Here is the most baffling paradox of 2026: Most Americans agree on most things most of the time — and yet, our feeds and screens scream civil war. Our eyes and our front porches tell a different story. Why it matters: Three events this week captured beautifully my core belief: The vast majority of Americans are decent, hardworking, neighbor-helping, kid-raising people who don't pop off online. They are the Majestic Muted Majority. Let's listen to three voices, in three different rooms. Each one cracked something open. Sunday night: Ben Sasse appeared on "60 Minutes." A 54-year-old former senator, dying of pancreatic cancer, his face sunburned from the experimental drug buying him weeks or months with his wife and kids. Host Scott Pelley asked him what mattered. He didn't hesitate. The best thing you'll ever be called, he said, is "Dad or Mom, lover, neighbor, friend." He spoke beautifully about community and connection, and the little stuff you hold when you're leaving this big, messy world. He said his terminal diagnosis isn't really unique: "We're all on the clock." Knowing your time is finite, he said, isn't despair. It's permission. Permission to talk about the big, meaty things — together — that we keep deferring. A man with months to live looked into the camera and chose hope, expressed poetically. Let that sit for a second. Stop everything and watch the full 40-minute interview via "60 Minutes." Or listen to his podcast chat with The New York Times' Ross Douthat. Tuesday afternoon: King Charles III stood before Congress. A 77-year-old, two years into his own cancer journey, became the first British monarch to address a joint meeting in 35 years. Charles looked out at a chamber as bitter as any in our lifetime and illuminated all that is good and right about what America has done and still can do. He spoke of our rescue and protection of other nations and of democratic ideals. Here was a king from a foreign land that we broke away from reminding a broken Congress of our collective promise and goodness. Reconciliation, renewal and partnership — those are choices. Still available. Today. Both parties stood together in rare smiles and applause. You can watch his full speech here. Tuesday night: Buffalo, N.Y., the KeyBank Center, an NHL playoff game, the Sabres vs. the Boston Bruins. Two American teams, but Buffalo's proximity to Canada means they sing "O Canada" at home games — until singer Cami Clune's microphone died mid-anthem. Without instruction, 19,000 fans on American soil picked up the words and carried the anthem home — for a country we're supposedly feuding with over tariffs and respect. Tariff fights. 51st-state taunts. None of it survived contact with hockey people in folding seats. They sang for their neighbors. Because that's what neighbors do. The big, bright picture: Sasse, dying. Charles, healing. Buffalo, just being Buffalo. We're all on the clock, folks. We choose what we do with our time. 📈 If you're a CEO or on a CEO's team: Ask to join Jim's new weekly Axios C-Suite newsletter.