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Law Professors and Deans Calling to Trash Constitution on 250th Anniversary

Glenn Beck · Jonathan Turley On Birthright Citizenship: "We're A Ship Of Fools!" · July 3, 2026
Law Professors and Deans Calling to Trash Constitution on 250th Anniversary
Glenn Beck
Glenn Beck
Jonathan Turley On Birthright Citizenship: "We're A Ship Of Fools!"
"This crisis of faith is being fueled by people who want to condition us, who want to break that spirit, who want us to accept that on the 250th anniversary, we should trash the Constitution. Law professors, law deans, saying the Constitution has to go, that we have to pack the Supreme Court. They're trying to condition voters to accept radical change in the world's oldest and most successful democratic republic."
Georgetown law professor Jonathan Turley warns that influential legal academics are using America's 250th anniversary to advocate for abandoning the Constitution and court-packing schemes. Turley characterizes this as a coordinated effort to "condition" Americans to accept radical institutional change, noting that such voices now include an incoming Congressman who recently called the Declaration of Independence fascist. He frames this as an existential threat to whether the republic will survive another 250 years.

About this episode

Glenn Beck interviews Georgetown University law professor and Fox News contributor Jonathan Turley about his book "Rage and the Republic" during America's 250th anniversary celebrations. The conversation centers on constitutional challenges facing the nation, particularly birthright citizenship and what Turley characterizes as an orchestrated campaign by legal academics to undermine foundational American institutions. Turley reveals that Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence in a recent 5-4 Supreme Court decision leaves open the possibility for Congressional limits on birthright citizenship, despite the narrow ruling upholding it. He advocates for both a 28th Amendment and legislation criminalizing birth tourism, noting the U.S. is an outlier among developed nations on this policy. Turley issues a stark warning about law professors and deans calling for abandoning the Constitution and packing the Supreme Court, describing it as conditioning Americans for radical change. The discussion pivots to the uniqueness of America's founding, with Turley highlighting Thomas Paine as the quintessential American—a repeated failure in England who became "the penman of the revolution" after Benjamin Franklin sponsored his emigration. Turley emphasizes that America's success as the world's first Enlightenment revolution stemmed from embracing faith and the principle that rights come from God, not government—contrasting sharply with France's Terror. Both Beck and Turley express concern about a "crisis of faith" in American principles but find hope in the 250th anniversary celebrations on the National Mall, which Turley describes as more grand than the 1976 bicentennial. The conversation concludes with Turley arguing that Americans must answer the question "who then is this American" or risk not surviving to the 500th anniversary.

Key takeaways

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