The Way the World Works: A Tuttle Twins Podcast for Families

Connor Boyack

From the trusted team behind the Tuttle Twins books, join us as we tackle current events, hot topics, and fun ideas to help your family find clarity in a world full of confusion.

  1. 2 days ago

    The Liberty Tree: One of America's First Symbol of Freedom

    In 1775, before he wrote Common Sense, Thomas Paine wrote a poem about a tree — and that tree was already shaping the American Revolution. The story of the American Revolution is usually told through famous documents and famous men, but some of the earliest and most powerful symbols of colonial resistance weren't speeches or armies at all. One of the first was a real elm tree on Boston Common — and one of the first writers to capture what it meant was a brand-new immigrant from England named Thomas Paine. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we read Thomas Paine's 1775 poem "The Liberty Tree" — written before Common Sense made him famous — and unpack what the poem (and the real elm tree on Boston Common that inspired it) tells us about the ideas already rooted in the colonies before the Revolution began. We talk about the Stamp Act, why colonists chose a tree as their rallying symbol, how the British cutting it down backfired, and how Paine's writing carried ideas that George Washington himself admired. What You'll Learn in This Episode Who Thomas Paine was before he wrote Common Sense — a brand-new immigrant from Britain in 1774 What Paine's 1775 poem "The Liberty Tree" actually said and why it mattered The real Liberty Tree — an elm on Boston Common that became colonial America's rallying point How the Stamp Act of 1765 turned an ordinary tree into a political symbol Why the Sons of Liberty chose a tree, not a building, as their gathering place Why symbols matter even when ideas are the real thing — and what a flag teaches us about that How the British cut down the Liberty Tree in 1775 — and why it backfired Why ideas are "bulletproof" even when their symbols are destroyed How Paine's poem foreshadowed his more famous Common Sense Why George Washington admired Paine despite calling himself "not an ideas man" How the rights Americans were fighting for were already part of the old English tradition Why families should read revolutionary-era poems and documents together this America 250 Timestamps 0:00 Why Paine's Poem About a Tree Matters 1:15 Who Thomas Paine Was Before "Common Sense" 2:30 Reading "The Liberty Tree" Poem 3:30 A New Immigrant Captures Liberty 4:30 Why a Tree Became a Symbol of Resistance 5:30 The Real Liberty Tree in Boston 6:30 Liberty Was Already in Our Soil 7:15 The British Plot to Cut It Down 8:10 When They Cut It Down, It Backfired 9:00 Ideas Are Bulletproof 10:00 Paine Inspires Common Sense and Washington 11:00 Many Ways to Fight for Liberty 12:00 A Challenge: Read the Poem with Your Family 👍 Like this video if you love discovering the real stories behind American history 🔔 Subscribe for more stories about liberty, courage, and the people who shaped America 💬 Comment below: What's a modern-day "Liberty Tree" — a symbol that captures an idea worth fighting for? Shop Resources 📘 Dive into the full story of the Revolutionary War in The Tuttle Twins America's History Volume 2 (1776-1791) https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/americas-history-vol2 📘 Discover stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things in The Tuttle Twins Guide to Courageous Heroes https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/the-tuttle-twins-guide-to-courageous-heroes 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com #LibertyTree #ThomasPaine #CommonSense #AmericanRevolution #SonsOfLiberty #StampAct #BostonHistory #America250 #AmericanHistory #TuttleTwins #FoundingFathers #LibertarianHistory

    13 min
  2. 6 days ago

    Who Was Joseph Plumb Martin?

    Joseph Plumb Martin was just a 15-year-old farm boy when he signed up to fight in the American Revolution — and the memoir he wrote at age 70 gives us one of the only firsthand glimpses of what war was actually like for an ordinary Continental soldier. The story of the American Revolution is usually told through its most famous figures — George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, the Declaration, the Constitution. But the war itself was fought by ordinary people who left their homes, picked up muskets, and faced hunger, cold, and unimaginable hardship for a cause they believed in. Joseph Plumb Martin was one of them. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we tell the story of a Connecticut farm boy who voluntarily enlisted in June 1776 at just 15 years old, fought through the entire war until 1783, and rose from private to sergeant. Decades later, at age 70, he wrote one of the only honest firsthand accounts we have of what life as an enlisted Revolutionary soldier was actually like — the starvation, the freezing winter without shoes, the unpaid wages, the friends lost. His memoir was largely ignored in his own time, but a century later it became one of the most important documents we have for understanding the Revolution from the bottom up. What You'll Learn in This Episode Who Joseph Plumb Martin was and why he matters to the story of America 250 Why a 15-year-old farm boy threatened to run away if his grandparents wouldn't let him enlist How he signed his name boldly even when given the chance to leave it as a scribble Why voluntary enlistment matters — and how it differs from conscription and the draft What ordinary soldiers actually experienced: starvation, freezing without shoes, friends dying How Joseph rose from private to sergeant over seven straight years of war Why so many soldiers (including George Washington) used military service to rise in life What happened to soldiers after the war: unpaid wages, seized farms, and the road to Shays' Rebellion How Joseph's memoir, written at age 70, was ignored until rediscovered a century later Why firsthand accounts and journaling matter for preserving history Timestamps 0:00 The Unsung Heroes of the American Revolution 0:30 Introducing Joseph Plumb Martin 1:25 The Memoir That Told the Real Story of War 2:25 June 1776 — A 15-Year-Old Enlists 3:10 Voluntary Enlistment, Not Conscription 3:45 Signing His Name Boldly 4:30 Seven Years of Reenlisting 5:30 Rising From Private to Sergeant 6:10 Military Service as a Path Up — Even for Washington 6:50 The Real Hardships of Revolutionary War 8:30 Trenches, Downtime, and Frustration 9:35 After the War: Unpaid, Forgotten, and Pushed to Rebellion 10:30 Writing the Memoir at Age 70 11:00 Why Firsthand Accounts Matter 👍 Like this video if you love discovering the real stories behind American history 🔔 Subscribe for more stories about liberty, courage, and the people who shaped America 💬 Comment below: Would you have had the courage to enlist at 15? Shop Resources 📘 Dive into the full story of the Revolutionary War in The Tuttle Twins America's History Volume 2 (1776-1791) https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/americas-history-vol2 📘 Discover more stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things in The Tuttle Twins Guide to Courageous Heroes https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/the-tuttle-twins-guide-to-courageous-heroes 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com #AmericanRevolution #RevolutionaryWar #JosephPlumbMartin #UnsungHeroes #ContinentalArmy #ValleyForge #America250 #AmericanHistory #TuttleTwins #LibertarianHistory #FoundingFathers #VoluntaryEnlistment

    12 min
  3. 16 June

    The Civilian Spies Who Helped America Win the Revolution

    Two ordinary civilians — a New York tailor and an enslaved man from Virginia — used their everyday roles to outsmart the British and change the course of the American Revolution. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we tell the stories of two civilian spies who helped America win independence without ever joining the army. Hercules Mulligan, a tailor in British-occupied New York, used the gossip of careless officers to pass intelligence to George Washington — and quite possibly saved Washington's life. James Armistead Lafayette, an enslaved man from Virginia, infiltrated the British command as a double agent and supplied the intelligence that turned the tide at the Battle of Yorktown. Both men proved that liberty is won by ordinary people doing courageous things in the place they happen to stand.   What You'll Learn in This Episode: • Why the American Revolution was won by ordinary people, not just famous Founders • How Hercules Mulligan used his tailor shop in occupied New York to gather British intelligence • How Mulligan's listening saved George Washington from a planned capture • Who James Armistead Lafayette was and how he became a double agent for the Continental Army • How James's intelligence helped trap General Cornwallis at the Battle of Yorktown • The Marquis de Lafayette's role in securing James's freedom after the war • Why James took the last name "Lafayette" as a tribute • What these unsung heroes teach us about courage, liberty, and America 250   Timestamps: 0:00 The Unsung Heroes of the American Revolution 1:18 Introducing the Civilian Spies of the Revolution 1:36 Hercules Mulligan: The Tailor Who Listened 3:07 Why Being Underestimated Was His Superpower 4:59 How Mulligan Saved George Washington's Life 6:19 James Armistead Lafayette: The Double Agent 7:09 Going Undercover with the British Army 8:10 The Marquis de Lafayette Connection 9:12 Turning the Tide at the Battle of Yorktown 10:28 Denied Freedom After Helping Win the War 11:18 Lafayette Goes to Bat for His Friend 12:05 Congress Grants James His Freedom 12:36 What These Stories Teach Us About America 250   👍 Like this video if you love stories about the unsung heroes of American history 🔔 Subscribe for more stories about liberty, courage, and the people who shaped America 💬 Comment below: Which of these two spies' stories surprised you the most?   Shop Resources: 📘 Explore the people, ideas, and events that shaped America in The Tuttle Twins America's History Volume 1 & 2 Bundle: https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/americas-history-volume-1-2-bundle   📘 Learn about courage and the heroes who defied the odds in The Tuttle Twins and the Search for Atlas: https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/the-tuttle-twins-and-the-search-for-atlas   📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com   #AmericanRevolution #RevolutionaryWar #HerculesMulligan #JamesArmisteadLafayette #UnsungHeroes #BattleOfYorktown #MarquisDeLafayette #America250 #AmericanHistory #TuttleTwins #LibertarianHistory #FoundingFathers

    13 min
  4. 11 June

    Why Was Moral Character So Important to the Founding Fathers?

    America's founders believed a free society could only survive if its people practiced self-control, integrity, personal responsibility, and virtue. The Founding Fathers didn't believe freedom meant doing whatever you wanted without consequences. Leaders like George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson understood that liberty requires strong moral character — because if individuals cannot govern themselves, government will eventually step in to govern them. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we explore why character was so central to America's founding. From John Adams' belief that laws cannot save a society without virtue, to George Washington's discipline and leadership, to Benjamin Franklin's daily pursuit of self-improvement, we look at how the founders connected freedom with responsibility. A free country depends on more than good laws — it depends on people who are willing to do what is right, keep their word, control their impulses, and stand on principle. What You'll Learn in This Episode: Why moral character mattered so much to the Founding Fathers How personal responsibility supports a free society What self-control, integrity, and moral independence mean Why John Adams believed virtue was essential to liberty How George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson practiced self-improvement Why self-discipline matters more than government control Timestamps: 0:00 Why Character Matters in a Free Society 2:00 What Does It Mean to Build Character? 4:00 Self-Control, Integrity, and Moral Independence 6:30 John Adams and the Importance of Virtue 9:00 George Washington's Discipline and Leadership 11:30 Benjamin Franklin's 13 Virtues 14:00 Thomas Jefferson, Education, and Moral Reasoning 16:30 Why Self-Discipline Protects Freedom 👍 Like this video if you believe freedom requires responsibility 🔔 Subscribe for more values-based conversations about history, liberty, and character 💬 Comment below: Which character trait do you think matters most in a free society? Shop Resources: 📘 Learn more about personal responsibility, self-discipline, and character in The Tuttle Twins and the 12 Rules Boot Camp https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/the-tuttle-twins-and-the-12-rules-boot-camp 📘 Explore the people, ideas, and events that shaped America in The Tuttle Twins America's History Volume 1 & 2 Bundle https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/americas-history-volume-1-2-bundle 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com Tags: #MoralCharacter #FoundingFathers #GeorgeWashington #JohnAdams #PersonalResponsibility #SelfDiscipline #AmericanHistory #ValuesEducation

    13 min
  5. 9 June

    Who Was Deborah Sampson? The Girl Who Disguised Herself to Fight in the Revolution

    When women weren't allowed to serve in the army, Deborah Sampson risked everything to fight for American independence anyway. Deborah Sampson was one of the most remarkable unsung heroes of the American Revolution. Born in Massachusetts and raised through hardship, she grew up strong, determined, and deeply committed to the cause of liberty. But because women were not allowed to serve as soldiers, she made a bold decision: she disguised herself as a man and enlisted under the name Robert Shurtleff. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we tell the incredible true story of Deborah Sampson's courage, sacrifice, and determination. She fought in combat, endured battlefield wounds, removed a bullet from her own leg to protect her secret, and served for more than a year before her identity was discovered. Even after being sent home, her bravery was honored — and she became the only woman to receive a full military pension for serving in the Revolutionary War. Her story reminds us that courage means standing up for what you believe in, even when the rules say you can't. What You'll Learn in This Episode: Who Deborah Sampson was and why her story matters Why women were not allowed to serve as soldiers during the Revolution How Deborah disguised herself and enlisted in the army What she endured while fighting for American independence Why her courage earned recognition after the war How her story shows sacrifice, bravery, and love of liberty Timestamps: 0:00 An Unsung Hero of the Revolutionary War 1:30 Who Was Deborah Sampson? 3:30 From Hardship to Strength 5:30 Why She Joined the Army in Disguise 7:30 Fighting as Robert Shurtleff 9:30 Wounded in Battle 11:30 How Her Secret Was Discovered 13:30 Deborah Sampson's Honorable Discharge 15:00 Her Life After the War 16:30 Why Her Courage Still Matters 👍 Like this video if you believe courage can change history 🔔 Subscribe for more values-based conversations about American history, liberty, and character 💬 Comment below: Would you have been brave enough to do what Deborah Sampson did? Shop Resources: 📘 Learn more about the people, ideas, and events that shaped America in The Tuttle Twins America's History Volume 1 & 2 Bundle https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/americas-history-volume-1-2-bundle 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com Tags: #DeborahSampson #AmericanRevolution #RevolutionaryWar #WomenInHistory #AmericanHistory #Liberty #Courage #ValuesEducation

    10 min
  6. 4 June

    Who Was Stephen Langton? The Man Who Told a King "No" and Helped Shape Magna Carta

    One courageous scholar helped remind the world that even kings must live under the rule of law. Stephen Langton may not be a household name, but his courage and conviction helped change the limits of power forever. As Archbishop of Canterbury, Langton refused to become a pawn of King John and later helped give the barons the language, ideas, and moral clarity they needed to stand against the king's abuse of power. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we tell the story of Stephen Langton, King John, and the events that helped lead to Magna Carta in 1215. We explore how Langton's commitment to truth, limited government, and the rule of law helped shape one of the most important documents in human history — a document that would later influence the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the idea that rulers are not above the law. Sometimes changing history doesn't require a sword. Sometimes it starts with the courage to speak the truth. What You'll Learn in This Episode: Who Stephen Langton was and why his story matters Why King John was such a dangerous and abusive ruler How Magna Carta helped limit the power of kings Why the rule of law matters for liberty How ideas, words, and courage can change history Timestamps: 0:00 Why Magna Carta Still Matters 1:30 Who Was Stephen Langton? 3:30 King John and the Abuse of Power 6:00 Why Langton Refused to Be the King's Pawn 8:30 Returning From Exile 10:30 The Road to Magna Carta 12:30 The Rule of Law Explained 15:00 How Langton Helped the Barons Stand Firm 17:30 Why Courageous Ideas Matter 👍 Like this video if you believe no ruler should be above the law 🔔 Subscribe for more values-based conversations about history, liberty, and courage 💬 Comment below: Why do you think Magna Carta still matters today? Shop Resources: 📘 Learn more about Stephen Langton and other courageous heroes who changed history in The Tuttle Twins Guide to Courageous Heroes https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/the-tuttle-twins-guide-to-courageous-heroes 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com Tags: #StephenLangton #MagnaCarta #KingJohn #RuleOfLaw #LimitedGovernment #CourageousHeroes #Liberty #ValuesEducation

    11 min
  7. 2 June

    Who Was Frédéric Bastiat? The Law, Liberty, and the Proper Role of Government

    When government stops protecting our rights and starts violating them, the law becomes a weapon instead of a shield. Frédéric Bastiat was a French economist and writer whose timeless essay The Law remains one of the clearest defenses of liberty, property rights, and limited government. His central question was simple but powerful: What is the law actually supposed to do? In this episode of The Way the World Works, we explore Bastiat's argument that the law should protect life, liberty, and property — not control people's lives, redistribute wealth, or give government permission to do things individuals could never morally do themselves. We break down his warning against "legal plunder," the idea that government can disguise theft as law, and explain why bad laws shrink freedom even when they claim to help. If something is wrong for an individual to do, why would it suddenly become right when government does it? What You'll Learn in This Episode: Who Frédéric Bastiat was and why his ideas still matter What The Law teaches about life, liberty, and property Why the law should be a shield, not a sword What Bastiat meant by "legal plunder" How bad laws can violate rights while claiming to protect people Why good ideas are the best way to fight bad laws Timestamps: 0:00 Who Was Frédéric Bastiat? 2:00 Why The Law Matters 4:30 What Is the Proper Role of Government? 6:30 Life, Liberty, and Property 8:30 The Law as a Shield, Not a Sword 10:30 What Is Legal Plunder? 13:30 How to Spot a Bad Law 16:00 Fighting Bad Laws With Better Ideas 👍 Like this video if you believe government should protect rights — not violate them 🔔 Subscribe for more values-based conversations about liberty, economics, and government 💬 Comment below: What do you think the law is supposed to do? Shop Resources: 📘 Learn more about Frédéric Bastiat's ideas on law, liberty, and government in The Tuttle Twins Learn About The Law https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/the-tuttle-twins-learn-about-the-law 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com Tags: #FredericBastiat #TheLaw #Liberty #PropertyRights #LimitedGovernment #LegalPlunder #Economics #ValuesEducation

    15 min
  8. 26 May

    Why Was Lexington and Concord So Important? The Shot Heard Around the World

    The Revolutionary War didn't begin with the Declaration of Independence. It began more than a year earlier when ordinary colonists stood up to the most powerful army in the world. In April 1775, tensions between the American colonies and the British Crown finally erupted in Massachusetts at Lexington and Concord. Long before the Declaration was signed, colonists had already been resisting British taxes, restrictions, and military pressure, and the British believed they could crush the rebellion before it truly began. In this episode of The Way the World Works, we explain why Lexington and Concord became one of the most important moments in American history. We break down why British soldiers marched toward Lexington, why they wanted to arrest Samuel Adams and John Hancock, how colonial information networks warned the militias, and why the "shot heard around the world" marked the beginning of the Revolutionary War. The British underestimated the courage, organization, and determination of ordinary Americans, and that mistake changed history. What You'll Learn in This Episode: Why Lexington and Concord happened before the Declaration of Independence What the British hoped to accomplish in Massachusetts Why Samuel Adams and John Hancock were targets How Paul Revere and colonial messengers helped warn the militias What "the shot heard around the world" really means Why the colonists' victory at Concord mattered so much Timestamps: 0:00 America 250 and Revolutionary War History 2:00 What Was Lexington and Concord? 4:00 Why Massachusetts Was Ground Zero 6:00 The British Plan to Stop the Rebellion 8:30 Minutemen, Militias, and Local Resistance 11:00 Paul Revere and the Warning System 14:00 The Shot Heard Around the World 16:30 What Happened at Concord 19:00 Why Lexington and Concord Changed History 👍 Like this video if you believe ordinary people can change history 🔔 Subscribe for more values-based conversations about American history and liberty 💬 Comment below: What moment from the American Revolution inspires you most? Shop Resources: 📘 Learn more about the people, ideas, and events that shaped America in The Tuttle Twins America's History Volume 1 & 2 Bundle https://www.tuttletwins.com/products/americas-history-volume-1-2-bundle 📚 Get Tuttle Twins books and homeschool resources: https://tuttletwins.com Tags: #LexingtonAndConcord #ShotHeardRoundTheWorld #AmericanRevolution #RevolutionaryWar #America250 #AmericanHistory #Liberty #ValuesEducation

    17 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.6
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

From the trusted team behind the Tuttle Twins books, join us as we tackle current events, hot topics, and fun ideas to help your family find clarity in a world full of confusion.

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