"monsanto"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke and Don Thatcher discussed geopolitical regime changes, comparing the violent overthrows of Gaddafi and Mubarak to historical patterns of CIA and corporate involvement in Middle Eastern politics. They analyzed propaganda narratives surrounding these events, critiqued the Obama administration's continuation of Bush-era financial bailouts to banks, and examined how media repeatedly remakes stories like Camelot and Tombstone to reinforce Masonic and elite power structures. The hosts also covered domestic issues including a $529 million federal loan to Fisker Automotive that resulted in car production being moved to Finland rather than the U.S., a federal judge who ruled against food rights and then took a job at Monsanto, and the opening of the U.S.-Mexico border to Mexican trucks under NAFTA, which they argued would displace American truck drivers and lower safety standards. A caller reported TSA claiming authority above county sheriffs, prompting discussion of federal overreach and the conditioning of law enforcement to reject constitutional limits.
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness and quartermaster topics on the evening of October 7, 2011. He covered the 25th anniversary of the 1985 Philadelphia MOVE bombing, drawing parallels to Ruby Ridge and Waco as examples of government overreach. The show focused heavily on food storage and supply chain concerns, including reports of imminent price increases for rice, beans, pasta, and sugar. Koernke and his co-host BK recommended specific preparedness resources: James Wesley Rawls's "Survivors: A Novel of the Coming Collapse," water filtration systems from SAFE H2O UV and Doulton USA, and a free food inventory spreadsheet. They emphasized strategic stockpiling of consumables like ammunition, water filters, and lantern mantles over capital equipment, and discussed broader concerns about agricultural consolidation through trade agreements like NAFTA 2.
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Mark Koernke discussed the fabricated food shortage crisis, arguing that it stems from deliberate policy failures by the Department of Agriculture and commodity speculation by bankers rather than actual scarcity. He urged farmers to increase production during spring planting season and explained how low-quality grain could be diverted to biofuel production without affecting the food supply. The show featured caller Tom from Brooklyn reporting on food issues, and Mike Nester providing extensive medical and first aid training information, including heat injury prevention, artificial respiration for dogs, and burn treatment protocols.