Principle 6: We Don’t All Have to Agree, We Just Have to Agree to Build
- Benjamin Cobb

- Aug 23
- 1 min read
We’re more divided than ever, and more tired of it than ever.
But unity doesn’t mean everyone thinks the same. It means we believe in something together.
This campaign isn’t about checking the right boxes or canceling those who disagree. It’s about building a movement that’s stronger because we don’t all look, think, or vote alike.
Here’s how we do it:
Host national and local town halls, online and off, to actually listen.
Create Unity Task Forces that bring together people from different races, classes, and political views to find real solutions.
Stop using difference as a weapon. Disagreement isn’t division, it’s democracy.
As a foster care survivor, I’ve seen both division and healing. I know the power of unity firsthand.
We don’t need uniformity to move forward. We just need people willing to show up, speak up, and build something better together.
🧭 Return to all six campaign principles → Principles Page
Related Reading:
🔗 (Future) Unity Task Force Plan
🔗 (Future) Dialogue Roadmap
🔗 (Future) Break the System, Part 5

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