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The WallBuilders Show

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green
The WallBuilders Show
Latest episode

930 episodes

  • The WallBuilders Show

    What Israel’s Nuclear Secrecy Reveals About Alliance And Deterrence

    05/08/2026 | 26 mins.
    Demanding that Israel reveal its nuclear defenses in the middle of a regional war sounds like “oversight” until you ask the obvious question: who benefits from making an ally’s deterrence easier to map and target? We walk through why that request is so dangerous, what it signals about the political climate around antisemitism, and the little-known US policy dating back to 1969 that helps keep sensitive allied capabilities out of public view. 

    Then we shift from foreign policy to life at home with newly released Department of Justice records describing anti-Christian bias under the Biden administration. We talk through what the report says about the scope of targeting across agencies, the controversy around the FBI memo on “radical traditional Catholics,” and why transparency matters if we want equal treatment for people of faith and real protection for religious liberty. The goal isn’t tribal scorekeeping, it’s guardrails that stop government weaponization against any viewpoint. 

    We also dig into a fascinating angle on the Iran war that doesn’t get enough airtime: oil. Global reserves, blocked exports, storage limits, and even the technical reality that shutting in wells can permanently damage production all create leverage that can push negotiations faster than speeches ever will. We close with two culture stories that hit close to home: a Surgeon General nominee with a pro-life, pro-motherhood message and the return of the Eisenhower physical fitness test as a push for discipline and healthier kids. 

    If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with the takeaway you want more people to hear.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    How National Prayer Proclamations Shaped American Life

    05/07/2026 | 26 mins.
    National Day of Prayer can feel like a modern flashpoint, but the deeper story is older and far more bipartisan than most people realize. We walk through the historical evidence that public prayer has been woven into American life from the start, including moments like Columbus’ prayers of thanksgiving, prayer observances tied to Jamestown and Plymouth, and a remarkable scene from September 6, 1774, when the First Continental Congress opens with prayer and Scripture for nearly two hours. If you’ve ever wondered whether faith belongs in America’s public square, that timeline changes the whole frame.

    We also trace how the National Day of Prayer became a formal part of American civic practice. We talk through the 1952 law during President Truman’s era, the organizing push that formed the National Prayer Committee in 1979, the first major coordinated event under President Reagan in 1983, and the 1988 legislation that set the first Thursday in May. Along the way, we discuss why leaders saw prayer as a key distinction between rights that come from government and rights grounded in God, plus the role of the National Prayer Breakfast and how it has even helped foster peace talks abroad.

    Then we pivot to listener questions with real legal consequences. Why do political ads get away with blatant lies if libel and slander are real offenses? We break down the “public figure” defamation standard that makes accountability so difficult today and why some justices have called for rethinking it. We close with a surprising American history detail: Ohio’s 1803 statehood was real, but Congress still had to clean up a technical oversight in 1953 by retroactively affirming what everyone already recognized.

    Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who cares about faith and liberty, and leave a review. What part of America’s prayer history surprised you most?
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    What Freedom Costs When Government Sets Prices - with Bob McEwen

    05/06/2026 | 26 mins.
    Gas prices spike and the first instinct is to blame “greedy oil companies,” but that explanation falls apart once you follow the math of a global commodities market. We sit down with former Congressman Bob McEwen to untangle a listener’s question: if America has so much oil, why do Americans still feel the pain at the pump? The answer runs straight through supply and demand, worldwide buyers, disruptions in major producers, and the reality that prices are signals, not slogans.

    From there, we take on the loaded term “price gouging” with a simple example that hits home: what happens to a business when replacement costs jump overnight? That retail logic applies to oil too, and it exposes why a snapshot of “profit” can be misleading when tomorrow’s inventory costs more than yesterday’s. We also talk about government price caps, why socialist-style price controls create shortages and empty shelves, and how political promises to “set the price” usually end by breaking the incentives needed to produce, refine, and deliver energy.

    We wrap by digging into futures markets, the risk entrepreneurs take to stabilize pricing, and the constitutional idea of limited government as a servant of the people, not a manager of every decision. Finally, we connect economic freedom to a deeper foundation: liberty works best when a society has shared moral restraints, because without them the pressure for more government control only grows. If you found this helpful, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: where should the line be between smart regulation and harmful micromanagement?
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    God’s Hand Runs Through America’s History - with Cynthia Scott

    05/05/2026 | 26 mins.
    America’s 250th anniversary is forcing a blunt question: are we willing to tell the real story of the nation’s founding, or only the version that fits today’s politics? We dig into why we see the “hand of Providence” as more than a slogan, walking through moments from early exploration to the Pilgrims, the awakenings, and the ideas that shaped the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. If you’ve ever wondered why so many leaders spoke openly about God’s guidance in public life, we lay out the historical logic and the original-source mindset behind that claim. 

    We also wrestle with the present. A recent act of violence in Washington, DC becomes a sober doorway into the breakdown of shared moral language and what happens when people are trained to see their neighbors as Nazis or enemies who must be stopped at all costs. We connect faith, moral formation, and constitutional liberty, and we talk candidly about why a free society can’t survive if everyone invents right and wrong for themselves. 

    Then Cynthia Scott joins us to share why she wrote “Celebrating God, Our Founder at America’s 250th Birthday,” a blend of historical truths and chapter-by-chapter prayers designed for personal devotion, small groups, and corporate prayer. We close with practical ways to mark the 250th in your own community, including reading the Declaration aloud and using trusted resources to teach the next generation. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What’s one piece of American history you wish every student learned?
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    No Limbs No Limits - with Nick Vujicic

    05/04/2026 | 26 mins.
    A kid attempts suicide at 10. He grows up with no arms and no legs. Then he spends his life crossing the globe telling people there is still hope. That’s why we brought back our friend Nick Vujicic, and why his new documentary film, No Limbs No Limits, matters far beyond a moving success story.

    We talk with Nick about what the film reveals that most people have never seen: home footage, family voices, the pain behind the platform, and the faith that carried him through depression, anxiety, and despair. He explains the release plan, the September 25, 2026 premiere, and how the project is being funded and distributed so it can reach the next generation at scale. If you care about Christian testimony, gospel outreach, and honest conversations about mental health and purpose, you’ll want to hear Nick’s heart for why this film exists.

    Before the interview, we also share highlights from our trip with Patriot Institute scholars to Washington, DC and Philadelphia, including the unforgettable moment of signing a Declaration of Independence copy inside Independence Hall during the 250th anniversary season. We reflect on the courage of the 56 signers, why their biographies still matter, and how the Great Awakening and George Whitefield connect faith to culture in a way that still challenges us today.

    Subscribe for more conversations on faith, culture, American history, and the Constitution, then share this episode and leave a review so more people can find it.
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About The WallBuilders Show

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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