Let's Find Common Ground - Local Common Ground: Dinner and a Fight. Simon Miontlake, Ted Wetzel, Tom Hach
Episode Date: January 5, 2023Want to know one of the most exciting and innovative ways to find common ground? Get people out of their political bunkers and move them beyond rigid polarization in our divided nation. Consider local... grassroots efforts, such as the one we profile in this podcast episode. Journalist Simon Montlake of The Christian Science Monitor tells us about his reporting on a lively grassroots effort in northeast Ohio to help people of all political stripes disagree constructively. Participants meet first over dinner at a community center and then debate a hot topic. The audience is invited to discuss a controversial proposition, listening to different points of view. It’s called Dinner and a Fight with the word "fight" crossed out and replaced by "dialog". Event organizers Ted Wetzel and Tom Hach explain how the evenings work and why they can be part of a broader effort to rebuild civic bonds. Ted is the founder and executive director of Fighting-To-Understand, a nonprofit group that encourages people to be more skilled at healthy disagreement. Former IT program manager and retired Navy Reservist Tom Hach is the Director of Ohio Freedom Action Network (OhioFAN). Please tell us what you think! Share your feedback in this short survey. For every survey completed we’ll plant 5 trees. Common Ground Podcast Feedback Survey (qualtrics.com)
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How do we bring people together and get Americans of different viewpoints, ethnic, racial and social backgrounds in the same room?
Talking and listening to one another about some of the most divisive issues of the day.
That's what this episode is all about.
This is Let's Find Common Ground. I'm Ashley Melntite. And I'm Richard Davies. Dinner and a fight is the playful and provocative name for a series of grassroots events in Northeast Ohio.
This local series of meetings on controversial topics may be one of the most innovative ways to get people out of their political bunkers,
find common ground and move beyond rigid polarization.
We'll speak with the organizers, but first we're going to hear from journalist Simon Montlake
of the Christian Science Monitor. He went to one of these dinners and dialogues and spoke with
those involved. Let's find out more about them and why they're needed.
Welcome and thank you for joining us. It's a pleasure to be here.
needed. Welcome and thank you for joining us.
It's a pleasure to be here.
How divided are we right now in America?
Let's kick off with that question.
It's a high one to one, so I mean very divided in terms of people's political preferences
and particularly when they're primed by hot moments, hot coverage, animated conversation, but on the other hand, I've
sat in groups of people who disagree, who manage to get along just fine talking both about
those issues and then turn to things that they do like. I always find it fascinating if you
just listen to sports coverage in this country and people are obsessed with sports. People feel very passionately about their team, their players, but they can also discuss with partisans from
other teams about the sport itself and about the way the game played out. And so the love
of the sport and the game and the rules somehow gets above the partisan belief in the team.
And I think that that does happen sometimes with politics.
So I do feel that there's a lot that brings the country together.
And the party politics is just impossible to manage in that context,
because the incentives are always there to divide.
And so those things are always intention, it seems.
You met a guy called Ted Wetzel when you were reporting a little bit earlier this fall.
What, what, what, he and his friends and colleagues trying to achieve in Akron, Ohio?
He wants to bring people together in a way that allows them to express themselves, to feel
heard and to also feel that they can learn better how to disagree.
And I think his feeling is that disagreement is hard and it's easier to either shy away from
that disagreement or to stick with people who you know you will agree with. But he actually
thinks that disagreement is fundamental to democracy and in some ways can be invigorating.
And to him, as he told me, it's patriotic, having a good disagreement when you come out
the other side knowing more, knowing more about the other side, how they think and maybe
not converting your opinion but understanding the differences.
That's the him a patriotic duty.
So it's almost
like a civics class to him. He comes away very energized by a good civil disagreement.
You work for a national newspaper, the Christian science monitor, you're based in Boston. You
decided to get on a plane to chat with Ted and his friends about this effort. Why did you think that this
was a worthwhile story? Why do you think it's important?
Well, I guess over the last several years, I mean, this all picked up a lot after the 2016
election. We've seen many well-meaning groups and initiatives trying to address polarization,
trying to bring people together. You know, my self and colleagues have written about these efforts.
And it's always struck me that there is a constituency that do want to get together
and try and talk through these issues that are concerned about the polarization
that do want to bridge these divides.
But I've always questioned, you know, how inclusive that process is.
And whether you're actually reaching the people
who perhaps don't want to be reached or the people that are most primed for a tribal
fight.
I just wonder how you get to those people.
What really got me interested in Ted is talking to retired newspaper editor in at Crono
Hio who I'd met before in previous trips and always found
to be a very, you know, thoughtful, reasonable sort of guide to his community.
And he just said that what he's talking about Ted and his events is that there were people
there.
He says, you don't normally see at a well-meaning structured debate.
He said, you know, these are angry people that say maybe Trump people, they could also be
Bernie people, they're just people who feel alienated, disenfranchised, they feel distrustful
of the whole process.
And he says, and he told me, look, Ted manages to somehow, he manages to get those people
in the room, and that's what makes him special.
And so that just planted a seed in my head.
I thought, well, who is this guy?
How does he do it?
And what does it look like?
And what does it feel like?
I mean, I also wonder about whether it all ends up
as a screaming match.
You know, am I going to be witnessed
to something ugly?
You mentioned just now, I think, that Ted was energized by, I think you might have used
the word civil discourse, and yet his organization is called Dinner in a Fight, which on the
surface sounds certainly more combative.
I mean, how does his organization or effort differ from some of the other groups out there
that also try to bring people of differing views together?
You know, there's braver angels, and and of course there's common ground committee that we're
part of.
How do you think this group is different?
I think that you've just nailed it.
The title itself is different and the way that he, I guess you would say, markets it or
styles it, it's sort of somewhat joky.
I mean, there is a certain humor to that.
There's also an acknowledgement that it is a fight that, you know, we shouldn't shy away from
the idea that argument can be quite invigorating. Talk radio is sort of
founded on the idea of the angry argument, the angry caller, the self-righteous
host. And so I think that's kind of his, perhaps his insight, his
contribution to this. He just wants to sort of create a space in which it's
okay to seek disagreement as long as you come there with an open sort of an
open heart and open mind that through this process you might learn something.
You have respect for the other side, but that I mean
a fight is kind of entertainment, politics and entertainment, crossover a lot.
How did these events differ from what you'd imagined?
They start off very sedate.
I mean, we're all sat at a table with strangers,
the idea is to mix it up with other people.
And there's icebreaker questions
and people go to the buffet and come back.
And it's almost like a prelude.
But I think the whole time, you are conscious of this,
this is the dinner, this is the warm up.
We are breaking bread together.
But at some point, we're gonna move to another stage.
And in this case, there's sort of the chairs and the stage are set up at the other end of the room.
So I found myself always looking over there and wondering about what comes next.
Crucially, you don't start talking about the political or social issue that's up for debate.
Because you don't actually know what the debate is.
When you arrive there or you have no idea what the dialogue will concern.
And that's deliberate. That is all sort of, you know, as it were teased out and built up to the moment when you move to the dialogue.
Do you think local efforts to bring people together are often more productive than attempts at the national level to find common ground? I think that's very likely that what he has found is very attuned to the local circumstances
and builds on that culture and those frankly class and geographical and racial divisions
that shape Ohio and its politics. The three of us are all very familiar with the
class-bound society of the UK and I was just going to ask you, you mentioned class just a
second or two ago, do you think in this country there is enough attention paid to divisions of class and how to broach those.
Frankly, no. I always find that even though race is a great divider in the United States, and historically a very shameful and painful issue that still comes up into most of politics
and perhaps still drives some domestic politics, as much as race matters hugely, so does class. And I think
you see that within racial groups, there is a big difference within Latino communities, I know
personally, between those who are, you know, wealthier people, exiles from Colombia, moving to Miami
versus someone from the coagulers who has come, you know, over the border, we're very little
to start with. I mean, there are big differences in socioeconomic class
within every ethnic and racial group.
So class is something that I think is slightly difficult
to talk about because the ideal of America
is that anyone can succeed and that class doesn't matter
because the American dream offers
that opportunity of upward mobility to everyone.
The reality is that there's actually a slowdown in social mobility.
And that perhaps you could argue is one of the reasons why things have become so unstable over the last 10, 20 years
is that I think the American Dream is receiving.
Simon Montlake of the Christian Science Monitor. Coming next are interview with the organizers of dinner and a fight, Ted Wetzel and Tom
Hack. This is Let's Find Common Ground.
I'm Richard. I'm Ashley.
We release new episodes of Let's Find Common Ground every two weeks.
This is episode 75.
Yeah, and Common Ground Committee also has a YouTube channel.
Our podcaster there and so are highlights and video from special live events.
One of them is finding common ground on guns.
The Common Ground Committee event with Democratic Senator Chris Murphy
and Will Heard, a former Republican member of Congress,
was held during the fall.
The moderator was former CBS News correspondent,
Jacqueline Adams.
It was a lively discussion of a contentious, complex issue.
You can watch it at YouTube
on the Common Ground Committee site.
Now more of our podcast, all about dinner and a fight.
And on their posters, the word fight is likely crossed out and replaced by the word dialogue.
Ted Wetzel is the creator of this local effort to help people of all political viewpoints
disagree constructively.
Ted is the founder and executive director of Fighting to Understand,
a nonprofit group that encourages people to become more skilled at healthy
disagreement. His politics are moderately left of center.
We also hear from Tom Hack. He's an active participant in dinner in a fight and
is a former IT program manager and retired Navy reservist.
Tom is director of Ohio Freedom Action Network
and calls himself a constitutional conservative. Richard, you did this interview on your own.
I was away when this was recorded. We first hear from Ted Wetzel about what happens at the
beginning of each event. People enter, it's usually in a community hall.
It is arranged with dinner tables in the entrance to the hall.
And then beyond that is the audience setup which is used later.
We like round tables with five chairs.
We like the number five because of the five from disagree strongly to agree strongly.
At the start of the evening, people are greeted at the door before they sit down and have dinner.
The fight or dialogue comes later.
We have cute signage up that's kind of comical.
One of the signs is a big warning sign that says warning.
I know everything.
From the very start, people know that this is going to be humor.
They're instructed to sit with people.
They do not know.
No one has any idea of anybody's politics.
They actually do have dinner.
They're given some icebreaker questions to pick from.
And those are typically questions that will be about
they're growing up.
And so one of my favorite questions is,
what was your favorite outfit as a child?
And people will start to come alive and talk about
their childhood favorite outfit.
The dinners usually last about 30 or 40 minutes and then people are asked to move to their
seats in the audience section of the hall.
And then we introduce the topic and people volunteer to take the five chairs.
And those people who take the five empty chairs, then dialogue for 20 minutes or so,
the facilitator helps the conversation go,
and then the audience is invited to make comments.
So it's really interesting because
the five chairs can be a little bit of a hot seat,
but the audience is processing all this,
and some gems come from the audience.
And then everyone's invited to go back to their tables
to be with their original dinner partners,
but this time, enjoy dessert.
And they're given a sheet with four questions
that talk about what seems to be the elephant in the room.
Or did we seem like maybe we're in agreement on something?
People tend not to want to leave.
They just love the dialogue.
And that whole thing takes about two and a half hours.
So far, there have been about 12 dinners in a fight.
Topics are picked in advance.
They've included the proper role for the police,
the right to bear arms, and gender identity in the classroom.
So plenty of room for disagreement.
And these five empty chairs are in front of the audience.
Disagree strongly, disagree somewhat, neutral, agree somewhat, agree strongly. And people assume those chairs after we
introduce a divisive topic. What's an example of a divisive topic? The very
first one that we did, we've done 12 of these now. The very first one we did was
about 15 months ago in the activity of COVID and the topic was wearing a mask is the
American thing to do.
And actually, Tom assumed the chair that was disagree strongly. Okay Tom so why did you disagree strongly with that statement? So when I
participated we did not know what the question was going to be as part of the
being part of the audience we didn't know what the question was going to be
until we actually got into we're done done, completed dinner, and we sat in the audience
portion of the room.
So that question really resonated with me.
I strongly believe that people need to have the personal choice whether or not to take
action, whether that be, you know, wearing the mask, taking the vaccine, doing other things, that in the end, government can,
certainly can have a recommendation, but in the end,
it is up to the individual to do so.
When that all was coming down, and this is a little while ago,
but the bottom line is, we all, as members of society,
we all need to be prudent.
But when we step out our front doors and go into the into the world,
we have to accept the risks of doing that.
What's on American is to expect others to take care of us.
No one should be required to take precautions for somebody else's comfort.
It's up to that person.
That person is uncomfortable, then I think the obligation is on that person to decide whether
or not to go out.
It is not their obligation.
It's not their right to say, you have to do X, Y, and Z to make me feel comfortable
outside.
That really sets us up for the loss of liberty and individualism.
Those are some of the things that come to mind as I sat in the strongly disagree chair
that wearing masks were the American thing to do.
Ted, your thoughts on that night?
Several things were interesting. One was that in the opposite chair, Tom was on this
degree strongly. In the degree strongly chair was a medical professional who
felt really strongly about safety and the medical view of this and the person who was agree somewhat had lost his mother to COVID. So all of a sudden,
it gets logical, yeah, but also emotional. And that's where we all come from these various
positions when we're when we're disagreeing and agreeing. Ted and Tom often don't agree politically,
but what unites Ted and I is that we understand that if we do not come together
and focus on what we agree with, then other forces are going to usurp us.
And if we want to live in a representative republic
Which includes a broad spectrum of people not people not only people who think like me But people who think like Ted and and perhaps you as well Richard
We have to focus on what we what unites us and not what divides us if we don't band together
Then I don't know what our government looks like. I don't know what our country looks like
I don't want to come across to your audience
as saying that we don't have an obligation
to take care of those who are less in need.
I think that volunteering and taking care of those
who are less fortunate in our society,
it's very important,
but when it comes to personal choices
of engaging with society when you walk out your front door,
it's your obligation to assume those
risks. I also think that in retrospect there are a lot of things about the mass that have come out. We
had a very one-sided conversation in the public forum of, say, for example, Twitter and Facebook and
others that I don't think we really got the information, the average person did not get the information they needed
to really ascertain whether or not wearing a mask
actually made a difference or not.
You only got one side of the story,
and that really does go to the heart of the issue
that we have is, are we gonna live in a representative
democracy, which requires freedom of thought
and freedom of speech, or are we going to be in a situation where we take government
dictates and whatever they're promoting from their own perspective?
Tom, I've been thinking that maybe we should do the masking issue again,
and basically the statement might be something like in retrospect,
we overreacted about masks
and see how that, you know, float down.
I agree.
What if we had asked each other to help our neighbor?
What if we said, hey, not on your neighbor's door,
go to the grocery store for your neighbor.
Do odds and ends, you can still maintain a distance and not really have an issue with, you know, with affecting them
with COVID. What, what if we had done that instead of creating so much divisiveness in,
in our society?
Yeah, had we to do it all over again, I think there's a lot of lessons. It would be fun to harvest some of those lessons.
Let's talk about your politics.
Ted and Tom, how do you differ personally?
I lean left, especially on social issues.
I'm pretty centrist on economic issues.
My personality is such that if we're having a three-way conversation here at Richard,
I'd say, boy, that's a really good point, Richard.
And then Tom would make another point.
And the opposite point, and I'd say, boy, that's a really good point too.
And not be so strong with my own.
I'm sort of the personality that wants to see
all sides of things before I make a decision.
Tom is very, well, I would say very conservative
in a moderate way and a conservative way.
Yeah, so I would describe myself
as a constitutional conservative.
I probably am a social and economic conservative.
You know Ted said words to the effect that I'm moderate or whatever.
I'm not sure if I am or not, but I do try to understand the other side
so that I at least have a basis for having further dialogue and can better understand what
unites us, what we agree on, versus what we disagree with. If we focus strictly on items that we disagree with, then we are never
going to come together and be able to renew the contract between ourselves, the Constitution,
and the government. A little bit more about dinner in a fight.
So how many people gather and are they politically very different quite often?
The more difference we can get in the room, the better.
Typically we like to see a minimum of 30 people participating and the most that we've done dinner in a fight is 60.
There's an odd thing Richard that the name dinner in a fight is oddly attractive because
people realize that we need to disagree. They see the tongue and cheek use of the word fight. And of course,
we, in our graphics, we cross out the word fight and hand right in the word dialogue.
So it's dinner dinner in a fight, but also dinner in dialogue.
That's right. Yeah. And anecdotally, people have told me after the events that they were concerned that they
might have been ambushed at the event, but they were pleasantly surprised that they were
not and that their input was welcome. 20 to 30% of the attendees fall in the conservative spectrum.
And then the rest would be 70% fall in centrist and left.
I would agree with Ted that it would probably be 30% at work on the conservative side, but that's a high enough percentage to make sure
that the that all perspectives were covered during the conversation.
So you don't feel cornered.
You don't feel like this is unfair somehow.
No, in fact, I think the facts are on our side, so I'm happy to engage.
Tom, why do you think that?
Events like this bringing people of different points of view together in a real setting and a physical setting as opposed to something online is
worthwhile
Because people naturally tend to associate with people that they agree with right?
You know sometimes you do but most people probably have a hangout with people that have
similar points of view.
So having the opportunity to be in an environment where people don't necessarily have your point
of view makes you think.
It strengthens your perspective because you actually have to defend yourself, right?
You don't necessarily, if you're in a group of people who agree with each other,
you just agree you don't necessarily have to defend yourself.
This puts you in a situation where you actually have to articulate why you think what you think.
And the other thing that is important is then it allows you as well to hear perspectives of other people
that you hadn't heard before. I think that the more you understand people who disagree with you, they may actually have some good ideas and perspectives that you hadn't heard before. I think that the more you understand people who disagree with you,
they may actually have some good ideas and perspectives
that you hadn't considered.
Ted, do you have any examples of what Tom just talked about
where at one of your events somebody went,
huh, I hadn't looked at it like that.
That's kind of interesting or have changed somebody's mind.
it like that, that's kind of interesting, or have, or change somebody's mind. We are pretty clear about the purpose is not necessarily to change everyone's mind.
We use a metaphor of a snow globe being shaken up.
So at the beginning of the event, everything is settled down in the snow globe.
During the event, we're shaking that thing up and looking
at it from all different angles. And it is very common. I would say very common that
people leave saying to themselves, hmm, I'm thinking about this differently. Not necessarily
changing their mind yet. these topics are complicated.
We're not going to solve them in 45 minutes and everyone acknowledges that.
And so we are in agreement that these complicated topics take time.
We're also in agreement that democracy is rooted in disagreement and third we're in agreement that we're
not very skilled at constructive disagreement so where are we going to learn
and that's one of the reasons for what we do. Tom do you agree that the roots of
democracy are in disagreement? I believe a better, more accurate statement is democracy is a mechanism to resolve disagreements.
To which he wins me over and I have to agree.
So do you think that dinner and a fight that these events could go on the road, that they
could be copied elsewhere.
Are you hopeful that perhaps you've hit upon something that may be useful to other communities
around the country in these very divided times?
We do believe that this is transportable. So we are taking out in the road to Phoenix, Tucson, San Diego, Los Angeles,
San Francisco, and then we're doing one in Washington DC in May. So we do hope to produce a kit
that this could be done in Albuquerque, or Peoria.
Tom? Yeah, I think that this is a great first step
in trying to bring people together
who have different backgrounds and perspectives.
It needs to be the first step, not the last step.
And Ted has spent a lot of time thinking about
how we can progress from the basic outlines
that he described within our inner fight to something that is more enduring and allows
for a consensus building.
Because nobody is in a position to dictate the outcome, the exact outcome they want.
It's got to be through conversation, negotiation,
and understanding that allows us to get to the point
where a consensus can develop
that maybe not everybody likes, but people can live with.
And we're in agreement on that.
Dinner in a fight alone is totally insufficient.
Dialogue alone is totally insufficient. Dialogue alone is totally insufficient. It needs this deliberation component that Tom's talking about.
But before consensus can be reached, people first need to of wanting to disagree is not part of Northeast
Ohio.
It's happening in every county in the country.
And I think, although people have a hard time articulating this, that they see it as a civic
duty to do it well. The problem is we don't know how
to do it well. And so it's something that we can learn.
Ted Weetzel with Tom Hack. Learn more about this episode and others at our website,
commongroundcommittcommittee.org.
You'll find our shows under the Listen tab on the website and you can also hear our take,
a new series of short podcasts with Common Ground Committee co-founders Bruce Bond and
Eric Olson.
They discuss areas of opportunity and reasons for hope on some of America's most timely
and pressing issues.
Find all of our podcasts at commongroundcommity.org.
I'm Richard Davies.
I'm Ashley Nuntite.
Thanks for listening to Let's Find Common Ground.
This podcast is part of the Democracy Group.
This podcast is part of the Democracy Group.