In this Geor­gia Hour seg­ment of BKP Pol­i­tics on Voice of Rur­al Amer­i­ca, host BKP slams Gov. Bri­an Kem­p’s $2 bil­lion tax incen­tives for the Hyundai EV plant in Bryan Coun­ty, high­light­ing ongo­ing water short­ages, hous­ing crises, and infra­struc­ture fail­ures along I‑16 to Savan­nah amid the Sep­tem­ber 2025 ICE raid fall­out; expos­es the “draw of Islam” to the West via migra­tion; oppos­es mail-order abor­tion pills like mifepri­s­tone post-2024 Supreme Court rul­ing, demand­ing in-per­son physi­cian con­sul­ta­tions; and cri­tiques U.S. labor his­to­ry of import­ing cheap work­ers for 1900s steel indus­try, reject­ing “inden­tured servi­tude” in mod­ern con­texts like Hyundai’s con­struc­tion. 

  • Hyundai Plan­t’s Infra­struc­ture Night­mare: Water, Hous­ing, and I‑16 Chaos in Bryan Coun­ty BKP reit­er­ates his long-stand­ing oppo­si­tion to Gov. Bri­an Kem­p’s 2022 $2 bil­lion tax incen­tive deal (includ­ing Biden-era green ener­gy cred­its) for the $7.6 bil­lion Hyundai plant in Bryan Coun­ty, Georgia—the state’s largest eco­nom­ic project but plagued by inad­e­quate infra­struc­ture. BKP notes vis­i­ble Hyundai vehi­cles every­where but ques­tions the deal’s wis­dom, espe­cial­ly post-ICE raids detain­ing 475 work­ers.
  • The “Draw of Islam” to the West: Migra­tion Strat­e­gy for Sharia Takeover and Cul­tur­al Dom­i­na­tion BKP warns of Islam’s strate­gic migra­tion to West­ern coun­tries like the U.S., por­tray­ing it as a ploy to feign inte­gra­tion (“we love you guys”) until achiev­ing major­i­ty sta­tus, then impos­ing Sharia law with bru­tal con­se­quences: women and homo­sex­u­als beat­en, forced child con­ver­sions to Islam, and church­es con­vert­ed to mosques. He cites exam­ples in Texas and Michi­gan, where efforts are under­way.
  • Abor­tion Pills by Mail: BKP Slams “Telemed­i­cine” Access to Mifepri­s­tone With­out In-Per­son Doc­tor Vis­its BKP goes on record oppos­ing mail-order abor­tion pills like mifepri­s­tone call­ing it “abor­tion in a bot­tle” and reject­ing telemed­i­cine pre­scrip­tions nation­wide, even in states allow­ing abor­tions; he insists patients must see a physi­cian in-per­son for con­sul­ta­tion and pre­scrip­tion to ensure safe­ty and eth­i­cal stan­dards, with­out endors­ing abor­tion itself. 
  • U.S. Labor His­to­ry: Reject­ing “Inden­tured Servi­tude” and Slave Labor in Steel and Mod­ern Indus­tries BKP rejects “inden­tured servi­tude” or slave labor, chal­leng­ing the nar­ra­tive that Amer­i­ca has “always import­ed labor” since the 1900s, par­tic­u­lar­ly in the steel indus­try, and calls for prepar­ing for a “major shift” away from exploita­tive prac­tices. 

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