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Inspiration

Revolutionary Love as Politicaland Spiritual Force

Valarie Kaur
Valarie Kaur
Jan 28, 2026
6 min read
Watch · 7

TLDR: Valarie Kaur frames love not as sentiment but as a radical political practice that is generationally rooted, collectively practiced, and more powerful than the nightmare of domination. She calls movements to shift from pure resistance toward actively practicing the world they want to build, and invites even enforcers of oppressive systems to recognize they have a choice to join that world.

Read · 8 sections

What Does Love Mean as a Political Force?

In this 80-second address to faith leaders, Kaur stakes a claim that love is not a soft or passive stance—it is a force of power (0:00–0:09). When she says "Our love is a force you can never defeat," she is not appealing to sentiment. She is naming a structural reality: love, as she defines it, operates through collective action, intergenerational memory, and the practice of building alternatives. The administration she addresses can use violence—arrest, beating, lethal force—but these tools cannot dismantle the force she is describing because that force is not located in any single body or moment. It is part of a continuity.

How Is Love Connected to Ancestral Memory?

Kaur grounds her claim of love's invincibility in genealogy (0:12–0:18). She says the movement is "part of a song of love that began long ago with our ancestors and will only get louder." This is a theological and spiritual move: love is not invented in the present moment. It is an inheritance, something already in motion before this generation joined it, and something that will outlast any current administration's lifespan. By rooting the movement in ancestral lineage, Kaur locates the source of power not in individual courage or willpower, but in continuity with those who came before. Suppressing a movement in the present does not erase that ancestral connection; it may only make it "louder."

Why Does Kaur Emphasize Being the Majority?

She states plainly: "We are the majority" (0:20–0:23). This is significant because it reframes the narrative of underdog resistance. Kaur is not calling for a minority to fight against overwhelming odds. She is naming a demographic and political fact: the force she speaks of represents the greater number. When she then says "The more you come after us, the more we will grow," she is describing a dynamic in which oppression does not weaken the majority—it radicalizes and expands it. Each act of repression becomes evidence of the system's illegitimacy and therefore recruits more people to the movement.

What Is the Difference Between Resistance and World-Building?

Kaur makes a sharp distinction at 0:30–0:47: "This movement is about more than resistance. We are practicing the world we want in the space between us. We are living into the dream of a world that is green and whole, safe and free." This pivot is crucial. Resistance alone defines itself by what it opposes—it keeps the oppressor at the center. But revolutionary love, as Kaur frames it, is generative. It does not only say "no to this"; it practices "yes to that," in real time, in the actual relationships and spaces of the movement. She specifies the dream: a world that is green (suggesting ecological healing), whole (suggesting integration and non-fragmentation), safe and free. These are not abstract ideals; they are being lived out now in how movement members relate to each other.

The image she offers is vivid: "Where I see your child as mine and you see mine as yours." This is not metaphorical. It is a description of a specific relational practice—the erosion of the boundary between self and other, between my family and your family. In such a world, harm to any child is harm to all. This practice, lived out now, is the seed of the world being fought for.

What Choice Does Kaur Offer to ICE Agents?

Remarkably, Kaur addresses not just the administration but also the agents who carry out immigration enforcement (0:51–0:66). Rather than demonizing them, she offers a choice: "Revolutionary love means blocking your actions with one hand and extending the other with the hope that you will one day take it or your children will take it." This formulation holds two things at once. The left hand blocks—it does not consent to the harm, it does not step aside. But the right hand is open, extending hope. Kaur is not naive about the power dynamics. She acknowledges that the agents may not themselves take that hand. But their children might. In other words, she is addressing a longer timeline than the immediate confrontation. She is planting seeds for future generations within the families of enforcers, betting that conscience is generational and that love can reach across even the most hardened divides.

Why Is Domination Brief and Love Infinite?

Kaur closes with a contrast (0:70–0:75): "For the brief high of domination is nothing compared to the infinite love and joy of true community." She is describing the internal experience of each position. Domination offers a "high"—a rush, a temporary feeling of power. But it is brief. It cannot sustain itself. Its brevity is structural: dominance requires constant enforcement, constant vigilance, constant violence, because it is built against human nature and human longing for connection. By contrast, love and community are infinite and joyful. They regenerate themselves. They do not require the same expenditure of force. They are, in her framing, more efficient and more durable than their opposites.

How Does This Address Apply Beyond Immigration?

While Kaur's immediate context is immigration enforcement and ICE, the logic of her argument applies to any system of domination. Whenever a government or institution relies on coercion, it has already ceded the claim to legitimacy. It has named itself as outside the force of love, outside community, outside the future. By contrast, every movement that practices love in the present—that shares resources, sees others' children as one's own, extends hope even to opponents—is aligning itself with what Kaur calls the majority and the ancestors. It is not fighting to create something new so much as aligning with something already in motion, already sung by generations, already inevitable.

Where to Go From Here

For those drawn to this vision: Kaur's newsletter at revolutionarylove.org and her social media (@valariekaur on Instagram and TikTok) offer ongoing resources and teaching on how to practice revolutionary love concretely. MARCH Minnesota and similar faith-based organizing efforts provide local examples of how to move from speech to sustained action. The key move is internal: shifting from asking "How do we fight them?" to asking "What world are we building right now, in the space between us?" The answer to that question, lived out, is what Kaur names as the force they cannot defeat.

Transcript

[0:00] I say we say to this administration, you

[0:03] can arrest us. You can beat us. You can

[0:07] gun us down in the street, but you

[0:09] cannot end us

[0:12] >> because we are part of a song of love

[0:14] that began long ago with our ancestors

[0:18] >> and will only get louder.

[0:20] >> We are the majority.

[0:23] >> That's right.

[0:25] >> The more you come after us, the more we

[0:28] will grow.

[0:29] That's right.

[0:30] >> Because this MOVEMENT IS ABOUT MORE THAN

[0:32] RESISTANCE. We are practicing the world

[0:35] we want in the space between us. We are

[0:37] living into the dream of a world that is

[0:39] green and whole, safe and free.

[0:42] >> Where I see your child as mine and you

[0:44] see mine as yours. Our dream is more

[0:47] powerful than your nightmare.

[0:51] >> To ICE agents everywhere,

[0:54] you have a choice.

[0:58] Revolutionary love means blocking your

[1:00] actions with one hand and extending the

[1:03] other

[1:04] >> with the hope that you will one day take

[1:06] it or your children will take it.

[1:10] >> For the brief high of domination is

[1:12] nothing compared to the infinite love

[1:15] and joy of true community.

[1:18] >> That's right.

Valarie Kaur
AuthorValarie Kaur

Watch more from Valarie Kaur on YouTube.

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Explore Topics
Revolutionary-loveResistance-movementFaith-organizingImmigration-justiceCommunity-building

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Revolutionary love, according to Kaur, means blocking oppressive actions with one hand while extending hope with the other. It involves practicing the desired world in present relationships—seeing others' children as one's own, building safety and freedom in the spaces between people right now, rather than only opposing what you're against.
Kaur argues that domination offers only a brief high and requires constant enforcement, while love and true community are infinite and regenerative. Love aligns with ancestral power and the majority, making it structurally more durable and efficient than coercion, which must exhaust itself maintaining control.
By rooting movements in ancestors, Kaur shifts the source of power from individual will to intergenerational continuity. A movement that is part of 'a song of love that began long ago' cannot be ended by any single administration—it will only 'get louder' because it precedes and will outlast any current oppressor.
Yes, Kaur specifically addresses ICE agents and others carrying out enforcement, offering them a choice to take the extended hand of hope. She acknowledges they may refuse, but seeds that choice for their children, betting that conscience and love can reach across even hardened divides over time.
Resistance alone keeps the oppressor at the center by defining itself against them. World-building—or 'practicing the world we want in the space between us'—is generative and positive. It creates the culture, relationships, and conditions of the desired future in the present, which is more powerful than opposition alone.
Kaur states plainly that the movement is the majority, not a minority. She argues that oppression does not weaken a majority—each act of repression recruits more people by revealing the system's illegitimacy. The majority's power grows when attacked because conscience and love are on the side of the many.
This refers to the relationships and interactions within the movement itself right now. By treating others' children as one's own, sharing resources, and building safety and freedom in how people relate to each other, the movement embodies the world it seeks. This is not preparation for a future world—it is that world lived into in the present.

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