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A single vote in a Kentucky primary could tell you more about American power than a hundred cable news panels. We sit down with attorney Robert Barnes to connect the dots between populism, civil liberties, and the machinery that keeps Congress weak and the executive strong.
We start with Barnes’s personal story: a hard upbringing in Chattanooga, losing his father young, and a deep skepticism of elitism that later pushes him to leave Yale in protest over policies he says punish poor students. From there, we track how that worldview shapes a legal career built around civil rights, constitutional law, and pro bono defense of people caught in the gears of institutions that rarely face consequences.
Then the conversation turns bluntly political. Barnes explains why Trump’s early message on ending forever wars, challenging the bureaucracy, and putting workers ahead of Wall Street felt real to many voters, and why he believes that promise collapses under donor pressure. We dig into the Thomas Massey primary, FISA and warrantless surveillance, and the broader question of whether foreign lobbying and big-money influence can effectively “buy” a House seat.
Finally, we walk through war powers and the War Powers Resolution, using the Iran conflict as the real-time test case. If Congress cannot control war, what can it control? If you care about the Constitution, congressional authority, and stopping endless wars, you’ll want this breakdown.
Subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review. What’s the one reform that would actually force Congress to do its job?
By Produced and Distributed by OMG Media Partners, LLC.A single vote in a Kentucky primary could tell you more about American power than a hundred cable news panels. We sit down with attorney Robert Barnes to connect the dots between populism, civil liberties, and the machinery that keeps Congress weak and the executive strong.
We start with Barnes’s personal story: a hard upbringing in Chattanooga, losing his father young, and a deep skepticism of elitism that later pushes him to leave Yale in protest over policies he says punish poor students. From there, we track how that worldview shapes a legal career built around civil rights, constitutional law, and pro bono defense of people caught in the gears of institutions that rarely face consequences.
Then the conversation turns bluntly political. Barnes explains why Trump’s early message on ending forever wars, challenging the bureaucracy, and putting workers ahead of Wall Street felt real to many voters, and why he believes that promise collapses under donor pressure. We dig into the Thomas Massey primary, FISA and warrantless surveillance, and the broader question of whether foreign lobbying and big-money influence can effectively “buy” a House seat.
Finally, we walk through war powers and the War Powers Resolution, using the Iran conflict as the real-time test case. If Congress cannot control war, what can it control? If you care about the Constitution, congressional authority, and stopping endless wars, you’ll want this breakdown.
Subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review. What’s the one reform that would actually force Congress to do its job?