When people are fearful and impatient, they are prone to make impulsive 
decisions. In time, however, to solve really difficult problems, they realize 
that they have to work with others who may be different. To work together 
effectively, they have to decide together what the work should be. They have to 
make sound decisions, which requires shared and reflective judgment.



How Americans can learn once again to solve our nation's problems together
https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/10/20/how-americans-can-find-common-ground-and-solve-our-nations-problems-column/3703276001/
(via Instapaper)

To solve really difficult problems, people realize that they have to work with 
others who may be different.

The year 2020 will go down in history as extraordinary. Americans, by most 
accounts, are deeply divided. They can’t even talk to those they disagree with.

Many people appear traumatized by fear. Some insist that change is long 
overdue. Some see the country sliding into moral chaos and want to preserve 
what they value in the American way of life. But there is little agreement on 
what needs to change or what needs to be preserved.

That’s the dominant story. But it isn’t the only one.

In covering the 2020 election, some journalists are telling another story. The 
group includes the USA Today Network and America Amplified, a public media 
collaborative. They are drawing on nonpartisan research provided by 
organizations including Public Agenda and the Kettering Foundation, where I 
work.

Kettering’s research draws on nearly 40 years of results from local 
deliberative forums held by a nationwide network known as the National Issues 
Forums. Here are the main findings from our research:


Recognizing that everyone is motivated by the same basic imperatives removes 
barriers to listening to others who may not be like us or even like us. (Photo: 
Zoom Video Communications)

►There is more common ground on policy issues than is recognized. People favor 
such policies as increasing economic opportunities, providing for affordable 
childcare and keeping jobs in the U.S. But the thing Americans agree on most is 
that there is too much divisiveness — even if they contribute to it sometimes.

►Citizens and government officials often talk past one another, which makes the 
loss of public confidence in government grow even greater. For instance, on 
health policy, those in government are naturally concerned about the cost to 
their budgets. But NIF forums show that people are most concerned about a 
health care system so complex it is almost impossible to navigate.

►Despite the tendency to favor the likeminded, in some circumstances people 
will consider opinions they don’t like. There is a space between agreement and 
disagreement, an arena in which people decide, “I don’t particularly like what 
we are considering doing about this problem, but I can live it — for now.”

This is the arena of pragmatic problem-solving. Observers of National Issues 
Forums have seen people move into it even on explosive issues like immigration. 
Described as a pivot, it changes the tone of decision making. When it happens, 
problem solving can move forward, even without total agreement.

This pivot occurs when issues are described in terms of what people find deeply 
valuable — not “values” but age-old imperatives like safety and being treated 
fairly. When issues are described in this way and framed with several options 
for solutions, with both advantages and disadvantages clearly laid out, people 
will confront tensions between what they prefer and consequences they may not 
like.

Recognizing that everyone is motivated by the same basic imperatives removes 
barriers to listening to others who may not be like us or even like us. Even if 
people disagree, they become aware of greater complexity. They explore the 
tradeoffs inherent in difficult decisions. That opens the door to understanding 
the experiences and concerns of others.

Options are carefully considered

Some people call this this kind of decision making “deliberation.” People 
deliberate privately throughout their lives on issues like what career is best. 
They weigh options carefully. That is deliberation.

When people are fearful and impatient, they are prone to make impulsive 
decisions. In time, however, to solve really difficult problems, they realize 
that they have to work with others who may be different. To work together 
effectively, they have to decide together what the work should be. They have to 
make sound decisions, which requires shared and reflective judgment.

Because of the many issues raised by the tsunami of crises hitting the country, 
people across the nation are wrestling with crucial questions like: How can we 
best educate our children and also keep them safe? And who should make those 
decisions?

Experts can’t give us clear answers to such questions. We must rely on our best 
judgment.

Whether those decisions are made deliberatively will affect their soundness. 
Opportunities for considering such questions are abundant, as the old-fashioned 
public forum has gone online. Students nationwide are using this technology to 
deliberate on issues such as economic recovery, immigration, policing and 
voting.

A path forward for journalists

I have the deepest respect for the groundbreaking work of the Hidden Common 
Ground project. Yet it has the promise to be more than an election year 
exercise, illustrating the potential for a new role for media. It can put 
journalists in the business of adding more public judgment to our political 
system. There are opportunities to do this, starting with every time a news 
organization names and frames an issue in deliberative terms.

Americans are not temperamentally suited for pessimism. Facing the greatest 
challenge to democracy in our lifetimes, we not only need to uncover common 
ground; we need to and can create it.

David Mathews is president of the Charles F. Kettering Foundation.



Sent from my iPhone

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