I started watching this show because Netflix algorithms suggested it. I was hooked and fell out of love with it, then hooked again to it, and now, as I watch the last episode, I cannot believe it doesn't have a season four. I particularly love the issues they raise about taking your path and the humanity in all of us, or what my favorite author likes to call the nature of human beings as walking contradictions. President Kirkman or Emily Rhodes is just that, like everybody else. They have lots of goodness, and they also have some darkness like everyone else, even though we like to judge and barely look inside ourselves. That said, I would also like to commend it for the issues it raises, particularly about HIV. Many people do not know that having HIV is not a death sentence, nor does it mean that the person is evil, and I wish I had done something to change this. It begins with the media we consume. Seeing this articulated in a tv show was really a phenomenon. People do not know this, but society's attitude towards HIV patients online and offline, media or not, knowingly or unknowingly contributes to the spread of HIV. what if HIV patients confided in others about their status without fear of prejudice? And what if media houses stop treating it like a death sentence and instead promoted responsibility for oneself and others just like in the film? The character did tell his partner and made sure to take medicines so that he remains undetectable and not spread it. Fiction or not, this was awesome. That was really something, among others that made me cry. I didn't like that the character was African American from a critical point of view, but what the hell, give credit where it is due. I also love the questions it raised about assisted suicide. I mean, there is so much aside from the cinematography and mise-en-scene aesthetics. I loved every bit and I was hoping for a season four.