When something has been wrong for a long time — or when books have been out of balance — there eventually comes a day of reckoning. That’s when debits and credits are added up and there’s either a credit or a price to be paid.
In our culture, we have been living on borrowed time for about a hundred years, because we’ve built prosperity on a foundation made of shifting sand. Today, we face the possibility of that system crashing down around us. Most people are scared and they have reason to be.
Who can you trust as we enter this age of reckoning, when all that we’ve known is probably going to be torn down?
Preview of next week’s show: We’re going to continue looking at the coming age of reckoning, starting with the things that have gone wrong and how we can make the best of some days which threaten to be very dark for most people.

Does the ocean offer the best chance of escaping the state?
Love & Hope — Update:
Our greatest apparent strengths frequently lead to our downfall
Regardless of political beliefs, why does anyone watch Bill O’Reilly?
Could we stop being disappointed by just understanding each other?
Freedom lovers, why do so many of you still blindly trust the GOP?
Federal checks are destroying incentive to take entry-level jobs
Chappelle is offensive and crude, but what he’s doing is important