• Do We Have a New Kind of Prejudice?
    Apr 8 2026

    This passage critiques the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit granting the Communist Party special privileges in campaign reporting, exempting it from the disclosure rules required of Republicans and Democrats. The author questions the rationale, arguing that donors to the Communist Party rarely face persecution, while donors to mainstream causes like United Way sometimes do. He frames this as an example of “reverse discrimination,” where the law favors certain groups over justice. The broader concern is that justice requires impartiality “no respecting of persons” yet legal favoritism toward specific groups undermines true justice. The passage concludes with an example of jury bias favoring a wealthy company, illustrating how prejudice, rather than fairness, can dictate outcomes.

    #ReverseDiscrimination #JusticeAndBias #Impartiality #LegalFavoritism #JudicialCritique #FairnessInLaw

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    3 mins
  • Are We Regulating Ourselves into Tyranny?
    Apr 1 2026

    This passage warns that excessive regulation even over seemingly minor matters like lawn maintenance can erode personal freedom and lead society toward tyranny. Using the example of a proposed 16-page building code in University Park, Texas, the author highlights how fines for weeds, cracks, or unsound chimneys, combined with inspectors’ authority to enter homes at will, could pave the way for ever-expanding governmental control. The critique emphasizes that overregulation shifts citizens’ focus from their own responsibilities to policing each other, creating a culture of compliance rather than liberty. While regulations may produce orderly neighborhoods, the author argues that the cost to freedom is far too high, warning that small, innocuous rules can become a slippery slope toward a dictator-like state.

    #Overregulation #FreedomVsOrder #SlipperySlope #TyrannyByRules #CivilLiberty #PersonalResponsibility #GovernmentOverreach

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    3 mins
  • Are We Using Language to Confuse Ourselves?
    Mar 25 2026

    Are We Using Language To Confuse Ourselves?

    https://cr101radio.com/podcast/are-we-using-language-to-confuse-ourselves-2

    In “Are We Using Language to Confuse Ourselves?” Rushdoony warns that statist categories—especially the IRS distinction between “profit” and “nonprofit”—have subtly reshaped Christian and cultural thinking, causing people to mistake tax classifications for reality itself. He argues that these terms obscure what truly matters: productivity versus nonproductivity, noting that families, churches, schools, and libraries—though labeled “nonprofit”—are among the most productive forces in civilization, while civil government, also nonprofit, is often minimally productive at best. By adopting bureaucratic language, society elevates administration over creation, form over substance, and pragmatism over theology, allowing the tax state rather than God’s law to frame how we think. The remedy, Rushdoony insists, is a return to Biblical categories and disciplined thinking that rightly divides truth before God, not the state.

    #LanguageMatters #BiblicalCategories #AgainstStatism #ProductivityVsProfit #ChristianWorldview #GodsLaw #TruthAndMeaning #CulturalClarity

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    3 mins
  • Do You Want a Vegetarian World?
    Mar 18 2026

    This piece critiques the modern animal rights movement and its push toward vegetarianism as a social imperative. While acknowledging the right of vegetarians and animal rights advocates to promote their beliefs, the author warns against coercive tactics that could impose dietary choices on the broader public. Representative Ronald Mottl’s proposed bill to study animal rights is cited as an example of how advocacy could evolve into regulation. The piece notes that appeals to morality like claims that a nonviolent diet ensures world peace are dubious, pointing out India’s history despite widespread vegetarianism. The argument concludes that freedom must include responsibility; when used foolishly or coercively, it undermines itself. #AnimalRights #Vegetarianism #FreedomAndResponsibility #SocialControl #DietaryChoice #IndividualLiberty #NonViolentWorld #Coercion #Regulation #EthicsVsFreedom

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    3 mins
  • Are We Robbing Widows?
    Mar 11 2026

    This piece highlights the harsh realities widows face under federal and state property and tax laws. A Missouri widow, unable to operate her late husband’s farm machinery during harvest because it was tied up in his estate, was forced to hire help at additional expense. Laws and regulations, including estate and inheritance taxes, often treat widows as secondary to bureaucratic process, ignoring the years of joint labor they contributed. Even careful legal planning can fail, as tax laws are frequently revised. The author argues that these policies amount to a form of robbing widows, and questions why senior citizen organizations aren’t doing more to advocate for their protection. He calls for legislators to show genuine consideration for widows and orphans, emphasizing that death should be a time of mourning, not bureaucratic exploitation. #ProtectWidows #EstateTaxInjustice #DeathTaxes #PropertyRights #TaxBurden #LegalRedTape #AdvocateForSurvivors #WidowProtection #InheritanceJustice #FairLegislation

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    3 mins
  • When is R-pe Not R-pe?
    Mar 4 2026

    A shocking case in New York exposed the failure of justice when a young bank teller was held at knifepoint, her face covered, and raped, yet the judge asked only whether she had seen penetration. When she said no, the criminal was acquitted of first-degree rape and violent robbery, convicted instead of lighter charges of nonviolent robbery and sexual abuse, highlighting a dangerous precedent that vision could determine the severity of a crime. The prosecutor rightly noted that if this were the standard, crimes against blind victims could never be prosecuted, yet the judge ignored this, speculating about hypothetical alternatives like a dildo or hands. This case exemplifies how courts can prioritize the supposed “rights” of criminals over the protection of victims, while civil remedies often fail due to cost or unenforceability. When justice and the law diverge, societal freedom and trust in the legal system are seriously jeopardized. #JusticeDelayed #VictimRights #LegalFail #RapeAwareness #JudicialAccountability #CrimeAndPunishment #LawVsJustice #FreedomAtRisk #ProtectTheInnocent #CourtFailures

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    4 mins
  • Does Crime Pay?
    Feb 25 2026

    In California, a con man who stole $9 million through a Ponzi scheme served only three years of a nine-year sentence, essentially paying a year for every $3 million stolen, while his victims lost everything their savings and homes. His incarceration at Boron was described as a “country club” with tennis courts, swimming pools, and dorm-style housing, showing that prisons often fail as a deterrent. Biblical justice, by contrast, emphasizes restitution, requiring the criminal to compensate victims and, if unable, to serve until the debt is paid, with capital punishment for capital crimes. Modern courts rarely enforce this principle; some criminals even stash their gains abroad and enjoy lavish lives after minimal incarceration. When crime pays, morality is undermined, victims suffer, and society as a whole bears the cost, highlighting the urgent need to realign justice with both law and ethical responsibility. #CrimePays #BiblicalJustice #Restitution #VictimRights #CriminalAccountability #SocietyAtRisk #MoralDecay #JusticeSystem #PrisonReform #EthicsInLaw

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    4 mins
  • Are We Running Low on Ideas to Spend our Money?
    Feb 11 2026

    Sometimes it seems Washington’s planners compete to find the most absurd ways to spend our money. Take Baltimore’s “Block” of strip joints and adult shops: $338,000 is being spent to make the area more accessible with tree plantings and wheelchair cuts apparently ensuring the physically disabled can comfortably visit porno shops! While satire aside, one wonders if resources couldn’t go toward more practical projects like park benches for the homeless or a museum celebrating disappearing Americana like farm mules or outhouses. Bureaucratic priorities often feel out of touch with common sense, and while humor helps us tolerate the madness, the underlying question remains: are we running out of meaningful ways to invest public funds? #GovernmentSpending #Bureaucracy #WastefulSpending #PublicFunds #WashingtonDC #FiscalResponsibility #Satire #CommunityDevelopment #HUD #Priorities

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    4 mins