
Nomad Podcast Selina Stone – Why Do the Wicked Prosper? (N366)
Apr 6, 2026
Selina Stone, theologian and author exploring Black British Christian life, reflects on why cruelty and exploitation sometimes seem to flourish. She discusses childhood moral disillusionment, elite impunity, personal and historical grief, and how anger can fuel resistance. The conversation weaves scripture, contemplative practice, and calls to live hope and courageous, justice-seeking love.
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Teaching A Toddler Illuminates Moral Expectations
- Selina uses a personal family example about teaching her two-year-old niece boundaries to illustrate learned expectations of reward and correction.
- The anecdote connects early praise/criticism to adult disappointment when kindness isn't reciprocated or rewarded.
Elite Networks Shield Harms From Accountability
- Selina highlights the stark reality of powerful people committing extreme harms yet retaining wealth and influence across nations.
- She points to systemic protection: elite networks connecting royalty, presidents, and the very wealthy shield perpetrators.
Personal History Frames Present Anger
- Selina names her identity as a Black woman of Jamaican heritage and recalls ancestors kidnapped and enslaved to show historical continuity of exploitation.
- This personal-historical link grounds her anger and fear about contemporary normalised violence.
