The Four Horsemen of Our Apocalyp...
The Four Horsemen of Our Apocalypse

UUMUAC (You Me Act): The Unitarian Universalist Multiracial ... by Barbara Jean Walsh

Episode notes

Rev. Jack Reich opens his sermon with Isaac Asimov’s reminder that “if knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we will solve them,” setting a tone rooted in evidence, clarity, and moral responsibility. He contrasts the everyday issues Americans believe are most urgent—rising costs, taxes, crime, immigration—with the deeper, structural crises that truly threaten our collective future. This mismatch between public perception and actual danger, he argues, undermines our ability to act effectively as citizens.

Reich identifies four overarching crises: climate change, extreme inequality, pervasive violence, and the erosion of voting rights and democratic functioning. These are not isolated problems but interconnected systems shaping American life. Climate change threatens long‑term survival; inequality distorts d ... 

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