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.

  1. 5H AGO

    Supreme Court Liability And Border Fixes That Change Daily Life

    A lot of headlines feel like noise until you ask one question: who is actually being held accountable? That’s where we start on Good News Friday. We walk through a US Supreme Court decision that shifts the legal landscape for trucking companies, especially when crashes involve drivers who aren’t properly trained, don’t meet basic standards, or can’t read critical road signs. When liability gets real, incentives change fast, and that can mean fewer tragedies on the highway and clearer options for families seeking justice after negligence.  Then we dig into a surprising development from the Department of Justice: a massive fund designed to help victims of government “weaponization” seek redress through a defined process. We talk about what it could mean for trust in institutions, why lawful avenues for grievances matter, and how accountability is supposed to work when government actors cross the line.  We also hit two big immigration policy stories with real-world impact: DHS fast-tracking border barriers near Big Bend to disrupt trafficking routes, and the US stepping away from the UN Global Compact on Migration. That opens a bigger conversation about sovereignty, assimilation, culture, and the difference between compassion and chaos. If you want news you can evaluate instead of just react to, listen through and share your take with us. Subscribe, send this to a friend who needs some good news, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Support the show

    27 min
  2. 1D AGO

    Civics Before Congress

    It feels obvious to say lawmakers should know the Constitution before they’re trusted with power, budgets, and national policy. But once we follow that idea all the way down, the real question becomes harder: can we legally require a civics test for Congress without breaking the Constitution itself? We walk through what the Constitution actually allows for congressional qualifications and why adding requirements by simple legislation runs into a wall. We also wrestle with the unintended consequences of “knowledge tests,” especially the nightmare scenario of political actors gaming the system by controlling the questions. Along the way, we talk about what citizens can do right now that doesn’t require a new law: public accountability, candidate forums, and encouraging trainings like Constitutional Alive and Biblical Citizenship so candidates and voters understand separation of powers and how our constitutional republic is supposed to function. Then we pivot to immigration and the Bible. A huge amount of today’s debate gets shaped by English translations that blur important categories. Drawing on Rabbi Daniel Lapin’s insight, we explain how Hebrew uses different words that can map to different kinds of immigrants, including a Ruth-like commitment to fully join a people, permission to live and work, and unlawful entry. That nuance changes how Christians should think and speak about immigration policy. We close with a candid look at indoctrination, education, and why uninformed voting is often the predictable result of one-sided schooling rather than simple ignorance. If you find this helpful, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can rebuild real civic and biblical literacy. Support the show

    27 min
  3. 2D AGO

    Frederick Douglass Against Marxism - with KCarl Smith

    Marxism doesn’t spread mainly through economics, it spreads through a story: nothing is fixed, everything must be remade, and the only way forward is to pit people into oppressor and oppressed. We push back on that story from a biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective, and we get specific about the differences between socialism, Marxism, and communism and why they all move toward coercion and loss of liberty. If you’ve ever wondered why these ideas keep getting rebranded for new generations, we connect the pattern to the way history is no longer taught or tested the way it used to be. We also revisit America’s early warnings. Jamestown and Plymouth both experimented with shared-property models and learned the hard way what happens when responsibility gets detached from reward. Those examples aren’t dusty trivia. They’re case studies that help parents, pastors, and students evaluate today’s promises about “new” versions of old systems and see why outcomes repeat across time and place. Then we’re joined by K Carl Smith, author of *Douglass vs Marx*, a creative, source-based “debate” built from the actual writings of Frederick Douglass and Karl Marx. Douglass is uniquely positioned to answer Marx because he lived real oppression, articulated God-given rights, defended personal responsibility, and ultimately called the Constitution a liberty document after reading it for himself. We talk about why Douglass gets clipped and distorted in modern education, how CRT and DEI borrow Marxist categories, and how this book functions like a curriculum with reflections and discussion questions. If you care about freedom, faith, and the future of education, listen, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. Support the show

    27 min
  4. 3D AGO

    A Day Of National Prayer

    Thirty thousand people in 90-degree heat, packed onto the National Mall, singing worship songs and praying for America’s future. That’s not a metaphor or a nostalgia reel, it’s what David and Tim Barton witnessed firsthand in Washington, DC, during a major rededication gathering timed to the 250th anniversary of the Second Continental Congress call for a national day of humiliation, fasting, and prayer. We share what it felt like on the ground, from the atmosphere of worship to the very real moments of fatigue, sunburn, and even people passing out in the crowd.  We also dig into the deeper meaning behind the headlines. Why does this moment matter historically and spiritually? We connect early American prayer proclamations to today’s hunger for moral clarity, and we talk honestly about what lands well and what can feel more like a program than a prayer meeting. Along the way, we highlight some of the most impactful voices and songs, including the closing worship set that culminates in Chris Tomlin leading “Holy Forever” with the Washington Monument behind him and the Capitol in view.  Then we bring it home with the question that actually changes things: what do we take back to our communities? We walk through a powerful biblical framework from Nehemiah, emphasize repentance and personal responsibility, and argue that lasting political renewal can’t outrun spiritual renewal. If you care about faith and culture, American history, and a biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective on where the country goes next, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the one action you think needs to start at your house first. Support the show

    27 min
  5. 4D AGO

    How Church History Fuels Pro-Life Courage Today - with Seth Gruber

    A pastor leads his church out of the sanctuary, marches them to a city wall where unwanted infants are left to die, and starts ripping the bricks down with his bare hands. That forgotten story becomes a mirror for modern America and it is one reason I wanted you to hear Tim Barton’s conversation with pro-life advocate and filmmaker Seth Gruber. We talk about The Last Stand event in Denver and the premiere of Seth’s new film, also called The Last Stand, along with the broader work of White Rose Resistance. Seth makes the case that the church has spent 1,900 years resisting evils that keep resurfacing: abortion and infanticide, the sexualization of kids, blurred gender lines, and the state stepping into the parent-child relationship. He brings history to life through Athanasius, the Nicene-era church leader who preached the Incarnation at the “infanticide walls” and helped spark a new legal imagination for the sanctity of life. We also connect the dots to America’s own foundations. Tim points to Founder James Wilson and early legal reasoning about the protection of unborn life, then asks the question many listeners are thinking: are we being “too extreme”? Seth answers with a warning from civilizational history and cultural sociology, including J D Unwin’s Sex and Culture, and a hard look at 1973 as a hinge point for abortion, pornography, and the broader sexual revolution. If you want a biblical worldview lens on pro-life convictions, Christian citizenship, and how history can fuel courage, this one is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the moment that challenged you most. Support the show

    27 min
  6. MAY 15

    Polls Are Moving And Courts Are Noticing It

    The headlines can make it feel like nothing good is happening, then you zoom in and realize the wins are piling up where it counts: elections, courts, policy, and real-world help for families. We walk through fresh midterm signals, including CNN’s own data analysis showing movement among Black voters that could decide razor-thin races in key districts. The bigger point is simple and practical: tight elections turn on tiny shifts, and optimism is never a reason to sit out, it’s a reason to work harder. From there, we get specific on policy and culture. The launch of moms.gov stands out as a major pro-family move, built to connect pregnant moms and families with resources like grants and supplies. We contrast that with the way abortion-centered institutions frame “services,” and we talk about what it means when government actively promotes motherhood and support instead of steering people toward termination. We also zoom out to foreign policy, NATO spending, troop deployments, and the pressure campaign on European allies to carry their share. Along the way, we react to the latest China diplomacy optics and share a behind-the-scenes story about upgrading America’s air traffic control technology, including how negotiation can save real money. Finally, we end on legal guardrails: Virginia’s redistricting fight and a unanimous US Supreme Court 9-0 decision defending a pro-life pregnancy center from an aggressive state probe. Subscribe for more Good News Friday, share this with a friend, and leave a quick review with the story that mattered most to you. Support the show

    27 min
  7. MAY 14

    Article VII And The Declaration Link

    If you’ve ever wondered why the Constitution sometimes feels “blank” on the biggest moral questions of the day, we make the case that you’re reading it without its foundation. We start with a listener’s question about Article VII and trace the paper trail the Constitution leaves on purpose: it dates itself from the twelfth year of American independence, pointing straight back to the Declaration of Independence and its claims about natural rights, the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God, and government’s duty to protect liberty.  From there we zoom out to the practical consequences of separating the Declaration from the Constitution. We talk through how that split has shaped arguments in American history, and why the founders and early legal thinkers (including Blackstone’s influence on common law) assumed a moral framework underneath the system. If the Declaration becomes “just a preface,” constitutional interpretation can turn into a power contest instead of a principled limit on government.  Then we shift to Washington realities: the filibuster, the 60-vote threshold, and why the Senate often avoids the hard votes that voters want on issues like election integrity, voter ID, and the SAVE Act. We also touch midterm dynamics, redistricting, and why motivation and trust can matter as much as raw numbers. Finally, we answer a question about removing judges for bad behavior, breaking down the impeachment process and why even serious allegations rarely reach a two-thirds Senate conviction.  If you care about constitutional original meaning, the Declaration of Independence, Article VII, Senate rules, and judicial accountability, this one connects the dots. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest question for our next Q&A. Support the show

    27 min
  8. MAY 13

    Can Tolerance Become A Trojan Horse For Tyranny - with Bill Federer

    America has had it so good for so long that we can start to assume freedom is automatic. It isn’t. From Wichita, Kansas at a Liberty Pastors event, we talk about why the 250th anniversary should feel less like a victory lap and more like a wake-up call for Christians who care about religious liberty, civic engagement, and the future of a constitutional republic. Rick Green sits down face-to-face with historian Bill Federer to connect hard headlines to hard history. We dig into the real-world cost of Christian persecution overseas, including a chilling account from the UK that sparked a simple demand with massive implications: “legalize apostasy,” meaning it must be truly legal to leave Islam without violence or retaliation. From there, Bill traces a repeating pattern across centuries: ideologies advance by exploiting internal division, taking advantage of rival factions that refuse to unite around what matters most. We also wrestle with modern information warfare. Influence campaigns don’t just come through movies anymore, they come through your feed, your phone, and now AI systems that learn what triggers fear, anger, and tribal loyalty. If the goal is division, then the antidote is wisdom, courage, and unity around first principles: God-given rights, human equality, and the true purpose of government. If you want a clearer Christian worldview for today’s cultural battles and practical next steps for your church or community, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review to help more people find it. What’s one place you think Americans need to stop fighting each other and start locking shields? Support the show

    27 min
4.8
out of 5
2,162 Ratings

About

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.

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