Who We Are
Fulton County Speaks is YOUR voice for our community.
It is the voice of every parent concerned that less than half of 4th and 8th graders are performing at proficient levels in reading or math.
It is a platform for those willing to speak up and unite with other action-oriented citizens to bring about fair and honest elections.
Fulton County Speaks hosts conversations of those who believe they have the right to clean food and health options for their family and want to impact community health.
It is the voice of hard-working small business owners who decide to run for office after seeing a significant amount of their earnings go to regulatory compliance.
Fulton County Speaks is the voice of reason, common sense, and purposeful action– not ideology or rhetoric.
Ours is a message of freedom and the determination to maintain it.
To all the good mothers, fathers, teachers, health practitioners, farmers, firefighters, shop owners, and anyone who believes that freedom, integrity, and prosperity are the values from which to establish our communities, states, and country – this is your voice.
You are free to speak.
How it began
“Whenever the people are well informed, they can be trusted with their own government; that whenever things get so far wrong as to attract their notice, they may be relied on to set them to rights.” Thomas Jefferson
During the lockdowns, some people began waking up to the fact that the freedom they took for granted could be lost. The majority did not realize this, so they continued to comply.
But the more insightful knew that as they watched their freedoms being chipped away, a time would come when they would not be able to fight back.
Truth Vs Propaganda
Intuitively, some felt they weren’t being told the entire truth about the situation. What they were watching on the news didn’t logically add up. And then came the realization that there was the factor of propaganda. Some called it “mockingbird media”. The messaging was ubiquitous and relentless.
“nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper. truth itself becomes suspicious by being put into that polluted vehicle.” Thomas Jefferson
Citizen journalists began to emerge and reported what they learned to those looking for answers outside big media.
Concerned citizens tuned out the din of big media, did their own research, and started to think for themselves. They began to ask questions:
Why?
Why were we limited on what we could buy at the grocery store?
Parents saw questionable curriculums with their children’s remote learning. Why so much talk about diversity when literacy rates are going down?
Why were all the strange towers appearing on top of schools during lockdowns?
Why was there talk about questionable election outcomes, and what did voting machines have to do with them? Why were paper ballots (which work) fought against?
Why was the government, with the help of doctors, dictating citizens’ health choices, including what we put in our bodies?
The Seeds
People talked about their concerns and discussed what could be done. Neighbors called neighbors. People began to collaborate and exchange numbers and contact information as they met online or at meetings. Like-minded folks seemed to have feelers for and gravitated toward other like-minded folks.
New friendships were forged, and some people started their own organizations to bring change in areas close to their hearts.
Many individuals began to more fully understand their freedoms by learning what powers they really had and what powers the government was taking from them. They learned from podcasts, Constitutional study groups, meetings, and informed neighbors.
Empowered by their growing numbers, increased knowledge, and love of freedom, ordinary citizens decided to act in coordinated and unified directions.
People who had never spoken in public overcame their fear and started to speak up. People who knew nothing about government decided to study the issues and run for office. Activists and advocates for freedom were born. A new generation of all ages, creeds, and races emerged. It happened in Fulton County, but it was a worldwide evolution.
In the political vernacular, when ordinary people are the majority of activity, it is called “grassroots.”
Grassroots
Activating grassroots means coming together informally as a community, putting minds together, and leveraging skill sets to drive local change. A grassroots movement doesn’t require board meetings or heavy financing to be effective. It requires enough organization, courage, communication, and purpose to get the job done.
The impact of the grassroots movement in Fulton County, Georgia, has demonstrated this.
Learning about the Georgia Dome
Citizen groups brought issues down to the Georgia Dome. It was the first visit to the Capitol for most. They weren’t savvy about the political process and weren’t there to incite violence. These were citizens who wanted freedom – not health imperatives. They wanted their voices heard and their vote to count.
Many were shocked to realize that their government had been working, unquestioned by the citizenry and running amuck. It was not controlled by “we the people” but by outside influences.
“We the people” had been negligent, and many freedoms had slipped away. It was time to take responsibility for our inactions and regain our government and freedoms.
The Election Process
In the face of what many suspected was a stolen election, individuals took it upon themselves to learn about voting rolls, machines, and the voting process. Much to their surprise, some discovered that dead people were on the voter rolls, with their votes still being counted, and abandoned homes and buildings had multiple registered voters. Some single-family homes had countless voters. And all this was discovered by citizens who previously had no background in any of this.
It was working Georgians, who hadn’t been hoodwinked, who studied a system that hadn’t been scrutinized by citizens up until that point. Until these harsh discoveries, we all thought,” Sure, our votes are counted.”
Education
The schools were shut down, and parents watched what was being taught to their children through remote learning. They saw questionable curricula. Seniors couldn’t attend their graduation services.
There was isolation among teenagers during a time in their lives when social growth is imperative. (We see many of them now constantly on their phones, not talking to others.) Some are struggling with mental health issues because of the isolation.
Health
People became concerned about their health and started to question the reality of what they were being told.
Communication about alternative methods of treatment for covid was censored, which only made people question the narrative more. They started questioning what the “experts” and sometimes their own doctors were promoting. They realized they were in charge of their health and would have to research and study to maintain and improve their health.
We Spoke Then and Continue to Speak
We spoke up then and continue to speak—as do many of you. We want to hear what you have to say and what your groups are doing. You can email articles that you feel are relevant to fultoncountyspeaks@proton.me. Our goal is to learn what is going on in Fulton County and the State, speak the truth, and give people, who want to make a difference, a direction and some ways to help.
It is not easy to speak out or challenge entrenched systems. It’s especially difficult when the majority of the population has been stuffed with lies and propaganda. This leaves a few of us to do the heavy lifting in removing the barriers to freedom. But we know it’s worth it.
What does freedom mean to you? At what point would you stand to oppose tyranny?
Learn how you can take action HERE.