Let's Find Common Ground - How Curiosity Can Bridge Dangerous Divides: Mónica Guzmán
Episode Date: February 1, 2024In this presidential election year, partisan divides cause political gridlock and distrust. We're encouraged to believe that we're right and those on the other side are ignorant, stupid, or evil. But ...avoiding awkward conversations with those we disagree with is a big reason why America is so bitterly divided. Journalist, bridge builder, and author Mónica Guzmán is the loving liberal daughter of conservative Mexican immigrant parents. We hear the personal story told with humor and passion of how Mónica set out to understand what divides America. In this episode of "Let's Find Common Ground", we discuss practical ways to use our own sense of curiosity to have cross-partisan conversations with colleagues, friends, and family. Mónica is the author of the book "I Never Thought Of It That Way". She serves as Senior Fellow for Public Practice at Braver Angels, and hosts the podcast series, "A Braver Way".
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Today we share an argument for radical curiosity. Why it's so often the key to understanding and staying in the same room with people you passionately disagree with.
This approach requires effort and patience. And our guest has a history of personal practice with her parents. They love each other, but they view the world through an entirely different lens.
I keep learning. This is not something where I feel like I already know. I have all the answers.
This is, we just got to do it this way, guys. No is Let's Find Common Ground. I'm Ashley Milntight.
And I'm Richard Davies. Our guest is Monica Guzman,
author of the widely read book,
I Never Thought of It That Way.
She's also at Brave Her Angels,
an organization working to depolarize America.
Monica also hosts the new podcast series, A Brave Away.
She talks with guests from both sides of the aisle
about how to disagree about politics without losing heart.
That sounds a little bit like us.
It does.
So here's our chat with Monica Guzman.
We spoke with her nearly two years ago and are sharing this conversation for a second
time.
You have lived for several years in a rather famously liberal city, Seattle, and you're
on the left yourself.
So what first got you interested in seeing the world from another perspective?
The relationship with my parents was pretty instrumental, at least for seeing the world
from a different political perspective.
We became American citizens in the year 2000.
We immigrated from Mexico.
And it was soon after that that I saw a Bush Cheney sign
suddenly appear on my parents' office wall.
And I didn't realize until that moment
that they wouldn't look at the world
the same way I did ideologically.
And I was just 17, I was in high school,
but that was certainly instrumental.
Earlier than that though,
because we immigrated from Mexico when I was six,
my life was just full of contrasts.
So the way that I had done kindergarten in Mexico
and the way that we were doing kindergarten
in Fort Worth, Texas was so different. And my mind was full of questions. Why are we
doing it this way and not that way? How do you say this in English? How do I communicate
that to this different world? So I do think that from pretty early on, I just had to figure out what the
differences were, and I had to see things from another point of view in order to understand
the new world that I was in, and in order to help the people in this new world understand me.
Monica, tell us more about your parents and how they view politics as opposed to your
own way of looking at things.
Well, we have had a lot of conversations.
Me and my parents, some of them have been very angry.
It's really one unending conversation.
Do we understand each other's politics completely?
No, because we keep evolving.
But where we have talked about politics and we do understand some of the differences,
I know that they are true conservatives and I'm a true liberal.
They focus more often on the individual and I focus more often on the overall system.
They're not only conservatives,
they're out and out Trump supporters, right?
Yes.
And their support for Trump,
each of them has their own reasons.
For my mother, she started the Respect for Life Club
at my Catholic high school.
She cares deeply about abortion.
And it's very hard for her to put a worse devil
on the other side of the devil that
would be OK with killing unborn children.
And then for my father, there's several reasons
I could get into, but the one that I'll say now
is he looked at the American government and the American
political system and
saw a lot of politicians not saying what they mean, not seeming to really stand for the principles
of this democratic republic. He saw it all just be really smarmy and false and fake. And then here
comes a guy who says what he means and doesn't seem to be scared of anything. It doesn't seem to have any shame about what he thinks and just calls it like he sees it.
He saw a lot of authenticity and he thought this guy might be able to shake things up
and get us all the snap out of this false place we are in our politics.
So that was one of the big reasons my dad voted for Trump.
And I think didn't you actually watch the results of the...
Was it the 2016 election or the 2020 election that you watched with your parents?
2020 election. Yeah, I had asked them, hey, so next Tuesday, you're busy, can I come over?
And they were like, yeah, sure. And And then later my mom pulls me aside and goes,
but Monica, you have to understand,
like you can come over, but please let us watch Fox News.
Just let us watch Fox News and don't complain about it.
I said, of course I'm there at your house.
Can we also watch CNN?
Yes, we can also watch CNN.
Okay.
And so we spent that night, you know,
flipping between the channels and every little bit
blowing up at
each other about something.
And like, you know, kind of going from sort of reining it in and then having a sip of
sangria to just all out and out arguing again and then back and forth and back and forth.
Is there anything else you would like to say about your parents' views?
Because you do have this line in the book where you say, my friends are acquaintances when they heard I had Trump voting parents could
almost not believe that I was still speaking to them. And yet I know that
if I were them, I would feel the same way as them.
I mean, they are immigrants to the U S obviously,
which is the main thing that shocks people, doesn't it?
Yes. Well, and Mexican immigrants, because in the minds of many liberals, well, Trump
just insulted all Mexicans, right? He talked about rapists and criminals coming over from
Mexico. But I think what is often left out that I've learned from my parents is, like,
turn it around. How do I put this? It's like we think that all Mexicans identify with all Mexicans. But all Americans
don't identify with all Americans, obviously. So there's something hilarious to me. When
my parents heard Trump say that, they didn't think he was talking about them. They didn't
get offended and insulted at all. At all, like it didn't even register
for them as an insult to them.
And then my dad also in particular has
a really incredible background when it comes to
looking at America's ability to enforce its own laws.
I grew up necessarily very curious to practice
in curiosity because I came from Mexico
and I had to make a lot of contrasts. In Mexico, unfortunately, you can get away with more.
You can. Lots of homicides go unsolved. Lots of taxes go unpaid. There's more corruption.
Not saying that there isn't in the United States, but come on, it's another level.
And so for my dad, the United States,
one of the reasons it is great
is because it can enforce its own laws.
It doesn't allow people to cheat.
So he looks at our immigration policy
and the gap between what's in the books
and what we actually do.
And he wants to close that gap because to him him that's part of what's great about America.
And that makes a lot of sense to me. I disagree with him on immigration.
You know, I want to pass the citizenship by one of the things.
But I get it after talking to him a lot. I'm like, I see that. I see how you
came into that point of view. You brought our family to this country for a reason.
So I get it.
You are now a bridge builder and you are director of digital and storytelling at
Braver Angels, which is a cross-partisan organization working to depolarize America,
have your views of how to handle people who don't think like you politically,
culturally, have they changed a lot in the last few months, in the last couple of years?
I keep learning. This is not something where I feel like I already know.
I have all the answers.
This is we just got to do it this way guys.
No, that's not a thing.
There's so much wisdom out there about how to do this that is untapped.
There's so many families working on it, friends working on it, but no one's asking them about it.
They're not talking about it.
It doesn't seem okay to do.
And so no one's learning.
So I'm, since I joined Braver Angels,
I have met so many more and more and more people
who have come to this work in their own lives.
And they might be volunteering for Braver Angels
or just following along,
but talking to them has been eye-opening.
I will say though that the principles,
some of the principles that I had, you know,
detected before joining Braver Angels,
very much still apply.
One of the ones that I write about in my book
is the importance of understanding differences in language.
The differences in ideology or really at anything,
when they form really separate communities,
those communities form different languages.
So for example, one thing that I learned at Braver Angels,
thanks to my conservative colleagues there,
is that it turns out the way we describe our government
is becoming divided.
So the word democracy is now coded blue,
not unifying red and blue
Wow, yeah
If you want to talk about our government in a way that folks who are liberal and conservative can both see themselves and don't
Suspect that it's charged with a political intent. You use democratic republic
So I now talk about our government as a democratic republic, which is more accurate
than saying it is a democracy.
How important is curiosity to having these sort of bridging conversations?
Critical, absolutely critical. Curiosity is, it's the thirst for knowledge, it's the craving for knowledge.
It does incredible things to leave our minds open.
So the analogy I use is, you know, in the hallways of your mind, when you're very certain about everything,
you're walking down the hallway in your mind and there's doors to either side of you, but they're all closed.
What curiosity does is it puts down door stops in those doorways, puts down door stops so
that they're not all the way closed, and you walk down those hallways and you're asking
questions you're noticing assumptions you have in your mind.
That is curiosity without even talking to another person.
That's self inquiry.
But then there's the level of, okay, curiosity when you're actually engaging with another person.
What does that mean?
And there's all kinds of levels there, but it's the same idea.
You have to be open.
You have to hold your beliefs, have your convictions.
But in a conversation of difference, a curious, bridging conversation,
can you hold those beliefs just a little bit loosely?
The analogy I use is on many smartphones is
something called wiggle mode. So if you want to move your apps around or delete them, you sort
of hold them down, they start to wiggle in place. And that's your cue that you can move them around.
That's what I try to do with my convictions and my beliefs in a conversation of difference.
A lot of people are afraid of doing that because they think that if they hold their beliefs more
loosely in a conversation, they could drop them.
You will not drop them.
That's not how opinions work.
That's not how perspectives work.
Don't worry.
All you're doing is allowing there to be room to breathe.
Monica Guzman on Let's Find Common Ground.
I'm Ashley.
I'm Richard.
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Now, back to our interview with Monica Guzman, recorded in 2022.
This bridging work is difficult. For some, they may even think it's insurmountable. I mean, certainly political differences
have spoiled many thanksgivings
and ruined a lot of family occasions,
not to mention friendships between people.
But you say that the barriers between us
are lower than we think.
Why? So I say that because the evidence, Barriers between us are lower than we think.
Why?
So I say that because the evidence,
particularly around the political divide, is showing it.
So study after study that asks one side to guess
at the beliefs of the other,
shows that we are constantly overestimating
how extreme people's beliefs are on the other side,
and we are constantly overestimating the amount of
sort of resentment and animosity that the other side sends to our own. This happens on both sides
of the divide. So the research is showing us that we are wrong about each other. The barriers between
us are lower than we think. It is true.
But is it true between you and your uncle? That's a different question, right?
Is it true between you and your friend?
I mean, these are individual relationships,
but what you can go in confident about
is that the probability is on your side.
And I can say from my experience
that I've talked to a lot of people on the other side and whatever side. And I can say from my experience that I've talked to a lot of people on the other side
and whatever side I've witnessed people doing these
conversations with each other.
I have yet to see two people come away from one of those
kinds of conversations really, really affirming
that the other person is exactly as bad as they thought.
So does it take courage?
Can it take patience?
Yes, but I think a lot depends on our ability to be curious,
even if all that means for you is not burning a bridge you would have burned.
You write about our tendency to sort other and silo people.
Can you just talk for a minute about like,
what are the differences between those three things?
Yeah, so sorting, othering and siloing
add up to the big SOS.
Help!
Our society is in deep trouble.
And yeah, the SOS begins with sorting,
which is the very natural human tendency
to be around people who are like us,
because especially in times
of anxiety and trauma and fear, we want to feel soothed and comfortable.
We don't want to be uncomfortable all the time.
Makes total sense.
What we see, and the evidence is stronger now than it's been in a while, is blue zip
codes getting bluer, red zip codes getting redder.
People are moving because of politics and because of whether they feel they're accepted
by their communities or they can even be heard
in the places they live, makes sense.
Othering is the distance that we put between ourselves
and anyone we deem different.
The social science around othering is terrifying
because the differences don't even have to be
that meaningful for us to discriminate
even in subtle ways between our group and theirs.
And then siloing is in some ways the most powerful
and the most pernicious because siloing is about
the stories we tell and the stories we hear
and the thoughts that they spark in our own minds
as a result of the sorting and the othering.
As a result of the groups we feel we belong to
and that we have to have some kind of connection
and attachment to, And then how far
away we are from everyone else means we're just trying to understand them from a distance which
is not going to work or people or endlessly complicated mysteries. We're not puzzles you can
fit together with the pieces in front of you. That's not the way it works. So our silos, you know,
technology makes it a lot easier for us to pick our neighbors in our social platforms and we get to design the kinds of stimulation to our thoughts.
And our thoughts, of course, determine how we see the world.
You're a journalist. You've written about technology, you know, a fair bit about how
works. There's a ton of newspaper columns, TV, radio, podcast commentary saying how social media is dividing us. We kind of know that. Can it be used to bring us together as well?
Absolutely. And I'm a big fan of irreconcilable contradictions
because they keep us curious.
And social media is bringing us together,
has been bringing us together,
has been miraculous in its ability to bring us together.
It has also been astoundingly awful
in its ability to drive us apart.
Both those things are true simultaneous.
Having written about technology for a long time,
I know the temptation to blame the tools, but it's really just a deflection because it's
never the tools. It's us and it's also whether we are aware of how the tools
limit us. Social media restricts the full human communication toolbox and we need
to be aware of the fact that when we have conversations
on social media, we are having them with fewer tools in our toolbox. The internet is a non-place
that makes us into non-people. Everything travels with texts and memes, and we have
to be aware of how much less of our meaning can get across easily.
What do you mean by fewer tools in our toolbox?
Can you explain?
Yeah, so the conditions for a great, curious conversation.
When you want to kind of figure out,
all right, is this the right time?
Are these conditions right for me to talk about this issue
with this person?
You want to think about a few things.
You want to think about time.
Do you have enough time to really get to the depth of it?
You want to think about attention. Do you have enough time to really get to the depth of it?
You want to think about attention.
Will you be able to put your attention
into this conversation?
Well, they.
You want to think about parity, which means,
are you both actually at the same level
in the conversation?
When you're in person, this can be fairly simple.
You both have the same range of volume.
You're in a room.
You can interrupt each other.
When you're online, if I am commenting on someone else's Instagram thread,
they can delete me, they can block me, they can hide my comment.
That is not parody.
You want to think about containment,
that one is really important on social media,
to what degree is the conversation contained to the people actually engaging in it?
Social media is full of opportunities to talk and talk and talk
in front of a mass invisible audience that you can't see.
And you don't know how they're reacting.
And that makes you want to perform your views safely,
grab a talking point under which you can take some shelter,
rather than actually explore your deep down honest views.
And then finally, embodiment.
So embodiment is, I've got a voice.
I've got expressions. I've got the little laugh that I said after I've got a voice. I've got expressions
I've got the little laugh that I said after I've got a voice. I went ha, you know
You can hear something more in what I'm saying and in my face and in the way
I smile or grimace or whatever and you can see my gestures. I gesture a lot
my whole body is in this communication and
on social media, it's not. And we miss
so much there, but we gain a lot too. You know, the trade-offs are wonderful. We can
now speak to thousands of people. That's cool, right? But it's also risky.
Several years ago, after Donald Trump was elected, you and a bunch of Seattle Democrats got on a bus
and traveled several hours away to a rural community in Oregon
to meet some of the people who lived there.
What led to that trip?
What was that all about?
Yeah, so I started a newsletter
called the Evergreen Seattle
and right after the 2016 election,
people in our community were really confounded, lots of liberals obviously in Seattle,
and people wanted to be curious. That was one of the core values of our community. But they were
like, how? We hardly know any Republicans. And there's also the fact that we're in a city and we
don't understand this other lifestyle. And so we saw this interactive feature online that showed what
county nearest to yours voted exactly opposite in the election. We learned that that was Sherman
County, Oregon, a county of 1700 people, Second Smalls County in Oregon. So Monica teamed up
with some leading citizens in Sherman County and arranged for a visit to take place. We brought
about 20 people down from Seattle to Sherman County.
There were 16 people from Sherman County there.
They donated sandwiches.
We had a meal.
We did a quick bus tour of the wheat fields,
just rolling, rolling wheat fields, as far as I can see.
And after a lot of that, we brought out
like a housewarming gift.
We brought a plant and a card.
Then we talked.
We talked.
And we talked about politics.
And we just scratched the surface.
The point was not to like hash it all out right then and there.
The point was more to have a face, have faces for each other so that the stereotypes
that Sherman County had about the big city could be humanized.
And the stereotypes the big city had about Sherman County could be humanized.
We learned a lot on that trip.
And it was really incredible.
Was there anything that particularly surprised you about what you learned?
Oh, yeah. And this was not just me. I talked with a lot of folks who went down from Seattle,
and everyone had the same, the same surprise.
They all remembered when the farmers from Sherman County brought up the Waters of the United States
Rule, and that is a federal regulation that
regulates when the federal government can claim control
of land.
And there are certain rules about the size of ponds.
If there's a certain size pond on the land,
then maybe the federal government has some claim to it.
The issue for a lot of farmers is they're extremely concerned
that the way that the regulation is boarded could be interpreted to mean that if a big rainstorm creates a pond between
some hills on their land, then that's it.
They could lose that land.
Or if a lot of water accumulates on furrows, which are the rows, the sort of little ditches
between rows of crops, that then the government could claim that land.
And you would think that that would be absurd,
but there's actually been some situations
that have been pretty close calls.
And they just do not trust Democrats at all
to take those concerns seriously.
They don't get a sense that Democrats
understand that lifestyle and understand the mechanics
and the economics of it.
But they were like, well, this Trump guy, he's a businessman. My money's on him. And so the surprise for a lot of folks from
Seattle that I talked to was that that was a powerful reason for their vote that no one
in Seattle gave a hoot about or even knew existed.
Did you expect to learn more from the rural community,
or did you think they would learn more
from you urban types?
Oh, yeah, and this was like humiliating to admit,
but as much as I pride myself
in being a good bridge builder,
I didn't realize until I was there
that I came in with the assumption
that they were gonna have in some ways more to learn
from us than vice versa.
And that was an extremely
self-serving assumption and an idiotic as I think about it.
And I'm a bit ashamed. Because what I realized there,
listening to the folks from Sherman County speak, the main
thing they saw from this trip was that no one from the big city
ever comes to Sherman County. And they go to the cities all the time.
If their kids go to college, they go to cities.
All their relatives live in cities
because the economics of farming means
like not everyone can stay.
And so they know the city is real well.
They talk to people there all the time.
They know the culture, but nobody ever goes to Sherman County.
And so that I didn't expect, and it was beautiful to see, the folks from Sherman County were so grateful to be seen by the people from the city,
which for them are the people with a lot more power. That's up for debate, I know. But that's
the way they saw it. Thank you so much for doing this.
Yeah, totally.
Thanks again for, I mean, I could talk about this all day,
if you can't tell.
It's just there's a lot to say.
So thanks for the curiosity.
Monica Guzman, author of I Never Thought of It That Way
on Let's Find Common Ground.
I really like her story.
Yeah, it's a perfect example of finding Common Ground. You can learn more about Monica and
her work with Braver Angels at our website, CommonGroundCommittee.org.
Search Common Ground Committee for more stories and initiatives on Bridging Divines. I'm Richard
Davies.
And I'm Ashley Miltite. Thanks for listening.