The Darrell McClain show

Let Them Know

24 min · Gisteren
aflevering Let Them Know artwork

Beschrijving

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/951727/fan_mail/new] They’ll question your intelligence, minimize your future, then act shocked when you outstudy, outbuild, and outvote them. From a Livingstone College commencement stage, we deliver a sharp, funny, and deeply serious charge built around three words that keep repeating for a reason: let them know.  We start with the brain. Not just degrees and GPAs, but the discipline to learn actively, speak clearly, and create value even when the world hands you limits. We reflect on how Black excellence keeps proving itself in classrooms, careers, and culture, and why HBCUs matter as engines of opportunity and leadership.  Then we move to the heart: resilience that comes from history, family, and “fictive kin,” plus the kind of faith that refuses to be reduced to quiet acceptance. Finally, we talk imagination as a survival skill and a civic duty, connecting the fight for the vote to today’s attacks on voting rights, redistricting, and the distractions of social media comparison and constant posting.  If you’re looking for a powerful graduation speech, an HBCU commencement message, or a real conversation about Black history, civic engagement, and personal responsibility, press play. Subscribe, share this with a graduate or a voter, leave a review, and tell us: what are you ready to let them know? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/TheDarrellmcclainshow]

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aflevering The Most Basic Fact And What It Changes artwork

The Most Basic Fact And What It Changes

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/951727/fan_mail/new] “God is.” If that sentence lands like a shrug, we think something is off, because it is the most basic fact beneath every other fact. We lean into the shock of it and ask what changes when you stop treating God like one more idea inside the universe and start treating Him as the foundation that holds everything up. We walk through the claim of God’s absolute being, what theologians often call God’s self-existence or aseity. That means God never began, never ends, and never came into existence the way everything else did. It also means God is absolute reality, with nothing “before” Him and nothing that exists unless He wills it. Before space, before the universe, before anything we can point to, there was only God, and that reframes how we think about origin, meaning, and what “real” even means. Then we turn the lens on us. If God alone is primary, everything else is secondary and dependent, including the entire universe. We talk about the startling implication that creation is upheld moment by moment by God’s decision to keep it in being, and what that does to our pride, our fear, and our sense of control. We also explore why God is not becoming anything, why He cannot improve, and why that steadiness matters. To close, we reflect on God as the standard of truth, goodness, and beauty, not someone who consults an outside rulebook. If you want a clearer, weightier view of God and a more grounded view of yourself, press play, subscribe, and share this with a friend. After you listen, what line hit you the hardest? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/TheDarrellmcclainshow]

Gisteren14 min
aflevering God Sets Us Free So We Can Walk By The Spirit artwork

God Sets Us Free So We Can Walk By The Spirit

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/951727/fan_mail/new] Some Bible passages don’t just inspire you, they reframe your whole inner world. Romans 8 is one of them, and we read it with the kind of attention it demands: slow enough to hear the logic, honest enough to feel the comfort, and clear enough to take it into real life. It starts with a stunning declaration that hits shame at the root: there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. From the first line, we’re talking about Christian assurance, freedom in Christ, and what it means that the Spirit of life sets us free from sin and death.  As the chapter unfolds, we lean into the contrast between living “according to the flesh” and living “according to the Spirit.” We explore why mindset matters, how the indwelling Holy Spirit changes our direction, and what it looks like to put sin to death without sliding back into fear. Then the tone shifts from effort to belonging: adoption, crying “Abba, Father,” and the Spirit bearing witness that we are God’s children and heirs with Christ. We also don’t dodge the hard parts Romans 8 names, like suffering, waiting, and the groaning of creation, because biblical hope is built for real pressure.  We end where Romans 8 ends: prayer when you’re weak, the Spirit’s intercession when you don’t have words, “all things work together for good,” and the unbreakable conclusion that nothing in all creation can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. If you’re searching for Bible teaching on suffering, prayer, sanctification, and confidence in God’s love, this is a chapter to return to often. Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs steady ground, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/TheDarrellmcclainshow]

Gisteren8 min
aflevering Let Them Know artwork

Let Them Know

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/951727/fan_mail/new] They’ll question your intelligence, minimize your future, then act shocked when you outstudy, outbuild, and outvote them. From a Livingstone College commencement stage, we deliver a sharp, funny, and deeply serious charge built around three words that keep repeating for a reason: let them know.  We start with the brain. Not just degrees and GPAs, but the discipline to learn actively, speak clearly, and create value even when the world hands you limits. We reflect on how Black excellence keeps proving itself in classrooms, careers, and culture, and why HBCUs matter as engines of opportunity and leadership.  Then we move to the heart: resilience that comes from history, family, and “fictive kin,” plus the kind of faith that refuses to be reduced to quiet acceptance. Finally, we talk imagination as a survival skill and a civic duty, connecting the fight for the vote to today’s attacks on voting rights, redistricting, and the distractions of social media comparison and constant posting.  If you’re looking for a powerful graduation speech, an HBCU commencement message, or a real conversation about Black history, civic engagement, and personal responsibility, press play. Subscribe, share this with a graduate or a voter, leave a review, and tell us: what are you ready to let them know? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/TheDarrellmcclainshow]

Gisteren24 min
aflevering Cuba Sanctions To Masked ICE And The Coming AI Job Shock artwork

Cuba Sanctions To Masked ICE And The Coming AI Job Shock

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/951727/fan_mail/new] The fastest way to understand modern power is to watch where pressure gets applied and who ends up paying. We start with a clear listener question: why the Trump administration is going so hard on Cuba right now. We break down the official “national security” framing, then get specific about the real leverage points: sanctions aimed at GAESA, the military-linked business empire tied to tourism and foreign currency, plus the domestic politics of Miami, Marco Rubio, and the long shadow of regime change. The hardest part to ignore is the moral math: economic suffocation rarely lands on elites first.  Then we run through a set of headlines that all point to the same theme of eroding trust. We cover the John Bolton classified documents case, Jerome Powell’s warning about political pressure on Federal Reserve independence, and the very public meltdown around 60 Minutes and media leadership fights that reshape what accountability journalism looks like.  The centerpiece is a chilling report on masked ICE tactics and the spike in criminals impersonating immigration agents to rob and assault immigrant families. From Portland’s response to America’s long history of anti-mask laws, we argue that visible identification is not a luxury, it is a prerequisite for democratic policing.  We close with a deep dive on artificial intelligence, data centers, and what comes next, featuring Zach Exley of New Consensus. He lays out why AI job automation could trigger a demand doom loop and why “capitalism can’t survive AI” is not a slogan but a systems warning. Subscribe, share, and leave a review, then tell us: what rules should govern AI and law enforcement in a free society? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/TheDarrellmcclainshow]

5 jun 202651 min
aflevering When Buckley Met Vidal artwork

When Buckley Met Vidal

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/951727/fan_mail/new] A single programming gamble by ABC News helped invent the political TV world we live in now, and it hinged on one combustible pairing: novelist-provocateur Gore Vidal and conservative architect William F. Buckley Jr. We walk through how the 1968 Republican and Democratic National Conventions became a national theater, with two elite talkers treating live television as both weapon and audience.  We unpack what each man is really fighting for. Buckley brings a movement-building instinct, a belief that culture drives politics, and a sharp defense of hierarchy, “law and order,” and American power. Vidal counters with satire, a suspicion of empire, and a determination to expose the moral assumptions behind conservative rhetoric, especially on civil rights, inequality, and the Vietnam War. As Miami gives way to Chicago, the arguments stop being abstract and start colliding with real violence in the streets and raw division on camera.  Then it goes off the rails. When debate turns into personal insult and threat, you can hear the future arrive: the conflict between what is most viewable and what is most illuminating. We also follow the long aftermath, from magazine essays to lawsuits to decades of obsession, and end with a question that still haunts media and politics: what happens when we no longer share the same screen, the same facts, or even the same language for disagreement?  If you found this story useful, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. Who do you think understood television better, Vidal or Buckley? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/TheDarrellmcclainshow]

5 jun 20261 h 29 min