June 16, 2020
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Splinters in the Bench
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by Tony Perkins
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It's a Supreme Court ruling that would have stung no matter what. But the timing of this one, when Americans are desperately waiting for something in 2020 to make sense, seemed to deliver a much more painful blow. In a country hurting for stability, the court only brought more chaos. Instead of common sense, more confusion. Where there should have been reassurances about basic truths, there was only shock and disappointment. Six justices, against the laws of science, history, and morality, decided to create their own Autonomous Zone -- where humanity's laws about male and female no longer apply.
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Joe Biden's Real Running Mate: Planned Parenthood
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by Tony Perkins
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There's a first time for everything -- including, it turns out, agreeing with Planned Parenthood. "This is literally," the group's acting president Alexis McGill Johnson said, "a life or death election." She's right. But America's biggest abortion business must not have any use for the "life" part of that equation, announcing Monday that they'd officially endorsed Democrat Joe Biden for president.
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A Cut above the Unrest
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Whole sections of Seattle are seceding from their city, and people everywhere are wondering: what happened? How did we get here? Was this an overnight implosion or a slow and steady erosion of everything that makes us Americans? Dr. Dave Brat, dean of Liberty University's School of Business, tries to unpack the breakdown of law and order. Don't miss his take from Monday's "Washington Watch."
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Today's show features: Josh Hawley, U.S. Senator from Missouri, on yesterday's U.S. Supreme Court ruling redefining sex in federal law; Jeff Sessions, former U.S. Senator from Alabama, on how the effort to eliminate police departments promotes lawlessness; Chip Roy, U.S. Representative for the 21st district of Texas, on the GOP's internal discussion over its party platform; Travis Weber, FRC's Vice President for Policy and Government Affairs, on Senator Hawley's floor speech today that criticized the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling yesterday and the U.S. Senate's vetting of judicial nominees.
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