Acharya Prashant addresses a question about whether imposing a uniform identity can eliminate racism and regionalism. He explains that as long as one wants to standardize or enforce something that varies from person to person, it will only create division, violence, discontent, resistance, and ultimately, suffering. He points out that aspects like language, physical features, sex, economic condition, and food habits are not fundamental to human existence and naturally vary. He argues that trying to normalize, standardize, or idealize these things is impractical and childish. For instance, even within a single household, food habits, choices, and accents differ. He compares this to the British imposing their skin color as superior, which was unacceptable, and states the same logic applies to other differences. Instead of focusing on these variable traits, Acharya Prashant emphasizes the need to focus on what truly unifies all human beings. He distinguishes humans from animals by highlighting the human's innate instinct to know, the urge to understand, realize, and be liberated from inner ignorance. While animals are driven by instinct, humans can make choices based on higher values. He asserts that this quest for knowledge and liberation is the true common ground for all humanity. All societal rules, laws, policies, and customs should be founded on this unifying principle. For example, a policy mandating basic education for all is a good unifying principle because it serves the human urge to know. Similarly, systems should be transparent to honor this urge. He suggests that the Indian Constitution, with its values of liberty, equality, and fraternity, is a respectable document with fairly universal values. However, it does not address the inner life of a human, such as liberation from physical identification, which is the role of other social agencies.