Cam leaned back in his chair, fingers loosely wrapped around a mug, watching Jam pace the room like a man arguing with gravity itself.
“Alright,” Cam said gently, “start from the beginning. What exactly is bothering you?”
Jam stopped, turned sharply. “It shouldn’t exist.”
Cam nodded. “That’s a strong position. Why?”
“Because it’s unnecessary and dangerous. That should be enough.”
“Dangerous for everyone? Or for some people?”
Jam groaned. “The ‘some people’ argument. Predictable.”
“I just want to understand,” Cam said.
“My reasoning is simple. If something poses serious risk to even part of the population, why keep it? Why celebrate it?”
Cam took a sip. “We keep a lot of things that aren’t safe for everyone.”
“That’s different.”
“How?”
“It’s avoidable,” Jam snapped. “We don’t need it. It’s optional.”
“Optional things can still have value.”
“Value?” Jam laughed. “You’re calling it valuable?”
“To some people, yes. It brings enjoyment.”
“It’s a hazard disguised as a treat.”
Cam leaned forward. “Do you think people who enjoy it are careless? Or unaware?”
“Both. Careless at best, selfish at worst.”
“That’s harsh.”
“It’s accurate.”
“Do you think they intend harm?”
“Intent doesn’t matter if the outcome’s the same.”
“It can matter,” Cam said. “It shapes how we respond.”
Jam waved it off. “If someone supports something dangerous, they’re the problem.”
“What if they don’t see it that way?”
“Then they’re not paying attention.”
“Or they’ve had different experiences.”
“Different experiences don’t change facts.”
“Sometimes they change how we interpret them.”
Jam stared. “You’re really defending this.”
“I’m trying to understand both sides.”
“Well, you’re failing to agree with me.”
“Understanding isn’t agreement.”
Jam groaned. “Convenient. You stay calm while others deal with consequences.”
Cam’s tone softened. “This sounds personal.”
Jam hesitated. “It is. I’ve seen what it can do.”
“I’m sorry,” Cam said quietly.
A brief silence.
“So your solution,” Cam continued, “is to eliminate it entirely?”
“Yes. No exceptions.”
“Even for people who can use it safely?”
“Why should their convenience outweigh someone else’s safety?”
“That’s fair,” Cam said. “But is it only convenience?”
Jam threw up his hands. “You keep romanticizing it.”
“I think small pleasures matter to people.”
Jam muttered, “Unbelievable.”
“Do you think removing it solves everything?” Cam asked.
“Yes.”
“What about education? Labels?”
“That puts the burden on the vulnerable,” Jam shot back. “Why should they always be on guard?”
“Removing it puts the burden on everyone else.”
“Good. Maybe then they’d understand.”
Cam raised an eyebrow. “You want people to lose something to build empathy?”
“If that’s what it takes.”
“Or it just frustrates everyone.”
Jam paused.
“You’re passionate,” Cam said. “But do you think how you’re saying this helps people hear you?”
“They don’t deserve to be coddled.”
“I’m talking about connection.”
Jam scoffed, softer now.
“If people feel attacked,” Cam continued, “they defend instead of listen.”
“So I’m supposed to be nice?”
“Respectful. Curious.”
Jam frowned. “They’re dismissive.”
“Some are. Meeting that with hostility escalates things.”
Jam paced again, slower.
“You might be right about the risks,” Cam added. “But if people tune you out, the argument goes nowhere.”
Jam stopped. “So I’m sabotaging myself.”
“A little,” Cam said.
Jam exhaled. “That’s… irritatingly possible.”
Cam chuckled.
“And I still think it’s ridiculous people are so attached to it.”
Cam grinned. “You mean peanut butter?”
Jam froze.
“…You knew?”
“I had a suspicion.”
Jam shook his head. “All this over peanut butter.”
“It matters to some people,” Cam said.
Jam sighed. “I still don’t like it.”
“That’s okay.”
Jam glanced at him. “But maybe calling everyone who eats it an idiot isn’t helping.”
“That’s fair.”
Jam huffed a small laugh. “Great. Now I have to be reasonable.”
Cam raised his mug. “It grows on you.”
Jam smirked. “Don’t push it.”
Respectfully..
AR for Cam & Jam
