John B. Wells hosts a two-part discussion on First Amendment protections and national security authority, followed by a personal January 6 legal account from a former Navy officer.
Posts tagged as “constitution”
Chuck Schumer faced scrutiny after comments opposing voter ID laws despite strong bipartisan public support. Debate intensifies over the SAVE Act and election integrity.
An opinion essay challenges the idea that free speech is the highest societal value, arguing it must serve truth and the common good. The piece examines religion, law, and cultural debates shaping liberty in America.
Tennessee lawmakers approved a bill letting public schools display the Ten Commandments and founding documents. Supporters cite history; critics warn of religious concerns.
Senate Republicans are weighing a talking filibuster to push voter ID legislation forward. The strategy could bypass the 60-vote hurdle without changing Senate rules.
A thoughtful exploration of how America shifted from a high-trust society to a low-trust system defined by bureaucracy and suspicion. This piece argues that rebuilding trust must begin locally, morally, and deliberately.
by Dave DeCamp The House on Wednesday voted down a War Powers Resolution meant to block President Trump from launching a war with Venezuela without congressional…
In this explosive episode of Caravan to Midnight, John B. Wells is joined by Stephen Willeford — the "Barefoot Defender" — to reveal how Gun Owners of America is taking the fight directly to the federal government. Discover the constitutional challenge shaking the foundations of the National Firearms Act, the DOJ’s scrambling response, and why this battle goes far beyond gun rights. From false flags to forced disarmament, this conversation pulls no punches.
By: Brendi Wells March 23, 2025 While the left pushes a globalist, open-border agenda under the disguise of “compassion,” President Donald J. Trump is once…
By Elizabeth Elkind Rep. Andy Ogles proposed an amendment to the Constitution Thursday One of President Donald Trump’s top congressional allies introduced a resolution on Thursday evening…
By Lex Greene “The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1868, granted citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States—including…
By Paul Engel Two hundred and thirty six years ago on September 17, 1787, the Constitution for the United States was signed and sent to…
By Sarah Arnold Just hours after Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton was acquitted of state impeachment charges, he sent a scathing warning to President Joe…
By STEPHEN KRUISER Top O’ the Briefing Happy Monday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Trenzino continues to feel that cheery couples on tandem bicycles have…

















