I got to know Patriot Steven Eugene Kuhn through his almost daily video posts on X. He had a kind of authority about him that resonated with me, and I listened more and more to his message and eventually shared them.
But first, a bit of Steven’s background: I was in the military for over seven years. When I got out, I became an entrepreneur, then a business owner, then multiple businesses, and now I own equity in a good number of businesses because I applied my knowledge in helping them grow, scale, and turn their businesses around.
The message on X was clear: we can’t engage in politics by just voting, but we must make our voices heard where we can. From the bottom up: school boards, local municipalities, and something we don’t know here: precinct seats, etc. He even came up with a name for this movement, this approach: “Take America Back,” which he cleverly translated for the rest of the world as “Take Authority Back,” after all, his international career attracted international attention and followers.
His new book, “Citizen Servant Leader: A DOCTRINE FOR LEADERSHIP WHEN CONTROL, AUTHORITY, AND PERMISSION ARE NO LONGER GUARANTEE,” is out now and can be ordered here.
“Citizen Servant Leader is a doctrine-based field manual for leadership when authority, control, and permission are no longer guaranteed.
Rather than teaching influence, motivation, or personal branding, this book focuses on the behaviors that stabilize systems under pressure. It is built on one uncompromising principle: responsibility always comes before authority.
Drawing from combat experience, high-stakes international business, and decades of organizational leadership across ten countries, the authors show how leadership forms naturally when individuals are willing to carry burden early, speak truth when it costs something, and create space when control is gone.
Each chapter combines real-world stories with clear standards, recognizable failure patterns, and practical field applications designed to be practiced—not admired. The book examines how silence and passivity quietly erode trust, why truth functions as a structural requirement rather than a moral preference, and how small, disciplined actions prevent collapse at personal, organizational, and civic levels.
Citizen Servant Leader is written for people who already feel the weight of responsibility—leaders without titles, citizens navigating Uncertainty, business operators, veterans, parents, and community builders who are done waiting for permission to act.
This is not a motivational book. It is a practical guide for becoming reliable when others hesitate—and for leading with clarity, restraint, and integrity when systems fail.
Why am I drawn to this information, and what does it have to do with the chemtrails we are bombarded with daily? One of the lessons I learned from Steven was, “Let go of those far-flung issues and focus on the things that concern you every day.”
Chemtrails immediately came to mind. After all, as a Dutch native here in France, I had already been writing letters to mayors to encourage them to join forces as a region and make a stand with the national government. But I couldn’t get a single French person to sign those letters locally so they would carry weight, so the responses from the mayors I wrote to were nonexistent because, after all, I’m more of a conspiracy-minded foreigner. But my health and food production are at stake.
So I signed up with Steven and am now reading his book because, as a young senior citizen (73), I can definitely still learn and apply something from him.
Take back your own authority, don’t be afraid of all the negativity, don’t be discouraged. Think about all the things you can do to process what comes your way. Above all, detox, both physically and mentally, because: “We are all part of the universe, and consider all the thoughts you send out and receive.”

