The Constitution: Presidential Powers
Americans fought a long and bloody war to get rid of one tyrant, the English King, George III. They didn’t want to install a new one of their own making. So how did the Framers ensure that the President would have enough power to be an effective chief executive, without making him a dictator? John Yoo, Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, has the answer.
Watch more from PragerU’s Understanding the Constitution: A 10-Part Series.

Now Playing: 17 of 20
Guarding Our Freedoms

The Dark Art of Political Intimidation
5-Minute Videos • Kimberley Strassel

Paulo Figueiredo on Brazil’s Political and Judicial Corruption
Real Talk • Marissa Streit

Why We're Losing Liberty
5-Minute Videos • Robert George

North Korean Defector: Where's the Freedom of Thought in America?
Short Clips

Totalitarianism: Can It Happen in America?
5-Minute Videos • Rod Dreher

Ep. 313 — Who Wants to Control Others?
Fireside Chats • Dennis Prager

Sheila Nazarian: I Am Proof the American Dream Is Alive
Stories of Us • Sheila Nazarian

Axel Kaiser: How the Left Destroyed My Country
Stories of Us • Axel Kaiser

Ilan Sinelnikov: What the Soviet Union Taught Me about Freedom
Stories of Us • Ilan Sinelnikov

What Do You Know About the Supreme Court?
Man on the Street • Will Witt

Defining Liberty
5-Minute Videos • Eugene Volokh

About the FBI Raid...
Short Clips • Dennis Prager

Russian Collusion and the Death of Journalism
5-Minute Videos • Ashley Rindsberg

Who Are the Most Powerful People in America?
5-Minute Videos • Philip Hamburger

What is Crony Capitalism?
5-Minute Videos • Jay Cost

The Constitution: The Supreme Court
5-Minute Videos • Sherif Girgis

The Constitution: Presidential Powers
5-Minute Videos • John Yoo

Live Not by Lies: An Interview with Rod Dreher
Interviews • Amala Ekpunobi

They Say Scandinavia But They Mean Venezuela
5-Minute Videos • Debbie D'Souza

Ep. 296 — America Needs American Values
Fireside Chats • Dennis Prager