The WallBuilders Show

Why State Of The Union “Responses” Feel Scripted And What History Says About It

Mar 5, 2026
A courtroom-like hearing over posting the Ten Commandments in schools and how a key Supreme Court ruling changed church-state rules. A look at why State of the Union responses sound scripted, tracing the short history of those rebuttals and media incentives that favor sound bites. An exploration of why members of Congress sit by party and how mixed seating can improve mentorship and reduce polarization.
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ANECDOTE

Testifying For Restoring Ten Commandments In Schools

  • Tim Barton testified in Nashville on Tennessee's Ten Commandments bill and encountered opposition from people of faith who argued the commandments were not appropriate for schools.
  • He cited historic textbooks (New England Primer, McGuffey's Readers) and legal tradition showing the Ten Commandments were part of public education until about 1980, framing the bill as a restoration.
INSIGHT

Coach Kennedy Dismantled The Lemon Era

  • The 2022 Coach Kennedy decision effectively overturned the Lemon test, reopening many religion-in-public-institutions questions previously closed for ~50 years.
  • David Barton explained this legal shift is why states now pursue restoring religious displays and instruction in schools.
INSIGHT

State Of The Union Responses Are A Modern Invention

  • Formal opposition responses to the State of the Union are a relatively new practice, starting about 60 years ago with LBJ era experiments.
  • Since the 1990s responses have been live, though they often feel prerecorded because of tight scripting.
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