I am not asking the White House to resign or be overthrown. I am telling them they should repent, stop spreading falsehoods, and correct them when they are made. Stop mocking religion. Stop speaking for Christians unless you are living the life of one. And now I must add this: stop sowing division among the people you claim to serve.

Division is not a harmless political tactic — it is the slow poison that weakens a nation from within. Jesus Himself said, “Every kingdom divided against itself will be ruined, and every city or household divided against itself will not stand” (Matthew 12:25). The Bible speaks of unity again and again: the unity of believers, the unity of purpose, the unity of a people under God’s truth.

The Founding Fathers understood this, too. George Washington warned in his Farewell Address against the “spirit of party” that would pit Americans against one another. Benjamin Franklin said plainly, “We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately.”

Unity does not mean uniformity. It means working together toward the common good — sharing the ball, not hogging it. A championship basketball team might have the most talented roster in history, but if jealousy, pride, and distrust creep in, they will start losing. Players stop passing, stop listening, stop defending each other, and soon they aren’t playing the game — they’re playing against each other.

Our nation is doing the same. As we argue over the jerseys we wear, our rivals are running the scoreboard. BRICS is growing in strength, with Mobi preparing to meet Putin and Xi — alliances that could shift global influence away from the United States. The world does not pause for our infighting.

Unity is not optional — it is survival. And yet, in our modern era, division is not just a symptom, it is an industry. Social media platforms and news outlets profit by magnifying outrage and painting our fellow citizens as enemies. Before we can heal, we must understand how these tools of communication have been twisted into weapons of separation.