Federal Reserve is one of the Four Horseman of the American Apocalypse
The Four Horsemen Final Act / John B. Wells
Starts at the 1:57:00 mark
In a riveting and thought-provoking interview on Caravan to Midnight, host John B. Wells welcomed author and commentator Rob Roselli to discuss what he calls the “Four Horsemen of the American Apocalypse.” Drawing from biblical allegory and modern geopolitical observation, Roselli painted a sobering portrait of the forces currently converging to threaten the foundations of the United States. The conversation moved swiftly from historical analysis to urgent warnings about the near future—woven together by Roselli’s conviction that America is undergoing a spiritual war disguised as political chaos.
Roselli, known for his book The Un-American Genocide, began by explaining how the imagery of the Four Horsemen in Revelation can be mapped onto today’s American crisis. “These are not just figures of doom from an ancient text,” he said. “They’re metaphors for real, tangible threats that are galloping through every institution in this country.”
The first horseman, Roselli claimed, is Deception. He cited media manipulation, propaganda, and psychological operations designed to divide and confuse the public. “This isn’t just about bias in the press anymore. We’re watching an entire population being gaslit—conditioned to accept lies as truth and truth as hate speech,” he said. John B. Wells echoed the concern, noting how quickly narratives shift and how dissent is often met with censorship or cancellation.
The second horseman is Dependency. Roselli warned that the growing reliance on government handouts, digital currency, and centralized control over resources is conditioning Americans to accept technocratic tyranny under the guise of convenience. “Dependency isn’t compassion—it’s control,” Roselli said. “They’re not trying to help the poor; they’re trying to make everyone poor. That’s how they reset society.”
The third horseman? Division. Identity politics, racial agitation, and cultural Marxism have become tools of destruction, according to Roselli. “This is Cloward-Piven and Gramsci in action,” he said. “They’re collapsing the system from within by pitting Americans against each other—black versus white, rich versus poor, man versus woman.” He pointed to the erosion of the nuclear family, the rise in crime, and the redefinition of basic biological reality as symptoms of societal fragmentation.
Finally, the fourth horseman: Destruction. Roselli didn’t mince words. He described open borders, economic sabotage, lawfare against political opponents, and the infiltration of the federal government as acts of internal warfare. “This isn’t just mismanagement,” he told Wells. “It’s treason. These people want to bring down the Republic—and they’re doing it from the inside out.”
Throughout the interview, Wells and Roselli tied these modern-day horsemen to the broader spiritual decay of the nation. Roselli argued that removing God from public life—schools, courts, and culture—has left a moral vacuum now being filled by nihilism and authoritarianism. “We stopped worshiping God and started worshiping government,” he said. “And the government is a jealous god.”
Wells asked whether America could reverse course. Roselli was cautiously optimistic. He emphasized the need for repentance, revival, and a return to constitutional principles. “It’s not too late, but the clock is ticking,” he said. “We need a spiritual awakening, not just a political one. Because at the end of the day, this is a battle between good and evil.”
The conversation concluded with a call to action—not one of violence or rebellion, but of awareness and moral clarity. Roselli urged listeners to unplug from the mainstream narrative, seek truth, and stand boldly in defense of faith, family, and freedom. “They want us afraid, distracted, and divided,” he said. “But we still outnumber them. We still have a voice. And as long as there’s breath in our lungs, we have a duty to fight back—with truth.”
Wells thanked Roselli for his insight, noting that the battle lines are no longer theoretical—they are being drawn right now, in real time.
In an age where silence equals surrender, the message was clear: the Four Horsemen may be riding, but the fight for America’s soul is far from over.