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If you travel to a remote island resort, where do the people who work there live? Because of course, if we are traveling to a remote location, it's highly unlikely that it's an easy place for hotel staff to commute to and from. Typically on an island resort, staffers are housed in the middle of the island and don't have access to the beach, the walking paths, or any of the amenities that make these destinations so appealing to travelers. But there's a new type of staff housing pioneered by the Ritz-Carlton Maldives, Fari Islands, which created an entire island for its employees—one where they can also snorkel, swim, relax, eat, work out, and just generally soak in the Maldives. This week's guest, Sally Kohn, traveled to the resort last year to get a peek at the island and see if it's really as impressive as it seems. She was surprised by what she found—happy employees included. Meet this week's guest Sally Kohn, activist, speaker, and author of the book The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity. Resources Read this week's show notes, including a full transcript of the episode. Check out the Ritz-Carlton Maldives, Fari Islands. Read some of Sally's other AFAR stories, including her essay about traveling as a queer family, and her podcast episode about exploring tolerance in Amsterdam. Buy Sally's book. Follow the podcast to ensure you don't miss an episode. Subscribe to AFAR's YouTube channel for a full video of the conversation. Be sure to subscribe to the show and to sign up for our podcast newsletter, Behind the Mic, where we share upcoming news and behind-the-scenes details of each episode. And explore our second podcast, Travel Tales, which celebrates first-person narratives about the way travel changes us.
It is time to practice emotional, not political, correctness. And, it is time to bridge divides, and here is how to do it. So says writer Sally Kohn in "The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity." Listen to this engaging conversation with Michael and her in this episode. Original air date 12 April 2018. The book was published on 10 April 2018.
John interviews Sally Kohn - liberal political commentator, community organizer, and founder and chief executive officer of the Movement Vision Lab, a grassroots think tank that focuses on liberal and progressive ideas and positions. They talk about her book "The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity." Next he chats with stand-up comedian, actress, podcaster, television writer, author and producer Judy Gold. She tells him about her book and her one woman show called "Yes I Can Say That".See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
As one of the leading progressive voices in the U.S. today, Sally Kohn is a frequent guest on CNN, MSNBC and Fox News. Her first book The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity was published in April 2018. She often speaks as a keynote speaker at conferences about political division, hate, otherizing, diversity and identity and how we can solve the deep problems of our past and present.
AFAR chose a destination at random and sent political commentator Sally Kohn on 24 hours’ notice to a city renowned for its “coffee shops” but where tolerance has its limits. Like what you hear? Please rate and review the podcast! It helps other travelers find the show. Read about One Fair Wage here, or follow Sally on Instagram @sallykohn or Twitter @sallykohn. And be sure to check out her book, The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity. Though COVID-19 has stalled many travel plans, we hope our stories can offer inspiration for your future adventures—and a bit of hope.
Today's off-topic 10th episode has Jason Hartman talking with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [4:30] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [7:09] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [11:59] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [16:11] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [19:54] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com
Today's off-topic 10th episode has Jason Hartman talking with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [4:16] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [6:54] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [11:45] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [15:56] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [19:40] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com
Today's off-topic 10th episode has Jason Hartman talking with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [4:20] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [6:59] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [11:49] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [16:00] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [19:44] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com
Today's off-topic 10th episode starts off with Jason Hartman explaining how 1031 exchanges have helped his portfolio grow more than any other tool, as well as how to view your tenants rent in a way that will make you feel really good. Then Jason talks with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [3:40] The power of a 1031 exchange has been a godsend for Jason's personal portfolio [8:02] Your tenants are working to pay you ~40% of their work hours. That's more than they work for anyone else. Sally Kohn Interview: [12:31] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [15:10] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [20:01] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [24:12] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [27:55] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com www.JasonHartman.com/Properties www.JasonHartman.com/Cruise
Today's off-topic 10th episode starts off with Jason Hartman explaining how 1031 exchanges have helped his portfolio grow more than any other tool, as well as how to view your tenants rent in a way that will make you feel really good. Then Jason talks with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [3:40] The power of a 1031 exchange has been a godsend for Jason's personal portfolio [8:02] Your tenants are working to pay you ~40% of their work hours. That's more than they work for anyone else. Sally Kohn Interview: [12:31] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [15:10] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [20:01] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [24:12] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [27:55] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com www.JasonHartman.com/Properties www.JasonHartman.com/Cruise
Today's off-topic 10th episode has Jason Hartman talking with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [3:22] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [6:00] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [10:51] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [15:02] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [18:46] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com
Today's off-topic 10th episode has Jason Hartman talking with Sally Kohn, CNN political commentator, host of The State of the Resistance podcast and author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity, about why there's so much hate in our country at the moment and how we need to continue acknowledging problems and working to get better. Key Takeaways: [4:16] Technology makes us feel more anonymous, which isn't always the best thing [6:54] Does the US deserve credit for being better than the rest of the world? [11:45] What definition of "hate" Sally's working from [15:56] Most people don't think they're hateful, they believe "those people" are hateful so the things they do are justified [19:40] We have been taught throughout history that men should be in positions of power, which is a powerful thing to have to break through Website: www.SallyKohn.com
“You’ve got to meet people where they are,” says Sally Kohn. “But then you don’t have to leave them there.” Kohn, a TV commentator and columnist, appeared on Fox News representing a liberal point of view for many years—that experience alone taught her a lot about listening, bridging, and ultimately persuading. Before that, Kohn worked for more than fifteen years as a community organizer. And today she’s talking to Elise Loehnen about her incredibly helpful, surprisingly funny book The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity. It’s a conversation that taught us about listening to understand—not to argue—and about getting comfortable with discomfort. It also reminded us that we’re all way more similar than we tend to think we are. (For more, see The goop Podcast hub.)
On this episode of The Open Mind, we welcome activist Sally Kohn, author of “The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing our Humanity.” One of the last surviving deep political thinking talking heads, if we can be brutally honest, and the host of the podcast State of Resistance, Kohn has penned an illuminating account of our nation's crisis of hatred, which appears more and more to be an epidemic, infecting our politics, our psyches, and our very American creed. Kohn says, “the opposite of hate isn't love, it's connection.” She writes, “You don't have to love people to not hate them. You have to see that you have something at your core: a fundamental humanity. A fundamental goodness.” She adds, “We have to do something about the way in which our lives and our communities are segregated, increasingly ideological, also racial; economic. It's a very interesting thing about the gay thing. You can have these stealth gay people. I was one of them, where I was dormant in my family the whole time. Then suddenly surprise: I'm gay and they already liked me, so it worked out well, and that's why we had such quick progress on gay rights as a country. That doesn't usually happen, say with black people or Muslims. Your cousin doesn't just suddenly one day come out to be Mexican.”
Nicole Sandler welcomes her old friend columnist, activist and author of the new book, “The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity” back to the show.
What happens when you call your Internet trolls. The peril of forgetting our next door neighbors. “You don’t have to love people to not hate them.” “People believe things that are mutually contradictory; I think we all do. I know I do.” — Erick Erickson Earlier this year, the University of Montana invited On Being to attempt an outside the box civil conversation between two political pundits on contrasting ends of the U.S. political spectrum. It became a sold-out, public event in the spirit of Montana’s Senator Mike Mansfield, who famously modeled integrity, courage, and humility across the partisan aisle in the tumult of 1960s and 70s. Sally Kohn and Erick Erickson are both controversial, lightning-rod figures, yet neither of them fits neatly into a partisan mold. The reaction of the youngest people in the room is what compelled us to put this on the air. They said they had not witnessed or imagined a political conversation like this possible: one marked at once by bedrock difference — and good will, humor, and a willingness to bring our questions as well as our arguments, our humanity as well as our positions, into the room, if only for an evening. Sally Kohn is a progressive columnist and political commentator for CNN. She’s also contributed to Fox News. She hosts the podcast, “State of Resistance.” She’s the author of “The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity.” Erick Erickson is editor of the conservative blog, “The Resurgent,” host of “The Erick Erickson Show” on WSB Radio in Atlanta, and contributor to Fox News. He’s also contributed to CNN. He’s the author of “Before You Wake: Life Lessons from a Father to His Children.” Find the transcript for this show at onbeing.org.
Sally Kohn in conversation with Reza Aslan at Live Talks Los Angeles discussing her book,The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity. The talk took place on May 2, 2018 at The Moss Theatre in Santa Monica, CA. For more information on Live Talks Los Angeles, visit www.livetalksla.com
Sally Kohn, a highly regarded author and CNN political commentator and columnist, joins IVY to discuss the findings from her recent work, The Opposite of Hate. Kohn conducted extensive research in a search of discovering why we hate and how we can stop it in a time when we are facing an epidemic of incivility and hate—with divisive political speech, online trolling, and hate crimes escalating. In this talk, she dives into the evolutionary and cultural roots of today's rampant anger and hatred, giving members powerful examples, and offering rich food for thought on how each of us can help contribute to a more peaceful society.
Kathryn interviews psychiatrist and Tulane University professor Michael S. Scheeringa MD, author of “They'll Never Be The Same: A Parent's Guide to PTSD in Youth”. With school shootings on the verge of becoming the 'new normal', it can be difficult for parents to navigate the trauma their children may experience as a result of these tragedies. Dr. Scheeringa uses his 20 years of clinical practice and research to provide parents with a compassionate and accessible guide to explain the impact of this trauma on their children. Kathryn also interviews CNN political commentator and activist Sally Kohn JD, author of “The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity”. Kohn, former leading progressive voice and liberal commentator on Fox News, has gone head-to-head with her colleagues on divisive issues, engaging in heated arguments and developing unexpected friendships. Kohn is featured in the Washington Post, NY Times, NY Magazine, USA Today and TIME.
Kathryn interviews psychiatrist and Tulane University professor Michael S. Scheeringa MD, author of “They'll Never Be The Same: A Parent's Guide to PTSD in Youth”. With school shootings on the verge of becoming the 'new normal', it can be difficult for parents to navigate the trauma their children may experience as a result of these tragedies. Dr. Scheeringa uses his 20 years of clinical practice and research to provide parents with a compassionate and accessible guide to explain the impact of this trauma on their children. Kathryn also interviews CNN political commentator and activist Sally Kohn JD, author of “The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity”. Kohn, former leading progressive voice and liberal commentator on Fox News, has gone head-to-head with her colleagues on divisive issues, engaging in heated arguments and developing unexpected friendships. Kohn is featured in the Washington Post, NY Times, NY Magazine, USA Today and TIME.
Sally Kohn is a longtime organizer, political commentator (on both CNN and Fox News), and the author of the just-published "The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity." In this episode of the Better Angels Podcast, Ciaran, John and Sally discuss how to work with those you disagree with, how to confront hatred within oneself, and what it's like to be a progressive on Fox News. Produced by Harry Fortuna. http://machinedhumanity.com/
Sally Kohn, an author and former Fox News political commentator, opens up to Women Rule about her last interaction with Roger Ailes, how she stumbled into the TV punditry business, and the findings of her new book, 'The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing our Humanity.'
CNN political analyst Sally Kohn talks about her investigation into the epidemic of hate all around us and how we can stop it. She discusses what scientists and researchers have learned about the evolutionary and cultural roots of hate, and how incivility can be a gateway to much worse. She shares some surprising lessons and dramatic stories from her travels to Rwanda, the Middle East, and across the United States engaging with former terrorists, white supremacists, and even her own Twitter trolls. Plus Sally Kohn opens up about confronting some of her own less than perfect moments such as when she bullied a classmate in school or times when the ugliness of the politics has gotten the best of her. Order her book The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity on Amazon or Audible. Subscribe to her podcast The State of Resistance on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. For more information, visit www.sallykohn.com and follow her on twitter at @sallykohn. Today's podcast is sponsored by Everquote, US Marker Board, and Zyppah.
CNN political commentator Sally Kohn talks with Recode's Kara Swisher about her new book, "The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity." Kohn's publicity tour for the book has been tangled up in allegations that she misquoted and misrepresented two of her sources, Ijeoma Oluo and Aminatou Sow, and she discusses how she's working to make things right. She also talks about how she became a TV commentator, why she chooses to engage with Fox News hosts like Sean Hannity and how her past life working as a left-wing activist overlaps with changing minds on broadcast media. Plus: Why Kohn, a gay woman, supports MSNBC anchor Joy Reid, who has been accused of writing homophobic blog posts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Stuph File Program Featuring Sally Kohn, author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity; Pete Trabucco, author of A Personal Guide to the Best Thrill Rides and Amusement/Water Parks; & Stuart Nulman with Book Banter Download Political commentator Sally Kohn, the author of The Opposite of Hate: A Field Guide to Repairing Our Humanity. Theme park expert, Pete Trabucco, author of A Personal Guide to the Best Thrill Rides and Amusement/Water Parks. Stuart Nulman with another edition of Book Banter. This week’s reviewed title is Lightfoot by Nicholas Jennings (Viking, $36). You can also read Stuart’s reviews in The Montreal Times. This week’s opening slate is presented by Ramon Stoppelenberg, an entrepreneur living in Cambodia. He owns a small art house movie theatre and also runs Foodoo, a $5 dinner box delivery service in Phnom Penh. Originally from the Netherlands, he’s also busy writing his first fiction novel about the crazy-ex pat bubble he lives in.
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