In this fiery episode of The Georgia Hour on VoiceofRuralAmerica.com, host BKP dives deep into Georgia’s political underbelly, urging listeners to demand transparency from 2026 candidates amid economic promises that feel more like smoke and mirrors. Kicking off with praise for a recent interview with patriot Joe Rossi (available on VORA Rumble channel), BKP shares insights from attending local GOP events, where he confronts candidates with tough, non-stump-speech questions—emphasizing that “America First” rhetoric isn’t enough without specifics.
A major focus is Georgia’s vaunted economic “wins” like the Hyundai, LG, and SK battery plants in Bryan County, where foreign (especially Korean) workers on H‑1B visas were supposedly training Americans for high-tech jobs. BKP blasts the lack of evidence: despite Governor Brian Kemp and First Lady Marty Kemp touting thousands of jobs from tax incentives, recent ICE raids detained hundreds of these workers, who now face lawsuits against the agency. He calls for mandatory reports from every incoming company—detailing visa holders for training, actual American hires, enrollment in programs (e.g., six-month courses yielding thousands of skilled workers), and automation/AI impacts reducing headcounts from 200 to just 35 per plant. Without this, he argues, it’s all displacing locals, and candidates like those vying for governor or lieutenant governor must commit to auditing these deals or risk being exposed as enablers of corporate welfare.
Shifting to the exploding data center boom, BKP highlights environmental and fiscal red flags. Drawing from a WSB-TV report, he exposes how hyperscale facilities—like Google’s in Douglas County or the massive proposed site in Cherokee County (larger than Hartsfield-Jackson’s terminals)—gulp 1–6 million gallons of water daily for cooling, equivalent to filling an Olympic pool. Yet, agreements are shrouded in NDAs and redactions, hiding water priorities (often favoring corporations over drought-prone Chattahoochee River users), infrastructure costs, and tax breaks. Industry reps claim efficiency and recirculation, but locals fear skyrocketing bills; BKP warns town halls are often too late, as lawmakers and councils are pre-sold on revenue. He demands candidates explain: Why prioritize “robots in every house” over human jobs? How will they enforce transparency on water/electricity rights and claw back exemptions for Google, Meta, and others?
Election integrity tops BKP’s “top of the list” for any officeholder, transcending party lines. He recaps Fulton County’s stonewalling: a DOJ Civil Rights Division letter demanding 2020 records within 15 days (response due soon), unclear ballot answers from election officials, and Judge Scott McAfee’s Friday deadline to reassign the Trump RICO case. BKP pushes for ditching Dominion machines—broken on launch—and separating the Secretary of State’s office from elections, insisting candidates specify decertification plans, emergency paper ballots, and log audits.
The episode skewers 2026 hopefuls for “stuck in their lane” performances. Blake Tillery (Lt. Gov. candidate) gets a polite but pointed critique for a Gilmer County speech touting zero state income tax via slashing “corporate welfare” (waving a thick exemption list), while dodging questions on paper ballots, new voting systems, or data centers. BKP contrasts this with his ideal response: Day-one decertification, emergency provisions, and DOJ awareness. Broader jabs hit Kemp’s machine turning politics into a “disaster”—backing Derek Dooley for U.S. Senate (despite Dooley’s 20-year voting drought and family ties to the scandal-plagued First Liberty Building & Loan fraud via brother Daniel’s loans), while his Hard Work in Georgia PAC attacks incumbents like Buddy Carter and Mike Collins over shutdown blame. BKP exposes Kemp’s strategy: Funnel funds to keep rivals from straying, prioritizing Dooley over party unity, and risking multimillion-dollar Dem influx if Dooley’s baggage erupts.
Tune in tomorrow at 8 AM for more unfiltered Georgia truth—because “revenue” shouldn’t sell out your water, jobs, or vote.

