
Teaching America’s Founders With Principles, Not Trivia
2026/1/15 | 26 mins.
Credit card APR creeping into the high 20s can feel like quicksand, and that’s exactly where we start—by asking whether a president can, or should, cap rates at 10 percent for a year. We sort the legal from the rhetorical, exploring the constitutional limits on executive power, the real-world ripple effects of price controls, and how a bully pulpit can move industries without writing a single rule. Through a biblical lens, we talk about profit versus exploitation, why Scripture warns against practices that deepen debt bondage, and how moral responsibility belongs to lenders and borrowers alike.From there we zoom out to solutions that outlast headlines. We dig into practical reforms that reinforce a healthy market: more transparency, fewer subsidies that distort risk, and serious financial literacy so families recognize the cost of compounding interest before it traps them. That thread carries us into the second half: how to teach America’s founding in a way that forms judgment, not just memory. We make the case for principles over trivia—using primary sources, biographies, and site visits to let students encounter real people, wrestle with real choices, and extract lessons that apply to school boards, budgets, and daily life.We also share resources for parents and teachers who want to start now: story-rich materials, digitized archives, and programs that bring history to life. The goal is a generation confident in reading the past for wisdom, not just facts—citizens who prefer persuasion over force, and character over convenience. If that resonates, hit follow, share this with a friend who’s battling debt or building a curriculum, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can bring more conversations like this to your feed.Support the show

What Happens When Faith Communities Get A Seat At The Table
2026/1/14 | 26 mins.
What if the fastest way to shrink the foster care system is to prevent entries in the first place? We unpack Florida’s results-driven approach that invited churches and nonprofits into a formal partnership with state agencies—without crossing constitutional lines—and turned compassion into measurable change. By treating faith communities as essential partners in prevention, crisis care, and reunification, Florida built real-time bridges between caseworkers and congregations and saw foster care numbers drop dramatically.We walk through the simple moves that changed the tone and the outcomes: 40,000 thank-you notes acknowledging existing service, a “red phone” straight into the governor’s office for pastors and ministry leaders, and a tech platform that alerts nearby churches when a caseworker logs a family’s urgent need. Often, the missing piece keeping a child safe at home was as basic as a bed. When churches delivered that bed, they built relationships that stabilized families long after the request was met.The results speak for themselves: 2,200 churches collaborating statewide, a 34–40% reduction in foster care population from roughly 23,332 to under 15,000, and an estimated $248 million in annual taxpayer savings. More important, thousands of children avoided the trauma of removal because support arrived upstream. We also share a step-by-step playbook any state can adapt: map the faith landscape, extend an authentic invitation, centralize communication for faith leaders, deploy a needs-matching tool like CarePortal, and offer multiple on-ramps for congregations to serve within legal and ethical guardrails.If you care about child welfare reform, faith-based community impact, and practical policy that works, this conversation offers both the vision and the toolkit. Subscribe, share with a policymaker or pastor, and leave a review with your state—what’s the first step you’d take to build this bridge where you live?Support the show

Founders, Faith, And The Fight To Protect Private Property
2026/1/13 | 26 mins.
What if the surest way to protect every right you love is to start with the front door on its hinges and the deed in your drawer? We dig into the founders’ most overlooked insight: secure property is the spine of liberty. Tim Barton walks through original sources—Adams, Madison, Dickinson, Lee—and shows how they linked private ownership to freedom, moral order, and social trust. Then we test those principles against today’s realities: swelling assessments, layered taxes, and seniors losing fully paid-off homes. The question isn’t whether taxation can exist; it’s how to keep ownership from becoming a revocable privilege.We contrast the founders’ consent-based, purpose-tied approach with modern practice. Daniel Webster’s case for funding education from property was narrow and civic-minded, not a blank check. John Marshall acknowledged the taxing power while pointing to constitutional structure as our only safeguard against abuse. Joseph Story’s warning feels prophetic now: when laws make the enjoyment of property precarious, liberty erodes whether the decree comes from a despot or an eager legislature. That’s more than rhetoric when families watch generational homes slip away for want of taxes their budgets can’t meet.We also ground the conversation in Scripture. Chronicles, Proverbs, and Ezekiel present land and inheritance as gifts to be stewarded and defended from unjust seizure. Those texts don’t write a tax code, but they draw moral lines: rulers must not use power to evict people from their inheritance or frustrate parents and grandparents who provide for the next generations. When policy crosses those lines, patriotism wanes, trust collapses, and communities fracture.Together we sketch a path forward: tighter assessment caps, strong homestead protections, transparent consent, targeted relief for fixed-income owners, and a reset toward simple, restrained, voter-accountable funding. If property truly guards every other right, then safeguarding ownership is not a niche cause—it is the practical defense of liberty itself. If this resonates, share the episode, subscribe for more constitutional deep dives, and leave a review with your best idea for fair, freedom-respecting reform.Support the show

Property, Freedom, And The Good Society
2026/1/12 | 26 mins.
Start with a simple question: what happens to freedom when property fades? We dive into that pressure point with a story that runs from Genesis to Philadelphia, tracing how stewardship, ownership, and consent form the backbone of a free society. Tim Barton walks through the biblical roots of private property—creation, cultivation, and commands that forbid stealing and coveting—then highlights the stark warning of 1 Samuel 8, where centralized power “takes” until liberty shrivels. That ancient caution feels modern when set against ideologies that dream of abolishing ownership and replacing personal responsibility with administrative control.We connect those roots to America’s founding mind. John Locke’s case for government as a trust to preserve property shaped the Revolution and the Constitution. Samuel Adams named life, liberty, and property as natural rights with the authority to defend them “in the best manner” possible. We unpack why Jefferson wrote “pursuit of happiness” instead of “property,” guided by George Mason’s influence and a refusal to sanctify slavery. Happiness here means human flourishing—virtue, family, work—sustained by the right to acquire and keep the fruits of one’s labor. John Dickinson’s crisp test frames our present: if others may by right take what is yours without consent, neither property nor freedom is secure.The conversation lands with practical stakes for legislators and citizens: guard against regulatory takings, tighten eminent domain to true public use with just compensation, and restore transparency so consent is real, not assumed. Teach the next generation why property is not greed but the space where responsibility lives. If you care about religious liberty, family stability, entrepreneurship, and fair elections, start by securing the ground beneath them—private property.If this resonates, share it with a friend who sees it differently and ask them to test the claims. Subscribe for more constitutional, historical, and biblical insights, leave a review to help others find the show, and pass this along to someone in public office who needs clear, principled footing.Support the show

Monroe Doctrine, Then And Now
2026/1/09 | 26 mins.
The headlines move fast, but America’s core ideas move the needle. We open with a surprising deep dive into the Monroe Doctrine—penned by John Quincy Adams and issued by President James Monroe—and connect it to modern policy choices around Venezuela and hemispheric security. When you judge action by founding-era principles instead of social media noise, foreign policy looks less like a personality contest and more like constitutional muscle memory at work.From there, we head west to a major shift in the Ninth Circuit. A two-to-one ruling leaned on the Supreme Court’s Bruin decision to strike down California’s open carry restrictions in large counties, arguing that firearm regulations must align with the nation’s historical tradition. The state claimed citizens could apply for licenses, yet admitted none had been issued. That gap between policy on paper and rights in practice is exactly what the new Second Amendment framework is designed to expose, and it marks a notable change in a circuit once nicknamed the “Ninth Circus.”Then we pivot to the First Circuit, where a three-judge panel affirmed Congress’s authority to defund abortion providers, including Planned Parenthood, through clear appropriations language. The kicker: all three judges were appointed by President Biden. Beyond the culture-war headlines, the ruling reinforces a fundamental constitutional truth—the power of the purse belongs to the legislature. When Congress speaks plainly, courts should not invent spending mandates.Across these stories, one pattern emerges: history, text, and institutional roles still decide outcomes. Whether it’s the Monroe Doctrine guiding regional boundaries, Bruin reshaping Second Amendment litigation, or Article I controlling federal dollars, the system works best when we remember how it’s built. If you’re tired of hot takes and ready for substance, you’ll find a straightforward playbook here: measure policies against founding principles and let that standard do the sorting.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves history with teeth, and leave a quick review so more listeners can find us. Your take: which precedent should guide today’s leaders the most?Support the show



The WallBuilders Show