

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

Jan 7, 2026 • 27min
Unmasking Charity Scams, Border Chaos, And Venezuela’s Power Shift
Headlines 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 message it sent, and why energy markets could feel the impact if American firms rebuild shuttered capacity. Safer borders, cheaper fuel, and fewer dollars flowing to adversaries aren’t abstract talking points—they’re the measurable outcomes that follow strategic clarity.Throughout, we connect policy to principle: decentralize programs that Washington can’t police well, publish audits and recipient lists, standardize voter roll maintenance, and insist on transparency that survives partisan spin. Courage is contagious, whether it starts with a citizen journalist or a community demanding records. If you’re ready to trade noise for facts and narrative for receipts, press play, share with a friend, and tell us where accountability should go next. Subscribe for Foundations of Freedom Thursday and don’t miss our Friday good news roundup.Support the show

Jan 6, 2026 • 27min
Faith, Freedom, And First Principles
What if the entire arc of American freedom hinges on where we say rights come from? We take you inside a spirited, timely conversation that ties together the founders’ reliance on prayer, the moral sequence of life before liberty, and the hard economics of why voluntary exchange creates wealth while coercion destroys it. This isn’t a history lecture; it’s a practical roadmap for evaluating candidates, policies, and institutions by a clear standard of truth.We unpack the core fork in the road: man as the measure versus God as the source. From that single choice flow wildly different outcomes on speech, taxes, education, borders, and defense. You’ll hear why “group‑granted rights” inevitably drift into socialism, why identity blocs replace individual dignity, and how compelled speech corrodes public trust. We share vivid examples—from campus showdowns over truth to crumbling output under redistribution—alongside a simple test: does a policy protect innocent life and expand ordered liberty, or does it reward power and punish productivity?Then we zoom out to strategy and statecraft. Innovation requires honest rules and abundant energy, so we dig into rare earth supply chains, nuclear approvals, and the power needed to fuel AI. Strong defense, limited government, and low taxes are not contradictions; they’re complementary shields for freedom. Pair that with a culture that prizes contribution over category and you get a nation that attracts builders, aligns allies, and regains confidence. If you care about how faith informs policy, how truth stabilizes markets, and how prosperity actually happens, this conversation will sharpen your lens and strengthen your voice.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a rating to help more listeners find thoughtful, good‑faith conversations about faith, history, and the Constitution.Support the show

Jan 5, 2026 • 27min
America’s Principles, Power, And Prosperity
If you care about why some nations flourish while others stall, this conversation puts real substance behind the answer. We dig into the ideas that anchor a free people—rights that don’t come from a vote, limits that bind power, and a moral center that turns law into trust. With former Congressman Bob McEwen, we connect those foundations to the everyday things we take for granted: GPS in your pocket, safe sea lanes for global trade, contracts that hold, and an innovation engine that keeps producing breakthroughs.We walk through the often-muddled difference between a democracy and a constitutional republic and show why it matters for people who want to build, invest, and raise families. If your rights depend on a majority, they can be erased; if your rights come from God and are secured by law, your risk falls and your future gets bigger. That’s the soil where patents grow, startups launch, and generosity flows outward—whether it’s a clean water pump deep in Africa or a consistent rule at the Panama Canal. Bob’s stories—from policy fights to world events—reveal how leadership is spiritual at its core, changing confidence and outcomes long before anything physical moves.We also challenge common myths about poverty and wealth creation, reframing the conversation around incentives, property rights, and the character needed to keep promises over time. Add in the global stakes—China’s push in the South China Sea, the cost of wavering leadership—and the message becomes urgent: protecting liberty’s architecture is not nostalgia, it’s strategy. As we mark a milestone year for the American experiment, we’re inviting you to revisit first principles and put them to work in your community.If this resonated, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review. Your voice helps more people discover conversations that strengthen freedom, leadership, and hope.Support the show

Jan 2, 2026 • 27min
Christmas Courage From The Governor’s Office
A governor’s Christmas proclamation that actually says what Christmas is about. A president joking with kids about cookies while thanking service members. Federal agencies quietly restoring room for faith at work and school. The start of 2026 comes packed with moments that reveal where conviction and culture meet—and why it matters.We open with Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ proclamation naming Jesus and closing state offices so families can celebrate together, followed by the Freedom From Religion Foundation’s objection and a forceful reply that re-centers Christmas on Christ. From there, we jump to the NORAD Santa Tracker’s quirky origin and a holiday call-in where the president mixes humor, nostalgia, and a clear salute to the military, including an end-of-year bonus that put help into real households.The conversation deepens as we explore the USDA’s move to protect religious expression—touching school lunch policies and even meatpacking plant break rooms—reminding listeners that rights don’t stop at the factory floor. We widen the lens to Nigeria, where U.S. strikes targeted ISIS-linked terrorists amid persistent attacks on Christians and dissenting Muslims. The question is sobering: when should power be used to restrain evil, and what does moral clarity look like on the world stage?We also unpack a rare bipartisan push: 42 attorneys general pressing AI companies to curb misleading, “tell-me-what-I-want-to-hear” outputs for kids, signaling a cultural return to verifiable truth over algorithmic flattery. Finally, we turn to the Smithsonian, where the White House is demanding documentation and accountability for historical narratives as America approaches its 250th anniversary. Artifacts deserve honest framing, and audiences deserve transparent standards.If you care about faith in public life, religious liberty, truthful storytelling, national security, and the health of our information ecosystem, this conversation connects the dots. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves history and policy, and leave a review telling us which moment gave you the most hope.Links to good news stories:https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/trump-tells-children-santa-on-his-way-thanks-service-members- 5962799https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/us-strikes-isis-in-nigeria-trump-5962963https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/white-house-warns-it-might-withhold-smithsonian-funds- pending-content-review-5961110https://www.theepochtimes.com/tech/tech-companies-should-curb-sycophantic-and-delusional-ai-outputs-attorneys-general-say-5956734https://www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/documents/sm-1078-019.pdf?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdeliveryhttps://governor.arkansas.gov/news_post/sanders-closes-state-offices-on-friday-december-26-in-celebration-of-christmas/Support the show

Jan 1, 2026 • 27min
Learning History Through Stories
New year, new habit: let’s make this the year we actually learn how freedom works. We kick things off by swapping stale timelines for stories that stick—showing why kids (and adults) fall in love with history when they meet real people first and fit the dates around character and consequence. From Abigail Adams to George Washington Carver, narrative turns rote facts into insight, and it gives families a simple, joyful way to teach virtue, context, and courage.We also tackle a thorny headline phrase: “threat to our democracy.” The founders didn’t build a pure democracy; they designed a constitutional republic to restrain passions with law. We walk through the seven articles every citizen should know—legislative, executive, judicial, state relations and a republican form of government, amendments, supremacy, and ratification—and explain why Article IV’s guarantee matters for rule of law, due process, and the everyday rights you rely on. Clear language leads to clear thinking, and clear thinking protects liberty when slogans start to blur the lines.If travel isn’t in the budget, you can still bring history to life. We share practical tools: biography‑driven reading lists, reality‑style history videos, and virtual tours that place your family in Yorktown and Vicksburg without leaving home. We add a friendly warning about modern spin at some sites and show how to cross‑check with primary sources so your kids learn to love truth, not just tales. By the end, you’ll have a step‑by‑step plan to build a weekly story seminar at home, map current events to the Constitution, and turn curiosity into civic confidence.Ready to start? Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who teaches kids, and leave a review telling us which founder’s story you’ll read first. Your feedback helps more families find practical, principled civics they can use all year.Link to children's biographies:https://shop.wallbuilders.com/product-category/all/books/biographies/Support the show

Dec 31, 2025 • 27min
David Vs. Goliath Goes Big
Giants don’t only live on battlefields. They show up in our homes, our timelines, and our headlines—and that’s why this new animated musical about David is landing like a thunderclap for families. We sit down with Brian Stivale, the voice of Samuel, to explore how a film can be both wildly entertaining and spiritually grounding without pretending to be a verse-by-verse commentary.We share why the orchestration soars, the animation feels “classic,” and the storytelling bridges 1 and 2 Samuel with heart and clarity for kids and adults alike. Brian opens up about his calling as an ordained pastor, his ties to Israel, and the creative team’s vision to craft a love letter to the land, the people, and the biblical narrative itself. We address the loudest critiques head-on—what the film chooses to symbolize, what it compresses, and why those decisions matter when your first goal is to inspire children to open the Bible. From Saul’s complexity to Jonathan’s noble heart to David’s steady courage, we talk character, craft, and the moments that made our kids sing the soundtrack on repeat.This conversation also touches the cultural moment. The story’s arc to Ziklag and its anthem of “I will not be afraid” resonates against a backdrop of fear and fragmentation, offering a timely reminder that scattered people can still find strength together. With box office momentum and word-of-mouth heat, “David” signals a hunger for quality, family-friendly films that respect the audience and lift the spirit. If you’ve been waiting for a project with the ambition of “Prince of Egypt” and the accessibility of modern animation, this is your cue.Stream now, then tell us your take: Which character landed most for you, and what conversation did it spark at home? If this episode helps, follow, share with a friend who needs hope, and leave a quick review so more families can find us.Support the show

Dec 30, 2025 • 27min
Israel, Borders, And The Battle For Truth
Michelle Bachmann, a former U.S. Representative and conservative voice, dives into the complexities of Israel's battle against Hamas. She discusses the imperative to finish what Israel started without external pressures. The conversation covers the evolving terror infrastructure in Gaza, the ramifications of immigration policies, and the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood in the U.S. Bachmann argues for supporting Israel's autonomy while critiquing plans that risk national security and promote anti-Israel narratives, particularly from media outlets like Al Jazeera.

Dec 29, 2025 • 27min
Nigeria, Faith, And A Hard Line
A quiet holiday reset gives way to a hard question: when should America act to stop mass killing abroad? We sit down with Rudy Atala, Deputy Senior Director of Counterterrorism at the National Security Council, to unpack the U.S. strike that rattled ISIS-linked militants and Fulani warlords in Nigeria’s north. Rudy explains how years of targeted violence against Christians escalated, why Nigeria’s government asked for U.S. support, and how a single precision operation using an MQ-9 and guided munitions helped enable Nigerian forces to move in and stabilize key areas.We break down Nigeria’s complex map: a 50-50 religious split, a contested middle belt where herder militias and jihadist factions collide with farming communities, and a political backdrop that opened the door to armed networks. Rudy paints a blunt picture of the target set—criminal warlords fused with ISIS affiliates—and the likely removal of a notorious kingpin, Bello Turji. He also tackles a bigger debate many listeners share: where does constitutional restraint meet moral clarity? The approach he outlines is simple and specific—support partners who own their fight, strike terrorists who plan to harm Americans and allies, and reinforce deterrence so villages are not left to fend for themselves.From there we zoom out to a live threat board. Iran’s proxies, Israel’s push to degrade Hezbollah, the hunt for ISIS leadership in Syria, Sudan’s worsening crisis, and the Red Sea’s Bab el-Mandeb chokepoint—an artery for global trade where instability raises costs for the world. Rudy’s message is consistent: protect U.S. interests, keep sea lanes open, and help partners hold ground against groups that thrive in chaos. If you want a clear, unvarnished look at how counterterror decisions are made—and why Nigeria became a line in the sand—this conversation brings uncommon detail without the spin.If this episode gave you clarity, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review to help others find the show.Support the show

Dec 26, 2025 • 27min
Christmas Plus One: Good News And Grit
Christmas may be over, but we’re still counting the days with a grin—and counting the wins from a year that felt like a reset. We open with a culture-shifting story out of Washington: a packed, worship-forward Christmas show at the newly rebranded Trump Kennedy Center. Our guest, worship leader and pastor Charles Billingsley, takes us behind the scenes of how a six-week scramble turned into a sold-out celebration complete with a live nativity and a first-ever tree lighting. The most surprising moment? A request from organizers to add more worship and ensure the gospel was clearly shared on a major DC stage.From there, we zoom out to the systems that shape culture: courts and policy. We break down an appeals court ruling that allows defunding Planned Parenthood under a key administration initiative, and we wrestle honestly with durability. Executive action can open doors, but lasting change requires law. That’s why we argue the next phase must be legislative—turning headline wins into structures that endure through future administrations.We also look at America’s posture abroad. A decisive U.S. strike on ISIS in Syria sends a loud signal on deterrence and the defense of American lives. Then we examine a less visible battlefield: AI and ethics in modern warfare. A three-star general’s comments about America’s Judeo-Christian moral framework limiting certain uses of AI might sound like a constraint, but we make the case that values are a strategic advantage. Boundaries bolster legitimacy, alliance trust, and long-term strength—proof that principle and power can pull in the same direction.If you’re hungry for a dose of hope grounded in real policy, real culture, and real deterrence, this conversation delivers. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs encouragement, and leave a review telling us which moment gave you the most hope. Your voice helps keep the momentum going.Support the show

Dec 25, 2025 • 27min
Saint Nicholas Unwrapped: From Bishop To Beloved Tradition
A secret bag of gold. A midnight window. A bankrupt father praying his daughters won’t be sold. We trace the astonishing true story of Nicholas of Myra and watch how a third-century bishop became the world’s most recognizable giver. This isn’t a North Pole fairy tale; it’s a tour through persecution, courage, theology and tradition that formed the bedrock of Christmas as we know it.We start with the real Nicholas—born around 280 AD in Asia Minor—who gave in secret, defended the vulnerable and faced prison under Rome. From the Chi-Rho on Constantine’s shields to the Council of Nicaea challenging Arianism, we unpack why “Xmas” points to Christ, not away from Him, and how a slap heard through history signaled the stakes of orthodoxy. Then the story moves: relics to Bari, Urban II calling the First Crusade, St. Francis restoring focus with the nativity, and Martin Luther shifting gifts to December 25 while pointing to the Christchild—Kris Kringle’s true origin.Across centuries, folklore and faith braided into culture. Boniface felled Thor’s oak and lifted the evergreen; Luther lit the tree like Bethlehem’s sky. England partied like Saturnalia, Puritans pushed back, and Dutch settlers in New Amsterdam welcomed Sinterklaas on a white horse. American imagination took over as Washington Irving suited him in knickerbockers, Clement Moore sent him down the chimney, Thomas Nast placed him at the North Pole, and Coca-Cola gave him a warm, red coat for the modern world. Yet when you peel back the layers, you find a pastor who loved Jesus, protected children, confronted corruption and gave without seeking credit.If you want Christmas to mean more this year, follow the thread back to Nicholas. Let generosity be quiet and real. Let truth be clear and kind. Let joy be rooted, not rushed. Subscribe, share this story with a friend who loves Christmas lore, and leave a review with the one tradition you’ll keep—and the one you’ll change—after hearing the real Santa’s tale.Support the show


