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On the day she heard God tell her to buy a mountain, Tami Barthen already sensed that her life was on a spiritual upswing. Shed recently divorced and remarried, an improvement she attributed to following the voice of God. Shed quit traditional church and enrolled in a course on supernatural ministry, learning to attune herself to what she believed to be heavenly signs. During one worship service, a pastor had even singled her out in a prophecy: Theres a double door opening for you, hed said.

But it was not until two years later, in June of 2017, that she began to understand what that could mean, a moment that came as she and her husband were trying to buy land for a retirement cabin in northwestern Pennsylvania. Theyd just learned that the small piece they wanted was part of a far larger parcela former camp for delinquent boys comprising 350 acres of forest rising 2,000 feet high and sloping all the way down to the Allegheny River. As Tami was complaining to herself that she didnt want a whole mountain, a thought came into her head that seemed so alien, so grandiose, that she was certain it was the voice of God.

Yes, but I do, the voice said.

She decided this must be the beginning of her divine assignment. She would use $950,000 of her divorce settlement to buy the mountain. She would advance the Kingdom of God in the most literal of ways, and await further instructions.

What happened next is the story of one womans journey into the fastest-growing segment of Christianity in the countrya movement that helped propel Donald Trump to the White House, that fueled his attempts to overturn the 2020 election, and that is becoming a radicalizing force within the more familiar Christian right.

It is called the New Apostolic Reformation, or NAR, a sprawling ecosystem of leaders who call themselves apostles and prophets and claim to receive direct revelations from God. Its congregations can be found in cities and towns across the countryon landscaped campuses, in old supermarkets, in the shells of defunct churches. It has global prayer networks, streaming broadcasts, books, podcasts, apps, social-media influencers, and revival tours. It has academies, including a new one where a fatigues-wearing prophet says he is training warriors for spiritual battle against demonic forces, which he and other leaders are identifying as people and groups associated with liberal politics. Its most prominent leaders include a Korean American apostle who spoke at a Stop the Steal rally prior to the January 6 insurrection and a Honduran American apostle whose megachurch was key to Trumps evangelical outreach. Besides Trump, its political allies include school-board members, county commissioners, judges, and state legislators such as Doug Mastriano, a retired Army intelligence officer whose outsider campaign for Pennsylvania governor last year was widely ridiculed, even as he won the GOP nomination and 42 percent of the general-election vote.

The movement is seeking political power as a means to achieving a more transcendent goal: to bring under biblical authority every sphere of life, including government, schools, and culture itself, establishing not just a Christian nation, as the traditional religious right has advocated, but an actual, earthly Kingdom of God.

For that purpose, the movement has followers, each expected to play their part in a rolling end-times drama, and that is what Tami Barthen, who is 62, was trying to do.

I called her recently and explained that I was in Pennsylvania trying to understand where the movement was headed, and had found her on Facebook, where she follows several prominent prophets. She said that she was willing to meet but that I should first do three things.

One was to go see a film called Jesus Revolution, and this I did that afternoon, the 2 oclock showing at an AMC Classic outside Harrisburg. As the lights dimmed, scenes of early-1970s California washed over the screen. What followed was the story of a real-life pastor named Chuck Smith, who opened his church to bands of drugged-out hippies who became known as Jesus freaks, a transformation depicted in scenes of love-dazed catharsis and sunrise ocean baptismsyoung people rejecting relativism for the warm certainty of Gods one truth. The film, a full-on Hollywood production starring Kelsey Grammer and produced by an outfit called Kingdom Story Company, has earned $52 million so far.

The second thing was to visit a church in Harrisburg called Life Center, whose senior pastor had been among the original California Jesus freaks and now held the title of apostle. I arrived at a glass-and-cement former office building for the midweek evening service. In the lobby, screens showed videos of blue ocean waves. The books on display included Now Is the Time: Seven Converging Signs of the Emerging Great Awakening and Its Our Turn Now: Gods Plan to Restore America Is Within Our Reach. The apostle was out of town, so another pastor showed visitors into the sanctuary, a 1,600-seat auditorium with no images of Jesus, no stained-glass parables, no worn hymnals, no reminders of the 2,000 years of Christian history before this. Instead, six huge screens glowed with images of spinning stars. On a stage, a praise band was blasting emotional, surging songs vaguely reminiscent of Coldplay. Rows of spotlights were shining on people who stood, hands raised, and sang mantra-like choruses about surrender, then listened to a sermon about submitting to God.

The last thing was to attend a touring event called KEY Fellowship, which stands for Kingdom Empowering You. So I headed to a small church in State College, Pennsylvania, the 44th city on the tour so far. On a Saturday morning, 100 or so attendees were arriving, a crowd that was mostly white but also Black, Latino, and Korean-American. They all filed through a door marked by a white flag stamped with a green pine tree and the words An Appeal to Heaven a Revolutionary Warera banner of the sort that rioters carried into the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. We thank you, Father, that you have chosen us, said the woman whod organized the event, explaining that its purpose was to release spiritual authority over the region. And then the releasing began. The band. The singing. The shouting: Lord, have your dominion. Several men stood and blew shofars, hollowed-out rams horns used in traditional Jewish worship, and meant in this context to warn demons and herald the gathering of a modern-day army of God. Out came maracas and tambourines. Out came long wooden staffs that people pounded against the floor. Others waved American flags, Israeli flags, more pine-tree flags. The point, I learned, was to call the Holy Spirit through the prefabricated walls of the church and into the sanctuary, all of this leading up to the moment when a local pastor, a member of the Ojibwe-Cree Nation, came to the stage.

She was there to declare the restoration of the nations covenant with Native American people, which, in the movements intricate end-times narrative, is a precondition for the establishment of the Kingdom. A sacred drum pounded. Father, we pray for a holy experiment! someone shouted. A white man cried. Then people began marching in circles around the roomflags, tambourines, maracas, staffsas a final song played. Possess the land, the chorus went. We will take it by force. Take it, take it.

Once I had seen all of this, Tami said I could come.The view from Tamis house (Olivia Crumm for The Atlantic)

The road to the mountain runs through the small town of Franklin, an hour or so north of Pittsburgh, then winds uphill and through the woods before branching off to a narrower road marked private . At the entrance is a Mastriano sign, left over from when Tami served as his Venango County coordinator.

We dont really do politics, she was saying, riding onto the property with her husband, Kevin. But thn we heard God say, You need to do this.

She had raised and homeschooled three children, been the dutiful wife of a wealthy Pennsylvania entrepreneur who traded metals, but as I came to learn over the next few weeks, so many new things had been happening since she started following the voice of God.

All this is ours, Kevin said, passing old cabins, a run-down trailer, and other buildings from the propertys former life.

And right up here is where it all happened, Tami said.

They parked and went over to a wooden footbridge, part of the only public path through the property. This is where theyd been walking when Tami had first seen the spot for their retirement cabin, at which point she had looked down and seen three blue interlocking circles stenciled onto the bridge, some sort of graffiti that she took as a sign.

I said, Kevin, were at the point of convergence, she recalled.

Convergence. Spiritual warfare. Demonic strongholds. These were the kinds of terms that Tami tossed off easily, and knew could make the movement seem loopy to outsiders. But they were part of a vocabulary that added up to a whole way of seeing the world, one traceable not so much to ancient times but rather to 1971.

That was when an evangelical missionary named C. Peter Wagner returned to California after spending more than a decade in Bolivia, where he had noticed churches growing explosively and where he claimed to have seen signs and wonders, healings and prophecies. A professor at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Wagner began studying what he believed were similar forces at work in the underground house-church movement in China and certain independent Christian churches in African countries, as well as Pentecostal churches in the U.S. He eventually concluded that a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit was under way across the globea supernatural force that would erase denominational differences, banish demonic spirits, and restore the offices of the first-century Christian Church as part of a great end-times battle. By the mid-1990s, Wagner and others were describing all of this as the New Apostolic Reformation, detailing the particulars in dozens of books.

The reformation meant recognizing new apostlesmen and women believed to have God-given spiritual authority as leaders. It meant modern-day prophetspeople believed to be chosen by God to receive revelations through dreams and visions and signs. It meant spiritual warfare, which was not intended to be taken metaphorically, but actually demanded the battling of demons that could possess people and territories and were so real that they could be diagrammed on maps. It meant portals: specific openings where demonic or angelic forces could entereyes or mouths, for instance, or geographic locations such as Azusa Street in Los Angeles, scene of a seminal early-20th-century revival. It meant the rise of the Manifest Sons of God, an elite force that would be endowed with supernatural powers for spiritual and perhaps actual warfare. Most significant, the new reformation required not just personal salvation but action to transform all of society. Christians were to reclaim the fallen Earth from Satan and advance the Kingdom of God, and this idea was not metaphorical either. The Kingdom would be a social pyramid, at the top of which was a government of godly leaders dispensing biblical laws and at the bottom of which was the full manifestation of heaven on Earth, a glorious world with no poverty, no racism, no crime, no abortion, no homosexuality, two genders, one kind of marriage, and one God: theirs.

Wagner helped convene the International Coalition of Apostles in 2000. It became the model for what remains the loosely networked structure of a movement that is both decentralized and inherently authoritarian. Apostles would lead their own ministries and churches, sometimes with the counsel of other influential apostles. The movement grew rapidly, creating its own superstars whose power came from the following they cultivated, and who were constantly adding prophecies that sought to explain how current events fit into the great end-times narrative.

Broad-brush terms like Christian nationalism and white evangelicals have tended to obscure these intricacies. NARs growth has also gone largely undetected in conventional surveys of American religiosity, with their old categories such as Southern Baptist and Presbyterian. It is most clearly reflected in the rise of nondenominational churchesthe only category of churches that is growing in this countrythough not fully, because many followers do not attend church. A recent survey by Paul Djupe of Denison University hints at its scope, finding that roughly one-quarter of Americans believe in modern-day prophets and prophecies. Those who have tracked and studied the movement for years often say it is hiding in plain sight.

Yet Trump-allied political strategists, such as Roger Stone, understand the power of a movement that offers the GOP a largely untapped well of new voters who are not just old and white and Bible-clinging, but also young and brown, urban and suburban, and primed to hear what the prophets have to say. Recently, Stone told one interviewer that he saw a demonic portal swirling over Joe Bidens White House. Theres a live cam where you can actually see, in real time, Stone said. Its like a smudge in the sky, almost looks like a cloud that doesnt move.

Like Many in the movement, Tami doesnt use the phrase New Apostolic Reformation, but she first encountered its kind of Christianity in 2015, when a friend gave her a book called Song of Songs: Divine Romance. It is part of a series called The Passion Translation, described by its author, a pastor named Brian Simmons, as a heart-level version of the Bible.

At the time, Tami had just extracted herself from what she described as a long and difficult marriage. She had left the traditional evangelical church shed attended for years, where she said the pastor tended to side with her wealthy husband. She was estranged from some of her family. She was alone and at a vulnerable point in her life when she opened Simmonss book and began reading passages such as I am overshadowed by his love, growing in the valley, and Let him smother me with kisseshis Spirit-kiss divine, and So kind are your caresses, I drink them in like the sweetest wine!

She had never felt so loved in her life, and she wanted more. The friend whod given her the book attended Life Center, and Tami signed up for a conference at the church called Open the Heavens, where she learned more about prophecy, spiritual warfare, and the idea that she herself had a role to play in advancing the Kingdom of God, if she could discern what it was.

Among the speakers she heard was a rising apostle named Lance Wallnau, a former corporate marketer whose social-media following had grown to 2 million people after he prophesied that Donald Trump was anointed by God. Tami had voted for Trump in 2016, but her interest in Wallnau at this point had more to do with what hed branded as the Seven Mountains mandate, or 7M, the imperative for Christians to build the Kingdom by taking dominion over the seven spheres of societygovernment, business, education, media, entertainment, family, and religion. Wallnau gives 7M courses and holds 7M conferences, and that is how Tami learned about convergence: the notion that there are moments in life when events come together to reveal ones Kingdom mission, as Wallnau writes, like a vortex that sucks into itself uncanny coincidences and divine appointments.

That was exactly how Tami felt as she considered buying the mountain. Divine appointments everywhere. At Life Center, a man told her that hed had a vision of God pouring onto the mountain everything she would need. Someone else shared a vision of Tami as a princess riding a horse, which she found ridiculous but also, as a woman whod always felt under the thumb of some man, compelling. And then she herself heard the voice of God telling her what to do.

See that? she said now, back in the ar, passing a rusted oil tank where someone had spray-painted what appeared to be a yellow Z.

Ill explain that later, Tami said.An oil tank on Tamis property (Olivia Crumm for The Atlantic)

She and Kevin drove to the former camp directors home where they now lived. Inside was a piano with a shofar and two swords on top, which Tami had bought to remind herself that she is a triumphant warrior for Christ. On a wall hung a portrait she had commissioned, which depicted her clad in medieval armor. An Appeal to Heaven flag was draped over a chair. She opened a sliding-glass door to a deck overlooking the Allegheny River, and explained what happened after she and Kevin had closed on the mountain: how they began to envision building a Seven Mountains training center. How that led to someone from Life Center introducing her to an apostle from the nearby city of New Castle, who visited the mountain and wrote Tami a prophecythat what was happening was bigger than whatever you could dream or imagine. How he introduced her to a group of five men who claimed to be connected to anonymous Kingdom funders, and how, not long after that, the group came to the mountain, where Tami, full of nerves, presented a plan that included a lodge, a conference center, an outdoor stage, and some yurts along the river.

The main thing they asked is whether we were Kingdom, Tami said.

She told them that she and Kevin were Kingdom all the way; they told her that God wanted her to double the size of the project, and then told her to add everything you can possibly dream of, Tami recalled.

So they didadding plans for an outdoor pistol range, an indoor pistol range, a tactical pistol range, and a rifle range, along with a paintball course, a zip line, and other recreational facilities. They printed brochures for the Allegheny River Retreat Center, which, Tami said, was now a $120 million project.

As they waited and waited for funding, the 2020 presidential election arrived. Tami again voted for Trump, this time in concert with prophets who said he was an instrument of God. She soon began listening to an influential South Carolina apostle named Dutch Sheets, who had for years advocated an end to Church-state separation and co-authored something called the Watchman Decree, a kind of pledge of allegiance that included the phrase we, the Church, are Gods governing Body on the earth. Sheets was among a core group of apostles and prophets spreading the narrative that the election had been stolen not just from Trump, but from God. He began promoting daily 15-minute YouTube prayers and decrees, which were like commandments to those in the Kingdom. He branded them Give Him 15, or GH15, and at their peak, some videos were getting hundreds of thousands of views.

Tami began reading Sheetss decrees aloud at sunrise every morning, videotaping herself on the deck overlooking the Allegheny River and posting her videos to Facebook.

Lord, we will not stop praying for the full exposure of voter fraud in the 2020 elections, she read on November 12.

We refuse to take our cue or instructions from the media, political parties, or other individuals, she read on November 17. We believe you placed President Trump in office, and we believe you promised two terms. We stand on this.

She started receiving lots of friend requests and was getting recognized around town. She bought an Appeal to Heaven flag, which Sheets had popularized as a symbol of holy revolution. She kept seeing signs that made her wonder whether the mountain might have a specific purpose in what she was coming to see as a global spiritual battle.

One day the sign was a dove flying across the sky as she read the morning decree, and the dove feathers she found on her doorstep after that. Another day, two women whod seen her videos showed up at her door with bottles of water from Israel, saying they needed to pour it in strategic places along her riverfront that God had revealed to them. Another day, Sheets himself announced that he was holding a prayer rally at the headwaters of the Allegheny Rivertwo hours north of Tamipart of a swing-state prophecy tour as Trump challenged election results.

Tami went. And when Sheets and other apostles and prophets urged followers to convene at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, she felt God telling her to go there, too. So she and Kevin boarded a bus that a friend had chartered to Washington, D.C., where she read the daily decree, the Washington Monument in the background, as Kevin held the Appeal to Heaven flag.

Let the battle for Americas future be turned today, in Jesuss name, she said. From what she described as her vantage point outside the Capitol, the big story of the day was not that a violent insurrection had occurred but rather that a movement of God was under way, another Jesus Revolution. It was one of the best days of my life, Tami said.

When she got back to the mountain, she kept recording the daily decrees from her deck, in front of a pink flower pot with an American flag.

We refuse to allow hope deferred and discouragement to cripple the growth of your people in their true identitythe army you intended them to be, she read after Joe Biden took office.

She flew to Tampa, Florida, for a stop on the ReAwaken America tour. She drove to another one a few hours away from her home, then watched others online, events featuring a roster of prophets alongside the headliner, retired General Michael Flynn, Trumps former national security adviser, who was now declaring the nation to be in a state of spiritual war. She always came home with a cellphone full of new contacts. She began introducing herself as Tami Barthen, the one who bought a mountain for God.Tami and Kevin in a demonstration of prayer (Olivia Crumm for The Atlantic)Left: The flag that Tami hangs on her deck, where she reads prayers from Dutch Sheets at sunrise. Right: Tami shows a visitor the feathers that she found on her doorstep. (Olivia Crumm for The Atlantic)

Occasionally she said this with a note of sarcasm, because the Kingdom funding had yet to come through, and at times she was not sure where all the signs were ultimately pointing. In those moments, she sought more prophecies.

She messaged a prophet whod appeared on a Dutch Sheets broadcast, asking him what God might tell him about her project. This is what I hear the Lord saying, he wrote back. God says this came forth from His heart and He has already orchestrated the completion.

At a Kingdom-building conference in Oregon, she asked Nathan French, a prominent prophet, what God was telling him and recorded the answer on her iPhone: I feel like that mountain is like Zion, and I feel like God is even saying you can name it Mount Zion I see the Shekinah coming, he said, using the Hebrew term for Gods presence, the shock and awe.

Tami had rolled her eyes at this grand new prediction, but when she got home, another sign appeared.

The Z on the oil tank, she said now, sitting on her porch.

It was spring. She took the Zion prophecy, which she had transcribed and printed on thick paper, and slipped it into a binder, where she archived the most meaningful ones in protective plastic covers. She was trying to figure out what it was all adding up to.

Why was Dutch Sheets at the headwaters of the Allegheny? Why is there a Z on the oil tank? Why am I meeting all these people? There are all these pieces to the puzzle, but I dont know what its supposed to be yet, Tami said.

A new piece of the puzzle was that Trump had been indicted in New York on charges of falsifying business records related to payoffs to the adult-film actor Stormy Daniels. Tami had watched coverage on an online show called FlashPoint, which has a cable-news format, except that the news bulletins come from prophets.

This is not just a battle against us; this is a battle against the purposes of God, one had said about the indictment, and Tami understood this to be an escalation. A few days later, an apostle named Gary Sorensen called. He was an engineer who had been among the group claiming to repreent the Kingdom funders. He was calling to invite Tami on a private spiritual-heritage tour of the Pennsylvania capitol, which was being led by one of the most powerful apostles in the state.

Tami took it as another sign, and she and Kevin drove to Harrisburg.

She was slightly nervous . The apostle was a woman named Abby Abildness, who heads a state prayer network that was part of the Congressional Prayer Caucus Foundation, a fixture of the religious right. During the legislative session, she convened weekly prayer meetings with state legislators along with business and religious leaders. She had a ministry called Healing Tree International, which claimed representatives in 115 countries, and focused on what she described as restoring the God-given destinies of people and nations. She was just back from Kurdistan, where she had met with a top general in the Peshmerga, the Kurdish military. To Tami, Abildness was like a high-ranking Kingdom diplomat.

So, Abildness began. The tour I do is about William Penns vision for what this colony would be. And it startsif you look up, we have the words he spoke on the rotunda.

Tami looked up at the gilded words beneath a fresco of ascending angels.

There may be room there for such a Holy Experiment, Abildness read. And my God will make it the seed of a nation.

Wow, Tami said.

They were the kind of words and images found in statehouses all over the country, but which Abildness understood not as historical artifacts but as divine instructions for the here and now.

They headed down a marbled hallway to the governors reception room.

So this is William Penn, Abildness said, pointing to a panel depicting Penn as a student at Oxford, before he joined the Quaker movement. Hes sitting in his library and a light comes into the room, and he knows something supernatural is happening.

They moved on to the Senate chamber.

Here you are going to see a vision of what society could be if the fullness of what Penn planted came into beinga vision of society where all are recognizing the sovereign God, Abildness said as they walked inside.

Tami looked around at scenes of kings bowing before Christ, and quotes from the Book of Revelation about mountains.

You see here, angels are bringing messages of God down to those who would write the laws, Abildness said.

They moved on to the House chamber.

This is The Apotheosis, Abildness said, referring to an epic painting that included a couple of Founding Fathers, and then she pointed to a smaller, adjacent painting, depicting Penn making a peace treaty with the Lenape people.

Tami listened as Abildness explained her interpretation: God had granted Native Americans original spiritual authority over the land; the treaty meant sharing that spiritual authority with Penn; later generations broke the covenant through their genocidal campaign against the Native Americans, and now the covenant needed to be restored in order to fulfill Penns original vision for a Holy Experiment. Nothing less than the entire Kingdom of God was riding on Pennsylvania.

Tami listened, thinking of something shed always wondered about, a sacred Native American site across the river, visible from her deck, known as Indian God Rock. It is a large boulder carved with figures that academic experts believe have religious meaning. As the tour ended, she kept thinking about what it all could mean.

People I hang with think were moving from a church age to a Kingdom age, Sorensen was saying.

Its like, what are all these signs saying? Tami said.Left: Tamis King Solomon sword. Right: A wall in her living room features a painting of her as a spiritual warrior. (Olivia Crumm for The Atlantic)

Sorensen was involved in various organizations devoted to funding and developing Kingdom projects. There was Reborne Global Trust, and New Kingdom Global, and Abundance Research Institute, among others. He told Tami not to worry about her benefactors coming through. He said $120 million was peanuts to them. He said one funder was an Australian private-wealth manager. He said others were international benefactors, as well as sovereigns, people he described as publicly known royal and ruling families of well-known countries.

We are looking into establishing a Kingdom treasury, he said, elaborating that some of the funders were setting up offshore banking accounts. Outside the central banking systemso we cant get cut off if were not voting right.

Everything would be coming together soon, he told her.

Driving back to the mountain, Tami and Kevin listened to ElijahStreams, an online platform that launched after the 2020 election. It hosts daily shows from dozens of prominent and up-and-coming prophets, and claims more than 1 million followers.

There were so many apostles and prophets these daysthe old standards like Dutch Sheets, and so many younger ones who had podcasts, apps, shows on Rumble. By now Tami followed at least a dozen of them closely, and what she had noticed was how politically involved they had become since the 2020 election and how in recent months, their visions had been getting darker.

Lance Wallnau, whom Tami thought of as fairly moderate, had spoken on Easter Sunday about hearing prophecies of sudden deaths, and he himself predicted that the disciplinary hand of God would be coming down.

Now, as she and Kevin were winding through the woods, she was listening to a young prophet from Texas named Andrew Whalen, who was being promoted on popular shows lately. He described himself as close friends with Dutch Sheets, and on his website, characterized the moment as a context of war, when a new generation is preparing to cross over into lands of inheritanceplaces that Christ has given us authority to conquer.

Im boiling on the inside, he was saying, describing a dream in which he saw the angelic realm working with earthly governments and militaries. He continued, I just say even today, let Operation Fury commence, God. We say let the fury of Gods wrath break forth against every evil work, against systems of demonic and satanic structure.

Tami listened. And in the coming weeks, she kept listening as Operation Fury became a page on Whalens website where people could sign up to help overthrow jezebels influence from our lives. She kept listening as Trump was indicted a second time, for mishandling classified documents, and a prophet on FlashPoint described the moment as a battle between good versus evil.

She sometimes felt afraid when she imagined what was coming.

Its going to get bad. Its going to get worse, she said. Its spiritual warfare, and its going to come into the physical. What its going to look like? I dont know. God said to show up at Jericho, and the walls came down. But there are other stories where David killed many people. All I can say is if you believe in God, youve got to trust him. If youre God-fearing, youll be protected.

The morning after her tour in Harrisburg, Tami went out on her deck and recorded the daily decree.

We use the sword of our mouths just as you instructed, she read. The kings decree and the decrees of the king are hereby law in this land.

After that, she went to her office.

On her desk were bills she had to pay. On a table were towers of books shed read about spiritual warfare, demon mapping, the seven mountains. In a file were all the prophecies shed tried to follow, all the signs.

She thought about Operation Fury, and what Abby Abildness had said about Pennsylvania, and Indian God Rock, and as she began putting all the signs together, she had a thought that filled her with dread.

I dont want this job, she said. What if I mess up? Why me?

She pulled out a 259-page book called The Seed of a Nation, about what William Penn envisioned as a Holy Experiment in the colony of Pennsylvania, opening it to the last page she had highlighted and underlined.

See? she said. I only got to page 47.

She thought that maybe the funding was not coming through because she had missed a sign. Maybe she had not been obedient enough. Mayb she, Tami Barthen, was the one delaying the whole Kingdom, and now instead of listening to the voice of God, she was listening to her own voice saying something back: Im sorry.

She thought for a moment about what would happen if she let it all go, if instead of being a Christian warrior on a mountain essential to bringing about the Kingdom of God, she went back to being Tami, who had wanted the peace of a retirement cabin by the river.Tami in her driveway (Olivia Crumm for The Atlantic)

I cant think of a Plan B, she said, so she reminded herself of how she had gotten here.

She had been living her life, trying to pull herself out of a dark period, when she felt the love of God save her, and then heard the voice of God tell her to buy a mountain. And who was she to refuse the wishes of God?

So she had bought a mountain, 350 acres redeemed for the Kingdom. Now she would wait for word from the prophets. She reminded herself of a favorite Bible verse.

He says, Occupy until I come, Tami said. Like the Bible says, Thy kingdom come.

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The evidence that Russia sanctions evasion has intensified

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The evidence that Russia sanctions evasion has intensified

For more than a year, we have been tracking the flow of sanctioned items out of the UK and towards Russia.

Electronic equipment, radar parts, components used to make aircraft and drones. These are all items that have been banned from going to Russia. For good reason: while Britain is far from a global manufacturing powerhouse, it nonetheless still makes certain prized components used to make machinery.

In some hands, these components could be used for peaceful purposes, but they could also be used to wage war. All of which is why they are among the items sanctioned by G7 nations and banned from entry to Russia.

Conway1

A glance at the trade figures might lull you into thinking those sanctions have been extraordinarily successful. Look at the flows of these so-called “dual use” goods from the UK to Russia and they drop to zero shortly after the invasion of Ukraine and the imposition of those export bans. But that’s not the whole story – because over precisely the same period, exports of those same items to countries neighbouring Russia have risen sharply.

At this point, the data trail goes cold. As far as the statistics tell us, those components stay in the Caucasus and Central Asia. But there are two powerful pieces of evidence that suggest otherwise. The first is that we have travelled out to the border of Russia and filmed European-sanctioned goods (in this case cars, the hardest of all goods to disguise) passing across the border.

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Zelenskyy: Sanctions needed as countries supplying missile components to Russia

The second is that Ukrainian forces have repeatedly found weaponry and equipment containing European and British components inside them on the battlefield in their country. British technology has been used to kill Ukrainians – in spite of sanctions. That was one of the messages President Volodymyr Zelenskyy relayed in his interview with my colleague Mark Austin.

So, in the wake of that interview, we revisited the databases to see if those flows of goods to Russian neighbours had slowed in recent months.

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But, far from slowing, they’ve accelerated. In the past nine months, the flow of dual-use goods to Russian neighbours has risen by an average of 9%, compared with the monthly average between the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and last June. Those flows are 111% higher than they were before the invasion.

Read more:
Analysis: Reasons for rhetoric from Russia
Western brands remain on Russian shelves
Putin says ‘Ukraine is ours’

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Nor are the flows of British goods to Russian neighbours the only trend suggesting these components are being trans-shipped via third countries. Look at exports of sanctioned items to the United Arab Emirates and Turkey and they are up by a similar proportion.

In short: the evasion of sanctions continues much as it has done since the beginning of the war. For all the talk about the toughest sanctions regime in history, the reality on the ground is somewhat different.

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Early Prime Day Sales with up to 65% savings from Jackery + Anker SOLIX, EcoFlow dual expansion batteries $2,899 off, more

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Early Prime Day Sales with up to 65% savings from Jackery + Anker SOLIX, EcoFlow dual expansion batteries ,899 off, more

Today’s Green Deals are jam-packed with power station savings, led by Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale that is taking up to 65% off power stations with some extra ways to save too. Among the lineup, we spotted the brand’s Explorer 2000 Plus Solar Generator Bundle with two 200W panels down at $1,709. Right behind it we have the first round of Anker’s SOLIX early Prime Day flash sales, with options like the C300 AC 90,000mAh Power Station getting a 100W solar panel at a new $369 low, among larger units. Next, there’s EcoFlow’s first early Prime Day flash sale that has two DELTA Pro Smart Extra Batteries together at $2,699, as well as a WAVE 3 portable AC/heater bundle too. Among our electric lawn care solutions today is the Greenworks 40V 17-inch​ Cordless Push Lawn Mower at a new $230 low, as well as Worx’s Nitro 40V 15-inch Cordless String Trimmer with Dual-Exit Bump Feed Head, two 4.0Ah batteries, and a dual-port charger at its $190 low. Plus, there’s all the rest of the hangover Green Deals in the links at the bottom of the page, like yesterday’s full EcoFlow early Prime Day Sale lineup, Lectric’s 4th of July e-bike sale, and more.

Head below for other New Green Deals we’ve found today and, of course, Electrek’s best EV buying and leasing deals. Also, check out the new Electrek Tesla Shop for the best deals on Tesla accessories.

Get up to 65% off Jackery power stations in early Prime Day Sale access with bonus + trade-in savings, more from $89

Jackery has launched its early Prime Day Sale pricing through July 7, with up to 65% being taken off power stations, alongside extra sitewide savings, trade-in savings, flash sales, and select member-only discounts. Among the lineup, one of the best and most expansive solar generator bundles is Jackery’s Explorer 2000 Plus Power Station with two 200W panels at $1,709.05 shippedafter using the promo code EXTRA5 at checkout for an additional 5% off. Normally you’d be shelling out $3,099 for this package at full price, which we mostly see brought down to $1,899 during sales these days, though it did fall lower to $1,799 in the earlier months of 2025. We have seen this bundle go as low as $1,673 with extra savings in a 3-day flash sale back in February, but it hasn’t come back around since, with the deal here landing as the second-lowest price we have tracked, saving you $1,390 and beating its Amazon pricing by $190.

As this is Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale, there are some additional savings options that are worth mentioning while the event continues. First off, the code EXTRA5 can be used at checkout to score an additional 5% savings on your order, with some models even offering larger on-page 7% off coupons. There’s also a trade-in offer that can give you up to $830 off a new model after trading in your old one, and special pricing on select units for members (sign up is free).

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One of Jackery’s most expansive backup power solutions, which only bows down to the new Explorer 5000 Plus, the Explorer 2000 Plus is a great option to cover camping needs, outdoor events, and home backup, starting at a 2,042Wh LiFePO4 battery capacity. That capacity can be boosted to 12,000Wh with five expansion batteries connected, while pairing two of these fully expanded setups together takes things to their maximum 24,000Wh levels. The station delivers up to 3,000W of steady output power through 10 port options, while the dual-expanded setups go higher at up to 6,000W of power.

The battery can be recharged to full in just two hours through a wall outlet, or it will take the same timeframe to get it back to full when connecting its maximum 1,200W solar input (not accounting for expanded setups), and a third option to connect to your car’s auxiliary port. You’ll get all the remote smart controls you’d expect through its companion app via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi.

***Note: the additional 5% and on-page 7% discounts have not been factored into the pricing below, so be sure to use the code EXTRA5 at checkout (or EXTRA7 where applicable) for the maximum savings!

Jackery’s current early Prime Day Sale flash offers (ends June 25):

Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale appliance backup deals:

Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale home backup deals:

Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale outdoor adventure deals:

Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale add-on deals:

Jackery’s transfer switch deals:

You can browse the entirety of Jackery’s early Prime Day Sale on the landing page here

Anker SOLIX power stations

Anker SOLIX early Prime Day flash sales drop C300 AC 90,000mAh 100W solar bundle to a new $369 low

Anker SOLIX is beginning its early Prime Day events with two limited-stock flash sale periods – first through June 26, then through June 29. Among the first round of offers we’re seeing, things start lowest with the C300 AC 90,000mAh Portable Power Station that comes with a 100W solar panel for $369 shipped. This newer bundle normally goes for $669 in full, with it only available directly from the brand’s website here, as other marketplaces like Amazon only offer the 60W panel bundle. We’ve seen this package go as low as $399 previously, which is getting beaten out by the 45% markdown during this sale, giving you $300 in total savings at a new all-time low price. Head below to check out the other units getting discounts during these flash sales.

A great option for folks who want a more compact backup power solution that they can easily carry along while stowed inside a bag, the 9-pound Anker SOLIX C300 AC power station keeps your personal devices running with a 90,000mAh LiFePO4 capacity. Unlike its DC counterpart, which leans more in favor of USB ports, this model has three AC outlets on top of the three USB-Cs, the solo USB-A, and a car port. It provides a steady power output of up to 300W, with things surging to 600W for larger power needs.

There’s a bunch of ways to recharge its battery too, with the obvious one from this bundle being the 100W solar panel, though it can also utilize a standard wall outlet, a car port, or through the PD 3.1 USB-C port. Its design is especially tailored for campers and outdoor adventures, as there is an integrated carrying handle (alongside hooks to attach a shoulder strap), as well as the integrated light bar that sits above its front-facing display screen.

Anker’s other SOLIX early Prime Day flash offers (through June 26):

You can browse the entirety of Anker’s SOLIX early Prime Day flash sale offers on the landing page here.

DELTA Pro Smart Extra Battery

Expand your EcoFlow DELTA Pro setup with two expansion batteries at $2,699 in flash savings ($2,899 off)

As part of its ongoing early Prime Day Sale through July 7, EcoFlow has launched the first of its scheduled flash sales, with two offers to upgrade your outdoor adventures. The first of these deals gives you two DELTA Pro Smart Extra Batteries for $2,699 shipped. This add-on bundle carries a $5,598 MSRP, but for the rest of the day you’ll benefit from the 52% markdown here to upgrade your DELTA Pro setup with $2,899 in savings. Considering that the lowest we’ve seen one battery go for was $1,399 during Black Friday and Christmas sales, this deal saves you $99 off buying two separately at those lowest rates, making this the best chance we have tracked to significantly expand your backup power support. It’s beating out Amazon by much more right now, where one unit is priced at $1,599, which comes in at $249.50 above the cost of each in this bundle.

If you’ve been wanting to expand your DELTA Pro setup beyond just the station, or further bolster things for greater backup power support inside or outside of the home, this DELTA Pro expansion battery bundle is certainly the best chance we’ve seen yet. Each of the batteries adds 3,600Wh to your overall capacity, giving you 10,800Wh should you currently only have the station, and helping to push you closer to its maximum 25kWh.

The second of these flash offers comes through the brand’s official Amazon storefront, giving you the new WAVE 3 Portable AC/Heater with an add-on battery and a free bag for the unit at $1,399 shipped, down from $2,299. This setup gives you mobile AC and heating for your tent, car, camper, or any other enclosed space, with the brand claiming it to “drop temperatures by 15 degrees in 15 minutes” or “warming a space by 17 degrees in 15 minutes.” There are plenty of smart controls via the app, like the new PetCare feature that automatically starts cooling when temperatures hit 77 degrees, among others.

Be sure to check out EcoFlow’s early Prime Day Sale offers in our original coverage here, which features 60% initial discounts, bonus savings, free gear, installation subsidies on select units, member benefits, and more.

Greenworks 40V 17-inch cordless push lawn mower

Cut, collect, and/or mulch clippings with this Greenworks 40V 17-inch cordless push mower at new $230 low

Amazon is offering the new Greenworks 40V 17-inch​ Cordless Push Lawn Mower with 4.0Ah battery at $229.99 shipped, which beats the brand’s direct website pricing by $18. This model hit the scene back at the top of the year carrying a $310 price tag in full, which we’ve only seen brought down as low as $232 at Amazon. All the rates we’ve tracked before are getting beaten out now by the 26% markdown here, which cuts $80 off the tag to land at a new all-time low price.

Perfect for first-time homeowners or for anyone looking for a budget-friendly means to replace their noisy gas-guzzlers, this 40V cordless lawn mower from Greenworks comes with a durable 17-inch steel deck that still retains a lighter weight for more effortless maneuvering around your yard. It comes with six different cutting height levels ranging from 1-1/4 inches to 3-3/8 inches, as well as 2-in-1 functionality to either collect clippings in the bag or mulch it all for your flowerbeds. It comes with a push-button start, as well as foldable handles to make storage all the easier.

If you’re looking to stock up on the brand’s commercial-grade lawn care solutions, you can find the 82V 760 CFM Cordless Axial Leaf Blower bundle with two 82V Bluetooth 4.0Ah batteries and a dual-port rapid charger down at a new $300 low (50% off), as well as the 82V 18-inch Commercial-Grade Cordless Chainsaw that comes with 4.0Ah and 2.5Ah batteries and a dual-port rapid charger at a new $400 low.

Worx Nitro 40V 15-inch Cordless String Trimmer

Control the length of line up to a 15-inch cutting swath with this 40V Worx Nitro cordless trimmer kit at $190 low

Amazon is offering the Worx Nitro 40V 15-inch Cordless String Trimmer with Dual-Exit Bump Feed Head, two 4.0Ah batteries, and a dual-port charger for $189.99 shipped. Normally, this trimmer package would run you $270 at full price, which we’ve previously seen brought down as low as $200 before this month. Today’s deal gives folks a second shot at the best price we have tracked, saving you $80 on a more advanced trimmer while also getting double the power supply.

A more advanced trimming and weed whacking solution, this Worx Nitro 40V string trimmer features a dual-exit bump feed head that can extend the line out to a 15-inch max cutting swath with a simple tap on the ground. What’s more, loading in more lines is quick and easy to save you time, with there also being a variable speed control to dial up or dial back speeds depending on the job at hand. It only weighs 9.42 pounds in total, making it easy to use for folks of all sizes. The two included batteries also give you double the runtime while being interchangeable with 140+ other tools in the brand’s PowerShare ecosystem.

Best Spring EV deals!

Best new Green Deals landing this week

The savings this week are also continuing to a collection of other markdowns. To the same tune as the offers above, these all help you take a more energy-conscious approach to your routine. Winter means you can lock in even better off-season price cuts on electric tools for the lawn while saving on EVs and tons of other gear.

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Environment

QuantumScape has integrated its ‘Cobra’ process, reducing solid-state production time tenfold

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QuantumScape has integrated its 'Cobra' process, reducing solid-state production time tenfold

Solid-state battery developer QuantumScape shared another exciting milestone today: integrating its long-developed “Cobra” solid-state separator manufacturing process into its baseline production. This step technology significantly reduces the overall footprint and production time of QuantumScape’s proprietary solid-state cells, setting the stage for commercialized production.

Much of our QuantumScape updates the past couple of years have pertained to the progress of its QSE-5 solid-state sample cells (because, let’s face it, that’s the most exciting stuff). However, some of QuantumScape’s production techniques are just as innovative as its cell technology.

In many ways, QuantumScape’s cream of its solid-state crop is its assembly lines, especially since arguably the most challenging hurdle for bona fide solid-state battery integration is scaled production at a cost that OEMs will be willing to opt for over lithium cells, which also won’t bankrupt the company.

We’ve known of these plans since 2023, when QuantumScape shared two phases of its assembly line overhaul using a fast separator heat-treatment process – Raptor and Cobra.

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Raptor was completed two years ago and introduced a step-change process, allowing continuous flow heat treatment to process the separator films faster with less total heat energy. The next phase, “Cobra,” was expected to build off Raptor and add even faster processing, particularly in the cell’s ceramics. Per the solid-state battery developer, Cobra is a “potential game changer in scaled cell production.”

By early 2024, QuantumScape was beginning to gear up for high-volume production of its solid-state electrolyte separator using the “Cobra” equipment and process, and by last December, was ready for initial separator processing on the QS-0 assembly line for B-sample cells.

QuantumScape has confirmed that Cobra has been fully integrated into the company’s baseline production processes, achieving a 2025 goal while enabling gigawatt-level solid-state cell production.

Quantumscape solid-state
Source: QuantumScape

QuantumScape’s Cobra separator is production’s secret sauce’

“What’s so special about a solid-state separator process?” Well, a lot actually.

The QuantumScape team will be the first to tell you that its proprietary solid-state separator is the proverbial key that unlocks the startup’s leading and potentially industry-changing performance in energy density, charge times, battery life, safety, and cost.

We all know that solid-state battery technology has the potential to enable a paradigm shift in electric mobility, providing cars, planes, boats, and plenty of other vessels with cells that will enable them to travel farther than ever. This technology has often been deemed a “holy grail” for electric mobility and while some companies, including QuantumScape have developed viable solid-state cells, none have scaled to mass production yet.

As we’ve reported on many times in the past, QuantumScape remains a leader in the space as one of the companies that appears closest to achieving the feat, thanks to its aforementioned Raptor and now Cobra manufacturing processes.

Hence why today’s news is a big deal.

In addition to unlocking the potential for solid-state cell production itself, QuantumScape says Cobra is the core innovation that will allow the technology to be manufactured at a gigawatt-hour scale. This breakthrough is expected to lay the groundwork for higher-volume B1 sample production and the startup’s path to market.

Furthermore, the technology supports QuantumScape’s licensing model with Volkswagen Group, which was announced a year ago. In this model, contract manufacturing can potentially help avoid tariffs by transferring IP instead of physical goods, especially as battery demand continues to grow steadily despite geopolitical tensions.

Looking ahead, we will see how Cobra contributes to QuantumScape’s production progress in 2025, hoping to get a more concrete timeline on when its solid-state batteries could hit the EV market.

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