Patriot TV Podcast Por JD Rucker arte de portada

Patriot TV

Patriot TV

De: JD Rucker
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Conservative politics and culture are widely covered in the world of podcasts... but not like this. JD Rucker, President of Patriot TV and a long-time podcaster himself, brings fresh perspectives and insights to a realm that has become both complacent and repetitive. Instead of just repeating what other conservative podcasters are saying, Rucker focuses on the topics that are important whether most Americans realize it or not.Copyright JD Rucker Ciencia Política Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • John Thune Should Give an Ultimatum to the Senate: End the Shutdown or He’ll End the Filibuster
    Mar 10 2026
    There are reasons to end the filibuster, but for some reason John Thune isn't buying into those reasons. He doesn't believe pushing a talking filibuster will work because it will lock down the Senate and his caucus for months as Democrats run out the clock. He may be right.

    On today's episode of Patriot TV, host JD Rucker explained how Thune has three policies that are extremely popular with the people which can help him either end the government shutdown or end the filibuster and pass the SAVE America Act and still end the shutdown.
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    17 m
  • Three Reasons to Support the Iran War Even if You Disagree With Its Premise
    Mar 4 2026
    The decision to go to war with Iran is one of the most consequential foreign policy moves in a generation — and plenty of Americans, across the political spectrum, have serious reservations about it. But opposition to how we got here doesn't have to mean opposition to seeing it through. Here are three reasons why supporting the war effort may be the most pragmatic path forward, even for skeptics.


    1. When You're Going Through Hell, Keep Going

    Winston Churchill's advice has never been more applicable. The hard truth is that there is not — and will not be — enough domestic opposition to compel President Trump or anyone in his administration to reverse course. Protest, criticism, and political pressure have their place, but they are not going to stop this war. Given that reality, the fastest road to peace runs straight through victory. Prolonging the conflict by undermining the effort only extends the suffering. Sometimes the most pragmatic form of opposition is pushing for a swift, decisive conclusion.

    2. A Secular Democracy Beats a Theocratic Regime

    We oppose regime change in almost every circumstance — and for good reason. History is littered with the consequences of well-intentioned interventions that left things worse than we found them. But there are exceptions. The Islamic Republic of Iran is not a neutral actor. Its government has chanted "Death to America" as official policy, sponsored terrorism across the Middle East, and taken direct action to destabilize American interests and allies for decades. If there is a 1-in-100 case for regime change, a radical theocracy that actively funds and directs violence against Americans is it. A secular, democratic Iran — however difficult to achieve — would be better for the Iranian people, better for the region, and better for the United States.

    3. A Short War Hurts Democrats. A Long War Buries Everyone.

    Political realities matter. Democrats are banking on a prolonged, messy conflict to generate the kind of public backlash that wins midterm elections — and they may well be right. But here's the catch: the longer the war drags on, the deeper the economic damage goes. Supply chains, energy prices, consumer confidence, and federal spending all take hits that compound over time. A protracted war doesn't just hand Democrats a political debacle to campaign on — it makes economic recovery exponentially harder for whoever is left to clean it up. Getting this over with quickly isn't just a military preference. It's an economic imperative.

    These arguments represent a strategic case for pragmatic support — not an endorsement of how the war began. The goal is the same for everyone: peace, as soon as possible, with the least amount of harm.
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    23 m
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