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March 24, 2021

USA Today Looks to Bounce ORU from NCAA
Everyone loves an underdog. Well, almost everyone. While the rest of the country rallies around Oral Roberts University, cheering on the Cinderella of this year's NCAA basketball tournament, USA Today says the slipper doesn't fit. The small Tulsa college is evangelical, they announce, as if it's news. That means they believe the Bible. And if they believe the Bible, an editor argues, there should be no place for them on the court -- or anywhere else in polite society.
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Young at Heart of Hyde Debate
Only in the modern Democratic Party could protecting African-American children be considered racist. And yet, that's the messaging du jour for the Left, who's decided to play the race card on any issue that's remotely unpopular -- like overturning the ban on taxpayer-funded abortion. Of course, the Hyde amendment wasn't racist when Barack Obama supported it. It's only now, when the nation's been beaten into submission from months of George Floyd riots, that liberals could dare to make the argument -- and demand that the president's nominees do the same.
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How You Can Help Cancel the Cancel Culture
The target that the cancel culture has on the backs of Christians and conservatives is nothing new. For the past decade, the Left has been working hard to silence Christian and conservative voices and lessen their influence in the public square. At the beginning, their tactics were more subtle -- public shaming and classification of people and groups who advocated for biblical values as hate groups by organizations that used to be legitimate, such as the Southern Poverty Law Center.
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Today's show features: Mike Berry, General Counsel for First Liberty Institute, and Tyler O'Neil, Senior Editor for PJ Media and author of Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center, on the House Armed Services Committee hearing on "Extremism in the Military"; Roger Severino, Senior Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC), on the Senate vote on the nomination of Rachel Levine to be the next HHS Assistance Secretary, and on the ways in which Levine will use HHS to infringe on religious freedom and parental rights; Robin Lundstrum, Arkansas State Representative for District 87, on her bill before the Arkansas legislature, "Save Adolescents from Experimentation (SAFE) Act"; Kristen Waggoner, General Counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom, and Travis Weber, FRC's Vice President for Policy and Government Affairs, on South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem using her veto power to gut the girls' sports protection bill.

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