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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.

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.

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

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.”
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.

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.

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

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.”



