Somewhere along the line, politics replaced sex as the one thing in America we don’t discuss in mixed company– even amongst friends and family.
Several months ago, my 17-year-old son accused me of being one of the most intolerant people he had ever met when it comes to politics. He said I didn’t listen to people with different points of view and that I wouldn’t even know if the other side had a good idea. Like most people, I hate divisive politics, but until that moment, I had not identified myself as part of the problem. Something has to change.
That’s when Bring It to the Table was born. Over the next six months, my crew and I brought a star-spangled Table on tour across America, setting it up in public places such as bookstores, bakeries, barbershops and libraries, asking voters to sit down and speak candidly about their political beliefs. No hysterics. No ranting. Just genuine discussion aimed at peeling away the stereotypes that dominate today’s political debate.
Democracy is founded on robust dialogue, and if we can’t have conversations across party lines, democracy doesn’t work. At the Table, people are given the space to express the complexity and contradictions inherent in everyone’s beliefs. We veer away from finger-pointing and we delve deeply into the personal experiences that shape people’s convictions. The discussions are about values and ideas, not candidates.









