The Rick Robinson Show

07-01-26 Citizenship Is Not an ATM Card.

1 h 57 min · I går
episode 07-01-26 Citizenship Is Not an ATM Card. cover

Beskrivelse

A Supreme Court ruling on birthright citizenship forces America to confront a much larger question: Is citizenship merely a benefit triggered by geography, or is it a bond built on allegiance, membership, and national consent? Rick Robinson examines the constitutional fight over the Fourteenth Amendment, the scale of births involving unauthorized or temporary-status parents, and federal prosecutions that exposed the very real business of birth tourism. From there, the discussion turns toward the political consequences of citizenship without allegiance and the growing strength of Democratic Socialist and DSA-backed candidates in safe blue districts across New York, Colorado, and Washington, D.C. As America approaches its 250th birthday, Rick contrasts the modern socialist movement with Theodore Roosevelt’s brand of progressivism—reform rooted in the belief that America is worth strengthening, rather than revolution rooted in resentment of the country itself. Who belongs to America? Who gets to decide? And are today’s institutions reforming the republic, replacing it, or simply opening the door for someone else to take control?

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Alle episoder

83 episoder

episode 07-15-26 Trust Us—The Guardrails Are Optional cover

07-15-26 Trust Us—The Guardrails Are Optional

From fatal ICE encounters and missing body-camera clarity to prosecutors bypassing constitutional safeguards, this episode asks what happens when the institutions exercising power expect public trust without consistently showing their work. Rick Robinson begins with the temporary ICE vehicle-stop pause, the Trump administration’s rapid reversal, and two fatal shootings involving drivers who were apparently not the original targets of the operations. He argues that supporting immigration enforcement does not require automatic loyalty to every official account. The mission should continue, but agents need clear tactics, functioning cameras, transparent investigations, and accountability when policy or law is violated. The conversation then turns to America’s artificial-intelligence infrastructure race. New York’s data-center pause, John Fetterman’s warning that “China wins,” and a Democratic socialist’s surprising appeal to Trump voters in Wisconsin reveal a growing political danger: Republicans cannot defend corporate subsidies, higher utility costs, and private profits at public expense, then expect the word “socialism” to settle the argument. Rick also reflects on the life and complicated legacy of Senator Lindsey Graham—from becoming guardian to his younger sister after losing both parents, to his military service, foreign-policy hawkishness, immigration compromises, defense of Brett Kavanaugh, and evolution from Trump critic to ally. The episode closes with the SAVE America Act, threats against Supreme Court justices, Jack Smith’s investigators reviewing congressional communications before the filter process had done its job, Oklahoma tenants losing essential services despite paying rent, and a dispensary raid that allegedly uncovered fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and other drugs behind a medical-marijuana license. Badges, robes, licenses, titles, and offices do not automatically create legitimacy. Institutions earn trust by following the rules, preserving the evidence, protecting the people who depend on them, and accepting consequences when the guardrails fail.

I går2 h 31 min
episode 07-10-26 The National Divorce Has Already Started cover

07-10-26 The National Divorce Has Already Started

America may still share one flag and one map, but millions of citizens are already separating from the institutions that claim to represent them. Rick Robinson examines the growing movement among rural Illinois counties to escape the political gravity of Chicago and Cook County, along with the broader “representation fatigue” driving Americans away from political parties, legacy media, schools, cities, and states they no longer trust. The show then turns to the collapse of Graham Platner’s Senate campaign and the Democratic machine that tolerated warning sign after warning sign until the polling finally made him inconvenient. Rick argues that modern political accountability is increasingly based not on truth or character, but usefulness: scandals remain “complicated” while a candidate can still win and become disqualifying only after the campaign becomes a liability. Also covered: a second Middle Eastern government rejecting an LGBTQ-focused cruise, Tim Walz’s pardon of a foreign national convicted of a child sex crime before federal officials deported him, new questions about Detroit absentee-ballot chain of custody, the unraveling Iran memorandum, attempted municipal freelancing with Iran’s ambassador, and the unusually lengthy preliminary hearing in the Tyler Robinson case. Across politics, foreign policy, culture, and the courtroom, the standard keeps changing whenever consistency becomes inconvenient. A country can survive disagreement, bad leaders, and hard elections—but it cannot survive forever once its people stop believing the rules are real.

I går2 h 6 min
episode 07-06-26 #America250: The Clash of Ideologies, America Celebrated. The Left Seethed cover

07-06-26 #America250: The Clash of Ideologies, America Celebrated. The Left Seethed

America turned 250, and while millions celebrated with flags, fireworks, faith, and family, much of the political Left seemed determined to treat the birthday party like a crime scene. Rick Robinson breaks down the backlash to America 250, including complaints about Christianity and patriotic language at the celebration, and asks why mentioning the Creator in a nation founded on God-given rights has suddenly become politically suspicious. The episode contrasts that outrage with the release of Chinese pastor Ezra Jin, who arrived in America after months in communist custody, reminding listeners what genuine religious persecution looks like. Rick also examines the LGBTQ cruise blocked from Turkish ports, Bill Clinton’s transformation from a “nation of laws” Democrat into a critic of immigration enforcement, and new Dallas Fed research linking the Biden-era immigration surge to rising rents and home prices. From religious liberty and immigration to housing costs, socialism, and the American dream, this episode argues that America’s critics judge the United States against perfection while grading authoritarian regimes, foreign cultures, and failed ideologies on a generous curve. America is flawed, but it remains the country people flee toward—not the country they are desperate to escape.

I går1 h 59 min
episode 07-03-26 A Republic—If We Still Want It. cover

07-03-26 A Republic—If We Still Want It.

On the eve of America’s 250th birthday, Rick Robinson steps away from the usual news cycle for a patriotic look at the history, sacrifice, faith, and freedom behind the American experiment. The episode revisits the story of Fort McHenry and the Star-Spangled Banner, features John F. Kennedy reading the Declaration of Independence, honors America’s military and first responders, and asks why so many Americans seem more comfortable criticizing the country than celebrating it. Rick also examines the difference between loving America and blindly defending every government decision, the growing appeal of socialism, the loss of assimilation and shared national culture, and the warning contained in Benjamin Franklin’s famous challenge: “A republic, if you can keep it.” More than a birthday celebration, this episode is a call to remember what the flag represents, rediscover the American dream on an individual level, and put political banners aside long enough to appreciate the nation generations of Americans fought to preserve.

I går2 h 0 min
episode 07-01-26 Citizenship Is Not an ATM Card. cover

07-01-26 Citizenship Is Not an ATM Card.

A Supreme Court ruling on birthright citizenship forces America to confront a much larger question: Is citizenship merely a benefit triggered by geography, or is it a bond built on allegiance, membership, and national consent? Rick Robinson examines the constitutional fight over the Fourteenth Amendment, the scale of births involving unauthorized or temporary-status parents, and federal prosecutions that exposed the very real business of birth tourism. From there, the discussion turns toward the political consequences of citizenship without allegiance and the growing strength of Democratic Socialist and DSA-backed candidates in safe blue districts across New York, Colorado, and Washington, D.C. As America approaches its 250th birthday, Rick contrasts the modern socialist movement with Theodore Roosevelt’s brand of progressivism—reform rooted in the belief that America is worth strengthening, rather than revolution rooted in resentment of the country itself. Who belongs to America? Who gets to decide? And are today’s institutions reforming the republic, replacing it, or simply opening the door for someone else to take control?

I går1 h 57 min