Featured News V2 Archives - Braver Angels https://braverangels.org/category/news-v2/featured-news-v2/ Mon, 26 Jan 2026 22:18:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.4 https://braverangels.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Braver-Angels_Logo-Favicon-2023-01-150x150.png Featured News V2 Archives - Braver Angels https://braverangels.org/category/news-v2/featured-news-v2/ 32 32 Walk with me https://braverangels.org/walk-with-me/ https://braverangels.org/walk-with-me/#respond Mon, 26 Jan 2026 22:18:46 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=255056 I had just finished drafting this message when I read and watched videos of Alex Jeffrey Pretti being shot to death by ICE agents in Minneapolis. I felt a rush of anxiety, fear, and sadness; but, still, I was hoping it wasn’t true. It was; and it is our reality today...

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I had just finished drafting this message when I read and watched videos of Alex Jeffrey Pretti being shot to death by ICE agents in Minneapolis. I felt a rush of anxiety, fear, and sadness; but, still, I was hoping it wasn’t true. It was; and it is our reality today.

Dr. Dimitri Drekonja, Pretti’s co-worker at the VA Medical Center, expressed the point on which I hope we all agree, no matter how you view ICE: “There is no reason for a guy like that to be dead, let alone to be killed by the agents of a government that employed him.”

➔ Two deaths in three weeks in Minneapolis.

➔ U.S. federal officers killing American citizens.

➔ Protestors storming church services with families and young children present.

➔ Local and federal officials arguing instead of talking, and leading, together.

So many reactions. So many questions. So many feelings.

Two things are on my mind right now about what is happening in Minneapolis:

  1. What it means for our country and Braver Angels; and

2. The impact this reality, and the work we do, is having on each of us individually.

I want to start here: What we see in Minneapolis right now is a harsh but true reflection of us as a people.

Intense conflict requires an equal force in response to be resolved; and that force can take very different forms. It can be domination (power and control) or connection (patience, perseverance, and perspective).

I believe it is that simple.

Right now, “we the people” seem to prioritize “tribal interests” over the interests of all. With every emergent conflict, we are choosing domination (or apathy) over connection. It doesn’t matter if the point is destroying the “other side” or checking out as if one has no individual part in the play of our national drama. In both, we choose a path that does not lead to a better America.

Braver Angels’ quest is to inspire people to embrace a way of being because they see it as a genuine pathway to heal society and make a better world. While other groups rightfully advocate for specific solutions or organize protests, Braver Angels focuses on the methods of how we reach those answers. We do it with discipline.

Within our membership people have very different ideas about public policy solutions. That is by design. We aspire to the hard work of engaging across differences to build together. We choose connection over domination.

Think about it. Our individual choices are what matter. No public official, political party, or institution can or will make this change alone without us. They can lead, invite and teach. Or they can, as most seem to do today, incite more anger and more division.

We can choose to go against the grain. Find those with whom we disagree and do the difficult work of learning, sharing, and building. Together. The more intense the conflict, the more effort is required to build a common solution. This is the Braver Angels Way.

Let me close on the very personal, human impact on trying to do this work.

I can’t help but feel the strain. I am as stretched as I’ve ever felt, right now. I know you must feel variations of the same. For me, it is a daily (and sometimes hourly) battle to keep things in perspective, determine what is in my control, and act. My most effective aids right now are family, exercise and study routines, breathing practices, meditation, and think time. Find yours.

In these times, I find there is no replacement for this idea: keep on keeping on… put one foot in front of the other. Sometimes those steps are fast, sometimes we need to slow down (and I ask the same of you). Recognize the challenges, celebrate the victories big and small, give each other the grace these times require. Through it all, let’s keep our eyes on the vision of an America at peace with itself, where courageous citizenship is the norm.

I choose to pray. You may or may not have that practice. But I believe you’ll understand my intent: I pray for peace, wisdom, strength, courage, and patience. Then I get to work.

Walk with me. One foot in front of the other. Shoulder to shoulder.

It’s worth it.

I am so proud to be on this mission with you. Even, and especially, right now. Look for a series of convenings we will be leading with others in our sector.


— Maury Giles, CEO of Braver Angels

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In a moment of rising conflict over immigration, Braver Angels calls for dignity, accountability, and civic repair https://braverangels.org/in-a-moment-of-rising-conflict-over-immigration-braver-angels-calls-for-dignity-accountability-and-civic-repair/ https://braverangels.org/in-a-moment-of-rising-conflict-over-immigration-braver-angels-calls-for-dignity-accountability-and-civic-repair/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2026 17:04:50 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=254756 It takes a special form of courage to keep engaging with people in our lives whose views appall us. Ernest Hemingway called courage “grace under pressure.” We live in a pressurized time, when courageous citizenship requires real emotional work.

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“These are the times that try men’s souls.” Thomas Paine penned these words 250 years ago to inspire Americans at a low point in the Revolutionary War. We are at another low point now—this time fighting each other rather than a colonial ruler. I live in the Minneapolis area, where I am witnessing the tearing of the social fabric. The soul of Braver Angels is also being tried, with some dedicated members wondering if our mission is still relevant. They are bluntly asking, “Why keep talking to those people?” This is my written response as a cofounder of Braver Angels. I’ve also recorded a video where I speak more personally about what’s going on in Minnesota.

As a therapist, my job is to help clients do two things with powerful emotions: understand what they are feeling, and then act mindfully rather than react instinctively. Political stress is stirring up two main emotions—fear and outrage—and they feed on each other. Fear can lead to one kind of reactivity: shutting down and withdrawing. Outrage can lead to another kind: demonizing and lashing out. The alternative is hard but possible: thoughtful responses informed by our emotions but not directed by them. It means showing up with a non-anxious presence when others around us are escalating, cutting people off, and losing hope. It takes a special form of courage to keep engaging with people in our lives whose views appall us. Ernest Hemingway called courage “grace under pressure.” We live in a pressurized time, when courageous citizenship requires real emotional work.

So far, I’ve described how we can function psychologically in a national crisis. But what about social action?

I think of work for social change as happening in three ways: Resist, Replace, and Repair—three Rs. All are necessary, and none alone is sufficient.

Resist refers to organized efforts to publicly name serious social problems and confront leaders and institutions that create and reinforce them. Resist is about vigorous, sustained calls for change now. (“We Shall Overcome.”)

Replace refers to what comes next: concrete reforms and changes such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Resistance movements need a Replace agenda in order to be effective.

Repair refers to organized efforts to heal the social fabric that is inevitably torn by the turmoil and polarization of major social change—what Lincoln called binding up our wounds. (South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and closer to home, Braver Angels.)

I see all three Rs as essential for successful long-term social change. We have to name injustices. We have to enact concrete solutions. And we have to treat one another with respect while debating the changes—and after one side wins out against opposition. Unfortunately, the repair work is often neglected.

Consider one example from perhaps the most successful social movement in U.S. history: abolitionism in the 19th century. It resisted the institution of slavery and helped replace it through constitutional amendments. But after the Civil War, the work of repair and healing was tepid and ultimately abandoned by many leaders. We are still paying the price.

This framing helps me respond to those who call for Braver Angels to speak out about injustices and abuses of governmental power. If we support democracy, this argument goes, then to not publicly resist these assaults is at best timidity and at worst complicity. The time for talking to the other side is over. They are unreachable; the only thing left is to fight them. (This challenge is coming mostly from progressive Blues distressed by the Trump Administration, but I could imagine a time when it would come from conservative or populist Reds upset, say, with a Mamdani administration.) In effect, the call is for Braver Angels to join the resistance.

My response is threefold.

First, we should distinguish between Braver Angels as an organization and what individual Braver Angels members decide to do with their own efforts at social change. Some may feel called to step away from Braver Angels and focus on Resist. For them, this may be the right season for that choice.

Second, I don’t believe Braver Angels can effectively do Resist and Repair. If Braver Angels camps on one shore, we lose the cross-partisan trust that makes our work possible. Organizations seen as neutral on policy and politicians are best positioned to do the work of healing divisions and bridging divides. I ask: Is the nation better served by Braver Angels adding one more small voice to a resistance and losing our ability to Repair?

Third, somebody has to staff the Repair brigade. Resist often has no shortage of volunteers. Keeping contact through conversation—and feasible joint activities—is essential to the functioning of our democratic republic.

I believe Braver Angels has an opportunity to make a difference only if we stay in our distinctive lane—one we’ve become pretty good at. What’s more, ours is the long game beyond any political leader or party in power. The forces of polarization that brought us to this crisis moment are not going away soon. Our work, in the Hebrew phrase, is Tikkun Olam—repairing the world. It is a never-ending human endeavor. And it matters, because when the talking stops, the only alternatives are coercion and violence. I’m seeing that danger up close right now in Minneapolis, where local and national leaders have stopped talking, and escalation is overtaking us. I pray that the talking begins and the healing starts soon. We have real work ahead in Braver Angels—and I know we are up to it.

— Bill Doherty, Braver Angels co-founder

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Announcement: 2026 Braver Angels National Convention https://braverangels.org/announcement-2026-braver-angels-national-convention/ https://braverangels.org/announcement-2026-braver-angels-national-convention/#respond Mon, 08 Dec 2025 15:46:31 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=253269 The 2026 Braver Angels National Convention will be held from June 25th to 28th in none other than Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the birthplace of America, which will be ringing in its 250th anniversary just a week later.

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The 2026 Braver Angels National Convention will be held from June 25th to 28th in none other than Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the birthplace of America, which will be ringing in its 250th anniversary just a week later.

In 2024, over 750 delegates—equally divided between Red and Blue—came to our convention in Kenosha, Wisconsin to restore hope in America. But 2026 will be different—it has to be. As we lead into our country’s Semiquincentennial, more than a thousand delegates from across the political spectrum will step up as leaders and step into courageous citizenship at a moment when our country needs it most.

America was founded by brilliant people who came together across debate, difference, and disagreement, to form a constitutional, representative democracy that has withstood civil unrest, economic depression, and war, and has remained the world’s greatest experiment in self-government: a government of the people, by the people, for the people.

But today, our country is in a moment of great need, and it’s time that we the people show our representatives, our fellow citizens, and ourselves what we really stand for. They say you don’t know you have a value until it’s tested. Well, this is our test. Will you answer the call?

In 2026, the significance of the Fourth of July, Independence Day, will be unlike any other in our lifetime. You have a chance to be a part of it the Braver Angels Way. Applications to become a delegate to the convention will open in the new year. If you sign up here, you’ll be the first to know about it.

We hope to see you in Philadelphia.

— Gabbi Kearns, Director of Communications

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Courageous Citizenship: Choosing Connection Over Violence https://braverangels.org/courageous-citizenship-choosing-connection-over-violence/ https://braverangels.org/courageous-citizenship-choosing-connection-over-violence/#respond Fri, 19 Sep 2025 22:40:41 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=249616 Powerlessness is paralyzing. After the assassination of Charlie Kirk—like that of Melissa Hortman—many Americans feel powerless against violence and the erosion of civil liberties. You don’t have to share these fears to know that right now, all of us fear something. Be part of our movement to build a house united in America. Now is the time to remember your power.

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Powerlessness is a paralyzing feeling. With the assassination of Charlie Kirk – as with the assassination of Melissa Hortman before him – many Americans feel powerless before the threat of violence. So too do many Americans feel powerless to defend their civil liberties. You do not have to agree with these fears to know that in this moment, all of us fear something.

Sometimes we fight against this feeling through anger, outrage, and a fear which can lead to retaliation. These are emotions that can feel empowering, and indeed there is a place for righteous anger in political life. But real power is found in the bonds of community rooted in goodwill. As Martin Luther King Jr. taught, ‘power without love is reckless and abusive.’ At Braver Angels, we are cultivating a power that comes from courageous connection, and empowered citizenship to ensure today’s tragedy does not become tomorrow’s normal. Whatever your politics, you are not powerless. Whatever side of the aisle you are on, you will find power in this community. And in community we have the power to heal our nation for all of us.

Included below are resources to help you respond to this moment. Take a look. If you are not already, join us as a member of our community.

Be a part of our movement to build a house united in America. Now is the time to remember your power.

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    Take Action

    1. FOCUS ON YOUR RESPONSE

    Each of us has a choice in this moment: Can we resist the urge to assign blame to entire groups for the actions of one individual? Do we escalate the rhetoric, or do we lower the temperature? This starts with how we speak, how we listen, how we show up online and in our communities.

    2. CHECK ON YOUR PEOPLE

    Reach out to young adults, students, neighbors, friends. Ask how they are navigating and understanding the unfolding event. Let them know you care and that they are not alone.

    3. RECOGNIZE OUR SHARED VALUES

    We all value freedom of expression. We all value family. We may disagree on many things, but we can agree that the death of a young father is tragic and that no one should be killed for sharing their opinions in a public forum. Let’s build on those shared values and commitments.

    4. SEEK RELIABLE INFORMATION

    Those who profit from our political divisions sometimes capitalize on moments of conflict with misinformation and calls for retaliatory violence. Relying on accurate information preserves the public trust, prevents the spread of harmful rumors, and honors the dignity of those affected. Resist the urge to speculate before facts are confirmed.

    Additional Resources

    BA in the Media

    BA Local Stories

    From Maryanne Colter,
    Illinois State Coordinator

    “We had already planned a meeting scheduled for September 11 where Blue Braver Angels members of the Chicagoland Alliance met with members of the Chicago Young Republicans Club. We were afraid we might have to cancel or that no one would show up. Instead, twice as many Young Republicans showed up than we expected. For a few, it was their first meeting. The Illinois Chair of YR, Evan Kasal, told me many of the attendees had decided to come to our event , passing up candlelight vigils, because they knew that now more than ever it was important to talk across the aisle.

    We met in groups of 3, with 2 YRs and 1 BA Blue member and got to know each other. We used questions from the 1:1 Conversations: How were your political views formed, what values do you admire about your side, what is something you like about the other side and something you dislike about our own, and shared an issue that was important to us. In my group, we found common ground in the need for a robust Middle Class and Freedom of Speech, and we shared the concern over the increasing role of religion in politics. No one called anyone a bad name, no one got angry, no one even raised their voice. As we ended, gratitude and thanks were deeply expressed by every participant. I came in with concerns about how the violence of the previous day would impact our previously planned event; I left with new friends and new hope that we can end the vitriol and the violence with the simple act of sitting across a table and talking. We are already planning our next event with another YR Chapter.

    Here is the post from the Young Republicans on Facebook: ‘Now more than ever calls for passionate, rigorous and civil discourse with those we disagree with. At the same time we must recognize the humanity and dignity of our neighbor irrespective of their political affiliation. From the beginning the Chicago Young Republicans have championed community building with those passionate about the direction of our Republic. As we move forward in this hour we remain vigilant of the precarious state of our Republic but ever optimistic for the future of our great nation. The Chicago Young Republicans in partnership with Braver Angels hope that this event and future gatherings can serve as a model for continued civil discourse.’

    For full post and photos from the event.  

    Thanks and kudos to Chicagoland Alliance members Sara Shacter for organizing the event, and Brian Padden who is also a Young Republican member and instrumental in bringing the groups together.”

    From Rob Hanson,
    Idaho State Co-Coordinator,
    Mountain Region Co-Lead

    In response to a “Checking In” email — I, and the rest of the Braver Angels Office of Field Operations, sent to individual Regional Leaders – Eric Ireland

    “Thanks for checking in, Eric. We’re pretty busy. We had a State Alliance meeting last night. People needed to talk. We talked about things we have in common. The feedback was that we need Braver Angels more than ever now.

    Because of the assassination, we are turning a Fishbowl at a Boise State University class into more of a listening session with some depolarizing within learning.

    A student from Idaho State University reached out wanting to start a Braver Angels club at her school. We’re following up with her.

    Charlie Kirk’s murder has opened a lot of peoples’ eyes about the situation we are in, if we don’t do something different.

    How was your time in Idaho? I think you were visiting the Burley area. Is that right?

    I appreciate all you do.”

    -Rob Hanson

    From Rich Harris,
    Delaware Alliance

    “Just wanted to share a quick story about our Alliance in Delaware. We are just in our formative stages and at our monthly Zoom meeting on 9/09, we welcomed a potential new member, a woman who chairs a regional Republican committee. As is often the case in Braver Angels, she was outnumbered by the Blues in our group and folks were treading on eggs a bit. Still, the engagement was sincere and she seemed inclined to commit.

    The next day in Utah Charlie Kirk was killed, and in casting about for what I could do in a tiny state on the Eastern Seaboard, all I could come up with was to call our new Republican and ask how she was doing. The gratitude and generosity of her response at simply reaching out actually took me aback. However, that simple Braver Angels act of recognizing her humanity persuaded her to join the DE Alliance. Our exchange was as uplifting for me as it was for her.”

    Minnesota State

    “Here’s what our team is doing:

    • The two state co-chairs submitted an op-ed that ran in MinnPost, an online newspaper.
    • The 3,500 subscribers and members in the state received an email from the state coordinators.
    • Bill Doherty scheduled an interview with a conservative talk show host whose program airs on conservative radio stations around the state.
    • We responded to messages from individual members.
    • We read a prepared statement at our monthly Zoom topic meeting.
    • We posted links on our website and FB page.”

    From Susan Rico,
    California State Co-Coordinator,
    Orange County Alliance

    “We sent an email to 450 email subscribers in our area that included the wonderful suggestions provided by National, including:

    Here are some steps you can take now:

    1. Reach out to someone who thinks differently from you. Use our 1:1 Red/Blue conversation guide to have a meaningful dialogue—or simply ask how they’re doing and offer support.
    2. Share Braver Angels’ message across social media (X, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn). In the midst of toxicity, this is our chance to raise a different voice.
    3. Join us for a national convening this Sunday. We’ll follow up with details soon.

    Now more than ever, our country needs the courageous citizenship Braver Angels calls forth:

    • Speak your views freely and fully, without fear.
    • Treat those who disagree with honesty, dignity, and respect.
    • Disagree accurately—without distortion or stereotype.
    • Seek common ground and, when possible, work together.”

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    Announcement: Citizen-Led Solutions https://braverangels.org/announcement-on-citizen-led-solutions/ https://braverangels.org/announcement-on-citizen-led-solutions/#respond Tue, 16 Sep 2025 14:53:11 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=249446 Read the full speech by Braver Angels CEO Maury Giles given at the National Conference on Citizenship explaining the vision behind Braver Angels' new program, Citizen-Led Solutions.

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    MAURY’S REMARKS

    OPENING & THANKS

    Good afternoon.

    Thank you to the National Conference on Citizenship for convening us this year around the theme of Building Civic Resilience. This gathering has been, for me, a vivid reminder of how much creative energy is moving right now in the civic-renewal space.

    And thank you to David for introducing Braver Angels’ new initiative, Citizen-Led Solutions, and to the panel of leaders who just shared their perspectives on letting citizens lead.

    What struck me most about their reflections was not only the opportunities but also the honest acknowledgement of the challenges we face as a country in equipping people to lead and in strengthening what some of us have come to call “civic muscle.” Especially at this time with so much pain and hatred.

    As Braver Angels’ new CEO, I’m still adjusting. It’s been I think 7 weeks. To be honest, it feels a bit like I was handed the playbook for “How to Heal America,” but when I was a third of the way through, I turned the page and read, alone on a blank page “You’ve got it from here.”

    But that’s my learning curve. And I will learn from all we are doing together. I suppose we’re writing the rest of the chapters together.

    It is a privilege to close this conversation – to step back and reflect on what these ideas mean for all of us, across this ecosystem, who care about the future of American democracy.

    THE PROBLEM (& WE’VE SEEN IT BEFORE)

    Heaven knows we don’t need another litany of statistics to prove we’re in a civic crisis. The events of the past week alone demonstrate the collapse of social trust and hatred present in some circles.

    We know these patterns: rising polarization, declining trust in institutions, mistrust of the media, the spread of misinformation, and despair about whether democracy will survive. We are living the experience of accelerating political violence and the inability to have productive conflict.

    I am from Utah.

    I live 25 miles from UVU campus. My wife and four of our children have attended UVU. Each year it’s where our high school graduations are held. Last Wednesday, our nephew and his wife were at the Charlie Kirk event. My daughter’s friend was seated in the front row.

    No matter your feelings about Charlie Kirk, his methods, or his words, each of those people observed the assassination of a young father engaging in open debate on a college campus. Those memories will not be forgotten.

    I have other nephews and nieces who attended the same school in southern Utah as Tyler Robinson, the accused shooter. They and their parents are trying to process how someone from their town could move from online discussions to hatred sufficient to take the real-world steps to kill someone… for their words.

    I think of the shooter’s parents… making the decision to help their son take responsibility for his actions.

    But those actions are indicative of our crisis. We have allowed the narrative to be defined by conflict entrepreneurs, people who make money and gain power off our division.

    To many Americans, our system feels distant, out of control, and, most importantly, something that we the people have nothing to do with.

    But this is not true. We will not experience change until we take accountability for the reality in front of us. It only works for the industrial outrage complex when we participate in their scheme.

    As Americans, more than anywhere else in the world, we have the power to shape the society we desire to live in and leave for our children.

    It is worth remembering: this is not the first time America has lived through such fracture. At the turn of the 20th century, the nation was convulsed by the upheavals of industrialization, mass immigration, and stark inequality. Political machines and corporate monopolies dominated public life. Racial terror was codified into law in the South. Leading writers and thinkers as well as everyday citizens worried aloud that democracy was failing, that corruption and rancor had hollowed out the civic heart of the country.

    And yet, history reminds us: that low tide did not mark the end of the American experiment. It marked the beginning of a new wave of renewal.

    Ordinary citizens — not elites, not politicians, not professionals — stepped forward to build new civic institutions. Settlement houses, Rotary, the Scouts, the NAACP, 4-H, the League of Women Voters, the United Way. Things we now take for granted as institutions in the United States once began as fragile, scattered experiments. Critics at the time dismissed them as too small to matter. But they multiplied, scaled, and became the civic infrastructure that carried us forward for a century.

    The lesson? Fragility is not failure. In fact, fragility is the natural first stage of resilience.

    Let me return to Utah over the past week.

    Within two hours of the assassination, a group of us, all Utahns, gathered on a call. We had become friends over the last 5 years through our work in the community. And we also happened to be involved in 7 different national organizations working on civic renewal and peacemaking.

    We moved quickly. We crafted a message to our friends, families, and neighbors in Utah about the meaning of this moment and the imperative to act instead of react. Within 24 hours we built a website inviting people to Turn Toward each other and offering them easy access to all of the resources, tools, and upcoming events that could help people consider what to do in their own sphere of influence. And within 48 hours we were up at the Capitol building in Salt Lake with 100+ Utahns and the media releasing this resource and calling on citizens to take control of our own response as individuals, as families, as neighbors, as a state.

    We presented simple, accessible, and effective resources for people. We were not promoting our respective organizations. We were acting in solidarity. We moved quickly.

    The morning of the event our PR partners recommended we postpone because they had caught the shooter and the story was going to shift. But we knew the story Utahns needed and the story we wanted to shape. We continued, people showed up. No elected officials. Just citizens.

    Now, there is a long road ahead for us in Utah. And for us in the United States of America. Make no mistake. What we are doing today, and everything we are about, is a counter-cultural movement in our time.

    CITIZEN-LED SOLUTIONS & BRAVER ANGELS EMPHASIS

    But that is the spirit behind Citizen-Led Solutions. To bridge the political divide in a way that cannot be ignored nor overlooked. My friend Manu Meel calls it “outrageously bridge build.” We call it courageous citizenship.

    Braver Angels launched Citizen-Led Solutions — or as we call it, CLS — this year not as a departure from what we’ve done, but as a deepening of our mission. For nearly a decade, Braver Angels has been known for depolarization. Our work has touched thousands of lives and has proven that well-directed dialogue matters when it’s driven by energetic volunteers with good training.

    But depolarization, powerful as it is, is not enough. If dialogue ends at understanding, people walk away hopeful but often still asking, “now what?”

    CLS represents a new emphasis for Braver Angels in two ways:

    First, we are infusing our depolarization activities with opportunities for citizen action. We want our training, debates, workshops, and discussions not just to bridge divides but also to spark collaboration on shared local challenges.

    Second, we are doubling down on our strategy of building and equipping local Alliances — our 120+ chapters across the country— to become epicenters of civic renewal in their communities. Alliances are where Braver Angels members put dialogue into practice, and now, where they will also put collaboration into action.

    Every Braver Angels activity is designed so that ordinary people like teachers, parents, students, retirees can run them — not civic professionals. We’ve learned that when local citizens lead, the work has deeper legitimacy and greater staying power.

    LESSONS FROM HISTORY

    If history rhymes, then here are two key lessons, among many others, that it teaches us:

    First. Renewal begins locally, and multiplies nationally. Hull House started with one Chicago neighborhood. Rotary started with four friends. The NAACP started with a handful of organizers. Scale came later.

    And, second. Resilience doesn’t just come from structures. It comes from practice.

    Think of it as civic muscle. Like any muscle, civic muscle only grows by being used.

    We grow stronger in self-government not by being led through exercises designed by others, but by lifting the weight ourselves — tackling problems together, improvising solutions, building trust rep by rep. Institutions can provide the gym, but people must do the training themselves.

    TODAY’S CIVIC RENAISSANCE

    That brings us to today. We have a choice. Is this the end of a dark chapter? Or is it the beginning of a much darker one?

    I believe in the aftermath of, and even before, this string of assassinations, we are seeing the first signs of another civic renaissance.

    We see them here today. This is our national week of citizenship. 238 years ago tomorrow, the framers of this American experiment signed this great document. Next year we celebrate 250 years from the moment it all started. This is our moment.

    It is a choice. Our choice. Each American. Each of us here today.

    Bridge-building efforts like Braver Angels, The Dignity Index, Living Room Conversations, and BridgeUSA are giving neighbors, students, and communities the tools to cross divides.

    Deliberative democracy efforts — citizens’ assemblies, participatory budgeting — are putting residents in charge of setting priorities and allocating resources.

    Dialogue-to-action initiatives like CLS, Convergence, and National Issues Forums are creating structures where citizens co-design solutions alongside local leaders.

    Service corps, volunteer networks, and resilience hubs are giving people the chance to build together in tangible, practical ways.

    Civic tech platforms like Democracy Works are amplifying citizen participation rather than replacing it with technocracy.

    And common ground policy efforts like CommonSense American are helping Americans weigh in on solutions to crosspartisan issues and see them through to becoming the law of the land.

    None of these are perfect. Many look boutique, scattered, and fragile. Some funders or policymakers dismiss them as marginal.

    But that is exactly what critics said about settlement houses, scout troops, league of women voters and community chests in 1900.

    If we’ve learned anything from history, it’s this: fragility is not a reason to doubt. It is a reason to invest.

    THE CHALLENGING ROLE OF EXPERTS AND PROFESSIONALS

    Now, let me address a reality many in this room grapple with: the roles of philanthropy, professionals, and institutions. They are indispensable. We cannot do this work without all three.

    And yet, too often, even with the best intentions, they default to models that place citizens at the margins. Citizens are asked to participate in programs designed elsewhere, to “engage” with agendas crafted by experts, or to provide input into initiatives they don’t really own.

    This is not because of malice. It’s because citizen-led efforts often look messy, hard to measure, and difficult to scale. Professionalized organizations, by contrast, look predictable, manageable, fundable.

    But history also tells us when citizens are at the margins, civic renewal stalls. When citizens are at the center, civic renewal spreads.

    The question is not: “How can institutions better lead people?” The question is: “How can institutions better support citizens to lead themselves?”

    “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country” echoes from the words in 1961 of a later assassinated US president.

    INSPIRATION FROM AMERICA’S CITIZEN-CENTERED ETHOS

    All of this rests on a deeper truth: American democracy has always been citizen-led.

    Our founding promise is that sovereignty resides with the people. From the Declaration of Independence to the Progressive Era to today’s renewal, the through-line is the same: civic health is not handed down from above. It is generated by citizens themselves.

    And that health depends on more than laws or policies. It depends on culture. The early 20th century civic renaissance worked not just because it built organizations, but because it built rituals and habits of belonging — badges, service days, pledges, community halls. These gave people a sense of identity, agency, and shared purpose. If we want civic renewal today, we must create modern equivalents that shape culture as much as they shift policy.

    Theodore Roosevelt put it plainly in 1899: “The main source of national power and national greatness is found in the average citizenship of the nation.”

    Local organization is what fascinated Alexis de Toqueville about America in 1831.
    It is people who must lead. History calls them “ordinary” or “average.” At Braver Angels we know they are both courageous and capable.

    CALL TO ACTION

    So let me close with a call to action.

    If we are serious about Building Civic Resilience, then our task is not simply to design better institutions, policies, or programs. Our task is to equip Americans to trust each other and to lead together.

    Let us commit to making our work less about how institutions, professionals, and experts can better engage citizens — and more about how people can engage with each other to lead their communities and, together, our democracy.

    That is what civic muscle means. It’s not something institutions give to people. It’s something citizens build by using it.

    Like Sara from Oxford in one of our CLS case studies said about her community’s efforts to address affordable housing: “We own what we make.” And her neighbor, Lynn, offered this hope: “If you’re thinking you could do this in your community, you can.”

    History tells us this is possible. The present tells us it is necessary. And the future will depend on whether we have the courage to trust our citizens — and ourselves — to lead.

    Thank you.

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    Braver Angels Statement on the Assassination of Charlie Kirk https://braverangels.org/braver-angels-statement-on-the-assassination-of-charlie-kirk/ https://braverangels.org/braver-angels-statement-on-the-assassination-of-charlie-kirk/#respond Thu, 11 Sep 2025 21:25:59 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=249126 September 10th was a devastating day for our nation. There are no words for the loss of Charlie Kirk. Our hearts are with his family and loved ones. It’s on each of us to stop this dangerous cycle of mutual destruction. No matter where we stand on the political spectrum, here’s what we must do in the wake of this tragedy.

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    September 10th was a devastating day for our nation. There are no words for the loss of Charlie Kirk. Our hearts are with his family and loved ones.

    It’s on each of us to stop this dangerous cycle of mutual destruction. No matter where we stand on the political spectrum, here’s what we must do in the wake of this tragedy.

    The immediate priority is to not escalate an already precarious situation. Do not throw fuel on the fire through attacks and counterattacks over responsibility for this act of violence. We’ve gotten ourselves into a deep hole. The first thing we must do is stop digging.

    Second, we must tone down the apocalyptic rhetoric that our democracy will not survive the leadership or ideology of any one side. When the survival of the American experiment is at stake, violence can seem justified and even heroic. We must believe in ourselves that we can hold onto our democratic republic even amidst profound disagreement.

    Third, we must use this moment to soul-search what we’ve allowed to happen in our political culture, from the national to the local level, and in our families and friendships. Polarization is a “We the People” problem, not just a “those politicians” or “those talking heads” problem. We have a role to play.

    For years, we’ve unleashed bitter contempt on our fellow Americans who think, speak, and vote differently, creating a toxic cycle to which both sides contribute. Change begins with each of us examining how we see and think about those who hold views we believe are wrong. We must challenge the dominant cultural narrative that pits us in a war of good versus evil, tribe versus tribe. Then, we must demand the same of our leaders.

    Together, we can define for this country what courageous citizenship means—modeling a constructive civic response that rebuilds trust and puts us on a path toward solving problems together. Now is the time. Our country depends on it.

    This Sunday, September 14th from 6pm to 8pm EST, in the wake of the most high profile political assassination in our country since Robert Kennedy, Braver Angels, the Listen First Coalition, National Institute for Civil Discourse, Bridge USA, Common Sense American, One America, Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism, Numbers USA and many more, are uniting to reject our slide into contempt and violence and to ignite the movement to bridge the divide.

    Join us at Dignity Over Violence: A Unified Civic Response

    Your voice is key to the success of this gathering. There will be opportunity for you to contribute your thoughts to the vision we will refine together in this pivotal gathering for the future of our cause.

    To hear more from our CEO Maury Giles, read his letter to our members here.

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    Meet Our New CEO, Maury Giles https://braverangels.org/meet-our-new-ceo-maury-giles/ https://braverangels.org/meet-our-new-ceo-maury-giles/#respond Thu, 14 Aug 2025 22:12:52 +0000 https://braverangels.org/?p=248357 We’re delighted to announce Maury Giles as the next CEO of Braver Angels. Let us tell you a bit more about Maury and how we arrived at this exciting decision.

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    We’re delighted to announce Maury Giles as the next CEO of Braver Angels.

    Let us tell you a bit more about Maury and how we arrived at this exciting decision.

    In March 2025, David Blankenhorn announced he was stepping down as President of Braver Angels after co-founding and leading our organization for nearly a decade.

    Weeks later, we had the opportunity to hear from our members in a town hall about the future of our leadership. They told us what kinds of skills, qualities, mindsets, and experience they wanted to find in the next leader of Braver Angels.

    They wanted someone who could galvanize people on the ground and motivate volunteers. Someone who was collaborative, agile, and understood our unique culture. Someone with a proven professional track record and experience in scaling organizations. Someone plugged in with political leaders across our country. Someone with wisdom. And so much more.

    Could this be possible? Were we being realistic? One participant joked about whether we’ll be able to find this “walking Mother Teresa mixed with Dr. Martin Luther King mixed with Jesus Christ at a bargain rate.” She had a point: This is a significant role—not just for our organization, but for our country—and it demands a great deal from one individual.

    During the search process, we partnered with a national executive search firm to scour our country looking for top leaders who could take on this role. Many of our members also recommended people in their own circle.

    In total, we had over 400 applicants, which were narrowed down to the top 25. The Search Committee—a Red/Blue balanced group of volunteers, staff members, and a board member of Braver Angels—whittled that list down further to 13 individuals, all of whom were interviewed. These talented people were business leaders, civic entrepreneurs, government officials, military veterans, and more.

    In the end, we found our next CEO because a veteran Braver Angels volunteer who leans Blue recommended a fellow Braver Angels volunteer who leans Red based on her experience working with him in Braver Angels.

    “When I listened to [the Braver Angels] meeting about finding a new person for David Blankenhorn’s job,” Mary Thomas-Vallens told us early on in the process, “a Braver Angels member popped immediately into my mind: Maury Giles.”

    She worked with him on several Braver Angels workshops, she explained, including co-moderating Common Ground Workshops with Republican and Democratic members of the Utah State Legislature. “I marveled at how he brought these elected officials together,” she said, “especially when they had shared that they had never had conversations with each other outside the legislative hall. They came, and the workshop was a true bridge-building event.”

    So, Mary reached out to Maury about the CEO opening. Maury, who has been in the midst of a thriving career in the corporate world, listened and saw an opportunity to answer what he sees as a personal calling: joining all of us in taking Braver Angels’ collective work to its next chapter.

    For those who haven’t yet met him, here’s what you should know: Maury Giles is a husband, a father of ten in a blended family, and a Red who now lives in Salt Lake City, UT. Maury doesn’t just understand the field—he comes directly from it. Volunteering with Braver Angels for five years, Maury has moderated Red/Blue workshops and led bipartisan legislative initiatives through Braver Politics.

    Not only is Maury uniquely suited to our culture, but he also has the professional expertise needed to grow Braver Angels in size and impact. Maury spent two decades founding and scaling mission-driven organizations, building high-trust teams across partisan divides, and leading transformative Braver Angels workshops—bringing both the soul of a devoted volunteer and the strategic acumen we need to grow our movement.

    As the Board said, “Maury’s appointment is more than a leadership transition; it’s a powerful statement of our determination to meet America’s challenges head-on.”

    One last thing: We often say our volunteers are our engine, but in this search for our next leader, volunteers really played a critical role from start to finish. We shared our opinions about our next leader freely, fully, and without fear. Thanks to the wisdom and input of our volunteer leaders, we found someone we believe will enable us to meet the moment and gain even more momentum.

     

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    A Republican and Democrat walk into a town hall. Can they help fix Congress? https://braverangels.org/a-republican-and-democrat-walk-into-a-town-hall-can-they-help-fix-congress/ https://braverangels.org/a-republican-and-democrat-walk-into-a-town-hall-can-they-help-fix-congress/#respond Thu, 05 Aug 2021 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/a-republican-and-democrat-walk-into-a-town-hall-can-they-help-fix-congress/ The squabbles in Congress have grown so venomous it inspired Reps. Dean Phillips and Dusty Johnson to try something new.

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    Braver Angels is building bridges across political divides: Larry Noel and Bill Shaul https://braverangels.org/braver-angels-is-building-bridges-across-political-divides-larry-noel-and-bill-shaul/ https://braverangels.org/braver-angels-is-building-bridges-across-political-divides-larry-noel-and-bill-shaul/#respond Fri, 16 Jul 2021 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/braver-angels-is-building-bridges-across-political-divides-larry-noel-and-bill-shaul/ Braver Angels work is done through workshops, debates, and 1:1 conversations that bring people together, guided by structured and very intentional ...

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    Opinion: Is this really how we get America to talk? https://braverangels.org/opinion-is-this-really-how-we-get-america-to-talk/ https://braverangels.org/opinion-is-this-really-how-we-get-america-to-talk/#respond Wed, 07 Jul 2021 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/opinion-is-this-really-how-we-get-america-to-talk/ There's Braver Angels , The Civil Conversations Project, Crossing Party Lines, Days of Dialogue, Intelligence Squared, Living Room Conversations, ...

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    Healing Ohio: May workshops aimed at bridging Ohio’s polarization https://braverangels.org/healing-ohio-may-workshops-aimed-at-bridging-ohios-polarization/ https://braverangels.org/healing-ohio-may-workshops-aimed-at-bridging-ohios-polarization/#respond Wed, 05 May 2021 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/healing-ohio-may-workshops-aimed-at-bridging-ohios-polarization/ Braver Angels , a nonprofit that works to depolarize the nation's politics, is hosting a free, virtual, two-part workshop called "Red/Blue," in which 10 ...

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    Fighting With a Family Member Over Politics? Try These 4 Steps https://braverangels.org/fighting-with-a-family-member-over-politics-try-these-4-steps/ https://braverangels.org/fighting-with-a-family-member-over-politics-try-these-4-steps/#respond Fri, 19 Feb 2021 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/fighting-with-a-family-member-over-politics-try-these-4-steps/ Braver Angels has a kind of categorization system for the way different personality types treat political discussion. There's the peacekeeper, who tries ...

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    Can Americans still talk to one another? This group thinks so. https://braverangels.org/can-americans-still-talk-to-one-another-this-group-thinks-so/ https://braverangels.org/can-americans-still-talk-to-one-another-this-group-thinks-so/#respond Wed, 17 Feb 2021 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/can-americans-still-talk-to-one-another-this-group-thinks-so/ That's why he and two others founded Braver Angels , a group shaped by Blankenhorn's own personal history. For years, he was an author and ...

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    Applying couples therapy techniques to help heal America’s fractured political relationship – CBS News https://braverangels.org/applying-couples-therapy-techniques-to-help-heal-americas-fractured-political-relationship-cbs-news/ https://braverangels.org/applying-couples-therapy-techniques-to-help-heal-americas-fractured-political-relationship-cbs-news/#respond Wed, 25 Nov 2020 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/applying-couples-therapy-techniques-to-help-heal-americas-fractured-political-relationship-cbs-news/ If President-elect Biden is committed to his pledge to unify the country, he has a lot of work ahead of him. Americans are fiercely split, not only about policy, but on the basic decency of the other side. Tony Dokoupil tests out one idea to ease this strain: give America a little therapy.

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    How We Can Reconcile With Each Other When Our Politics Are So Polarized – WSJ https://braverangels.org/how-we-can-reconcile-with-each-other-when-our-politics-are-so-polarized-wsj/ https://braverangels.org/how-we-can-reconcile-with-each-other-when-our-politics-are-so-polarized-wsj/#respond Tue, 24 Nov 2020 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/how-we-can-reconcile-with-each-other-when-our-politics-are-so-polarized-wsj/ Sharp political divisions have disconnected us from friends and family. Here’s how to find common ground again.

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    Thanksgiving dinner 2020: How to talk to your family about politics https://braverangels.org/thanksgiving-dinner-2020-how-to-talk-to-your-family-about-politics/ https://braverangels.org/thanksgiving-dinner-2020-how-to-talk-to-your-family-about-politics/#respond Mon, 23 Nov 2020 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/thanksgiving-dinner-2020-how-to-talk-to-your-family-about-politics/ Stress from an unprecedented year could lead to conflict during Thanksgiving. Here's how to handle a political debate at dinner.

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    The Karens: can friendship trump politics? – podcast | News | The Guardian https://braverangels.org/the-karens-can-friendship-trump-politics-podcast-news-the-guardian/ https://braverangels.org/the-karens-can-friendship-trump-politics-podcast-news-the-guardian/#respond Wed, 11 Nov 2020 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/the-karens-can-friendship-trump-politics-podcast-news-the-guardian/ Karen Ward and Karen Cotter live in the town of Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. There is one thing on which they really don’t agree: politics, and in particular, Donald Trump. Yet despite everything that sets them apart, these two women have become close friends and believe there is a way to heal the political rift that has torn apart so many communities in the past four years

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    Over half of voters expect violence, disagree on election legitimacy https://braverangels.org/over-half-of-voters-expect-violence-disagree-on-election-legitimacy/ https://braverangels.org/over-half-of-voters-expect-violence-disagree-on-election-legitimacy/#respond Wed, 07 Oct 2020 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/over-half-of-voters-expect-violence-disagree-on-election-legitimacy/ One poll of nearly 2,000 registered voters found that nearly half – 47% – disagree with the idea that the election "is likely to be fair and honest."

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    They hate each other’s political views – so why have they become friends? | Life and style | The Guardian https://braverangels.org/they-hate-each-others-political-views-so-why-have-they-become-friends-life-and-style-the-guardian/ https://braverangels.org/they-hate-each-others-political-views-so-why-have-they-become-friends-life-and-style-the-guardian/#respond Wed, 30 Sep 2020 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/they-hate-each-others-political-views-so-why-have-they-become-friends-life-and-style-the-guardian/ Our political culture is becoming more and more polarized. In such a partisan world, can we still get along with those whose beliefs we can’t abide?

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    The Right Way to Talk across Divides – Scientific American https://braverangels.org/the-right-way-to-talk-across-divides-scientific-american/ https://braverangels.org/the-right-way-to-talk-across-divides-scientific-american/#respond Tue, 21 Apr 2020 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/the-right-way-to-talk-across-divides-scientific-american/ “Conversational receptiveness” can be learned

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    Red and blue Texas sit down to talk, despite polarized politics – CSMonitor.com https://braverangels.org/red-and-blue-texas-sit-down-to-talk-despite-polarized-politics-csmonitor-com/ https://braverangels.org/red-and-blue-texas-sit-down-to-talk-despite-polarized-politics-csmonitor-com/#respond Mon, 02 Dec 2019 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/red-and-blue-texas-sit-down-to-talk-despite-polarized-politics-csmonitor-com/ Political divisiveness is rife, but groups facilitating civil discourse abound. Participants find it’s harder work outside a workshop or classroom.

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    Marriage-Counseling Techniques for American Civility – The Atlantic https://braverangels.org/marriage-counseling-techniques-for-american-civility-the-atlantic/ https://braverangels.org/marriage-counseling-techniques-for-american-civility-the-atlantic/#respond Sun, 10 Nov 2019 08:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/marriage-counseling-techniques-for-american-civility-the-atlantic/ Borrowing techniques from couples therapy to bring liberals and conservatives back together

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    How to Get Trump Voters and Liberals to Talk: Don’t Make Anyone Sit in a Circle – The New York Times https://braverangels.org/how-to-get-trump-voters-and-liberals-to-talk-dont-make-anyone-sit-in-a-circle-the-new-york-times/ https://braverangels.org/how-to-get-trump-voters-and-liberals-to-talk-dont-make-anyone-sit-in-a-circle-the-new-york-times/#respond Sun, 03 Nov 2019 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/how-to-get-trump-voters-and-liberals-to-talk-dont-make-anyone-sit-in-a-circle-the-new-york-times/ Classes, apps and message boards are trying to bridge the divide between the left and the right, one conversation at a time.

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    How to bring out the ‘better angels’ in your community https://braverangels.org/how-to-bring-out-the-better-angels-in-your-community-2/ https://braverangels.org/how-to-bring-out-the-better-angels-in-your-community-2/#respond Mon, 08 Jul 2019 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/how-to-bring-out-the-better-angels-in-your-community-2/ Family therapist Bill Doherty talked about depolarizing within your own political circles.

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    Trump-era anxiety inspires Better Angels, others to push civil discourse https://braverangels.org/trump-era-anxiety-inspires-better-angels-others-to-push-civil-discourse/ https://braverangels.org/trump-era-anxiety-inspires-better-angels-others-to-push-civil-discourse/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2019 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/trump-era-anxiety-inspires-better-angels-others-to-push-civil-discourse/ In the Trump age, political polarization in the United States has never been higher. Groups like Better Angels are promoting civility to lower angst.

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    Trump-era anxiety inspires Better Angels, others to push civil discourse https://braverangels.org/trump-era-anxiety-inspires-better-angels-others-to-push-civil-discourse-2/ https://braverangels.org/trump-era-anxiety-inspires-better-angels-others-to-push-civil-discourse-2/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2019 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/trump-era-anxiety-inspires-better-angels-others-to-push-civil-discourse-2/ In the Trump age, political polarization in the United States has never been higher. Groups like Better Angels are promoting civility to lower angst.

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    Better Angels: Bridging the Uncivil Discussion Divide | RealClearPolitics https://braverangels.org/better-angels-bridging-the-uncivil-discussion-divide-realclearpolitics-3/ https://braverangels.org/better-angels-bridging-the-uncivil-discussion-divide-realclearpolitics-3/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2019 07:00:00 +0000 https://braverangels.org/better-angels-bridging-the-uncivil-discussion-divide-realclearpolitics-3/ During a time of deep political polarization, not everyone could get a representative from Black Lives Matter and the Tea Party in the same room. But an organization known as Better Angels can do it...

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