This is one of the most important questions—and it gets to the heart of what makes The Heartline different.
The truth is: we already live side by side with people we deeply disagree with.
We’ve seen how often disagreement can lead to unfriendlyness, disrespect, closing off, polarisation, and even to war.
This planet is for all of us. Even the ones we dislike. Even the ones we don’t understand.
And unless we believe everyone has the right to be here and be safe and happy, then none of us can—because we will never agree with everyone, and not everyone will agree with us.
The Heartline isn’t about sameness. It’s about shared direction.
We can disagree—on politics, identities, values, or methods—and still believe in a future where people matter, where imagination is allowed, and where change is possible.
Sometimes disagreement is the fire that reveals something new. It challenges us. It helps us grow.
As long as someone isn’t causing harm or excluding others, they belong.
We don’t tolerate oppression. But disagreement? That’s not dangerous. That’s life together.
The point of The Heartline isn’t to always agree—it’s to stay connected. To act anyway. To not let our differences cancel out our shared humanity.
"In a world that keeps trying to make us turn away from each other, we’re saying the opposite."