“We live in different times now.”
That sentence gets tossed around like a moral hall pass. As if the calendar flipped and suddenly integrity expired. As if respect went out of style. As if accountability was a limited-time offer that quietly ended while everyone was distracted by trends, timelines, and hot takes.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: time doesn’t change morals. People do.
Why have values disappeared?
Values aren’t seasonal. They don’t evolve because an algorithm shifted or because public opinion found a new favorite thing. Right and wrong don’t need software updates. The standard didn't change, but the willingness to live up to it has.
Integrity still matters. Respect still matters. Accountability still matters.
They matter when it’s inconvenient. They matter when it costs you social standing. They matter when nobody’s clapping.
Values have been replaced with "vibes". Vibes feel good. Values hold firm. Vibes shift with the room. Values stand on its own.
What happened to accountability?
Accountability is another casualty of the “times have changed” excuse. Everyone demands it for others, but almost no one wants it for themselves. Mistakes are reframed as misunderstandings. Bad behavior gets rebranded as growth. Apologies come with excuses and a reminder that criticizing them is somehow worse than what they did.
That’s not accountability. That’s public relations.
Does respect still exist?
And respect? Respect now gets confused with agreement. If you disagree, you’re a “hater.” If you question someone's opinion/idea, you’re “toxic.” If you don’t clap on cue, you're side-eyed. Somewhere along the way, respecting people turned into obeying narratives.
Healthy societies don’t work like that. Neither do strong individuals.
Here's the truth: Your character shines the brightest when you have something to lose.
When standing on principle means standing alone. When telling the truth risks backlash. When doing the right thing doesn’t come with applause.
Times didn’t change morals. They just exposed who had them—and who was borrowing them.
I know that I'm sometimes too nostalgic for the past, but I am also realistic about the present.

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