November 10, 2020
 |
The Presidential Election: A Work in Process
|
|
by Tony Perkins
|
|
|
The media must be awfully forgiving. After four years of hammering home how suspect our election process is -- how vulnerable it is to meddling and interference -- they're suddenly comfortable with it. What happened to the talking heads who insisted that tech glitches had impacted the Midwest votes in 2016? Or that our online systems had been hacked? Like magic, their suspicions have vanished. Now, despite six states' worth of questions and a mail-in system that's ripe for more abuse, Americans realize: the only ones trying to influence the election are the ones who aren't interested in counting the legal votes.
|
|
|
 |
2000 v. 2020: A Study in Media Bias
|
|
by Tony Perkins
|
|
|
If Americans thought the 2000 election was painful, buckle up. This is like five Floridas, Victor Davis Hanson warns. Dealing with contested counts in Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania is the mother of all contested elections. Which is why, he writes, "Millions of voters find it rich that suddenly the Democratic Party is vouching for a pristine voting count" -- after four years of warning that the system was irrevocably broken! And where is the media in all of this? Messaging for the Left instead of reporting.
|
|
|
 |
A Sudden Loss, a Forever Legacy
|
|
by Tony Perkins
|
|
|
I am deeply saddened by the news of the passing of Bishop Harry Jackson, Jr. The nation has lost a fearless minister of the gospel, and I have lost a dear friend. Harry and I came from opposite sides of the tracks in Cincinnati, but we walked a shared path together through our Christian faith. In 2005 when we first met, Harry, although conservative, was a registered Democrat. We began discussing immigration, the ethnic divide, and the climate, among other topics.
|
|
|
|
Today's show features: Marsha Blackburn, U.S. Senator from Tennessee, on the Judiciary Committee's Crossfire Hurricane hearing and Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's public support for President Trump's legal challenge; Dr. Matt Briggs, Author of Uncertainty: The Soul of Modeling, Probability, and Statistics, on the statistical anomalies in the 2020 election results; Travis Weber, FRC's Vice President for Policy and Government Affairs, on Joe Biden's dangerous promise to overturn President Trump's accomplishments by executive order; Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo, on the administration's religious freedom agenda, the latest on China, and the world's reaction to America's election drama.
|
|
|
|