Let’s get real for a second, Common sense isn’t complicated, it doesn’t require a PhD, a think tank, or a ten-hour symposium.
It’s the inner compass that tells us what’s right, what’s just, and what simply makes sense for the betterment of people.
So why, why are we still arguing over things that could help entire communities and nations thrive?
When a solution is presented, clear, simple, and effective, and it stands to bring relief, dignity, and opportunity to struggling people, why does it meet resistance?
Why are we seeing growing trends of over-analysis, skepticism, and redirection by those who claim to serve the public interest? Let’s call it what it is, sabotage by confusion.
Too many analysts so-called experts and individuals are fast to inject their opinions and frameworks into matters that don’t concern their agenda.
They want to twist and intellectualize basic truths, they scramble to reframe the narrative, not to help the people, but to preserve systems, institutions, or egos that benefit from dysfunction.
But here’s the bottom line, if a common sense solution is laid on the table, qualified, clear, and ready to do meaningful work, why would anyone in their right mind fight it?
Why would anyone who truly has a people and a nation at heart choose to taint it?
The answer is uncomfortable but necessary to say: because not everyone claiming to serve the people serves the people.
Some fear change. Others fear losing power, credit, or control.
But if your heart truly beats for the nation, you don’t block what helps, you don’t distort what works, you don’t silence the truth just because it didn’t come wrapped in your language or aligned with your politics.
We need to get back to honoring reason, not the kind sold in expensive reports or scripted debates, but the kind that speaks to the heart, the gut, and the soul of a community.
The kind of reasoning that says, “This helps. Let’s do it.” Period.
Let’s stop pretending that every solution needs endless debate or bureaucratic gymnastics.
If something works, and it helps the people, support it.
If you're trying to break it down, rebrand it, or redirect it to serve another purpose, ask yourself: who are you serving?
We don't need more noise, we need action. We need unity around truth, we need leaders and citizens who don't fight common sense, but follow it boldly, unapologetically, and without compromise.
Because at this point, to argue against what could uplift a people, is to admit you never had their best interest in mind to begin with.
Any common sense reasoning rooted in truth and aimed at doing good should be applauded, not pushed aside.
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