The WallBuilders Show Podcast Por Tim Barton David Barton & Rick Green arte de portada

The WallBuilders Show

The WallBuilders Show

De: Tim Barton David Barton & Rick Green
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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.

© 2026 The WallBuilders Show
Ciencia Política Cristianismo Espiritualidad Ministerio y Evangelismo Mundial Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Europe Reverses Course As America’s Culture Fights Heat Up
    Apr 10 2026

    Europe is changing course, Hollywood is unexpectedly saying the quiet part out loud, and a few long-running legal fights just took a dramatic turn. We kick off Good News Friday by looking at the European Parliament’s move toward deportations and detention centers for illegal immigration, a major shift after years of open-border ideology. If you care about immigration policy, national sovereignty, and public safety across Western civilization, this story is hard to ignore.

    Then we jump into culture with American Idol’s Faith Night. We talk through Luke Bryan’s reflections on growing up around a Baptist church, how gospel preaching and youth group shaped him, and why Carrie Underwood’s bold, consistent Christian faith still stands out. We also name the tension you probably felt too: sometimes “faith” means worship, and sometimes it gets reduced to self-confidence. That difference matters, especially when the whole country is listening.

    From there, we get practical and constitutional. A new Department of Defense policy allows commanders to approve service members carrying personal firearms on U.S. military bases, a shift framed around self-defense and lessons from past base shootings. We also cover the dismissal of the last charge against David Daleiden after years of prosecution tied to exposing Planned Parenthood’s alleged fetal tissue sales, plus the first Antifa terrorism convictions in Texas. We close with a hopeful call from South Carolina to rededicate the state to the Lord through prayer, repentance, and moral renewal as the 250th anniversary approaches.

    If you found value here, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find conversations on faith and culture grounded in history and the Constitution.

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    27 m
  • Christ-Centered College Rallies Are Rewriting The Story Of Gen Z
    Apr 9 2026

    Thousands of college students are showing up in arenas to talk about Jesus and it’s not happening at just one school. We dig into the Unite Us movement and the wave of campus revival stories from places like Pittsburgh, Alabama, Purdue, Ohio State, and Texas A&M, plus why the real test comes after the rally. Big moments are powerful, but we talk about the unglamorous next step that makes them stick: local churches stepping in to disciple, mentor, and help students build a lasting faith that shapes everyday life.

    Then we shift gears to a claim designed to spark outrage: the idea that George Washington hated his mother. We walk through why sensational history spreads so easily, especially when a famous name sells the story, and we lay out a simple way to fact-check anyone, no matter how well-known. If the claim is real, there should be a document, a date, and a quotation. If not, the burden of proof stays where it belongs.

    Finally, we answer a parent question we know many families face: how do you respond when your teen doubts the American Revolution and appeals to Christian teaching on obeying government? We unpack taxation without representation, the Declaration of Independence and its list of grievances, and the biblical framework for when resisting tyranny can align with obedience to God. If you care about faith, civic literacy, and raising thoughtful young leaders, hit play, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us what question you want us to tackle next.

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    27 m
  • What Happens When Voters Lead Again - with Tim Mooney
    Apr 8 2026

    A two-week ceasefire can sound like progress, but it can also be a trap if it lets a hostile regime regroup. We take a hard look at the Iran headlines and ask the question most coverage skips: what would a real end to the conflict require, and how do you prevent a “pause” from becoming a rebuild? From deterrence to diplomacy, we talk through why credibility changes negotiations, why Israel’s posture matters, and why “done enough damage” is not the same thing as securing lasting peace.

    To make sense of the moment, we reach back to history and compare today’s strategy debates to Harry Truman’s challenge with Imperial Japan. Winning every battle doesn’t guarantee you win the war, and the will to keep fighting can outlast rational self-interest. We also address how World War II is often misremembered, why context matters, and what that history teaches about surrender, reconstruction, and the difference between a tactical victory and a durable outcome.

    Then we bring it home with our guest Tim Mooney from Morning in America, who’s helping drive ballot initiatives across the country. We dig into the states where these fights are happening, the polling that shows voters across party lines shifting back toward common sense, and why protecting girls’ sports is becoming a defining issue in places like Maine, Colorado, Arizona, and Nevada. If you’re tired of legislatures ignoring voters, this is a practical roadmap for how citizens can move policy and culture at the same time.

    If you found this helpful, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find conversations that connect faith, culture, and real-world action.

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    27 m
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