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Host and executive producer Erika Washington welcomes back Dr. Toni Bond, a classically trained Womanist ethicist and ethics professor, for a wide-ranging conversation about ethics, morality, faith, and the United States’ political climate in 2026. They distinguish ethics (social rules of conduct) from morals (individual principles), and Dr. Bond explains key normative ethical approaches—utilitarianism, deontological duty ethics, and virtue ethics—using a classroom dilemma about whether a parent should tell authorities a son is hiding after allegedly robbing a beloved elderly neighbor. The discussion expands into Christian and theological ethics, including how biblical interpretation varies by translation and historical context, and how scripture has been weaponized for oppression; they also explore consent and a Womanist reading through the story of Mary and the birth of Jesus. Turning to current events, they address immigration enforcement and ethical questions about human rights, critique the nation’s “broken” moral compass and the historic problems of U.S. democracy, and discuss unjust laws, voting, mutual aid, and the need for courageous activism amid threats to speech and dissent. They close by debating the ethics and strategy of protesting inside a church over alleged ICE ties, weighing private property, consistency, and whether actions advance justice or deepen division, and end with a call to work together toward liberation and community care.
By Erika WashingtonHost and executive producer Erika Washington welcomes back Dr. Toni Bond, a classically trained Womanist ethicist and ethics professor, for a wide-ranging conversation about ethics, morality, faith, and the United States’ political climate in 2026. They distinguish ethics (social rules of conduct) from morals (individual principles), and Dr. Bond explains key normative ethical approaches—utilitarianism, deontological duty ethics, and virtue ethics—using a classroom dilemma about whether a parent should tell authorities a son is hiding after allegedly robbing a beloved elderly neighbor. The discussion expands into Christian and theological ethics, including how biblical interpretation varies by translation and historical context, and how scripture has been weaponized for oppression; they also explore consent and a Womanist reading through the story of Mary and the birth of Jesus. Turning to current events, they address immigration enforcement and ethical questions about human rights, critique the nation’s “broken” moral compass and the historic problems of U.S. democracy, and discuss unjust laws, voting, mutual aid, and the need for courageous activism amid threats to speech and dissent. They close by debating the ethics and strategy of protesting inside a church over alleged ICE ties, weighing private property, consistency, and whether actions advance justice or deepen division, and end with a call to work together toward liberation and community care.