Why bridging the gap between a character and an audience is so difficult?

It’s not easy, but somebody has to do this. If nobody takes a chance, then nothing changes. And that is sad for all stakeholders. Everyone doesn’t love change as it is not discerningly beautiful. Great performances are not just seen but felt. The best host is not the one who welcomes the strangers in their home but invites strangers to their hearts and never forgets that experience. Don’t do things which you don’t understand. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Shared values make us predict how we are going to behave towards each other. Some see an opportunity in tragedy to push agendas. If your absence doesn’t affect them, your presence never mattered. I don’t know” is not an admission of ignorance. It’s an expression of intellectual humility. “I was wrong” is not a confession of failure. It’s a display of intellectual integrity. “I don’t understand” is not a sign of stupidity. It’s a catalyst for intellectual curiosity. Silence and smile: those are two powerful tools. If you put your faith in the wrong hands, you can lose everything. Sometimes, to save something from annihilation, we have to sacrifice some of it as an offering to almighty. However, sometimes, one has to dismantle something to save it from it itself. This may stir up investigations due to a lack of a win-win situation. And, that’s perfectly okay. We all can live with this option as a compelling argument can be made that killing the original form of creation is good as it doesn’t make sense to keep it around for keeping sake. Is steadily revealed information that someone is stealing from one their future slowly bit by bit should be detrimental to the stealer? I guess yes. Why not. After all, it is wrong at all levels of sanity. For example, trying best may not be enough or not, and trying at all may be worse. In the case of middle-class labor in our country is suffering so some concrete steps need to be taken. It is the worst for the poor class, while innovative ideas can pull most Americans easily out of poverty if our focus is at the right place. Uninonizing workers across sectors one sector at a time would be a good start. Putting workers on the corporate boards would be a good start to make things fair. It’s tragic that the US government doesn’t collect one trillion dollars in federal taxes every year, while two hundred billion dollars spent per year will wipe out poverty in America. Well-meaning policies sometimes don’t produce desired outcomes if things are not done with good intentions.