Surviving Martial Law
Prepper Broadcasting NetworkOctober 13, 202401:51:59128.14 MB

Surviving Martial Law

A masterclass on Surviving Martial Law by L. Douglas Hogan.

Get the Powerpoint Slides for the class here: https://www.authorsarafhathaway.com/support

or here: https://www.ldhogan.com/

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[00:00:10] Welcome back to the Changing Earth Podcast with author Sarah F. Hathaway and co-host Chen Gibson.

[00:00:17] Blending survival fiction and fact to bring you entertaining education that will help you dream, survive, and thrive.

[00:00:26] And now, here's your host, Sarah F. Hathaway and Chen Gibson.

[00:00:39] You're listening here to PBN, your path back to stability here.

[00:00:46] Season 16, episode 2.

[00:01:20] So today I have a special show for you today.

[00:01:23] I've got L. Douglas Hogan with me here.

[00:01:26] Hi, Doug. What's up?

[00:01:27] Hey, Sarah. Not much. How are you?

[00:01:29] I'm doing well.

[00:01:30] I've heard some feedback from the listeners how cool it is that I always have TJ on the show.

[00:01:35] So, there you go.

[00:01:36] Oh, good. I'll try to keep up with it then.

[00:01:38] Yeah, there you go.

[00:01:40] I was listening to a little bit of yours and Ryan's new show before I had to take care of some drama in my life.

[00:01:48] And, man, you guys are sounding good.

[00:01:51] I think that's going to be an awesome team.

[00:01:53] Yeah, I'm looking forward to a bright future.

[00:01:55] Yeah, that was some good stuff.

[00:01:57] I'm glad you got hooked up with him too.

[00:01:59] We really missed having him on the air.

[00:02:01] He's a good voice to have.

[00:02:04] I would have to agree with that.

[00:02:05] Yeah, he's got a good podcast voice.

[00:02:08] Yes.

[00:02:08] Yeah.

[00:02:09] And I think the two different walks of life are really going to help out.

[00:02:12] So, we were at Prepper Camp.

[00:02:15] I was going to come to your class on Sunday.

[00:02:18] And then everything got just thrown into...

[00:02:23] Everything got mother natured.

[00:02:25] Yes.

[00:02:26] Mother natured.

[00:02:27] I love that.

[00:02:28] But I was like, when we get back, we are doing the class on survival martial law on the podcast.

[00:02:34] Because I do think that the relevance of me hearing this information and also the audience hearing this information,

[00:02:43] the timing right now is critical, in my opinion.

[00:02:47] So, why don't you give us a little bit of your background other than the awesome voice of TJ Swenson

[00:02:52] and how you've come to be so educated on this topic, the relevance you have to speak to this topic.

[00:03:01] Sure.

[00:03:02] Well, let me see here.

[00:03:03] My life story really began on this topic back in 1992 when I joined the Marines

[00:03:08] and became basically a federal employee that was owned by the federal government.

[00:03:13] Anybody that's ever served in the United States military understands what life under the UCMJ

[00:03:18] or Uniformed Code of Military Justice is like.

[00:03:21] It's a very strict, separate set of rules that apply to military personnel that don't apply to civilians.

[00:03:29] For example, you, as a civilian, while I was serving in the military, were under the Civil Criminal Code,

[00:03:37] but I was under the Uniformed Code of Military Justice.

[00:03:39] Completely different.

[00:03:40] A lot more harsh.

[00:03:42] Okay?

[00:03:42] So, I did that for four years as an infantryman.

[00:03:46] I could talk more about that as we get into the martial law topics.

[00:03:48] Okay.

[00:03:49] I went from there right into state deployment as a state employee in Illinois,

[00:03:56] and I recently retired with 25 years working in Illinois' only maximum security mental health facility.

[00:04:03] So, the training I've had through the years has been rather extensive with just about every possible element you can imagine

[00:04:10] when working with incident management systems, you know, that kind of a thing.

[00:04:16] Right.

[00:04:17] Right.

[00:04:17] FEMA, basically FEMA-controlled systems and trainings and mandates and stuff like that.

[00:04:22] I did that for a long time.

[00:04:24] Like I said, 25 years.

[00:04:26] But back up a little bit, 2006, I also became a police officer.

[00:04:29] I went through the part-time academy at Southwestern Illinois Police Academy in Belleville, Illinois.

[00:04:35] And so, that academy took 10 months through the part-time process because you're not there every single day.

[00:04:41] You go on weekends.

[00:04:42] You're doing a lot of stuff online.

[00:04:43] You got to go on the weekends for the practical application stuff, the wrestling, the ground pounding,

[00:04:49] and all the kind of stuff you enjoyed doing.

[00:04:50] Yeah.

[00:04:51] Handcuffing, et cetera, et cetera.

[00:04:54] That was done on the weekends.

[00:04:56] And, of course, then, you know, I graduated from there as a class president.

[00:05:02] Of course you were.

[00:05:03] Yeah, I don't think I ever told you that, but I was actually nominated to do that.

[00:05:07] There was a vote, and I was voted.

[00:05:10] Anyway, so that happened.

[00:05:12] And so I did that from 2006 on through 2015, I think, when I became a supervisor for the state at the maximum security mental health facility.

[00:05:24] I was running things.

[00:05:26] And I just felt – because at the time, I had like two or three part-time police jobs on top of my full-time work.

[00:05:32] And so becoming a supervisor of a maximum security hospital in addition to the three part-time police jobs was overwhelming.

[00:05:39] I just – I was – there was too many logs on the fire at that point.

[00:05:42] So lots of police training that I had.

[00:05:46] And, you know, I did that.

[00:05:47] I was out.

[00:05:47] So I left the police world for five years until I retired.

[00:05:51] And then after retiring, I got back into the police world.

[00:05:54] Yeah, after you retired.

[00:05:56] Yeah.

[00:05:57] I lasted a month and a half.

[00:05:58] It didn't last long.

[00:06:00] I would like to think I helped with that.

[00:06:04] I say retired loosely.

[00:06:06] I'm semi-retired.

[00:06:07] I really enjoy policing.

[00:06:09] You know, I got the – it's – when you actually retire and you're getting a pension and you take on like a supplemental income like I'm doing in the police world, it's not – it don't feel like prison.

[00:06:20] Like full-time job does when you're not retired.

[00:06:22] Yeah, because you're doing it for fun.

[00:06:24] Yes.

[00:06:25] I don't need the – I don't have to work.

[00:06:27] I'm having fun with it now, and I really enjoy it.

[00:06:29] I say and do whatever I want to because I don't care if I get fired.

[00:06:32] I don't care what anybody thinks of.

[00:06:34] Uh-oh.

[00:06:35] Don't do anything wrong in that county, folks.

[00:06:38] Right.

[00:06:39] Well, not in that regard.

[00:06:40] Like I'm very pro-constitution.

[00:06:42] That's where I was going with this.

[00:06:43] I'm very – I'm a constitutionalist.

[00:06:45] So I don't believe – I'm not a fan of big government.

[00:06:49] You know, I believe that there's a need for a few agencies.

[00:06:51] But for the most part, I believe that small government is beneficial and large government is overreaching and intrusive.

[00:07:01] So I'm not a fan of big government.

[00:07:02] So walk us through – I know usually you have visual aids.

[00:07:07] I do.

[00:07:08] Yeah.

[00:07:08] Maybe one day we'll have to do like an online class so we can show the visual aids.

[00:07:13] But walk us through some of that class content, you know, best you can without visual aids.

[00:07:21] We've done – I was just going over some of my former episodes.

[00:07:24] We did the compass episode with no visual aids.

[00:07:27] So we've got to be able to pull it off.

[00:07:29] Oh, I love compasses and land navigation, that kind of thing.

[00:07:32] Yeah, we can do it.

[00:07:33] But on top of that, I'd like to say, Sarah, that to your listeners, if they would subscribe –

[00:07:37] if they've got a way to subscribe into you to a newsletter, that they do so.

[00:07:40] Yep.

[00:07:41] And I can get you a PDF version of this.

[00:07:43] Perfect.

[00:07:43] And you can include it in your newsletter.

[00:07:46] Okay.

[00:07:46] And so they can get the visual aids that way.

[00:07:50] Perfect.

[00:07:50] So everybody head on over changingearthseries.com.

[00:07:53] That's changingearthseries.com.

[00:07:56] Sign up to the – just become a member.

[00:07:59] It's free.

[00:08:00] And I'll go ahead and make sure that you get a copy of that out in the newsletter.

[00:08:04] Perfect.

[00:08:05] Two other ways they can do it is I'm about to do the same thing on my newsletter.

[00:08:08] So if they go to www.ldhogan.com and do the same thing, they can get it that way.

[00:08:14] And also if they want a handbook they can keep on them and a person, whatever,

[00:08:18] they can go to Amazon and get the book, Surviving Martial, all that way.

[00:08:21] Right.

[00:08:22] So this was a PowerPoint first.

[00:08:24] And going through the slides, you know, I have – one of my early slides is the who,

[00:08:29] what, when, or how, and why, which is the fundamental questions, right?

[00:08:33] I mean, any time you go into any kind of situations, you want to know the who,

[00:08:36] what, when, where, why, and how of anything.

[00:08:38] Yep.

[00:08:41] So, yeah, in the class, you know, I talk about martial law and the attempt to define it.

[00:08:45] I talk about who can declare martial law.

[00:08:47] I talk about the things that might lead us to suspect that martial law rule is imminent.

[00:08:51] I talk about what will happen when you hear the inevitable words of martial law, martial rule.

[00:08:55] It's interchangeable.

[00:08:56] When you hear martial rule, martial law, it's the same exact thing.

[00:09:01] Life under the military rule, FEMA, you know, the Federal Emergency Management Act.

[00:09:06] Oh, yeah.

[00:09:07] Surviving under martial rule.

[00:09:10] Surviving under the guise of, quote, unquote, safety and security.

[00:09:13] And then dealing with martial rule, right?

[00:09:15] Because it's coming.

[00:09:16] It's not a matter of if it's going to happen but when it's going to happen.

[00:09:22] That's scary.

[00:09:24] So where do we get martial law, right?

[00:09:27] The Constitution of martial law.

[00:09:28] It literally comes – this is the entire section of it right here from the U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 15.

[00:09:34] That's a test question.

[00:09:36] Congress shall have power to provide for the calling forth of the militia to execute the laws of the union, suppress insurrections, and repel invasions.

[00:09:45] That's it.

[00:09:47] That's all there is.

[00:09:49] Their total legal excuse to be able to pull this off.

[00:09:53] Yes.

[00:09:54] Congress.

[00:09:55] Congress shall have the power to provide for the calling forth of the militia – that's the military, right?

[00:10:00] Yep.

[00:10:00] To execute the laws of the union.

[00:10:02] Here's when they can do it.

[00:10:04] To suppress insurrections and to repel invasions.

[00:10:08] That's it.

[00:10:09] There's no definition of what an insurrection is.

[00:10:12] There's no definition of what an invasion is.

[00:10:14] Now, we can assume we know what an invasion is, right?

[00:10:18] But an insurrection, we've seen in recent times, right, that the good guys can be called bad guys, the bad guys can be called good guys.

[00:10:25] There's a complete flip of the script here.

[00:10:28] Yep.

[00:10:28] Who defines what an insurrection is?

[00:10:32] It's whoever's in power.

[00:10:35] Mm-hmm.

[00:10:37] So we have – right now we have Joe Biden and what happened on J6 2021, right?

[00:10:42] Everybody's calling those people that, yes, it was bad.

[00:10:44] A lot of the stuff – you know, the Constitution – the First Amendment of the Constitution calls for peaceful protests.

[00:10:51] It literally says that you – to peacefully protest.

[00:10:54] Right?

[00:10:54] To peacefully protest.

[00:10:56] You can gather, but you've got to do it peacefully.

[00:10:58] You can't break glass.

[00:11:00] You can't go into places you're not welcome.

[00:11:02] You know, you can't – that's illegal.

[00:11:04] You can't cause property damage.

[00:11:06] Right.

[00:11:06] That's right.

[00:11:07] That's all very bad stuff.

[00:11:08] That goes way beyond –

[00:11:10] People seem to forget that in June of that year, though, D.C. was on fire from protests.

[00:11:15] And that's just the thing.

[00:11:17] Whenever Manhattan was on fire, whenever Portland was on fire –

[00:11:20] Chad, they took over the town.

[00:11:21] When all the cities were burning down.

[00:11:22] Yeah.

[00:11:23] Well, nobody called that – nobody called that an insurrection.

[00:11:26] Nobody said anything.

[00:11:27] That was peaceful protesting.

[00:11:29] Do you remember that?

[00:11:30] Yep.

[00:11:30] Yes.

[00:11:31] Yes.

[00:11:31] Well, they're here.

[00:11:32] Fire is burning in the background.

[00:11:33] This is just peaceful protesting.

[00:11:35] No.

[00:11:37] Yep.

[00:11:38] So there's no clear definition in the Constitution itself as to what martial law is.

[00:11:44] But here's something else.

[00:11:45] Here's a kicker.

[00:11:45] In 1946, the United States Supreme Court ruled that martial law carries no precise meaning.

[00:11:52] All right.

[00:11:52] And you guys can look it up.

[00:11:54] Whoever's listening to this, Duncan – and I can't pronounce this last name.

[00:11:57] It's K-A-H-A-N-A-M-O-K-U.

[00:12:01] I'm going to try to pronounce it.

[00:12:04] Kohanamoku.

[00:12:05] Duncan versus Kohanamoku.

[00:12:07] 327-US-304.

[00:12:09] Okay.

[00:12:09] You guys can go look that up.

[00:12:11] So they're basically saying in that – because what was going on in 1946?

[00:12:17] Martial law has never happened in the United States, right?

[00:12:22] Now, you know what?

[00:12:23] I'm going to say that for just a – I'll get into that in a little bit.

[00:12:27] I was going to say that name sounds Hawaiian, so –

[00:12:30] It is Hawaiian.

[00:12:31] And it is Hawaiian.

[00:12:32] But we can talk about Hawaii in just a little bit because Hawaii was under martial rule for some time after Pearl Harbor attack.

[00:12:40] Okay.

[00:12:41] Now, back up in just a little bit because I don't want to get ahead of myself.

[00:12:44] According to definition, people – and now we're looking at the Encyclopedia Britannica.

[00:12:48] They try to define what martial law is here.

[00:12:50] They say it's the temporary rule by military authorities of a designated area in time of emergency when the civil authorities are deemed unable to function.

[00:12:59] Okay.

[00:13:00] So what they're saying is there's no civil courts available.

[00:13:06] No civil courts are open at this point, right?

[00:13:10] According to – and this is constitutional, and we'll get into that also in a little bit in a later slide.

[00:13:13] But according to the Constitution, there can't be any civil courts open or available in order for martial rule to happen.

[00:13:22] Okay?

[00:13:23] That's important for later.

[00:13:24] The legal effects going on with the definition, the legal effects of a declaration of martial law differ in various jurisdictions.

[00:13:31] But they generally involve a suspension of the normal civil rights and an extension to the civilian population of summary military justice or of military law.

[00:13:41] That's U.S. – sorry, uniformed UCMJ, Uniform Code of Military Justice I spoke of earlier at the beginning of this.

[00:13:49] It goes on.

[00:13:50] Although temporary in theory, a state of martial law may in fact continue indefinitely.

[00:13:56] Now we're going back to what – who defines what an insurrection is?

[00:13:59] Who defines what a rebellion is?

[00:14:03] What an invasion is?

[00:14:04] These are things that are defined by whoever is in power.

[00:14:06] So in that regard, it could be viewed as indefinite because whoever is in power right now may feel that – let's say, for example, not accepting an election outcome could be determined as an insurrection and rebellion.

[00:14:24] And so by that basis, it's lawful and constitutional to place the country under nationwide civil – or I'm not civil – martial rule.

[00:14:39] Any questions at this point?

[00:14:40] No, and that's why I wanted to talk about this right now.

[00:14:45] Because it's getting crazy.

[00:14:47] And we saw what happened back in 2020 with the election results and January 6th and all this other stuff.

[00:14:54] 86 million votes.

[00:14:55] Come on now.

[00:14:57] Yes.

[00:14:58] Yeah.

[00:14:58] He scored way more than Barack Obama, right?

[00:15:02] You really believe that.

[00:15:03] Sleepy joke.

[00:15:04] Most voted for president.

[00:15:05] I mean, come on.

[00:15:06] At least Barack Obama was, like, turning him out at his conventions.

[00:15:11] And Biden's in his basement.

[00:15:13] And he's the most voted for.

[00:15:15] I doubt it.

[00:15:15] Not campaigning.

[00:15:16] Yes.

[00:15:16] Yes.

[00:15:18] There's lots of shade.

[00:15:19] But nobody can say there wasn't voter fraud.

[00:15:21] I get tired of that argument that there wasn't voter fraud.

[00:15:23] There absolutely was voter fraud.

[00:15:24] There's plenty of proof of voter fraud.

[00:15:26] Right.

[00:15:27] However, there's no way to know because the courts aren't hearing the evidence.

[00:15:33] Right.

[00:15:33] Okay?

[00:15:34] And that's when you hear these pundits, these political pundits go on the radio shows and they talk about, well, there's no evidence.

[00:15:40] Well, no, there's no evidence because in order for the proof to be called evidence, it has to be first admitted into court.

[00:15:46] Right?

[00:15:47] Right.

[00:15:48] During the preliminaries, during the findings.

[00:15:51] And if it's not being admitted because the courts aren't hearing it, therefore, there is no evidence.

[00:15:57] Right?

[00:15:58] Yeah.

[00:15:58] So it's a play on semantics, really.

[00:16:02] But because of that, technically, no, there is no evidence of it.

[00:16:07] Do we have video proof of people blacking out the windows and kicking out Republican voters?

[00:16:14] Yeah.

[00:16:15] Yes.

[00:16:16] And box of ballots and all these boxes being put, more people being counted than we have registered voters, for example.

[00:16:27] Yeah.

[00:16:27] Right.

[00:16:28] You know, just more, that's proof.

[00:16:29] Yeah.

[00:16:30] But since it hasn't been admitted into the court because the courts aren't hearing it, there's no evidence.

[00:16:34] Yeah.

[00:16:35] Okay.

[00:16:36] So Miriam, that was Encyclopedia Britannica.

[00:16:38] Now Miriam Webster says something similar but much smaller.

[00:16:53] Much shorter and sweeter, yeah.

[00:16:54] So then I go on to the next slide.

[00:16:55] What's that?

[00:16:56] Much shorter and sweeter but same purpose.

[00:17:00] Yes.

[00:17:02] So who can declare martial law?

[00:17:04] Test question I asked while earlier.

[00:17:06] Remember that?

[00:17:06] I read it to you earlier.

[00:17:07] I even, I even, I even bolded it as I said it.

[00:17:11] The people in power.

[00:17:13] The Congress.

[00:17:14] The Congress.

[00:17:15] The Congress is the most direct answer, all right, constitutional answer.

[00:17:22] However, here's the issue.

[00:17:25] Who is the commander in chief of the United States Armed Services?

[00:17:29] The president.

[00:17:30] The president is.

[00:17:32] And who does the military answer to?

[00:17:34] The president.

[00:17:35] Yes, the commander in chief.

[00:17:37] Nobody else.

[00:17:39] Can Congress agree to do anything these days?

[00:17:42] No.

[00:17:43] Absolutely not.

[00:17:43] So Congress occasionally lacks the competence to agree on bills, let alone something as crucial

[00:17:49] as what might be, you know, considered or a discussion on martial law.

[00:17:53] Right.

[00:17:53] So the POTUS or the president of the United States, I'll just go and call him POTUS for short here on out, is the most likely unit of government to invoke martial law.

[00:18:02] And this is just my opinion.

[00:18:04] But whenever we ever respected the Constitution in modern times.

[00:18:07] I mean, yeah.

[00:18:09] Oh, it's an outdated document.

[00:18:11] And then, just because we've been friends for so long.

[00:18:15] I know about all of them executive orders that you're probably going to talk about.

[00:18:18] And that scares the heck out of me.

[00:18:20] That's my books in a nutshell.

[00:18:22] Yes.

[00:18:23] Yes.

[00:18:23] Yes.

[00:18:24] Those are scary.

[00:18:25] And we will get to that for sure.

[00:18:28] But it's been said, you know, that martial rule cannot be enacted while the civilian courts are in RRR operational.

[00:18:33] Keep in mind that civilian courts don't govern the military.

[00:18:36] Right?

[00:18:37] Right.

[00:18:37] And to be the military that would determine when the civilian courts are safe enough to use.

[00:18:42] You see the catch, too, on 22 there here?

[00:18:44] Yeah.

[00:18:44] All right.

[00:18:45] All right.

[00:18:45] Yeah.

[00:18:45] So in the event of martial rule or martial law, the military becomes the authority.

[00:18:50] And they're governed by the UCMJ, or the Military Code of Military Justice.

[00:18:55] We may believe that we can rely on our elected officials to keep things in check.

[00:18:59] But it must be noted right here that we've seen an influx of politicians with little to no regard for the law of the land.

[00:19:06] The supreme law of the land, right?

[00:19:08] The Constitution of the United States.

[00:19:09] Absolutely.

[00:19:10] And we'll cover some examples towards the end of the presentation.

[00:19:14] So I mentioned a while ago Pearl Harbor, right?

[00:19:17] So how many times has martial law happened in the United States?

[00:19:20] Well, martial law has only been enacted once in U.S. history.

[00:19:24] Keyword, U.S. history.

[00:19:26] Right?

[00:19:26] Hawaii was under the state of martial law for three years from the onset of the Pearl Harbor attack in 1942.

[00:19:32] However, Hawaii did not officially become a 50th state until 1959.

[00:19:36] Got you.

[00:19:37] Okay?

[00:19:39] So when was martial law first used?

[00:19:41] The only one and only time martial law.

[00:19:43] I'm talking about like a national.

[00:19:45] Revolutionary war with Abraham Lincoln taking over the railroads.

[00:19:50] Kind of.

[00:19:50] Civil war.

[00:19:51] Oh, yeah.

[00:19:52] Civil.

[00:19:52] Sorry.

[00:19:52] Yeah.

[00:19:53] Fair.

[00:19:54] I'm like Abraham Lincoln, though.

[00:19:55] I don't.

[00:19:56] Yeah.

[00:19:56] Yeah.

[00:19:57] I know you know.

[00:19:58] We're talking about George Washington days in the American Revolution.

[00:20:02] But no, he wasn't around for this.

[00:20:05] Like this is much later.

[00:20:06] So on September 15th, 1863, Lincoln imposed congressionally authorized martial law.

[00:20:11] Okay.

[00:20:11] So it was constitutional originally.

[00:20:14] Gosh.

[00:20:15] Yeah.

[00:20:15] In 1863, Lincoln imposed congressionally authorized martial law.

[00:20:21] The authorizing act allowed the president to suspend habeas corpus.

[00:20:25] All right.

[00:20:25] What's habeas corpus?

[00:20:26] Habeas corpus is the right to a fair and speedy trial.

[00:20:28] Okay.

[00:20:29] That you're not going to be in prison indefinitely.

[00:20:32] You know, that you'll be charged and we'll try you as fast as possible, get you back out

[00:20:36] on the street or get you in prison, whichever you deserve.

[00:20:38] Okay.

[00:20:38] That's habeas corpus.

[00:20:41] And the president, so he allowed, this act allowed the president to suspend habeas corpus

[00:20:46] throughout the entire United States.

[00:20:48] So every state was under martial law at the time.

[00:20:54] Lincoln imposed the suspension of prisoners.

[00:20:56] He imposed the suspension on prisoners of war, spies, or aiders and abettors of the enemy.

[00:21:02] So now we're going back to what the constitution says.

[00:21:05] Remember what I told you when I read the definition of martial law?

[00:21:09] It's rebellion, right?

[00:21:10] And invasion.

[00:21:11] Yep.

[00:21:12] Okay.

[00:21:12] We kind of got both those things going.

[00:21:14] Insurrection and invasion.

[00:21:15] Right.

[00:21:16] So in this case right here, we have what was viewed as the South or the Confederates,

[00:21:21] right, as insurrectionists or viewed as insurrectionists.

[00:21:26] Again, there's semantics here, okay?

[00:21:29] Viewed as insurrectionists against the Union.

[00:21:33] That's his constitutional authority that was congressionally authorized for martial rule.

[00:21:39] So he instituted that on all those, pretty much the Confederates, the Confederacy.

[00:21:46] And other classes of people, such as draft dodgers, all right?

[00:21:50] So the president's proclamation was challenged in ex parte Milligan.

[00:21:54] The Supreme Court ruled that Lincoln's imposition of martial law by way of suspension of habeas corpus,

[00:22:00] here we go now, they're saying it was unconstitutional as long as civilian courts are operational.

[00:22:05] I got you.

[00:22:06] Okay.

[00:22:06] Okay.

[00:22:08] So habeas corpus was suspended to gain control over the insurrection and rebellion that endangered the Constitution and government of the United States.

[00:22:16] So once martial law was declared, he's basically saying, you know,

[00:22:21] or the forces on the ground are saying that it's not safe to open up our civilian courts, right?

[00:22:25] That's why habeas corpus and all that was suspended.

[00:22:30] Going on to our next slide, what is the definition of insurrection then, right?

[00:22:34] I kind of touched on this.

[00:22:35] Nobody really knows.

[00:22:36] It's an act or an instance of revolting against civil authority or an established government, according to Miriam Webster.

[00:22:43] Which is kind of funny, too, because then they know, like the Founding Fathers,

[00:22:47] like one of the things that's said is like revolution has to happen for our government every once in a while to kind of stay fresh.

[00:22:54] Yes.

[00:22:55] Right.

[00:22:56] Yeah.

[00:22:57] And other people in history have spoken to, you know, the blood of patriots.

[00:23:02] Right.

[00:23:03] Watering the tree of liberty.

[00:23:04] They've spoken to the right of the people to abolish the government and replace it with a new one.

[00:23:11] And why we have our Second Amendment to ensure we have the ability to do that.

[00:23:15] Right.

[00:23:16] So you see the conundrum in all the verbiage.

[00:23:19] Yes.

[00:23:19] And there's just no definitions, you know, any way of kind of dissecting this and making any sense of it.

[00:23:26] Which is surprising because the people who wrote our Constitution, they were geniuses.

[00:23:31] Like they were all brilliance.

[00:23:33] Right.

[00:23:33] And they spent so much time fine combing this to make sure it was just right.

[00:23:38] But I can tell you as somebody who's been in government for a lot of years, over 30 years of my life,

[00:23:44] counting the military and police work and 25 years of working for the state,

[00:23:49] is that when you write policy, you want to keep some things vague.

[00:23:53] So when the fecal matter hits the rotator blades, you can define it to whatever you need it to be.

[00:23:59] You got to be able to fit it to the occasion.

[00:24:02] And that's just how it is.

[00:24:05] That's kind of scary in the same right.

[00:24:07] It is.

[00:24:08] Exactly.

[00:24:10] So now that we know a little bit about martial law, right, let's look at what can happen.

[00:24:15] And so the U.S. Constitution permits the government to declare martial law to suppress insurrections or repel invasions.

[00:24:21] So things that you can kind of start, things that can start a revolt against authority include,

[00:24:27] but are not limited to, things like widespread civil unrest.

[00:24:31] The things we saw, you know, after the George Floyd incident and who's the other clown that there's a lot of –

[00:24:38] I'm brain farting right now.

[00:24:40] Yeah, there's been a lot of clowns along the way.

[00:24:42] Yeah.

[00:24:43] I think it's actually his name somewhere in my slide.

[00:24:46] But anarchy, which will most likely be called a national emergency, right?

[00:24:51] So these things are – these are the things that are vaguely defined in several executive orders, which we're going to see pretty soon.

[00:24:59] But one of the most disturbing executive orders is Obama's pick.

[00:25:02] Even with the insurrection – sorry to interrupt you – but even with the insurrection and invasion, they could just be like, well, now all these illegals are here.

[00:25:12] It's an invasion.

[00:25:13] We've got to do martial law.

[00:25:14] They could, potentially, yes.

[00:25:16] I don't – I don't know what to think about that because right now the left loves them coming in because they're getting votes for them.

[00:25:25] Right.

[00:25:26] But on the other hand, they could essentially call for martial law because of an invasion that they created.

[00:25:33] Yes.

[00:25:33] Yeah.

[00:25:34] Yeah, that's what was –

[00:25:34] Locked out the system and not have an election.

[00:25:36] Yeah, that's where my brain went.

[00:25:37] Yeah.

[00:25:39] Yeah.

[00:25:39] So, yes, there's potential.

[00:25:40] The potential is definitely there.

[00:25:44] All right.

[00:25:45] So – and I'm just going to touch, glaze over briefly.

[00:25:48] Executive Order 13603 written in 2012 by Barack Obama.

[00:25:53] Just keep that in your mind because we're going to talk about it in a little bit because he wrote something, an executive order, that we're going to talk about quite a bit, at least probably five minutes or so.

[00:26:07] So, Executive Order 13603 was written to maintain technological superiority.

[00:26:12] This is taken around the executive order.

[00:26:14] To maintain technological superiority of its national defense equipment during peacetime and at times of national emergency.

[00:26:23] So, again, what is national emergency?

[00:26:26] This – these two words, national emergency, is written four times in a 10-page executive order, and it never defines what it actually is.

[00:26:35] It can literally be anything that the executive or legislative branch deem to be a crisis.

[00:26:40] This single executive order is an executive equivalent to Article I, Section 8, Clause 15 of the Constitution, which is martial law.

[00:26:48] They can say with this – this is an emergency.

[00:26:51] I've heard them utter those words with the climate crisis.

[00:26:57] It could be anything.

[00:26:58] Yeah.

[00:26:58] I was like –

[00:26:59] It could be an economic collapse.

[00:27:01] It could be, you know, multiple organized riots.

[00:27:04] Michael Brown was the other one.

[00:27:05] It could be a Michael Brown kind of situation, right?

[00:27:10] Widespread natural disasters like what you write about in your books.

[00:27:13] It could be political dissension like what we saw on January 6, 2021.

[00:27:18] Yeah.

[00:27:19] That's way too broad.

[00:27:21] Way too – and there's no definition to it.

[00:27:23] And from what I've just learned, they just put very similar language in – they just passed it in the UN in September for a global force to be able to handle global shocks.

[00:27:34] And then, like, the Surgeon General or whatever of the UN can declare it over whenever he or they deem fit, which is exactly – the language sounds very similar.

[00:27:51] Again, yeah.

[00:27:52] Well, with – as far as United States sovereignty, we're always going to be sovereign.

[00:27:57] The thing is who's going to give us to the United Nations, right?

[00:28:02] Who's going to give us to the World Health Organization?

[00:28:03] Who's going to give us to the World Government Summit?

[00:28:08] Our leadership.

[00:28:09] Right.

[00:28:09] All these organizations that are trying to control the world don't have a lot of hold over the United States unless the authority is given to them.

[00:28:20] Right.

[00:28:21] Yep.

[00:28:22] So when you've got a globalist president like – I'm just going to throw both Republican and Democrat in here.

[00:28:27] When you've got a globalist president like George Bush and Barack Hussein Obama.

[00:28:31] Yeah.

[00:28:32] You're going to – the United Nations is going to have some kind of say over the United States.

[00:28:37] But when you have somebody that's not a part of the system – and I'll throw an outsider in there like, well, I don't know, we'll say Donald Trump.

[00:28:44] Yeah.

[00:28:45] The United Nations ain't going to have a lot of control of the United States.

[00:28:47] Yeah.

[00:28:48] Okay.

[00:28:51] Some things that could – there's going to be precursors to martial law.

[00:28:56] So when you start seeing things like what I'm about ready to do, these bullet points kind of start to happen, which some of them have started to happen, you can kind of prepare yourself and understand that we're kind of getting close to martial law.

[00:29:10] Not to say that some of this bullet point might happen and there's nothing for a few years.

[00:29:14] You kind of, you know, cool your jets a little bit.

[00:29:16] But when you see these things in rapid succession start to happen over a short period of time, you can probably get ready for it to go down.

[00:29:24] Things like curfews.

[00:29:27] Curfews is the big one.

[00:29:28] When the government's in your town or some authority – we'll just say some authority's in your town and they're telling you to get in your home.

[00:29:36] That's a – that's for martial rule.

[00:29:37] And we kind of saw this in Tim Walz's state, right?

[00:29:43] Yeah.

[00:29:43] During COVID, the police were running through the streets screaming at people with their rifles, telling them get in their home, stay in their home.

[00:29:51] Right.

[00:29:52] Even though he might not have said the word martial law, that's martial law.

[00:29:58] Mm-hmm.

[00:29:58] Okay.

[00:29:58] And even though it's not the police, they've been endued with supreme powers that surpass or supersede the Constitution.

[00:30:10] When that happens, you are now living under a uniform code of –

[00:30:17] Yeah, I would say COVID is probably the closest we got to actually being in – I mean, everything.

[00:30:24] They were like, well, you don't have a right to do any of that.

[00:30:27] Yes.

[00:30:28] Because with all the restaurants shut down and the stores shut down, yes, it was like that, very close.

[00:30:36] But then imagine you're being told to stay in your home or if you can – or you have to get a chit, basically a piece of paper or permission to go somewhere.

[00:30:45] And when you do, you can't go X amount of miles from your home.

[00:30:49] That's what it was like in the military.

[00:30:51] Yeah.

[00:30:51] If you want to go somewhere, you can't go outside 25 miles of your – of the base or whatever.

[00:30:57] Yeah.

[00:30:57] Well, that's China.

[00:31:00] You know, China's got their house.

[00:31:02] Communist, yes.

[00:31:02] Yeah.

[00:31:03] Exactly.

[00:31:03] Well, that's what martial law is because in a communist country, the military is –

[00:31:09] Mm-hmm.

[00:31:10] Okay.

[00:31:10] Fair enough, right?

[00:31:11] Yep.

[00:31:12] Travel restrictions, another one.

[00:31:14] Rationing.

[00:31:16] Rationing of anything.

[00:31:18] Checkpoints.

[00:31:19] Checkpoints is a big one.

[00:31:20] Mm-hmm.

[00:31:22] Censorship.

[00:31:22] We've been seeing a lot of censorship.

[00:31:24] Oh, yeah.

[00:31:24] Right.

[00:31:25] When you see the government – you know, just censorship from social media by itself is no big thing.

[00:31:32] But when the government's telling social media censor you, that's a violation of your first amendment right.

[00:31:35] Yep.

[00:31:36] Yep.

[00:31:36] Okay?

[00:31:37] Excessive military operations in civilian areas.

[00:31:40] Jade Helm 15 was a big conspiracy theory, right?

[00:31:44] Yeah.

[00:31:44] Yeah.

[00:31:45] It was a big, huge military, and there's been several since then.

[00:31:48] I don't know the names of all of them, but that was the most popular one because it was one of the biggest in the first.

[00:31:53] Right.

[00:31:53] Where they were like in all the Walmarts, right?

[00:31:57] Yeah.

[00:31:57] Well, there was several military branches over a large area, and I forget what state they were in.

[00:32:03] It was multi-state, I believe.

[00:32:04] Yeah, it was multi-state.

[00:32:05] We're doing this massive.

[00:32:06] Right.

[00:32:06] And that's kind of a thing because what would be multi-state like that?

[00:32:09] It was some kind of national crisis, martial law.

[00:32:13] Yeah, yeah.

[00:32:14] Rapid inflation.

[00:32:15] We're seeing that right now.

[00:32:18] Unusual government purchases.

[00:32:19] We've seen that in the past, buying up all the ammunition, right?

[00:32:24] So these people that are producing ammunition, they're buying it directly from them, and then your rural kings.

[00:32:29] Walmart don't sell it no more.

[00:32:31] Right.

[00:32:31] During COVID, or whenever that was, they stopped supplying it on their shelves.

[00:32:36] Yeah, 22 ammo was gone for a long time.

[00:32:40] And really, we've been dipping in 5.56 again.

[00:32:42] I mean, it's back now, but it just happened again recently.

[00:32:46] Is Walmart even selling ammunition anymore?

[00:32:48] Not my local one.

[00:32:49] I don't know.

[00:32:49] I don't buy it there.

[00:32:50] I'm in Texas, so we've got options.

[00:32:52] I'm a rural kings guy.

[00:32:53] I like going to rural kings and buying their ammunition.

[00:32:56] Yeah.

[00:32:57] Yeah.

[00:32:57] We've got a couple of little ones.

[00:32:58] Unusual government purchases.

[00:33:00] Increased regulation.

[00:33:02] We live in a regulation nation.

[00:33:03] Oh.

[00:33:04] And when you see across the board, you know, federal regulations increasing, we've got some

[00:33:09] problems because we're still a country of states, and each state has its own constitution.

[00:33:15] And so this is what I was talking about earlier with overreaching government.

[00:33:18] The government should not be writing laws for everybody.

[00:33:21] You know, sure, there's some federal laws, but they should be far and few in between.

[00:33:26] Did you see that the Surgeon General came out and said that parenting is bad for your health,

[00:33:31] and so the state should just raise your children?

[00:33:35] Of course they should.

[00:33:36] That's right.

[00:33:37] That's not a communist at all.

[00:33:37] Not at all.

[00:33:39] That's socialistic if I ever heard of it.

[00:33:41] Yep.

[00:33:43] Marx has said its core.

[00:33:45] Yeah.

[00:33:46] But those are the kinds of precursors.

[00:33:48] They're a very good indicator that you may be under an impending state of martial law.

[00:33:53] I would expect that such things would be done to avoid it, something to be done to avoid it,

[00:33:58] but the reality is that they violate basic human rights and the American spirit, which by default is one of rebellion.

[00:34:07] Amen.

[00:34:07] Amen.

[00:34:08] That's just how our Americans are.

[00:34:10] Like, you're not going to tell me to wipe my ass that way.

[00:34:12] See, I'm an American.

[00:34:14] Beats my chest.

[00:34:15] I only wore a mask twice during COVID.

[00:34:18] I wore my Airsoft mask that had holes all in it.

[00:34:20] I was like, they're like, well, you can put that mask on?

[00:34:23] I'm like, sure.

[00:34:23] I put it on my arm, you know, because you don't dictate what I wear on my body, you know?

[00:34:28] You know, it'll be fine.

[00:34:30] You just get out of my store.

[00:34:31] Right.

[00:34:31] All right.

[00:34:31] I'll go stop the mask.

[00:34:32] I did.

[00:34:33] I was going into CarMax for a new car, up with 10 grand in my pocket, and they wanted me to wear the mask.

[00:34:39] I said no, and so they threw me out, and I said, cool, I'll go buy a car someplace else.

[00:34:43] Yep.

[00:34:44] I'm sure you found someone.

[00:34:45] I did.

[00:34:46] Yeah.

[00:34:46] Great vehicle, too.

[00:34:48] All right.

[00:34:49] So then the resistance, right, is going to be defined as insurrection, and insurrection will lead to martial law.

[00:34:54] And so once the state of martial law has been declared, resistors will be reclassified as domestic disturbers of the peace.

[00:35:01] That's how I see this happening.

[00:35:02] I wrote about this a long time ago when I wrote my little prequel to the Tyrant series called Axe of Defiance, which is now off the market because I rewrote.

[00:35:12] I kind of include, I wrote a segue from that book into book one, and so they're now one book.

[00:35:17] Oh, gotcha.

[00:35:17] Cool.

[00:35:18] But, yeah, so Tyrant, The Rise, this whole process is in there, of course, with fiction characters and stuff.

[00:35:26] They're good books.

[00:35:27] I highly recommend them, guys.

[00:35:29] Thanks.

[00:35:29] You're looking for more books, yeah.

[00:35:31] I don't read very many other fiction novels because I don't want to clutter up my brain, but that one is one I read, and it was good.

[00:35:40] You could pretty much know that any patriot or any conservative, anybody that is constitutional or pro-constitution will be labeled a domestic terrorist.

[00:35:55] It doesn't matter that you don't know how to make pipe bombs.

[00:35:58] You never blow anything up.

[00:35:59] You never shot anybody.

[00:36:00] You don't have any plans.

[00:36:01] No blueprints.

[00:36:02] You see what I'm saying?

[00:36:03] Just that ideology makes you dangerous.

[00:36:07] And Barack Obama started something a long time ago, and I honestly can't remember the name of it.

[00:36:11] I think I wrote it.

[00:36:13] I can't remember if I wrote it in Surviving Martial Law or Oath Takers.

[00:36:17] But basically, every veteran that's ever served is red-taped as a potential threat, as a potential disturber of the peace.

[00:36:29] It's not worded that way.

[00:36:31] Yeah, because they have the oath to the Constitution and not to the government.

[00:36:35] And we've also trained, and we've been places and seen things and been a part of things that your normal civilian hasn't done or been part of or witnessed.

[00:36:46] We have a very – in the words of Liam Neeson, in Taken, a very specific set of skills.

[00:36:52] Right.

[00:36:54] And that – to a Marxist or to somebody that's communist or socialist would be deemed as a threat because they don't want anybody to rebel against the rights.

[00:37:09] I would argue that Christians would as well because we take our orders from God and Jesus and not from the government.

[00:37:14] You will be recategorized.

[00:37:16] Yeah, you'll be categorized as the domestic disturber.

[00:37:19] Yeah.

[00:37:20] Yeah.

[00:37:21] All right, the executive orders.

[00:37:23] We are now to that slide.

[00:37:25] Bring them on.

[00:37:26] I'm good at these.

[00:37:27] I don't know the numbers, though.

[00:37:30] For sure.

[00:37:30] All right, so a lot of these were written by John F. Kennedy because, well, he was a Democrat.

[00:37:38] The best way to know how likely it has had to happen during martial law is to look into a few executive orders that were written by previous few presidents.

[00:37:47] A lot of these, like I said, were written by John F. Kennedy.

[00:37:49] Let's start with executive order that was written in 1962.

[00:37:54] Executive order 10997.

[00:37:57] Basically, this says that in the event of an emergency or national crisis – all these are in the event of a national crisis, which again is not defined – that the government can seize all electric power, all petroleum and gas, all solid fuels and minerals.

[00:38:13] Executive order 10998.

[00:38:16] Same thing, national crisis.

[00:38:17] The federal government can seize all food resources, farms, fertilizers, facilities.

[00:38:24] Okay?

[00:38:25] Executive order 10995.

[00:38:29] The executive or federal government, but it's pretty much the executive, can seize all telecommunications management, which is all anything, right?

[00:38:38] At the time there was no internet, but any kind of means of communication.

[00:38:45] Executive order 10999.

[00:38:49] The federal government in the next crisis can take and confiscate all transportation, the production and distribution of all materials.

[00:38:58] Of all materials?

[00:39:01] That's just kind of blanket out there?

[00:39:02] Yes.

[00:39:03] Blanket word.

[00:39:04] Absolutely.

[00:39:05] Back to my policy comment earlier I said, right?

[00:39:08] You want to leave it as big as possible.

[00:39:10] Yeah.

[00:39:10] Because a material could be anything that the government needs.

[00:39:13] Yeah.

[00:39:14] Wood, whatever, everything.

[00:39:16] Yep.

[00:39:18] Executive order 1100011000.

[00:39:23] Manpower management.

[00:39:24] This is about your story, the things that you write about.

[00:39:28] All right.

[00:39:28] What is that?

[00:39:29] It's a labor force.

[00:39:29] Manpower management is a sweet word for labor force.

[00:39:33] Yep.

[00:39:34] And had that system pretty much collaborated by too many people in too high of government positions for my liking.

[00:39:43] Yep.

[00:39:45] Executive order 11003.

[00:39:48] The federal government can seize all air travel, airports, and operating facilities.

[00:39:54] Executive order 11004.

[00:39:58] Housing and community facilities.

[00:40:01] So basically.

[00:40:02] No more Fourth Amendment, right?

[00:40:04] No more right to privacy because they can seize your home.

[00:40:09] It says housing.

[00:40:10] So anything that you live in.

[00:40:12] Yeah.

[00:40:12] It could be a trailer.

[00:40:13] It could be a house.

[00:40:13] It could be a.

[00:40:15] Motorhome.

[00:40:16] Yeah.

[00:40:17] Anything that you live in.

[00:40:18] It could be your camper.

[00:40:19] It's a.

[00:40:20] It's a.

[00:40:22] And community facilities.

[00:40:24] So an entire town.

[00:40:25] Right?

[00:40:25] Right.

[00:40:26] Yeah.

[00:40:26] The high schools.

[00:40:28] The rec centers.

[00:40:30] Anything like that.

[00:40:31] And that's all for John F. Kennedy.

[00:40:33] So let's.

[00:40:33] Let's look at now 1969.

[00:40:35] Richard Nixon.

[00:40:37] Executive order 11490.

[00:40:39] He's like, hey.

[00:40:40] Oh, yo.

[00:40:41] Nixon.

[00:40:41] I mean, Kennedy.

[00:40:42] You forgot something very important.

[00:40:43] That the federal government can seize.

[00:40:46] Or that the federal departments.

[00:40:48] Federal departments and agencies will control all U.S. citizens.

[00:40:53] Churches and businesses.

[00:40:57] So basically they send somebody into your local church.

[00:41:00] Tell the pastor to eat your bench.

[00:41:03] And then they will decide if you're open or if you're closed.

[00:41:07] Or what form of religious word you want to hear.

[00:41:10] They could put a, I forget what the military term, a chaplain.

[00:41:17] They could put a chaplain in there.

[00:41:18] Oh, fair.

[00:41:19] Right?

[00:41:19] Uh-huh.

[00:41:20] And do it that way.

[00:41:21] So there's one brand.

[00:41:23] Okay?

[00:41:28] Let's move on to my next slide because I'm going to come back around and talk about the big executive order here in a minute.

[00:41:32] But, you know, when this executive order of Obama's first came out, 13603, I'm like, I went Googling for it because it sounded so conspiracy theory to me that I almost didn't believe it.

[00:41:48] And at the time I didn't know how left-wing Snopes was.

[00:41:54] Oh, yeah.

[00:41:54] Fair.

[00:41:55] Fair.

[00:41:55] So I just want to tell everybody that's listening to this, if you go to Snopes and try to do a fact check, you might as well go to CNN, MSNBC, ABC.

[00:42:05] It turned out that there was like this guy's hookers running it.

[00:42:10] Well, they were in deep with the Clintons originally.

[00:42:13] Yeah.

[00:42:13] Friends of the Clintons, friends of Hillary.

[00:42:16] They, yeah, they're big donators to the Clinton Foundation.

[00:42:19] So they're in the machine.

[00:42:21] And so they're going to spin the wheel, the great agenda wheel, whatever it may be.

[00:42:27] So if you're expecting to go to Snopes and find facts, you might as well go to Babylon Bee and find a nonfiction story.

[00:42:37] Right.

[00:42:38] Okay.

[00:42:39] So, again, this is 2012.

[00:42:44] I went to look this up.

[00:42:45] And, of course, I went to Snopes.

[00:42:47] Snopes, did Obama write an executive order giving the president unprecedented power in times of national emergency?

[00:42:52] Easy question.

[00:42:54] Snopes says no.

[00:42:55] This is false.

[00:42:56] But I screenshotted this because I did a deeper search, as I always do.

[00:43:01] And I went to archives.gov and went directly to the executive order itself and started reading from that.

[00:43:05] But Snopes says President Obama issued an executive order giving the president – oh, sorry, this is a claim.

[00:43:11] President ordered issued an executive order giving the president unprecedented powers in times of national emergency.

[00:43:16] Again, Snopes, the left-wing biased political organization with an agenda, said it was false.

[00:43:22] Okay?

[00:43:22] But I went, like I said, right to the National Defense Resources and Preparedness Act in archives.gov and looked at the executive order myself.

[00:43:31] Like I told you earlier, it's a 10-page executive order.

[00:43:33] It's real.

[00:43:34] It exists.

[00:43:36] Executive order 1-3603.

[00:43:39] Why would they even want to be saying it's false?

[00:43:42] Like if it was such a good thing and, like, needed and necessary.

[00:43:45] Because, remember, from their vantage point, the consumer is stupid.

[00:43:51] Fair.

[00:43:52] Fair enough.

[00:43:52] Okay?

[00:43:53] Yeah.

[00:43:53] You will believe what we feed you.

[00:43:56] Yeah.

[00:43:57] And I'm telling you, I'm writing a book right now called The Program, and it's going to get me killed.

[00:44:03] I'm fully aware of that.

[00:44:05] I'm not saying that lightheartedly or as a joke.

[00:44:08] It's going to be good, though.

[00:44:10] I'm uncovering things that I think most people don't have the balls to print.

[00:44:14] And I don't even know if it's going to stay on Amazon, to tell you the truth.

[00:44:17] Right.

[00:44:19] Because I dig and I go to government websites.

[00:44:22] See, they're by law.

[00:44:23] They have to put this stuff up.

[00:44:24] And you've got Republicans and Democrats, so they're holding each other to their feet to the fire.

[00:44:27] This stuff is available to the public.

[00:44:30] You just got to know where to look for it.

[00:44:31] Right.

[00:44:32] Okay?

[00:44:33] Okay.

[00:44:34] So, Executive Order 13603 of the National Defense Resources Preparedness Act, the executive can seize, listen to this, all water, all human and animal food, all transportation, all energy, all construction materials, all health insurance or health resources, all farm equipment, all fertilizers, all fuels, and it goes on and on and on.

[00:44:58] So, basically, this one executive order consumes every single thing that Nixon and Kennedy wrote into one executive order, one executive fiat.

[00:45:10] Okay?

[00:45:11] So, who needs to remember all these other executive orders when this one is here?

[00:45:15] Yep.

[00:45:16] When the National Defense Resources Preparedness Act is handy, this pretty much encapsulates everything that every socialist or Democrat, I mean, that president before them wrote into executive law in the event of a national emergency.

[00:45:33] And, again, this 10-page executive order, nowhere does it define what a national emergency is.

[00:45:38] Right.

[00:45:39] Yeah.

[00:45:40] It's just like a trigger waiting there to be pulled.

[00:45:42] Now, you tell me, does this executive order give unprecedented power to the sitting president of the United States?

[00:45:48] I would think so.

[00:45:49] Most people with common sense would think that it would agree that it does.

[00:45:54] In fact, give them unprecedented power.

[00:45:56] Because never in the history of this country has an executive order existed that gave one person so much power over the people of the United States.

[00:46:04] Yeah.

[00:46:04] And it gets worse.

[00:46:05] It gets worse.

[00:46:09] So, that was March 16, 2012, the National Defense Resources Preparedness Act.

[00:46:13] Executive order, and I'm not going to keep saying 13603.

[00:46:16] On March 16, 2012, by the authority vested in me as president by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended, and Section 301 of Title III, United States Code, and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States.

[00:46:32] So, he's throwing his muscle in there.

[00:46:34] Right.

[00:46:35] As Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States, it is hereby ordered as follows.

[00:46:39] Part 1, Purpose Policy Implementation.

[00:46:41] Section 101, Purpose.

[00:46:43] This order delegates authorities and addresses national defense resource policies and programs under the Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended, the act.

[00:46:53] Section 102, and I get this all highlighted in my PDF file, yellow, for my PowerPoint as yellow.

[00:47:00] The United States must have an industrial and technological base capable of meeting national defense requirements and capable of contributing to the technological superiority of its national defense equipment in peacetime and in times of national emergency.

[00:47:15] The domestic, industrial, and technological base is the foundation for national defense preparedness.

[00:47:21] Now, if you – any history buffs out there know what happened in Nazi Germany when Hitler came into power and he turned his country into a war machine.

[00:47:32] Yep.

[00:47:32] Yep.

[00:47:33] That's what this is.

[00:47:35] And I've heard chatter too about we have to keep up with China's tech base.

[00:47:40] Like, China's going to outstep us if we don't start deploying this across the United States, all the surveillance tech, all this stuff.

[00:47:48] That's their excuse because even at peacetimes we have to stay ahead of it.

[00:47:54] Yes.

[00:47:55] Because on a drop of a dime there might be a national crisis and you don't want to be behind, you know, behind the opponents, so to speak.

[00:48:04] Right.

[00:48:05] And in this executive order it's basically saying that everything in this country belongs to the executive in an event of a national crisis.

[00:48:16] That's why I've been so careful about listening for that word.

[00:48:20] I'm like, it is one thing that does frighten me a little bit.

[00:48:26] Which word?

[00:48:28] The national crisis word.

[00:48:29] Yeah.

[00:48:30] Yeah.

[00:48:31] Yeah.

[00:48:32] Yeah.

[00:48:32] I've been waiting for it too because they're not going to say national emergency.

[00:48:36] I mean, it's going to be probably some buzzword.

[00:48:39] They might even – you know, national crisis.

[00:48:40] They might soften that up at some point even, you know, to make it sound like, you know, like it's not so bad.

[00:48:47] They might use the word safety and security for the reason safety and security.

[00:48:52] Safety and security, of course.

[00:48:53] Yes.

[00:48:54] People fall behind.

[00:48:55] Everybody wants to be safe and secure.

[00:48:57] Yeah.

[00:48:57] And so a lot of people will fall behind a president who's promising them safety and security or a president who's promising to protect them from national crisis.

[00:49:04] It just sounds better.

[00:49:05] Liberty dies.

[00:49:07] Right.

[00:49:08] It gets worse still yet.

[00:49:11] I just want to cover a couple more slides before I get there.

[00:49:14] Going back to Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution, it states the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.

[00:49:20] This is where the Congress said that Lincoln was imposing unconstitutional martial law because he suspended habeas corpus, right?

[00:49:27] Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution states the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, persons arrested to be brought before a judge, shall not be suspended unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.

[00:49:44] So the ground forces, because Lincoln's not on the ground, okay?

[00:49:50] Right.

[00:49:51] He's in the White House or he's wherever he's at, in the Capitol building, wherever he's at.

[00:49:56] The ground forces are saying it's not safe for civilian courts to be open.

[00:50:00] There's open war.

[00:50:02] Okay.

[00:50:03] Yep.

[00:50:04] Yeah.

[00:50:04] There's chaos on the streets, so we can't have this court.

[00:50:07] Gotcha.

[00:50:08] And that's where it would be again.

[00:50:09] That's where it is in any martial law.

[00:50:12] There's martial law because it's unsafe.

[00:50:16] There's no civilian courts because it's unsafe.

[00:50:19] Therefore, there's no habeas corpus because it's unsafe.

[00:50:24] Okay?

[00:50:26] So this section of the Constitution makes it legal to suspend civilian court proceedings during martial law.

[00:50:32] It must be noted that civilians employed by the military are sometimes subject to the UCMJ or the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

[00:50:38] That being said, the National Defense Resource Preparedness Executive Order authorizes the government to create labor forces.

[00:50:46] This goes back to the manpower management thing I spoke about earlier.

[00:50:51] So the Uniform Code of Military Justice, that's the law.

[00:50:55] I'm going to try to summarize here.

[00:50:56] That's the law that governs the military.

[00:50:58] The UCMJ defines military justice system and lists criminal offenses under military law.

[00:51:06] The law requires a president of the United States acting as commander-in-chief of the armed forces to write rules and regulations to implement military law.

[00:51:20] So the president's in control of all of the military code of conduct, the military laws.

[00:51:26] So it could just be switched up whenever.

[00:51:30] He's the shiznit.

[00:51:31] Mm-hmm.

[00:51:33] That's a king.

[00:51:34] Yes.

[00:51:35] And yes, I'm going to go into more depth here.

[00:51:38] The Uniform Code of Military Justice, again, this UCMJ 64 statute 109-10 U.S. Code Chapter 47, is the foundation of military law in the United States.

[00:51:49] UCMJ applies to all members of the Uniformed Services of the United States.

[00:51:54] Okay?

[00:51:55] And trust me, it's severe.

[00:52:00] And I'm going to get back to some of that stuff here.

[00:52:02] But I want to first talk about what to expect during martial law.

[00:52:05] Okay.

[00:52:06] I got kind of a balance to my slides as I move through things.

[00:52:10] What to expect?

[00:52:11] So the suspension of many rights, such as habeas corpus, right?

[00:52:15] Your Sixth Amendment right, you know?

[00:52:16] You can expect that right to be gone bye-bye.

[00:52:20] Unreasonable searches and seizures, right?

[00:52:21] Your Fourth Amendment right to privacy.

[00:52:23] Mm-hmm.

[00:52:24] Bye-bye.

[00:52:25] Your freedom of association.

[00:52:27] Your First Amendment.

[00:52:29] Basic human right.

[00:52:30] Bye-bye.

[00:52:31] Freedom of movement and curfews.

[00:52:33] That's a basic human right.

[00:52:35] Bye-bye.

[00:52:37] Confiscation of firearms, right?

[00:52:38] Your Second Amendment.

[00:52:40] Removal from property.

[00:52:41] That's a Fourth Amendment violation.

[00:52:43] You have a right to be on your property, a right to privacy.

[00:52:45] Right.

[00:52:46] Gone.

[00:52:47] Confiscation of food and water supplies.

[00:52:49] Again, a basic human right.

[00:52:52] Yeah.

[00:52:53] Detainment.

[00:52:54] Possibly indefinite.

[00:52:56] Again, that's kind of the same thing as the habeas corpus,

[00:52:59] the suspension of habeas corpus.

[00:53:01] But life under UCMJ.

[00:53:03] Okay.

[00:53:03] The Uniform Code of Military Justice applies to all persons in the military

[00:53:06] and some civilian personnel employed by the military.

[00:53:09] So if there's civilian workforces or a labor force or manpower management,

[00:53:15] if you're employed by the government, right,

[00:53:20] you fall under the Uniform Code of Military Justice in the case of martial rule.

[00:53:26] You see?

[00:53:27] Yes.

[00:53:27] Yes.

[00:53:28] Okay.

[00:53:28] I just want to make sure that was clear,

[00:53:30] that anybody that – we're talking about a nationwide event,

[00:53:35] a state of crisis, we've got martial law,

[00:53:37] the Uniform Code of Military Justice,

[00:53:38] now the law of the land, and you're employed.

[00:53:41] Those laws apply to you.

[00:53:42] There's no civilian courts.

[00:53:44] They apply to you.

[00:53:46] The military only knows one law and answers only to one code,

[00:53:50] and that is the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

[00:53:52] Ideally, the military authority would enforce civilian laws,

[00:53:57] but realistically, it will enforce military justice because of the suspension of habeas corpus.

[00:54:04] If civilian courts are suspended, you could be indefinitely detained or confined.

[00:54:10] Civilian workforces will be governed by the UCMJ.

[00:54:12] Life under the Uniform Code of Military Justice would be difficult for any person who's never served in the military,

[00:54:18] and they have no knowledge of what it's like to be in the military.

[00:54:19] The rules are very strict, and the punishments are very, very steep.

[00:54:27] I wouldn't do well.

[00:54:31] Well, no, and that's not an insult.

[00:54:33] It's a good thing because you are – you bleed red, white, and blue.

[00:54:38] Yeah.

[00:54:38] You're an American, and you're rebellious by nature, and you should be.

[00:54:42] I mean, that's how we are as a people.

[00:54:44] Right.

[00:54:45] But let's look at some things here.

[00:54:47] Right now we have, for example, open rebellion against authorities.

[00:54:50] Okay, capital punishment crimes.

[00:54:52] These are capital punishment crimes and crimes of martial law.

[00:54:55] Open rebellion, the death penalty.

[00:54:59] Actions of speech that incite rebellion, the death penalty.

[00:55:03] Aiding the enemy, who's the enemy, right?

[00:55:06] Yeah.

[00:55:07] The death penalty.

[00:55:09] Espionage, spying, you know.

[00:55:11] Yep.

[00:55:12] Giving over information.

[00:55:14] Yes.

[00:55:15] The death penalty.

[00:55:17] All these things are subjective points of view.

[00:55:19] That sounds like very much like Nazi Germany.

[00:55:22] Yes.

[00:55:23] With all the Gestapo and all the, you know, the people that were whispering on their neighbors

[00:55:27] and tattling and snitching and all this other stuff that's going on.

[00:55:31] Yeah.

[00:55:31] I'm going to get more into that in a little bit.

[00:55:34] Rebellion against who?

[00:55:35] Is rebellion in defense of liberty?

[00:55:37] Who's the enemy?

[00:55:39] Is asking questions espionage?

[00:55:41] You see what I'm saying?

[00:55:42] Yeah.

[00:55:43] Yeah.

[00:55:43] These are all points of view.

[00:55:45] And they could all be misconstrued by whoever the authority is.

[00:55:49] Yeah.

[00:55:49] Just shut your mouth and go about your business like you're living in North Korea or something.

[00:55:54] Yep.

[00:55:55] Right.

[00:55:56] The Republic.

[00:55:57] Right.

[00:55:58] Sure.

[00:55:58] Yeah.

[00:55:59] The Republic of North Korea.

[00:56:00] Yeah.

[00:56:02] All right.

[00:56:02] FEMA.

[00:56:03] You know, I used to think that FEMA was a fairy tale a long time ago.

[00:56:07] And lo and behold, it's not a FEMA.

[00:56:08] Because you hear all these fairy tales about FEMA, you know.

[00:56:11] FEMA is a loosely organized agency.

[00:56:14] It's garbage.

[00:56:15] It's crap, as we found out here recently with Hurricane Helene.

[00:56:20] They've actually been, they have been on the ground, as we found out from some of our contacts in North Carolina.

[00:56:25] And they are, in fact, collecting contributions.

[00:56:28] But they are, in fact, not distributing the contributions.

[00:56:31] At all.

[00:56:32] They're locking them up.

[00:56:33] Yeah.

[00:56:34] Okay.

[00:56:35] And I have dug up and found out why in my research in writing the program, why this is so.

[00:56:43] And I found in their, I got to dig up my phone here, their goal.

[00:56:49] If you go to their website, you can actually dig it up and look for yourself.

[00:56:53] But they have on there their goal.

[00:56:56] Let me find it here.

[00:56:57] I ain't too far away.

[00:57:04] Anyway, I'm going to summarize it if I can't find it here.

[00:57:08] They basically say, they basically say, oh, here it is.

[00:57:10] Here it is.

[00:57:11] They basically say, it says goal number one, to instill equity as a foundation of emergency management.

[00:57:16] Now, DEI has embedded itself.

[00:57:19] Oh, my gosh.

[00:57:21] In emergency management situations.

[00:57:24] So.

[00:57:25] I heard that was coming because freaking Kamala always talks equity, not equality.

[00:57:33] Equity, not equality.

[00:57:35] Okay.

[00:57:35] Yes.

[00:57:36] And there's a difference.

[00:57:37] Here's equality.

[00:57:37] Right.

[00:57:38] You're, you're what?

[00:57:39] I'm not making fun of your height.

[00:57:40] What are you?

[00:57:40] Five foot.

[00:57:41] Five foot.

[00:57:42] You're five foot.

[00:57:43] Gosh, that's short.

[00:57:44] Five, six, five.

[00:57:46] Here's, here's, here's equality.

[00:57:48] Here's equality.

[00:57:49] You get a box so you can see higher and I get a box so I can see higher.

[00:57:54] We each got a box.

[00:57:56] That's fair, right?

[00:57:57] Right.

[00:57:57] Right.

[00:57:58] Right.

[00:57:58] That's equal.

[00:57:59] You got a box.

[00:57:59] I got a box.

[00:58:01] In her world.

[00:58:04] You get three boxes so that you're as tall as me.

[00:58:09] Right.

[00:58:10] That's her world.

[00:58:12] So in looking at this, goal number one, instill equity as a foundation of emergency management.

[00:58:18] What is FEMA doing collecting all these donations but not distributing the donations to the people in the ground in North Carolina that need them?

[00:58:26] They're distributing them to the illegals.

[00:58:28] Thank you.

[00:58:29] Yep.

[00:58:30] I believe that.

[00:58:31] Do I have evidence of that?

[00:58:32] I do not.

[00:58:33] No.

[00:58:33] But all last year.

[00:58:35] But they're all in control.

[00:58:35] The same person's in control of both of them.

[00:58:38] All last year.

[00:58:40] All last year.

[00:58:42] FEMA funds.

[00:58:43] DHS gets like 20 plus billion dollars a year.

[00:58:48] And a lot of that gets allocated to FEMA for emergencys.

[00:58:51] And FEMA all last year.

[00:58:53] And I have, I have audio proof of this.

[00:58:55] That was, I had on my last podcast when me and Ryan was talking about this with Corrine, Sean Pierre.

[00:59:03] All last year they were giving away money to illegal immigrants.

[00:59:07] The state agencies and state officials and elected officials.

[00:59:11] All they had to do was apply for it and ask for it.

[00:59:13] It was being given to them.

[00:59:14] Yep.

[00:59:14] Also, they were given phones.

[00:59:16] They were given hotel rooms.

[00:59:17] They're giving free food and all this, these debit cards, all this other stuff.

[00:59:20] That's all coming out of FEMA funds.

[00:59:21] Yeah, $1,200 a month or something.

[00:59:23] Like our vets were getting like 50.

[00:59:26] You see?

[00:59:27] And now the people in North Carolina are, they're, they're being allotted at $750 per household.

[00:59:32] If they apply for it and maybe they'll get it, maybe they won't.

[00:59:34] Then they have to pay it back.

[00:59:35] Yeah.

[00:59:36] And I haven't heard of anybody who's actually gotten it successfully at this point.

[00:59:42] No, because what I've heard is that they're actually hanging up on them when people call.

[00:59:49] So FEMA is garbage.

[00:59:51] Don't trust in FEMA.

[00:59:53] You saw how they mismanaged Katrina.

[00:59:55] Yep.

[00:59:57] And that's because it's built on the House of Cards.

[01:00:00] You got, they, they rely on systems like the National Emergency Management System, the Incident

[01:00:04] Command System, National Qualification System, and Incident Resource Inventory Systems.

[01:00:09] They're the ones in conjunction with the president who runs it when all this stuff goes down,

[01:00:14] when they call in these executive orders.

[01:00:16] It's going to get worse.

[01:00:17] Hang on a second.

[01:00:18] Oh my gosh.

[01:00:18] Yes, it gets worse.

[01:00:20] Oh my gosh.

[01:00:21] So in order for FEMA to operate, it depends, it depends on state, county, and municipal cooperation

[01:00:26] to function effectively.

[01:00:29] That's why when Katrina happened, and this, this, this hurricane is far worse than Katrina.

[01:00:34] Yeah.

[01:00:34] All these, the communication lines are down.

[01:00:37] How do you communicate?

[01:00:38] Cell lines are down.

[01:00:39] How do you communicate?

[01:00:40] The internet's down.

[01:00:41] How do you communicate?

[01:00:43] Okay.

[01:00:44] There cannot be, there cannot be an effective cooperation when there's no means of communication.

[01:00:51] Right.

[01:00:52] And that's what we ran into with Katrina.

[01:00:54] Not only that, but when you got so many hands in the, in the cookie jar, nobody knows who's

[01:01:01] doing what.

[01:01:02] Yeah.

[01:01:02] They sit and argue about it while towns burn down.

[01:01:04] I've watched it happen from an insurance point of view.

[01:01:07] The bureaucracy and the red tape in government.

[01:01:10] Yeah.

[01:01:10] And I've served on every level.

[01:01:11] I've served, I didn't tell, I didn't tell your listeners, but I was, I was a sheriff's deputy

[01:01:14] too for a couple of years.

[01:01:15] So I was a municipal police officer, a sheriff's deputy on the county level, a state employee

[01:01:19] on the state level, and a federal employee as a, in the military.

[01:01:22] I've worked every level of government and I can tell you that this is like this across

[01:01:27] the board.

[01:01:30] These, these, there's a lot of confusion, a lot of hands in the cookie jar and no, and

[01:01:34] there's always groups of people say, well, what are we doing?

[01:01:37] Right.

[01:01:37] What's the next play?

[01:01:39] And nobody has the answer because nobody wants to be held accountable.

[01:01:42] So there's no decision making, no decision making.

[01:01:47] All right.

[01:01:48] It lacks, it also lacks financial backing as we saw here with North Carolina, where did

[01:01:52] their FEMA funding go?

[01:01:54] Yeah.

[01:01:55] Hold on.

[01:01:56] To Ukraine?

[01:01:58] Well, that was last year.

[01:02:00] Well, to the, to the illegal immigrants.

[01:02:02] I don't know.

[01:02:02] I think it's a separate fund going to United Kingdom or to, uh, to Ukraine.

[01:02:05] To Ukraine.

[01:02:06] Let me tell you something else I recently dug up.

[01:02:08] Kamala Harris has been touting recently, like within the last couple of weeks, that the

[01:02:24] Republicans passed it, uh-huh.

[01:02:25] The House Republicans passed it, 219 yeas out of 237 or something, 234 seats.

[01:02:33] It passed overwhelmingly in the House back in June.

[01:02:38] Uh-huh.

[01:02:40] All right.

[01:02:40] All right.

[01:02:41] Now we're talking about, we're talking about fiscal year 2025.

[01:02:44] So this went into effect or would have gone into effect on October 1st.

[01:02:48] The reason why it hasn't is because who's in charge of the Senate?

[01:02:52] The Democrats right now.

[01:02:54] The Democrats are sitting on $22 billion.

[01:02:57] Oh my gosh.

[01:02:58] And who is the chairperson of the Senate?

[01:03:04] The vice president of the United States.

[01:03:06] Uh, Kamala.

[01:03:08] Kamala Harris.

[01:03:09] Oh, wow.

[01:03:11] It gets deeper.

[01:03:13] Her husband, Doug Emhoff.

[01:03:16] Yep.

[01:03:18] Has huge shares in BlackRock.

[01:03:21] BlackRock.

[01:03:22] Mm-hmm.

[01:03:22] Who has, who owns quite a bit of, uh, uh, Piedmont lithium.

[01:03:30] Yes.

[01:03:30] They mine lithium.

[01:03:32] Which is disgusting.

[01:03:33] Everybody, if you don't know what lithium mining looks like, you better go check it out.

[01:03:37] It is gross.

[01:03:38] It's, it's, it's a metallic, it looks almost like lead.

[01:03:43] Yeah.

[01:03:43] And, and.

[01:03:44] The leech fields, like miles and miles of leech fields of this disgusting process going on.

[01:03:51] And, and that area in North Carolina is one of the richest deposits of lithium in the world.

[01:03:56] And what do we need that for?

[01:03:58] Green energy.

[01:04:00] Right.

[01:04:00] And I've heard that, uh, BlackRock already purchased one of the mountains that is affected.

[01:04:07] Yes.

[01:04:08] Uh, um.

[01:04:09] I think it's Black Mountain.

[01:04:10] King, King, King Mountain.

[01:04:11] King Mountain, I think it's.

[01:04:12] Yeah.

[01:04:12] I can't remember those.

[01:04:13] It's the mining company anyway.

[01:04:15] But also there's quartz under there.

[01:04:16] Yeah.

[01:04:17] Which is another deal.

[01:04:18] Which is needed for the semiconductors.

[01:04:20] It's also needed for, for artificial intelligence, uh, uh, AI chips.

[01:04:25] Yep.

[01:04:26] Which again, we're going now.

[01:04:28] I don't want to get too much off.

[01:04:29] Yeah.

[01:04:29] Fair, fair enough.

[01:04:30] We're in a typical hat zone.

[01:04:31] But.

[01:04:32] Well.

[01:04:32] We're in the back of the book of the, in the revolution, in the revolution.

[01:04:36] I'm sorry.

[01:04:36] The book of revelation chapter, like in the back of the book stuff.

[01:04:39] Yeah.

[01:04:40] Yeah.

[01:04:40] All right.

[01:04:41] All right.

[01:04:41] Back on what we're talking about.

[01:04:43] FEMA.

[01:04:43] Okay.

[01:04:44] FEMA lacks financial backing.

[01:04:45] You know, you can see that it's not even responsible and they're, they're always taking from Peter to pay Paul kind of a thing with FEMA.

[01:04:52] Because how do you know, how do you predict when, when it brings us going to happen?

[01:04:56] You can't.

[01:04:57] And anybody that's working.

[01:04:58] Yeah.

[01:04:59] Yeah.

[01:04:59] Yeah.

[01:04:59] Well, if you don't, here's the thing with also with government.

[01:05:01] If you don't spend your funds in that fiscal year, you don't get the same funds in the next fiscal year.

[01:05:06] Right.

[01:05:07] Right.

[01:05:08] Right.

[01:05:08] So by giving it all away to legal immigrants, they can say, look, we spent all $20 billion.

[01:05:13] Okay.

[01:05:14] Here's the other $20 billion for the next fiscal year.

[01:05:16] Oh, that is so true.

[01:05:19] That's how, that's how, that's how budget works in the government.

[01:05:23] Okay.

[01:05:24] So in the event of martial law scenario, it's likely that the federal government will move to make leadership and organizational changes necessary to operate on a wide scale basis.

[01:05:32] As it simply is, FEMA lacks any kind of structure and it simply cannot work.

[01:05:39] So FEMA needs also, it needs what needs security forces.

[01:05:43] Okay.

[01:05:45] In the event of a martial law on a national level, the federal government would, would, would have to rely heavily on foreign assistance.

[01:05:53] We don't have our, we sit, FEMA don't have its own military force.

[01:05:56] Right.

[01:05:57] Right.

[01:05:57] There's not enough United States military police and sheriff's deputy personnel in all the United States to cover all the major cities, let alone the rural areas of America.

[01:06:10] So in the event of, let's say an economic collapse, police officers and sheriff deputies, right.

[01:06:16] Who's not getting paid by the government, they're going to go home.

[01:06:18] Right.

[01:06:19] They're going to go beat their families because nobody wants to work for free.

[01:06:23] And many of the U S personnel would go AWOL.

[01:06:27] And if asked to go against your fellow citizens, you know, I, I know people have bills to pay and stuff like that, but I would pray that most of them would be very opposed to doing such things.

[01:06:41] Here's something that, that many, many of your listeners may know or may not know.

[01:06:45] Whenever, whenever there's a new president is elected, that president generally purges the high ranking military officers in every branch.

[01:06:57] And they appoint the ones that they want in that position.

[01:07:02] Right.

[01:07:03] Okay.

[01:07:04] So if you have a conservative president, you're going to have a conservative military general.

[01:07:08] If you have a liberal president, you're going to have a liberal military general.

[01:07:12] Now they're far a few in between, you know, but at the minimum, they're going to have someone that's a yes, sir guy.

[01:07:18] Okay.

[01:07:19] Right.

[01:07:20] So the orders will almost certainly come from the top and roll down.

[01:07:24] However, when you start getting into the high ranking enlisted ranks, that's where you're going to start running into the problems.

[01:07:33] Because you're going to have your gunnery sergeants, your master sergeants, your first sergeants.

[01:07:36] I mean, you're talking about guys with years of military service who are very red blooded, very patriotic and very, I love, I love the military.

[01:07:45] I love, I love my country and I love the constitution.

[01:07:47] I swore an oath to it.

[01:07:48] It's an oath that never ends kind of a thing.

[01:07:51] There will be rifts.

[01:07:53] There's going to be rifts amongst the, in the military.

[01:07:58] This happens in my tyrant series, not to give away any spoilers, but you have rifts with force on force kind of a thing.

[01:08:05] Right.

[01:08:05] And one of my buddies was in private, well, I've known a couple of gentlemen in the private defense contracting.

[01:08:14] And he was telling me that, you know, the U.S. military is the biggest, China's military is second, and then our private defense contracting force is actually like the third biggest military force.

[01:08:26] And that's the kind of stuff that we're going to need to maintain martial law.

[01:08:33] Because as you look at this, like the United States active duty, our military has 2,063,451.

[01:08:42] That's the Army, Navy, and Marines and Air Force.

[01:08:45] Okay.

[01:08:47] Law enforcement, municipal and sheriff has 708,081.

[01:08:52] That's a fluid kind of a number.

[01:08:54] All these numbers are kind of fluid, right?

[01:08:56] But they're going to be close.

[01:08:58] That brings the total up to 2,771,532.

[01:09:02] That's if all the police officers, all the municipal, all the sheriffs pitch in.

[01:09:05] There's no rifts.

[01:09:06] All the military jumps in on board with this.

[01:09:08] They're all helping out.

[01:09:09] Right.

[01:09:10] That's unlikely.

[01:09:11] We're going to talk about the worst case scenario here, okay?

[01:09:13] Okay.

[01:09:14] Everybody's a yes, sir.

[01:09:15] Everybody's on board.

[01:09:16] Yeah.

[01:09:17] Yes.

[01:09:18] The United States land mass is 3,531,905 square miles.

[01:09:23] What's that mean?

[01:09:24] When you do the math, that means that less than one person will be covering one square mile of land mass.

[01:09:29] Now, when you start looking at the foothills of Georgia, the mountains of North Carolina, the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Smoky Mountains in Tennessee, one person cannot cover all that.

[01:09:51] Hell, they couldn't cover it in rural southern Illinois.

[01:09:54] Yep.

[01:09:56] Do you think they would use technology as a filler, drones, all that kind of stuff?

[01:10:01] But, I mean, you think.

[01:10:03] Yeah, if it's available.

[01:10:04] Depends on what kind of crisis you have, right?

[01:10:06] Mm-hmm.

[01:10:07] You know, an EMP attack, for example, you're not going to have anything like that.

[01:10:11] Yeah.

[01:10:12] Yeah.

[01:10:12] CME.

[01:10:13] Yep.

[01:10:14] Yeah.

[01:10:14] Mass coronal ejection.

[01:10:16] Yeah.

[01:10:16] Coronal mass ejection.

[01:10:17] Yep.

[01:10:17] So, in order for FEMA to fully function on a national level during a time of national crisis, it needs to have control over all government agencies.

[01:10:25] Remember that.

[01:10:31] It needs to run all of the government.

[01:10:34] Where do I get that, and why do I get that?

[01:10:36] Well, because Bill Clinton wrote an executive order, 13010, July 15, 1996.

[01:10:45] FEMA takes control of all government agencies.

[01:10:51] This loose-knit, disorganized, doesn't-know-which-end-is-up agency just takes the control of everything.

[01:11:00] Yep.

[01:11:01] Remember that this executive order was written back when it was relatively newer, and, you know, people have high hopes for something like this.

[01:11:13] They want to see it.

[01:11:14] I want to see, you know, I want to see stuff like this succeed.

[01:11:17] Always the best intentions.

[01:11:19] The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

[01:11:22] Yes.

[01:11:23] But here's the problem.

[01:11:24] You know, our government has been doing the-all these agencies have been doing the inverse.

[01:11:28] Right.

[01:11:29] Of everything that these agencies are designed to do.

[01:11:31] They're doing the absolute opposite of what they were designed to do.

[01:11:36] And that, to me, is scary.

[01:11:38] Yeah.

[01:11:41] More so than I could imagine.

[01:11:43] Because it's allowing-I call it the filth, the grime.

[01:11:47] It's allowing that darkness and destruction to drip all over everything.

[01:11:53] Think about it.

[01:11:54] FEMA, FEMA's-they're inflaming disasters by not helping, by not distributing the goods that are being donated.

[01:12:02] The Department of Defense is issuing stand-down orders to most of the people that are capable and well-equipped that's coming there to help their citizens.

[01:12:09] But they're being allowed to needlessly die in the mountains.

[01:12:11] Even going off of equity, it's not like any of these people were like-it's not like it was Mar-a-Lago sitting up there or anything.

[01:12:19] These are salt-of-the-earth people who just had their place and by blood, sweat, and tears of their own.

[01:12:27] And so if you're looking at redistribution of equity, they're definitely on the list to receive rather than be screwed over by their own government.

[01:12:38] Well, in Kamala Harris's eyes of equity, they're at least American citizens, and they have more than the people that are coming in with nothing.

[01:12:48] Fair.

[01:12:49] Just trying to see this.

[01:12:50] I don't believe that way she does.

[01:12:51] I'm just saying that's how she thinks.

[01:12:53] That's how she thinks of it, right.

[01:12:54] The FDA authorizes poisons, you know, and they're banning medicines.

[01:12:58] You know, what happened when COVID came out?

[01:12:59] They took out-they got rid of ivervectin.

[01:13:01] Everything that helped with COVID, they took it off the shelf.

[01:13:04] The CDC causes diseases, and they spread and distribute misinformation, homeland securities, and facilitating invasions.

[01:13:11] The FBI instigates insurrection and hides evidence.

[01:13:14] I mean, you see what I'm saying?

[01:13:15] It's the inverse in every single one of these agencies.

[01:13:18] Top-down, yeah, it's upside-down.

[01:13:20] Yep.

[01:13:23] All right, let me see here.

[01:13:24] So since martial law is about control, we must learn to make that system work for us, right?

[01:13:32] So it's a good idea to have an alternate – and we've talked about this kind of stuff before on older podcasts that we've done before.

[01:13:41] You've talked to me before about, like, patrols and stuff like that.

[01:13:44] You know, in a martial law situation, it's a good idea to have an alternate location for food caches, for example.

[01:13:49] Yep.

[01:13:50] Something away from the home.

[01:13:52] Don't blaze a footpath from your home to your supply cache, right?

[01:13:57] Only acquire food from off-site locations when necessary.

[01:14:01] Right.

[01:14:03] Don't go out – in other words, if you've got a nice supply of food somewhere that's off-site, don't go there every single day.

[01:14:09] Yeah.

[01:14:10] All you're doing is opening up – first of all, you're making a trail, right?

[01:14:15] You're making a path that's going to be visible, and it's going to be seen.

[01:14:20] Secondly, you're creating – you're expanding the possibility for reliability of possibly being caught.

[01:14:28] Right.

[01:14:29] The fewer times you go out, the least likely you're going to get caught.

[01:14:35] And you better be in those food lines that are going on in town.

[01:14:40] Yes.

[01:14:40] Because if they see you're not in that line, then why are you not in that line?

[01:14:43] Why aren't you there?

[01:14:44] Does he or she have – do they have food?

[01:14:47] What are they hiding?

[01:14:48] Right.

[01:14:49] Yeah.

[01:14:51] Gardens are beneficial, right?

[01:14:52] So however you should expect the authorities to indulge themselves.

[01:14:55] So if some foot patrol comes walking by, you can expect that they're going to be digging in your gardens.

[01:15:01] Fair enough.

[01:15:02] Keeping a small garden on your property would be – it's like low suspicion, okay?

[01:15:07] If there's absolutely no food to be found in your home or on your property, they're going to know that you're concealing it somewhere.

[01:15:14] Fair.

[01:15:14] Likewise, things like rabbits, chickens, other things that are multipurpose and other small food sources should be maintained in two separate locations, one on hand and one off property.

[01:15:25] Change up the structure design, the gardens that you produce.

[01:15:28] Remember to keep the on-hand supply small to minimize a loss in case it's confiscated.

[01:15:35] You don't want to put all your eggs in one basket because they're going to take your entire basket.

[01:15:40] Right.

[01:15:41] They're already – they're already talking about, you know, oh, we don't want you to have gardens.

[01:15:46] It's bad for the environment.

[01:15:48] So, you know, you can't grow your own food.

[01:15:50] We can't have hoarders.

[01:15:51] We're going to have to – they're already regulating stuff off, you know.

[01:15:56] Crazy, right?

[01:15:56] Yeah.

[01:15:59] Possession of firearms and ammunition would be – would raise a lot of suspicion.

[01:16:04] An off-site location where firearms can be concealed is ideal.

[01:16:07] If you're like me, you're going to want to – you know, you're going to be incapable of not having a weapon or anything.

[01:16:13] I'm like, uh-huh, that's not happening.

[01:16:16] Right.

[01:16:16] So you've got to be – you've got to have a very good hiding spot.

[01:16:19] You've got to think outside the box and try not to limit your imagination.

[01:16:23] Always suspect that your weapon's hiding spot isn't good enough and it's going to be discovered.

[01:16:29] This will drive you to be more creative with where you – where you hide it.

[01:16:36] In one of my stories, I want to say it was – it used to be Acts of Defiance, which is now in book one of the Tyrant series, The Rise.

[01:16:44] One of my characters had a pistol vacuum sealed and in a fish aquarium buried under the rock.

[01:16:51] Yeah.

[01:16:54] No one's going to think that you've got a weapon in water.

[01:16:57] That's a fool's idea.

[01:16:59] Yeah.

[01:17:01] And here's what you were talking about earlier.

[01:17:03] You know, we were talking about talking to people.

[01:17:05] Information will be a form of currency.

[01:17:08] How?

[01:17:09] Well, the authority is going to want information.

[01:17:11] It's for this reason you must not talk to anyone you do not trust 1,000%.

[01:17:15] Yeah.

[01:17:16] Yeah.

[01:17:17] Sharing information with your neighbors about your hiding spots could come back to haunt you.

[01:17:22] Right?

[01:17:23] Because they also want to benefit and be left alone.

[01:17:28] So snitching on you is going to take the attention off them.

[01:17:32] And if they run into some kind of process, some kind of problems, right, with the authority to get out of it, they could offer information.

[01:17:40] Information will be a form of currency.

[01:17:43] Well, Sarah Hathaway's got this.

[01:17:46] Right.

[01:17:46] All right.

[01:17:47] Get out of my face.

[01:17:48] They're going to go get the bigger fish.

[01:17:52] So assuming the authority figures are good at detecting dishonesty, knowledge is power, but only if you know how to use it.

[01:18:04] Survival groups.

[01:18:05] We've talked a lot about survival groups in the past on your show.

[01:18:07] They're going to try to get an early foothold, prepare yourself to defend against looters.

[01:18:13] Not all survivors, survival groups are bad.

[01:18:16] Some of them will be.

[01:18:19] But they're all made up of people.

[01:18:20] And people are like any other group.

[01:18:24] There's going to be 10%, right?

[01:18:26] They're just cockroaches.

[01:18:28] Yep.

[01:18:28] And they're fickle.

[01:18:30] Yeah.

[01:18:30] Right.

[01:18:31] So just don't assume this is a good group.

[01:18:33] Somebody in that group is bad.

[01:18:34] Yep.

[01:18:35] I guarantee it.

[01:18:36] They're just doing what they're doing to stay alive.

[01:18:39] But the moment they can take advantage of something, they will.

[01:18:42] Do what you're told when the authority tells you to do it.

[01:18:46] Some exceptions apply, of course.

[01:18:48] You'll know what happens.

[01:18:49] I can't sit here and play what-if games all night long.

[01:18:51] Yeah, all night long.

[01:18:52] Fair enough.

[01:18:54] But trust nobody and remain cautiously optimistic.

[01:18:58] That will be so hard for me to do what you're told when you're told.

[01:19:03] Yes, but you've got to remember that this can't last forever.

[01:19:08] Fair.

[01:19:09] You know, no martial law.

[01:19:11] Neither one of the martial laws.

[01:19:13] One martial law in the United States on American citizens.

[01:19:18] And the second one, you know, against non-citizens being, you know, a non-state Hawaii.

[01:19:23] So twice this has happened in our country.

[01:19:25] They didn't last forever.

[01:19:27] Just endure it for as long as you can and try to get through it.

[01:19:32] Back to my bullet points.

[01:19:34] Try to store medical supplies in a cool, dry place.

[01:19:36] Avoid temperature extremes.

[01:19:38] But hiding your medicines.

[01:19:40] Yeah.

[01:19:40] Too cold, too hot.

[01:19:42] Either way, it'll ruin your medicines.

[01:19:44] So the question comes up, well, do I resist or do I submit?

[01:19:47] Again, we can't play what-ifs all day long, but the answer depends on the authority for us.

[01:19:54] Right?

[01:19:54] So if one person, if one authority figure is by himself and he comes to your property,

[01:20:00] knocks on your door and demands something of you, what are you going to do?

[01:20:04] Are you going to comply?

[01:20:05] Well, it depends on what he's asking.

[01:20:07] Well, if you decide not to comply and you look out the door and he's by himself and you take him out

[01:20:11] and you bury his body somewhere, what have you done?

[01:20:15] Who sent him there?

[01:20:16] Attracted a larger force.

[01:20:18] Exactly.

[01:20:19] That's exactly what I told the guys at Prepper Camp.

[01:20:21] If you take out this one soldier, somebody sent him to you.

[01:20:24] Like no military person is rogue.

[01:20:26] Nobody just goes out on their own.

[01:20:28] Right.

[01:20:29] They're sent.

[01:20:30] They all have marching orders.

[01:20:31] They know where Sergeant Hogan's going, okay, because they sent him there.

[01:20:38] They sent him to that landowner's property over there, the Hathaway residence.

[01:20:44] And now he hasn't returned.

[01:20:47] And so more people are going to come.

[01:20:49] And now you've got a problem.

[01:20:53] Stockpile bartering goods that serve dual purposes.

[01:20:56] We're talking about multipurpose things, things like alcohol.

[01:20:58] You can drink alcohol.

[01:21:00] You can barter alcohol.

[01:21:01] You can use it as disinfectant.

[01:21:02] It burns.

[01:21:03] Yep.

[01:21:04] Multipurpose stuff.

[01:21:07] Other things that are high value, things that maybe you can barter that are not multipurpose.

[01:21:12] Toilet paper.

[01:21:13] Oh, my gosh.

[01:21:14] I can't believe that one.

[01:21:15] Toilet paper burns.

[01:21:16] Yep.

[01:21:17] You just wipe your butt.

[01:21:20] Inmates use toilet paper.

[01:21:21] They water it up really, really tight.

[01:21:23] Don't even go in there.

[01:21:25] No, I'm saying it lights for a long time.

[01:21:26] Oh, yeah, fair.

[01:21:27] If you can dip it in petroleum, that will burn for a very long time.

[01:21:33] Bullets.

[01:21:34] You can shoot them, and you can open them up and pour the gunpowder out and use it to start a fire.

[01:21:41] Multipurpose stuff, right?

[01:21:43] But make sure all this stuff is hidden somewhere off site.

[01:21:46] Right.

[01:21:50] So, some of the things that the government's been doing in the past, things that you might remember,

[01:21:55] you remember when the Bureau of Land Management came down on Clark County, Nevada in 2014?

[01:22:00] Yes.

[01:22:01] Yes, yes, yes.

[01:22:02] With their machine guns.

[01:22:03] Uh-huh.

[01:22:04] And dude was shot in cold blood.

[01:22:07] That was...

[01:22:08] Oh, that was up north.

[01:22:09] That was...

[01:22:10] Yeah, that was Finnecombe.

[01:22:12] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

[01:22:13] You're right.

[01:22:13] That was BLM land argument.

[01:22:15] I'm sorry.

[01:22:15] Yeah.

[01:22:16] I'm getting confused.

[01:22:17] Yep.

[01:22:18] Still.

[01:22:19] In this particular case, so in the Bureau of Land Management issue, you know, I want

[01:22:23] to say that it was an argument over some guy's property because it had been in his family

[01:22:28] in his generations, this land.

[01:22:32] And Harry Reid was the senator of Nevada at the time, and he's selling all of his land

[01:22:37] to the government, all of his federal land to the government.

[01:22:39] And I have a slide that's ridiculous.

[01:22:41] The entire...

[01:22:42] Almost the entire West Coast is owned by the federal government.

[01:22:44] Yes, it is.

[01:22:46] And we're going to talk about that here in a second.

[01:22:48] But there was actually, during this time, Barack Obama put up a First Amendment area in Clark

[01:22:58] County.

[01:23:00] In other words, if you want to express your freedom of expression, you've got to go within

[01:23:06] these confines.

[01:23:07] Oh, my gosh.

[01:23:09] This...

[01:23:09] I've got a picture of this on my slide.

[01:23:12] So when you get the PDF down the road and send it out in your newsletter, it'll be there.

[01:23:17] It's a First Amendment area.

[01:23:19] And it's barred off with some lines, and you've got to stand on the inside of that because

[01:23:24] anywhere outside of that, you don't have your First Amendment right.

[01:23:28] This is a version of martial law.

[01:23:34] They call them free speech zones.

[01:23:37] Yeah, no.

[01:23:40] So what else do we see?

[01:23:41] Like, moving on into the future.

[01:23:43] In 2020, we began to see unprecedented amounts of censorship on social media.

[01:23:47] Yeah.

[01:23:48] Moderators...

[01:23:48] Moderators called fact checkers were hired to ghost any narratives that were counterproductive

[01:23:54] to those being served by the CDC and the World Health Organization.

[01:23:57] Yeah.

[01:23:58] That's when I got nuclear launched off of those platforms.

[01:24:02] Well, me too.

[01:24:02] And I lost several thousand people.

[01:24:04] Yeah.

[01:24:04] You know, people are reluctant to come back and follow you again.

[01:24:08] You know, each time I've been banned off social media, it's more difficult to get my people

[01:24:12] back.

[01:24:12] Because they don't know if it's like a fraud thing now.

[01:24:16] Yeah.

[01:24:16] Well, I already followed...

[01:24:17] Yeah.

[01:24:18] Already followed half the way.

[01:24:19] So that's obviously...

[01:24:20] That count there is obviously...

[01:24:22] You know what I'm saying?

[01:24:22] Yep.

[01:24:23] Yep.

[01:24:23] Yep.

[01:24:24] Yep.

[01:24:25] And come to find out, I was right about every single thing that was anti-COVID that I ever

[01:24:30] posted.

[01:24:31] Me too.

[01:24:31] Every single bit of it.

[01:24:32] Yeah.

[01:24:32] The masks.

[01:24:33] Praise God, right?

[01:24:34] The masks.

[01:24:35] The six-foot social distancing that was made up.

[01:24:38] Yep.

[01:24:39] The immunity.

[01:24:39] If you take this shot, you know it'll keep you from spreading it and you won't be able

[01:24:43] to contain that.

[01:24:43] Where it came from.

[01:24:44] Where it originally came from.

[01:24:46] All of it.

[01:24:47] Yes.

[01:24:47] A bat.

[01:24:48] Come on.

[01:24:49] Really?

[01:24:49] This thing was not created in nature.

[01:24:52] It was manufactured in a lab in Wuhan, China.

[01:24:56] And we now know that.

[01:24:58] Yeah.

[01:24:59] 100%.

[01:24:59] Back then, the agenda that was being pushed by the left was quite different.

[01:25:03] And you're not allowed to go against the narrative.

[01:25:05] Remember, you're stupid.

[01:25:07] You're going to drink the Kool-Aid that I serve you.

[01:25:11] That's how the government operates.

[01:25:14] 100%.

[01:25:15] But if you are smart enough and wise, if you know where to look at how to search and do

[01:25:19] your own homework, you can figure this all out yourself.

[01:25:21] Which is why Obama also wanted to control the internet.

[01:25:24] Do you remember when that was going down?

[01:25:25] Yep.

[01:25:27] Nobody should have that much access to that much knowledge.

[01:25:31] No.

[01:25:32] And now they are data harvesting big time.

[01:25:36] Yes.

[01:25:37] So, all the land, all of Nevada, probably half of California.

[01:25:42] There's other states over there that are almost entirely red.

[01:25:45] This is also in the slide.

[01:25:46] And you guys can look at it.

[01:25:48] Article 1, Section 8, Clause 17 of the United States Constitution.

[01:25:51] It gives the authority of the government.

[01:25:54] The Constitution gives the government authority over land for erection of forts, magazines,

[01:25:59] arsenals, dockyards, other needful buildings.

[01:26:02] That's basically military stuff.

[01:26:03] Okay.

[01:26:05] That's the only reason, constitutionally, the federal government should own land.

[01:26:09] They should not own parks.

[01:26:12] They should not own reserves.

[01:26:14] Right?

[01:26:14] Right.

[01:26:15] This is all constitutional.

[01:26:19] And all this happened on the Bundy Ranch in 2014.

[01:26:22] Yeah.

[01:26:23] Harry Reid's old state.

[01:26:25] It's almost all gone.

[01:26:26] He gave it away probably to China because China owns all of its federal land, right?

[01:26:30] Yeah.

[01:26:31] Yeah.

[01:26:32] Sadly enough.

[01:26:33] Right.

[01:26:34] So, what's China done for him then?

[01:26:39] Pat his pockets.

[01:26:40] Good enough checks.

[01:26:41] Back when I first...

[01:26:42] There was a...

[01:26:42] I watched a Chinese professor that was like, oh, it's easy with Americans.

[01:26:46] If they don't, then you just add another zero to the check until they say yes.

[01:26:51] Yep.

[01:26:55] Have you ever heard of the Utah Data Center, a.k.a. the Domestic Surveillance Dictorant?

[01:27:00] I've heard...

[01:27:01] I haven't heard the technical name, but I knew about the data center.

[01:27:05] Well, I heard...

[01:27:07] I heard...

[01:27:08] This is the baby of the Patriot Act.

[01:27:11] All right?

[01:27:11] George H.

[01:27:12] Yep.

[01:27:13] Yep.

[01:27:13] That makes sense.

[01:27:15] Okay.

[01:27:15] So...

[01:27:16] And again, when I did this, when I built this PowerPoint, I thought it was the only one.

[01:27:20] There are now dozens of them all across the country.

[01:27:24] And if you go to the Utah Data Center or any domestic surveillance dictatorate and read

[01:27:30] their about link, their vision, their values, it's very interesting.

[01:27:35] I'm going to read it for you here, but you guys can read it later also.

[01:27:37] Okay.

[01:27:38] This is about the Domestic Surveillance Dictorate.

[01:27:40] The men and women of the Domestic Surveillance Dictorate together and individually act for one

[01:27:45] thing and one thing only.

[01:27:47] Here we go.

[01:27:48] We act for the good of the nation.

[01:27:50] Each employee takes a solemn oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States

[01:27:55] against all enemies, foreign and domestic.

[01:27:59] Our vision?

[01:28:00] Domestic information dominance through responsive presence and network advantage.

[01:28:06] Here's the crazy part.

[01:28:07] Our values.

[01:28:09] For us, collaboration is built into the very fabric of who we are, a component of both

[01:28:15] the U.S. Defense Department and the U.S. Intelligence Community.

[01:28:18] We also partner with other federal agencies to safeguard our national security.

[01:28:24] Domestic surveillance is a team sport.

[01:28:28] No one organization has the resources to do the job alone.

[01:28:34] Do you believe that?

[01:28:35] A team sport.

[01:28:36] A team sport.

[01:28:37] How warm and fuzzy.

[01:28:40] That we get everybody reporting in.

[01:28:43] So, and here's how it works.

[01:28:45] Here's how the UTC works.

[01:28:47] So, you go onto a website, all right?

[01:28:49] You browse.

[01:28:50] You find what you're looking for.

[01:28:51] You do an internet search.

[01:28:53] You call Doug Hogan on his phone, all right?

[01:28:55] You jump on Skype.

[01:28:57] You call Doug.

[01:28:58] You call Ryan.

[01:28:59] You call Brock.

[01:29:00] You call whoever you're doing on Skype, okay?

[01:29:01] Right.

[01:29:02] Then you go into your emails, and you send some emails out.

[01:29:04] Then you jump on your cell phone.

[01:29:06] You send some text messages out.

[01:29:07] Hey, are you still up for the podcast tonight?

[01:29:09] What are we talking about?

[01:29:10] Oh, we're talking about Marshall, or surviving Marshall Law.

[01:29:12] All right, I'll be there.

[01:29:15] All right?

[01:29:15] Then you jump on your credit card.

[01:29:17] You make an online purchase at Amazon.

[01:29:18] You buy some Gazette and Culpepper flags because you think it's really cool.

[01:29:21] The Second Amendment.

[01:29:22] You love the Second Amendment, right?

[01:29:23] You're a fond supporter of the Second Amendment, okay?

[01:29:26] All your financial information, all your legal documents, all your travel documents, all your health records, every site you've ever visited, all the cookies, all the internet searches, all the people you've ever called, all your contacts on your phone, all your Skype contacts, all your Skype emails, all your Skype conversations, everything, all your text messages, your cell phone contacts.

[01:29:47] It's all recorded and stored right here in this data center, all right?

[01:29:53] So they collect it automatically.

[01:29:56] And we're supposed to have a right to privacy?

[01:29:58] Well, here's the thing.

[01:29:59] They're not reviewing it.

[01:30:03] Just there if they need it.

[01:30:06] Yes.

[01:30:07] Yeah.

[01:30:07] So right now, it's stored.

[01:30:10] They're respecting your privacy, okay?

[01:30:13] But down the road, okay, because there's this spinny wheel thing where they match it, they store it,

[01:30:23] they match it, and they share it.

[01:30:25] So if you're communicating with Hezbollah terrorists, right?

[01:30:40] They are now reviewing everything that I just told you.

[01:30:45] That I've ever done.

[01:30:46] Yeah.

[01:30:47] Yes.

[01:30:48] It doesn't matter about your intentions.

[01:30:50] Right.

[01:30:51] The Patriot Act says that Sarah Hathaway is now an affiliate of a known terrorist.

[01:30:57] And we now have a right, because of this act, to go through all her data, okay?

[01:31:05] And then they share it to all these different agencies.

[01:31:07] The CIA, the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, they're all looking into you.

[01:31:13] Local police departments, possibly.

[01:31:15] So martial law, you're now the insurgent, because you don't fall in line with the power structure.

[01:31:24] So it's all there for them.

[01:31:25] You see where it's going?

[01:31:26] Yep.

[01:31:28] Nobody is safe.

[01:31:30] Yeah.

[01:31:31] Nobody.

[01:31:32] And because this is just for me, I'm speaking for me, because I've done a tremendous amount of research on patriotism, tyranny, terrorism, U.S. history, religion studies, military operations, survival tactics, on and on and on.

[01:31:47] Right?

[01:31:47] But I've made myself vulnerable to surveillance and monitoring.

[01:31:51] My guess is that many of the people that are listening to this are in the same category.

[01:31:55] Right.

[01:32:00] And that's why I always say that we are the leaders of tomorrow.

[01:32:04] There's no – you're the ones who have been doing it.

[01:32:07] You're the ones who have already done the work.

[01:32:08] You already put in the research.

[01:32:10] You already know.

[01:32:10] You can't live blindly anymore.

[01:32:13] Right.

[01:32:15] And that's why it's important.

[01:32:16] Like, I'm not trying to make a buck off my book, but people need a copy of this because I've done all the homework for you guys.

[01:32:26] I do encourage you to go and download it.

[01:32:28] You know, print it up.

[01:32:30] Do what you got to do to get it into some kind of paper format where you can have it.

[01:32:33] Throw it in your go bag or whatever, you know.

[01:32:35] Just something.

[01:32:36] So what did Doug say again about, you know, gardens?

[01:32:39] You know.

[01:32:39] It's good to have this kind of stuff handy.

[01:32:43] And so however you want to do it, I would recommend that.

[01:32:45] I got like three slides to go, so I want to move on here.

[01:32:48] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

[01:32:49] Let's get her done.

[01:32:51] We're already like an hour over today, but that is okay.

[01:32:53] Like I told you, I was like, I'm bringing you on.

[01:32:55] We're going to do the show.

[01:32:57] Like, we're going to go through it because this is just too important to worry about the time frame.

[01:33:02] And it's coming.

[01:33:03] It's better when.

[01:33:04] Yeah.

[01:33:04] So we're powerless to prevent martial law, right?

[01:33:06] So the question that comes in, how do we deal with it?

[01:33:08] Well, our focus must be to learn to deal with martial law instead of preventing it, okay?

[01:33:13] The totality of circumstances should be thoroughly weighed out before responding to it.

[01:33:18] For example, consider the area affected.

[01:33:20] Is it a small area, a big area?

[01:33:21] What forces are involved?

[01:33:23] Are they domestic or foreign?

[01:33:25] What situation gave rise to the martial law?

[01:33:27] You see, there's a lot of components here that got to be weighed in with the decisions that you make.

[01:33:30] That's why we can't what if this thing forever.

[01:33:32] Right.

[01:33:33] Fighting against the authority is a bad idea unless you have an army.

[01:33:36] Do you have an army, Sarah?

[01:33:37] Nope.

[01:33:37] I don't have an army.

[01:33:38] That's why we have to comply the best that we can.

[01:33:41] Fair.

[01:33:42] Okay?

[01:33:43] Outright, hiding is not a good idea either because martial law lasted for two years during the second half of the Civil War and lasted three years in Hawaii after the Pearl Harbor attack.

[01:33:52] Can you imagine hiding for three years?

[01:33:53] It could be done.

[01:33:54] Yeah.

[01:33:55] But it would be rough.

[01:33:57] Right.

[01:33:58] You're going to be like out in the woods because they have surveillance everywhere.

[01:34:03] Right.

[01:34:04] People think about living off the grid in these type of situations, but consider the consequences if you and your family are discovered by foreign forces.

[01:34:10] Yeah.

[01:34:12] Right?

[01:34:12] You violated how many – are you a rebel now?

[01:34:17] Are you an insurrectionist?

[01:34:18] Right.

[01:34:19] Because you're throwing your own food?

[01:34:20] Yeah, because you don't want to be a part of the new world order.

[01:34:24] Right.

[01:34:34] Living in open, undetected is the best means of survival.

[01:34:39] But never under any circumstances surrender yourself to boarding or checking terminals.

[01:34:44] And I got asked this question at Prepper Camp.

[01:34:47] Why?

[01:34:48] And I talked about it a while ago.

[01:34:50] How many of us have read the back of the book?

[01:34:54] We're not talking about martial law.

[01:34:56] When you start checking yourself into terminals and places to board, what do you think they're going to stick in you?

[01:35:05] Again, I'm worst case scenario.

[01:35:06] Whatever they want.

[01:35:08] And if you want food, you're going to comply.

[01:35:10] Yep.

[01:35:11] That store that you talked about, you know, going to pick up your food, what if they say – what if they say to you, hey, we've changed our policy.

[01:35:19] You've got to take this now.

[01:35:20] Yeah, in order to come in and get your food.

[01:35:23] You walk away?

[01:35:25] What if they chase you?

[01:35:27] What if they detain you?

[01:35:29] You see how fuzzy this can get?

[01:35:30] Yeah.

[01:35:31] It can get extremely hairy.

[01:35:33] Really fast.

[01:35:34] Yes.

[01:35:34] So the moment you see, like, checkpoints being set up and all these kind of boarding things going on, all the hairs on the back of your neck should be standing up.

[01:35:42] Right.

[01:35:43] Or like the refugee – literally the refugee camps in my books.

[01:35:49] Yes.

[01:35:51] They can do whatever.

[01:35:52] You know, we used to think some of the stuff that we lived through in the last four years was science fiction.

[01:35:57] Yeah.

[01:35:57] But look at what happened.

[01:35:58] It really did happen.

[01:36:00] I mean, those children's lives are affected forever, the children that were –

[01:36:03] Have to wear masks in schools and all that.

[01:36:05] Right.

[01:36:05] Yes, the PTSD from those kids.

[01:36:07] Oh, Lord.

[01:36:08] Yeah.

[01:36:09] Limit your movement to foot unless it becomes absolutely necessary.

[01:36:13] Transportation will be controlled and fuel will be a confiscation.

[01:36:16] So what if they see your vehicle driving down the road?

[01:36:18] What?

[01:36:18] You see?

[01:36:19] Yeah.

[01:36:19] How do you have fuel?

[01:36:21] Yes.

[01:36:22] And what do you do?

[01:36:22] Yeah, exactly.

[01:36:23] It would be prudent to consider ciphering the fuel from your vehicles or vehicle, whatever, you know, to prevent it from being taken or destroyed.

[01:36:32] Buried canisters off your property somewhere inconspicuous.

[01:36:36] That would be my recommendation.

[01:36:38] Two more slides.

[01:36:40] Do not dress in camouflage clothing.

[01:36:42] Right.

[01:36:42] It's just a bad idea to give the authority the impression that you're anything more than a cooperative civilian.

[01:36:46] What do you look like when you dress in camouflaged clothing?

[01:36:50] A militant.

[01:36:51] Yes.

[01:36:52] Or you're going hunting or something.

[01:36:54] Either one you're not supposed to be doing because – remember, at this point you're relying on the government.

[01:36:59] The government's the daddy, your daddy now.

[01:37:01] Yep.

[01:37:02] And they get – well, they're – yeah, they're the almighty.

[01:37:05] You don't want to look like a soldier.

[01:37:05] Yep.

[01:37:06] You don't want to look like a militant.

[01:37:07] You don't want to look like any kind of rebellion or insurrectionist.

[01:37:10] You don't want to look like a cooperative civilian.

[01:37:13] So dress in your dad clothes.

[01:37:16] Maintain a low profile and do not attract attention.

[01:37:20] You don't want your name to become known unless you want attention, right?

[01:37:25] Yep.

[01:37:26] Listen.

[01:37:27] Don't talk.

[01:37:28] Information can save your life.

[01:37:30] Be smart with the information you collect.

[01:37:32] Attacking a supply convoy that was discussed in your presence will draw the authorities back to you.

[01:37:38] Make sense?

[01:37:39] Yes, it does.

[01:37:40] If you're talking about something – you were there.

[01:37:43] Like, Hathaway was there when we were talking about this.

[01:37:46] And then all of a sudden he gets attacked.

[01:37:48] Yeah.

[01:37:49] Who attacked?

[01:37:50] Well, I might have a good idea.

[01:37:51] Yeah.

[01:37:52] Yeah, that chick was standing there.

[01:37:53] I mean, I don't gray man very well.

[01:37:55] I'm too tiny.

[01:37:57] You're too tall.

[01:37:59] Exactly.

[01:38:00] Remember to stay humble and non-confrontational.

[01:38:03] Cooperation relates to non-threatening for authority figures.

[01:38:07] Nobody suspects a friendly, quiet, and cooperative civilian.

[01:38:10] So, Sarah, I know that you are a rebellious spirit.

[01:38:14] So am I.

[01:38:15] But I was in the military, and I could fall back into that really easy.

[01:38:19] But one thing you have to do to stay ahead of them is to know that you're fooling them.

[01:38:28] That will give you the edge.

[01:38:30] If you know in your mind that you're outsmarting them, you're winning.

[01:38:36] You don't have to get the last word.

[01:38:38] Right.

[01:38:39] Fair enough?

[01:38:40] What would Jesus do?

[01:38:42] Right.

[01:38:43] Yeah.

[01:38:43] And I wrote that Bible term out today, you know, be as wise as serpents and as harmless as doves.

[01:38:49] Yes.

[01:38:50] Okay?

[01:38:52] Have a plan to defend yourself.

[01:38:54] Firearms, maps, escape routes, rally points, means of communication, et cetera.

[01:38:59] Sometimes situations go bad, and you have to defend yourself and your family.

[01:39:04] But you always want to hope for the best, pray for the best, right?

[01:39:09] But you also want to be prepared for the worst.

[01:39:11] And again, for my final slide, the biggest question is not will there be martial law, but when will there be martial law.

[01:39:19] In arguments before the court, the Council of the United States spoke to the question of what is martial law.

[01:39:23] Martial law, it was argued, is the will of the commanding officer of an armed force or of a geographical military department expressed in time of war within the limits of his military jurisdiction as necessary demands or as necessity demands and prudence dictates, restrained or enlarged by the orders of his military chief or supreme executive ruler.

[01:39:44] In other words, martial law is imposed by a local commander on the region he controls on an as-needed basis.

[01:39:53] Further, it was argued that officer executing martial law is at the same time supreme legislator, supreme judge, and supreme executive.

[01:40:02] As whether or not is infringed and the extent of the infraction, he alone can judge and his sole order punishes or acquits the alleged offender.

[01:40:14] And that's from constitution.net.

[01:40:16] Oh my gosh.

[01:40:17] Isn't that like Judge Doom?

[01:40:19] What was that, Arnold?

[01:40:20] Not Arnold.

[01:40:21] I am the law.

[01:40:22] Yeah!

[01:40:23] Yeah, it was with Rambo.

[01:40:24] Not Rambo.

[01:40:25] Sylvester Stallone.

[01:40:26] Stallone, yeah.

[01:40:28] And my last bullet point, in the end, the decision for martial law comes to what the president believes to be an insurrection or national emergency.

[01:40:36] And that's a broad scope.

[01:40:38] Yeah, there's so many things right now.

[01:40:40] If they took us harder into war, they can say it over the immigrants right now.

[01:40:46] Be like, oh, you guys are concerned about it?

[01:40:48] Oh, okay, well, yeah, it's a national emergency.

[01:40:50] Here we go, down that road.

[01:40:52] There's so many.

[01:40:53] Oh, the disasters, you know, the whole, a lot of the East Coast just got hit really hard.

[01:41:01] You know, there's so many things.

[01:41:02] They could just be like, yep, that's it.

[01:41:05] It could be anything.

[01:41:06] But, you know, but here's the key.

[01:41:08] It's got to be, it's got to be planned carefully.

[01:41:09] If they're going to, if they want this to happen, like if they want a reason, it has to be nationwide.

[01:41:14] Otherwise, it's going to be regional.

[01:41:15] Right.

[01:41:16] Right.

[01:41:16] And the biggest way to keep somebody enslaved is to not let them know they're actually in jail, which, you know, they're kind of working on that right now.

[01:41:26] But if you wanted the whole country to fall into martial law, what would be a good route?

[01:41:31] Like an economic collapse.

[01:41:34] Yeah.

[01:41:35] Fair.

[01:41:35] It seems like.

[01:41:38] There's a girl by the last name of Whitney.

[01:41:41] She talks a lot about financial things that are coming down the pipeline.

[01:41:49] And she's putting out huge warnings right now.

[01:41:52] She's an investigative journalist.

[01:41:54] If you haven't heard her speak, you definitely should.

[01:41:56] And she's putting up some pretty mega warnings about a financial freeze, which would be a great catalyst to take us into martial law.

[01:42:05] Yeah.

[01:42:07] That's the most simple of things that we're all familiar with is an economic, huge economic nationwide impact.

[01:42:15] We're looking right now at, you know, Biden's been attacking cryptocurrency.

[01:42:18] And he's put agencies in charge of trying to take it down, at least regulate it after death.

[01:42:23] And in the meantime, he's trying to get together like a centralized banking.

[01:42:29] The CBDC.

[01:42:30] Yeah.

[01:42:31] Yes.

[01:42:31] And if that happens, we're darn near close to the end because with a centralized banking digital currency system, we just need a means to digitize everybody so that everybody can be controlled the way the government wants us to control.

[01:42:47] That's the mark of the beast.

[01:42:47] Right.

[01:42:48] And now we're talking about implants.

[01:42:49] We're talking about transhumanism.

[01:42:51] We're talking about smart cities, the Internet of Things.

[01:42:52] All these things already exist.

[01:42:54] And once you have an implant, now you're a slave.

[01:42:56] I mean, now you're tokenized along with everything else.

[01:43:00] Even though you're doing it unwittingly, what you're doing is you're saying, okay, I no longer depend upon God to be my protector, to be my provider.

[01:43:12] But I'm giving myself to the government.

[01:43:13] And I'm being remade in the government's image.

[01:43:16] And the government is going to protect me.

[01:43:18] And the government is going to feed me and provide for me.

[01:43:21] Oh, it's so true.

[01:43:22] That's true.

[01:43:25] And that's how.

[01:43:25] It doesn't matter if you're ignorant or not.

[01:43:27] If you take the mark of the beast, and it's not my words, that's what the Bible said.

[01:43:33] Yeah.

[01:43:34] You're being tossed into the lake of fire.

[01:43:35] Yep.

[01:43:36] And, you know, well, how can a righteous God know he's warned us all?

[01:43:40] He's warned us all.

[01:43:41] It's all there.

[01:43:42] I mean, that book is the most interlaced, inter-referenced, accurate, prophetic book of all time.

[01:43:49] If you think about this, this was written over 2,000 years ago.

[01:43:52] Right.

[01:43:53] And the things he's talked about, was it possible to know a mark, really, where you can't buy or sell?

[01:44:02] Right.

[01:44:03] That stuff is existing, and it's actually being used right now.

[01:44:07] Right now.

[01:44:08] And isn't it so great?

[01:44:09] Isn't it so great?

[01:44:10] No, it's really not.

[01:44:14] You know, some people love it.

[01:44:15] Some people have taken, I don't know if it's the mark, but they've taken chips in their hand.

[01:44:19] They're going to work.

[01:44:20] They're clocking in by swiping their hand.

[01:44:21] They're going up to the machine.

[01:44:23] They're swiping their hand.

[01:44:23] They're making their choices, and they're not pulling out any cash.

[01:44:27] Yeah, cap to pay from the implant.

[01:44:30] It's the same thing.

[01:44:31] Now, imagine that connected to your bank, where everything is completely digital.

[01:44:34] And we're all using a digital system anyway.

[01:44:36] Right.

[01:44:37] How often do you deal with cash?

[01:44:38] Well, and they were saying, okay, so Americans are so, don't want to give up their cash.

[01:44:43] So they're talking about putting a chip within the dollar bills that could literally shut that dollar bill down.

[01:44:49] Well, there's a chip in my debit card that I use right now.

[01:44:51] Right?

[01:44:52] Exactly.

[01:44:52] It wouldn't be hard to put them inside of our cash money and then, look, we didn't take your cash away.

[01:44:58] Yeah, so people are like, well, how's it going to work?

[01:45:00] Let me explain real quick because I know that we're short on time.

[01:45:02] But the system is already in place.

[01:45:05] When you go to any store and you pick up a product, you look on it, you see a barcode.

[01:45:08] There's numbers on that barcode.

[01:45:10] The scanner scans it, all right?

[01:45:12] That number tells the scanner what the product is and shoots the information to the server.

[01:45:18] The server's got all the information about that product in it.

[01:45:21] And it records the time of the purchase, what was purchased, you know, who purchased it at what time, everything.

[01:45:26] Right.

[01:45:27] That's for inventory.

[01:45:29] Yes.

[01:45:29] So I can keep it real quick.

[01:45:31] But you're going to be in inventory too.

[01:45:32] You're going to be in inventory too.

[01:45:33] When you get this mark, there's going to be a number assigned to it.

[01:45:37] The Bible says the mark of the beast, right, is the number of his name.

[01:45:40] Behold, it's a human number.

[01:45:41] It was 666, right?

[01:45:44] He said 600, three score and six.

[01:45:46] That's 666.

[01:45:47] Right.

[01:45:47] That's going to be the number of his name.

[01:45:49] So everybody's worried about getting 666.

[01:45:51] You're not going to actually have 666 on you.

[01:45:53] You're going to have a number assigned to you.

[01:45:56] And the number, so that when they scan you with this RFID, it's going to be an RFID chip.

[01:46:01] They're going to use a reader to scan you.

[01:46:03] And your body produces electricity already.

[01:46:06] So you're going to have this internal antenna inside this little microchip.

[01:46:09] It's got a number assigned to it.

[01:46:10] When they scan it, it's going to energize just a little bit with the body electricity that you already have.

[01:46:15] Electromagnetism.

[01:46:16] Electromagnetism.

[01:46:21] That you already have going on.

[01:46:23] And it's going to tell that scanner what your number is.

[01:46:27] It's going to feed back to the server.

[01:46:29] And all your information is going to be stored there.

[01:46:31] Your email contacts.

[01:46:33] Your legal records.

[01:46:34] Your medical records.

[01:46:35] Oh, you're outside of your zone.

[01:46:37] You're not supposed to be there.

[01:46:38] You've already had too much meat.

[01:46:40] They'll know your address.

[01:46:41] They'll know how much you've consumed.

[01:46:42] They'll know how much you've purchased.

[01:46:43] How many credits you have left.

[01:46:45] What you've spent.

[01:46:45] How many hours you've worked.

[01:46:46] Everything.

[01:46:49] Yeah.

[01:46:50] Smart cities will only make it worse.

[01:46:51] You won't be able to go outside without being recorded.

[01:46:54] And everybody knows.

[01:46:55] This smart information.

[01:46:57] This internet of things.

[01:46:59] They'll be playing it in devices.

[01:47:00] It could be in pressure points on the road.

[01:47:03] It could be in cameras that are recording you.

[01:47:05] It could be on your watch.

[01:47:06] It's monitoring your heartbeat.

[01:47:08] Everything that you use.

[01:47:09] Everywhere you go.

[01:47:12] This blockchain technology.

[01:47:14] It'll be immutable.

[01:47:16] Nobody will be able to edit it or hack you.

[01:47:18] All this stuff already exists.

[01:47:21] We just need to get everybody on the same sheet of music.

[01:47:23] And that's where we're at right now.

[01:47:25] Because we've got so many independent groups.

[01:47:28] We've got a lot of moving parts.

[01:47:29] We need to get everybody in tandem.

[01:47:30] But once everybody gets put in tandem.

[01:47:32] Game on.

[01:47:34] And then that's your one world order.

[01:47:36] I mean.

[01:47:37] That's why right now it is so imperative.

[01:47:39] Guys.

[01:47:40] Get out.

[01:47:41] I know your vote.

[01:47:41] You don't think it matters.

[01:47:43] But it does.

[01:47:44] And you've got to get out and vote in this election.

[01:47:47] Really.

[01:47:47] We're voting for the one world order.

[01:47:49] This time.

[01:47:50] Or we're voting.

[01:47:52] To keep America free.

[01:47:56] And I hope that's what we're going to get out of Trump.

[01:47:58] I've never been like.

[01:48:00] On board 100%.

[01:48:03] Until I found out.

[01:48:04] That that man is never drunk.

[01:48:06] He's never done drugs.

[01:48:08] His family.

[01:48:09] His children.

[01:48:10] Still love him.

[01:48:12] When you're that.

[01:48:15] Popular.

[01:48:16] When you're that.

[01:48:17] In the limelight.

[01:48:17] Your whole life.

[01:48:18] And you can still.

[01:48:19] Know that your children.

[01:48:21] Love you.

[01:48:21] And whatnot.

[01:48:22] Now that's something special.

[01:48:23] It says a lot.

[01:48:24] It does.

[01:48:25] It does.

[01:48:26] His kids are good kids.

[01:48:27] Yeah.

[01:48:27] They're not on crack cocaine.

[01:48:29] Right.

[01:48:30] Going to jail.

[01:48:31] It says a lot.

[01:48:32] So that's why I put my faith there.

[01:48:35] And I hope he does the right thing.

[01:48:36] When the ships come down.

[01:48:39] We need to take care of a lot of corruption.

[01:48:41] And so.

[01:48:42] And I don't think he took care of it enough.

[01:48:44] But he didn't have a team last time.

[01:48:46] And if he can set himself up with.

[01:48:49] You know.

[01:48:49] Great people around him.

[01:48:51] Gabby.

[01:48:54] You know.

[01:48:54] Even Kennedy.

[01:48:56] I know.

[01:48:56] Democrat.

[01:48:57] But like.

[01:48:58] He's so focused on correcting the food problem within the United States.

[01:49:02] That.

[01:49:02] I think if he delegates properly.

[01:49:04] And has a really strong team around him.

[01:49:07] That we can get some stuff done.

[01:49:09] And get our country back.

[01:49:10] He's absolutely against the establishment as well.

[01:49:12] Right.

[01:49:13] So I mean.

[01:49:14] That's important.

[01:49:15] It's important guys.

[01:49:17] Because hopefully we.

[01:49:19] You know.

[01:49:19] But like you say.

[01:49:20] It's a matter of.

[01:49:21] Matter of if.

[01:49:23] Not.

[01:49:23] Or a matter of when.

[01:49:25] Not if.

[01:49:25] If we're going to go into martial law.

[01:49:27] So.

[01:49:27] Yep.

[01:49:28] Everybody get out there.

[01:49:29] Get on the email list.

[01:49:31] Doug's kind enough to share.

[01:49:33] Share the slides.

[01:49:34] We'll be emailing him out.

[01:49:36] Get.

[01:49:37] Get a hold of his book.

[01:49:38] It's not.

[01:49:39] What do you sell for like 10 bucks or something like that.

[01:49:41] It's not that bad.

[01:49:42] Yeah.

[01:49:42] Both.

[01:49:42] Both old figures.

[01:49:43] And swive martial law.

[01:49:44] $10 each.

[01:49:45] And the program is coming up real soon.

[01:49:46] I'm expecting to be done with my book.

[01:49:49] By the end of this coming weekend.

[01:49:50] I just got to get it out to the editor.

[01:49:51] And then.

[01:49:52] It'll be soon after that.

[01:49:53] Yeah.

[01:49:53] That takes a little bit of time.

[01:49:55] But boom.

[01:49:55] And I've.

[01:49:56] I've already had a couple of sneak peeks there.

[01:49:58] And that one's going to be legit as well.

[01:50:00] Great.

[01:50:01] Great.

[01:50:02] To get a hold of.

[01:50:02] So.

[01:50:03] Hopefully you guys stuck around to the end of the show tonight.

[01:50:06] Because it was definitely worth it.

[01:50:08] But.

[01:50:09] You know.

[01:50:10] You got to be prepared.

[01:50:11] You got to be ready.

[01:50:12] You got to keep your thinking cap on.

[01:50:14] That's what it's going to take.

[01:50:17] All right.

[01:50:18] Doug.

[01:50:18] Well.

[01:50:18] Thank you for joining us.

[01:50:19] Let's go ahead and shut this down.

[01:50:21] And get off air.

[01:50:21] So we can get this show posted.

[01:50:23] And get everybody prepared.

[01:50:25] So.

[01:50:25] I'll let everybody know again.

[01:50:26] Where to sign up to your website.

[01:50:28] And check you out as well.

[01:50:30] Absolutely.

[01:50:31] You guys could.

[01:50:32] I hate to feed the beast.

[01:50:33] But facebook.com.

[01:50:34] Slash honor your oath.

[01:50:37] www.ldhogan is my website.

[01:50:39] And you got links there for just about everything.

[01:50:41] My podcast is Rising Republic with L.

[01:50:43] Douglas Hogan and Ryan Buford.

[01:50:44] I have yet to tinker with my graphics on that.

[01:50:47] But I have a new co-host.

[01:50:48] He's really good.

[01:50:49] Hit me up on Instagram also.

[01:50:51] Yeah.

[01:50:51] Just do a search for L.

[01:50:53] Douglas Hogan.

[01:50:53] I think it's L.

[01:50:54] Douglas Hogan underscore author.

[01:50:56] Something along those lines have been banned so many times.

[01:50:57] I've had to reuse.

[01:50:59] Right.

[01:51:00] Get creative with my names.

[01:51:02] That's why I just want alias.

[01:51:04] Yeah.

[01:51:04] Just hit me up on ldhogan.com or Amazon.

[01:51:07] Google my name L.

[01:51:08] Douglas Hogan.

[01:51:08] I'll come up there as well.

[01:51:09] Or Google me L.

[01:51:10] Douglas Hogan.

[01:51:11] You'll find me.

[01:51:11] Easy.

[01:51:12] And if you send a message over Change Your Nurse series, I can definitely get it to Doug.

[01:51:18] I'm honored to call him my brother from another mother.

[01:51:21] And yeah.

[01:51:24] Well, it's to keep getting the content out.

[01:51:26] And keep listening to the audio drama.

[01:51:27] Audio drama is getting ready.

[01:51:29] I'm finishing up episode 12 here pretty quick.

[01:51:32] So we're going to be in our next block.

[01:51:33] We're going to have a fun day.

[01:51:35] Some family feud coming up soon.

[01:51:37] I think I'm going to do Team TJ versus Team Burgess on the next one.

[01:51:42] So I can moderate a little bit better than our last one.

[01:51:46] No.

[01:51:48] Cheater.

[01:51:50] Me?

[01:51:50] Okay.

[01:51:51] We're not even going there.

[01:51:53] All right, guys.

[01:51:55] Change Your Nurse series.

[01:51:56] Go check out Doug.

[01:51:57] Go check out our stuff.

[01:51:59] I hope you guys enjoyed the show tonight.

[01:52:01] And until next time, remember, dream, survive, thrive, my man.

[01:52:10] All right.

prepping,martial-law,surviving-martial-law,preparedness,survival,