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NOTE: Many of our meetings, espeically in the winter months, are at private residences. For security reasons, we do not post the venue informations for these meetings. Instead, if you're on the RSVP list, you'll receive the addresses for the meeting you've signed up. So it's very important for you to set it so you DON'T BLOCK messages or notifications from this group. Otherwise, you may not see the detailed address information.
We're seeking to build a group of thinking people with diverse outlooks and perspectives to share, and do not mind being challenged. We welcome opinions and voices from different parts of the political spectrum and varying backgrounds. We're not afraid of discussing controversial topics honestly, respectfully, and passionately--Let's learn from each other. Come and let's share the fun of digging deeper into issues dear to your heart, and think about the state of the world, humanity, and community.
Towards the goal of creating and maintaining a community that is engaged, productive, civil, fun and open to new ideas and ways of thinking, we have some ground rules. And those who don't follow these ground rules will be asked to move on.
- This group is for lively conversation, and for learning and understanding different outlooks and points of view. It is not a conversation group aimed at winning an argument, or proselytizing an ideology. The objective is exploration, not confrontation.
- Although this is certainly a social--and sociable--group, it is basically for conversations about values and philosophy. Each meeting topic is intended to frame a discussion around some interesting ideas and core values. Sidelining these conversations with personal stories, sidebar conversations, and anecdotes reduces the value and enjoyment that everyone else gets from the group.
- Don't interrupt. Don't talk over other people. Don't roll your eyes. Let people finish their thought before jumping in.
- We try to keep the group to a size that can conduct good conversation about deep and interesting topics (generally 8 - 12, depending on topic, venue, and the like). People who repeatedly RSVP and no-show, or cancel at the last minute disrupt the group--we almost always have a waiting list, and is generally disrespectful to everyone else.
- No conspiracy theories!
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We'd like to extend special thanks to David G., the organizer of the Civilized Conversation of San Diego for granting us the right to use the name, 'Civilized Conversation'. David has also graciously given us the permission to borrow their past topics to help launch our new group. We look forward to our continued collaboration and sharing of stimulating ideas and events.
Yaklaşan etkinlikler (3)
Tümünü gör- ONLINE: The Guarantee of Birthright CitizenshipKonum gerekiyor
Online Event by Brennan Center for Justice at NYU - https://www.brennancenter.org/about
The Brennan Center for Justice is a nonpartisan law and policy institute.
We strive to uphold the values of democracy. We stand for equal justice and the rule of law. We work to craft and advance reforms that will make American democracy work, for all.Date: Thursday, June 12 9:30 am to 10:30 am PST
Free, but you must register here: https://brennan.swoogo.com/birthrightcitzenship/begin?ref=EventsNewsletter060224
It will be posted on their YouTube channel after the event. You will find lots of other discussions on important legal and constitutional matters there.
On the very first day of his second term in office, President Donald Trump issued an executive order purporting to strip U.S. citizenship from the children of undocumented immigrants. The order directly conflicts with the plain language of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which states that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” And it defies more than a century of case law.
The executive order met with immediate legal challenges and a wave of court rulings blocking its enforcement, and it is destined for a Supreme Court showdown. The history of the 14th Amendment will likely play a key role in the outcome of the case. What historical currents led to the ratification of the amendment’s Citizenship Clause? What did the framers intend? How did courts interpret its guarantees in the decades following? How do today’s attacks on birthright citizenship relate to historical attempts to deny citizenship to people born and living in the United States?
Join the Brennan Center virtually on Thursday, June 12, at 12:30 p.m. ET for a discussion with leading experts on the historical and legal dimensions of the attack on birthright citizenship.Produced in partnership with the Organization of American Historians
Speakers:- Kate Masur, Professor of History, Northwestern University
- Martha Jones, Professor of History, Johns Hopkins University
- Erika Lee, Bae Family Professor of History, Radcliffe Alumnae Professor, Harvard University
- Thomas Wolf, Director of Democracy Initiatives, Founder of Historians Council on the Constitution, Brennan Center
- Moderator: Kareem Crayton, Vice President for Washington, DC, Brennan Center
- What Is Your Worldview and How Was It Formed?Huntington Beach, Huntington Beach, CA
This topic was chosen, and written, by Kimberly
In Civilized Conversation we express our beliefs week after week, often citing some facts or figures or personal experiences to back them up.
How else could it really work? Yet, we seldom talk about what lies at the base of our supposedly objective beliefs: our worldviews. At the very least, our unstated POV about how the word works and how it should work leaves us susceptible to seeing facts (or “facts”) from one point of view rather than another. This does not mean that facts don’t matter or that morality or truth are subjective, of course.
Worldviews are where we start from, whether we realize it moment-to-moment or not.
So, I thought a topic that explicitly asks us to speak about and explore our worldviews and their origins would be fun and illuminating. I initially imagined “worldview” both broadly and simply. Someone’s worldview is what they believe about:
- How the world works – especially for “people like me.”
- Why it works this way – God, culture, science, economics, luck, just desserts, etc.
- How the world should work; and
- What the how, why, and should imply for the way we (and other people) should live our lives.
Worldviews are formed in large part during our childhood. They are not coolly reasoned out in Philosophy 101 class ,or by comparing religious doctrines in adulthood, nor by rationally calculating economic interests, or reading child-rearing websites.
- Worldviews are partially socially determined, and thus often highly culture-specific.
- Most people’s worldviews are based on their religious beliefs. A “Christian worldview” seems to be a buzzword among American Christians, at least based on the fact that roughly three-quarters of my Google search results (“What is a worldview?”) were about defining it and celebrating its merits.
- A person’s worldview need not be very explicit or even conscious but serve as automatic decision-making heuristics during times of stress or uncertainty or sudden change.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS –
- What is a worldview and what are its origins?
- What is your worldview and how did you come by it?
- Personal: In general, or for you, what role is played by childhood…
- Parenting and siblings.
Nurturing, stress, insecurity, or instability. - Religious faith of the family.
Friends. teachers, romantic experiences, other outsiders.
4. Culture:
How socially- or culturally-determined is a person’s worldview?
Religion’s/churchgoing’s role. Secular worldviews.
Experience of racism, sexism, other discrimination.
5. Western and non-Western worldviews.
6. Change:- Can your worldview change in adulthood?
- Can a society’s dominant worldview change? How: Economic development, immigration, war/conquest, racial/ethnic conflict or healing, etc.?
- Politics: How can politics change a dominant WV – especially one that holds us back from progress and greater shared prosperity and justice?
- Social media/internet: Do these new tools alter or warp people’s worldviews? How?
OPTIONAL BACKGROUND READINGS –
- RationalWiki’s brief list of the main types of worldviews.
- Nice, but medium-long, breakdown of what comprises a personal worldview. I like this one. It points out your worldview is the framework for how you think, not just how you behave. And it distinguishes “depth” (core well thought-out) in one’s worldview from “breadth” (the practical knowledge it leads to). Both are important. Recommended.
- What is a non-religious worldview, and do Atheism or Agnosticism amount to one?
Note: 1. This is a potluck event.
2. You must have attended at least 1 event to be qualified to attend this event.