John Wood, Jr., a national advocate for racial and political reconciliation, asks us to pull back from the precipice of our divided nation, and use nonviolence as our guide.
Read MoreA young American asks: Should I have stayed in my hometown? What does it mean to be part of a community, and where do we go from here?
Read MoreSeth D. Kaplan’s book “Fragile Neighborhoods” is a must-read book for anyone who wants to understand how to repair our social fabric and build resilient communities.
Read MoreWhat do we owe each other? And how do we build a country where intergenerational wealth isn’t measured in gold and property, but in a society that cares for its most vulnerable? We owe an existential debt to the generations that came before us. What will we do with that inheritance?
Read MoreChristy Vines left a career in national security to work in the bridge building space. Does a successful American experiment depend on empathy?
Read MoreEveryone thinks that they're on the moral high ground. But what if, from that perch, instead of using it to our advantage in a fight, we simply seek what’s out there? How do organizations such a Heterodox Academy help us to disagree better?
Read MoreIn reflecting on the war in Ukraine, a call for Americans to come together and take the wheel of their own country. Politics isn’t religion, but it’s become like a religion for many. How do we ditch dogma and come together?
Read MoreBy Walter Foley
More and more people are unconnected to themselves, to their families, and to their communities. In what ways are we becoming modern zombies? Can we find our selves as humans again by searching for wisdom? Interview with John Vervaeke and Christopher Mastropietro.
Read Moreby Heather Shayne Blakeslee
Be like bees, just not too much, and we might just save our species.
Read MoreWhat is political empathy and how do we find each other again? A 2020 interview with John Wood, Jr., National Ambassador of the grassroots political depolarization organization Braver Angels.
Read Moreby Walter Foley and Heather Shayne Blakeslee
Humans are already prone to mob rule and moral panics, including frenzies about witches, communists, and Satanists. Is the media’s broken business model playing with our psychology and biology by purposefully stoking outrage and profiting from call-out and cancel culture?
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