PodcastsChristianityThe WallBuilders Show

The WallBuilders Show

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

899 episodes

  • The WallBuilders Show

    What Nature Teaches About Rights And Responsibility

    2026/03/26 | 26 mins.
    TSA delays, shutdown threats, and airport security drama raise a bigger question than most headlines admit: who should be responsible for keeping travelers safe, and what does the Constitution actually allow? We dig into the growing push to privatize TSA-style screening, why some lawmakers argue airports or airlines should carry more of the burden, and how accountability changes when government runs a system versus when a private operator runs it under a clear standard. Along the way, we talk candidly about what travelers experience on the ground, why effectiveness matters more than optics, and why a “Chick-fil-A run the line” joke lands because people are hungry for competence. 

    We also tackle the confusion around ICE at airports and the way social media can turn routine law enforcement into instant political theater. Words like “police state” and “fascist” get thrown around fast, so we slow down and define terms. If we want honest debate about immigration enforcement, homeland security, and public safety, we have to start with reality instead of outrage. We connect that to the Senate funding fight and the deeper issue underneath it: politicians rarely change course until voters make the consequences real. 

    Then we shift gears into one of the most important lines in the Declaration of Independence: “the laws of nature and of nature’s God.” What are those laws beyond self-defense? We share a practical way to think about natural law through observation and Scripture, including why Job 38 is a powerful crash course in learning from creation. If you care about constitutional government, biblical worldview, and everyday policies that affect real families, this conversation ties them together. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway from the TSA and natural law discussion.
    Support the show
  • The WallBuilders Show

    Election Day Means Election Day

    2026/03/25 | 26 mins.
    Election rules don’t just decide winners, they decide whether people believe the system is honest. We start with the Supreme Court weighing whether states can keep counting mail-in ballots days after Election Day, and why the drift from “election day” to “election week” can punish transparency, stretch uncertainty, and invite suspicion. We also cover the Court’s recent standing decision that strengthens the ability of candidates to challenge election procedures in court, which could change how future election disputes are handled.

    From there, we head to California, where a Riverside County sheriff seized hundreds of thousands of ballots after a major mismatch appeared between ballot logs and reported totals. We talk voter ID, chain of custody, record retention, and why “human error” isn’t a satisfying answer when the numbers don’t reconcile. If election integrity is the goal, verification has to be normal, not controversial.

    Then we pivot to global stakes: the reported five-day pause with Iran, Israel’s continued strikes, what may be happening inside the Iranian regime, and how all of it connects to China, oil markets, and long-term security. We also reflect on the underground church in Iran and why spiritual and cultural change can be part of the story people miss.

    Subscribe for more biblical, historical, and constitutional analysis, share this with a friend, and leave a review if it helps. What’s the single most important reform for rebuilding trust: tighter deadlines, voter ID, or better transparency?
    Support the show
  • The WallBuilders Show

    Why Conservatives Must Vet Candidates Before They Rise - With Heidi St John

    2026/03/24 | 26 mins.
    A decorated past, a tragic story, a viral interview, and suddenly millions of people are treating a politician’s new talking points as truth. That’s a recipe for getting played, and we’ve seen it happen before. Heidi St. John joins us to unpack the Joe Kent controversy, what she witnessed firsthand on the campaign trail, and why the real issue is bigger than one candidate.

    We talk about how media narratives get built, how endorsements can suck the oxygen out of a race, and why conservatives can’t afford lazy discernment. Heidi explains why she flagged warning signs early, what “vetting” should actually look like, and why a résumé, charisma, or military service can never replace a clear record and consistent values. We also wrestle with a hard but necessary idea: multiple things can be true at once, including gratitude for service and serious concerns about a person’s leadership.

    Then we widen the lens to the long-term fight. Heidi shares what she’s learning through building a thriving homeschool resource center and why education is shaping the next generation of voters. We address burnout, the lure of conspiracy culture, and the danger of outsourcing your worldview to influencers instead of grounding yourself in Scripture and solid sources. If you care about faith and culture, civic responsibility, and how to recruit better leaders locally, you’ll walk away with practical steps and a renewed sense of duty.

    If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s tired of the noise, and leave a review so more people can find it. What’s one question you always ask before you trust a public voice?
    Support the show
  • The WallBuilders Show

    Iran And Israel Update - with Jonathan Feldstein

    2026/03/23 | 26 mins.
    The headlines move fast, but the hard question stays the same: what does “success” actually look like when Iran is at the center of a regional firestorm and Israel is fighting for its future. We talk through why Americans feel whiplash right now from shifting narratives on the right and left, and why mission clarity matters more than slogans when troops, trade routes, and global stability are on the line. If leaders can define objectives, limits, and an end state, public trust holds. If they cannot, the fog of war turns into a fog of politics. 

    Jonathan Feldstein returns with an Israel-focused update while temporarily stuck in the United States, and he doesn’t mince words about how we got here. We dig into decades of appeasement, the consequences of regime funding, and why “Death to America” is not a cute chant but a declared threat that should be taken seriously in any Iran policy analysis. We also explore the practical knock-on effects many listeners feel immediately, including shipping lanes, oil prices, and the fear of a prolonged conflict that drags on for years. 

    Then the conversation widens into something most geopolitics shows won’t touch: what happens after the regime. Feldstein argues Iran is not Hamas, describing a hijacked nation with deep Persian roots and signs of widespread rejection of radical Islam, including the growth of an underground Christian church. We talk about why visiting Israel changes minds, how truth cuts through propaganda, and what people of faith can do right now through Genesis123.co, including prayer and tangible support. If you care about Israel security, US foreign policy, and the future of the Middle East, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest question about what comes next.
    Support the show
  • The WallBuilders Show

    What Happens When A Nation Prays Again

    2026/03/20 | 26 mins.
    A 20% nationwide drop in murder. Thousands of missing kids found. Tens of thousands of Texas families rushing to school choice on day one. If you’re tired of doomscrolling, we’ve got a stack of stories that point to something different: when leaders restrain evil, protect families, and tell the truth out loud, the results show up in the numbers and in the culture.

    We start with new FBI data and what it says about law enforcement priorities, public safety, gangs, fentanyl seizures, and the renewed pursuit of child predators. From there, we shift to an unexpected cultural signal: the Melania documentary hitting number one on Amazon Prime in the US and worldwide. We talk about what the film reportedly highlights, why the media attention feels lopsided, and why viewers’ choices can quietly undermine propaganda.

    Next we get practical with education policy and the Texas school choice rollout, including the scale of the program, who applies, and why competition tends to raise academic outcomes while lowering costs. We also cover a tense international story involving the Iranian women’s soccer team threatened for refusing to sing Iran’s anthem, plus the push for asylum protections in Australia. We close with the National Prayer Breakfast, the America Praise Initiative, and the May 17 prayer gathering on the National Mall as part of the 250th anniversary.

    If you care about faith and culture, FBI crime statistics, school choice in Texas, and how prayer shows up in public life, this conversation ties it together. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs some good news, and leave a review with the story that mattered most to you.
    Support the show

More Christianity podcasts

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.
Podcast website

Listen to The WallBuilders Show, The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features