The following video is one of several from our massive data files that was lost/forgotten and thus never published until now. The video was first created in 2013.
One of the reasons why this video was lost/forgotten was due to the fact that the clown featured, Karl Denninger faded from the media spotlight, so we forgot about him.
For the first time, we are publishing this two-part video.
Karl Denninger was one of many clowns pumped by Max Keiser around the financial crisis period because Denninger promoted the gold pumping, doomsday narrative that Keiser himself pitched to his naive audience of conspiracy quacks.
As I have shown many times in the past, Keiser features anyone (and I do mean absolutely anyone) who he thinks will preach the gold pumping narrative because his only objective is to make money selling overpriced gold and silver coins.
These days, the buzz in precious metals has been dwarfed by the scam artists running the cryptocurrency industry.
And because all good con artists head where they can fleece the largest audience of suckers, today most of Max Keiser's fairy tales focus on promoting cryptocurrencies.
Without surprise, Keiser even partnered with some scam artists to attach his name to a cryptocurrency. Consistent with his early attempts to become a successful comedian and later a successful Wall Street stockbroker, the cryptocurrency bearing his name, Maxcoin failed.
Similar to other fear mongering novices that came from nowhere, after Denninger appeared on Keiser's highly unprofessional weirdo "show," he became automatically inducted into the gold pumping syndicate.
You get a cookie if you can identify Denninger from the image below.
Note that this image was first created around ten years ago, proving that I immedately detected Denninger as a disinfo, doomsday douche bag.
It did not matter that Denniger had absolutely no experience on Wall Street. The only thing that mattered was that he parroted the kind of fear-mongering garbage that was in demand by fear-mongering nut jobs and con artists. Oh, and it also mattered that Denninger is Jewish.
To cover up for the fact that Denninger had no clue about the financial markets, he was usually introduced as a "millionaire" and "former CEO" of some insignificant company.
In tradition with many other clowns who want to convince the audience that they're serious traders (despite the fact that they have never worked in a professional capacity as traders or on Wall Street) Denninger was always seen with multiple LCD monitors in the background hoping the audience would think he's some kind of industry pro.
Whenever you see someone on TV or some video interview who isn't working at a major financial firm with several monitors behind them, it should always be your first clue that the person is a pretentious novice. It's a silly trick used to fool naive people.
And now, the video you've all been waiting for.
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