The Reagan Faulkner Show

The WHCD Shooting: Unpacking the Rise of Political Violence - Episode 39

32 min · 29. huhti 2026
jakson The WHCD Shooting: Unpacking the Rise of Political Violence - Episode 39 kansikuva

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/fan_mail/new] An assassination attempt at the 2026 White House Correspondents’ Dinner shattered what was supposed to be a glitzy celebration of the First Amendment—and Reagan Faulkner walks you through exactly what happened inside that ballroom. She breaks down the moment shots rang out near President Trump, how Secret Service reacted, and who alleged gunman Cole Thomas Allen really is: a Caltech grad, NASA intern, and award‑winning teacher, not a stereotypical “deranged loner.” From there, Reagan exposes the deeper pattern of high‑achieving would‑be assassins and the radical education, media, and activist ecosystems that are teaching young elites to see “revolutionary” violence as justified. She closes with a sobering warning that disavowing violence isn’t enough—and a challenge to parents, voters, and lawmakers to confront the institutions normalizing political bloodshed before it’s too late. Timestamps / Key moments 00:00 – Why this is an emergency WHCD shooting episode 03:50 – Inside the ballroom when shots ring out near Trump 08:30 – Secret Service response and takedown of Cole Thomas Allen 12:20 – Who is Allen? Caltech grad, NASA intern, teacher of the year 18:00 – The disturbing pattern of other high‑IQ would‑be assassins 29:00 – Democratic vs. revolutionary socialists and “social murder” rhetoric 42:00 – “Words are violence” and why a generation is turning to bullets 56:30 – Radical groups, treason, and why law enforcement must act 1:02:00 – Reagan’s warning: it’s not just about winning elections What You Can Do If this breakdown helped you see the WHCD shooting and the rise of political violence in a different light, don’t keep it to yourself—share this episode with a friend who still thinks all of this is “random.” Make sure you’re following The Reagan Faulkner Show on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Substack, and stay plugged in with The Wilmington Standard on Instagram and Facebook so you never miss an update as this story—and others like it—unfold.  And if you want to support the parallel economy while you do it, grab your next batch of Seven Weeks Coffee with code REAGAN2026; 10% goes straight to crisis pregnancy centers, and it’s some of the best organic coffee you’ll ever drink. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/support]

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jakson The Capital at 250: A Firsthand Look at American Exceptionalism - Episode 47 kansikuva

The Capital at 250: A Firsthand Look at American Exceptionalism - Episode 47

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/fan_mail/new] On this episode of The Reagan Faulkner Show, Reagan steps away from heavy research to give a firsthand report from Washington, D.C. during America’s 250th year. She describes a capital that feels cleaner, safer, and more orderly under President Trump, even as far‑left propaganda clings to the outskirts. From the Great American State Fair and the America Innovates Pavilion to PragerU’s Freedom 250 truck and Arlington National Cemetery, Reagan shows how faith, sacrifice, and innovation still set America apart. She closes with a challenge: do we still want another 250 years of American exceptionalism, or are we ready to let this experiment fade. What you’ll learn in this episode * 00:07 – Why Reagan is sharing a boots‑on‑the‑ground D.C. trip during America 250 and how the capital looks and feels different under Trump. * 03:45 – Far‑left propaganda in a “nice” neighborhood: Antifa and pro‑Palestinian stickers, anti‑Trump rhetoric, and how it disappears near the National Mall. * 06:30 – Great American State Fair “Innovation Day,” a cleaner and safer Metro, and how the National Guard actually helps visitors instead of intimidating them. * 08:40 – Inside the America Innovates Pavilion: NASA, SpaceX, Axiom Space, TikTok, Truth Social, and Google Jigsaw’s AI display on 250 years of American freedom. * 12:30 – Secret Service’s new armored truck, Trump’s push to modernize security, and how most threats are handled quietly before the public ever hears about them. * 15:15 – State pavilions that went all‑in (especially Florida), blue states that didn’t show, and how private sponsors rescued North Carolina’s booth when Governor Stein refused. * 20:55 – PragerU’s Freedom 250 truck, the rodeo, and a main‑stage conversation on innovation, crypto, and AI alongside a full‑size GE jet engine and flight simulator. * 30:05 – Arlington National Cemetery, the story of James Parks, and Reagan’s closing reflections on war, sacrifice, and whether Americans still want to carry this republic another 250 years. What You Can Do If you don’t want America’s next 250 years decided without you, now is the time to lean in. Follow The Reagan Faulkner Show on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Substack so you never miss an episode and can share it with friends who need a clear, hopeful conservative voice. Stay connected with The Wilmington Standard on Instagram and Facebook for local and national coverage that actually respects your values. And when you order Seven Weeks Coffee with code REAGAN2026, you get great coffee while sending 10% of every purchase to crisis pregnancy centers serving moms and babies across America. Capital-At-250-2.docx [https://ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/web/direct-files/attachments/67391327/e074acaf-74d0-4192-b977-c4dc5cf02dba/Capital-At-250-2.docx?AWSAccessKeyId=ASIA2F3EMEYER4MWU2ID&Signature=0MnccSCYWx8nxr4wleWt%2Ffi41uk%3D&x-amz-security-token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEH4aCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJGMEQCIBX3oKm1hqN54fbTeN3CCunN0B6UshIMTxwpvawpsKp4AiBhgdNpN9gXc1m36vEFvFF%2BhHSkWzso2rliIOzSjJkxWirzBAhGEAEaDDY5OTc1MzMwOTcwNSIMsi42WHC%2BqKOwAioQKtAEf3Rjl4MaSMAflLJ7B8GJeziCzRbhhqOFU6xCm%2Frp%2BXUq1Lz57leZRIJvhpsmy2Ps%2F1rsKFhccEwXjvHl%2Bg0jK0bNV7Q4YkeSQZwPwQ%2FPryiyi0PfvVP8dSO23zEoO43f6Ny3bOU4yHbjwtGw9asghMGNhoaRJaAyD1XRA72PlSVKtNoCGxh2vctGpBySkouD7bVTSKIiKQJtLbEhtdnzPloYq4aWVNTI4TOVNb3n03Kkcjd2ehhW%2FMeL0qLjUjj4wmMhey0l2ZbXv%2BsBgYmia%2F%2B3BMOZ0mvipd%2FYQuFBB%2FejfEwpSIjz9BlGmjoual%2FQPsDVZzc3wNvF%2FydULtDPzw%2FaY4X4AYY9crOgI8z2tPZ7umpHCeQ70Y4fFMQrF%2BU6dnO%2FRCvIInSv42mrOuCNOX1RyIiRPC52aeKX95SEAmsy4xpKkPYre9wTaJarbl5SbocaL4v9UQpswgQWK2O0T8i9UlgMIt01oq3ZQ73oZSxG1I5p%2BhmdwMir51sEKNPmJSXcGvLeFfSSwynSTmTNuWxU3qghyZ5gGttC5G6I4frVY5O66is82MDEsZVnhcndnOJIOved9HRxjwTmhmz%2BlGPepgIR%2FQnMvyd6COavT9KjSi%2Fh01x9UeCen%2FQHiLc%2FBKl57ttCQje3%2BcjnIoUL%2Bh%2FbmZysgqZZ3daNzJ0ykz6Vte6PL5%2ByVMs2%2BcuNnWA%2FaXlm4gTMZnrTFlZ2s%2Bx%2BeI0by2E8BD2WEXtRkehtQdafpgYzVIkNJA%2FmnvajGJkBIXUXbdJ5GKQFXsYKsFDcqjCJs%2BPSBjqZAQ1MTNfEzc868XXi%2F7Bo%2Fz9HsVwTHTH6hAHvhTdxn9mLKw%2FmE1qb6rC2ObgjvWroC%2FlndBCRLOQMAckGr2F%2BZXGoHfRPsLAnztuSigYZFfieEMZ5X5Dr0cCzNr7B0eD2Xy3RlZhZafaNF76nQfaYlGVmkmDt%2B28JWOIS%2BqNiTvD4oA%2BzfvH3CCu9QaCC%2BxPmh2DWDLoSvCgrAw%3D%3D&Expires=1784211292] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/support]

16. heinä 202642 min
jakson Builder Versus Critic – What are We Supposed to Build Now - Episode 46 kansikuva

Builder Versus Critic – What are We Supposed to Build Now - Episode 46

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/fan_mail/new] Builder Versus Critic – What are We Supposed to Build Now is a long‑form, summer conversation about why America doesn’t just have an information or commentary problem, but a formation shortage. Reagan Faulkner walks through how engagement‑driven algorithms reward hot takes and doomscrolling while starving the slow, boring work of actually building trustworthy people and institutions. Drawing from American history, from Theodore Roosevelt to Ronald Reagan, she makes the case that criticism feels powerful because it is instant, but builders are the ones who actually shape the future. This episode is an invitation for Gen Z, Gen Alpha, and anyone listening to pick up the “chisel” in front of them—family, church, school, local community—and leave at least one institution stronger than they found it. What you’ll learn / Key moments * 00:07 – America is “unfinished,” not broken, and every generation is handed a chisel and a block of marble instead of a completed statue. * 02:29 – Why the internet rewards the critic with instant dopamine while builders get almost no credit online. * 05:06 – From “information problem” and “commentary problem” to a “formation shortage” and what formation actually means in real life. * 10:31 – How honest criticism is a form of stewardship, and where it crosses the line into an identity that replaces actual work. * 13:10 – Why our algorithm‑driven media ecosystem is literally built to make the critic win and the builder disappear. * 21:50 – The “man in the arena” passage from Theodore Roosevelt and how it reframes the difference between spectators and builders. * 28:40 – Six shared traits of real builders, from Washington and Booker T. Washington to modern entrepreneurs and church planters. * 34:40 – Trust, pride, housing, local news, religious life, and volunteering: a dashboard of where America’s builder class is thin—and where hope is breaking through. * 42:19 – A practical “builder vs. critic” lens you can apply to education, media, politics, AI, business, and even your own street. * 43:39 – Ronald Reagan’s warning that freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction—and what that means for this generation’s character. * 44:20 – The core assignment: pick one institution you’re responsible for right now and leave it stronger than you found it. Call to action If this episode pushed you out of spectator mode and into the arena, don’t just scroll on. Follow The Reagan Faulkner Show on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Substack so you don’t miss the next long‑form framework we’re building together. Stay connected with local, on‑the‑ground coverage by following The Wilmington Standard on Instagram and Facebook—and share this episode with one person you know is more of a builder than a hater.  And if you want your morning routine to actually build something, grab a bag of Seven Weeks Coffee and use code REAGAN2026 at checkout; 10% goes directly to crisis pregnancy centers serving moms and babies in need. Let’s trade rage‑bait for responsibility and put our hands back on the chisel. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/support]

9. heinä 202648 min
jakson First in Freedom: What America 250 Should Actually Mean to Gen Z - Episode 45 kansikuva

First in Freedom: What America 250 Should Actually Mean to Gen Z - Episode 45

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/fan_mail/new]  America is about to turn 250, and Reagan Faulkner argues that this milestone should hit Gen Z as a calling, not just a party. She walks through how the United States became the world’s longest-running written constitutional government, why patriotism is a tradition that has to be handed down, and how that transmission broke for her generation. Then she heads home to North Carolina, unpacking the real “First in Freedom” story—from Cornelius Harnett’s Stamp Act resistance in Wilmington to the Halifax Resolves and Moores Creek Bridge. Along the way, Reagan makes the conservative case that our job at 250 is to pick up the chisel, reclaim our local founding stories, and decide—on purpose—whether this experiment in self‑government keeps going. What you’ll learn / Key moments * 00:00 – Why Reagan opens America 250 week with awe instead of cynicism, and why she calls this milestone a near‑miracle in world history. * 04:30 – How the United States became the world’s oldest written constitutional government, and why most other constitutions are younger than the microwave. * 09:45 – The Gallup numbers on collapsing American pride, why Gen Z is the least proud generation, and how politics shifted from “what you believe” to “who you are.” * 15:30 – Why patriotism is a tradition that has to be handed down, how that transmission broke for Gen Z, and why disconnection is often mistaken for hatred of America. * 21:50 – The real “First in Freedom” story: Cornelius Harnett, the Stamp Act bonfires in Wilmington, and how North Carolina became the only colony to never issue a Stamp Act stamp. * 28:10 – The women who stepped up first: Penelope Barker, the Edenton Tea Party, Wilmington’s Ladies Tea Walk, and what their courage means for young conservative women today. * 33:20 – What “First in Freedom” on the North Carolina flag really means, the Halifax Resolves, and why North Carolina was the first colony to authorize independence. * 38:15 – Two paths at America 250, why indifference is not a neutral third option, and how conservatives can “out‑belong” the Left by handing down a hopeful, honest American story. What You Can do If this episode gave you even a flicker of pride or ownership in America’s story, do not let it stop at a feeling—turn it into action. Follow The Reagan Faulkner Show on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Substack so you can share this America 250 conversation with the next generation that needs to hear it. Stay plugged into the local fight by following The Wilmington Standard on Instagram and Facebook, where we tell the “First in Freedom” story from right here on the Cape Fear coast.  And as you celebrate our 250th, grab a bag from Seven Weeks Coffee, use code REAGAN2026 at checkout, and know that 10 percent goes straight to crisis pregnancy centers across the country—supporting moms and babies while we honor a nation founded to protect life and liberty. The experiment only survives if we decide to carry it, so pick up the chisel and join us. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/support]

3. heinä 202644 min
jakson Why Politics Became Identity First - Episode 44 kansikuva

Why Politics Became Identity First - Episode 44

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Reagan Faulkner Show, we look at why political fights today feel less like policy disagreements and more like personal attacks on who you are at your core. We walk through how belonging collapsed in churches, local communities, and institutions long before politics turned into a primary identity, and why that shift is driving exhaustion, anger, and even political violence. Reagan breaks down what Pew and other researchers are seeing in younger Americans’ trust and media habits, and why the rise of creators and news influencers is changing the conservative movement’s future. Most importantly, we talk about how conservatives can respond with authentic voices, real relationships, and content that offers belonging instead of just outrage. What you’ll learn / Key moments * 00:00 – Why political disagreements now feel like personal rejection and identity attacks instead of normal policy debates. * 03:05 – How Americans historically rooted their identity in faith, family, work, and local community, with politics running parallel instead of on top. * 05:44 – The massive cultural shift from political opinions to political identities and why that change is reshaping American life. * 06:04 – What Pew’s data shows about exhaustion, anger, and our “toxic relationship” with politics in the 2020s. * 09:59 – The slow-motion collapse of institutional trust and why younger Americans feel less attached to their communities and traditional news. * 11:01 – Why humans are inherently tribal, what Genesis and social identity theory tell us about in‑groups and out‑groups, and how the internet supercharged it. * 14:40 – How online fandoms, influencers, and niche communities turn disagreement into rejection and intensify polarization on both the Left and Right. * 18:40 – Why people now live, date, move, and consume media along political lines, and what that reveals about politics as identity. * 21:51 – Why politics was never designed to carry your whole identity and how that failure shows up in protests, violence, and comment‑section wars. * 22:46 – The hidden opportunity: trust migrating from institutions to individuals and why durable conservative influence will come from trusted, consistent creators. * 23:34 – How institutions get captured and degraded, versus how relational trust with real audiences is built and protected over time. * 24:28 – What it will take for conservative movements and creators to build genuine belonging instead of just rage‑bait content. What You Can Do If this conversation helped you rethink why politics feels so personal right now, make sure you’re plugged into the communities that are actually building something better. Follow The Reagan Faulkner Show on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Substack to stay connected to clear, grounded, conservative commentary that takes identity and belonging seriously instead of just chasing outrage. Follow The Wilmington Standard on Instagram and Facebook for local reporting and analysis that keeps you rooted in your community, not just doom‑scrolling national headlines. And when you’re ready to put your dollars behind your convictions, check out Seven Weeks Coffee and use code REAGAN2026—every purchase sends 10% to crisis pregnancy centers supporting moms and babies across the country and strengthening the pro‑life movement in the real world, not just online. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/support]

24. kesä 202627 min
jakson What Happens When Communities Stop Passing Down Traditions? - Episode 43 kansikuva

What Happens When Communities Stop Passing Down Traditions? - Episode 43

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/fan_mail/new] On this episode of The Reagan Faulkner Show, Reagan takes you from the docks at Big Rock in Morehead City to the heart of America’s loneliness crisis. Using one of the world’s biggest offshore fishing tournaments as a case study, she asks what happens when communities stop passing down traditions that give people identity, purpose, and a sense of place. Reagan breaks down the data on social isolation, political tribalism, and collapsing trust in institutions, and makes the case that strong families, local traditions, and bottom‑up communities—not new federal programs—are the real answer. If you care about the future of your town, your church, and your kids, this conversation will challenge you to protect the traditions that are still worth keeping. What you’ll learn / Key moments * 00:00 – Why Reagan skips the usual talk about elections and DC to start with a story about fishing instead of politics. * 01:35 – The Big Rock origin story: five local fishermen, Captain Bill’s Restaurant, and a red wagon full of silver dollars that grows into a world‑class offshore tournament. * 04:08 – Redefining tradition as a kind of “technology” for transferring values, identity, and community from one generation to the next. * 07:49 – The loneliness epidemic: the Surgeon General’s warning, APA data, and why the most digitally connected generation is also the loneliest in American history. * 12:25 – How trust really collapses: when family, church, and local relationships break down first, institutions follow. * 17:00 – Big Rock as a working model of grassroots tradition that creates jobs, charity, summer rhythms, and multi‑generational belonging on the Crystal Coast. * 19:46 – The uncomfortable truth: when communities stop producing belonging through traditions, people turn to politics and other substitutes that can’t carry that weight. * 23:54 – Reagan’s conservative answer to the crisis: subsidiarity, strong families, local communities, and intentionally keeping the traditions that are still worth passing down. Call to action If this episode gave you something to think about, do not stay on the sidelines—take a step toward real community today. Follow The Reagan Faulkner Show on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Substack so you don’t miss future conversations on faith, culture, and the future of the country. Stay connected with The Wilmington Standard on Instagram and Facebook as we keep covering the stories and local traditions that still hold this region together.  And when you grab your next bag of coffee, support a company that actually lives out pro‑life values: order from Seven Weeks Coffee and use code REAGAN2026 at checkout—10% of your purchase goes directly to crisis pregnancy centers. Let’s choose to belong to something real, local, and life‑giving, and then pass it on. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2542746/support]

16. kesä 202633 min