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Walls And Bridges: Understanding 2018

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Illustration by Mark Fiore

KQED’s new six-part event series explores some of the most polarizing topics of our time

Illustration by Mark Fiore

March 28, 2018, San Francisco, CA — For many, 2017 was a year of shocks. We saw some of the deadliest mass shootings in U.S. history. We witnessed a president with little political experience take office and operate far outside the traditional norms of American leadership. We saw the voices of thousands of women take down some of the most powerful men in media and politics. We saw the country become increasingly divided — politically, economically and socially.

As we look forward through 2018, KQED will present a six-part series of live conversations across the Bay Area exploring some of the most polarizing topics of our time: politics, race, gender, immigration, extremism and more. We’ll ask the questions that divide us and look for the answers that unite us. Audience members will have an opportunity to talk about solutions to our growing polarity as they meet and mix during a post-conversation reception.

“At a time when our country seems so polarized, we wanted to bring people together to talk about our divisions―and remind each other about our common values, including knowing how to disagree with each other in a respectful manner, says Holly Kernan, KQED’s vice president, news. “This is a critical value of public media and we want to support an informed and engaged public.”

Support for this series is provided by the James Irvine Foundation.

Sponsored

Admission to the following events is free, but tickets are required to attend. Reserve yours using the RSVP link below for each.

Tuesday, April 10, 7pm
Extremism
Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco, San Francisco
Author Ijeoma Oluo (So You Want To Talk About Race), UC Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies professor Dr. Lawrence Rosenthal, and the Anti-Defamation League National’s Brittan Heller explore polarized politics, emboldened white nationalists, and how we can move forward in a time of intense division.
RSVP

Thursday, April 12, 7pm
Gender Equality
Mountain View Center from the Performing Arts, Mountain View
Panelists discuss what comes next after #metoo, before audience members tackle some of the most biting questions surrounding the issue themselves in an interactive conversation with each other.
RSVP

Wednesday, April 25, 12:30pm
Majority Minority
Ohlone College, Fremont
Audience members will get to join a panel of experts as they discuss the social and political implications of shifting demographics at the national, state and local levels, and explore what happens when the minority becomes the majority.
RSVP

Wednesday, May 9, 7pm
Immigration
Oakland Museum of California, Oakland
Sanctuary cites, families divided and ICE creeping into some of the most vulnerable communities. How long can communities stay in the shadows? What are the consequences and how are these communities creating their own narrative?
RSVP

Thursday, May 17, 7pm
Zipcode and Health
Bayview Opera House, San Francisco
A zip code can reveal a lot, including geographic inequality and revealing the likelihood of upward mobility in different locations. In this event, audience members will join a panel of experts and activists as they explore one of the most pressing social and economic questions of our time: Does your zip code determine your fate?
RSVP

Monday June 4, 7pm
Policy & Racism
The Commonwealth Club, San Francisco
Do Bay Area policies reinforce racism? Panelists and audience members will discuss whether local policies are discriminatory in one of the more progressive regions in the country.
RSVP


About KQED

KQED serves the people of Northern California with a public-supported alternative to commercial media. An NPR and PBS affiliate based in San Francisco, KQED is home to one of the most listened-to public radio stations in the nation, one of the highest-rated public television services and an award-winning education program helping students and educators thrive in 21st-century classrooms. A trusted news source and leader and innovator in interactive technology, KQED takes people of all ages on journeys of exploration — exposing them to new people, places and ideas. www.kqed.org

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