Sinopsis
WallBuilders Live! with David Barton and Rick Green is a daily journey into the past to capture the ideas of the Founding Fathers of America and then apply them to the major issues of today. Featured guests will include Congressmen, Senators, and other elected officials, as well as experts, activists, authors, and commentators on a variety of issues facing America.
Episodios
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Why Conservatives Must Vet Candidates Before They Rise - With Heidi St John
24/03/2026 Duración: 26minA decorated past, a tragic story, a viral interview, and suddenly millions of people are treating a politician’s new talking points as truth. That’s a recipe for getting played, and we’ve seen it happen before. Heidi St. John joins us to unpack the Joe Kent controversy, what she witnessed firsthand on the campaign trail, and why the real issue is bigger than one candidate.We talk about how media narratives get built, how endorsements can suck the oxygen out of a race, and why conservatives can’t afford lazy discernment. Heidi explains why she flagged warning signs early, what “vetting” should actually look like, and why a résumé, charisma, or military service can never replace a clear record and consistent values. We also wrestle with a hard but necessary idea: multiple things can be true at once, including gratitude for service and serious concerns about a person’s leadership.Then we widen the lens to the long-term fight. Heidi shares what she’s learning through building a thriving homeschool resource center
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Iran And Israel Update - with Jonathan Feldstein
23/03/2026 Duración: 26minThe headlines move fast, but the hard question stays the same: what does “success” actually look like when Iran is at the center of a regional firestorm and Israel is fighting for its future. We talk through why Americans feel whiplash right now from shifting narratives on the right and left, and why mission clarity matters more than slogans when troops, trade routes, and global stability are on the line. If leaders can define objectives, limits, and an end state, public trust holds. If they cannot, the fog of war turns into a fog of politics. Jonathan Feldstein returns with an Israel-focused update while temporarily stuck in the United States, and he doesn’t mince words about how we got here. We dig into decades of appeasement, the consequences of regime funding, and why “Death to America” is not a cute chant but a declared threat that should be taken seriously in any Iran policy analysis. We also explore the practical knock-on effects many listeners feel immediately, including shipping lanes, oil prices, an
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What Happens When A Nation Prays Again
20/03/2026 Duración: 26minA 20% nationwide drop in murder. Thousands of missing kids found. Tens of thousands of Texas families rushing to school choice on day one. If you’re tired of doomscrolling, we’ve got a stack of stories that point to something different: when leaders restrain evil, protect families, and tell the truth out loud, the results show up in the numbers and in the culture.We start with new FBI data and what it says about law enforcement priorities, public safety, gangs, fentanyl seizures, and the renewed pursuit of child predators. From there, we shift to an unexpected cultural signal: the Melania documentary hitting number one on Amazon Prime in the US and worldwide. We talk about what the film reportedly highlights, why the media attention feels lopsided, and why viewers’ choices can quietly undermine propaganda.Next we get practical with education policy and the Texas school choice rollout, including the scale of the program, who applies, and why competition tends to raise academic outcomes while lowering costs. We
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The Real Story Behind Presidential Term Limits
19/03/2026 Duración: 26minPower doesn’t usually arrive with a villain speech, it piles up quietly through attention, advantage, and time. We take a listener’s question about presidential term limits and follow it straight into the real history behind the 22nd Amendment: Franklin D Roosevelt’s four election wins, Harry Truman’s push to formalize limits, and the fear that long tenures can start to look like a monarchy or worse.We also get honest about what changed between Washington’s day and ours. George Washington set the two term precedent with personal restraint, but modern politics runs on name recognition, fundraising, and nonstop “earned media.” We talk about why wartime presidents can become impossible to challenge, how mass communication can tilt the field, and why today’s media ecosystem makes the incumbency advantage feel even more powerful than it used to.Then we widen the lens to Congress, Supreme Court justices, and federal judges. If the goal is limiting accumulated power, should term limits apply beyond the presidency? A
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The SAVE Act And The New Fight For Election Integrity - with Seth Keshel
18/03/2026 Duración: 26minYou can feel it everywhere: people don’t just argue about candidates anymore, they argue about whether the election system itself is believable. We walk through the SAVE Act now hitting the Senate, why it’s built around proof of citizenship and voter ID, and why a simple question sits underneath all the noise: should only US citizens decide the course of the United States?Seth Keschel joins us to explain what he calls the difference between “stolen” and “rigged” elections, where the real leverage often comes from structure like automatic voter registration, expansive vote-by-mail, ballot harvesting, and sloppy voter roll maintenance. We compare what fast, transparent election administration looks like in Florida versus the drawn-out counting and public frustration that shows up in places like Arizona. Along the way, we talk precinct size, chain-of-custody, paper ballots, and why black-box trust is a bad foundation for a nation that depends on consent of the governed.We also step back into American history and
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Faith In Every Arena - with Elizabeth Carlyle
17/03/2026 Duración: 26minCulture doesn’t drift toward truth by accident. It’s shaped by whoever shows up with conviction, skill, and staying power and that’s exactly why we’re talking about faith beyond church walls. We dig into what it means to live as “biblical citizens” who bring the gospel into every calling, from politics and education to media, medicine, and the fine arts. If you’ve ever wondered whether your work really matters to God, this conversation makes the case that your profession can be a mission field when you practice excellence and refuse to compartmentalize your beliefs.Elizabeth Carlisle joins us to share her new book, “Americans Who Pray: Uniting a Nation in Faith and Freedom,” a collection that blends her own prayers with prayers from 80 inspiring Americans. We talk about the power of prayer in American history, why George Washington’s dependence on God still speaks to the moment we’re in, and how humility changes leadership. Elizabeth also describes the story behind First Freedom Art and the legacy of Arnold F
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How States And Congress Are Reclaiming Religious Liberty - with Jason Monks
16/03/2026 Duración: 26minA lot of political coverage trains us to expect the worst, so when real momentum shows up it can feel almost unbelievable. We zoom out on the good news we’re seeing at the intersection of faith and culture, where religious liberty and state-level leadership are producing wins that many people never hear about in their day-to-day “bubble.”From Washington, DC, we unpack Senator Josh Hawley’s press conference on mifepristone, often called the abortion pill, and why he’s making a medical safety case instead of a partisan pitch. We talk through the claims about adverse event rates, how FDA standards have treated other drugs with far smaller risk ratios, and why distribution channels and oversight matter. Even if you’re tired of culture-war framing, this part of the conversation is about patient safety, informed consent, and whether our institutions are applying consistent rules.Then we’re joined by Idaho House Majority Leader Jason Monks to discuss a statewide call for prayer and fasting. He explains why humility
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A Week Of Unexpected Wins For Faith And Family
13/03/2026 Duración: 26min5,700 ISIS terrorists moved out of a shaky Syrian prison system and into Iraq. Sponsors walk away from a long-running Disney event. States start ending lifetime tenure for professors. And an NFL coach gives every player a Bible with a clear message about identity and purpose. That’s the kind of Good News Friday we’re bringing you, because the most important shifts often happen quietly, then all at once.We start with a Middle East security update that surprised even us: the reported US move to relocate thousands of ISIS detainees from Syria to Iraq, lowering the risk of escape and keeping dangerous actors off the field. From there we pivot to a piece of parenting research that keeps confirming what many families already know, children do better when a mom and a dad are both present, bringing different strengths that balance the home. If you care about child development, family structure, and what the data actually says, you’ll want to hear this part.Then we hit education accountability and higher education ref
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Primary Power For Independent Voters
12/03/2026 Duración: 26minYou can care about principles and still care about strategy, because the rules of the system decide whether your voice gets heard. We start with a listener stuck in a closed-primary state as an independent and walk through the hard tradeoff: stay unaffiliated and lose primary access, or register with a party so you get two meaningful chances to influence the outcome. Along the way, we explain open primaries vs closed primaries, why crossover voting happens, and how to think about party registration without turning your conscience over to a party label. From there, we zoom out to a values-first approach to voting, including Benjamin Rush’s blunt line that he’s neither an aristocrat nor a democrat but a “Christocrat.” That idea frames the whole conversation: judge candidates by the values they defend and the policies they will implement, not by team identity. If you’ve felt politically homeless, this gives you a clear way to stay grounded while still being effective. We also tackle two rapid-fire but important
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Tennessee’s Push To Reclaim Marriage Law - With Gino Bulso
11/03/2026 Duración: 26minPower doesn’t just shape policy; it decides who gets to decide. We sit down with Tennessee State Representative Gino Bulso to unpack a bold two-bill strategy aimed at narrowing federal court rulings on marriage and civil rights while reclaiming state authority and protecting private conscience. If you’ve wondered how a state can push back without breaking the rules, this is a masterclass in targeted, constitutional maneuvering.We start by grounding the conversation in first principles—why the Declaration’s moral claims and the Constitution’s structure are not value neutral, and how drifting from a fixed moral baseline has confused public standards. From there, Rep. Bulso breaks down HB 1473, which clarifies that Obergefell binds public actors but not private citizens or businesses, and HB 1472, which directs Tennessee not to adopt the Supreme Court’s Bostock reading of “sex” into state anti-discrimination law. Together, the bills seek to secure space for conscience, particularly for private businesses not cov
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Kids First: Rethinking Marriage Policy - with Katy Faust
10/03/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if the way we define marriage is quietly reshaping childhood—for worse? We open the conversation with a child-first lens and ask the question most debates avoid: does public policy exist to validate adult desires, or to protect a child’s right to both mother and father? Katie Faust, founder of Them Before Us, joins us to explain how the 2015 redefinition of marriage flattened biological reality and turned parenthood into a credential adults acquire, often without the adoption safeguards designed to protect kids. From IVF mandates to loosened parentage rules, she traces how systems now subsidize motherless or fatherless homes by design, measuring success by adult fulfillment rather than child well-being.We dig into the data and the vibe shift. Approval among conservatives has dropped as people connect the dots: if sex differences matter on the field and in the clinic, they matter even more at home. Pastors are finding their voice, too—teaching clearly that marriage is a child-serving institution rooted in
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How A Revival Sparked A Revolution - With Joshua Enck
09/03/2026 Duración: 26minLiberty didn’t start with a vote. It started with a voice. We sit down with Josh Enck of Sight & Sound to explore A Great Awakening, a feature film that puts George Whitfield back in the pulpit and Benjamin Franklin at his press to show how revival prepared the ground for revolution. Rather than retell battlefield moments, we follow an unlikely friendship that helped shape the American mind—pairing Whitfield’s electrifying sermons with Franklin’s genius for print and persuasion—to reveal why cultural change must precede political change.Josh shares how a ministry known for epic, immersive stage productions stepped into cinema without losing its soul. The COVID shutdown became a catalyst: a filmed stage show reached more people in a long weekend than two years of sold-out theaters, pushing the team to bring stories to audiences wherever they are. That shift comes with a promise—no shortcuts, no sentimentality—just careful acting, tight scripting, and historically grounded scenes that honor the intelligence
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Revival Or Awakening
06/03/2026 Duración: 26minA surge of spiritual interest is sweeping the country, but will it last long enough to change anything? We dig into the hard truth: revivals inspire; awakenings transform. That transformation only happens when people are discipled to live out Jesus’ full teaching, the kind that speaks plainly about marriage, gender, and the purpose of covenant—without losing sight of grace, redemption, and the path back.We share encouraging shifts from the pulpit as national voices tackle no-fault divorce and explain why God’s commands are for our flourishing. Then we zoom out to culture and policy. Scouting America announces a slate of reforms—dropping DEI mandates, restoring membership by biological sex, and honoring military families—after high-level pressure to reclaim clarity and standards. Across the Atlantic, Marco Rubio earns applause in Europe by calling leaders back to the shared roots of Western civilization, Christian identity, and actionable security. At home, a key court win in Vermont protects foster families’
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Why State Of The Union “Responses” Feel Scripted And What History Says About It
05/03/2026 Duración: 26minA courtroom drama played out in a committee room, and we got a front‑row seat. We break down why Tennessee’s push to post the Ten Commandments in public schools is framed as restoration, not invention, and how a single Supreme Court ruling—Coach Kennedy—quietly dismantled the decades‑old Lemon test that kept faith at arm’s length in public institutions. From Moses carved into the Supreme Court frieze to McGuffey’s Readers in the classroom, we connect the historical dots most civics courses skip.Then we pivot to the modern spectacle of the State of the Union and ask a simple question: if the rebuttals are live, why do they feel prerecorded? The answer runs through shrinking sound bites, risk‑averse scripting, and a media environment that punishes context. We dig into the surprisingly short history of formal SOTU responses, the experiments that worked (including conversational formats), and what it would take to make these moments useful again.Finally, we explore why members of Congress split by party inside th
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Iran’s Theocracy And The Ballot Box
04/03/2026 Duración: 26minHeadlines about Iran can feel like a blur of missiles, ministers, and moving targets—until you connect the dots between what leaders believe and what nations do. We dive into how Shiite end-times theology influences Iran’s pursuit of power, why “the great Satan” rhetoric matters for strategy, and how surgical strikes against military and clerical leadership could open a narrow window for change. When ideology prizes escalation, containment looks different—and so do the choices free nations face.Back home, we unpack a Texas primary night that says a lot about where voters want guardrails. Prop 10’s blowout against Sharia law becomes a pivot point to discuss the deeper role of worldview in public life. We then break down key races across Arkansas, North Carolina, and Texas, contrasting a steady voting record with a lack of fight, and a fighter’s zeal with heavy baggage. Add a polished progressive pastor with strong media chops, and you get a masterclass in electability: narrative, competence, and character coll
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School Prayer Returns To The Spotlight - with Kelly Shackelford
03/03/2026 Duración: 26minWhat changes when a single Supreme Court case rewrites the playbook on faith in public life? We dig into the ripple effects of Coach Joe Kennedy’s victory, which not only vindicated a high school coach’s right to pray but also swept aside the Lemon test that fed government hostility to religion for decades. With that barrier gone, schools and communities now have clearer ground to protect student religious expression, respect teachers’ personal faith, and honor America’s history and traditions without fear or confusion.We talk with Kelly Shackelford of First Liberty Institute about the legal momentum reshaping the landscape: Ten Commandments displays returning to public spaces, appellate courts signaling a new era for religious liberty, and updated Department of Education guidance that finally reflects the modern case law. Kelly explains how these changes empower local leaders to act confidently, why historical practice matters in constitutional analysis, and how misinformation about “separation of church and
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How A Preemptive Strike Aims To End A Forever War
02/03/2026 Duración: 26minHeadlines popped, timelines blew up, and a joint operation against Iran became the weekend’s defining story. We dive straight into what actually happened and why it matters: the legal thresholds that govern rapid action, the Gang of Eight briefings, and the intelligence that pushed leaders toward a preemptive strike. Our goal is simple—cut through noise, track the facts, and ask the hard questions about deterrence, proportionality, and whether swift force can prevent a longer war.We unpack why some Iranians cheered while Western commentators split, and how selective outrage online can warp public judgment. From reported hits on hundreds of targets to the immediate regional reactions, we connect the operational dots to the broader strategy: neutralize launch sites, degrade terror financing, and avoid the trap of open-ended ground wars. We also revisit a consistent pattern—targeted actions that dismantle hubs of harm, whether tied to state terror or fentanyl pipelines that kill Americans—while keeping the U.S.
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How Common Sense Is Making A Comeback Across Courts, Sports, And Politics
27/02/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if the headlines you’ve been waiting for finally started to land—quietly, firmly, and with a dose of common sense? We walk through a week where the executive branch said “stay in your lane” to the judiciary, a hockey team skated to gold while pointing to faith, and a British voice laid out a plain-spoken roadmap to national renewal. Different stories, same current: courage with boundaries.We start with a constitutional gut check. Two federal prosecutors were appointed by judges and immediately let go by the executive—an overdue reminder that prosecutors are executive officers, not judicial staff. That sparks a deeper dive into how Marbury v. Madison is taught versus how Jefferson and Madison actually handled judicial overreach. Instead of treating courts as super-legislatures, we argue for a return to the founders’ design: branches that respect each other’s roles and push back when lines blur. It’s not theory; it’s how a republic stays honest.Then the ice heats up. The USA men’s hockey team clinches gold
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What Do Courage, Polling, And Delegated Powers Tell Us About America Now
26/02/2026 Duración: 26minWhat happens when a speech turns the room into a live referendum on first principles? We break down a State of the Union that fused patriotic theater with hard policy bets—calling for voter ID through the SAVE Act, pressing tariffs despite a legal speed bump, and elevating faith and service as shared civic anchors. The showmanship was unmistakable: Team USA hockey winding through the press as chants rose, pointed “stand up” moments that drew sharp lines, and tributes to veterans and everyday heroes that felt refreshingly unifying.We walk through why the SAVE Act became the centerpiece and how that choice sets the terrain for the midterms. Simple framing plus visible floor reactions create clips that travel, and those clips influence polling that, in turn, disciplines party messaging. On tariffs, we dive into the constitutional mechanics—how delegated powers work, what Federalist No. 12 actually emphasizes, and why the Court’s ruling narrowed a lane without closing the highway. If you care about what lasts bey
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School Choice Wins In Texas
25/02/2026 Duración: 26minWant to see how ideas become laws that change lives? We trace a straight line from primary-source history to modern policy, then unpack how Texas advanced a billion-dollar school choice program while strengthening religious liberty protections. With Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, we dive into the long-game strategy behind expanding parental rights, why competition can lift outcomes for every student, and how teacher pay and public school funding fit into a balanced plan that keeps classrooms strong.We start with something rare in politics: receipts you can hold. From Revolutionary-era Bibles and George Washington’s orders, to WWII chaplain records, we share artifacts that demonstrate how faith once operated in America’s civic and military life. When people see history up close, the debate shifts. Instead of arguing abstractions, we face a record that shows religious expression as a durable thread in our national fabric—not an intrusion to be scrubbed away.From there, we break down the architecture of Texas’