Billede af showet The Conservative Opinion Podcast

The Conservative Opinion Podcast

Podcast af Jordan B. Rickards

engelsk

Nyheder & politik

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Læs mere The Conservative Opinion Podcast

Bringing you sharp, insightful commentary on politics, culture, and current events from a conservative perspective. Join us for thoughtful analysis and unapologetic truth.

Alle episoder

28 episoder

episode Ken Burns is Everything that is Right, and a Little Bit of What is Wrong in America cover

Ken Burns is Everything that is Right, and a Little Bit of What is Wrong in America

In this episode, I react to a recent conversation between Ken Burns and Conan O'Brien, and wrestle with a frustrating contradiction. Ken Burns is, in many ways, everything that is right about America. He is thoughtful, serious, historically grounded, and deeply patriotic without being performative. His documentaries have helped generations of Americans understand their country with honesty and depth. He is the kind of public figure we need more of. And yet, in this interview, he falls into a familiar and revealing trap—one that helps explain why so many Americans feel misunderstood and dismissed by the cultural elite. When Burns suggests that Republican voters have been persuaded to vote against their own interests, he is not just making a political point. He is revealing a deeper assumption: that millions of his fellow citizens cannot be trusted to understand their own lives, values, and priorities. In this episode, I explore why that assumption is not only wrong, but corrosive, and why it represents a broader failure of modern political discourse. I also explain why this matters so much coming from someone like Ken Burns, who, in his own work, consistently treats even controversial historical figures with seriousness and respect. If he can extend that generosity to the past, why not to the present? This is not an attack. It is a disappointment. And it is an invitation—to think more carefully about how we understand one another in a deeply divided country.

3. apr. 2026 - 12 min
episode Should We Cheer for War? cover

Should We Cheer for War?

In this episode, I wrestle with the moral and strategic unease I’ve felt watching the bombing of Iran unfold — and, more specifically, watching the applause that has followed it. Iran’s regime is brutal. Its nuclear ambitions are dangerous. There is a serious argument that diplomacy reached its limits. But even if military force was necessary, should it be celebrated? I explore the difference between resolve and revelry, why asking about strategy is not disloyalty, and what the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan still have to teach us. War may sometimes be justified. It is never entertainment. A morally serious nation can act with strength — and still take no pleasure in destruction. This is not an argument for pacifism. It’s an argument for sobriety.

6. mar. 2026 - 5 min
episode Bombing Iran and the Limits of Ballistic Diplomacy cover

Bombing Iran and the Limits of Ballistic Diplomacy

Is bombing Iran a show of strength — or a symptom of strategic confusion? In this episode, I examine the limits of what I call “ballistic diplomacy” — short bursts of military force launched without sustained follow-through. Iran is not an innocent actor. It sponsors terror, enriches uranium, and aligns itself with powers openly hostile to the United States and Israel. There is a strong case that conflict may be unavoidable, and I am not arguing for pacifism. But force without endurance is not strategy. Drawing on the lessons of Iraq, the concept of gunboat diplomacy, and the constitutional role of Congress in matters of war, I explore why one-night bombing campaigns rarely produce meaningful political change. If Iran truly represents an existential threat, then symbolic strikes are insufficient. And if regime change is the goal, hoping for spontaneous uprisings is not a plan — it’s a superstition. This episode asks a sober question: Are we deterring our enemies, or merely advertising the limits of our own commitment? I hope I’m wrong. But the least likely outcome may be the one many are cheering for — that this achieves anything of lasting substance.

3. mar. 2026 - 7 min
episode Satan Plays Both Sides cover

Satan Plays Both Sides

In this episode, we explore one of the most dangerous illusions in modern politics: the belief that evil only exists on the other side. Drawing on theology, history, and political philosophy, this episode examines how moral certainty — not malice — so often becomes the gateway to corruption. When people become convinced that their cause is righteous, their opponents irredeemable, and their intentions pure, restraint disappears and power begins to justify itself. From cancel culture and political purges to surveillance states and authoritarian impulses, the same pattern emerges again and again: both the Left and the Right fall prey to the same temptation. Each believes that if power must be wielded, it will be wielded responsibly — because it is in the “right” hands. Using biblical imagery, historical examples, and a reflection on the enduring symbolism of Tolkien’s One Ring, this episode argues that the greatest political danger is not evil itself, but the belief that we are immune from it. This is not an argument for moral relativism or political apathy. It is a call for humility, self-examination, and the recognition that no movement, ideology, or party is beyond corruption. Because while God may belong to neither party, the devil has always been willing to play both sides.

20. jan. 2026 - 7 min
episode Why Hitler Hated Christianity, But Not Atheism cover

Why Hitler Hated Christianity, But Not Atheism

Why did Adolf Hitler despise Christianity but tolerate — and even benefit from — atheism? In this episode, we explore the historical and philosophical reasons behind Hitler’s hostility toward the Christian faith, and why Christianity posed a far greater threat to Nazi ideology than unbelief ever did. Drawing on historical records, speeches, and Nazi policy, this episode explains: * Why Christianity threatened Hitler’s vision of absolute state power * How Nazi ideology sought to replace Christian morality with racial and political loyalty * Why atheism posed no obstacle to authoritarian rule * What this reveals about the relationship between faith, freedom, and tyranny * How these lessons still matter in modern political debates This episode challenges the lazy assumption that religion is inherently dangerous to society and instead argues that Christianity, in particular, has historically been one of the strongest barriers to totalitarianism. 🔗 Read the full essay: https://conservativeopinion.com/why-hitler-hated-christianity-but-not-atheism/ [https://conservativeopinion.com/why-hitler-hated-christianity-but-not-atheism/?utm_source=chatgpt.com]

18. jan. 2026 - 9 min
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