Ohio Groups Fight The Next Globalist Land Grab in North Carolina

Originally Posted on The Heartland Beat
As the Federal Government attempts to pull out all the stops to fund the failed state of California from burning to the ground through a myriad of incompetence and misplaced agendas, it seems to have been all but forgotten that the people of large portions of North Carolina are still suffering from the aftermath of hurricane Helene. Though American’s from all across the Midwest, including here in the heartland, are attempting to fill the void of a completely absent federal government, according to some who have been in the thick of it, the worst may be yet to come for those still suffering as a move towards another great selloff may be just down the road echoing the events of Maui and East Palestine.

Four months after the hurricane hit the working class people of areas like Pole Creek, Burnsville, Chimney Rock and Lural Lake and the damage is still far from repaired. While thousands of homes were completely wiped away, bridges and roadways were also decimated, leaving many areas inaccessible for a time and larger numbers of families are still without places to go. While the Federal Government can continually find billions every month to fund foreign wars, FEMA has recently announced an end to emergency shelters for thousands of people, forcing them out into a winter snowstorm with temperatures dropping below 20 degrees. Given FEMA’s previous assistance to the area which constituted providing a whopping $750 to some eligible households and confiscating donated resources from private churches to claim them as their own, kicking Americans out of emergency shelters in the middle of a winter storm hardly seems that surprising.

Perhaps it was because of the Federal Government’s response, or maybe a deeper connection to the plight of the people of Appalachia, that local churches private groups in Ohio have been mobilizing rebuilding efforts and donation runs to try and fill in where our unrepresentative republic has failed. One such group is Campus Martius, a local Ohio chapter of the Old Glory Club, an organization seeking to build relationships with American men that are interested in improving the situation of the nation.
“So it pretty naturally follows that when something happens and a large number of our people are in need that the thing for the men of the community to do is to help them,” Campus Martius treasurer Ryan said.

While Campus Martius is still growing and relatively new, its numbers hovering around a dozen, it was able to raise several thousand dollars as part of a fundraising effort during the initial stage of relief mobilization for the victims of Helene. Several of the members of the group have even been down to North Carolina to assist in various capacities, including handing out supplies, delivering generators and assisting in some rebuilding efforts. It is from these connections that a darker looming cloud was seen on the horizon that may still plague these people.
According to several sources connected with the group currently assisting with rebuilding efforts, the local government and county officials in North Carolina are creating significant hurdles to families seeking to reclaim their livelihoods from the flood either through inaction or regulatory hurdles to steep to clear.
“I'll bet they will move heaven and earth to rebuild everything in California, while here, even the county governments are dragging their feet on allowing these people to rebuild on their land,” a source close to the rebuilding efforts said. “FEMA gets a lot of flak but the county governments are dropping the ball pretty hard here. North Carolina may actually end up being an echo of this fire problem [in California] in the spring just because of the sheer amount of fuel lying on the ground and so much dead vegetation that there will be mudslides and further erosion of infrastructure with the Spring rains and then the first good lightning bolt when its dry is probably gonna set the entire west part of the state on fire.”
According to the source, the area has become something akin to the Wild West, with aid trucks being pilfered by illegal immigrants who take supplies pretending to be affected families, only to turn around and resell the items at flea markets.
“We drove up a rich guy’s driveway once on accident in WNC and there’s some dude in full camo, plate carrier etc with a long gun just chilling at the gate, meanwhile, we didn’t see any cops for a long time,” The source said. “They certainly weren’t doing anything about the caravans of illegals showing up to donation depots and obviously gaming the system, taking the stuff to flea markets and reselling it.”
According to one contractor connected with relief efforts, if incoming natural disasters or roaming groups of illegals aren’t attempting to siphon supplies, families may still be impeded by zoning laws and environmental protections.
The Coastal Area Management Act, which was passed in 1974 has put significant limitations on construction in what they consider ‘areas of concern.’ These concerns could be anything from environmental factors and protections to protecting marshlands. Any new construction in these ‘protected’ areas require the issuance of permits with some cost and a land use plan.

“Most of the structures that were taken by Helene were ‘grandfathered’ in by building codes of long ago,” One contractor said. “In some or most cases before there were such codes. The other issue is zoning regulations set by local, state and federal entities. CAMA is what decides what can be erected near bodies of water, they claim due to environmental reasons. These examples will make it near impossible to rebuild a lot of the structures that were lost. Then there is the insurance restrictions. If you’re to get a bank loan to rebuild you will have to have insurance to do so. If you were flooded then flood insurance will be expensive, if you can get it at all.”
This sort of issue puts the fundraising efforts of groups like Campus Martius at the forefront of the biggest problem facing these Americans currently. After so many disasters across the country, from the inexplicable fires in Maui to the intentional poisoning of East Palestine, it almost seems trite to discuss families ‘losing their homes’ only for wealthy developers to buy the properties up for pennies.
In truth, these people have lost more than a roof. The unifying thread of all of these disasters seems to always be those people who can’t afford to rebuild or maintain the costs of losing their homes, or even of just maintaining in an area having to walk away from land they rightfully owned to become vagabonds in their own homeland. These are people just like you, who wake up every day to provide for their families in a country their ancestors built that is increasingly squeezing them for more to fund a never ending stream of replacement migration. A country filled with ‘representatives’ who care far more about funding foreign governments than they do about the people whose blood is baked into the soil they walk on.
According to sources close to the matter, there is no financial assistance being made available to families to deal with the issues of rebuilding. Despite the U.S. government earning $4.4 trillion in tax revenue from among these people every year and sending billions overseas every month, there is no will to use any of that to help them. Still, those involved in the relief efforts are striving to be optimistic as a new administration is looking to take the high seat.
“I think that in a cynical way, it could change to the benefit of the people there as a way for the new administration coming in and saying ‘look how screwed up everything was and look how much better we are going to be for the American people’, I think that would be a potential outcome but I don’t know,” Ryan with Campus Martius said. “With it not being in the headlines as much right now, is there as much political capital to gain from that, I don’t know. With the fires, I think that has brought it back to the limelight, the stark contrast with at least what has been promised by the federal government and the attention they're giving it has kind of brought that back I think. I do think it’s a pretty straightforward example of patronage, Hollywood is on their side. The regime is pretty inextricably tied to Los Angeles, so when it's time to do favors for them they are more than happy to do that. Whereas Appalachia is not at all. The regime doesn’t rely on Appalachia for votes or cool guy points so they can be safely ignored and I believe they despise us.”
In a system that relies on government intervention, the American people will be forgotten. It’s for this reason why community organization and involvement has become the rallying cry of many grassroots movements in recent years. In a country that is becoming increasingly aware of how occupied their government system is, the path forward may not be so much political as it may be collective. Since the earliest days of this disaster it has been church groups and private citizens helping the people of North Carolina from the rubble; neighbors helping neighbors. In a more civilized time, when landgrabs were attempted, those same neighbors would push back by facilitating ‘penny auctions.’ While we have not seen such an act of heroic fellowship in some years, one hopes they would not be needed. Still, watchful eyes are observing the next stages of this debacle just as groups like Campus Martius are doing all they can to help the people of Appalachia.
“It feels good to be able to do a small amount to help,” Ryan said. “I think it’s better to be physically involved [with rebuilding] which is why I want to do that, not only because people need help and helping them is good but it’s good to build relationships. It’s good to help people and it’s good to be helped by your own people. To start getting that into people’s minds, in the way we think about everything; to know that we can rely on each other and make that a reality too and that becomes the first expectation, that my neighbors are going to help me.”