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Why do good people suffer while the wicked prosper?
Why does living with integrity, faith, and restraint feel harder than cheating, exploiting, or abandoning moral limits?
In this episode, we confront one of the oldest and most painful questions humanity has ever asked — and why it feels more urgent than ever today. Drawing on Torah wisdom, history, psychology, and real-time politics, this conversation explores why societies that abandon accountability reward chaos, why moral clarity comes at a cost, and why meaning — not comfort is the true measure of a life.
This episode is for anyone struggling to stay decent in a world that increasingly celebrates destruction, excuses fraud, and punishes conscience. It’s not about left versus right. It’s about order versus collapse, truth versus narrative, and why doing the right thing still matters — even when it hurts.
By Linda SadackaWhy do good people suffer while the wicked prosper?
Why does living with integrity, faith, and restraint feel harder than cheating, exploiting, or abandoning moral limits?
In this episode, we confront one of the oldest and most painful questions humanity has ever asked — and why it feels more urgent than ever today. Drawing on Torah wisdom, history, psychology, and real-time politics, this conversation explores why societies that abandon accountability reward chaos, why moral clarity comes at a cost, and why meaning — not comfort is the true measure of a life.
This episode is for anyone struggling to stay decent in a world that increasingly celebrates destruction, excuses fraud, and punishes conscience. It’s not about left versus right. It’s about order versus collapse, truth versus narrative, and why doing the right thing still matters — even when it hurts.