Faith, Freedom, And The Constitution
If you’ve ever looked at politics and thought, “How did we get this far off track?”, this conversation goes straight to the foundation. We sit down with John Diamond, a field representative for the John Birch Society, to talk about faith, freedom, and the idea that our rights are not granted by government but secured by it. That one distinction changes how you see everything from daily headlines to the choices made in your state capitol and county courthouse.
We dig into the Freedom Index, the John Birch Society’s vote-based scorecard that grades legislators on whether they actually uphold constitutional limits. Instead of voting on vibes, slogans, or party labels, we talk about tracking records, educating neighbors, and using primaries to reward courage and punish “go along to get along” politics. We also spend time on civic education, why so many Americans were never taught the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution, and how that ignorance shows up in policy.
Then we tackle the heavy stuff: election integrity and public trust, questions about voter rolls and counting systems, and why local officials can matter more than national talking heads. We also connect constitutional rights to everyday life through the Second Amendment, taxes, government waste, NGO funding, and eminent domain after the Kelo decision, especially as pipelines and large projects push into rural land.
If you care about constitutional rights, election integrity, limited government, and practical steps you can take locally, listen through to the end. Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s tired of party politics, and leave a review with the biggest issue you want your community to tackle next.
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