YesToHellWith cover art

YesToHellWith

YesToHellWith

By: and may TRUTH reign supreme!
Listen for free

YesToHellWith is determined to expose the wrongful conviction and imprisonment of Orlando Carter. We are asking that President Trump review this injustice and exonerate Carter.

yestohellwith.substack.comyestohellwith
Hourly Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Where is your birthright?
    Jul 3 2026

    THE GREATEST BIRTHDAY GIFT

    Two hundred and fifty years ago, a remarkable generation gave the world a gift unlike any that had ever been offered before.

    Imagine, for just a moment, that you are standing in a quiet room with George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, Patrick Henry, George Mason, and the countless men and women who pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to create something history had rarely seen.

    Imagine them placing into your hands a beautifully wrapped gift.

    Not gold.

    Not land.

    Not power.

    Freedom.

    Natural rights.

    Self-government.

    A constitutional republic.

    They would tell you:

    “We cannot guarantee your prosperity. We cannot guarantee your safety. We cannot guarantee your happiness. But we can guarantee that no king shall own you, no government shall rule you beyond its lawful authority, and no man shall stand above the law.”

    That was the gift.

    They did not hand us a government.

    They handed us a government in chains.

    A government bound by a Constitution.

    A government carefully limited so that free men and women could govern themselves.

    That was the birthday gift of the American Republic.

    Now imagine those same founders walking quietly through America today.

    They see agencies issuing regulations by the tens of thousands.

    They see citizens asking permission to engage in ordinary activities.

    They see licenses, permits, registrations, classifications, identification numbers, surveillance, inflation, bureaucracies, executive orders, administrative tribunals, and a government that increasingly governs the people rather than governing itself.

    Then they look at us.

    Not with anger.

    Not with hatred.

    But with sadness.

    And perhaps they ask one simple question:

    “What did you do with the gift we entrusted to you?”

    “What happened to the Republic?”

    “What happened to the Constitution that restrained government?”

    “What happened to the sovereign people?”

    “When did freedom become permission?”

    “When did rights become privileges?”

    “When did self-government become administration?”

    “When did you forget that government was created to govern itself so that you could remain free?”

    The uncomfortable truth is this:

    No foreign army conquered the American Republic.

    No king reclaimed the colonies.

    No emperor crossed the Atlantic.

    Instead, generation after generation slowly accepted a little more government... a little more administration... a little more dependency... a little more control... until many Americans no longer remembered what had been given to them in the first place.

    The tragedy is not merely that liberty has been diminished.

    The greater tragedy is that many no longer recognize what liberty actually looks like.

    But there is still hope.

    Because gifts are not lost simply because they have been neglected.

    They can be opened again.

    Remembered again.

    Protected again.

    Passed to our children again.

    That is our responsibility.

    Not merely to celebrate America’s birthday.

    But to honor the extraordinary gift that was placed into our hands by those who came before us.

    If we truly wish to celebrate the birth of the American Republic, then let us become worthy of the inheritance we received.

    Let us restore constitutional limitation.

    Let us restore self-government.

    Let us restore the Republic.

    And let future generations never have to answer the question that echoes across two hundred and fifty years:

    “What did you do with your birthright?”



    Get full access to YesToHellWith at yestohellwith.substack.com/subscribe
    Show More Show Less
    5 mins
  • What is it Exactly that America is Celebrating?
    Jul 2 2026
    The 250-Year Question: What Made America Unique?Two hundred and fifty years ago, something happened that changed human history.Not because a war was won.Not because a king was defeated.But because a revolutionary idea was declared.For thousands of years, governments claimed that rights came from rulers.Kings granted privileges.Governments bestowed freedoms.Power flowed from the top down.Then came America.In 1776, the founders declared something the world had rarely heard.That rights do not come from government.They come from God.That government does not create liberty.It exists to secure liberty.That the people are not subjects of the state.The state is the servant of the people.That single principle changed everything.America was unique because it rejected the oldest political assumption in history—that man exists for government.Instead, it declared that government exists for man.That is why the Declaration of Independence begins, not with government, but with self-evident truths.It begins with the Creator.It begins with natural rights.It begins with liberty.Government appears only afterward—and only as an instrument created to protect what already belongs to the people.Think about how extraordinary that was.The Constitution did not create freedom.It was written because freedom already existed.The Bill of Rights did not grant rights.It recognized rights that government was forbidden to violate.That distinction is everything.Because once government becomes the source of rights, government can redefine them.It can expand them.Limit them.Suspend them.Or eliminate them altogether.The founders understood that danger.That is why they limited government instead of empowering it without restraint.They divided power.Separated authority.Created checks and balances.Reserved powers to the states.Reserved countless rights to the people.They understood something history had repeatedly proven.Power naturally expands.Government rarely surrenders authority voluntarily.And liberty disappears gradually, one exception at a time.So what made America exceptional?It was not merely wealth.Not military strength.Not geography.Not technology.America was exceptional because it attempted something no major nation had ever successfully attempted.A government intentionally restrained by higher principles.A government whose legitimacy depended upon the consent of the governed.A government expected to justify its exercise of power rather than simply command obedience.But over the past two and a half centuries, something changed.Slowly.Incrementally.Generation by generation.Americans increasingly began looking to government not merely for protection, but for permission.Not merely for justice, but for solutions to nearly every problem.The relationship gradually shifted.Government grew.Administrative systems expanded.Rules multiplied.Citizens became increasingly dependent upon institutions they were originally intended to supervise.The language changed.The assumptions changed.The expectations changed.Many Americans today speak of rights as though they are government benefits.As though liberty exists only because statutes recognize it.As though freedom survives only by administrative approval.That is not the philosophy announced in 1776.Whether one agrees or disagrees with particular modern policies, the underlying question remains the same.Where do rights come from?If they come from government, then government ultimately decides their limits.If they preexist government, then government itself is subject to limits.That debate lies at the very heart of the American experiment.Perhaps America’s 250th birthday is not merely an occasion for fireworks.Perhaps it is an invitation.An invitation to remember first principles.To read the Declaration of Independence again.To ask why the founders placed the Creator before government.Why they spoke of unalienable rights.Why they insisted that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.And why they believed that preserving liberty would require eternal vigilance from every generation.The greatest threat to liberty is not always conquest from abroad.Sometimes it is forgetfulness at home.Because a nation cannot preserve principles it no longer remembers.As America marks 250 years, perhaps the most important question is not whether we celebrate our past.It is whether we still understand what made that past so extraordinary.Because if we forget the foundation...We may preserve the buildings.We may preserve the symbols.We may preserve the ceremonies.But we will have lost the very idea that made America unique in the first place.And perhaps that is the question every American should ask on this historic anniversary:Not simply, “What happened in 1776?”But...“What principles are we willing to preserve for the next 250 years?”May truth reign supreme. Get full access to YesToHellWith at yestohellwith.substack.com/subscribe
    Show More Show Less
    6 mins
  • The Tax Honesty and Freedom Movement?
    Jul 1 2026
    The Quiet Revolution Begins With One Question. It is July 1, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.There is something profoundly ironic about the movement to restore liberty in America.The greatest obstacle to restoring the American Republic may not be Washington.It may not be the courts.It may not even be the administrative state.It may be us.Those of us who care enough to fight.Those of us who love liberty.Those of us who dedicate our lives to exposing corruption and restoring constitutional government.Because the liberty movement has one characteristic unlike almost any other.It is not made up of followers.It is made up of leaders.Independent thinkers.Mavericks.Men and women who refuse to blindly accept what they are told.That is one of our greatest strengths.But it has also become one of our greatest weaknesses.For decades, we have spent countless hours debating what statutes mean.What Congress intended.What Supreme Court decisions supposedly held.What this regulation means.What that regulation means.One expert reaches one conclusion.Another reaches a completely different conclusion.A third insists everyone else is wrong.And the American people are left wondering who is right.The answer is...We don’t know.And neither do they.Because unless the government itself officially explains what it means—unless the very agencies and lawmakers claiming authority answer the questions—we are left with opinions.Some brilliant.Some sincere.Some expensive.But opinions nonetheless.The movement has become trapped.Not by tyranny alone.But by interpretation.And interpretation is an endless maze.The Liberty Dialogues System asks a different question.What if we’ve been fighting the wrong battle?What if the issue has never been what we think the law means...but what the government itself is willing to say the law means?Imagine millions of Americans asking the same simple questions.Does this statute apply to me?What authority creates that obligation?Where is the jurisdiction?What facts place me within its scope?What evidence supports your conclusion?Not arguments.Questions.Honest.Reasonable.Good-faith questions.Now imagine something even more powerful.Silence.No answer.No explanation.No clarification.No official response.At that moment, something extraordinary happens.The issue is no longer about your interpretation.The issue becomes their refusal to explain their own authority.That changes everything.Because government derives its legitimacy not merely from power...but from accountability.If government refuses to answer fundamental questions from the very people it governs...it exposes something far more dangerous than disagreement.It exposes unaccountable power.That is how republics die.Not overnight.Not with tanks in the streets.But one unanswered question at a time.Perhaps it is time to stop arguing over what we think statutes mean.Perhaps it is time to stop following personalities.To stop chasing gurus selling expensive solutions that promise freedom but rarely deliver it.Perhaps it is time to learn something far more valuable.The language of administration.The language of jurisdiction.The language of presumption.The language of burden of proof.The language that government itself uses every single day.Because if we learn their language...we can require them to answer in it.And if they refuse...the burden shifts.Not to us.To them.That is the quiet revolution.Not violence.Not rebellion.Not chaos.Accountability.Questions that deserve answers.Questions that demand answers.Questions that expose the difference between lawful authority and unsupported presumption.If the American Republic is to be restored, it will not be because one guru finally figured out what every statute means.It will be because millions of Americans finally required those claiming authority to explain it.And when they cannot...or when they will not...the people will finally understand where the real problem has always been.The future of liberty does not depend upon becoming a better interpreter of government.It depends upon requiring government to explain itself.That is where accountability begins.That is where freedom returns.That is where the quiet revolution starts.May truth reign supreme. Get full access to YesToHellWith at yestohellwith.substack.com/subscribe
    Show More Show Less
    6 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.