• Letters Or Emails What Lawmakers Actually Notice
    Apr 30 2026

    A flood of emails used to look like “the people are rising up.” Now it might just be a script, a bot, or an AI tool spinning up thousands of messages that feel personal but aren’t. We dig into the question every frustrated citizen is asking: what actually gets a congressman or senator to pay attention today, and what’s the smartest way to use your limited time and energy?

    We walk through the real-world hierarchy of influence, from handwritten letters and phone calls to showing up in person at district offices and town hall meetings. Along the way, we talk about how AI voice spoofing and automated advocacy campaigns are changing trust and verification, and why authenticity and local context matter more than ever for civic engagement. We also address a hot-button issue making the rounds, DC statehood, and offer a sober reality check on what’s politically and constitutionally likely versus what’s being used to stir up donations.

    Then we shift to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact and the Electoral College. We explain how the compact attempts to redirect electoral votes, why critics say it undermines a republican form of government, and what it could mean for states whose voters choose one candidate while the national tally picks another. Finally, we answer a great question from a high school student about getting involved, covering Patriot Academy, internships, leadership training, and why practical civics education and biblical citizenship can be a better foundation than drifting into debt without direction.

    If you care about the Constitution, elections, and effective citizen action, listen, share this with a friend, and subscribe. If this helped you think clearer, leave a review and tell us: what’s the most effective way you’ve ever contacted an elected official?

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    27 mins
  • Faith Vs Marxism - with Kirk Cameron
    Apr 29 2026

    The weirdest part of our political moment isn’t the headlines, it’s how comfortable some people have become saying out loud that violence is acceptable if it stops the “wrong” side. We talk through the latest assassination attempt news, the reactions that followed, and why this isn’t just a fight about policy but a clash of worldviews that shapes how people justify hatred.

    From a biblical perspective, we argue the world is broken by sin and healed by a Savior. From a Marxist lens, life becomes oppressor versus oppressed, and once you label your opponent “evil,” almost anything starts to feel permissible. We connect that mindset to what’s been happening in education, how history gets stripped of heroes, and why parents can’t afford to outsource moral formation. We also discuss leadership under pressure, media narratives that blur moral lines, and what real biblical masculinity looks like when people around you need protection.

    Then we’re joined by Kirk Cameron to focus on solutions: kids’ books, storytelling, and rebuilding patriotism at home. He shares the story behind Built By The Brave from Brave Books, a fun route into the Monument to the Forefathers, the Pilgrims, Lexington and Concord, the Revolutionary War, Gettysburg, and the faith-driven courage that shaped America. With America’s 250th anniversary approaching, we talk practical ways families can reclaim civic education, constitutional history, and a love for country without swallowing the “America is shameful” script.

    If you want clear Christian worldview commentary, better history for kids, and tools for homeschooling and family discipleship, you’ll get a lot from this conversation. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more families can find it.

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    27 mins
  • Restoring Faith Family And Freedom In A Fractured Culture - with Tim Goeglein
    Apr 28 2026

    Politics can be loud enough that we forget what’s actually at stake. We sit down with Tim Goeglein, longtime Focus on the Family leader and former George W. Bush White House aide, to get clear about the foundations that make a free society possible: faith, family, and freedom. If you care about religious liberty, parental rights, and a culture where truth still means something, this conversation puts the spotlight where it belongs.

    We talk honestly about the sobering trends shaping American life, including record-low marriage rates and fertility rates, and why so many young adults feel unstable even when they say they want marriage, kids, and a life grounded in faith. Tim lays out why the “political class” often debates everything except the first principles, then connects the dots between policy, culture, and what happens in our own homes. We also explore what it means for young men to become marriageable, dependable, and purpose-driven in a time that often tears down masculinity and fractures family formation.

    One of the most urgent threads is the loneliness crisis among men and the digital displacement that replaces real friendship with virtual contact. We connect that reality to timeless biblical wisdom about companionship, community, and iron-sharpens-iron relationships, and we make the case that the local church can be a front-line solution by rebuilding fellowship, mentorship, and belonging. Along the way, we also highlight encouraging Gen Z trends that suggest better days are possible if we choose intentional relationships and resilient habits.

    Subscribe for more conversations at the intersection of faith and culture, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find it. What’s one practical step you think would strengthen families in your community?

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    27 mins
  • Rise Of The Statesman - with Josh McPherson
    Apr 27 2026

    A lot of men feel it but can’t quite name it: the country is shifting fast, leadership feels thin, and doing nothing is starting to look like a decision. We sit down with Pastor Josh McPherson from Washington State to talk about FreedomCon 2026 and why he calls it “Rise Of The Statesman” a rallying point for Christian men who want to lead with strength, clarity, and responsibility.

    We get into the surprising momentum he’s seeing, the problem of isolation, and why brotherhood matters when the culture gets loud. Josh also shares the wild story behind the location: the Gorge Amphitheatre in George, Washington, lined up with Father’s Day weekend and a nod to George Washington’s commission to lead the Continental Army. It’s a conversation about faith and culture that doesn’t stay abstract. We talk biblical worldview, American history, and constitutional principles, plus what “statesmanship” looks like when you bring it down to everyday life as a husband, father, church member, and citizen.

    Most importantly, we keep coming back to the difference between getting inspired and getting equipped. Josh lays out why “hope isn’t a plan” and how men can leave with practical action steps for family discipleship, church engagement, and civic involvement even in deep blue states. If you’ve been looking for a Christian men’s conference with real strategy, or you’re hungry for “meat” instead of soft talk, this one will light a fire.

    Subscribe for more conversations at the intersection of faith and culture, share this with a friend who’s ready to step up, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s one action you want to take in your community this month?

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    27 mins
  • When Institutions Bend, Who Holds The Line
    Apr 24 2026

    A judge tells Virginia Democrats a referendum is illegal, it goes forward anyway, and then the election gets set aside. That’s where Good News Friday starts: not with hot takes, but with the uncomfortable truth that election integrity depends on boring things like timing rules, publication requirements, and ballot language voters can actually trust. We walk through what the Virginia redistricting fight means, why turnout still matters in off-year elections, and what we’ll be watching as the state Supreme Court weighs in.

    Then we shift to a story that hits harder on the personal level: Mark Houck, a Catholic dad and pro-life advocate, targeted under the FACE Act after praying outside a Planned Parenthood clinic. We talk about the escalation from a sidewalk confrontation to an early morning FBI raid, what that kind of enforcement does to religious liberty and free speech, and why a seven-figure settlement matters as restitution and as a deterrent for future abuse.

    Finally, we zoom out to culture. Disney quietly moves away from “Hello, Friends” and back to “Ladies And Gentlemen,” and a former employee describes a real internal retreat from DEI dominance. We also share why it’s encouraging to see more pastors engaging public life with courage, clarity, and the full counsel of Scripture. If you care about constitutional rights, pro-life news, Christian leadership, and where the culture may be turning, this one’s for you.

    Subscribe for more Good News Friday, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What story gave you the most hope, and what should we cover next?

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    27 mins
  • Faith Meets Founding History
    Apr 23 2026

    A Great Awakening is getting people into theaters and then into conversations they didn’t expect to have: Who was George Whitefield, why did Benjamin Franklin respect him, and how did spiritual ideas shape early American public life? We talk through the wave of listener feedback, including the kind that makes us smile most, when someone realizes they “know a lot about history” because they’ve been quietly learning and sharing it for years.

    Then we give the honest review many of you asked for. When a film is based on real events, we’re not looking for every line to be a perfect transcript, but we do care about tone and about the big claims that stick in the audience’s mind. We highlight what the movie gets impressively right, including moments drawn from real Constitutional Convention debates and Franklin’s powerful call to prayer. We also slow down on the controversial moment where Franklin is labeled a deist, walking through what the primary source actually says and why that label gets abused in modern takes on the Founding Fathers.

    Finally, we zoom out to the bigger cultural shift we’re sensing: a growing hunger for better stories, deeper faith, and leaders with principle. That’s why it meant so much to participate in America Reads The Bible in Washington, DC and to see national leaders publicly read Scripture. If you care about Christian history, the Great Awakening, the founding of America, and where the culture is heading next, you’ll find encouragement and practical next steps here. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves history, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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    27 mins
  • Texas Textbooks Determine the Direction of the Nation, Part 2 - with Dr. Julie Pickren
    Apr 22 2026

    One vote can decide whether a generation learns a clear, content-rich story of American history or a vague set of standards that can be stretched to fit almost anything. Rick Green sits down with Julie Pickering from the Texas State Board of Education, with David Barton adding long-range context on why Texas standards don’t stay in Texas. When TEKS change in a major state, textbook publishers and other states follow, which is why this June meeting matters nationwide.

    Julie walks us through how social studies standards are built: the approved framework, the work groups, the role of content advisors, and the reality-check of more than 5,000 teacher survey responses saying the current standards are too generalized. We dig into what teachers mean by “mastery,” why specificity protects parents and classrooms, and how broad language can be used to claim controversial materials are fully aligned to state standards.

    We also talk about the deeper purpose of civics and history education: helping students understand the why behind the Declaration of Independence, the role of founding documents, Western civilization, and the Judeo-Christian ideas that shaped American law and public life. Julie explains why the second reading and final adoption in late June could turn into a battle over a full substitute document, and she shares how listeners can pray and how public testimony can influence the outcome.

    If you care about curriculum, textbooks, and what kids are actually learning, listen through to the end, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What do you want students to know about America by the time they graduate?

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    27 mins
  • Texas Textbooks Determine the Direction of the Nation, Part 1 - with Dr. Julie Pickren
    Apr 21 2026

    A handful of votes in Austin can quietly shape what students read in classrooms across America and most families never hear about it until the books are already printed. We start with a hopeful cultural moment, America Reads the Bible, and talk about why public Scripture literacy still shows up in civic life, from shared language to the way laws and history are taught. We also look ahead to the 250th anniversary and the idea of a national rededication, echoing early American practices of prayer, fasting proclamations, and public thanksgiving.

    Then we zoom in on one of the biggest leverage points in the country: the Texas State Board of Education. Because Texas and California drive textbook publishing, the social studies standards and TEKS decisions made in Texas can ripple nationwide for the next 10 to 15 years. David Barton explains why down ballot SBOE races can touch daily life more than people realize, and why the real divide is often conservative vs progressive rather than simply Republican vs Democrat.

    Finally, we’re joined by Texas SBOE member Julie Pickering for an on-the-ground update from the latest hearings. She describes the public turnout, the media narrative battle, and the pressure campaigns that shape who gets heard in “public testimony.” Julie also walks through how Texas is rebuilding the social studies framework around primary source documents, a patriotic lens required in state law, and the context students need to understand terms that appear in modern law and culture. If you care about accurate history, civic education, and who influences curriculum, this conversation is your roadmap.

    Subscribe, share this with a friend who cares about schools, and leave a review so more people can find it. What do you think should be non-negotiable in a K–12 social studies curriculum?

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    27 mins