Character used to be quiet. You built it in the dark — without hashtags, applause, or a camera angled just so. These days, too much of politics feels like a wardrobe change: the right tee, the right caption, the right posture of empathy. Solidarity as a selfie. The performance gets booked; the principle gets bumped.
I’ve watched people mistake vocabulary for virtue. They memorize the terms, curate the reading list, and rehearse a fluent compassion. But compassion doesn’t need a microphone. It needs a calendar. It needs time blocked off for uncomfortable conversations and unglamorous tasks that don’t fit neatly in a carousel post.
We’ve turned conviction into a brand, and branding is cheap. It lets you buy moral credit with the currency of agreement. Say the right thing, say it loudly, say it first — then slip back into the old incentives, the same social circles, the same daily habits. The public script is immaculate. The private ledger never changes.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: character is inconvenient. It will cost you friends, gigs, and comfort. It will force you to care when there’s no social reward attached — when the cause isn’t trending, when your timeline is indifferent, when helping means showing up at 6 a.m. with coffee and quiet, not a placard and a press release. Character makes you…