The Arrogant Independent

Revised - Interrupted by Grace Audiobook

7 h 9 min · 25 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Revised - Interrupted by Grace Audiobook

Descripción

The story they tried to discredit. The memories he struggled to hold onto. The questions no one wanted answered. It’s a true story. He survived combat in Iraq. What happened afterward was harder to explain. After twenty years of military service, Shawn Havens believed the war was finally behind him. A decorated combat engineer and senior noncommissioned officer, he returned home carrying the invisible weight of Iraq—grief, trauma, exhaustion, and memories that refused to stay buried. But the deeper he moved into civilian life, the more reality itself began to fracture. What first appeared to be the collapse of a struggling veteran slowly evolved into something far more disturbing: unexplained interference, missing pieces of memory, reputational attacks, workplace manipulation, psychological pressure, and a growing sense that the narrative surrounding his life was being shaped by forces he could neither fully understand nor escape. As events escalated, those around him increasingly reframed his experiences as instability, paranoia, or PTSD alone—even as the patterns themselves became harder to ignore. Then came the morning he nearly died. Moments before taking his own life, a phone call interrupted everything. What followed forced him to confront a terrifying possibility: what if his collapse had not been entirely natural? What if trauma had not simply damaged him—but made him vulnerable to something far more deliberate? Interrupted by Grace is part military memoir, part psychological survival story, and part deeply personal investigation into memory, manipulation, corruption, and truth. Moving from the battlefields of Ramadi to the quiet isolation of a Georgia home, Havens reconstructs the events that nearly erased him while wrestling with the terrifying uncertainty of what was real, what was forgotten, and whether parts of his story had been intentionally buried beneath a more convenient narrative. This is not a book about easy answers. It is a book about what happens when a man begins to realize that losing control of his own narrative may be more dangerous than losing his life. At its heart, Interrupted by Grace is the story of a father, a survivor, and a man who was expected to disappear. And didn’t.

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156 episodios

episode When Shame Is Used as a Weapon: Restoration, Truth, and the God Who Sees artwork

When Shame Is Used as a Weapon: Restoration, Truth, and the God Who Sees

The Arrogant Independent Podcast   When Shame Is Used as a Weapon: Restoration, Truth, and the God Who Sees   ———————————————   Some people do not want confession.   They want control.   Some people do not want repentance.   They want leverage.   Some people do not want truth.   They want a label.   This episode looks at a difficult spiritual issue: what happens when someone’s past is used against them repeatedly, not for healing, accountability, or restoration, but for public shame, humiliation, and control.   There is a difference between conviction and accusation.   Conviction comes from God and leads a person back to truth, repentance, and restoration.   Accusation keeps a person trapped in shame and tells them they will always be defined by their worst moments.   ———————————————   The Bible does not deny sin.   It does not excuse wrongdoing.   But Scripture also does not teach that a person’s forgiven past belongs permanently in the hands of accusers.   Joel 2:13 says:   “Return to the Lord your God, for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness.”   And Joel 2:25 gives one of the strongest promises of restoration in Scripture:   “I will restore to you the years that the locust hath eaten.”   That does not mean every consequence disappears.   It does not mean the past never happened.   It means God can redeem what was damaged, restore what was broken, and rebuild a life that others tried to define by shame.   ———————————————   In this episode, I discuss:   The difference between confession and coerced humiliation.   The difference between accountability and exploitation.   The danger of using someone’s sexual past as a weapon.   The biblical difference between conviction and accusation.   Why restoration does not mean pretending the past never happened.   How God restores people who return to Him with honesty and humility.   And why no human being has the right to permanently define another person by what God has already forgiven.   ———————————————   Jesus did not join the mob in John 8.   He did not deny sin.   But He also did not allow the accusers to control the woman’s future.   He said:   “Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more.”   That is the balance.   Truth without destruction.   Accountability without dehumanization.   Repentance without permanent shame.   Restoration without pretending sin does not matter.   ———————————————   This episode is for anyone who has ever been made to feel like their past disqualifies them from healing, faith, dignity, or a future.   Your past may be part of your testimony.   But it does not have to be your identity.   God is not finished.   ———————————————   Listen to the full episode here:     ———————————————   The Arrogant Independent   Faith. Freedom. Truth.   Real stories. Real truth. Real restoration.   ———————————————   #TheArrogantIndependent #FaithAndRestoration #ChristianPodcast #BiblicalTruth #GraceAndTruth #Joel225 #Restoration #ShameIsNotIdentity #GodIsNotFinished

31 de may de 202617 min
episode Do We Really Need All These AI Data Centers? artwork

Do We Really Need All These AI Data Centers?

The Arrogant Independent New Research Report & Podcast Release Do We Really Need All These AI Data Centers? Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming one of the largest new sources of electricity demand in the United States. New data centers are being proposed across the country, consuming land, water, electricity, and utility infrastructure. Yet one question rarely gets asked: Does every AI task need a massive data center behind it? In this report and podcast, I explore an alternative approach: a hybrid AI model that reserves large data centers for advanced research, scientific computing, national security, and critical public services while encouraging routine AI tasks to be performed on efficient local devices. The report examines: ———————————— • The growing energy demands of AI data centers • Whether local AI could reduce pressure on the electrical grid • The economic impact on ratepayers and utility customers • Data-center transparency and accountability • The role of eminent domain and public necessity • A proposed “AI Edge Efficiency Program” • Subsidized local AI as an alternative to endless infrastructure expansion • How policymakers could encourage efficiency without slowing innovation ———————————— This is not an anti-technology argument. It is not an anti-business argument. And it is certainly not an anti-AI argument. It is a discussion about accountability. If AI is going to become a permanent part of our economy, then its infrastructure demands, energy costs, and public impacts deserve the same scrutiny we apply to every other major industry. Innovation is valuable. Waste is not. ———————————— 📄 Read the Full Research Report: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aaFXFk693ozEiV7cBJBEWsHtKcPVdH5W/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=111018917453627434082&rtpof=true&sd=true [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aaFXFk693ozEiV7cBJBEWsHtKcPVdH5W/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=111018917453627434082&rtpof=true&sd=true] 🎙️ Listen to the Podcast Episode: ———————————— Discussion Question: Should governments encourage local AI systems for routine tasks in the same way they encouraged electric vehicles, solar power, and energy-efficient appliances? Or are large centralized data centers the only realistic path forward? I’d like to hear your thoughts. ———————————— The Arrogant Independent Independent analysis. Independent thought. No team jerseys required.

29 de may de 202619 min
episode Revised - Interrupted by Grace Audiobook artwork

Revised - Interrupted by Grace Audiobook

The story they tried to discredit. The memories he struggled to hold onto. The questions no one wanted answered. It’s a true story. He survived combat in Iraq. What happened afterward was harder to explain. After twenty years of military service, Shawn Havens believed the war was finally behind him. A decorated combat engineer and senior noncommissioned officer, he returned home carrying the invisible weight of Iraq—grief, trauma, exhaustion, and memories that refused to stay buried. But the deeper he moved into civilian life, the more reality itself began to fracture. What first appeared to be the collapse of a struggling veteran slowly evolved into something far more disturbing: unexplained interference, missing pieces of memory, reputational attacks, workplace manipulation, psychological pressure, and a growing sense that the narrative surrounding his life was being shaped by forces he could neither fully understand nor escape. As events escalated, those around him increasingly reframed his experiences as instability, paranoia, or PTSD alone—even as the patterns themselves became harder to ignore. Then came the morning he nearly died. Moments before taking his own life, a phone call interrupted everything. What followed forced him to confront a terrifying possibility: what if his collapse had not been entirely natural? What if trauma had not simply damaged him—but made him vulnerable to something far more deliberate? Interrupted by Grace is part military memoir, part psychological survival story, and part deeply personal investigation into memory, manipulation, corruption, and truth. Moving from the battlefields of Ramadi to the quiet isolation of a Georgia home, Havens reconstructs the events that nearly erased him while wrestling with the terrifying uncertainty of what was real, what was forgotten, and whether parts of his story had been intentionally buried beneath a more convenient narrative. This is not a book about easy answers. It is a book about what happens when a man begins to realize that losing control of his own narrative may be more dangerous than losing his life. At its heart, Interrupted by Grace is the story of a father, a survivor, and a man who was expected to disappear. And didn’t.

25 de may de 20267 h 9 min
episode Does Conscience Belong to the Individual… or the State? artwork

Does Conscience Belong to the Individual… or the State?

Throughout history, societies have repeatedly attempted to enforce conformity in the name of unity, morality, safety, religion, or national identity.   But forced conformity rarely creates harmony.   It creates fear. It creates coercion. And eventually, it places power over the individual conscience into the hands of institutions, governments, movements, or majorities.   In this episode, I go deep into one of the most important and misunderstood principles behind the American founding:   Why liberty of conscience became essential to the survival of a free republic.   This episode explores:   • Europe’s religious wars and the dangers of state-controlled belief • Why the founders rejected a national church • The persecution of Baptists and religious dissenters in colonial America • James Madison’s defense of liberty of conscience • The true meaning of separation of church and state • Why E Pluribus Unum originally represented unity without forced conformity • How constitutional liberty protects disagreement without collapsing society • Why conscience must remain beyond the ownership of power   This is not an attack on faith.   It is a defense of the individual conscience — religious or nonreligious — against systems that attempt to command belief through power.   One republic. Many consciences.   📘 Based on my book: E Pluribus Unum: One Republic from Many Consciences Now available in Paperback, Kindle, and Audiobook.   — Shawn Havens The Arrogant Independent

14 de may de 202616 min
episode E Pluribus Unum: One Republic from Many Consciences — Audiobook Edition artwork

E Pluribus Unum: One Republic from Many Consciences — Audiobook Edition

Why did the founders of the United States reject a national church while building a republic shaped by deeply religious people? E Pluribus Unum explores one of the most important and misunderstood questions in American history: how the American founding emerged from centuries of religious conflict, persecution, state churches, and struggles over liberty of conscience. Drawing from constitutional debates, founding-era letters, legal documents, and historical records, this audiobook traces the development of religious liberty and the separation of church and state from Europe’s religious wars to the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. Topics include: • Europe’s religious wars and state churches • Religious persecution in colonial America • Baptist dissenters jailed for preaching without licenses • The constitutional arguments of James Madison and Thomas Jefferson • Article VI and the ban on religious tests • The First Amendment and liberty of conscience • The later addition of “under God” during the Cold War • The ongoing challenge of preserving liberty within a morally diverse society Rather than portraying the founding as either purely secular or purely theocratic, this work presents a historically grounded examination of how the founders attempted to create one constitutional republic without requiring one government-approved faith. At the center of the American experiment was a difficult but enduring principle: A free republic can survive deep disagreement only when government does not claim ownership of conscience. Ideal for listeners interested in: American history, constitutional history, the First Amendment, religious liberty, political philosophy, church and state, and the American founding. Written and narrated by Shawn Havens.

14 de may de 20268 h 34 min