September 2020

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September 2020 Pat r io t E di t ion Colossians 3:17


Tennessee Full Throttle Mission Statement ....................................................................................................3 Always Remember..............................................................................................................................................4 HHMA “Sacrifice” Article .............................................................................................................................6-7 Shortkid’s Hive....................................................................................................................................................8 Calendar.......................................................................................................................................................10-11 Then, Now, Forever/Never Forgotten........................................................................................................12-13 Event Announcement.................................................................................................................................14-15 Remembering 9/11.....................................................................................................................................16-17 Directory............................................................................................................................................................18 Think About This “T.A.T.”................................................................................................................................19

Calendar photo provided by Curtis Paglusch Off Road Lifestyle

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Shawna Reed

President & Chief Editor

Laura Tolliver

Event Director

Janith Emm

T N Full Throttle Writer

Nicole Campbell

T N Full Throttle Photographer

Adam Campbell

Marketing Director

Les Tolliver

Shannon Campbell

Co-Editor & Director of Sales

Co-Editor & Director of Design

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Our Mission Statement Full Throttle Media & Entertainment, LLC is proud to introduce Tennessee Full Throttle Magazine. We are an all-inclusive motor sport magazine. Tennessee Full Throttle Magazine will constantly endeavor to bring awareness of all Motorsports, both on land and on water. The thrill of motorcycles, dirt bikes, ATVs, boats, jet skis, and cars, to name a few, has fueled the imagination of all ages. From speed boats to slow fishing trawlers, from racing to cruising, a day on water or on land can be just as relaxing as it is challenging. Motorsports capture the attention of the whole family. While some drive and others ride along, no one should be left out. From toddlers to seniors there is a motor sport, or several Motorsports, just waiting to be discovered. Our goal is to introduce you to these sports and help you discover the wide variety of motor driven excitement, and to present safe family centered fun.

about who you are and what you are all about and discuss the possibilities of a feature in Tennessee Full Throttle Magazine. Please visit our “contact us” page and submit the name and contact information or you may give us a call.

Tennessee Full Throttle Magazine will have articles that will be informative about the machine, the people, and their causes.

We are very serious supporters of our veterans and first responders.

We would love and appreciate an opportunity to interview a motor sport organization, group or person, whether that be yourself or someone you know. We want to learn

Tennessee Full Throttle Magazine will be sponsoring events, festivals, bike nights, concerts, activities, and more for the whole family to enjoy. Vendors are always welcome. Contact us to set up a booth. We will, of course, be selling advertisement space in the magazine and appreciate sponsors who can get behind our mission. A portion of the proceeds from our events will be donated to charity. If you have a favorite charity, please nominate that organization for consideration by visiting our “contact us” page.

Our prayer is and always will be that God blesses each of you. We’ll see you soon. Ride Safe!

Full Throttle Media & Entertainment, LLC - Owned by widow of a veteran & first responder, mom to a first responder, daughter of a first responders, granddaughter of a veteran, and daughter-in-law of a veteran & first responder.

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R emember E veryone D eployed 4

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Premier Health Services Premier Health Services is a Tennessee state licensed chronic pain management specialist.

MEDICAL EXCELLENCE, COMPASSIONATE CARE

•Urgent Care •Primary Care •Chronic Pain Management Premier Health Services 10622 Chapman Highway Seymour, TN 37865 (865)-773-0327 www.premierhealth-s.com

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SACRIFICE A soldier is one who fights as part of an army. A soldier can be a conscripted or a volunteer enlisted person, a noncommissioned officer or an officer. Soldiers are military personnel that participate in ground, sea, or air forces, commonly known as armies, navies, and air force, respectively. Every person who enlists in the armed forces takes an oath. “I, (state name of enlistee), do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.” First Responder is someone whose job is to respond immediately (first) when there is an accident or emergency. Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs), paramedics, firefighters, and police officers are all considered first responders. Law Enforcement, Military, Firefighters, Corrections, EMS, and other Emergency Response Personnel all have an oath to take. Sacrifice is giving up something that is valuable to you in order to help another person. The sacrifice of what is valuable is very personal to each person. For those who have personally sacrificed, these experiences can be endless and horrifying. It can be quite scary for those who witness the affects and consequences of this experience. The ripple effects this creates can be extremely devastating. Watching a black and white tv screen as a small child, I saw many men in uniforms walking down the middle of a road. People were yelling at them and spitting on them. I had no idea what it all meant; I just knew it was wrong. That made me incredibly sad and I cried. As I grew, I started asking questions. “Daddy,

what

are

those

bumps

on

your

back?”

“There are pieces of metal in those bumps. I was shot at while I was at work being a policeman,” he answered. “Popa, why can’t you hear me when I talk to you?” “Because when I was in the army, a bomb went off too close to my head and burst my ear drums,” my Popa told me. “Momma, how was your first day as a paramedic?” “I worked a wreck on the interstate involving a

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family of seven. The mom and three of the children, including an infant, died,” my mom solemnly replied. “Mom, while I was dispatching today the pilot, I was speaking to said something was wrong and I heard the helicopter crash over the radio. No one survived,” this was my daughter speaking to me. A four-year-old boy who had crawled into bed with his mom and dad in the middle of the night, suddenly woke everyone up screaming, “Daddy it’s me, Daddy it’s me!” The dad was having a nightmare and his little son was trying to wake him up. A comment made out the blue, “The smell of burning flesh is something you never forget.” These examples do not begin to tell the whole story. Most do not talk about the whole story. The oaths taken and the sacrifices made are a conscious choice made by those who serve. The sacrifices and effects are huge, long lasting and far reaching. The lasting emotional and mental conflicts, the loss of limb and the loss of life, those who are left behind with a painful lonely void, these are some of the lasting effects and consequences. The members of Hometown Heroes Motorcycle Association understand all too well. The Hometown Heroes Motorcycle Association (HHMA) consists of men and women who understand the true definition of service. Their members are current or former Military, Law Enforcement, Firefighters, Search and Rescue, Emergency Medical Services, 911 Dispatchers, and family members who share a certain “esprit de corps” along with a passion for riding motorcycles. They are law-abiding citizens who are united in supporting and serving our communities, states, and nation. Their chapters and their members are active in numerous charitable causes, especially those that benefit children’s organizations, veterans, and the families of fallen police officers and other first responders. They take great pride in their commitment to their communities and in helping those in need. There is an old saying in the motorcycle community ... “If it’s not in your heart, don’t put it on your back.” This is why they design every single detail of their back-patch with a specific meaning. The organization’s colors are the same as those of our nation ... Red, White, and Blue. These colors represent the patriotism that each of them shares, as evidenced by their chosen professions. The U.S. Flag is tattered, symbolizing the hardships endured while serving their communities, states, and nation ... as well as those endured by their families that stand with them. The background of the patch is white to remind

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them of the purity of their mission and that they represent something larger than ourselves. The patch is bordered in black. This is to honor those who are no longer with us; true heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice. The figures on the patch are silhouetted. This is to represent all who serve, or have served, regardless of gender, age, race, religion, heritage, or social status. These silhouettes are positioned in front of the flag, standing tall. This is to inform all who see their patch that they stand for. The flag, they stand by their oaths, and they stand together as family ... Military, Law Enforcement, Firefighters, EMS, and other Emergency Response Personnel alike. So yes, we agree ... If it’s not in your heart, don’t put it on your back.

Live Your Life – The Tecumseh Poem

For those who have sacrificed, served and experienced the traumas, life is never the same. You are one person at work and another at home. Part of that sacrifice for you and your families is having to live with both. It is because of these valiant people and their families that we strive to bring recognition, hope and help to them.

So live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about their religion Respect others in their view And demand that they respect yours Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life Seek to make your life long and its purpose in the service of your people Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide Always give a word or a sign of salute when meeting or passing a friend Even a stranger when in a lonely place Show respect to all people and grovel to none When you arise in the morning give thanks for the food and for the joy of living If you see no reason for giving thanks, the fault lies only in yourself Abuse no one and nothing For abuse turns the wise ones to fools and robs the spirit of its vision When it comes your time to die Be not like those whose hearts are filled with the fear of death So that when their time comes They weep and pray for a little more time To live their lives over again in a different way Sing your death song And die like a hero going home

For those who understand, I add this.

Chief Tecumseh, 1768 – 1813

The Hometown Heroes Motorcycle Association (HHMA) is an independent motorcycle association whose membership includes Law Enforcement, Military, Firefighters, Corrections, EMS, and other Emergency Response Personnel. As such, they fully support the Constitution of the United States of America, the rights afforded to every U.S. Citizen, and the laws established to protect those rights. Therefore, they are not affiliated with any motorcycle clubs, riding clubs, associations, coalitions, or any other organizations that do not fully support the same. www.facebook.com/groups/235950241055241

Words taken from the movie Act of Valor. “The worst thing about growing old was that other men stop seeing you as dangerous. How being dangerous was sacred, a badge of honor. You live your life by a code, an ethos. Every man does. It’s your shoreline. It’s what guides you home, and trust me, you’re always trying to get home. We are men made up of boxes: chambers of loss, triumph, of hurt and hope and love. No one is stronger or more dangerous than a man who can harness his emotions, his past. Use it as fuel, as ammunition.”

- Shawna Reed

Bill & Veronica Rayner

Bill Rayner & Mike Henson Co-Founders of National HHMA

Steve “Cowboy” B Gray President TN Chapter HHMA & Tara Gray

1. “soldier - Dictionary Definition”. Vocabulary.com. Retrieved 19 July 2020. 2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Armed_Forces_oath_of_enlistment 3. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/first-responder 4. https://storyspeaker.wordpress.com/2013/04/26/letter-from-the-movie-act-ofvalor/ 5. https://bloomsoup.com/tecumseh-poem/

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HHMA Benefit Ride for our HomeTown Heroes Roadhouse BAR and GRILL 10 AM EDT – 1 PM EDT

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T h e n... Now. . . For eve r . . . Ben Campbell - U.S. Army Ben Lynch - U.S. Army Ben Moody - Sgt U.S. Army Retired Benjamin J Wyatt - U.S. Navy Bill Rayner - Command Sgt Major Army National Guard Carl Payne Sr. - WWII Carl E Walton - USMC Carson C Chapman - U.S. Navy Christina Griesi - National Guard Christopher Reed - Paramedic Clarence “Bill” Cedars - WWII (passed in 2016 at age 94) Claud Payne Cleveland Long - U.S. Navy Collin Tolliver - U.S. Army Corey Petre - Chief U.S. Navy Coy Ward - U.S. Army (deceased) Dale Williams - U.S. Army Korean War (deceased) Darrell Reed - U.S. Army 82nd Airborne (deceased) Debra Day - U.S. Airforce Dillard Dove - U.S. Army Dominick Griesi - Law Enforcement Dudley Lee Foster - Korean War (deceased) Eulas Underwood George A Vanwinkle - U.S. Army WWII (deceased) George Wyatt Sr. - U.S. Army Gerald C Ehman - U.S. Army Hiram Vanwinkle Private U.S. Army WWII (deceased) Ivan Campbell U.S. Army WWII (deceased) James Cameron - U.S. Navy James Thompson James Williams - U.S. Army Korean War Janith Emm - Paramedic

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N ev er Forgot ten Jeff Moody - Sgt Clay County Sheriff’s Office Retired Jersey Thompson Jess Bubba Walton - USMC Jesse Adams - U.S. Navy Vietnam

These are but a few of the countless men and women who then, now, and forever, have, do, and will lay it all on the line to fight for our safety and our freedoms. This is dedicated to all of those who make the sacrifice for you and I. We thank you. We love you. We pray that God almighty holds you and keeps you, in this life, and the next. Until we all meet again...

Jesse Williams - U.S. Army (deceased) Jon Grayson - Vietnam Jordan Campbell - U.S. Army Joshua Marvets - U.S. Army Kenneth Bowman - Korean War Kevin Craig - U.S. Army Kyle McCullough - National Guard

Thank you,

Lamar Pratt - U.S. Army

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Larry Pace - U.S. Navy Les Tolliver - U.S. Army Michael B Griesi - SSgt U.S. Airforce Michael E Causey - U.S. Navy (deceased)

Michael Joseph Webber - National Guard/Sheriff’s Office Mike Henson - Police Officer (retired) Perry Wallace - U.S. Navy Randy Bowman Randy Masingale - 101st Airborne Ray E Peregoy - U.S. Army/Air Force Reserve Rick Cannatelli - Tusculum Volunteer Fire Department Rocco Griesi - U.S. Army WWII 101st Airborne Scott Woollard - U.S. Navy Shay Hill - U.S. Army Korean War (POW tortured 3 years before recue) Steve “Cowboy” B Gray - (retired) Travis Moody - Corrections Officer Verion Fox - U.S. Army Wesley Niles Perkins - Killed in WWII Wilbert Aydell William J Pioch - U.S. Army Donald Zeke Vanwinkle Sr. - U.S. Army (deceased)

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Full Throttle Media & Entertainment / Tennessee Full Throttle Magazine presents

LIVE

IN CONCERT with

HIGH VALLEY

MATT CORDELL & WHISKEY BUSINESS and

MAGNOLIA VALE Friday October 9, 2020 Show Starts @ 5:30pm Gates open @ 3:30pm Tickets available online @ www.tnfullthrottle.com Blue Holler Offroad Park 1494 Ollie Rd Mammoth Cave, KY

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A Nashville icon for more than two decades, Trace Adkins has made his mark on the country music industry. 11 million albums sold. Time-honored hit singles. Momentous, fiery and always memorable live performances. GRAMMY nominations. CMT and ACM awards. Nearly 200 million plays on YouTube. Hell, even a slew of movie and TV roles have come the Grand Ole Opry member’s way. But ask Adkins what’s left to prove in his career and the small-town Louisiana native says it’s simple: the itch remains. To create. To collaborate. To continually feel the excitement that comes after whipping up a new song out of thin air and laying it down to tape. It’s what, after all these years, he says he still craves. “It’s an adrenaline rush and I love it,” says Adkins, who is back in the studio working on a new project, his Ain’t That Kind Of Cowboy EP, releasing on October 16th. “There’s nothing else like that,” the Louisiana naive offers. “That is still my favorite thing to do in this business. Go into the studio with some lyrics and a melody and then let the finest musicians in the world help turn it into something magical. It liberates me. I just dig it!” Working with some of Nashville’s most respected songwriters, Adkins continues to find ways to connect with his fans through music while recording what he describes as autobiographical songs. “Over the years people have asked me, ‘How could we get to know you?’ Well, if you really wanted to know who Trace Adkins is, go back and listen to the album cuts on the records I’ve done over my career. Those are the songs that reflect where I was in my head at the time I made that record.” It’s an interesting change of perspective for Adkins, however, when he hits the road for a slew of his now legendary live gigs. Where the studio offers unique insight into his current state of mind, onstage—when revisiting his classics like “You’re Gonna Miss This” or “Every Light in the House” nearly every evening, he says he’s taken back, if only for a brief while, to earlier moments in his life. “It’s hard to describe, I gotta be honest,” he says of being overcome

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with emotion and reflection when trotting out some of his time-tested cuts for adoring audiences. “I’ve gotten to the point now where I’ll be onstage singing ‘Every Light in the House Is On’ and I look down at the crowd and realize that person right there wasn’t even alive when I recorded that song,” he says, laughing. “To watch their face go, Oh, that’s a cool hook, it’s like, ‘Oh my god, that’s the first time that person ever heard that song!’” Adkins says he’s profoundly touched that he serves as an inspiration to a younger generation of country artists, much in the way he revered icons like Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard when he first moved to Nashville. “I want to be in that position,” he says of taking the reigns as an elder statesman of the genre. “I want to be looked at that way. I want those guys to know they can walk up to me and ask me anything and know I’m here for them and I’ll help them however I can. I relish that position.” With one million followers on Spotify and over one billion spins on Pandora (10 million spins per month), the longstanding country icon has yet to lose any of his trademark passion and killer instinct for his craft. The 58-year-old is as fired up as ever to be back on the road this year, taking his music to the fans once again. “I get a kick out of it. I still enjoy the camaraderie, the band of brothers, your crew and your band. I’m an old jock. I like team sports,” he says of his continued passion for touring. “I like it when the new guy is closing for me, and we turn it up a notch or two and just absolutely kick his ass. You go out and put a boot in somebody’s ass!” Ask Adkins where he goes from here and he’ll say it’s quite simple: keep doing what he knows and loves. Performing. Creating. Inspiring. He loves it. And, he adds, he knows so many of his lifelong fans, and new ones to boot, do too. “I’m gonna go out there and find those people,” he says with genuine enthusiasm for the coming months. “I’m gonna bring a band and turn it up real loud! And we’re gonna have a good time!”

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“Good evening. Today our fellow citizens, our way of life, our very freedom came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts. The victims were in airplanes or in their offices: secretaries, business men and women, military and Federal workers, moms and dads, friends and neighbors. Thousands of lives were suddenly ended by evil, despicable acts of terror. The pictures of airplanes flying into buildings, fires burning, huge structures collapsing, have filled us with disbelief, terrible sadness, and a quiet, unyielding anger. These acts of mass murder were intended to frighten our Nation into chaos and retreat, but they have failed. Our country is strong. A great people has been moved to defend a great nation. Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts shattered steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve. America was targeted for attack because we’re the brightest beacon for freedom and opportunity in the world. And no one will keep that light from shining. Today our Nation saw evil, the very worst of human nature. And we responded with the best of America, with the daring of our rescue workers, with the caring for strangers and neighbors who came to give blood and help in any way they could. Immediately following the first attack, I implemented our Government’s emergency response plans. Our military is powerful, and it’s prepared. Our emergency teams are working in New York City and Washington, DC, to help with local rescue efforts. Our first priority is to get help to those who have been injured and to take every precaution to protect our citizens at home and around the world from further attacks. The functions of our Government continue without interruption. Federal agencies in Washington which had to be evacuated today are reopening for essential personnel tonight and will be open for business tomorrow. Our financial institutions remain strong, and the American economy will be open for business, as well. The search is underway for those who are behind these evil acts. I’ve directed the full resources of our intelligence and law enforcement communities to find those responsible and to bring them to justice. We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor them. I appreciate so very much the Members of Congress who have joined me in strongly condemning these attacks. And on behalf of the American people, I thank the many world leaders who have called to offer their condolences and assistance. America and our friends and allies join with all those who want peace and security in the world, and we stand together to win the war against terrorism. Tonight I ask for your prayers for all those who grieve, for the children whose worlds have been shattered, for all whose sense of safety and security has been threatened. And I pray they will be comforted by a power greater than any of us, spoken through the ages in Psalm 23:4 - Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil, for You are with me. This is a day when all Americans from every walk of life unite in our resolve for justice and peace. America has stood down enemies before, and we will do so this time. None of us will ever forget this day. Yet, we go forward to defend freedom and all that is good and just in our world. Thank you. Goodnight, and God bless America.”

- President George W. Bush

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September 11, 2001

we will NEVER forget

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Think About This

T.A.T.

Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends. John 15:13

In this issue we are honoring the men and women who understand and demonstrate this kind of love by their sacrifice and service to their communities. These are the folks who leave the comforts of home and the protective arms of loved-ones to go out into the heat of raging fires, the chaos and destruction of wars and dangers of rescues. They show up to tend the sick at the risk of their own health or face angry mobs while trying to remember that their mission is to protect and serve while all instincts would rather shoot first and sort it out later. The state of our country can be called mobocracy, an appropriate Thesaurus term for the chaos we see today. But greater love can and will prevail. This greater love is not defined by race, religion, or ethnicity. It is defined by human relationships and the values this country stands for. This greater love can be seen between Jesus and the Samaritan woman or Mary Magdelene as she stood at the foot of the cross while Jesus died. As Jesus died, a sacrifice for us, the ethnicity and reputation of those women placed them in danger as they served Him. For the greater love no sacrifice is too small. Abraham Lincoln proclaimed that this nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal, that this nation under God shall be free with a government of the people, by the people, and for the people and shall not perish. He also said that the sacrifice of those who died to buy these freedoms should not be in vain, but that they be honored. Those we honor today include not only the ones we can name, but those whose names have been forgotten or erased over time. While the mobocracy is determined to separate, I would like to remember one 23-yearold black slave who understood John 15:13. His name was Joe. He fought at the Alamo beside Mexican-born Tejanos, an Italian general, freed slaves, Indians from central Mexico as well as Jim Bowie, Davy Crockett, and other big names. Our fight for this country is not a race war or even a political war, it is a battle for freedom and the American way. Whether you are Joe or President Trump, you are to be remembered for your sacrifice and service. Greater love hath no man... Think About This Janith Emm

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