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October 13, 2020

Barrett Hearing: Questions Reveal More than Answers
by Tony Perkins
Day Two of Amy Coney Barrett's confirmation hearing was supposed to be when the probing questions about her fitness for the bench would begin. Instead, we were treated to more of the same from Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee -- a public charade that seemed like a healthcare campaign event for liberal policy priorities.
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Bible Probe a Testament to HUD's Priorities
by Tony Perkins
On Facebook, Wilhoit Properties says, "It is our sincere desire to do everything possible to make your stay here a long and happy one." Unless, older residents found out, that stay includes the Bible. In Oklahoma, one of the 16 states where Wilhoit runs a senior living facility, a controversy has been brewing since March, when one of the tenants said all of the religious material in the common areas disappeared. A resident had complained about an angel decoration at Christmas, and that was apparently enough to scrub 116 properties clean of anything remotely religious. At least until Secretary Ben Carson got involved.
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The NBA's Airball on Human Rights
by Arielle Del Turco
Dallas Mavericks Owner Mark Cuban was pressed to answer why, exactly, he along with the entire National Basketball Association (NBA) claimed to promote human rights, but looked the other way concerning China's gross human rights abuses. His justification was simple -- for money.
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Today's show features: Tom Cotton, U.S. Senator from Arkansas, on the second day of Amy Coney Barrett confirmation hearings; Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Professor of Medicine at Stanford University, on the Great Barrington Declaration he co-authored that calls for a herd immunity response to COVID-19; John Jackson, Owner of American Heroes Cafe in Portland, Oregon and Army and Marine Veteran, on how Antifa rioters who targeted his Portland cafe 'solidified' his vote for President Trump; Cristian Ionescu, Pastor of Elim Romanian Pentecostal Church in Chicago, Illinois, on his church's lawsuit and on how churches should respond and move forward in light of the government's restrictions on church gatherings.

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