"1929 depression"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed various political and constitutional topics including criticism of FDR and the 1929 depression, election integrity concerns regarding vote counting delays, federal overreach by agencies like the FBI and Homeland Security, and a detailed segment on AR-15 and AR-10 rifle platforms and their modular components. The show included commentary on an FBI agent incident in Grand Rapids and extensive discussion of firearms customization and magazine availability.
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Mark Koernke and co-hosts discussed economic collapse warnings, preparedness strategies, and government overreach. A caller named Barry shared an email predicting economic crisis within six weeks, prompting discussion of DHS involvement with foreign operatives, the fragility of supply chains evidenced by sparse grocery store shelves, and the importance of mental preparedness over panic. The hosts emphasized that listeners should already be storing food and water, avoid panic-driven decisions, and relocate to safer areas like Idaho or Michigan if possible. They also covered the 1977 transfer of U.S. national parks to the International Monetary Fund, the planned 1929 stock market collapse orchestrated by J.P. Morgan and Winston Churchill, Y2K preparedness lessons, and warnings about civil unrest if government benefits are cut off. Discussion included tactics for appearing quarantined during civil breakdown and critiques of federal land management and globalist agendas.
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Mark Koernke discussed the deterioration of the American education system, noting that 40% of children fail to graduate high school and criticizing the public school system's approach to standardized testing and student engagement. He then shifted to warning listeners about provisions allegedly embedded in recent bailout legislation that would authorize the use of foreign troops on U.S. soil to suppress Americans resisting foreclosure, urging callers to contact representatives and investigate the bill's sponsors. Koernke connected these issues to broader themes of government overreach, comparing the current financial crisis to the 1920s bubble, and called for systematic resistance rather than reactive panic, invoking historical parallels to the American Revolution and warning against foreign occupation.