Acharya Prashant explains that attempting to standardize or enforce a uniform identity based on external factors like language, culture, or food habits is counterproductive. He asserts that such traits vary naturally from person to person and place to place, and trying to normalize them only breeds division, resistance, and suffering. He emphasizes that focusing on diversity as a basis for national policy is impractical and childish. Instead, society must emphasize what is common to all human beings rather than highlighting differences that are bound to exist. He points out that nature itself is inherently diverse, and no single form, whether a tree or a blade of grass, is superior to another. He identifies the true unifying principle of humanity as the urge to know and the quest for liberation from inner ignorance. While animals live by instinct, humans have the unique capacity to reflect, meditate, and seek understanding. Acharya Prashant suggests that education and the shared goal of realization should be the foundation of any community or state policy. A society built on transparency and the pursuit of knowledge would naturally move beyond the exclusive and discriminatory practices of racism and regionalism. He argues that when unity is based on flimsy things like attire or language, it becomes a tool for exclusion and conflict. Finally, he discusses the Indian Constitution as a respectable framework for shared identity. He notes that the values in the preamble, such as liberty, equality, and fraternity, are universal and non-discriminatory. While the Constitution provides a stable foundation for a fair polity, he mentions that it does not address the inner life or the individual's emancipation from psychological bondages. He concludes that while adhering to constitutional values would solve many societal problems, the deeper work of inner liberation from ignorance must be addressed by other social and spiritual agencies.