Chuck Holton
Politics • Culture • News
A Place of Hope
How Mercy Projects is Changing Lives in Armenia
22 hours ago
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Out here in the rugged hills of Armenia, there’s a place where faith meets hard work — and lives are being changed because of it. This is the Mercy Projects Rancho California, a patch of land that’s turning hope into something you can see, touch, and feel. What started as a simple vision has grown into a thriving outreach where faith and farming come together. The team here isn’t just raising animals and crops; they’re raising up the next generation of leaders for Armenia. You’ll meet the men and women who’ve worked hard to build a safe haven for this part of the world, building a community that reflects God’s love in real, practical ways. It’s gritty. It’s beautiful. And it’s proof that when people of faith step out and serve, incredible things can happen. Come along with me as we visit the Mercy Projects Ranch — a place where hope grows deep roots in the Armenian soil. Learn more or support the work: https://www.mercyprojects.org/

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September 18, 2025
Benjamin Netanyahu Explains the Israeli Economy

Netanyahu was once Israeli Finance Minister - and it shows. He understands a lot about economics, and is worth listening to in order to get a sense for where Israel's economy is headed.

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September 12, 2025
Video of Kirk’s Killer

BREAKING: The FBI and state of Utah have just released video of the Charlie Kirk kiIIer escaping from the scene following the shooting

He jumped off the rooftop, moved quickly through the parking lot, and then began walking casually to blend in before entering a wooded area.

He was wearing converse tennis shoes, a shirt with an eagle, and a baseball cap with a triangle.

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September 07, 2025
Houthi Drone Strikes Israel - Two Wounded

Three Houthi drones were fired at Israel on Sunday. Two were shot down and the third struck the airport in Eilat, Wounding to his Israelis and causing the airspace to be shut down.

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Episode 622 - Field Producer Dennis Azato and Chuck Reminisce

My erstwhile field producer and cameraman Dennis Azato has accompanied me on ten years of adventures across the globe. Today he joins me in Ukraine and we spend some time remembering our many trips together.

Episode 622 - Field Producer Dennis Azato and Chuck Reminisce
What I Uncovered In the Mountains Of Guatemala

As I mentioned on the live yesterday, here’s the full episode from our trip to the nearly abandoned village in the mountains of Guatemala. This one is eye-opening. Watch now and see how mass migration is transforming rural communities and what it means for the crisis at our own border.

Let us know what you think in the comments.

Russia cannot win. Even with their horse drawn cavalry. I've been following Paul Warburg and unlike Jake Broe, he leaves the politics out. Take a look.

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The gift of the Holy Spirit is the validation of our salvation, and the confirmation of our adoption into God's family (Romans 8:15-17). Moreover, the Spirit is the assurance of our future bodily resurrection/redemption, into Christ's glorious likeness (Romans 8:9-11, Philippians 3:21)! Thank You Father, for such amazing grace, and steadfast love, and the life-giving gift of Your very Spirit!

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The Welfare Machine Draining America

“If a system pays people not to work, don’t be shocked when it produces more people who don’t work.”

 

 

The Real Cost of “Free”

Let’s do the math.

The U.S. spends trillions of dollars every year on welfare and entitlement programs—federal, state, and local combined. When you divide that by the number of taxpayers, you’re effectively paying about $3,500 a month to fund these systems.

That’s your money. Every month. Whether you like it or not.

And if only 1% of that is wasted through fraud—and I assure you it’s much more—that’s a billion dollars a month going straight into the ether.

The Government Accountability Office estimates 11% of welfare spending is lost to fraud, waste, and abuse. Eleven percent. That’s not a rounding error; that’s a hemorrhage.

“Fraud isn’t a bug in the system—it’s the business model for people who know how to game it.”

 

What I Found on the Ground

This isn’t theory for me. I’ve been to the villages in Guatemala and seen what happens when America subsidizes dependency.

One mountain town I visited looked like a ghost village. The mayor told me it used to hold around 2,000 residents, but now maybe 200 remain—mostly women and children. Almost all the men had gone to the United States.

And they’re not just sending postcards home. They’re sending money.

Those “remittances” are being used to build 3,000-square-foot mansions in a town where people once lived in bamboo huts with dirt floors. American tax dollars—channeled through welfare checks and under-the-table cash work—are being wired home and turned into marble staircases and brass fixtures.

Across Latin America, that story repeats. Over $200 billion a year leaves the U.S. in remittances. Not all of it is ill-gotten, but enough is that it’s propping up entire foreign economies—Mexico, India, even China—with money that originated from your tax bill.

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Ending Welfare Might Be the Most Loving Thing the Government Could Do
When compassion becomes control, dependency becomes slavery — and freedom begins with responsibility.

When God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness” (Genesis 1:26), He was establishing something radical: every human life has intrinsic worth, purpose, and responsibility. We’re not accidents of evolution — we’re image-bearers of God.

That’s why Christians defend life from conception to natural death. But the Imago Dei doesn’t just speak to abortion or euthanasia. It also speaks to the way we treat human dignity in everyday life — including how we deal with poverty, work, and welfare.


The Cruelty of “Compassion”

For decades, the U.S. government has built an entire industry around dependency. SNAP, EBT, and countless welfare programs were supposed to be safety nets, not hammocks. But when “temporary help” becomes a permanent lifestyle, it robs people of the very thing that makes them human: agency.

Work was never a punishment — it was God’s design. Adam wasn’t lounging in Eden collecting fruit stamps. He was tending a garden, naming animals, exercising dominion. Work is how human beings imitate their Creator.

That’s why Paul said in 2 Thessalonians 3:10, “If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat.” Not as a threat, but as a correction. A culture that subsidizes idleness is not compassionate — it’s complicit in spiritual decay.


Mercy Isn’t Maintenance

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Rio Is a War Zone (Again): Brazil’s Gang Wars, U.S. Moves in the Caribbean, and Why It All Connects

 Brazil: When the State Loses the Streets

I’ve worked in Rio with a special operations anti-gang unit (BOPE). I’ve walked the favelas with locals who risk their lives just to get in and out of their own neighborhoods. When the government “takes a hard stance,” it means armored vehicles rolling into some of the most densely packed urban terrain on earth—with families caught in the crossfire.

What you need to know

  • Red Command (Comando Vermelho) began in Brazil’s prisons in the late ’70s with Marxist roots, and evolved into one of the most powerful criminal factions on the planet.

  • They run cocaine and marijuana retail/wholesale, weapons trafficking, carjackings, armored-car robberies, and extortion.

  • They impose “parallel governance”: if you live in their turf, they are the government.

  • The terrain is a nightmare for police: alleyways too tight for vehicles, multi-story concrete warrens, countless blind corners. Even with BOPE, operations are high-risk and civilian casualties mount.

“In Rio’s favelas, the state doesn’t always rule. Whoever controls the corner rules.”

Why Americans should care: Red Command is transnational. A lot of their product goes to Europe, but some flows toward the U.S. via routes that snake Brazil → Venezuela or Brazil → Bolivia → Ecuador → Colombia → north. When state power erodes, cartels fill the vacuum—and the poison travels.

 A Hemisphere Pushing Back

Say what you will, but a tougher U.S. stance on cartels has emboldened several Latin American governments:

  • Ecuador (Jan): Declared internal armed conflict; designated 22 gangs as terrorists; later the U.S. added two to our own lists.

  • Guatemala (Oct 21): Congress passed an anti-gang law, formally branding MS-13 and Barrio 18 as terror organizations with stiffer penalties.

  • Honduras: Reframed parts of narco-trafficking as terrorism in the penal code.

  • Nicaragua: Cracking down—not on cartels—but on churches and religious NGOs. Backwards priorities, and they’re proud of it.

Bottom line: The El Salvador model (mass gang arrests, unapologetic enforcement) is contagious. Some countries are finally acting like cartels are terrorists. Because they are.

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