The Hamilton Corner

December 4, 2025 · 51:48

("Best-of" Edition from 11/11) Bill Federer, nationally known speaker, best selling author, President of Amerisearch, Inc., returns to the “The Corner.”

Politics & Policy

Show notes

0:00 - 15:00. Proverbs 14:23. Mere talk leads ONLY to poverty and destruction. 15:00 - 31:00. Bill Federer, nationally known speaker, best selling author, President of Amerisearch, Inc., returns to the “The Corner.” 31:00 - 48:00. Historical ignorance ensures repetition of some of its worst epochs. | 1-800-326-4543 ext. 345 To donate call : 877-616-2396

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Transcribed with OpenAI Whisper (base.en). Timestamps are approximate. Lightly cleaned for readability; quotations from on-air callers may include filler words. Use the audio player above for the authoritative recording.

  1. 0:00Darkness is not an affirmative force.
  2. 0:03It simply reoccupies the space vacated by the light.
  3. 0:07This is the Hamilton Corner on American Family Radio.
  4. 0:11It should be uncomfortable for a believer to live as a hypocrite.
  5. 0:15Delivery people out of the bondage of mainstream media.
  6. 0:18And the philosophies of this world.
  7. 0:20God has called you and me to be his ambassador.
  8. 0:24Even in this dark moment.
  9. 0:26Let's not miss our moment.
  10. 0:28And now, the Hamilton Corner.
  11. 0:33Good evening, everyone.
  12. 0:34Welcome to the Hamilton Corner.
  13. 0:36My name is Abraham Hamilton.
  14. 0:37The third joined by the corner contingent right across from me.
  15. 0:41My man 100 grand, but you might want to call him today.
  16. 0:43Jeff can go slim.
  17. 0:45Check him out over there.
  18. 0:46Can go slim came though.
  19. 0:49None other than Mr. Bobby.
  20. 0:51RR-R-R-R-R-R-R-R-R-R-R-R-tone
  21. 0:52La-Rosa, y'all going to play with him if you want.
  22. 0:57Thelake's temperature gets
  23. 0:59to drop certain degrees below
  24. 1:02count on Mister Rosa, to bust out the kingo.
  25. 1:06The screening room we have produced extraordinaire.
  26. 1:09Often imitated, never duplicated.
  27. 1:12You might call him Amini, but he got his winter beanier on.
  28. 1:19Hey, hey you got to keep the lid, you know?
  29. 1:22You got the company called in.
  30. 1:23Fairly insulated.
  31. 1:25Yeah, you know, I'm just, you know, I've, I've, I've, I've opted for the industry option on this fine evening fellows.
  32. 1:35At this very moment, many of you, if not most of you are making your transition from your part time jobs where you generate an income to your full time jobs where you cultivate an outcome.
  33. 1:44And as you do so, I want to remind you to do so within tensionality, understanding the primacy that God places on family and recognizing the reality
  34. 1:54that we will not outpace deficiencies that are bound in the home, that we ignore, neglect,
  35. 2:04sideline, and even some instances marginalize family to our own detriment.
  36. 2:11We have to come to grips with the reality, and this is something that I've been pondering
  37. 2:14and wrestling with in my own mind and heart and communicating with people about with the
  38. 2:21state that the family is in currently.
  39. 2:23in currently where the majority of children who are being born now and they are there there
  40. 2:28are status of various stats demographically but the trend is the same regardless of demographic
  41. 2:33breakdown where you have a increasing quantities of children that are being born into homes where
  42. 2:39where the father primarily or even some instances the mother of the child are not living in the
  43. 2:46home in which the child is being reared over the course of their lives. Younger people are saying
  44. 2:51things like they want to have children but have no concept for marriage.
  45. 2:56Guys, that is where we are.
  46. 3:01But it is coming upon us who are members of the eternal family of God that we in many ways,
  47. 3:06we lead, generally speaking, but one of the particular ways that we lead is that we lead
  48. 3:11in embracing the exclusive human institution that God made and describes in his word as
  49. 3:18illustrative of Christ's relationship with his bride.
  50. 3:21There is not another to say that in a different way.
  51. 3:26In a more simplified manner, guys marriage is a big deal.
  52. 3:29It's a big deal.
  53. 3:30It's a big deal.
  54. 3:32So with all that's happening all around the world, and I've mentioned before we got the
  55. 3:35monitor right here, that scours the world and the nation with all kinds of things.
  56. 3:40Even the world is awakening to the fact that that old thing called the Affordable Care Act,
  57. 3:47it was never affordable.
  58. 3:49Oh, in fact, it was never meant to be affordable.
  59. 3:55Even, and let me just say this, and I think this is the best way to frame this issue.
  60. 3:58People who say, oh, Congress needs to do something because health care premiums, health insurance
  61. 4:04premiums are skyrocketing.
  62. 4:05Facts, folks.
  63. 4:06No, they aren't.
  64. 4:08The health care premiums are not changing at all.
  65. 4:11You know what's changing?
  66. 4:13The amount of money taxpayers would spend towards your premium so that you, AKA, or should
  67. 4:19I say ACA adherence, pre-out of pocket.
  68. 4:23A great way to understand this hypothetical.
  69. 4:25Let's talk about gas, right?
  70. 4:26Let's say gas, gas is $5 a gallon.
  71. 4:29That's the cost.
  72. 4:30But the Congress has passed a statute that says,
  73. 4:33you know what?
  74. 4:34The taxpayers will pay $250 per gallon
  75. 4:37of each gallon of gas that's spent,
  76. 4:39so that at the pump, all that people pay is $2.50.
  77. 4:44So if the government happened to set the legislation
  78. 4:50to allow the gasoline subsidies to expire.
  79. 4:54When those subsidies expire,
  80. 4:56has the price of a gallon of gas changed?
  81. 5:01No, ladies and gentlemen,
  82. 5:03all that has changed is the amount
  83. 5:07that the federal government would charge the taxpayer
  84. 5:12for the gallon of gas.
  85. 5:14Guys, that's what's happened.
  86. 5:15The issue here, the issue here,
  87. 5:18is not what Congress has done now.
  88. 5:20It's that Obamacare was passed in the first place.
  89. 5:23And the issue here, if you wanna lay something at the feet
  90. 5:25of the Republicans,
  91. 5:26because the Democrats passed Obamacare,
  92. 5:28and guess what Republicans did when they had majorities
  93. 5:30and had the opportunity to do so, they failed to repeal it.
  94. 5:36So let's be clear.
  95. 5:39No doubt, Democrats shut down.
  96. 5:41No doubt, the ACA is what caused all of these problems.
  97. 5:46Premiums are not skyrocketing on people.
  98. 5:47Just the taxpayer contributions
  99. 5:51to the health insurance premiums are just going.
  100. 5:54And they're not even going away totally.
  101. 5:56That's another thing people need to realize.
  102. 5:57They're not going away totally.
  103. 5:58They're just being reduced from what the Biden administration
  104. 6:04got passed.
  105. 6:08This is why we need to understand what's going on.
  106. 6:11With that being said, to the word of God we go.
  107. 6:13Because remember what goes on in your house
  108. 6:15is far more important than what goes on in the White House.
  109. 6:18Make sure you explain that to your friends
  110. 6:19and family members and your loved ones,
  111. 6:21that premiums help the cost for health insurance
  112. 6:24has gone up and it's all because of Obamacare.
  113. 6:27But with these people saying that,
  114. 6:28oh, prima's gonna skyrocket on people.
  115. 6:29Now, that's not what's happening,
  116. 6:30it always happening.
  117. 6:31The prima's on what they have been,
  118. 6:34but the federal government subsidies
  119. 6:36creating that, oh, I don't know, 40 billion plus
  120. 6:39slash fund for the insurance companies.
  121. 6:41That is what's happening.
  122. 6:46To the word of God we go, Proverbs, chapter 14.
  123. 6:49Proverbs, chapter 14, verse 23, one verse this evening.
  124. 6:54Man, the word of God is so rich and so profound.
  125. 6:58The Lord says, so us through His word,
  126. 6:59Proverbs up to 14 verse 23.
  127. 7:01In all labor, there is profit.
  128. 7:06But mere talk leads only to poverty.
  129. 7:12Read that one again.
  130. 7:14In all labor, there is profit.
  131. 7:16But mere talk leads only to poverty.
  132. 7:22This portion of scripture is affirming the biblical truth
  133. 7:27that work is a blessing.
  134. 7:31It's a blessing.
  135. 7:32In fact, some have said,
  136. 7:34Well, I know in the reality of work that happened following the rebellion in the garden.
  137. 7:38Actually, that's not true.
  138. 7:40Work predates the rebellion in the garden.
  139. 7:43Before sin into the world, Adam was given a job.
  140. 7:50That was a part of it.
  141. 7:52But the animal naming process, by the way, naming the animals, that's absolutely right.
  142. 7:55But the animal naming process flowed downstream from this overarching instruction that God
  143. 7:59gave him when he placed him in the garden.
  144. 8:01He said, I am placing you in the garden to do what?
  145. 8:03To dress it and to keep it.
  146. 8:09was employed long before there was sin. That employment, however, wasn't a requirement in
  147. 8:16order to eat because in order to eat, all he had to do was go to a tree. But the employment
  148. 8:20was an opportunity to reflect the reality of his creator in innovation and ingenuity
  149. 8:25and initiative long before sin ever into the picture included in that responsibility to cultivate
  150. 8:32or dress his garden jurisdiction and to keep it to protect all that was in within his jurisdiction.
  151. 8:41He had the substrate responsibility of identifying and naming all of the animals.
  152. 8:48This is long before sin ever enters a picture.
  153. 8:51This is why later on in the New Testament the Lord says if a man doesn't work, because following
  154. 8:59the rebellion in the garden one of the consequences for a man is that labor would be connected to
  155. 9:03his ability to provide for himself.
  156. 9:05Guys, even if you try something, for example you pursue a small business and your first
  157. 9:12iteration of your business doesn't necessarily go as well as you had hoped for.
  158. 9:17You've learned something in that process that is beneficial for you later on.
  159. 9:22Say you have a business and you learn about software for payment, of outstanding bills and
  160. 9:29receiving payment for transactions at the point of sale.
  161. 9:33You carry that knowledge with you to the next enterprise that creates a learning opportunity
  162. 9:44and the Bible says, this is from God's perspective.
  163. 9:47In all labor, there is benefit, there is profit.
  164. 9:52But I want you to also notice the contrast.
  165. 9:54But second half of the verse, mere talk leads only to poverty.
  166. 10:02Here the Lord in His word is pairing laborious investment, working with mere talking about
  167. 10:12working.
  168. 10:13Hey, man, you know, one day I'm going to go ahead and start that business.
  169. 10:19Hey, man, you know what?
  170. 10:20Hey, I'm gonna renovate this room.
  171. 10:23Hey, man, you know, one day I'm gonna get me some land
  172. 10:26and I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna,
  173. 10:29to which the Lord would say.
  174. 10:31Now, I just say, Lord would say,
  175. 10:32when you're gonna do it, bro, my wife has a saying.
  176. 10:39Don't talk about it.
  177. 10:40Be about it.
  178. 10:42The Lord says it this way.
  179. 10:45In all labor, there is profit,
  180. 10:46but mere talk leads only to poverty.
  181. 10:49But the Will Addison pointed out this scripture to
  182. 10:52the men at our last men's meeting,
  183. 10:53when we were talking about this very phenomena.
  184. 10:57If you look around what's happening in our society,
  185. 11:00it largely is attributable to people who may be able
  186. 11:03to Sunday to Monday morning quarterback to problems,
  187. 11:07but won't lift a finger or a foot
  188. 11:08to do anything about it.
  189. 11:10And I'm saying that enough is enough of that.
  190. 11:15How much more is it gonna take?
  191. 11:16How many more Islam units gotta be elected
  192. 11:18in major metropolitan networks?
  193. 11:20How many more generations of Americans have to be deprived
  194. 11:23of a robust proclamation of the gospel
  195. 11:25and disciples and being made into disciples,
  196. 11:28knowing what they believe, knowing why they believe it,
  197. 11:30and are reasonably able to articulate that
  198. 11:32to whom so ever will they would ask that question.
  199. 11:35How much more do we have to see to recognize,
  200. 11:41you know, you keep looking around for an answer
  201. 11:44when the Lord has already given you His word
  202. 11:46and has called you to be a part of being the answer?
  203. 11:50Or should I say conveying the answer?
  204. 11:55We have to get to the point where we had enough talking
  205. 11:58about it, it's time to be about it.
  206. 12:01In all labor, there is profit.
  207. 12:04But mere talk, we just going to flap our gums.
  208. 12:09We just going to diagnose and diagnose and diagnose.
  209. 12:15And we don't respond putting feet to what we recognize.
  210. 12:21The scripture gives us a warning.
  211. 12:23If we are mere talkers, we are talking our way into poverty and destruction.
  212. 12:31Enough is enough.
  213. 12:34I've asked this question before.
  214. 12:36What is God requiring of us right now?
  215. 12:38What is God requiring of you right now?
  216. 12:39What are the things that you see happening
  217. 12:42and that you have the wherewithal to respond to?
  218. 12:48Surely God knows that you cannot individually,
  219. 12:50you know, be the source,
  220. 12:52to be a source of salvaging for the entire world,
  221. 12:55but God knows what you can be
  222. 12:56and what you can do in your world.
  223. 13:01How long are we gonna talk about it before we do anything?
  224. 13:05Are we content with merely talking?
  225. 13:07That's another question and I'm saying this
  226. 13:08as a host of a talk show,
  227. 13:13but I would tell you and people who know me,
  228. 13:14they know this is a part of what I do.
  229. 13:17There are a lot of other things going on behind the scenes
  230. 13:20by God's grace.
  231. 13:24But my hope in prayer is that this encourages you
  232. 13:27to recognize that there is biblical admonition
  233. 13:34against being a gum flapper only.
  234. 13:37Now don't misconstrue what I'm saying.
  235. 13:40I am not saying talking has no value because it does.
  236. 13:43You often have to convey the vision that God has given you
  237. 13:46and articulate what it is that you're pursuing
  238. 13:49in order to have people to join you in pursuing that.
  239. 13:54But if we're only going to talk and never going to respond,
  240. 13:58the script has a warning for us.
  241. 14:00In all labor, there is profit, but mere talk, mere talk,
  242. 14:06leads only.
  243. 14:07Notice that, leads only to impoverishment, destruction,
  244. 14:15calamity.
  245. 14:17We cannot afford to be a people who are mere talkers.
  246. 14:24James says it this way, we must not be hearers of the word only, but doers.
  247. 14:34The harvest is plentiful, but the labors of few pray you the Lord of the harvest that
  248. 14:40he would send laborers into his harvest field.
  249. 14:43And that's across the entire spectrum of our society.
  250. 14:47When he pulpits a flame in righteousness, enterprise a flame in righteousness, civic
  251. 14:51engagement a flame in righteousness, righteousness, cultivation of the hearts and minds of the
  252. 14:55next generation inflamed with righteousness.
  253. 15:01A discipleship minute with Joseph Parker.
  254. 15:05In the parable of the Good Samaritan in Luke chapter 10,
  255. 15:08three people of quote unquote faith
  256. 15:10found a man in great trouble and distress.
  257. 15:13Two of the three passed by on the other side of the road
  258. 15:16after seeing the injured man.
  259. 15:19Sadly, they did nothing to help.
  260. 15:22Yet when a Samaritan saw the man, he had compassion on him.
  261. 15:26The Samaritan went through great lengths
  262. 15:28to help the injured man. He used his time, energy, and money to assist the person in need.
  263. 15:34The Lord Jesus, after sharing the parable, gave a command, go and do likewise. Babies
  264. 15:41in the womb have too often been the man on the side of the road. The world has beaten
  265. 15:47them up, robbed them, and taken their lives too often. May the church, the body of Christ,
  266. 15:54May we not pass by on the other side anymore.
  267. 16:02Do you have a comfortable, prodigal living in your home?
  268. 16:05Hi, I'm Mark Gregston with Parenting Today's Teens.
  269. 16:08I find it interesting that the prodigal son in the Bible came to his senses only when the
  270. 16:12consequences of his rotten attitude left him eating with swine far away from his mother's
  271. 16:18home cooking.
  272. 16:19But today many teens are living a prodigal lifestyle while still enjoying the comforts
  273. 16:24of home.
  274. 16:25get what they want and they do as they please, all that Mom and Dad's expense and as a result,
  275. 16:31they never grow up.
  276. 16:33Mom, Dad, it's okay to give your teen what he truly needs, but don't let your generosity
  277. 16:38facilitate his laziness.
  278. 16:41Instead, take some risk and give your teen some personal responsibility.
  279. 16:46One day, he'll be fully prepared to live on his own.
  280. 16:50Want more help from Mark Regston?
  281. 16:52Check out his latest resources online.
  282. 16:55at parodentodaysteens.org.
  283. 17:05Shining, lighting to the darkness,
  284. 17:08this is the Hamilton Corner, an American family radio.
  285. 17:11Welcome back to the Hamilton Corner, Abraham Hamilton,
  286. 17:13the third here I'm delighted to have on the program
  287. 17:16a brother in Christ to I deem to be a mentor.
  288. 17:20Frankly, he is a national treasure in my estimation.
  289. 17:23He is a nationally known speaker,
  290. 17:26best-selling author, president of Amerisearch,
  291. 17:29which is a publishing company dedicated
  292. 17:31to researching America's noble heritage.
  293. 17:33Many of you have heard him numerous times
  294. 17:35on the American Minute Radio feature
  295. 17:38that's heard all over the country.
  296. 17:39My guess is none other than Bill Federer.
  297. 17:43Bill, thank you for joining me here on the Hamilton Corner.
  298. 17:46Well, Abraham's crazy with you.
  299. 17:48Oh man, the pleasure is mine.
  300. 17:49I've had the wonderful privilege of joining you
  301. 17:52and at several different conferences
  302. 17:54and speaking together at different events.
  303. 17:57And you just bring a delightful wealth
  304. 18:01of knowledge and information,
  305. 18:03but it's anchored in your commitment to following Christ.
  306. 18:06And so I'm just grateful for you in the ministry
  307. 18:08that you've been invested in for all of these years
  308. 18:10and your willingness to continue to fight the good fight.
  309. 18:14Well, hey, I'm impressed with all that you're doing.
  310. 18:17And when I was with you at that homeschool convention,
  311. 18:20you had the room just in awe.
  312. 18:22They were like, man, you're just hitting every cylinder
  313. 18:25and it was brilliant.
  314. 18:27So the AFR is blessed to have you there
  315. 18:31and all the listeners as well.
  316. 18:33Oh man, well, well, thank you for that.
  317. 18:36Thank you for that.
  318. 18:37Well, I invited you on the program
  319. 18:40because I've been talking quite a bit about
  320. 18:42the things that are happening.
  321. 18:44For example, the Islamianist who was elected
  322. 18:46in New York City, Zura Mamdani recognizing the pattern
  323. 18:51that as of 2023, there's a majority of Muslims
  324. 18:54who are predominantly Shiite frankly,
  325. 18:56and Dearborn, Dearborn, Michigan,
  326. 18:58you have a higher percentage of Muslims
  327. 19:01in Hamtramic, Michigan.
  328. 19:03I had a friend on the show who lives in Michigan
  329. 19:05who said, listen, in Dearborn, it's not formal Sharia,
  330. 19:07but it's functional Sharia law that's happening.
  331. 19:10Right now you have the presence
  332. 19:13of a pretty significant Muslim population
  333. 19:16in the Minneapolis area, the Twin Cities area,
  334. 19:19and there's a pattern that I believe is happening
  335. 19:22that is consistent with what has happened
  336. 19:25without history concerning Islamic migration patterns
  337. 19:28and rout ultimately to Islamic domination,
  338. 19:32how would you articulate that pattern first and foremost
  339. 19:36and secondarily are we seeing that play out
  340. 19:38right here in our own land?
  341. 19:40Yeah, yeah, you know, Henry Ford is the one
  342. 19:44who initially brought Muslim immigrants to Detroit
  343. 19:47to break the unions because they wouldn't unionize.
  344. 19:49And so then they, and then building a community
  345. 19:52and building great cars.
  346. 19:53They had the first major mosque in America, they're in Detroit, but the next generation is more
  347. 20:02fundamental, but big picture, Muhammad was born 570 AD.
  348. 20:07Father dies before he's born, mother dies when he's six, grandfather, garden dies when he's eight,
  349. 20:11he's orphaned, taken in by an uncle, a boot to leave, who takes him on camel rides to different cities. He hears about different religions.
  350. 20:18Persia was Zoroastrian that believed that paradise was fill full of virgins that would fulfill all the guys' desires.
  351. 20:23And Muhammad heard that, and lo and behold, that appears in Islam.
  352. 20:28The Zoroastrians believed in gins or genies, right?
  353. 20:31And that got in, or Latin's lamp.
  354. 20:33And then there were pagan communities.
  355. 20:35So Mecca was a pagan city.
  356. 20:37They had 360 different pagan gods.
  357. 20:39The most popular was Houball the moon god.
  358. 20:41And they had a rock.
  359. 20:42They thought it'd fall from the moon, the glass impact rock, where they would kiss it, walk
  360. 20:45around and bottle it.
  361. 20:46And they did this first centuries pre-Mohamad, Muhammad kissed that rock and that got incorporated
  362. 20:50into his belief system.
  363. 20:51He went to Jewish cities and he originally had his followers bombing towards Jerusalem
  364. 20:55But when the Jews rejected him he changed the direction to Mecca
  365. 20:59And even in Cyclopedia Britannica says the gospel was made known to Muhammad through apocryphal and heretical sources
  366. 21:05So Muhammad thought the Trinity was the father Mary and Jesus
  367. 21:08Muhammad was a literate you can never read and write the word Quran means rest ittation. It's an oral thing
  368. 21:13he goes into Mecca and
  369. 21:15and thinks there's something in it for everyone,
  370. 21:19but very few converts.
  371. 21:20So he only makes 70 converts in 12 years.
  372. 21:23Got to confrontational.
  373. 21:24They tried chasing him out first in 619 AD.
  374. 21:27He goes to a city called Al-Taiif.
  375. 21:29They don't want him. They pelt him with rocks and stones.
  376. 21:31His wife dies.
  377. 21:34And then he ends up going to a Jewish city called Medina.
  378. 21:39And the Jews let Muhammad in as the first Muslim immigrant ever.
  379. 21:44He's a refugee.
  380. 21:45He goes into the city, presents his faith to the Jews.
  381. 21:48They say, you're not a prophet in the line of our prophet, they reject him, but he goes
  382. 21:52into the minority neighborhoods and he begins to organize a following.
  383. 21:56And when his following gets bigger and bigger, he gets involved in politics, like he gets selected.
  384. 22:01And then with his following, he pressures the Jews to accommodate him and his new followers
  385. 22:06politically.
  386. 22:07And they do, so Muhammad's a political leader in addition to being a religious leader.
  387. 22:11And his followers in Mecca get confrontational argumentative.
  388. 22:14They get chased out of town.
  389. 22:15Now you have lots of Muslim immigrants and the Jews let them
  390. 22:19into the Jewish city of Medina, three Jewish tribes, clans.
  391. 22:23And Mohammed allows them to rob the caravans headed back to Mecca
  392. 22:27in retaliation for the mechanism chasing them out of town.
  393. 22:31And so this is different than Jesus who said,
  394. 22:33if they take your go, give them your shirt,
  395. 22:34his attitude was that if they take your house,
  396. 22:36you retaliate, take their caravan.
  397. 22:37and he gets verses from his Allah on.
  398. 22:40One says, Allah has given you the slave girls as your booty.
  399. 22:44So he would get, and then another one is that a fifth of the booty
  400. 22:48is for the messenger of the prophet.
  401. 22:51So Muhammad got a fifth of the booty from robbing the caravans.
  402. 22:55And so the meccans send a thousand soldiers to protect their caravan,
  403. 23:03624 AD battle of Badra, Muhammad with just a hundred defeats 300.
  404. 23:09So he takes this as a confirmation from all,
  405. 23:11I suppose to be a military leader.
  406. 23:13And he fights 66 battles and raids, killing 3,000 people in the next eight years
  407. 23:18before he dies and he dies in 632 AD.
  408. 23:22But within five years of him coming into the Jewish city of Medina,
  409. 23:25there's not a Jew left in the city.
  410. 23:27It's like, what?
  411. 23:28Yeah, the Jews were nice.
  412. 23:29These three clans, but the three clans didn't get along.
  413. 23:32And so, Muhammad picked on one of the clans the other two didn't like, and he confiscated
  414. 23:36their property, chases him out of town.
  415. 23:38And the other two Jewish clans sort of keep their head low.
  416. 23:40He plays the politics, he knows which one.
  417. 23:42And then there's two Jewish clans, he picks on the smaller of the two.
  418. 23:44The big one stands back and says, well, they were always sort of competition for me and
  419. 23:47now they're gone.
  420. 23:48Now there's one Jewish clan.
  421. 23:50And had Deth says that Muhammad was taking a bath, a spirit appeared to him, said, up in
  422. 23:54you rest when all his enemies are in your midst.
  423. 23:56He said, where?
  424. 23:57And it points at that last Jewish neighborhood.
  425. 23:59He bottles him up for 28 days when they surrender.
  426. 24:01brings them into the market and chops off the heads of the men and sells the women and
  427. 24:04children in the slavery.
  428. 24:05Let me jump right there because you mentioned the Quran which means recitation absolutely
  429. 24:09right.
  430. 24:10I've repeated numerous times that Muhammad was illiterate.
  431. 24:13So it is an oral thing communicated documented by others thereafter.
  432. 24:17Then you mentioned the Hadith.
  433. 24:18They rhyme for like rap music.
  434. 24:19Yes, it does.
  435. 24:20If you ever read it.
  436. 24:22Yeah.
  437. 24:23What are the Hadith?
  438. 24:24The Hadith are 60,000 stories remembered about Muhammad by his wives and warriors.
  439. 24:31So he married anywhere from 11 to 22 wives.
  440. 24:34He had slave wives.
  441. 24:35He had concubines as youngest wife.
  442. 24:36Aisha was six years old.
  443. 24:37He had a dream tonight's in a row of him marrying the six year old daughter of his
  444. 24:40general, a boob ocker.
  445. 24:42And he said, well, you're the prophet.
  446. 24:43Here she is.
  447. 24:44And in the head, Keith, Aisha says that she was nine years old playing in the
  448. 24:49backyard.
  449. 24:50The Muslim women came, took a cloth, dipped in water, washed her face and
  450. 24:53washed her off.
  451. 24:54And then said, Alice, blessings and good luck.
  452. 24:57The prophet visited me that afternoon.
  453. 24:58I was nine years old.
  454. 25:00And so she was Muhammad's favorite wife any and then having slave wives and concubines and so forth and so the
  455. 25:07idea is that
  456. 25:10He's the perfect Muslim and so he's the example and and
  457. 25:16The the Quran is two sets of verses
  458. 25:20the first set of verses were given to Muhammad when he was in Mecca and
  459. 25:25He was just a religious leader. So those verses are relatively more peaceful
  460. 25:29the verses he gets in Medina or more political militant and they're more violent and the later verses supersede the earlier verses.
  461. 25:36That is the hermeneutic approach for the Quran is that the latter verses supersede the prior soras that are in the Quran.
  462. 25:44Yeah, so in the Bible we have an Old Testament with some violence and a New Testament with no violence.
  463. 25:49Jesus in the apostles didn't kill anybody. So what do we say? The last example is the one we're going to try to follow.
  464. 25:54It's the same way in Islam only in reverse.
  465. 25:57Their peaceful verses came first when Muhammad was in Mecca,
  466. 26:00and they're abrogated and superseded by the later verses
  467. 26:02in Medina that are political and militant.
  468. 26:04So the Quran are private revelations to Muhammad,
  469. 26:08nobody else got those.
  470. 26:09But the Hadith stories remember about Muhammad,
  471. 26:13for those not familiar, the Quran is arranged
  472. 26:15by the size of the chapter.
  473. 26:18So the longest ones are at the front shores,
  474. 26:19ones at the back, if they did that with the Bible,
  475. 26:21the first chapter would be Psalms 119,
  476. 26:23and the last verse would be Jesus' webbed head.
  477. 26:26But Hadith, their stories remembered about Muhammad.
  478. 26:30And so you would have people like Kali Humar, and they would be challenging him.
  479. 26:36And he says, wait a second, I remembered that the prophet one time after a battle told me
  480. 26:40this, and I was the only one there.
  481. 26:42And it's like, okay, well, if you heard it from the prophet, but these were oral, and then
  482. 26:46they get later written down.
  483. 26:48the Sunnis like some, the Shiite like, and then one other piece of
  484. 26:54literature is the Surat, S-I-R-A-T, and it's the Bhagavr phiomoham, and written about
  485. 27:00a hundred years after his death, and it puts his life in chronological order. And
  486. 27:04so where the Quran is arranged by the size of the chapter, and the Hadith are
  487. 27:11just more or less random stories remembered about the Prophet. He slept on
  488. 27:14on his right side, he would cup his hands, he used a sandal,
  489. 27:17you would toothpick, you know.
  490. 27:19And so, since the goal is to try to imitate him,
  491. 27:23these were observations of him that became part.
  492. 27:27And then, so the crown of the Hardith and Surat,
  493. 27:29and you have four major schools of Islamic study
  494. 27:32interpreting that the crown of the Hardith and Surat.
  495. 27:36You had one major person is,
  496. 27:39in the eighth and ninth century to the Islamic Golden Age,
  497. 27:42you had some Muslims that were becoming moderate
  498. 27:46and Al-Farrabi, Avaros, Avasena,
  499. 27:50and they were writing in science and medicine and math
  500. 27:54and geometry, and they were reading Greek stuff.
  501. 27:57And you had the,
  502. 28:03if you would have taken a snapshot,
  503. 28:05you would have thought that the Islamic world
  504. 28:07is about to experience the Renaissance.
  505. 28:10But they'd all get slapped down by a Muslim leader
  506. 28:13named Ghazali. He's a Mujahideen, a renewer of the faith. And he said, stop studying Greek
  507. 28:19geometry because you could get pulled into Greek philosophy and get pulled away from Islam. So stop
  508. 28:24studying all the science, medicine, and physics, just study the Quran. And it was a closing of the
  509. 28:29Muslim mind. And it sort of more or less cemented Islam. You had another Islamic scholar in Andalusia
  510. 28:38Spain and he starts noticing that geez, some of the stories in
  511. 28:42the Quran are different than some of the stories in the Bible.
  512. 28:45And he just says, well, we know the Quran is true. So the Bible
  513. 28:49must be untrustworthy. It's like, he didn't say what stories were
  514. 28:54wrong, who got it wrong, when it got wrong. No, he just just made
  515. 28:58a blanket statement. And so Muslims today say, well, you know,
  516. 29:01the current the Bible must have been corrupted. But we know the
  517. 29:05the Quran is like, wait a second, the Quran, those verses were compiled by Khaleef Uthman.
  518. 29:13And he gathered pieces of paper and bone and leaves and people had written these verses
  519. 29:19down and Mohammed had a scribe and a secretary and they would memorize the verses.
  520. 29:25But then Khaleef Uthman compiled all these and then destroyed the source documentation.
  521. 29:31So you can't go back and check.
  522. 29:33So in a sense, the Quran is the most undocumented book.
  523. 29:37You can't go back.
  524. 29:38Where the Bible, you got all these letters from Paul,
  525. 29:41the apostles and Codexes and little scraps of letters here
  526. 29:45and there's thousands of them.
  527. 29:46You don't have that with the Quran.
  528. 29:49So anyway, the three things.
  529. 29:51All of these are viewed as authoritative sources
  530. 29:54and how do they contribute to the,
  531. 29:59you begin talking about this even dating back
  532. 30:01to the migration to Medina, the effort to migrate to a place
  533. 30:06and then ultimately end up in a position
  534. 30:07of dominance in the location.
  535. 30:10Yeah, so Egypt used to be Christian,
  536. 30:14evangelized by Mark that wrote the Gospel,
  537. 30:16Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
  538. 30:18Until in the 630s, you had the Muslim leader, Amir, Ibn,
  539. 30:22Allah, invades Egypt.
  540. 30:24Egypt had two groups of Christians, the Coptic Christians,
  541. 30:28the word Coptic is the Egyptian word for Egyptian,
  542. 30:30and the Byzantine Christians,
  543. 30:33and they disagreed on some doctrine.
  544. 30:35And the Byzantine Christians were oppressing
  545. 30:38the Coptic Christians.
  546. 30:39And so Amir ibn al-As comes to the borders of Egypt
  547. 30:42and says, hey, we will help you drive out
  548. 30:45those Byzantine Christians.
  549. 30:46And they're like, really, you wanna help us?
  550. 30:47And so they let the Muslims in with their Arabian horses
  551. 30:51and their serps and the cemetery swords.
  552. 30:52And yeah, they drive out the Byzantine Christians,
  553. 30:54but then they stay and they take over.
  554. 30:56And then they begin to cut out the tongues
  555. 30:59of anybody caught speaking Coptic.
  556. 31:00and then they would get the whole people in the church
  557. 31:02and set the church on fire.
  558. 31:03And I mean, that's why they speak Arabic in Egypt
  559. 31:08rather than the Coptic Egyptian language in Egypt.
  560. 31:11Because of the Arab, and then all the North Africa
  561. 31:13used to be Christian.
  562. 31:15Barack, Al-Jir, Tunisia, Libya,
  563. 31:17Saint Augustine of Hippos from Carthage,
  564. 31:18while the Umayyid Muslims conquered it in 10 years.
  565. 31:21Why?
  566. 31:22Because the Christians had embraced pietism.
  567. 31:23If you're really Christian, you won't get involved
  568. 31:25in politics, you'll just withdraw.
  569. 31:26And so the Muslims were under post.
  570. 31:28And then you had in the year 7, 11,
  571. 31:31a Muslim general named Tariq.
  572. 31:33And he takes Muslim warriors across the Strait of Gibraltar
  573. 31:37into Spain.
  574. 31:39Now, his name is Jabal, excuse me, his name is Tariq,
  575. 31:43and the name of a mountain is Jabal.
  576. 31:45So Jabal Tariq means the mountain of Tariq,
  577. 31:47and that's where he landed.
  578. 31:49And so they pronounced it today, Jabralter.
  579. 31:52Jabralter is Jabal Tariq, the mountain of Tariq,
  580. 31:55where he lands with his soldiers.
  581. 31:57And then the Europeans are lots of different kingdoms.
  582. 32:00So just like the three Jewish tribes
  583. 32:03were divided politically and a lot of Islam would take over,
  584. 32:05just like Egypt had the Coptic and Byzantines
  585. 32:08that were divided, a lot of Islam would take over.
  586. 32:10Spain was a bunch of Visigothic Christian kingdoms
  587. 32:13that didn't get along.
  588. 32:14And the Muslim warriors would attack one
  589. 32:17and the other ones would stand back and say,
  590. 32:18well, I never really liked that one.
  591. 32:19They were competition for me.
  592. 32:21And then they would get gone
  593. 32:22and then they'd conquer another one.
  594. 32:23Well, the other ones would stand back
  595. 32:24and then they'd conquer another one.
  596. 32:25Well, they're three kingdoms away.
  597. 32:26They're not gonna bother you.
  598. 32:27They're not gonna come to their rescue.
  599. 32:28And within 10 years, they conquered all of Spain.
  600. 32:31And they crossed the Pyrenees Mountains,
  601. 32:33conquer Southern France.
  602. 32:34Europeans are fighting on foot with heavy metal swords.
  603. 32:37You read the story of the Battle of Bordeaux
  604. 32:40in Southern France in one pass.
  605. 32:42The Muslim cavalry annihilates the entire Frankish army.
  606. 32:46Now they're headed toward Paris,
  607. 32:48the Battle of Tours, Charles Martel,
  608. 32:51the grandfather of Charlemagne.
  609. 32:53He gets about 30,000 men.
  610. 32:54They're all on foot.
  611. 32:56and he puts him on top of a hill in a square.
  612. 32:59Well, the Muslim cavalry,
  613. 33:00the horses do not like for whatever reason,
  614. 33:03charging into a solid square full of soldiers,
  615. 33:05something the horses sort of hesitate,
  616. 33:07and it's difficult to charge uphill.
  617. 33:10Let me stop you right there because
  618. 33:11the disrespectful music is started.
  619. 33:13But when we come back from this break,
  620. 33:15that means a break is coming,
  621. 33:16that's a disrespectful music.
  622. 33:18But when we come back from this break,
  623. 33:19let's pick up right there where the solid square
  624. 33:22and the uphill positioning was a deterrent for these horses
  625. 33:28and then continue to build in the direction
  626. 33:30to illustrate that the same pattern
  627. 33:32seems to be playing out currently right here in our own nation.
  628. 33:35You're listening to the Hamilton Corner.
  629. 33:37My guest is Bill Federer, president of Amerisearch,
  630. 33:42Amerisearch Inc, nationally known speaker,
  631. 33:44best-selling author and a historian, as by now I'm sure
  632. 33:48you can tell of man,
  633. 33:51incomparable knowledge.
  634. 33:53We'll be right back right after this break.
  635. 34:00The mission of AFA is to inform, equip,
  636. 34:03and activate individuals and families
  637. 34:05to strengthen the moral foundations of American culture
  638. 34:09and get aid to the church here and abroad
  639. 34:11in its task of fulfilling the Great Commission.
  640. 34:15AFA upholds the truth that all human beings,
  641. 34:18including the unborn, are created in the image of God
  642. 34:22and are worthy of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
  643. 34:26Thank you for standing with the American Family Association.
  644. 34:30Washington Watch with Tony Perkins.
  645. 34:33You look at three of the four justices there in Colorado
  646. 34:36that voted to remove him from the ballot.
  647. 34:38They all came from Ivy League schools,
  648. 34:40schools that had been created as divinity schools.
  649. 34:43What a picture of the apostasy in America
  650. 34:47when it comes to the church.
  651. 34:48Stay informed with Tony Perkins
  652. 34:50and his guests on Washington Watch,
  653. 34:52weekdays at 4 p.m. Central on AFR,
  654. 34:56or catch up anytime with the podcast at AFR.net.
  655. 35:00What if health care could be more than bills and bureaucracy?
  656. 35:04What if it could reflect faith, foster community,
  657. 35:07and offer spiritual support?
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  659. 35:11the mission goes beyond medical bills.
  660. 35:14It's about honoring Christ and embracing health care
  661. 35:17that aligns with Christian values.
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  672. 35:56More at redeemhealthshare.org.
  673. 36:04The Hamilton Quarter Podcast
  674. 36:06and One-Minute Common Terrets are available at
  675. 36:09eafr.net back to the Hamilton Quarter
  676. 36:12on American Family Radio.
  677. 36:15Welcome back to the Hamilton Corner,
  678. 36:16Abraham Hamilton III here.
  679. 36:18By now, you know you probably should send this
  680. 36:20to your friends, family, and loved ones.
  681. 36:22This particular episode.
  682. 36:23But I know some of you are listening and saying,
  683. 36:25whoo, that's a lot of information.
  684. 36:27Well, that's okay, relax.
  685. 36:30Because Bill has written a book on this,
  686. 36:32as I'm sure you can tell.
  687. 36:33Bill, would you mention the book that you've written on this
  688. 36:35and tell the audience here how they can find
  689. 36:38that particular book?
  690. 36:38And Jeff, if you would, would you please put a link
  691. 36:41to the book in the show notes?
  692. 36:43All right, Bill, would you tell the people
  693. 36:44how they can find your book and what's the title of it?
  694. 36:47Yeah, it's called,
  695. 36:48What Every American Needs to Know About the Quran,
  696. 36:50A History of Islam in the United States.
  697. 36:53And I also have a flash drive with about 20 to presentations
  698. 36:56with my power points and slides jumping back in.
  699. 37:00So the Battle of Tours 732 AD is 100 years
  700. 37:05after the death of Mohammed in 632 AD.
  701. 37:08They go from Arabia to Paris in a 100 year military campaign.
  702. 37:11Wow.
  703. 37:12And you think, well gee, that's pretty offensive.
  704. 37:14Well, you know, if you read their writings,
  705. 37:15they'll say they're defensive.
  706. 37:17It's like, how could you be defensive
  707. 37:19when you're from Arabia and you're in Spain?
  708. 37:21Well, if you feel threatened by your enemy,
  709. 37:23then you are justified in attacking them preemptively.
  710. 37:27And it's this idea that when your enemy is strong,
  711. 37:30retreat, when your enemy is weak, attack.
  712. 37:33And so they're stopped at the battle of tours, 732 AD,
  713. 37:35by Charles Martell, the grandfather of Charlemagne.
  714. 37:37It takes 700 years of reconquista battles
  715. 37:41to drive the Muslims out of Spain.
  716. 37:43Meanwhile, they come around the other side
  717. 37:44and they conquered Jerusalem around 638 AD,
  718. 37:47which had been a Byzantine Christian city.
  719. 37:49The Congress Syria, which was the first country
  720. 37:51to completely be Christian, evangelized by Paul,
  721. 37:54the name Christian was first used in Syria
  722. 37:57until Khalifa Umar conquers it.
  723. 37:59And then the Seljuk-Turk conveyed the Byzantine Empire.
  724. 38:05All seven churches mentioned in the book of Revelation
  725. 38:07were wiped out by the Seljuk Turks.
  726. 38:09It cuts off the land routes to get from Europe
  727. 38:12to India, China in 1453 when Sultan Mamut II
  728. 38:17Conquers, Constantinople.
  729. 38:18And so in 1492, Columbus set sail looking for a sea route
  730. 38:22to get to India, China.
  731. 38:23Columbus would have never, ever set sail.
  732. 38:26Had it not been for Islamic Jihad,
  733. 38:28cutting off the land routes in 1453,
  734. 38:30second Constantinople, turned the largest Christian church
  735. 38:33in the world into a mosque.
  736. 38:35And so then the Greeks begged for help.
  737. 38:40The West sent help, it's called the Crusades,
  738. 38:42nine major Crusades in 200 years.
  739. 38:44Crusades and Muslims pick up where they left off,
  740. 38:46right there invading Europe.
  741. 38:47And anyway, the Ottoman Empire.
  742. 38:52So from around 1200, up until after World War I,
  743. 38:54the Ottoman Empire controlled the entire Turkey
  744. 38:58and the Middle East called the Levant Anatolia
  745. 39:01and then Egypt and North Africa.
  746. 39:04A couple of definitions are helpful.
  747. 39:06The word Islam means submission to the will of Allah.
  748. 39:09A Muslim is one who has submitted to the will of Allah.
  749. 39:12And they think there will be world peace
  750. 39:15when the whole world submits to the will of Allah.
  751. 39:17So it is a religion of peace.
  752. 39:19It's just their definition of the word peace
  753. 39:22is different than ours.
  754. 39:23Our definition of peace is different groups getting along.
  755. 39:25Their definition of peace is world Islam.
  756. 39:29When all of the enemies of Islam are defeated,
  757. 39:31there's nobody left to fight.
  758. 39:33So there's peace, right?
  759. 39:35And how modern-
  760. 39:36So how would you-
  761. 39:37Let me jump and ask this question.
  762. 39:37How would you navigate the issue?
  763. 39:39Because it's a, clearly, a popular conversation topic.
  764. 39:45Well, you have the Mujuhadid, you have the Islamic terrorists, those who are willing to
  765. 39:50use violence to advance Islam, but the world is filled with the majority of the Islamic people
  766. 39:55are what is described as peaceful Muslims.
  767. 39:58How would you respond to that notion?
  768. 40:00Yeah, yeah.
  769. 40:01I mean, I would call them non-violent Muslims because, again, their word peace means world
  770. 40:05Islam.
  771. 40:06So, when they were stopped at the Battle of Tours, when they were stopped first at Constantinople
  772. 40:12in the 600s, a different line of Islamic theology developed that says we will still conquer the
  773. 40:19world, but it may just have to wait till later.
  774. 40:23And so now you have two groups.
  775. 40:24You have the fundamental Muslims that think the world is supposed to submit to Allah now
  776. 40:30and the non-violent Muslims that think the world is going to submit to Allah later, maybe
  777. 40:34in the distant future, maybe at the end of the world, maybe it's even figurative.
  778. 40:38And since it's so far off, they really don't think about it and they just want to live
  779. 40:41their lives.
  780. 40:42happy to have you as a friend in a neighbor. That's great. Matter of fact, many of those
  781. 40:46want to enjoy the freedoms of Western civilization. Now, the dilemma for the West is the nicer the
  782. 40:52West shows itself. Some of the fundamental Muslims view that niceness as weakness and they take
  783. 40:58that as an indicator to attack. Right? And so in the law of the jungle, lions, Jason, zebra,
  784. 41:04if there's a weak zebra, which one is the lion going to pass on? The weak one. And so weakness
  785. 41:09invites aggression. So we have to understand that when the West would win battles and their
  786. 41:15chose strength, then they would retreat and for about a generation or two become non-violent,
  787. 41:21but then they would do probing attacks and when there's no response, they would take that
  788. 41:25as an indicator from Allah that's supposed to get aggressive again. And so those are
  789. 41:30some important definitions. They divide the world into the Dar-al-Islam House of Submission
  790. 41:36and the Dar Al-Harba, the House of War.
  791. 41:40So the non-Muslim world is supposed to be at war
  792. 41:42because it's in the process of being put into submission.
  793. 41:46And then when the whole world is in submission
  794. 41:48to the will of all of there's peace.
  795. 41:50And now, Muhammad was a white Arab
  796. 41:53and he owned African slaves.
  797. 41:55And there are, there are Hadith,
  798. 41:56there are Hadith that says,
  799. 41:58Muhammad was the white man reclining on the couch.
  800. 42:01Another Hadith, some people went to see him
  801. 42:03and they said that he lifted his arms to say a certain prayer.
  802. 42:07They saw the whiteness of his armpits.
  803. 42:08Another guy's riding in his donkey, rubs up against Muhammad's donkey.
  804. 42:11And he says, I saw the whiteness of the prophet's thigh.
  805. 42:13And Muhammad owned black slaves like Bilal and they had slave markets all throughout
  806. 42:18Africa, Tanzania, the Zanzibar coast, to Khartoum, Timbuktu, or the canoe meets the
  807. 42:25caravan, the Niger River, and they would capture slaves.
  808. 42:30They enslaved different estimates, but probably like 100 million Africans.
  809. 42:35And it still goes on today.
  810. 42:37The Arab Muslims of northern Sudan are killing the Christian African in southern Sudan.
  811. 42:43Yeah, I'm sure.
  812. 42:44Missionary friend, Brad, Brad Phillips, and he's got the persecution project and he's
  813. 42:50over there.
  814. 42:51Another friends in Nigeria and the British colonized Nigeria and the Muslims were better
  815. 42:56at collecting taxes.
  816. 42:57And so they put them in the government
  817. 42:58and when the British gave Nigeria its freedom,
  818. 43:00they left the Muslims in charge.
  819. 43:01And so they're in Northern Nigeria
  820. 43:03and they're gradually conquering these villages
  821. 43:05and they disarmed the whole country.
  822. 43:06And so only the Boko Haram have weapons
  823. 43:08and they go in and wipe out entire villages.
  824. 43:10So this friend of mine says,
  825. 43:12hey, I got intel that I know where they're gonna attack next
  826. 43:15and I go to the US embassy
  827. 43:16and all they're concerned about is climate change.
  828. 43:19It's like people are getting killed.
  829. 43:21They go, oh, you know, with the climate.
  830. 43:23And so these are still some of the holdovers
  831. 43:25from the previous administration.
  832. 43:26That's why Trump's like, you know,
  833. 43:27get rid of this filibuster.
  834. 43:28It's like I can get my people in office.
  835. 43:31But heart-wrenching stories of, you know,
  836. 43:35cutting off arms and legs and a female circumcision
  837. 43:38and things like that.
  838. 43:39We saw the same thing in Congo.
  839. 43:41When they rounded up Christians in the villages
  840. 43:43and brought them in front of the local Protestant church
  841. 43:45and beheaded them right in front of the church,
  842. 43:47that's just a couple months ago in Congo.
  843. 43:49Wow, wow, God have mercy.
  844. 43:52And so it's important for us to understand
  845. 43:55that their goal is to caliphate, what's to caliphate?
  846. 43:59It's a one-world Islamic government.
  847. 44:02And so they call it the Red-Green Access
  848. 44:03because the Communist 101-world government,
  849. 44:07they have a word near MIR, which means world peace
  850. 44:11and world communism, very similar to the Islamic attitude
  851. 44:16of world peace means world Islam.
  852. 44:18So they're happy to work together for the globalist goals
  853. 44:22and they view Western values as opposition,
  854. 44:26mainly because the Judeo-Christian thought
  855. 44:30gives birth to the idea of the individual, the Bible,
  856. 44:33that man and women of every race
  857. 44:36are made in the image of God,
  858. 44:38and God is not a respecter of persons.
  859. 44:40This is the beginning of the concept of equality.
  860. 44:42In Islam, they don't have a concept.
  861. 44:44Allah has no image, you can't be made in his image.
  862. 44:47And Allah loves the Muslim who's submitted,
  863. 44:50and Allah hates the infidel.
  864. 44:51It says, make war on the infidel, be unbeliever.
  865. 44:54And there's no concept of man and woman being equal.
  866. 44:57Muhammad said, a woman's mind is deficient,
  867. 44:59so it takes two women to testify in court against one man.
  868. 45:02In Egypt, your marriage license at the courthouse,
  869. 45:05one line for the husband, four lines for the wives.
  870. 45:08And so when these Muslims will come in,
  871. 45:11again, the majority of them are moderate
  872. 45:13and they just want to live.
  873. 45:15But when the West shows weakness,
  874. 45:17it empowers the fundamental ones.
  875. 45:20And so I tell people it's like, if a drug gang's moving
  876. 45:23into the neighborhood and you call the police
  877. 45:25and they show up and arrest them,
  878. 45:26are you gonna call the police again?
  879. 45:28Yes.
  880. 45:29If the drug dealer does deal on your front lawn,
  881. 45:31you call the police, they don't show up yet.
  882. 45:34And then the drug dealer comes up to your front door
  883. 45:36and says, we have somebody inside the police department
  884. 45:38and they said, you called on us.
  885. 45:39And if you call again, we'll kill you.
  886. 45:40Are you gonna call the police again?
  887. 45:42Probably not.
  888. 45:44And so when the moderate Muslims who wanna enjoy freedoms,
  889. 45:48and this is the majority of them,
  890. 45:50when they see the West showing itself strong
  891. 45:53against the fundamental Muslims,
  892. 45:55they're happy to enjoy the freedoms of the West.
  893. 45:58But when they see the West not only not enjoying it,
  894. 46:00but funneling money and arms to Muslim terrorist groups, right?
  895. 46:05And so this began, you know, really during World War I
  896. 46:11when you had the British, you know,
  897. 46:15Sir Lawrence Arabia got the Arab Muslims
  898. 46:19to help the British to beat the Turkish Muslims, right?
  899. 46:22And he gave them an unauthorized promise
  900. 46:25that if they helped the British,
  901. 46:26they'll get all the land in the Middle East.
  902. 46:28Yet a Jewish chemist,
  903. 46:30and Heim Weizmann helps the British to develop acetone
  904. 46:32for explosives, and so the British air will to win the war,
  905. 46:35and they give the Jews the Balfour Declaration,
  906. 46:38where the British give the Jews all the land
  907. 46:40called the British Mandate.
  908. 46:41So the same land is promised to two different groups.
  909. 46:44The British Mandate gives it to the Jews
  910. 46:46and Lawrence of Arabia's unauthorized promise,
  911. 46:49gives it to the Arabs and so that's the origin of the fighting. But you track it through history.
  912. 46:55You have what? Jimmy Carter abandons the ally that Shaw in Iran and he lets the Ayatollah take over
  913. 47:07and then you have the Iran Iraq war and Ronald Reagan and Rumsfeld are arming and training Saddam
  914. 47:17Hussein who's in Iraq to fight the Ayatollah in Iran.
  915. 47:23And so from 1980 to 1988, you got the US helping Iraq and then you have the Soviet Afghan
  916. 47:28war around the same time.
  917. 47:31And the US CIA is arming and training the Taliban to fight the Soviets.
  918. 47:36One of the people we train was Osama bin Laden.
  919. 47:38And all of these things are happening and these people are completely ignorant to the
  920. 47:40history and really the theology of the people that they're training it appears.
  921. 47:45Yeah, Tom Hanks did a movie called Charlie Wilson's War, where it's our CIA, Army, and
  922. 47:52Training the Taliban.
  923. 47:53Sylvester Stallone did a movie, Rambo III, where it's our military, our CIA, Army, and
  924. 47:58Training the Taliban.
  925. 48:00Then you have the Reagan, I loved him, but when the Muslims blew up the U.S. Marine barracks
  926. 48:06in Lebanon, his response was to tuck tail and run.
  927. 48:08So here we abandoned the Shah, we abandoned Lebanon, and we're sending these signals that
  928. 48:13were weak.
  929. 48:14And then you have Bill Clinton funneling arms through Iran to arm the
  930. 48:21Bosnia and Muslims to fight the Serbian Christians
  931. 48:23You have of course Hillary Clinton doing gun running running arms from Benghazi over to Syria trying to overthrow Assad
  932. 48:31and then you have
  933. 48:35The Afghanistan with Biden leaving eighty five billion dollars worth of arms to the the Taliban
  934. 48:40I actually saw a Los Angeles Times newspaper headline.
  935. 48:47It says, militant Muslim groups armed by the CIA
  936. 48:50fight militant Muslim groups armed by the Pentagon.
  937. 48:54So we're like, and the Christians are getting crushed
  938. 48:57in the middle.
  939. 48:58So tell us the gabbard introduced a bill,
  940. 49:00stop arming terrorist act.
  941. 49:02It's like, you know, Rand Paul is like, let's just stop.
  942. 49:05And then the poor Christians are getting crushed
  943. 49:08between it all.
  944. 49:09So we have these things happening and you have here in our own nation kind of like the demographic winter coming home to where American
  945. 49:16Citizens are not necessarily reproducing at the same rates. We have historically, but we we have a reproduction being outpaced
  946. 49:24By lots of immigrants including Muslim immigrants. What is that what is is that contributing to what you mentioned before the the effort to pursue peace under Islam?
  947. 49:34Yeah, so Western civilization is bought into climate change and you have fewer kids and
  948. 49:40maybe one kid per family.
  949. 49:43The Muslim immigrants come in, some of them have four wives and they put them in apartments
  950. 49:48and the wives go down to the welfare office and get checks.
  951. 49:52The guy visits his wives and the more children they have, the larger the checks get.
  952. 49:58He's living like an emir with his harem, all paid for at the state expense.
  953. 50:03It's a social stigma for Muslim women to have less than five children.
  954. 50:06And so you get this one guy and he's got 20 kids, right?
  955. 50:11And so just demographically, by 2030, they will have a majority Muslim population in all these
  956. 50:16Western countries, including Canada.
  957. 50:18And so they won't even have to do jihad.
  958. 50:20They'll just vote in Sharia law, right?
  959. 50:24And it's something that demographically, it's going to be hard to turn around.
  960. 50:30Charlie Kirk was saying, you know, get married, have kids, you know.
  961. 50:33But it's something that is happening.
  962. 50:38I, in my book, I brought out a couple interesting things.
  963. 50:42One minute, Bill.
  964. 50:43We got one minute.
  965. 50:44The Barbary Pride Wars, but you had oil.
  966. 50:47In the 1800s, came from Wales until 1859s,
  967. 50:50discovered in Pennsylvania, Drake Oil, Well then Oklahoma,
  968. 50:52then Baghdad, Kirk, Kook and then Persian.
  969. 50:56So the British formed the Anglo-Iranian oil company called BP.
  970. 50:59And then the Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany
  971. 51:01makes a treaty with the Turks.
  972. 51:03Abdul had me the second for oil.
  973. 51:05So now you have half of World War I
  974. 51:06takes place in the Middle East over oil.
  975. 51:10And so, and then a big deal happened in 1938,
  976. 51:13standard oil company discovered oil in Saudi Arabia.
  977. 51:16And that's when Saudi Arabia went from the poorest
  978. 51:18from the country to the richest from the country.
  979. 51:20Anyway, the West has been financing a lot of the fundamental
  980. 51:23is on stuff without realizing it.
  981. 51:25But americanmenot.com is our website
  982. 51:28And the book is what every American needs to know about the Koran.
  983. 51:30Guys, you need the book.
  984. 51:32You need the book.
  985. 51:33Bill, we've got to have you back on so we can talk further about this.
  986. 51:35Thank you.
  987. 51:40The views and opinions expressed in this broadcast may not necessarily reflect those of the American
  988. 51:45Family Association or American Family Radio.

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