

The WallBuilders Show
Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green
The WallBuilders Show is a daily journey to examine today's issues from a Biblical, Historical and Constitutional perspective. Featured guests include elected officials, experts, activists, authors, and commentators.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 4, 2026 • 27min
Righteousness And The American Founding
America’s 250th is coming fast, and the louder the debate gets, the more we need receipts instead of clichés. We dig into the evidence behind the nation’s uncommon durability—from the University of Chicago’s findings on constitutional lifespans to Donald Lutz’s landmark study mapping who the Founders actually quoted. Montesquieu, Blackstone, and Locke mattered, but the Bible surfaced as the most cited source, shaping the moral vocabulary of liberty, justice, human dignity, and limited government that still anchors our civic life.We connect those influences to vivid moments: the First Continental Congress opening with extended prayer, letters between Adams and Jefferson that acknowledge doctrinal questions yet affirm the unifying “general principles of Christianity,” and Alice Baldwin’s documentation of sermons that anticipated the Declaration’s claims years before 1776. Rather than a sanitized tale, this is a grounded picture of how public virtue, preached in pulpits and practiced in communities, became the cultural scaffolding for a constitution that has far outlasted the global average.As we look toward the semiquincentennial, we make a clear case: righteousness isn’t a slogan; it’s civic infrastructure. If freedom is to remain strong, leaders and citizens need the habits and principles that once formed a self-governing people. Join us as we outline practical ways to recover those foundations, equip your conversations with credible sources, and invite your representatives to engage with these ideas. If this resonates, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review telling us which insight you’ll bring into your next civic conversation.Support the show

Feb 3, 2026 • 27min
How Digital IDs Could Reshape Freedom, Work, And Money
A “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 onto always-on rails.Beyond the tech, we tackle the human stakes. When credentials govern access to jobs, healthcare, and education, dissent becomes costly and quiet penalties replace open debate. Bio-digital convergence and implantable credentials raise deeper questions about privacy, autonomy, and the kind of society we’re building. This isn’t fearmongering; it’s a call for clear limits and smart policy while the infrastructure is still taking shape.We share a concrete state playbook: ban mandatory digital ID for essential services, protect cash and penalize refusal to accept it, require explicit consent and strict data limits, prohibit profiling, and consider parallel resilience like gold and silver as legal tender. On the personal side, reduce data exhaust, choose privacy-preserving options, and teach kids the real cost of “frictionless” life. If we draw firm lines now, we can keep digital tools as servants—not masters. If this conversation resonates, follow, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more people find it.Support the show

Feb 2, 2026 • 27min
From Texas Ballots To Federal Bench: What The Headlines Miss
Headlines 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 enforce, or expect federal backup. We also track the growing spotlight on alleged “ghost daycares” and funding pipelines, where fraud claims intersect with campaign finance and census-driven power shifts.We close with a dose of optimism: NASA’s Artemis momentum and the push toward crewed missions to the moon and, potentially, faster trips to Mars using advanced propulsion. Space exploration isn’t just awe—it’s a force multiplier for innovation that improves everyday life. Between election math, legal clarity, and scientific ambition, this conversation connects civic responsibility with national aspiration and gives you the tools to sort narrative from reality.If this helped cut through the noise, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review—what story here deserves more attention from the media?Support the show

Jan 30, 2026 • 27min
From Pro-Life Wins To Global Exits: A Week Of Policy Shifts
A 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 climate compacts and UN climate groups. The stakes are sovereignty, accountability, and cost. When distant bodies push mandates without balancing tradeoffs, citizens pay twice—in dollars and lost discretion. The market is noticing, too, as major asset managers temper net zero pledges and states push back on ESG-driven debanking. Stewardship matters, but so does reliability and consent.Freedom at home gets a boost from new polling showing rising support for religious liberty, parents’ rights in education, and protection for faith-based charities. Add in the best news many didn’t expect: nationwide crime rates are down across most categories, including a historic low in the murder rate. Carjackings and shoplifting fall, while drug crime remains a challenge—proof progress isn’t uniform, but it is real.If you’re ready for substance over spin—policy receipts, cultural momentum, and hard numbers—this conversation brings it all together. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs some good news, and leave a review to help more listeners find the show. What stood out most to you?Links to this week's Good News Fridayhttps://www.worthynews.com/111637-support-for-religious-freedom-up-5-points-from-2020-reaching-a-high-of-71https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/us-officially-exits-world-health-organization-5975202https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/us-homicide-rate-plummets-to-125-year-low-group-reports-5975221https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/trump-order-taking-us-out-of-un-climate-orgs-caps-flood-of-corporate-exits-5968897https://www.lifenews.com/2026/01/22/president-trump-ends-all-tax-funded-research-with-aborted-baby-parts/https://www.lifenews.com/2026/01/22/president-trump-ends-all-taxpayer-funding-for-international-abortions/Support the show

Jan 29, 2026 • 27min
Kansas Judges, Accountability, And The Ballot
What 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 restrains government, not churches. Trespass and interference with worship remain prosecutable, and consistent enforcement deters repeat tactics without compromising compassion.Finally, we examine the legal and moral calculus behind a high-profile operation targeting a foreign actor tied to deadly drug flows into the United States. When overdose deaths top 100,000 a year, federal duty to protect citizens is not abstract. We trace the arc from warnings and sanctions to decisive action, noting bipartisan bounties that signaled the scope of the threat. The pattern is consistent across every topic we cover: accountability is the engine of a free society, preparedness is its safety net, and clarity is the bridge between them.If this conversation sparks ideas, share it with a friend, subscribe for future episodes, and leave a review with your take on judicial accountability and church readiness—what reform would you champion first?Support the show

Jan 28, 2026 • 27min
Border, Protests, And The Midterm Stakes
What 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 results, and build momentum for deeper fixes at the border and in the courts.Policy without politics doesn’t stick, so we connect the dots to the midterms and Congress. E-Verify, defunding sanctuary jurisdictions, and scrutinizing remittances aren’t just talking points; they’re high-support measures that force clarity and accountability. We talk about how to press for cooperation from governors and mayors, why messaging discipline matters when the public is paying attention, and how incremental wins can reshape the national debate. If you care about public safety, constitutional rights, and practical reforms that last, this breakdown gives you the frame and the facts to engage with confidence.If the conversation resonates, subscribe, share with a friend who’s stuck in an echo chamber, and leave a quick review telling us where you stand on de-escalation versus pressing the gas. Your take might shape our next deep dive.Support the show

Jan 27, 2026 • 27min
Oklahoma’s Marijuana Wake-Up Call
A 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 state tightens up, the operation flows to another; that’s why Minnesota, Michigan, and Maine are seeing sudden spikes in suspicious grows and related crime. Policy doesn’t stop at state lines when the incentives stay high and the scrutiny stays low.This isn’t an argument against reform—it’s a call for grown-up policy. Beneficial ownership transparency, strict vetting, financial controls, meaningful penalties, and interagency task forces can change the risk-reward equation for bad actors. Oklahoma’s turnaround shows what happens when you trade stage-one thinking for stage-two strategy. If you care about public safety, local economies, and responsible freedom, this conversation offers a clear blueprint. If it resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who votes on this issue, and leave a review with your take on what your state should do next.Support the show

Jan 26, 2026 • 27min
Can A Nation Stay Free Without Shared Morals
Start 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 replicable model that avoids taxpayer costs while honoring America’s legal heritage.This isn’t about forcing belief. It’s about restoring widely shared guardrails—don’t murder, don’t steal, don’t lie—that shaped Western law and helped communities thrive. Public reminders change behavior because they make people God-conscious and accountable beyond impulse. We connect that truth to education, civic rituals, and the coming 250th anniversary, laying out how citizens can lead, how officials can empower them, and how small acts—plaques in classrooms, inscriptions in courtrooms, monuments in courtyards—can rebuild a culture of trust.If you’re ready to move from frustration to action, this conversation hands you the playbook. Subscribe, share with a friend who cares about local leadership, and leave a review with the one step you’ll take in your city this month.Support the show

Jan 23, 2026 • 27min
Snow, Sports, And Standing With Israel
A 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 War Powers push over Venezuela implodes when a simple point of order reveals there are no troops to withdraw. It’s a reminder that process still works when someone’s paying attention. And we talk frank oversight of federal judges who try to set national policy from the bench—accountability is a constitutional feature, not a bug.Education might be the most consequential shift: Dallas and Houston are expanding merit‑based pay for teachers, rewarding effectiveness over seniority and allowing pay to adjust when results slip. It’s not a knock on great teachers—it’s a push to align incentives with student learning and give high‑need campuses the talent they deserve. We close with momentum for the Convention of States as Kansas becomes the 20th state, bringing the effort closer to proposing amendments that restore federalism and rein in runaway agencies.If this conversation gave you a lift, share it with a friend who could use some hope, subscribe for more faith‑and‑culture breakdowns, and leave a review to tell us which story resonated most. Your voice helps us keep bringing principle‑driven good news to the forefront.Links for today's show:https://www.worthynews.com/111487-trump-to-nyt-no-room-for-antisemitism-in-gop-or-maga- movementhttps://www.worthynews.com/111487-trump-to-nyt-no-room-for-antisemitism-in-gop-or-maga- movementhttps://www.worthynews.com/111487-trump-to-nyt-no-room-for-antisemitism-in-gop-or-maga- movementhttps://www.theepochtimes.com/us/senate-shelves-bill-to-block-military-action-in-venezuela-with-vance-casting-tie-breaking-vote-5969696https://www.timesofisrael.com/trump-to-be-awarded-israel-prize-next-year-the-countrys-top-honor/https://www.crosswalk.com/headlines/contributors/michael-foust/glory-to-god-indianas-fernando-mendoza-leads-hoosiers-to-historic-championship.htmlSupport the show

Jan 22, 2026 • 27min
When Culture Calls It Political, We Still Teach What The Bible Says
Headlines 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 reflects how they were taught—original text or living document. We trace how law schools shaped the bench and outline a long game for reform: elect leaders who value original meaning, strengthen civic literacy, and show up in low-turnout races that decide key pipelines. Along the way, a listener question about the Founders’ Greek, Latin, and Hebrew opens a window into early American education and the power of immersion for real understanding.If you want faith that stands firm in a noisy world—and tools to make a difference where you live—this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who cares about biblical clarity in public life, and leave a review telling us the next “political” topic you want addressed.Support the show


