Watch former Republican representative David Duke at the U.S. Senate debate at Dillard University in New Orleans, Louisiana. Following the debate, comments with Kevin MacDonald and Duke via Skype video. (This was streamed by Red Ice)
Welcome to Blackbird9's Breakfast Club's Wednesday Podcast. Tonight we conclude this four part series on the Archetypes of Fear with a look at the history of The Beast.
In the First Hour Host Frederick C. Blackburn will cover the recent chaotic events brought on by the teachings of the Frankfurt School Marxists. Their mission: establish a greater Israel ruled by Globalism under the direction of Talmudic Noahide Law and at the same time force all other countries to surrender their independent sovereignty. Then at the bottom of the first hour we will update you on the upcoming Farmers Aid South Africa benefit festival and the associated book sale of Die Sukkelgatte (The Broke Ones) by Mr. Jaco.
The Second Hour of Blackbird9's Breakfast Club host Frederick C. Blackburn looks at the history of The Beast image and why this particular Archetype of Fear has long represented the raw and ruthless aspect of nature itself both internally and externally.
Keeping you up to date - One Knowledge Sphere at a time
Is Art serious? Well, he has moved out of Southern California and is now
hiding out on a rural ranch at an undisclosed location, waiting for the
grid to collapse. If it doesn't, we're going to have one heck of a
party at his place on November 27th, feasting on his stored food and
enjoying the wonders of electricity.
Morgan Reynolds on Lincoln, FDR, War Myths, and 9/11
Morgan Reynolds joins the show to discuss
Lincoln, FDR, war myths and the economy. We talk about the "Honest"
Abe's lies that led to the War of Southern Independence, the causes of
the Great Depression, FDR's failed domestic policies and his serial
deceptions that dragged the country into the Second World War. Later we
discuss the economy, the failure of Keynesian economics, 9/11 and the
UFO phenomenon.
Morgan O. Reynolds, Ph.D., currently is Professor emeritus, economics,
Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas. He is a former Chief
Economist at the U.S. Department of Labor 2001-2002, and he also served
as the Director of the Criminal Justice Center and Senior Fellow at the
National Center for Policy Analysis, headquartered in Dallas, Texas.
Reynolds received his Ph.D. in economics in 1971 from the University of
Wisconsin in Madison. He has taught and done research at several
universities including the Poverty Institute at the University of
Wisconsin, the University of California and Texas A&M. He has served
on the board of editors at the Journal of Labor Research, the Quarterly
Journal of Austrian Economics, and the Journal of Libertarian Studies.
In 1993-4 Reynolds was visiting scholar at the Joint Economic Committee
of the U.S. Congress. He has been an adjunct scholar with the Cato
Institute and currently is an adjunct scholar with the Ludwig von Mises
Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Among other professional affiliations, Dr.
Reynolds has been a member of the Mont Pelerin Society, an
international society of free-market economists, scholars and policy
advocates.