"bankers"
10 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the Civil War as a pivotal moment in American history orchestrated by bankers and financial interests, examining how events like the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Dred Scott decision, and Uncle Tom's Cabin were used to incite sectional conflict. He analyzed the role of the Federal Reserve, the loss of common law, and the centralization of power through unconstitutional means. The show also covered current events including vaccine dangers, immigration policy, the Biden administration's composition, and the destruction of American culture through diversity initiatives and educational indoctrination. Callers discussed firearms, ammunition availability, and preparedness.
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Mark Koernke discussed voter fraud allegations and election recounts, criticized TSA and Homeland Security for invasive body cavity searches and humiliation of travelers, condemned police militarization and black uniform adoption as communist tactics, expressed skepticism that the Trump administration would differ from Obama's police state policies, promoted preparedness and range activities, and encouraged listeners to use 'Merry Christmas' as a tool to identify political enemies while supporting armed resistance in India against bankers and government.
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Mark Koernke discussed satellite feed funding needs for the show, with callers expressing support for the micro-effect's mission and offering donations. The episode covered concerns about government overreach, including discussion of an incident involving a truck in sanctuary territory and a caller's legal battle over an unloaded handgun charge. Koernke addressed AR-15 ownership as a defense against tyranny rather than hunting, chemtrail theories involving biological weapons activated by frequency, and extensively analyzed the January 2016 Iranian naval incident involving U.S. patrol boats, comparing it to false flag operations like the Gulf of Tonkin incident. The show also touched on Native American tribal territories, land grabs, and warnings about manufactured conflicts to distract from domestic economic collapse.
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Mark Koernke discussed the economic decline of American manufacturing cities in the Rust Belt, including Cleveland, Flint, Youngstown, and Gary, analyzing how outsourcing of jobs to China and Mexico destroyed the middle class. He critiqued media narratives blaming white Americans for urban decay while ignoring intentional economic sabotage by Washington elites and bankers. Koernke also provided tactical commentary on rifle marksmanship and body armor, advocating for precision shot placement rather than center-mass shooting, and discussed the historical value of architectural styles from the Victorian and Art Deco eras.
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Mark Koernke discussed ammunition scarcity and the need for preparedness, criticizing Secretary of State John Kerry for his stance on gun control and urging listeners to stockpile firearms and ammunition. He covered economic concerns including potential currency collapse similar to 1929, warned of an impending severe winter in Michigan comparable to 1977-1978, and provided practical preparedness advice on finding deals at yard sales, acquiring free or discounted supplies, and creating camouflage covers and emergency medical kits from salvaged materials. The show emphasized self-sufficiency, creative resource gathering, and defensive readiness.
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Mark Koernke discussed the U.S. debt crisis and threats to military pay, criticizing bankers and government officials for prioritizing financial institutions over troops. He detailed a long history of military pay issues dating back to the 1970s, blamed both Democratic and Republican administrations for cutting troop benefits, and called for soldiers to recognize bankers as the true enemy. Koernke also reported on recent militia training exercises in Michigan involving helicopter operations and field exercises, discussed commodity price manipulation in copper and aluminum futures markets drawing parallels to the 1970s wheat scandal, and took a caller discussing a Michigan State Police officer's accidental firearm discharge. The show included commentary on government contractor fraud and the dangers of dealing with federal agencies.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, self-sufficiency, and political commentary on July 26, 2011. He covered gardening techniques for summer heat protection using shade cloth and PVC pipe structures, promoted affordable surveillance and electronics from dealextreme.com, and criticized pension fund mismanagement in Central Falls, Rhode Island where retirees faced 50% cuts. He warned about the newly proposed congressional "super committee" as Soviet-style centralization of power, condemned international bankers and what he characterized as communist infiltration of American institutions, and emphasized the need to build independent systems rather than defend against existing corrupt structures.
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Mark Koernke discussed military history, including the decommissioning of field jackets in the 1970s and their subsequent resale as scrap, and explored geopolitical themes including the Italian Navy's surrender in World War II, Trotsky's role in the Bolshevik Revolution funded by Western bankers, and alleged connections between U.S. presidents and communist agendas. He criticized media manipulation, examined the Iran-Israel conflict as a vendetta over oil resources, and contrasted Democratic and Republican candidate selection strategies, arguing both parties serve the same globalist agenda. The show touched on preparedness, food security, and firearm ownership rights.
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Mark Koernke discussed World War II history, focusing on German military capabilities, Poland's betrayal by Western allies, and parallels to current American political situations. He analyzed Hitler's war declaration speech (suppressed for 47 years), German weapons production and strategy, the role of international bankers in orchestrating conflicts, and how Poland was divided between Germany and the Soviet Union despite being an ally. Koernke drew connections between historical patterns of national betrayal and contemporary threats to American sovereignty, particularly regarding border security and federal overreach.
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Mark Koernke discussed network expansion across multiple states and the importance of local communications infrastructure, particularly CB radios and amateur radio systems as alternatives to potentially compromised cell phone networks. He addressed preparedness strategies including food storage and community organization through local militia structures, criticized FEMA's destructive actions during Hurricane Katrina, and examined agricultural policy as a tool of banker control. Callers contributed perspectives on military training for body disposal, the intentional fabrication of food shortages, and the use of plastic patriotism to advance a police state agenda.