📰 Stay Informed with Sovereign Radio!
💥 Subscribe to the Newsletter Today: SovereignRadio.com/Newsletter
🌟 Join Our Patriot Movements!
🤝 Connect with Patriots for FREE: PatriotsClub.com
🚔 Support Constitutional Sheriffs: Learn More at CSPOA.org
❤️ Support Sovereign Radio by Supporting Our Sponsors
🚀 Reclaim Your Health: Visit iWantMyHealthBack.com
🛡️ Protect Against 5G & EMF Radiation: Learn More at BodyAlign.com
🔒 Secure Your Assets with Precious Metals: Get Your Free Kit at BestSilverGold.com
💡 Boost Your Business with AI: Start Now at MastermindWebinars.com
🔔 Follow Sovereign Radio Everywhere
🎙️ Live Shows: SovereignRadio.com/Shows/Online
🎥 Rumble Channel: Rumble.com/c/SovereignRadio
▶️ YouTube: Youtube.com/@Sovereign-Radio
📘 Facebook: Facebook.com/SovereignRadioNetwork
📸 Instagram: Instagram.com/Sovereign.Radio
✖️ X (formerly Twitter): X.com/Sovereign_Radio
🗣️ Truth Social: TruthSocial.com/@Sovereign_Radio
Summary
➡ The Foxhole Foundation, with help from other organizations, has been successful in aiding veterans like Tom Jervis, who was contemplating suicide. The foundation is planning to establish a veteran healing camp in Southwest Virginia, featuring off-road trails and outdoor activities. They are also organizing a gala event in September to benefit at-risk veterans. The event will feature various speakers and activities, with the aim of raising funds and providing support for veterans in need.
➡ The Foxhole Foundation is planning a series of events and initiatives to support veterans. These include encouraging veterans to wear their uniforms, offering handmade gifts at events, and introducing new healing technologies. They are also seeking funding for a veteran healing camp in Lee County, Virginia, which will offer outdoor activities and therapy. Additionally, they plan to host a Christmas giveaway event for children and families. The foundation is dedicated to helping veterans and improving their quality of life.
➡ The speaker is excited about a new technology that can increase the body’s voltage, potentially helping people overcome chronic illnesses and pain, reduce medication use, and avoid hospital stays. This technology is particularly aimed at helping veterans who have suffered injuries. The speaker is grateful for the opportunity to contribute to this cause and looks forward to an upcoming event.
Transcript
I am the Q News Patriot, joined again today by a roundtable of Foxhole Foundation Patriots, Ms. Nadine Askey and Jeffrey and Donnie Stagg. My name is SG and on. Well, folks, I have to say, you know, I thought it would be prudent and sort of reflective in a manner if we looked back around this time of the year on what Foxhole foundation has actually been about and a part of over the last 12 months. Many of you out there that follow this show will remember that it was around about this season, a little bit after August of last year, that we brought Foxhole foundation on the program to talk about the disaster relief response that they had essentially overtaken from the failed FEMA response.
And with respect to Hurricane Helene and the disaster that happened in the Appalachians, nearly a year on Foxhole has assisted with a number of different disaster relief operations, coordinated, brought a lot of material, provided a great deal of transport, logistical support, construction and physical manpower and labor hours. And I thought it would be very interesting for us to catch up with them as we go into the fall season and begin to close off the summer in the usa. Thank you all very much for joining me. Welcome back. Thanks for having me. Thank you. Great to be with you.
Well, it’s great to have you all here and I have to say I’m excited to talk about some of the events that you all have upcoming. I know that there is a fundraiser and a bit of a benefit event that’s going to come up that’s that’s planned for next month, if I’m not mistaken. That’s going to benefit veterans that are really struggling with suicide and getting resources and support and the community help that they need. And I want to get to that in just a minute. But I thought we could reflect a little bit on over this past summer, we saw a number of different flood events, a couple of significant Heat events that were out there in the usa.
How did the summer go from the vantage point of Foxhole Foundation? All right, thanks S.G. well, from we we’re coming to you right now from southwestern Virginia. We’re in the Appalachian Mountains, Lee county, very, very far, this western part of Virginia. And from where we are here, my wife Donnie here and I, we both, you know, are working with disaster relief, suicide prevention. And from where we are located, a lot of the disasters from Helene are actually here on our property. I’ll tell you about that in a minute. A lot of it south of us, hour or two away from where we are in eastern Tennessee, western North Carolina, and just north of us, Kentucky and West Virginia were just hit first of this year.
It’s been great to be able to collaborate with a lot of other great little foundations. And this summer. Well, I’ll just give you an example of something we’re working on right now. We know of a veteran that’s contacted us in Florida, central Florida area, that is living in a home that’s leaking right now really bad. It was hit by a tree. And we’ve been trying to get some Florida help for our army veteran friend Robbie down there. It’s just been tough to kind of connect dots and people and resources. We have a group we work with called river of Life Miracles out of Bristol, Virginia, and they actually obtained a donated camper for a woman who lost everything in West Virginia in February when that area was being devastated with all those floods.
Unfortunately, that that elderly woman had passed away. And river of Life is now getting that camper back. And through foundations working together, hand in hand, humanity helping humanity, we’re connecting the dot of the veteran in need that we know of in Florida with this camper that’s in West Virginia that’s now available. So within the next week or so, we’re working on the logistics to get that camper delivered down. I’ll be taking my truck down to Florida, Donnie and I, and bring it to this veteran in Florida that’s in need. So that’s just kind of an example of what we, what we look look for in trying to help help people.
Yeah, Robbie. So I knew, I actually knew Robbie in school and I just happened to see a post of him reaching out for any help because he hasn’t been getting any help. And so when I saw it, I just, I mean, that’s just what we do, you know. And so he sent me the pictures of how he’s living and it’s not okay, you know, and that’s One thing I want to get across to people. There’s so many people out there like Robbie living, living in conditions that nobody should be living in. And especially near and dear to my heart.
A veteran, I mean, somebody who is, you know, and has sacrificed for our country, it’s not okay, you know, and so I, you know, I reached out to friends and family to get donations to help with fuel to get this camper down there. You know, we can’t help people without the help of the American people. And so it’s really hard for me on my heart to have to say no to somebody because we don’t have the funds. You know, the funds have been trickling in. So I just want people to know how important it is to try to keep us in mind, you know, because there’s, there’s so many people who’s trying to get help from us, and sometimes, you know, we just, we can’t.
So I just wanted to bring that to everyone’s attention. Yeah, and the veteran suicide rate is, you know, it’s still sitting at around 22 veterans a day. And I’d like to give you just a quick backstory. I may not have mentioned this to you, but about, about a decade ago, I had done some volunteering with a veteran organization called End 22. They were providing awareness to veteran suicide and trying to prevent it. And I myself, I had already retired. I had come out of not combat connected, but service, combat related, but service connected injuries I’ve had.
I was just coming off my third hip replacement. I’ve got about a pound of titanium inside my body and a bag full of screws with my spine. And I was at a time where I was pulling my bootstraps up and just trying to get better physically and beat a opioid pain pill addiction. And I got out of it. But one thing I realized was just getting out and getting around good people and being active outside was really, really helpful. So while I was volunteering, first time I’d ever volunteered with any kind of a volunteer organization, I had met my wife Donnie, who, whose cousin actually had started end 22.
Donnie has a story too. Her second husband was a Marine Corps veteran who took his life. So the veteran suicide prevention is really near and dear to our, to our hearts. And so a decade ago, while I was volunteering, within 22, the suicide rate then was 22 veterans a day. And I’ve done a little bit of research and, you know, realized that now I, I went looking for what the rates were today. And in 2024, the National Veteran Suicide Prevention Annual Report came out. And that report was actually comprised of data that came out in 2022.
So when these reports come out, they are working off of data that’s a little, little older. And the Department of Veteran affairs had reported in 2022 that 6,407 veteran suicides had existed then. And that worked out to be about 17.6 suicides per day. But there’s another group that called America’s Warrior Partnership awp and they’re suggesting that veteran overdoses, you know, overdosing with the intent to commit suicide really wasn’t factored into the Department of Veteran affairs data. And when you, when you factor in overdosing that veterans were going through, that jumped the numbers up to about 24 veteran suicides a day, if you include the suicide attempts through overdosing, whether they actually died or not.
So we still are. Well, my point is we still are at the 22 veterans a day taking their lives. And we’ve got to do some things to try to bring awareness to it, but not just that, you know, prevent it. You know, there’s, there’s, there’s things that can be done to help people that are just way, way down and out and thinking about taking their life with, you know, suicidal ideation. And we had a, we’ve had, the Foxhole Foundation’s had a huge success story with help from River Life and Wheeling for Hope and Trucking for Troops and other organizations just by helping a veteran that we talked about and brought onto your, your broadcast earlier this spring.
Tom Jervis, he was one. Yeah, he was ready to, he, it was a shock to us. He came out on, on a broadcast on the air and admitted that he was ready to take his life. But, you know, we realized that he was in trouble and we came out just to, you know, bring some compassion and humanity and get him back into a living place. And he’s doing great. We could definitely tell a story about him, you know, a little bit later, but he’s going to be attending our gala event in, in September. We’ll be talking about soon too.
So we’re really happy for that. And another, this, this situation that this epidemic our country is in has really inspired us to develop a project. We’re going to give it official name here soon, but I’ll just. It’s where we’re announcing this kind of for the first time on your broadcast here, we’re going to have a Foxhole veteran healing camp out here. And so Southwest Virginia, we have the land. We have 21 acres of trails. We’ve got a. We’ve got the land of 40 acres and we’ve got 21 acres. We have a contract of a trail system being made through the USDA and logging trails.
We’re going to be doing some clear cutting because we are victims of the Helene disaster last year of that hurricane while we were out doing disaster relief, you know, this past year our forest has been laying on the ground. And one of our favorite pastimes here, we have our grandson here visiting. My don’t. My wife Donnie and I love to take casen up into the trails and check our game cameras and check the wildlife habitat and see what kind of animals we have trotting around our property. We haven’t been able to access it since the Helene came through.
Trees are down everywhere. We have no trail. So we decided to turn a lemon into lemonade. And we’re going to build ourselves a kind of a veteran healing camp that’s going to have off road trails because like Wheeling for hope that Donnie is director of operations with, they have a suicide prevention message and it’s also. They use 4×4 trails and getting out in the outdoors and the nature and riding and ATVs and just enjoying life that way. Exposure to the frequency of God’s earth. Absolutely. Yep. Get right into it. So that’s where that’s a little project that we’re excited about.
We’ve got that in hand. But we, we don’t have any, you know, it’s just in the planning stages right now. We don’t have the money yet for, you know, utilities and buildings and roads. But we’re going to try to approach the grant process, you know, donations and grants, try to get a road built and that kind of thing and some buildings up. So kind of kind of long winded there. But I just wanted to give you our background and you know, how we met and what’s important to us and how we’re going to go about trying to help our veterans.
Yeah, well, it’s really quite. It’s quite a statistic you cited a moment ago. 22 per day. I did some quick math on the fly. That’s over 8,000 per year and that’s more than the entire casualty count from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined. And so look at that. In one year we’re losing more of our incredible veterans to things like suicide and overdoses. Whether they are accidental or intentional. I don’t think that that really matters too very much. When the net loss, of course is the loss of the human being. We’re losing more in one year than we lost in the entirety of those wars.
And I think that perspective is important for Americans and really for every culture with respect to the veterans of their armed forces to understand that there are stressors out there and there are things in life that certain individuals have gone through that they’re going to need a leg up and a little bit of community support to move forward. And so that’s going to pivot me to the gala event that you referenced just a moment ago. Mr. Stagg. As I understand it, this particular gala is primarily to benefit at risk veterans, those that are struggling with things like suicidal ideation, not having a support line, not having a familial connection line.
And it’s going to be held, if I’m not mistaken, on the 14th of September. Do you and Ms. Askewmind to go ahead and bring us up to speed on, on the planning stages for that, how that’s coming along and what the intention is for that event? Absolutely. I’ll definitely pass this on to Nadine. She’s got a lot of really good details. And I, I tell you before I, I do that Nadine has a very, she has very great, a good skill set and, and very good taste. I have never been to a presidential inaugural ball, but that is like the flavor of what this event is going to be.
I don’t know if any of your, your listeners have ever been to a presidential inaugural ball, but it, it’s semi formal, kind of like a wedding dress type thing. And it, it’s a beautiful, beautiful place called Lomont Farms. And Nadine has a lot of details of where we are with that and what we’ll be doing. It’s going to be really exciting. Yeah. Yeah. So it’s being held at the Rotunda Lomond Farms in Wrightsville, Pennsylvania on September 14th. From 2 to 4 is the event from, or I’m sorry, from 2 to 6 is the event. From 6 to 8 we’re doing a Patriot Roundtable.
So we’ve got different speakers giving different types of, types of information, whether it be health for our country, for veterans. So that six to eight time frame, if anybody wants to stay and get more information, it’s just going to be a very casual, let’s talk answer questions if you need help with something. We have someone coming from Texas with a unit called a Vasin so she can give information about that and how veterans can get that unit for free. And then the next day, the Rotunda, the owners are giving us a room to use for anybody who wants to come and try out the units for free.
And that way we can give more information. So, yeah. Of increasing blood pressure and. Yeah, beautiful, beautiful event. I mean, the location is just incredible. And then I’ve got, you know, I have a friend, Amy Herwig, she owns Party Bells. That’s what she does. She does events and it is going to be amazing. So we’ve got beautiful auction items, very nice auction items to raise money. They’re very patriotic. Yeah. Yes. It’s going to be the best patriotic event that you can go to. It’s going to be amazing. We are going to have a. We have a coupon code for any of your viewers.
So tickets are $75. But on your code, if somebody will purchase a table of 10, because the table seat 10, they can use the code. It’s Q, NP 250. So that will discount the table by $250. So that will be $50 a ticket if it is a $25 a ticket. So. But you have to have 10 names. Yeah, you have to have all 10 names in one order and then you use the coupon code at the end. But yeah, if anybody can make it, you will not regret it. It’s going to be amazing about Chad Gracie and.
And Derek Reed. Yeah, so Derek Reed, he was actually a contestant on Amer or American Idol. He is a young man, very grounded, very sweet young kid, amazing voice. Um, so he’s going to be entertaining. And then, um, Chad Gracie, the drummer from the band Live, he’s going to be in attendance. He has his own podcast called Gracious 2 with John Rotolo, who will also be in attendance. And then we’ve got Francine Fosdick from Upfront in the Prophetic. She’s going to be in attendance. Now, this one we don’t know for sure, but he did announce on his show, so I’m going to say it, since it’s already been public.
Scott McKay may also be there. We’re waiting to see, you know, if he’s. If he’s able to attend. So. But yeah, there’s a lot going on. Yeah, that’s right. And yours truly, hopefully, if we can make it happen, I think we should make it happen real quick. Oh, yeah. From what I understand, the event itself is going to be a semi formal, but very open, you know, very, you know, same level, same access, kind of, you know, mingling, for lack of a better term. And I want to stress again, as my understanding that the event is going to benefit, you know, at Risk veterans and those that really do need a leg up and a hand and you know, a hand up and rather than a handout is what I’m trying to say that it’s semi formal and so there’s a story behind me having to wear this uniform.
Thank you, Nadine. He didn’t get a choice. Very exciting. So I do. And we’re really hoping that any, any veteran, whether you’re active duty, retired or, you know, any veteran of any kind, if you have got a uniform that still fits you. Yep. Wear it. Yeah. Then, yeah, we hope that you wear it. Yeah. And if you’re volunteering, then put on your fatigues. You know, I mean, let’s just be honest. I mean, they’re sexy anyway. I mean, that’s just the truth. Yeah, that’s right. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Nadine coerced me into wearing it and then when my wife found out, she is a big fan of men in uniform and she had a big smile on her face.
So I have no choice. Yeah. And there’s also a gift for all veterans attending. Did you mention that we don’t say what it is? Yeah, there’s going to be two gifts. I mean, I can announce it. So I actually make hand quilted Christmas ornaments and they’re very patriotic, so each one will get one of those. And then there’s a company that’s the owners, the their sisters and one lives in Florida, one lives in California. So they make handmade flags all made in the United States. Like every part of it is made in the United States. They don’t source anything out of the country.
So they will be donating flags for every veteran that comes. That’s great. Great. Absolutely fantastic. So it’s gonna, that’s gonna segue right into the. My closing remarks here for, you know, our call today. And I’m really very excited to hear about the plans that Foxhole has with, you know, both this event and other things moving towards the Christmas season. I want to talk about the fall and moving into the winter. Where do we think from the Foxhole Foundation’s perspective? The biggest need still lies. And, and what is in your all’s opinion, the most important thing for the audience to focus on as we go into the fall and winter season with respect to helping our fellow men and women.
Right, okay, great. Well, we have two things. The Tom Jervis event in December is going to be a lot of joyful and a lot of fun. But our moving, moving forward, the Foxhole Veteran healing camp that we have, you know, Nadine, And I she has a guest next to her, Scott Oatesvall with LT 360. We’re running into a lot of people that have new healing technologies. Just Scott as an example has the ability to do biometric frequency scans through people’s DNA. Everything is frequency. And he can come up with, you know, 700 or so data points of where people’s health lies at the very moment and come up with suggestions on how to improve them.
A zero point frequency, a quantum frequency bed is, you know, related to, you know, frequency. Like I mentioned, we’re all about frequency and Scott has that technology. We want to try to bring technologies like that to veterans and other and people that need them. So before we get, you know, a whole lot into that, to answer your question, what where we’re where we are. This our veteran healing camp that we have out here, Lee County, Virginia. That’s some where we are looking for. I don’t know if you have people out in your audience that are grant writers.
We are looking for a way to fund this project. Like I mentioned, we have a contract for the trail system, we have the property. But it’s going to take a lot of money that we don’t have right now. But what we want to try to do is provide a place that has like a building, a place where veterans can come, families that can come and camp, do ATV 4×4 rides out in trails, a big fire pit, campfire therapy. There’s all kinds of outdoor related activities that we have. And we’re going to be building small cabins, tent spots, camper spots.
We have to build a road, a small road to get down to the area that we have. There’s a lot of infrastructure needs. So that’s why we were, we’re in the next week. We have a fellow by the name of Corey Spears with SkyShield drone photography coming to Stag Ridge Haven, our property. And we’re going to be putting a presentation together and we’re going to be showing it at the Foxhole Gala in York, Pennsylvania in September to describe the project that we have here for outdoor therapy for veterans. And so we, we have plans and that’s where kind of where we’re at.
But we’re looking for, you know, donations and grants. That’s where we are for the in the coming months. And that’s going to be an ongoing project. Then we also have, we’re just looking for all kinds of ways to introduce the new healing technologies to our veterans through our friends like, you know, Scott Oatesvall and There’s a little. We’ll mention this at the gala, too. We have our friend, Vietnam Purple Heart veteran Tom Jervis is going to be in attendance, and he’s willing for hope. Here is getting him a Santa Claus suit that he lost in the floods this year and when he lost his home, and he’s going to be dressing up like Santa Claus.
He called me yesterday all excited because he just found, like another eleven hundred dollars worth of toys. He is stockpiling toys for kids and wants to put together a. A little Christmas event to have the. All the children and families in the area so he can just be Santa Claus and give away all these bikes and tricycles and toys he’s collecting at his home right now. And so we’re going to be doing a big Christmas giveaway event in December, and he wants to talk a little bit about that at the gala. So that’s something we’re going to try to help.
Help out for. He wants to buy some, you know, hams and turkeys and things like that for the families and toys for the kids. So that’s. That’s one little project we got. Yeah. And what, what impressed me, one, One of the other things that impressed me so much about Tom Jarvis is that everything that that man is going through, I mean, he was in a car, he was in a truck wreck. He is just. He’s got so many health things going on. But what was the very first thing that he thought of? How can he help someone else? It’s amazing.
He’s amazing. And there’s so many that are just like him, that are like, oh, well, no, I don’t. I don’t need that. I bet there. I know that there’s someone else that needs it more than I do. And it’s that kind of a giving spirit and there’s that type. That type of heart that just makes us want to do any and everything that we possibly can to make it better for them so they can actually help someone else. Spoken like a be the people patriot. Go ahead, Ms. Askey. Yeah. If. If we can give just a few minutes for Scott to explain about the testing that he does and the bed.
It’s very. It’s really incredible. People need to know. Know what’s going on. And Scott helped me, and it was amazing. Raising my voltage. I just feel it in my energy. Yeah. I mean, that’s part of the plan also, is to be able to bring that to the camp so they can have a relaxing weekend and get some of the technology. Yeah. Excellent. Mr. Oates Fall. Welcome to the show. As I understand it, you’ll be in attendance at the upcoming gala. I am trying right now to rearrange my schedule. I’m actually scheduled to speak in Houston, but we’re trying to rearrange that and I hope I can make that.
It’s a privilege and a pleasure to be with you guys and the work that you’re doing and the ministries that you have helping our veterans and really helping humanity, because that’s what it really is, it’s about helping sg, you said our fellow human or our fellow man. And really it’s about really partnering with the spiritual forces of light to really be a force for good. And so what we do in all natural naturopathic health care, non pharmaceutical strategies that we use, we use a lot of technology. Jeff was mentioning the bioenergetic feedback and the frequency testing that we use.
And we’ve been doing this for many, many, many years with thousands and thousands of people. Now we have access to all kinds of technology that I think there is a small window of opportunity that I believe is opening up now. We’re certainly with the friendliest administration that I’ve ever been a part of in naturopathic healthcare in 33 years. And so it’s allowing us to really, really present things in a way that is palatable, number one to people, but also providing evidence based results. And so what Jeff is talking about is a new technology that we have just gotten our hands on very recently and that is what’s called zero point energy med beds.
And so what this does is it allows people voltage in their body to be raised. Because what happens when you raise the voltage in the human body, all disease processes tend to really, really go away. And so again, I don’t want to mention specifics or make any claims here, but I can just tell you this. What we’re seeing is nothing short of miraculous. And we’re seeing God do some amazing things through this technology. And so I’m super excited to be able to be one of the pioneers of this technology where we can actually raise the voltage of the human body.
We can actually help people reverse chronic illness and disease, get out of pain, come off medication, stay out of the hospitals. And really my heart has always been to help our veterans as well. And so we have a lot of people that are suffering needlessly in some ways, but in many ways that they’ve suffered injuries on the battlefield, they’ve suffered injury with other types of things that they’re dealing with in their families. And so we want to be able to provide a service and a technology that allows them to do this all naturally, come off these medications, really get the help that they deserve, and really get lasting and impactful results for not only them, but it impacts their families as well.
So we’re grateful to be a part of this opportunity and grateful for what you guys do. Spoken like a true patriot. We have interesting and exciting days ahead of us. Indeed. I want to thank all of you for joining me today on this incredible audio chat. It’s very much appreciated. We look forward to the gala that’s upcoming. I’ll remind the audience out there that I will be in attendance for this particular event. It’s likely going to be the only event that I’m able to attend out there this year with respect to my own personal calendar and responsibilities on this end.
If you’d like to learn a little bit more about the Foxhole Foundation’s mission and the upcoming events, you can navigate to the links in the description box below the video. This is SG and on. I’ll be back with each and every one of you again soon on the Q News Patriot Rumble. God bless everyone. Thanks. Stay safe today. Thank you. Thank you. Bye bye. Oh, he’s got a shirt.
[tr:tra].
