July 7, 2021
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A Fight for the History Books
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by Tony Perkins
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"We oppose attempts to ban critical race theory and/or The 1619 Project," the National Education Association (NEA) said in a resolution late last week. At its 2021 annual meeting, America's largest teachers' union -- and largest union of any kind -- passed a slew of pro-CRT resolutions. They also approved "an already-created, in-depth study that critiques white supremacy, anti-Blackness, anti-Indigeneity, racism, patriarchy ... capitalism ... and other forms of power and oppression." The resolutions amounted to a declaration of war on parent organizations that have sprouted up as sentinels against encroaching wokeness.
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Florist's Hopes Wilt with Latest SCOTUS Injustice
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by Dan Hart
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It was a devastating day for Barronelle Stutzman. The florist from Washington State, who's become a symbol of the struggle for religious liberty in America, learned last week that the U.S. Supreme Court will not hear her case, in which she declined to design flower arrangements for a same-sex wedding in accordance with her Christian beliefs.
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A Book So Right, the Left Won't Touch It
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by Tony Perkins
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What's wrong with good old fashioned "God and Country" patriotism and referencing the Good Book? Apparently, it's so offensive some won't stand for it.
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On today's show: Ralph Norman, U.S. Representative the 5th District of South Carolina, talks about President Biden's door-to-door vaccination campaign and efforts in Congress to end the mask mandate on public transportation; Pete Ricketts, Governor of Nebraska, declares July "Victims of Communism Remembrance Month"; Stanley Kurtz, Senior Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, shares why efforts to stop indoctrination in school curriculum is both necessary and justified; Ken Blackwell, FRC's Senior Fellow for Human Rights and Constitutional Governance and former Ohio Secretary of State, discusses the surge in crime in major U.S. cities.
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