Freedom doesn’t vanish overnight—it erodes when we forget what we stand for and hesitate to defend it. We dive straight into the collision of Sharia law with constitutional liberty, outlining why abrogation matters, why enforcement beats rhetoric, and why Texas is uniquely positioned to set a national precedent. With Frank Gaffney, Bill Federer, and more voices at the table, we trace a strategy from “tavern talk” to the ballot box: make the threat legible, win a public mandate, and operationalize it through clear laws, candidate accountability, and focused law enforcement.
We lay out the stakes with specificity: what Sharia means in practice; why later doctrinal interpretations shape governance claims; and how groups accused of advancing illiberal aims fit into a modern legal framework. Then we pivot to action—five words on the Texas primary ballot that could spark a wider movement: “Texas should prohibit Sharia law.” The message is simple but decisive: ask every candidate where they stand and make the answer consequential. We look to Reagan’s playbook for confronting totalitarian threats, turning principle into policy and public will into durable action.
The most searing moments come from Nissar Hussein, a former Muslim who faced threats for apostasy. His story personalizes abstract debate: when leaving a faith invites violence, the bedrock of religious liberty crumbles. He warns that the gap between the UK and the United States may be smaller than many think, urging vigilance before norms reset. Alongside that warning, we return to first principles: restore civic memory, teach constitutional guardrails, and practice the habits that keep a free people free.
If you care about religious liberty, constitutional law, and the practical steps that turn conviction into policy, this is your roadmap. Listen, share with a friend who votes, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Then ask your candidates—local to federal—exactly where they stand on Sharia and what they’ll do about it.
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