Send us Fan Mail“Civilization will die” is a sentence that should freeze a country in its tracks, especially when it’s tied to war and the casual suggestion of catastrophic escalation. We take that line seriously and follow where it leads: to questions about nuclear brinkmanship, moral language, and why even secular commentators reach for words like evil when leaders talk about killing civilians as if it’s normal.We also spend time on the part that surprised us most: a defense of faith as a kind of humility, not a demand for theocracy. In a pluralistic democracy, we don’t need religious rule, but we do need restraint, respect, and the ability to recognize human limits. That’s why the conversation about mocking Islam, mocking Christianity, and using sacred language as a taunt matters. We unpack the symbolism around the inauguration Bible detail too, not as a purity test, but as a window into whether political norms are treated as real commitments or disposable costumes.Then we zoom out to the system that made this moment possible. Iraq War accountability that never happened. Torture and rendition without prosecutions. Bankers bailed out with almost no consequences. We argue that impunity teaches the worst lesson imaginable: there are no laws, only power. The final question is pointed and practical: if you’re inside government and you know where this is going, do you have the courage to resign, cause a scandal, and force the public to look?If this conversation hits you, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s still trying to “wait and see,” and leave us a review. What would accountability and courage look like right now? Support the show