Colonel’s Constitutional Brief

Freedom of Religion, but for Who? Part II

From Finland's courts convicting a bishop for publishing Christian theology to Canada criminalizing scripture readings, the pattern is clear: Western governments are selectively targeting Christian speech while ignoring far more inflammatory rhetoric from other belief systems.

By |2026-04-01T15:16:43+00:00April 1, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

Texas Taxpayer Funded Islamic Jihadist Education

A federal judge orders Texas to include Islamic schools in its voucher program, raising urgent questions about taxpayer funding, the Muslim Brotherhood's stated goals, and the advance of civilization-jihad in America.

By |2026-03-25T16:44:54+00:00March 25, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

A Mother’s Grief and a State’s Betrayal

Allen West met Patty Morin, mother of murdered Maryland mom Rachel Morin, and asks why Governor Moore's first legislative priority was banning the very law enforcement cooperation that brought her daughter's killer to justice.

By |2026-03-18T22:04:17+00:00March 18, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

Shall Not Be Infringed

What happens when the state that gave America James Madison considers legislation that critics say undermines the very rights he helped enshrine? A proposed Virginia law would ban the future sale of certain semi-automatic firearms and magazines, igniting a fierce debate over the Second Amendment, constitutional limits, and the role of government in regulating arms. Supporters argue the measure promotes public safety. Opponents say it contradicts both the historical purpose of the amendment and Supreme Court rulings affirming an individual right to keep and bear arms. With the bill now sitting on the governor’s desk, the controversy highlights a broader national clash over constitutional interpretation, public safety, and the enduring meaning of the right to bear arms.

By |2026-03-17T21:44:04+00:00March 11, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

America Security First

For 47 years, we've operated in a delusional reality when it comes to Iran. The number one state sponsor of Islamic terrorism has killed and maimed our troops, armed Russia with drones, funded proxy wars across the Middle East, and pursued nuclear weapons not for energy but for apocalyptic ambitions. There is no compromise with a regime that chants "Death to America" and means it. Removing Iran as a threat isn't optional. It's a strategic geopolitical imperative.

By |2026-03-04T14:51:40+00:00March 4, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

The Three Branches of Government

A federal judge just blocked Texas from enforcing key parts of its own DEI law in three school districts. When activist courts override the will of the people, it's time to channel our inner Brigadier General McAuliffe (Battle of the Bulge) and say "Nuts!"

By |2026-02-25T15:22:16+00:00February 25, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

The Incompatibility of Sharia Law with the U.S. Constitution

Texas is voting to ban Sharia law — and for good reason. When apostasy, simply leaving Islam, is a capital crime in over a dozen countries, there is no compatibility with our First Amendment. Just ask Nissar Hussain, a British Pakistani man condemned to death by a Sharia court for converting to Christianity. His warning to America is one we cannot afford to ignore.

By |2026-02-18T22:53:19+00:00February 18, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

One Thing Leads to Another

The basic purpose of the SAVE Act is to require individuals to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote in federal elections. Now, this sounds just simple, easily comprehensible, and agreeable, right?

Freedom of Religion…for Who?

The very first freedom, liberty, in our individual Bill of Rights is the freedom of religion and the free exercise thereof. So, with this backdrop, I found it quite interesting, hypocritical, earlier this week on Monday, that four Muslim women in hijabs were passing out Qurans and hijabs at Wylie East HS in Wylie, Texas.

By |2026-02-04T22:40:07+00:00February 4, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|

A Challenge of Constitutional Will

From encrypted coordination to open obstruction of federal law enforcement, events in Minneapolis fit the textbook definition of an insurgency. Calling it anything else requires abandoning both legal definitions and intellectual honesty.

By |2026-01-28T21:01:41+00:00January 28, 2026|ACRU Commentary, Colonel's Constitutional Brief|
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