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She’ll Never Do Lunch In Berkeley Again.


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?p=43170Shot In The Dark:

Mitch Berg

April 18, 2014

 

I’ve always tried to understand people from “across the aisle”.

 

Part of it was the fact that I was a liberal for a while. It’s easy for me not to see libs as “evil”; I wasn’t evil, I was just naive.

 

And over the years I’ve found that getting to know people who think differently, outside the context of politics, can be useful, especially for people whose primary interaction is via some sort of social media. Social media – and the whole online user experience – tends to reduce inhibitions and focus emotion – which is a lousy combination for civil discussion. And over the decade or so of doing MOB parties, I’ve met a lot of people who disagree with me – but spent enough time talking about anything but politics that it was easier to start treating each other like human beings rather than collections of caricatures.

 

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And it cuts both ways. Liberal commentator and strategist Sally Kohn spent some time, er, commentating at Fox News, and learned that conservatives are, in fact, human.

 

My time at Fox News was marked by meeting and working with some of the kindest, smartest, and most talented people I’ve had the pleasure of meeting in life. As I said in my TED talk, Sean Hannity is one of the sweetest people you’ll ever meet – and even now that I’ve parted ways with Fox, he remains a good friend and mentor.

 

For a radical progressive who once harbored negative stereotypes about folks on the right, it was a turning point for me to meet people such as Mr. Hannity, Karl Rove, Monica Crowley, Sarah Palin, and so many others, and see that – though we certainly disagree profoundly on political issues – they’re personable and kind and human. Just like me.

 

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Young Conservative Comments

 

Yahoo News Comments

 

Lucianne.com

 

horacer, 4/15/2014 3:13:27 PM (No. 9811800)

 

She makes an excellent point, reinforced by the comments here. Partisanship isn´t the problem. We´ve always had ideological divides. Our political problems stem from the need to vilify the opposition instead of debating them on the merits of their ideas. Both sides do too much of it.


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