25

There was a post from yesterday about the price of strawberries in Canada and theres always tons of bitching about bidenflation here and everywhere. I posted in that strawberry thread but thought it should have more visiblity so that anons can gain a basic understanding of what is really at play here so that they may go forth and redpill the uninitiated.

I am not an economist and only have a basic understanding of financial matters, most of which only relates to the handling of my own small slice of the pie. So instead of trying to imperfectly explain the gist, I will provide some reading for all to do on the exfiltration of middle class wealth and how they implement it. This is an area that Sundance at The Conservative Treehouse has explored extensively. He shows great insight into this process and I think all anons here and everywhere should at least have a basic understanding of how it works.

This first link is to a search on the subject at the Treehouse that will lead you to many articles on the subject:

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/?s=exfiltration+of+wealth

This link is my favorite that explains the nuts and bolts of this malfeasance and exploitation:

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2017/07/17/multinational-corporations-and-the-export-of-american-wealth/

But there are also many other good articles on this subject, some of them on very specific incidents.

This is a worldwide problem but the American middle class is the largest repository of wealth in the world and the userers, criminals and con men cant be having that.

28

There have been two articles in the Gateway Pundit concerning bedbugs.

The first is from October 3rd:

Bloodsuckers: Paris Is Infested With Bedbugs – Authorities Seek to Control Situation Ahead of Next Year’s Summer Olympics

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/10/bloodsuckers-paris-is-infested-bedbugs-authorities-seek-control/

The second came out today:

Bedbugs Across the Channel: After Paris, Now London Panics With the Possibility of a Pest Infestation

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/10/bedbugs-across-channel-after-paris-now-london-panics/

Now after I read the first I didnt think anything about it. Bedbugs in big cities are nothing new. But the headline on the second really caught my attention with the phrase "pest infestation" and calling it panic. I thought it strange that there are two articles spaced a week apart about pest infestations that need to be eradicated in two cities so intricately tied to the pedo death cult and that panic has ensued.

Is this comms by WH that arrests and/or removals of players is occurring in these two death cult bastions?

282
We buried a fine woman today 🧘Mental/Physical Health 🏋🏼‍♂️
posted ago by LongTimeListener ago by LongTimeListener

My Aunt Mary Ellen was buried today. She was a veteran of the Korean War and received full military honors. A three volley salute was given, taps was played by a bugler from the American Legion, followed by the ceremonial folding of the flag to be presented to the family. She was buried at the Great Lakes National Cemetery in Holly, Michigan beside her beloved husband, also a veteran of the Korean War.

She will be missed by all that knew her. Rest in Peace, Aunt Mary Ellen.

14

https://rumble.com/v2zk3wg-the-occult-apocalypse-show-episode-2-d.c.-deep-state.html

There has been recent discussion here on Jake and if he may have a larger role still to play in this:

https://greatawakening.win/p/16biw1UXcS/qanon-shaman-aka-captain-america/c/

There has also been a recent post on cymatics that I cant find atm. But here is an older one started by u/MNisahellhole:

https://greatawakening.win/p/140w2NrIG3/if-youre-interested-in-cymatics-/

In the rumble video linked above Jake discusses cymatics and laylines and auras and the occult. I have no more than a cursory knowledge of the occult and how it connects to the satanic pedophile death cult but this video gave me some rabbit holes to chase.

Hopefully this post can start a discussion and help people like me who have mostly ignored occult references as too esoteric. This war is spiritual and on that we all mostly agree. I want to tie the discussion of Jakes possible future role with something he is discussing that has drawn interest here in the past.

What role is Jake really playing and why did he start this video series on the occult now, at this moment? Is there a deeper connection between Jake and the Awakening than has so far been surmised? I dont think his story is complete and somehow its tied into this ancient occult knowledge.

160

Declass happened before Trump left office. We are now in a disclosure phase with more and more information on the cabal and their puppets evil and criminal depravity coming to light in easily digestible bite sized nuggets. As far as I can tell in my small corner of the world, the normies are waking up and this awakening is accelerating.

We have 18 months to go on this dissemination. And it is to prevent internecine violence.

But it is also about the 2024 election.

Political pundits have long used a phrase after every election that a candidate wins handily. Mandate to govern. If this plan is to be as effective as it possibly can be, I fully believe that Trump will not take office before January 2025. He will win in the biggest landslide ever recorded, winning all 50 States by large margins. To a large extent he probably achieved this in 2020 but it is hidden behind the fraud. This time the fraud will be mitigated to a great extent if not outright eliminated.

This will give him the mandate to do whatever is necessary to root out the cabal, from thier bastard sons to the puppets, the compromised and the threatened, without any political blowback. Thats when the swamp is drained and the Washington toilet scrubbed. It is how Trump will be able to round up all the scum, try them in military tribunals and jail or execute traitors and those who are participating in crimes against humanity, satanic ritual murder and human and drug trafficking, and do so without the threat of civil war.

37

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/03/cnn-surprisingly-publishes-investigative-piece-about-oklahoma-city-police-officer-who-was-mysteriously-shot-dead-after-oklahoma-city-bombing/

An interesting piece of investigative journalism by CNN on the suspicious death of Oklahoma City Police Officer Terry Yeakey. Yeakey, you may remember, rescued three people from the Alfred Murrah building in 1995. He was suspicious of his superiors and a year later was found dead in the woods from a single gunshot to the head but had scratches all over his arms. Of course, the Coroner decided against an autopsy and ruled it a suicide. Officer Yeakey's family and other officers believe he was murdered.

Why this article now, 28 years after the bombing and 27 after his death? This event is firmly memory holed and many believe never to be seen again.

I think this is part of an ongoing declass. A soft disclosure, at first, so as not to frighten the sheep. The cultivation of the seeds planted. It serves a double purpose of introducing the larger normie public to False Flags hopefully leading to acceptance of 9/11, Sandy Hook, Palm Nightclub, Uvalde and many others, most recently East Palastine.

This is the only path forward that avoids internecine violence.

Im sure most of us here have seen this before but its worthy of review:

https://whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/POLITICS/DOCUMENTS/the_signers.html

Have you ever wondered what happened to the fifty-six men who signed the Declaration of Independence? This is the price they paid:

Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons in the revolutionary army, another had two sons captured. Nine of the fifty-six fought and died from wounds or hardships resulting from the Revolutionary War.

These men signed, and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor!

What kind of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists. Eleven were merchants. Nine were farmers and large plantation owners. All were men of means, well educated. But they signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty could be death if they were captured.

Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags.

Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward.

Vandals or soldiers or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.

Perhaps one of the most inspiring examples of "undaunted resolution" was at the Battle of Yorktown. Thomas Nelson, Jr. was returning from Philadelphia to become Governor of Virginia and joined General Washington just outside of Yorktown. He then noted that British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headqurt, but that the patriot's were directing their artillery fire all over the town except for the vicinity of his own beautiful home. Nelson asked why they were not firing in that direction, and the soldiers replied, "Out of respect to you, Sir." Nelson quietly urged General Washington to open fire, and stepping forward to the nearest cannon, aimed at his own house and fired. The other guns joined in, and the Nelson home was destroyed. Nelson died bankrupt.

Francis Lewis's Long Island home was looted and gutted, his home and properties destroyed. His wife was thrown into a damp dark prison cell without a bed. Health ruined, Mrs. Lewis soon died from the effects of the confinement. The Lewis's son would later die in British captivity, also.

"Honest John" Hart was driven from his wife's bedside as she lay dying, when British and Hessian troops invaded New Jersey just months after he signed the Declaration. Their thirteen children fled for their lives. His fields and his grist mill were laid to waste. All winter, and for more than a year, Hart lived in forests and caves, finally returning home to find his wife dead, his chidrvanished and his farm destroyed. Rebuilding proved too be too great a task. A few weeks later, by the spring of 1779, John Hart was dead from exhaustion and a broken heart.

Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates.

New Jersey's Richard Stockton, after rescuing his wife and children from advancing British troops, was betrayed by a loyalist, imprisoned, beaten and nearly starved. He returned an invalid to find his home gutted, and his library and papers burned. He, too, never recovered, dying in 1781 a broken man.

William Ellery of Rhode Island, who marveled that he had seen only "undaunted resolution" in the faces of his co-signers, also had his home burned.

Only days after Lewis Morris of New York signed the Declaration, British troops ravaged his 2,000-acre estate, butchered his cattle and drove his family off the land. Three of Morris' sons fought the British.

When the British seized the New York houses of the wealthy Philip Livingston, he sold off everything else, and gave the money to the Revolution. He died in 1778.

Arthur Middleton, Edward Rutledge and Thomas Heyward Jr. went home to South Carolin tight. In the British invasion of the South, Heyward was wounded and all three were captured. As he rotted on a prison ship in St. Augustine, Heyward's plantation was raided, buildings burned, and his wife, who witnessed it all, died. Other Southern signers suffered the same general fate.

Among the first to sign had been John Hancock, who wrote in big, bold script so George III "could read my name without spectacles and could now double his reward for 500 pounds for my head." If the cause of the revolution commands it, roared Hancock, "Burn Boston and make John Hancock a beggar!"

Here were men who believed in a cause far beyond themselves.

Such were the stories and sacrifices of the America revolution. These were not wild eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft-spoken men of means and education. They had security, but they valued liberty more. Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, they pledged: "For the support of this Declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of the Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor."

79

Something everyone needs to keep in mind is that RICO requires a pattern of criminality. One single crime can not be racketeering. A criminal that enters your home and steals your TV is not a corrupt organization. Multiple crimes need to be committed in an organized pattern. It took Rudy years to pin RICO on the NY mob. The stakes are higher here by many orders of magnitude.

If the WHs are to use RICO to gather up all the periphery players in this National Tragedy they will need to prove a pattern of criminality in pursuit of a goal. Those at the top will face Treason, sedition and crimes against humanity charges. RICO is for the complicit.

There are potentially millions that could be charged under RICO. That is a shit ton of evidence that needs to be collected. Letting the underlings slip away ensures that this continues at a later date. The WHs must make it known that this behavior will not be tolerated now or in the future without severe consequences.

Existential is a shitty, overused word. But this is truly existential. It is a zero sum game with the stakes being life itself. It must be done right. There can be no escape. That is what keeps me patient (for now).

192

I see all kinds of shill activity trying to call into question some of our most core beliefs. Things that are known and accepted. Attempts at dividing, dissuading, demoralizing and blackpilling. Some from people I had previously thought were on our side. I just try and flag the questionable stuff and leave it to mods to make the call. Im sure I am wrong plenty because I err with an overabundance of caution and skepticism.

I dont tolerate doomers well either. I am a Patriot and our mission is clear. There is no turning back from the path weve set ourselves upon. This is a zero sum game and the stakes are life itself. Theres no room for pussies until the war is won. Then the Sunshine Patriots can freely join us in the construction of a new, free and equitable (equal opportunities not equal outcomes) world.

I can be somewhat abrasive. I find myself deleting a lot of my posts in response to the doomers that go to far. I dont want to scare off those with legitimate interest. This isnt kun. GAW has to keep the training wheels on somewhat for the newly awakened. We are the introductory course for a lot of people. I try to keep that in mind.

In the end, it all comes down to my overwhelming thirst for Freedom and Justice. My grandkids have the God given right to live free and unfettered. As do the children and grandchildren of every person on the planet.

45

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/04/historic-humiliation-trump-endorsed-candidates-sweep-establishment-gop-picks-grassroots-rise-win-odds/

In what can only be described as a historic election, MI GOP delegates wiped out decades of establishment rule yesterday at the GOP State Convention with their votes to elect Trump-endorsed election integrity candidates Kristina Karamo for Secretary of State and Constitutional Attorney Matt DePerno for Attorney General as their choice to run in the 2022 general election.

This is big news coming out of Michigan. You may remember the Kristina Karamo video of her personally delivering the thousands of affidavits to Michigan Soros crony SoS office. Matthew DePerno is the Constitutional attorney who, to date, is still the only person to audit a Dominion machine from Antrim County Michigan. The grassroots conservative movement in Michigan has got game.

472

The Ambassador Bridge is the busiest border crossing between The US and Canada. Fully 25% of the trade between the two countries pass across this bridge. The Truckers have shut this crossing down and already auto plants in Michigan and in Windsor are closing down for lack of parts.

A Milford, Michigan Mom has begun a givesendgo to help feed these Truckers. She has contacted Garys catering in Wixom, Michigan to send their food trucks to the border to feed these Patriots. You can help here:

https://givesendgo.com/TRUCKERSFORFREEDOMAMBASSADORBRIDGE?sharemsg=display

/u/catsfive u/rooftoptendie

18

This is part of my continuing effort to spread awareness of our History and the Great Patriots whose blood was shed so that we may be free. Please take note of the parallels to today. I apologize for the length but I hope you read it. Too many Americans were not taught the deeper History of our Founding and lack any understanding of the connection between then and now.

The Intolerable Acts were passed in spring 1774, and helped cause the American Revolution (1775-1783).

In the years after the French and Indian War, Parliament attempted to levy taxes, such as the Stamp Act and Townshend Acts, on the colonies to aid in covering the cost of maintaining the empire. On May 10, 1773, Parliament passed the Tea Act with the goal of aiding the struggling British East India Company. Prior to the passage of the law, the company had been required to sell its tea through London where it was taxed and duties assessed. Under the new legislation, the company would be permitted to sell tea directly to the colonies without the additional cost. As a result, tea prices in America would be reduced, with only the Townshend tea duty assessed.

During this period, the colonies, angered by the taxes levied by the Townshend Acts, had been systematically boycotting British goods and claiming taxation without representation. Aware that the Tea Act was an attempt by Parliament to break the boycott, groups such as the Sons of Liberty, spoke out against it. Across the colonies, British tea was boycotted and attempts were made to produce tea locally. In Boston, the situation climaxed in late November 1773, when three ships carrying East India Company tea arrived in the port.

Rallying the populace, the members of the Sons of Liberty dressed as Indigenous men and boarded the ships on the night of December 16. Carefully avoiding damaging other property, the "raiders" tossed 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbor. A direct affront to British authority, the "Boston Tea Party" forced Parliament to take action against the colonies. In retribution for this affront to royal authority, the Prime Minister, Lord North, began passing a series of five laws, dubbed the Coercive or Intolerable Acts, the following spring to punish the Americans.

The Boston Port Act Passed on March 30, 1774, the Boston Port Act was a direct action against the city for the previous November's tea party. The legislation dictated that the port of Boston was closed to all shipping until full restitution was made to the East India Company and the King for the lost tea and taxes. Also included in the act was the stipulation that the colony's seat of government should be moved to Salem and Marblehead made a port of entry. Loudly protesting, many Bostonians, including Loyalists, argued that the act punished the entire city rather than the few who were responsible for the tea party. As supplies in the city dwindled, other colonies began sending relief to the blockaded city.

Massachusetts Government Act Enacted on May 20, 1774, the Massachusetts Government Act was designed to increase royal control over the colony's administration. Abrogating the colony's charter, the act stipulated that its executive council would no longer be democratically elected and its members would instead be appointed by the king. Also, many colonial offices that were previously elected officials would henceforth be appointed by the royal governor. Across the colony, only one town meeting was permitted a year unless approved by the governor. Following General Thomas Gage's use of the act to dissolve the provincial assembly in October 1774, Patriots in the colony formed the Massachusetts Provincial Congress which effectively controlled all of Massachusetts outside of Boston.

Administration of Justice Act Passed the same day as the previous act, the Administration of Justice Act stated that royal officials could request a change of venue to another colony or Great Britain if charged with criminal acts in fulfilling their duties. While the act allowed travel expenses to be paid to witnesses, few colonists could afford to leave work to testify at a trial. Many in the colonies felt it was unnecessary as British soldiers had received a fair trial after the Boston Massacre. Dubbed the "Murder Act" by some, it was felt that it allowed royal officials to act with impunity and then escape justice.

Quartering Act A revision of the 1765 Quartering Act, which was largely ignored by colonial assemblies, the 1774 Quartering Act expanded the types of buildings in which soldiers could be billeted and removed the requirement that they be provided with provisions. Contrary to popular belief, it did not permit the housing of soldiers in private homes. Typically, soldiers were first to be placed in existing barracks and public houses, but thereafter could be housed in inns, victualing houses, empty building, barns, and other unoccupied structures.

Quebec Act Though it did not have a direct effect on the thirteen colonies, the Quebec Act was considered part of the Intolerable Acts by the American colonists. Intended to ensure the loyalty of the king's Canadian subjects, the act greatly enlarged Quebec's borders and allowed the free practice of the Catholic faith. Among the land transferred to Quebec was much of the Ohio Country, which had been promised to several colonies through their charters and to which many had already laid claim. In addition to angering land speculators, others were fearful about the spread of Catholicism in American.

In passing the acts, Lord North had hoped to detach and isolate the radical element in Massachusetts from the rest of the colonies while also asserting the power of Parliament over the colonial assemblies. The harshness of the acts worked to prevent this outcome as many in the colonies rallied to Massachusetts’s aid. Seeing their charters and rights under threat, colonial leaders formed committees of correspondence to discuss the repercussions of the Intolerable Acts.

These led to the convening of the First Continental Congress at Philadelphia on September 5. Meeting at Carpenters' Hall, delegates debated various courses for bringing pressure against Parliament as well as whether they should draft a statement of rights and liberties for the colonies. Creating the Continental Association, the congress called for a boycott of all British goods. If the Intolerable Acts were not repealed within a year, the colonies agreed to halt exports to Britain as well as support Massachusetts if it was attacked. Rather than exact punishment, North's legislation worked to pull the colonies together and pushed them down the road towards war.

https://www.thoughtco.com/the-intolerable-acts-2361386

35

This post is gonna be a bit long but it gives some context to the opening of 'American Crises' by my favorite Patriot writer, Thomas Paine. And it is important for all of the citizens of the world to read and understand. The ghosts of our past speak to us now through these poignant words.

The fall and early winter of 1776 was the low point of the war for the American cause. Beginning that summer, the British had struck with a vengeance in an attempt to end the American rebellion in one knock-out blow. In July, over 20,000 British and German soldiers landed on Staten Island in preparation to capture the vital port of New York. When the attacks finally began the following month, Washington and the Continental Army were nearly powerless to stop them. Washington was pushed off Long Island on August 27th, and his whole army only avoided capture through a miraculous night evacuation to Manhattan. The British did not relent, however, and on September 15th they landed nearly unopposed on Manhattan and secured New York City. The city would remain in British possession until the end of the war.

In the weeks and months that followed, Washington’s army suffered defeat after defeat at the hands of General Howe’s British and German forces. American defenses were outflanked by British landings in what is now the Bronx (October 18, 1776), forcing Washington to pull northward to avoid encirclement. Howe caught up with Washington ten days later at the Battle of White Plains (October 28, 1776), driving Washington further from New York and the remaining Continental troops there. Howe turned back to deal with these cut off garrisons, decisively defeating the Americans at Fort Washington (November 16, 1776) and capturing nearly 3,000 men. Washington’s army, which had numbered nearly 20,000 Continentals and militia in the late summer, was reduced to less than 5,000 effective soldiers as casualties and desertions began to mount. To make matters worse, many of those remaining had limited enlistments that were set to expire in the winter.

Recognizing that Washington’s situation was dire, General Howe continued to push onward into New Jersey. The Continental Army remained elusive, as Washington pushed his exhausted and demoralized men across New Jersey to deny Howe the opportunity for one final decisive battle. The American commander’s goal was to cross the Delaware River to the relative safety of Pennsylvania, and from there try to rekindle the American cause. Among the steadily waning column of soldiers following him was the 39-year-old English immigrant, Thomas Paine.

Born in Thetford, Paine initially followed in his father’s footsteps as a maker of lady’s stays (a corset-like undergarment). He was never successful in business, however, and by 1774 he had separated from his wife and prepared to move to the colonies to avoid debtor’s prison. Arriving in Pennsylvania with the help of Benjamin Franklin, Paine found work as the editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine. The magazine gave Paine a forum for his increasingly radical liberal politics, and he would advocate for the abolition of slavery, worker’s rights, and American independence. Although he personally abhorred war, Paine gradually began to see tyranny as a worse evil.

Thomas Paine became a household name in both the colonies and in Great Britain in January 1776 with the publication of Common Sense. Within a few months over 100,000 copies of the pamphlet had been printed and distributed. Its strength lay in Paine’s ability to discuss complex and important events in terms that the average person could readily understand. Today, Common Sense is recognized as an important catalyst for the rise in popular support for the revolution. He saw the American Revolution as just the beginning of a worldwide struggle against oppression and for the rights of the average man. Later that year, Paine joined the army as a staff officer for General Nathanael Greene. As he moved through the army camps, soldiers referred to him by the nickname “Common Sense” and adored him for the complimentary dispatches he wrote for the Pennsylvania Magazine.

In late November 1776, during the Continental Army’s darkest hour, Paine again picked up the pen with the hope of recreating the enormous success of Common Sense. “It was necessary” he later wrote, that “the country should be strongly animated.” As the wrecked army crawled across New Jersey, Paine took advantage of every stop to put words to paper. He often wrote late into the evenings by the flickering light of a campfire, as exhausted soldiers slept huddled nearby. As Washington’s army crossed the Delaware River into Pennsylvania, he put the finishing touches on his latest pamphlet – The American Crisis No. 1.

First published in Philadelphia on December 19th, The American Crisis No. 1 was an appeal to the patriotism and resolution of the American people. It’s opening lines are some of the most well-remembered and oft-quoted in American history.

“THESE are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is dearness only that gives every thing its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated.”

The words electrified the demoralized army and became the rallying cry that Paine had hoped for. Within a day, copies were printed and distributed throughout the Continental Army, and officers read it to their assembled men. Militiamen who had returned home in disgust just a month before took up arms once again. Civilians up and down the Delaware River Valley reaffirmed their commitment to the cause of independence. Desertions among the Continentals slowed, and soldiers quoted The Crisis in their watchwords while on picket duty. On the night of December 25th, as Washington prepared to make a strike on Trenton, he ordered that Paine’s words be read to the entire army as a reminder of the importance of their task.

“I call not upon a few, but upon all: not on this state or that state, but on every state: up and help us; lay your shoulders to the wheel; better have too much force than too little, when so great an object is at stake. Let it be told to the future world, that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope and virtue could survive, that the city and the country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet and to repulse it.”

Their resolve renewed, the battered but not broken Continental Army went back on the offensive. The “Ten Crucial Days” that followed saw Washington and his men victorious at Trenton and Princeton, forcing the Howe to abandon much of New Jersey. Loyalists, emboldened by Howe’s earlier success, now found themselves abandoned to the wrath of their patriot neighbors. As winter gave way to spring, new enlistments from throughout the colonies poured into Washington’s army. The military victories at Trenton and Princeton changed the course of the war in a strategic sense, but The American Crisis No. 1 provided the ideological motivation that made them possible.

The American Crisis No. 1 was first of thirteen pamphlets published in the series, which would continue until the end of the war in 1783. Many of the future pamphlets reinforced the sentiments of the first, in their appeal to the patriotism of the American people to see the war through to its end. Others were ostensibly to “Lord Howe” or the “People of England” and highlighted what Paine saw as the injustice of the British government and the futility of trying to conquer America. These future volumes of The American Crisis continued to sell well and were distributed across the nation, but none would share the widespread recognition of the first. From the darkest days of the revolution came a piece of legendary American writing that continues to provide inspiration nearly two and a half centuries later.