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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How Digital IDs Could Reshape Freedom, Work, And Money
03/02/2026 Duración: 26minA “free” digital ID sounds harmless—until it becomes the key that decides whether you can work, bank, travel, or donate. We invited Alex Newman to brief us and a room full of legislators on how digital IDs are being woven into a larger digital public infrastructure that links identity, payments, health records, and even carbon scores. The pitch is convenience and inclusion; the fine print is programmability and control.We walk through the architecture being promoted by global institutions: national digital IDs tied to central bank digital currencies, where money can be coded with rules, expirations, and purchase restrictions. You’ll hear public statements from central bankers and forums describing how CBDCs require comprehensive digital ID systems and how “targeted” money could shape behavior. We also look at Real ID and state-level digital ID pilots, the European drive for unified identity apps, and efforts to tokenize assets on international ledgers—steps that could move property rights and transactions ont
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From Texas Ballots To Federal Bench: What The Headlines Miss
02/02/2026 Duración: 26minHeadlines screamed that Texas was shifting blue and the House majority was shrinking, but the numbers—and the context—tell a different story. We open with a clear walkthrough of the Texas special elections: why a long-held Democratic congressional seat returning to a Democrat isn’t a national pivot, how a low-turnout state senate special produced an upset, and where party mechanics fell short. When only a quarter of general-election voters participate, motivation and awareness dominate outcomes; we map the operational misses and explain what would have changed the margin.From there, we shift to a consequential legal development in Minneapolis. A federal judge affirmed that when local jurisdictions refuse to honor immigration detainer requests, federal authorities can step in. We break down what detainers are, why they’re central to public safety, and how noncompliance created revolving doors for offenders. The ruling reframes the issue around duty and accountability: uphold the federal law you swore to enforc
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From Pro-Life Wins To Global Exits: A Week Of Policy Shifts
30/01/2026 Duración: 26minA rare week where the wins line up: a culture bright spot, decisive policy shifts, and data that actually encourages. We kick things off with a family hit—Angel Studios’ David is now streaming—then follow the money and momentum behind audience-backed storytelling. When your kids are captivated and you can support creators who respect your values, it’s more than entertainment. It’s a signal that culture is shifting toward courage, character, and craft.From there, we trace a clear pro-life throughline across administrations to recent moves curbing federal funding tied to research using aborted fetal tissue and reinforcing the Mexico City policy. The point isn’t just moral clarity; it’s also practical results. For years, promised breakthroughs didn’t arrive from controversial methods, while adult stem cell research made real progress. Policy can be principled and effective, and budgets should reflect that.We step into the global arena with the U.S. leaving the World Health Organization and pulling back from clim
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Kansas Judges, Accountability, And The Ballot
29/01/2026 Duración: 26minWhat happens when a small circle of lawyers controls who sits on a state’s highest court? We unpack Kansas’s bar-driven judicial selection and make the case for restoring voter accountability to the bench. You’ll hear why retention elections rarely inform the public, how judicial review morphed into judicial supremacy in modern practice, and what history suggests about balancing independence with democratic oversight. We share examples from states that shifted back to elections and saw credibility improve, plus practical resources you can use to advocate for change.The conversation pivots to an unsettling moment in a sanctuary: a protest that interrupted worship. We walk through a realistic plan churches can adopt—frontline greeters trained to spot risk, ushers who de-escalate, security with clear thresholds, and a congregation prepared to sing or recite Scripture when disruption is nonviolent. Then we draw the line where protection must take precedence. Private property rights matter. The First Amendment res
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Border, Protests, And The Midterm Stakes
28/01/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if your social feed is the worst guide for what’s actually happening on the ground? We dive into Minneapolis as a live case study in how unrest evolves from daytime protest to nighttime agitation, how leadership signals change outcomes, and why the right kind of de-escalation can lower the temperature without abandoning the rule of law. Along the way, we unpack the media’s role in amplifying or abandoning narratives, including the swift backlash to calls for disrupting churches, and what that silence signals about public sentiment.From there, we get specific about immigration policy. Bringing Tom Homan back into the spotlight shows a federal focus on criminal illegal offenders—an incremental approach that’s moving the middle. We examine polling shifts toward broader deportations, the strain sanctuary policies put on local communities, and the tangible impact targeted enforcement can have on safety and trust. This isn’t about slogans; it’s about sequencing actions that draw broad consensus, produce result
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Oklahoma’s Marijuana Wake-Up Call
27/01/2026 Duración: 26minA simple promise—less prosecution and more freedom—turned into a complex fight against organized crime. We walk through Oklahoma’s hard lessons from “just medical” marijuana: how cheap licenses, light regulation, and an all-cash market drew in well-funded networks using straw owners, laundering money through land purchases, and operating grows tied to trafficking, extortion, and violence. The numbers tell the story: farms ballooned from roughly 2,000 to 8,000 in under three years, then fell to about 1,400 as the state shifted to aggressive audits, license denials, and round-the-clock narcotics enforcement.Along the way, we surface the hidden costs that rarely make campaign talking points: dispensary theft targeting product, water and power theft draining rural infrastructure, and property values warped by opportunistic land grabs. We also connect the dots between local licensing and transnational finance, highlighting reported links to Chinese black market networks and high-level intermediaries. When one stat
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Can A Nation Stay Free Without Shared Morals
26/01/2026 Duración: 26minStart with a winter snap in Texas and you’ll feel the temperature of our times: communities split on basic right and wrong, outrage trending faster than facts, and leaders struggling to hold a moral center. We lean into that tension with a clear case for shared standards—and a practical plan to put them back in view—through the Ten Commandments monument now standing at the Tarrant County courthouse.We talk frankly about the difference between lawful carry and reckless interference with law enforcement, why consistency matters more than partisanship, and how a society loses its footing when it treats criminals as victims and cops as villains. Then we shift from debate to blueprint. Former Texas legislator and Tarrant County commissioner Matt Krause walks us through the steps any city or county can take: pass a resolution; form a citizen commission; fund the monument privately, including installation, lighting, and maintenance; and partner with First Liberty Institute for pro bono legal support. It’s a replicab
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Snow, Sports, And Standing With Israel
23/01/2026 Duración: 26minA rare streak of good news can change how we see the week, and this one delivers. We open with a human story that cuts through the noise: a quarterback ranked 2,149th out of high school fights his way to Heisman glory and leads Indiana to a national title. It’s about grit, faith, and leadership under pressure—and why those habits are the building blocks of cultural renewal.From there we get clarity where it counts. Trump draws a bright line against anti‑Semitism—“not welcome or needed” in MAGA or the GOP—while Israel awards him its prestigious Israel Prize, the first time it’s gone to someone living outside the country. Love him or hate him, commitments to Israel’s security and the fight against anti‑Semitism aren’t abstract; they carry real‑world consequences that allies recognize.We also dig into signals from the Supreme Court that point toward protecting girls’ sports under Title IX. Definitions matter, biology matters, and restoring fairness for female athletes is overdue. On Capitol Hill, a performative
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When Culture Calls It Political, We Still Teach What The Bible Says
22/01/2026 Duración: 26minHeadlines move fast, and too many churches step back the moment culture slaps “political” on a topic. We lean in. From life and marriage to immigration and gender, we unpack why Scripture still speaks when the room gets loud—and how pastors can guide people through hard news without turning Sunday into a shouting match. The aim isn’t outrage; it’s discipleship that equips believers to love their neighbors with conviction and clarity.We share data on pastors who believe the Bible addresses modern issues yet rarely teach them, and we highlight encouraging shifts since COVID: weekly cultural briefings, sermon-adjacent podcasts, and a renewed focus on formation over fear. Expect practical ideas for weaving timely guidance into planned series, plus a frank look at handling pushback from the vocal few. Courage grows when congregations voice support, and we offer ways to build that culture so truth-telling feels normal, not risky.Then we zoom out to courts and civic life. What judges “see” in the Constitution often
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Spies, Songs, And Washington
21/01/2026 Duración: 26minHidden networks. Secret signals on a clothesline. A general who didn’t even know every name that kept him alive. We sit down with composer Christy Stutzman to unveil Ring of Spies, a new musical that brings George Washington’s Culper Ring out of the shadows and onto the stage with period-rich music, meticulous research, and a story that stirs the heart.We trace the British occupation of New York and Long Island, follow Haim Solomon’s bold blend of languages, finance, and espionage, and meet Robert Townsend and Anna Strong, whose quiet courage turned ordinary life into a codebook. Christy shares the poignant arc of Liz, an enslaved girl whose flight to British lines led to deeper abuse, and the daring rescue that returned her to freedom—proof that the Revolution’s true stories are diverse, complex, and unforgettable. From thwarting counterfeit plots and exposing Benedict Arnold to safeguarding the French fleet, the Culper Ring shows how intelligence, sacrifice, and faith shaped victory as surely as battlefield
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From Tehran To Greenland: Geopolitics, Faith, And Strategy
20/01/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if the most important map of power right now runs from Tehran’s streets to Greenland’s ice? We sit down with Rudy Atallah to connect the dots between a weakening Iranian regime, a surprising surge of underground Christianity, and the hard math of deterrence in a hypersonic age.We start with Iran, where protests have flared across dozens of cities and casualty estimates run high. Rudy unpacks credible signals beneath the noise of social media—cyber operations targeting IRGC systems, Starlink‑enabled evidence, and the regime’s brutal crowd suppression. Then comes a deeper current: the growth of a house‑church movement seeded years ago by Chinese underground pastors working in Iranian construction projects. That spiritual shift, combined with an educated youth rejecting theocracy, pressures the regime from below. We weigh how much leverage protesters have, what outside actors are prepared to do, and how an exiled figure like the former Shah’s son could position a post‑clerical Iran, including potential reco
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Saving Fairness In Women’s Sports
19/01/2026 Duración: 26minStart with a simple question: should medals, scholarships, and roster spots meant for girls be decided by biology or identity? We dive straight into a Supreme Court showdown that could reset Title IX and define fairness in women’s sports for more than half the country. With Senator Mayes Middleton at the table, we unpack how states like Idaho and West Virginia crafted sex-based competition laws, why Texas took similar steps, and what the Justices’ questions reveal about where this ruling might land.This conversation moves beyond headlines. We revisit the legal sea change that came when the Court scrapped the Lemon test, opening the door for public expressions of faith—like Fort Worth’s granite Ten Commandments monument—and explore how that shift affects the way courts weigh moral clarity against ideological pressure. Senator Middleton shares hard-won lessons from the legislative trenches, why the Save Women’s Sports movement centers on immutable realities, and how safety, privacy, and opportunity for girls ar
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Strength Meets Resolve: What Happens When America Signals Consequences
16/01/2026 Duración: 26minA cascade of good news stretches from Caracas to Tehran, and the common thread is clarity backed by action. We break down how the fall of Maduro exposed the depth of Cuban involvement, cut a vital oil lifeline to Havana, and sent shockwaves through China’s energy and gold ambitions. When a regime relies on foreign soldiers for personal security, the problem isn’t just optics—it’s a sign of collapsing legitimacy, and the aftershocks can reorder a hemisphere.We also zoom in on what smart pressure really does. Cuba’s weakened position, reduced oil flow to China, and a recalibrated regional posture all reflect a simple principle: remove adversaries’ leverage, and stability has room to grow. That same principle surfaces in the Middle East, where a firm warning led Iran’s leadership to signal interest in talks after deadly crackdowns on protesters. Deterrence is not an empty slogan; it’s a set of boundaries that, when enforced, make diplomacy possible.Back at home, norms get tested and reinforced. A Minneapolis hot
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Teaching America’s Founders With Principles, Not Trivia
15/01/2026 Duración: 26minCredit card APR creeping into the high 20s can feel like quicksand, and that’s exactly where we start—by asking whether a president can, or should, cap rates at 10 percent for a year. We sort the legal from the rhetorical, exploring the constitutional limits on executive power, the real-world ripple effects of price controls, and how a bully pulpit can move industries without writing a single rule. Through a biblical lens, we talk about profit versus exploitation, why Scripture warns against practices that deepen debt bondage, and how moral responsibility belongs to lenders and borrowers alike.From there we zoom out to solutions that outlast headlines. We dig into practical reforms that reinforce a healthy market: more transparency, fewer subsidies that distort risk, and serious financial literacy so families recognize the cost of compounding interest before it traps them. That thread carries us into the second half: how to teach America’s founding in a way that forms judgment, not just memory. We make the ca
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What Happens When Faith Communities Get A Seat At The Table
14/01/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if the fastest way to shrink the foster care system is to prevent entries in the first place? We unpack Florida’s results-driven approach that invited churches and nonprofits into a formal partnership with state agencies—without crossing constitutional lines—and turned compassion into measurable change. By treating faith communities as essential partners in prevention, crisis care, and reunification, Florida built real-time bridges between caseworkers and congregations and saw foster care numbers drop dramatically.We walk through the simple moves that changed the tone and the outcomes: 40,000 thank-you notes acknowledging existing service, a “red phone” straight into the governor’s office for pastors and ministry leaders, and a tech platform that alerts nearby churches when a caseworker logs a family’s urgent need. Often, the missing piece keeping a child safe at home was as basic as a bed. When churches delivered that bed, they built relationships that stabilized families long after the request was met.
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Founders, Faith, And The Fight To Protect Private Property
13/01/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if the surest way to protect every right you love is to start with the front door on its hinges and the deed in your drawer? We dig into the founders’ most overlooked insight: secure property is the spine of liberty. Tim Barton walks through original sources—Adams, Madison, Dickinson, Lee—and shows how they linked private ownership to freedom, moral order, and social trust. Then we test those principles against today’s realities: swelling assessments, layered taxes, and seniors losing fully paid-off homes. The question isn’t whether taxation can exist; it’s how to keep ownership from becoming a revocable privilege.We contrast the founders’ consent-based, purpose-tied approach with modern practice. Daniel Webster’s case for funding education from property was narrow and civic-minded, not a blank check. John Marshall acknowledged the taxing power while pointing to constitutional structure as our only safeguard against abuse. Joseph Story’s warning feels prophetic now: when laws make the enjoyment of proper
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Property, Freedom, And The Good Society
12/01/2026 Duración: 26minStart with a simple question: what happens to freedom when property fades? We dive into that pressure point with a story that runs from Genesis to Philadelphia, tracing how stewardship, ownership, and consent form the backbone of a free society. Tim Barton walks through the biblical roots of private property—creation, cultivation, and commands that forbid stealing and coveting—then highlights the stark warning of 1 Samuel 8, where centralized power “takes” until liberty shrivels. That ancient caution feels modern when set against ideologies that dream of abolishing ownership and replacing personal responsibility with administrative control.We connect those roots to America’s founding mind. John Locke’s case for government as a trust to preserve property shaped the Revolution and the Constitution. Samuel Adams named life, liberty, and property as natural rights with the authority to defend them “in the best manner” possible. We unpack why Jefferson wrote “pursuit of happiness” instead of “property,” guided by
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Monroe Doctrine, Then And Now
09/01/2026 Duración: 26minThe headlines move fast, but America’s core ideas move the needle. We open with a surprising deep dive into the Monroe Doctrine—penned by John Quincy Adams and issued by President James Monroe—and connect it to modern policy choices around Venezuela and hemispheric security. When you judge action by founding-era principles instead of social media noise, foreign policy looks less like a personality contest and more like constitutional muscle memory at work.From there, we head west to a major shift in the Ninth Circuit. A two-to-one ruling leaned on the Supreme Court’s Bruin decision to strike down California’s open carry restrictions in large counties, arguing that firearm regulations must align with the nation’s historical tradition. The state claimed citizens could apply for licenses, yet admitted none had been issued. That gap between policy on paper and rights in practice is exactly what the new Second Amendment framework is designed to expose, and it marks a notable change in a circuit once nicknamed the
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Faith, Freedom, And The Founders’ Intent
08/01/2026 Duración: 26minWhat if the most powerful myths about America’s origins collapse under the weight of the Founders’ own words? We open the door to a wider, evidence-rich view of faith, freedom, and law—starting with God-given rights in the Declaration and Franklin’s call to prayer when the Constitutional Convention hit a wall. Instead of arguing about what professors or pundits say, we walk through primary sources and show how to challenge bad history—and even your favorite AI—by requiring original documents.From there, we pivot to the numbers shaping the future. Western fertility has fallen below replacement, changing how nations sustain workforces, culture, and political coalitions. We unpack why the U.S. sits near 1.8 children per woman, how Europe trends even lower, and what happens when immigration meets automation. Israel’s story is more complex: Jewish and Arab birthrates are closer than many assume, with local variations that matter. Over time, immigrant fertility converges toward host-country norms, but the gap still
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Unmasking Charity Scams, Border Chaos, And Venezuela’s Power Shift
07/01/2026 Duración: 26minHeadlines moved fast this week, but the through-line is simple: when truth meets sunlight, systems change. We open with the Minnesota scandal where a young investigator’s iPhone clips sparked serious questions about charity and daycare programs funded with federal dollars. As audits spread to other states, we dig into what real accountability looks like, why some outlets fixate on edge cases, and how a love of truth—not team loyalty—should guide the conversation. From there, we step into voter roll transparency, lawsuits against states refusing disclosure, and the practical steps that make elections cleaner long before ballots are cast.The second half shifts to Venezuela and the global stakes you might not see at first glance. We unpack years of nationalization, collapsing oil output, and alleged narco-terror networks tied to Nicolás Maduro, alongside successive U.S. bounties and sealed indictments. Then we analyze the reported operation that bypassed Russian air defenses and Chinese drones, the deterrent mes