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. 7 hr ago

    Founders Under Fire

    The Founding Fathers are quoted constantly and understood rarely, and that gap is where bad history thrives. We dig into the real human cost behind the Declaration’s pledge of “lives, fortunes, and sacred honor” and share standout stories from our new book, Lives, Fortunes, and Sacred Honor. You’ll hear what it meant for John Hart to spend a year on the run after signing, and why Francis Lewis’s family story, including Elizabeth Lewis’s imprisonment and failing health, puts teeth into the word “sacrifice.” We also talk honestly about complexity, including William Whipple’s connection to the slave trade and the significance of his decision to free Prince Whipple and publicly oppose slavery.  Then we shift gears into a surprisingly fun piece of American history: sports and athletic life at the White House. From Teddy Roosevelt’s boxing and jujitsu to Taft and Wilson’s golf, to Coolidge’s infamous mechanical horse workouts and Hoover’s invention of Hooverball, we trace how presidents have always interacted with popular culture. That context helps when modern headlines spark outrage, because it reminds us that “new” controversies often have older roots than we think.  We close with a direct answer to concerns about growing Muslim political participation in local elections. The takeaway is practical and constitutional: many races are uncontested and turnout is low, so the community that organizes wins. If you want better outcomes, recruit better candidates, contest every seat, and actually show up to vote. Subscribe, share this with a friend who cares about local government, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Support the show

    27 min
  2. 1 day ago

    Jefferson’s Rough Draft

    The fastest way to cut through modern noise about the Founding Fathers is to put the original documents back in your hands. We’re celebrating America’s 250th anniversary by talking about a replica of Thomas Jefferson’s handwritten draft of the Declaration of Independence, complete with cursive, scratch-outs, and the drafting trail that shows how carefully the words were chosen. It’s not the same as reading the final text online; it’s a front-row seat to the founding process, and it’s an incredible resource for homeschool families, teachers, legislators, and anyone who wants a stronger grip on American civics. We also share why this draft matters in today’s arguments about race, rights, and the nation’s core ideals. When you read what Jefferson actually wrote and trace what changed, you’re equipped to handle “America was uniquely evil” claims with something better than opinions: primary sources. We talk about how the document frames God-given rights, equality, and liberty, and why seeing the edits can change how you understand the founding era. Then we pivot to the people behind the pledge of “lives, fortunes, and sacred honor” as we preview stories from Lives, Fortunes, and Sacred Honor. You’ll hear a hilarious John Adams and Benjamin Franklin moment that feels painfully relatable, plus a sobering account of signer Button Gwinnett’s fatal duel that proves these men were human, even as they did history-shaping work. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves history, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway from the original documents. Support the show

    27 min
  3. 2 days ago

    Patriotism On The Rise - with Dr. Ben Carson

    A fighter wins under the lights and quotes John 3:16 to a massive audience. Another walks out after reading the Declaration of Independence in the Oval Office. Moments like that don’t just feel cinematic, they reveal something real about the cultural weather in America, and we dig into why it matters.  We start by reacting to a weekend packed with patriotic imagery in Washington, DC, and what it signals about the return of public confidence in country and in faith. From national anthem performances and historic backdrops to shout outs to the military and Reagan’s Flag Day message on “informed patriotism,” we talk through why these symbols still hit so hard and why the contrast with anti America messaging feels sharper than ever. We also connect the dots to what we’re hearing from international visitors who are shocked by everyday American freedoms and generosity, and what that gratitude can teach us about civic perspective.  Then Dr. Ben Carson joins us to focus on the long game: kids. We talk about his new K–5 book “Built on Faith,” why the faith of the Founding Fathers belongs in age appropriate patriotic education, and how constitutional history becomes sticky when it’s taught through pictures and stories. We also address the slavery narrative head on, arguing for honest history that includes the full record, including the people and movements that fought to end it.  If you care about civic literacy, biblical literacy, and raising the next generation with a grounded love of country, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest lesson you think every kid should learn about America’s founding. https://bravebooks.us/products/built-on-faith Support the show

    27 min
  4. 3 days ago

    Why Fatherhood Still Matters - with Bill Federer

    Father’s Day is usually framed as a light holiday, but the real story is heavier and a lot more revealing. We sit down with historian Bill Federer to trace the origins of Father’s Day from a heartbreaking coal mine disaster that left hundreds of families without fathers, to the grassroots push that spread nationwide through churches and the YMCA. Along the way, we ask a simple question with huge consequences: what happens to a culture when fatherhood becomes optional, mocked, or absent? We also get practical about why fatherlessness is not just a private family concern. We talk through the social and economic fallout that follows broken homes, from poverty and school failure to crime and the rising costs communities absorb when stability collapses. We connect that to the deeper hunger every kid has for identity and belonging, and why strong families help children resist peer pressure and manipulation when the world offers counterfeit “tribes” in the form of gangs, destructive subcultures, or ideologies that promise structure without grace. To close, we look at how to rebuild: recovering respect for fathers, strengthening marriage and family, and choosing daily habits that form resilient sons and daughters. Bill shares standout historical voices and a powerful Father of the Year reflection from General Douglas MacArthur that reframes fatherhood as building, not destroying. If you care about faith and culture, biblical citizenship, American history, and the future of the family, this conversation is for you. Subscribe for more conversations from a biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective, then share this with a dad who needs encouragement and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Support the show

    27 min
  5. 6 days ago

    Lives, Fortunes, And The Culture Shift

    The founders weren’t a tidy, unanimous blob of “great men,” and the more you learn about them, the more gripping the real story gets. We kick off Good News Friday with something we’ve been itching to share: our new book, “Lives, Fortune, Sacred Honors,” a fast-moving set of modern biographies on all 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence. Along the way, we talk through the kinds of details most Americans never hear, from personal rivalries and street-level violence to the brutal costs some families paid for liberty. If you’ve ever searched for Declaration of Independence signers, Founding Fathers biographies, or the meaning behind “lives, fortunes, and sacred honor,” this is the deep dive that still moves at a readable pace. From there, we zoom into the headlines shaping faith and culture right now. We react to new polling that shows support for the LGBTQ lifestyle and gender transition dropping, and we unpack why moral trends matter far beyond one issue. We connect the dots between religion, morality, public policy, and the long-term health of a nation, including how media moments and detransitioner stories changed what many people were willing to question out loud. We also hit two big policy stories: the ATF rolling back Biden-era gun rules and what that means for Second Amendment rights and self-defense, plus new data showing churches speaking more clearly about abortion and pro-life convictions. We close with a Pentagon update that trims hundreds of “recognized” religion codes while emphasizing religious liberty and chaplains, and we ask what it looks like to stay focused on mission without turning faith into bureaucratic nonsense. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Links to Good News Stories: https://www.theblaze.com/news/support-for-the-lgbtq-lifestyle-is-in-free-fall-poll https://www.newsmax.com/us/trump-atf-joe-biden/2026/06/05/id/1258653/ https://notthebee.com/article/poll-support-for-same-sex-marriage-is-dropping-and-republican-support-has-cratered https://www.lifenews.com/2026/06/03/new-poll-finds-churches-are-speaking-out-against-abortion/ https://www.foxnews.com/politics/pentagon-drops-180-faiths-militarys-recognized-religions-list Support the show

    27 min
  6. 11 Jun

    Civics Before Committee Power

    What if we stopped pretending “anyone can lead” means “no one needs to know the basics”? We dig into a listener-driven idea with real constitutional teeth: you cannot add extra requirements to be elected to Congress beyond what the Constitution already lists, but leadership can absolutely decide who gets committee assignments, chairmanships, and real influence. If you want the gavel, prove you understand the country you are governing. From there, we explore why the U.S. citizenship test keeps coming up in this conversation about civic literacy. Immigrants often learn enough in a short course to pass at high rates, while American students can struggle with the same material after years of schooling. That contrast raises hard questions about civics education, constitutional knowledge, and what we should reasonably expect from lawmakers in a constitutional republic. We also pivot to two fascinating listener questions: whether everyday citizens have the right to investigate a decades-old crime and what that looks like without police powers, and whether Freemasons truly shaped the founding the way conspiracy stories claim. We talk history, primary-source context, George Washington’s actual connection, and why Freemasonry in the 1700s is not the same as modern Masonry, even if the name sounds familiar. If you care about the Constitution, the Founding Fathers, faith and culture, and practical ways to rebuild civic understanding, share this conversation, subscribe, and leave a review so more people can find it. What standard would you set for committee leadership? Support the show

    27 min
  7. 10 Jun

    Building on the American Heritage Series - Revival and Reformation

    Revival is one of those words that can feel inspiring and vague at the same time, so we decided to get concrete. We talk about what revival actually looks like when you compare Scripture with American history and we challenge the popular idea that renewal is a quick spiritual adrenaline rush that fixes everything overnight. The Great Awakenings didn’t last a weekend. They lasted decades, and they changed the way everyday people thought, lived, and participated in public life. We dig into the First Great Awakening and why many historians argue it helped lay the groundwork for the United States itself. Then we zoom in on George Whitefield, whose relentless missionary travels and staggering preaching schedule show the real cost behind spiritual movements. We also look at a surprising pattern: opposition to revival often comes from “spiritual” circles that feel threatened by new methods, new unity, or new priorities. If you’ve ever wondered why good change can create conflict, history has receipts. From there we get practical. Prayer matters, but prayer that never turns into action stalls out. We discuss why Scripture puts special emphasis on praying for leaders, how praying for officials can reshape our own hearts, and how to think about advisors and staff who influence policy. Finally, we tackle the big question: how do you measure revival? The strongest markers aren’t just church metrics, but cultural fruit like integrity, accountability, and a refusal to tolerate what once felt “normal.” Subscribe for more conversations at the intersection of faith and politics, share this with a friend, and leave a review if it sharpened the way you think about revival. What’s one cultural change you’d expect to see if renewal were real? Support the show

    27 min
  8. 9 Jun

    Flag Day Decoded - with Bill Federer

    Flag Day isn’t a modern, made-up observance. It reaches back to a wartime decision on June 14, 1777, when the Second Continental Congress chose a national flag in the middle of the American Revolution. We walk through that origin story, why Francis Hopkinson belongs in the center of it, and how the familiar Betsy Ross claim shows what happens when legend outruns documentation. If you care about American history, the founding era, and civic literacy, this timeline changes how you see the symbol flying outside your home, school, or church. Our friend Bill Federer joins us to lay out the surprisingly clear chain from the flag to the Pledge of Allegiance: early drafts in the late 1800s, public school adoption, and Woodrow Wilson’s 1916 declaration of National Flag Day. We also dig into presidential language around faith and freedom, including how leaders framed liberty of conscience and religious liberty as core American principles rather than optional extras. Then we tackle the Cold War turning point: the 1954 addition of “one nation under God,” the role of the Knights of Columbus, and the story of a pastor who challenged President Eisenhower with a simple question, what truly makes America different from regimes that can mouth the same words about “liberty and justice.” We connect that to a bigger conversation about where rights come from, what happens when a nation forgets its past, and why education shapes culture. If this helped you, subscribe, share it for Flag Day, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Support the show

    27 min

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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