"slavery"
4 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed the federal government's alleged unconstitutional actions against Arizona, arguing that appealing to the United Nations constitutes treason against the states. He extensively analyzed the American Civil War, contending that European bankers and Wall Street manipulated both North and South to weaken American sovereignty, and that slavery was not the primary cause but rather a tool for economic control. Koernke covered the post-Civil War Reconstruction period, the westward migration caused by northern banker foreclosures, and historical parallels between southern plantation exploitation and northern industrial labor abuses including the forced importation of Welsh and Irish miners. He fielded caller questions about constitutional law, admiralty court symbolism, and state sovereignty.
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Mark Koernke discussed the 2008 financial crisis and the $700 billion bailout, arguing it represented the culmination of a decades-long system of financial enslavement through birth certificates, Social Security numbers, and fictional bond instruments. He explained how the U.S. government creates bonds on citizens at birth worth millions of dollars each, which are then traded on international markets by banks like Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers. Koernke connected this to the expansion of the prison system, describing penal bonds as a new form of slavery, and warned that the government would use force to seize property and round up citizens to service the debt. He urged listeners to understand the constitutional versus corporate structure of government and to reclaim their bonds through administrative filings with the Secretary of the Treasury.
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Mark Koernke and Michael Messer covered veterinary first aid instruction on anaerobic infections, pulmonary infarction, and treatment of mouth, nose, and puncture wounds in dogs. Caller George discussed historical revisionism regarding the Civil War, arguing that northern bankers orchestrated the conflict to seize southern land and resources, that slavery was economically unviable, and that the South's eventual recovery resulted from carpetbagger failure. The hosts and caller explored tariffs, hemp exports, Irish immigration, Liberia's founding, and the triangle trade. The episode concluded with political commentary on the 2008 presidential race, criticizing both Barack Obama and John McCain as inadequate candidates.
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Mark Koernke discussed historical revisionism and propaganda, focusing on the Civil War, slavery, and the Underground Railroad. He argued that the Civil War was orchestrated by Northern bankers seeking to exploit Southern resources rather than being primarily about slavery, and that German Methodists and Lutherans—not Harriet Tubman alone—ran the Underground Railroad. Koernke also addressed contemporary issues including the Jena Six case, racial conflict orchestration by organizations like the ADL and SPLC, and the need for militia preparedness. He promoted HK91 magazines at $2 each and encouraged listeners to prepare for potential conflict while maintaining constitutional knowledge.