Joe: Nelly, I don’t ACT for the Assertive Care Team. I’ve seen this act before. It’s the same stage, the same applause, the same banquet halls. People giving each other awards while calling it progress.
Nelly: That’s a harsh judgment.
Joe: Maybe. But sometimes the West looks like a first-world clown show—endless ceremonies, photo ops, and self-congratulation—while millions of people elsewhere are still forced to drink from polluted rivers, go hungry, or live without basic necessities. We celebrate ourselves before we’ve solved the problems that should matter most.
Nelly: We do try to recognize people making a difference. There are programs like Anderson Cooper’s HERO awards that highlight acts of service.
Joe: I’m glad real heroes get recognized. But I haven’t received any awards from Anderson Cooper, and that’s not what motivates me anyway. I’d rather see fewer galas and more wells being dug, more homes being built, more families being fed. Recognition is nice, but results are better.
Nelly: And what’s driving your frustration?
Joe: A culture that too often mistakes excess for success. The whole “Imelda Marcos’s thousand pairs of shoes” mindset has become a symbol of endless consumption. Build bigger, buy more, throw more away, then congratulate ourselves for recycling a fraction of it. That kind of civilization isn’t sustainable—not environmentally, not economically, and not spiritually.
Nelly: So what deserves applause?
Joe: Clean water. Homes for the homeless. Food for the hungry. Honest work. Communities that restore what they’ve taken instead of chasing endless excess. When those things become the headline, then hand out the awards.
