You always own the option of having no opinion.
In a world filled with noise, Marcus reminds us of a radical choice: silence. When senators bickered, when rumours flew, when emotions boiled — he often refrained from judgment. Not every situation requires a stance. Not every argument needs your view. He believed in the discipline of neutrality. This was not indifference, but inner space — preserving clarity and peace by not rushing to react.
Freedom often means choosing *not* to respond.
"If someone does wrong, the harm is to himself. Why should I be disturbed?"