January 12, 2021
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A Nation Tuned to the Station of Freedom
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by Tony Perkins
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For most Americans, there hasn't really been time to stop and process what happened at the Capitol last Wednesday. Instead, we're just trying to survive, fighting off daily waves of crackdown and retribution -- punishment for a crime the vast majority of conservatives didn't commit or condone. The people in power, the same ones who called the summer riots "the American Way," are coming for our rights, our speech, even our livelihoods. Who will be left standing? If history is any indication -- we will.
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Parler for the Course
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by Tony Perkins
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If the Jeff Bezoses of the world want to shut conservatives down, they're in for quite a fight. Twitter rival Parler, who is still reeling from being booted off Bezos's Amazon web service Saturday, is headed to court with a case that could rattle Big Tech's big plans. "Parler will be back," investor Dan Bongino vowed. "I will go bankrupt and destitute before I let this happen."
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Impeachment: 'We Never Think about the Consequences'
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by Tony Perkins
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The new Congress has only been sworn in for eight days, and Democrats have already made a mess of their first week. "One of President Trump's biggest flaws is not knowing when to stop," Michael Goodwin pointed out. But the far-Left's latest impeachment stunt makes it clear: that's one thing they all have in common.
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Today's show features: Doug McKelway, Correspondent for the Washington Examiner, on how the tech giants are curbing free speech; Michael Burgess, U.S. Representative for the 26th district of Texas and Member of the House Rules Committee, on the House Rules Committee drafting articles of impeachment for a floor vote on Wednesday Dr. Dave Brat, Dean of the School of Business at Liberty University, on what today's Big Tech companies have in common with the robber barons of the 19th century.
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