March 31, 202601:00:00

Road Warrior Radio with Chris Hinkley, March 31, 2026 Hour 1

In these increasingly perilous times, the resounding question is: ‘What is to be done?’ I agree with Chuck Baldwin to the extent that the Christian church, the body of Christ is the first line of preservation and defense against putrid corruption.

The trouble is; the time for what could and should have been done, when the cost was low, has long since passed. The time before us demands of us a cost we are altogether unfamiliar with, and unwilling to pay. The evidence is; if we were willing, we’d have paid when it required so much less.

  • “And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if every Security operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive and had to say good-bye to his family? Or if, during periods of mass arrests, as for example in Leningrad, when they arrested a quarter of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing left to lose and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand?… The Organs would very quickly have suffered a shortage of officers and transport and, notwithstanding all of Stalin’s thirst, the cursed machine would have ground to a halt! If…if…We didn’t love freedom enough. And even more – we had no awareness of the real situation…. We purely and simply deserved everything that happened afterward.” – Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago 1918–1956

  • For the time [is come] that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if [it] first [begin] at us, what shall the end [be] of them that obey not the gospel of God? – 1 Peter 4:17 KJV

  • I will worship toward thy holy temple, and praise thy name for thy lovingkindness and for thy truth: for thou hast magnified thy word above all thy name. – Psalm 138:2 KJV

Links Videos / Clips

[x] = Played

Walter Williams: Why the Founders Did Not Want a Democracy [x] 0:00–1:52 Chapter 1: Why the Founders Did Not Want a Democracy 1:52–5:06 Chapter 2: What Politicians Reflect 5:06–8:51 Chapter 3: Liberty vs Tyranny [x] 8:51–10:10 Chapter 4: Low Tolerance for TSA Norman Dodd – The Hidden Agenda For World Government [x] 46:17–49:20 When Christians Become “Good For Nothing” – 3/22/26 By Pastor Chuck Baldwin Whitney Webb SOUNDS ALARM! Tech Billionaires Have Completely Taken Over Government! – The Jimmy Dore Show Headlines

[x] = Mentioned / Discussed

The Rest

[x] = Mentioned / Discussed

[x] IMEC: Trump’s War With Iran Is About Global Trade. Period. (Mar 18, 2026) By Patrick Wood

The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor — IMEC — is being called one of the largest and most ambitious infrastructure projects in modern history. Trump called it ‘one of the greatest trade routes in all of history.’

IMEC is not just a trade route. It is a control corridor…

I have been tracking the intersection of geopolitics and commercial infrastructure for a long time. What makes IMEC uniquely significant is the degree to which the same individual designed the diplomatic preconditions, brokered the commercial relationships, and is now overseeing the governance structure in the key territory the corridor passes through. That individual is Jared Kushner.

I have defined Technocracy consistently for over a decade: it is a system of governance in which society is controlled by scientists, engineers, and technical experts rather than elected representatives, and in which resource allocation and behavior modification replace price mechanisms and democratic consent. The endgame is scientific dictatorship. It does not announce itself. It builds infrastructure.

IMEC is Technocracy in its infrastructure phase.

I have said for years that Technocracy does not need a revolution. It needs infrastructure. … Consent is not required. Ownership is not required. Elections are not required. What is required is control of the architecture.

IMEC is that architecture. And it is being built right now, while the world watches the smoke rising over the Strait of Hormuz and the cranes moving rubble in Gaza.

Connect the dots.

[x] Kushner and Witkoff – by esc

Alastair Crooke, a former British diplomat and founder of the Conflicts Forum, described the mechanism in February 2026. The failure to resolve the Ukraine conflict, he argued, is a feature — one that opens a path for business to be done, for stakeholder deals to be cut, and for billions to be shared out.

Trump, Witkoff and Kushner are said to be confident that they can construct a financial reward system for western debt-holders, investors and politicians that succeeds in retaining the financial rewards of war — without the ancillary ingredient of bloodshed.

The territorial issues, security guarantees, EU membership status, and the position of NATO are, in Crooke’s framing, ‘downstream details once the larger payment system is organised’.

That sentence deserves to be read twice. The politics is downstream of the payment system, the governance is downstream of the financial architecture, and the settlement conditions are downstream of the clearing house. What Crooke is describing is not a peace process — it is the installation of a new financial system, with conflict resolution as its onboarding mechanism.

In Iran, the central bank is cut off from SWIFT, the rial has lost value since February 28, and the country cannot access its own reserves or settle internationally. When the war ends, Iran will need outside money to rebuild — and that money will come with conditions. The energy infrastructure is being destroyed physically while the financial infrastructure is being destroyed through isolation, and both lead to the same outcome: a country that has to accept external terms to rebuild, because it has no capacity left to do it alone.

In all three cases [Ukraine, Gaza, Iran], the mechanism is the same. Destroy the country’s ability to finance itself. Offer reconstruction money conditioned on adopting the new standards. Embed those standards in infrastructure that outlasts the funding.

The debt is the onramp, but the architecture is permanent.

The technocratic committee’s digital lead has pledged to build ‘a secure digital backbone, an open platform enabling e-payments, financial services, e-learning, and healthcare’ — with Gaza’s 2G network upgraded to free high-speed access by July.

Kushner’s own condition — that reconstruction money only flows into ‘terror-free zones’ — means the stablecoin doesn’t just track what you buy. It tracks where you are when you buy it. A terror-free zone is a geofence, and a stablecoin that only clears inside one is location-locked programmable money — a design feature first documented in the digital currency architecture explored by Joi Ito and Jeffrey Epstein at the MIT Media Lab, and subsequently tested by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston through the lab’s Digital Currency Initiative.

The population is being onboarded onto digital financial infrastructure before the reconstruction formally begins.

The Board of Peace’s charter does not mention Gaza. Permanent seats cost one billion dollars. Trump is named as chairman for life, with sole authority to pick his successor, invite countries, and create or dissolve any part of the organisation — and this authority is held in his personal capacity, separate from the presidency.

The Board of Peace is not a US government body subject to Congress or future presidents. It is a personal enterprise that would outlast his time in office, positioned outside any single sovereign authority — which is exactly where a clearinghouse sits. The BIS occupies Basel for the same structural reason. Russia’s UN representative warned during the Security Council debate that the arrangement is ‘reminiscent of colonial practices and the British mandate for Palestine’.

The structure bears this out — an international body governing a territory through conditions the population did not set, with full powers kept by the patron, and exit conditioned on compliance judged by the governing body itself.

China refused to join. UN human rights experts formally condemned the Board as ‘an illegal and illegitimate manoeuvre by powerful States driven by nostalgia and avarice’.

The politics is downstream of the payment system. It always was. What has changed is the speed of installation, the number of conflicts processed simultaneously, and whether the populations being onboarded have any say in the terms.

In 1871, it took six decades for the settlement architecture to produce the institution — the Bank for International Settlements. In 2026, the institution is being installed before the wars have ended — and the switchboard is on television, explaining how it works, to an audience that thinks it is watching diplomacy.

The Peace initiative Andrew Carnegie founded in 1910 is being installed even in hostile nations — one war at a time.

[x] MUST READ! EVERYONE! THEN POST & SEND OUT EVERYWHERE! | SOTN: Alternative News, Analysis & Commentary

Key Business Personnel in the Trump Administration (2025-2026)

  • Howard Lutnick (Commerce Secretary): CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, previously the world’s largest inter-dealer broker of U.S. government securities
  • Scott Bessent (Treasury Secretary): Founder of Key Square Capital Management and former Chief Investment Officer for Soros Fund Management
  • Elon Musk (Leader, U.S. DOGE Service): CEO of Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink, The Boring Company, xAI and X.
  • Doug Burgum (Secretary of the Interior): Software entrepreneur who sold Great Plains Software to Microsoft.
  • Kelly Loeffler (Small Business Administration): Former CEO of Bakkt and former U.S. Senator.
  • Linda McMahon (Education Secretary): Co-founder (and previous CEO/president) of sports entertainment company Titan Sports (later World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE)
  • Steven Witkoff (Special Envoy to the Middle East): Real estate investor and founder of the Witkoff Group
  • Jared Isaacman (NASA Administrator): Billionaire CEO of Shift4 Payments.
  • Charles Kushner (Ambassador to France): Real estate developer and founder of Kushner Companies
  • Vivek Ramaswamy (Co-leader, U.S. DOGE Service): Founder and CEO of Roivant Sciences, a biotechnological pharmaceutical company
  • Massad Boulos (Middle East Advisor): CEO of SCOA Nigeria PLC.
  • Frank Bisignano (Social Security Administration Commissioner): Chairman and CEO of Fiserv.
  • Stephen Feinberg (Deputy Secretary of Defense): Private equity titan, co-founder and former CEO of Cerberus Capital Management
  • Warren Stephens (Ambassador to the United Kingdom): Chairman, president and chief executive officer of Stephens Inc., a privately held investment bank
  • Tilman Fertitta (United States ambassador to Italy): Owner of the entertainment company Landry’s and the National Basketball Association’s Houston Rockets
[x] Iran War: We Follow The Money (To Mar-A-Lago) [x] Iran War: The Dark Money, Dark Politics, and Project 2025

What this article documents is something different: that long before any of those events occurred, a specific, identifiable network of organizations — funded by specific, identifiable corporations — had already built the personnel pipeline, the policy doctrine, the moral narrative, the military framework, and the diplomatic coalition needed to execute exactly this kind of operation. When the “golden window” opened, the machine didn’t need to be designed. It was already running.

… would a government staffed by career diplomats, intelligence professionals, and nonpartisan policy experts — rather than Heritage-vetted loyalists with fossil fuel portfolios — have found a different path?

We’ll never know. The machine made sure of that.

The Assembly Line Doesn’t Stop

Project 2025 isn’t a book. It’s an assembly line. And the Iran war is its most ambitious product to date.

[x] SOURCED TRANSCRIPT The Ultimate History Lesson A Weekend With John Taylor Gatto : Richard Andrew Grove : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive [x] The Anglo-American Establishment: Carroll Quigley: 9780945001010: Amazon.com: Books [x] What The Iran Attack Is Really All About – Road Warrior Radio [x] On Communitarianism: Collected Musings – April 2020 [Updated: Feb 3, 2025] Lark In Texas

The 3 A’s spring to mind – Amnesia, Abulia, and Apathy. With Amnesia, the collective memory dies. Abulia is the conditioned loss of will. And Apathy signifies our lack of concern or care. All three A’s will eventually lead to our subjugation, our acculturation**… and, yes… even our suicide.

Inter alia, these three things will likewise lead us to an eventual state of anomie… then into a state of “learned helplessness.”

(See: anomie; Emile Durkheim: Suicide (1897); Martin Seligman)

[x] The Impact of Science on Society – Wikiquote

I think the subject which will be of most importance polit­ically is mass psychology. Mass psychology is, scientifically speaking, not a very advanced study, and so far its professors have not been in universities: they have been advertisers, politicians, and, above all, dictators. This study is immensely useful to practical men, whether they wish to become rich or to acquire the government. It is, of course, as a science, founded upon individual psychology, but hitherto it has employed rule-of-thumb methods which were based upon a kind of intuitive common sense. Its importance has been enormously increased by the growth of modern methods of propaganda. Of these the most influential is what is called “education.”

[x] DEMOCRACY OR REPUBLIC, WHICH IS IT? by Benedict D. LaRosa published with permission by Devvy Kidd On This Day Holidays Historical Events
  • 2022 – Scientists announced they had finished fully sequencing the human genome, the full genetic blueprint for human life.
  • 2005 – Terri Schiavo (SHY’-voh), 41, died at a hospice in Pinellas Park, Florida, 13 days after her feeding tube was removed in a wrenching right-to-die court battle that began in 1998.
  • 2004 – Iraq War: Anbar Province: In Fallujah, Iraq, four American private military contractors working for Blackwater USA, are killed after being ambushed by Iraqi insurgents; frenzied crowds then dragged the burned, mutilated bodies and hanged two of them from a bridge.
  • 1999 – “The Matrix” released in theaters: Wachowski brothers writing and directing sibling team of Larry Lana and Andy Lilly Wachowski release their second film, the mind-blowing science-fiction blockbuster The Matrix.
  • 1998 – Netscape releases Mozilla source code under an open source license.
  • 1995 – Pop star Selena murdered by fan club president: Tejano music star Selena, 23, died after being shot by Yolanda Saldívar, the president of Selena’s fan club, who was found to have been embezzling money from the singer.
  • 1993 – Actor Brandon Lee, 28, was accidentally shot to death during the filming of a movie in Wilmington, North Carolina, when he was hit by a bullet fragment that had become lodged inside a prop gun.
  • 1992 – The USS Missouri, the last active United States Navy battleship, is decommissioned in Long Beach, California.
  • 1992 – The Treaty of Federation is signed in Moscow.
  • 1991 – Warsaw Pact’s military union ends: After 36 years in existence, the Warsaw Pact—the military alliance between the Soviet Union and its eastern European satellites—comes to an end.
  • 1985 – Wrestlemania: The first-ever Wrestlemania is held at Madison Square Garden, a nine-match event headlined by Mr. T and Hulk Hogan smacking down Rowdy Piper and Mr. Wonderful. Also there: Muhammad Ali as a referee and Liberace as a timekeeper.
  • 1968 – At the conclusion of a nationally broadcast address on Vietnam, President Lyndon B. Johnson stunned listeners by declaring, “I shall not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination of my party for another term as your president.”
  • 1951 – Remington Rand delivers the first UNIVAC I computer to the United States Census Bureau.
  • 1945 – World War II: a defecting German pilot delivers a Messerschmitt Me 262A-1, the world’s first operational jet-powered fighter aircraft, to the Americans, the first to fall into Allied hands.
  • 1943 – “Oklahoma!” premieres on Broadway: Oklahoma! opens on Broadway on March 31, 1943. In spite of a less-than-promising lead-up, it would go on to set a Broadway record of 2,212 performances before finally closing five years later.
  • 1933 – The Civilian Conservation Corps is established with the mission of relieving rampant unemployment in the United States.
  • 1931 – Notre Dame college football coach Knute Rockne, 43, was killed in the crash of a TWA plane near Bazaar, Kansas.
  • 1930 – The Motion Pictures Production Code is instituted, imposing strict guidelines on the treatment of sex, crime, religion and violence in film for the next 38 years
  • 1918 – Massacre of ethnic Azerbaijanis is committed by allied armed groups of Armenian Revolutionary Federation and Bolsheviks. Nearly 12,000 Azerbaijani Muslims are killed.
  • 1918 – United States switches to DST for first time: Most areas in the U.S. change the clocks twice a year. Exceptions include Hawaii and most of Arizona. The first country to ever use DST was Germany in 1916.
  • 1917 – The United States takes possession of the Danish West Indies after paying $25 million to Denmark, and renames the territory the United States Virgin Islands.
  • 1906 – The Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (later the National Collegiate Athletic Association) is established to set rules for college sports in the United States.
  • 1889 – Eiffel Tower officially opens for dignitaries and an award ceremony in Paris, France; designed by Gustave Eiffel and built for the Exposition Universelle, at 300 meters high, it holds the record for the tallest man-made structure for 41 years
  • 1870 – Thomas Mundy Peterson of Perth Amboy, New Jersey, is the first African American to vote in the US under the provisions of the 15th Amendment to the Constitution
  • 1776 – Abigail Adams urges husband to “remember the ladies”: In a letter dated March 31, 1776, Abigail Adams writes to her husband, John Adams, urging him and the other members of the Continental Congress not to forget about the nation’s women when fighting for America’s independence from Great Britain.
  • 1774 – American Revolution: The Kingdom of Great Britain orders the port of Boston, Massachusetts closed pursuant to the Boston Port Act.
  • 1657 – English Parliament presents the Humble Petition and Advice to Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell, offering him the crown, but he declines
  • 1521 – Ferdinand Magellan and fifty of his men came ashore to present-day Limasawa to participate in the first Catholic mass in the Philippines.
  • 1492 – Jews expelled from Spain: King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain issued the Alhambra Decree, an edict expelling Jews from Spanish soil, except those willing to convert to Christianity.
  • 1146 – Second Crusade: Bernard of Clairvaux preaches his famous sermon in a field at Vézelay, urging the necessity of a Second Crusade. Louis VII and Eleanor of Aquitaine are present and join the Crusade.
Births
  • 1972 – Evan Williams, American businessman, co-founded Twitter and Pyra Labs (54)
  • 1971 – Ewan McGregor, Scottish actor (55)
  • 1955 – Angus Young, co-founder, lead guitarist, and last remaining original member of the legendary rock band AC/DC (71)
  • 1948 – Rhea Perlman, American actress (78)
  • 1948 – Al Gore, American politician, 45th Vice President of the United States, Nobel Prize laureate, confabulist climate alarmist (78)
  • 1945 – Gabe Kaplan, American actor and comedian (81)
  • 1943 – Christopher Walken, Oscar-winning actor noted for offbeat performances in films like “The Deer Hunter” and “Pulp Fiction”—and his need for more cowbell. (83)
  • 1940 – Patrick Leahy, American lawyer and politician (86)
  • 1940 – Barney Frank, American lawyer and politician (86)
  • 1936 – Walter E. Williams, American economist and academic (died 2020)
  • 1935 – Herb Alpert, American singer-songwriter, trumpet player, and producer (91)
  • 1934 – Shirley Jones, American actress and singer (92)
  • 1934 – Richard Chamberlain, American actor (died 2025)
  • 1929 – Liz Claiborne, Belgian-American fashion designer, founded Liz Claiborne Inc. (died 2007)
  • 1928 – Gordie Howe, Canadian NHL ice hockey legend (died 2016)
  • 1927 – Cesar Chavez, American labor union leader and activist (died 1993)
  • 1924 – Leo Buscaglia, American author and academic (died 1998)
  • 1878 – Jack Johnson, first African-American world heavyweight boxing champion (died 1946)
  • 1732 – Joseph Haydn, Austrian pianist and composer (died 1809)
  • 1685 – Johann Sebastian Bach, German Baroque composer and musician who laid the foundation of Western music with unmatched mastery of harmony and counterpoint. (died 1750)
  • 1596 – René Descartes, French mathematician and philosopher (died 1650)
Deaths
  • 2025 – Betty Webb, English code breaker (born 1923)
  • 2014 – Charles Keating, American sportsman, lawyer, real estate developer, banker, financier, conservative activist, and convicted felon best known for his role in the savings and loan scandal of the late 1980s. (born 1923)
  • 1995 – Selena, American singer-songwriter (born 1971)
  • 1993 – Brandon Lee, son of Bruce Lee, American actor and martial artist (born 1965)
  • 1980 – Jesse Owens, American sprinter and long jumper (born 1913)
  • 1931 – Knute Rockne, American football player and coach (born 1888)
  • 1913 – J. P. Morgan, American banker and financier (born 1837)
  • 1850 – John C. Calhoun, American lawyer and politician, 7th Vice President of the United States, early fomenter of States Rights and Civil War provocateur (born 1782)
  • 1727 – Isaac Newton, English scientist and mathematician (born 1643) (born 1643)
  • 1703 – Johann Christoph Bach, German composer (b. 1642)
No transcript available.