John and Bob examine how anti-Catholic activism, fraternal politics, and extremist religious networks intersected with early Pentecostal and Latter Rain history. The discussion follows Roy E. Davis, William Branham, Indiana political influence, Methodist participation, and the broader climate that helped shape later restorationist and charismatic movements.
The conversation also explores how propaganda, civic clubs, religious identity, and power structures overlapped in twentieth-century America. Along the way, John and Bob connect those older patterns to later movements, including Christian Identity, the New Order of the Latter Rain, and the environment that influenced modern apostolic and prophetic networks.
- Introduction
- Why This Topic Matters
- The Klan As A Religious And Anti-Catholic Movement
- Roy E. Davis, William Branham, And The Indiana Klan
- Methodism, Protestant Culture, And Klan Expansion
- The Klan As A Christian Fraternal And Civic System
- Money, Marketing, And Power
- Roy Davis In California, Front Organizations, And Propaganda Networks
- Pulling Back The Curtain On Religious Power
- JFK, Anti-Catholicism, And Militant Reorganization
- Why The Same Religious Patterns Still Matter

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