6/7
Disagreement is not hatred.
A person can oppose your policy without denying your worth.
Healthy disagreement separates ideas from human dignity.
Ideas should be tested.
People do not have to earn their humanity by agreeing with us.
7/7
We rebuild this locally.
Learn names.
Ask better questions.
Help after the storm.
Tell the truth without cruelty.
Remember the order:
Image-bearer first.
Neighbor second.
Political opponent much farther down the list.
A nation survives when citizens remember they belong to one another.
~ GGX
5/7
Social media did not create human division.
It industrialized it.
We are shown strangers at their worst, stripped of context, then invited to treat that moment as proof of an entire group’s character.
No wonder we fear one another.
4/7
Understanding someone is not the same as agreeing with them.
Recognizing another person’s humanity does not require surrendering your convictions.
Some ideas deserve firm opposition.
But we must oppose what is wrong without becoming what is wrong.
3/7
Belonging becomes dangerous when it requires an enemy.
Tribal politics tells us our side is reasonable and moral, while their side is ignorant, corrupt, and dangerous.
Once that happens, truth becomes secondary to loyalty.
2/7
Today, we often know someone’s category before we know their story.
How they voted.
What they posted.
Which “side” they belong to.
But we rarely know if they are grieving, exhausted, caring for family, or afraid for the future.
That matters.
A nation cannot survive when disagreement becomes dehumanization.
We used to disagree with neighbors and still borrow the lawnmower.
That country was not perfect.
But it understood something we are forgetting:
The person who disagrees with you is still your neighbor. #FaithAndCulture #CivilDiscourse
@PolitiBunny Healthcare access is too important for political blame games. Citizens deserve honest numbers, lawful priorities, and leaders willing to explain exactly who is being covered, who is paying, and what tradeoffs are being made. 🙏🇺🇲