11.02.2018

Gretchen Carlson, David Brooks : Political common ground in a polarized United States


Gretchen Carlson, David Brooks at TED Dialogues (transcript)
Political common ground in a polarized United States
Summary
Last year, Donald Trump was elected the 45th president of the United States.
This is the story after a little while his election.
In America, Liberia is called left side and Hillary Clinton was a candidate for the presidency. Conservative is called right side and Donald Trump was elected as a president somehow despite he was said that he was a man like breaking the words political correctness.

Is there or is it returning political common ground completely in a polarized the United States? Probably, no. No one feels it, despite the election was over. People go beyond it but they are disgusted with each other, even they are family.

This TED dialogues must have had been holed to have the same political common ground in a polarized United State.

A woman guest was visited for the left side and a man guest was Trump side, of course. However, they aren’t disgusted with each other on the stage. A woman who is on Clinton side tells us that there is a lot of anger, though, it’s important to watch a television news show or read a column that you normally wouldn’t. See both sides. It means that if you’re a liberal, watch something that’s very conservative. You gain perspective of what the other side is thinking. Stop only saying that you don't like the opposite side. Learn to speak both languages. Don't watch certain entities because you have no idea what the rest of the world is talking about.

Start coming together and it would start creating political common ground together.

People must think that our world becomes better.

P.S. I love the words “Make America great again”.

Words in this story
political correctness / the avoidance, often considered as taken to extremes, of forms of expression or action that are perceived to exclude, marginalize, or insult groups of people who are socially disadvantaged or discriminated against.

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