Lowering the temperature: Tips for transcending our polarized politics

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The political assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk produced a range of reactions from those on the fringes of a deeply polarized nation, with calls for violent retribution on one extreme matched by something of a macabre glee over Kirk’s murder on the other.

But between those political counterpoles there’s also been bipartisan pleas for unity and a rejection of politics as bloodsport in the interest of mending a social fabric frayed by discord and division.

With that in mind, here are several strategies people can personally employ to help bring down the political temperature:

Debate in good faith

Christine Mellon, Ed.D, a Wilkes University professor and the speech and debate coach there, shared a number of recommendations for how to facilitate a safe, respectful and constructive environment for the free exchange of ideas. Among other advice, she said people engaged in respectful debate should be clear in their viewpoints and avoid personal or ad hominem attacks.

And they should be willing to agree to disagree, too.

“Because sometimes, no matter how hard you try, your viewpoints are just different,” Mellon said. “And I think if you can say ‘we’re going to agree to disagree’ that also keeps the level and the integrity of the debate in a calm atmosphere.”

Healthy, constructive debate also demands a willingness to listen and an earnest, good-faith effort to understand other points of view.

“When you go into a debate space sometimes you understand exactly what it is that you want to say really well, and you just know, whatever the other person is going to say, ‘well I just disagree with that,’ ” Mellon said. “But the problem is that, have you really tried to understand? Like maybe their background factors into what they believe, or maybe their education factors into what they believe. So you have to be willing to understand their other point of view.”

Common ground is a good place to start, she said.

“I don’t really know too many people who don’t look at the situation of last week and aren’t absolutely saddened for his family,” Mellon said, referencing Kirk’s killing. “Start there. … It’s tragic what’s happened to his family. I mean I don’t have to necessarily agree with him politically in order to understand how tragic it is. So I think that’s it, you want to try to look for common ground.”

Another problem, Mellon continued, is that people often don’t realize that the point of debate is to find solutions to problems.

“I think people have lost sight of why it is that we should be debating with each other in these open forums, because it’s so important that we solve some of these things,” she said. “I mean I might not always agree with the way that someone else wants to arrive at a solution, but if you’re not offering that, if you don’t recognize that as the end goal, then of course it is going to devolve into something that’s going to be incredibly unpleasant.”

In closing, Mellon reiterated that an argument doesn’t have to amount to a fight.

“We don’t define argumentation the same way that it seems like society is,” she said. “In our classes, argumentation is much more about, again, trying to arrive at solutions, understanding compromises, understanding the other person’s point of view. This is what’s going to allow us to have positive discourse.”

Log off, take a break

One arena where debate often devolves into something else is the digital space. At its best, or at least in theory, social media can be a tool for transcending differences and communicating across political and other divides. But it can also become a veritable battlefield, with some of the most incendiary and divisive content often garnering the most engagement.

Licensed clinical social worker John Rosengrant, the executive director of the NEPA Youth Shelter, said sometimes it’s good to log off, especially when social media becomes a source of anxiety or otherwise adversely impacts one’s mental health.

“That’s the best advice I could give,” he said. “Just shut it off. And no matter how much you want to engage, no matter how much you want to get off your chest and debate with that other person, shut it down. Walk away. Shut it down and just let it go, because it can turn into a perpetual cycle that you’re not going to be able to get out of. Fundamentally it comes down to self-care, and we as social workers teach people all the time about how to practice self care. Especially now, in this climate that we’re in, people really really need to learn those strategies to be able to just walk away and don’t take the bait.”

Among other pitfalls, Rosengrant said it’s easier to misinterpret meaning and intent in online interactions.

“I think you’re missing the nonverbal communication cues,” he said. “When you’re face-to-face with someone you can see the facial expressions, you can hear the inflections in their voice, you can sense the empathy or the sympathy that they’re exhibiting toward you. When you’re online, or you’re engaged in any kind of written communication, that goes away. And we know that people will often misinterpret a text, or they’ll misinterpret the way that you write something to somebody because they’re framing it the way that they’re reading it.”

Rosengrant also agreed that social media can embolden people to say things online they likely wouldn’t say in face-to-face interactions, contributing to a more acrimonious online environment that can have an offline impact.

“I think that people feel as if they’re stronger, or maybe more invincible online as opposed to in-person,” he said. “I definitely see the different dynamic. People are more free to speak their mind or to say what they feel or to engage in an argument with someone, and then what you see is people don’t know when to shut it off. And then they’re becoming angered and they’re becoming more anxious toward the people around them because of the engagement that they just had on social media.”

Embrace shared values

Others asked about the hostility that too often defines American politics encouraged an embrace of shared values — a recognition of a common humanity that should supersede partisan differences.

“Respect for the individual is certainly at the core,” said Phil Yevics, cantor at St. John’s Byzantine Catholic Church in Scranton and a volunteer officer with the Scranton Area Ministerium. “Every religious tradition has some version of (the concept) that each person is a reflection of the divine, and that therefore is worthy of respect.”

The Scranton Area Ministerium is a voluntary association of leaders from different faith communities and social service agencies in the region. It seeks “to provide mutual support and enrichment, to advocate for the shared values of our religious traditions and to undertake cooperative action for the good of the larger community,” per its website.

Family is an example of a shared value, something Yevics said he recognized during a World Refugee Day celebration held earlier this summer at Nay Aug Park.

“It was just such a joy to see that, the great diversity of people, but they love their kids, they’re all nurturing to their families,”  he said. “That’s something that is relatively easy to recognize.”

Broadly speaking, Yevics said it’s important to see others as human beings and as more than just holders of different views or ideologies.

“At the ministerium … our purpose is to form personal relationships, to get to know each other well enough that we can then work together for the common good,” he said. “We all want to live with respect. We all want to have a job where we can feel like we’re contributing to society. We all want to provide for our families and be able to nurture their growth.”

Engage on local issues

During times of deep polarization, people with disparate views on national politics or on different sides of various culture wars may find common ground on more local issues.

“Many local problems are less partisan,” said University of Scranton political science professor Jean Harris, Ph.D., who described local politics as generally more accessible and a good starting point for people looking to engage politically.

Democrats and Republicans who don’t see eye to eye on much in the state or national political spheres might, for example, agree on a local land-use issue or community effort. In working together locally, they might also develop personal connections not defined purely by politics and begin to bridge broader divides.

“At the local level that is more possible, more probable, because (with) local issues in many cases — when we’re looking at things like data centers and things like that — neighbors are on the same side no matter what their political ideologies are,” Harris said. “That is a good starting point to get comfortable working with people in a civil way. … That relationship building is really important, and it’s easier to do that definitely engaging in local-level issues and politics.”

Are young people more likely to support political violence than older people?

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The assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk earlier this month on a college campus in Utah was the latest and perhaps most graphic example of a disturbing trend of recent political violence in the United States.

The murder of Minnesota Democratic state lawmaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, in June. An arson fire at Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro’s house in April. The shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a New York sidewalk in December. Before that, the hammer attack that nearly killed Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul, at their San Francisco home, and two attempted assassinations of President Trump. The events have shaken people on the left and the right.

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Many Americans have condemned the attacks. But some have not. The biggest divide in support for political violence may not be ideological, but generational, ongoing research suggests.

A survey of more than 4,100 people conducted last year by a California State Long Beach professor found that 93% of baby boomers and 86% of Generation X members say violence is never acceptable to stop political speech, even the most offensive speech. But only 71% of millennials and 58% of Generation Z agreed.

“The wrong conclusion to draw, of course, is that millions of young people are celebrating acts of political violence,” said Kevin Wallsten, a professor of political science who led the survey.

RELATED: The data doesn’t back up Trump’s claims that the left is more violent

“But we should still be concerned,” he said. “Everybody can feel the political temperature rising, and we are being pulled in different directions as a country. We collectively need to think of ways of addressing the deep disaffection that is underneath it.”

Wallsten said leaders at universities, the media and politicians need to “turn down the temperature” by emphasizing that democracy depends on listening to other viewpoints.

“Partisans follow their leaders,” he said. “If you have an unambiguous and widely repeated message that speech is not violence and the appropriate response to offensive speech is more speech, that can start to move the needle.”

Wallsten’s survey, which is part of an ongoing study and will form the basis of a book he is writing, found the same results for young people (age 18 to 26) who are conservative and liberal. And there was little difference between those not enrolled in universities and those who are in college — where Gaza protests and other battles over speech, including during appearances by Kirk and other conservative speakers at California universities — have roiled campuses.

“Charlie Kirk came to our campus in the spring,” he said. “My students were there. One of them said, ‘We should just punch everybody who is in attendance.’ It was a real moment of reflection for me. I thought something has really changed.”

Other surveys have shown similar age-related differences.

A Reuters poll in December found 41% of people aged 18 to 29 said the killing of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was “acceptable” or “somewhat acceptable,” while only 9% of people 60 to 69 did. Luigi Mangione, 27, the man charged with killing Thompson, whose company has faced criticism for denying coverage, became something of a folk hero in some TikTok videos, and supporters have appeared outside his trial.

The man charged with killing Kirk, allegedly over his conservative viewpoints, is 22, and Trump’s slain would-be assassin in Pennsylvania was 20. But those charged in a second Trump assassination attempt and the Hortman and Pelosi attacks were in their 40s and 50s.

One hopeful note, said Dr. Garen Wintemute, director of the Centers for Violence Prevention at UC Davis, is that although his surveys have shown similar trends where more young people than older people voice general support for political violence, only about 2% to 3% say they would consider personally acting on it.

Wintemute said such attitudes have likely always been around.

“Look at all the videos from the 1960s,” he said. “There aren’t a lot of old people throwing Molotov cocktails in those videos.”

Wintemute remembered a protest when he was a student at Yale in 1970 over the Vietnam War and Black Panther leader Bobby Seale’s prosecution, which had National Guard troops with fixed bayonets clashing with his classmates.

“I still have the tear gas canister that I found outside my dorm window,” he said.

“Young people are less patient; they want to see answers quickly,” said Wintemute, who also is an emergency room doctor. “They are passionate. They have less to lose in terms of jobs and families and homes. Many haven’t learned the importance of gradualism and that change doesn’t often happen overnight. All young people learn that. I certainly did. None of that is unique to this moment. It is part of growing up.”

Wintemute said social media worsens polarization. He said Trump should try and heal the country, similar to the way former President George W. Bush attended a mosque after the 9-11 attacks.

“We have a president who famously said of protesters, ‘Can’t we just shoot them in the legs?’” he said. “What leaders say matters. We have a president whose rhetoric encourages violence. There is concern that things may continue to accelerate.”

The current generation has two major differences with prior generations: social media and COVID.

During the COVID pandemic, many young people came of age isolated, noted Wallsten of CSU Long Beach. They faced traumatic events, from the killing of George Floyd by police to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob loyal to Trump. A trend in classrooms by some instructors to embrace identity politics in recent years encouraged “safe spaces” and punished “micro-aggressions.” Too often, verbal disagreements have been compared to actual violence, he said, reducing tolerance for other viewpoints.

Social media has amplified and spread misinformation and division, Wallsten added.

“Algorithms feed people a steady diet of content designed to infuriate them and emotionally activate them,” he said. “It is an echo chamber and has a siloing effect. Influencers build their audience by being outrageous.”

Some leaders have attempted to turn down the heat after Kirk’s killing on Sept. 10 at Utah Valley University.

At a discussion at USC on Monday, former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger urged college Republicans and college Democrats to find some issues they can agree on and work together.

“You would be an example for the nation and other universities, how you get together, and don’t see the other side as the enemy, or ‘fight fire with fire’ or declare war on each other,” the former governor said. “You can show leadership, and get together and set an example.”

Kirk’s killing shook many college students in California.

Josue Salvador, a civil engineering major at San Francisco State, where Kirk visited in May, said he agreed with some of Kirk’s views and disagreed with others. He said he was troubled after his death to see some students celebrating.

“I remember seeing a video of him saying that he encourages people with different opinions to speak to each other,” he said. “In friendships, if you don’t speak, you start separating. In a marriage, if you don’t speak, divorce happens. And in a nation, if you’re not speaking, then that can lead to worse things.”

Bay Area News Group reporter Ethan Varian contributed to this report.

Secret Service dismantles telecom threat around UN capable of crippling cell service in NYC

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By MIKE BALSAMO

NEW YORK (AP) — While close to 150 world leaders prepared to descend on Manhattan for the U.N. General Assembly, the U.S. Secret Service was quietly dismantling a massive hidden telecom network across the New York area — a system investigators say could have crippled cell towers, jammed 911 calls and flooded networks with chaos at the very moment the city was most vulnerable.

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The cache, made up of more than 300 SIM servers packed with over 100,000 SIM cards and clustered within 35 miles of the United Nations, represents one of the most sweeping communications threats uncovered on U.S. soil. Investigators warn the system could have blacked out cellular service in a city that relies on it not only for daily life but for emergency response and counterterrorism.

Coming as foreign leaders filled midtown hotels and motorcades clogged Manhattan, officials say the takedown highlights a new frontier of risk: plots aimed at the invisible infrastructure that keeps a modern city connected.

A broader investigation led to this discovery

The network was uncovered as part of a broader Secret Service investigation into telecommunications threats targeting senior government officials, according to investigators. Spread across multiple sites, the servers functioned like banks of mock cellphones, able to generate mass calls and texts, overwhelm local networks and mask encrypted communications criminals, officials said.

This photo provided by the U.S. Secret Service, in New York, Monday, Sept. 22, 2025, shows SIM card packaging that was seized by the agency. (U.S. Secret Service via AP)

“It can’t be understated what this system is capable of doing,” said Matt McCool, the special agent in charge of the Secret Service’s New York field office. “It can take down cell towers, so then no longer can people communicate, right? …. You can’t text message, you can’t use your cell phone. And if you coupled that with some sort of other event associated with UNGA, you know, use your imagination there, it could be catastrophic to the city.”

Officials said they haven’t uncovered a direct plot to disrupt the U.N. General Assembly and note there are no known credible threats to New York City.

Forensic analysis is still in its early stages, but agents believe nation-state actors — perpetrators from particular countries — used the system to send encrypted messages to organized crime groups, cartels and terrorist organizations, McCool said. Authorities have not disclosed details on the specific government or criminal groups tied to the network at this point.

“We need to do forensics on 100,000 cell phones, essentially all the phone calls, all the text messages, anything to do with communications, see where those numbers end up,” McCool said, noting that the process will take time.

An extensive, expensive operation

When agents entered the sites, they found rows of servers and shelves stacked with SIM cards. More than 100,000 were already active, investigators said, but there were also large numbers waiting to be deployed, evidence that operators were preparing to double or even triple the network’s capacity, McCool said. He described it as a well-funded, highly organized enterprise, one that cost millions of dollars in hardware and SIM cards alone.

This photo provided by the U.S. Secret Service, in New York, Monday, Sept. 22, 2025, shows servers on desks at the location where they were seized by the agency. (U.S. Secret Service via AP)

The operation had the capability of sending up to 30 million text messages a minute, McCool said.

“The U.S. Secret Service’s protective mission is all about prevention, and this investigation makes it clear to potential bad actors that imminent threats to our protectees will be immediately investigated, tracked down and dismantled,” the agency’s director, Sean Curran, said in a statement.

This photo provided by the U.S. Secret Service, in New York, Monday, Sept. 22, 2025, shows part of a wall of SIM boxes that were seized by the agency. (U.S. Secret Service via AP)

Officials also warned of the havoc the network could have caused if left intact. McCool compared the potential impact to the cellular blackouts that followed the Sept. 11 attacks and the Boston Marathon bombing, when networks collapsed under strain. In this case, he said, attackers would have been able to force that kind of shutdown at a time of their choosing.

“Could there be others?” said McCool “It’d be unwise to think that there’s not other networks out there being made in other cities in the United States.”

Missouri woman to be sentenced for trying to sell off Elvis Presley’s Graceland

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By ADRIAN SAINZ

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — A Missouri woman is scheduled to be sentenced Tuesday for scheming to defraud Elvis Presley’s family by trying to auction off his Graceland home and property before a judge halted the brazen foreclosure sale.

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U.S. District Judge John Fowlkes will sentence Lisa Jeanine Findley in federal court in Memphis. Findley pleaded guilty in February to a charge of mail fraud related to the scheme. She also had been indicted on a charge of aggravated identity theft, but that charge was dropped as part of a plea agreement.

Findley, of Kimberling City, falsely claimed Presley’s daughter borrowed $3.8 million from a bogus private lender and had pledged Graceland as collateral for the loan before her death in January 2023, prosecutors said when Findley was charged in August 2024. She then threatened to sell Graceland to the highest bidder if Presley’s family didn’t pay a $2.85 million settlement, according to authorities.

Findley posed as three different people allegedly involved with the fake lender, fabricated loan documents and published a fraudulent foreclosure notice in a Memphis newspaper announcing the auction of Graceland in May 2024, prosecutors said. A judge stopped the sale after Presley’s granddaughter sued.

Experts were baffled by the attempt to sell off one of the most storied pieces of real estate in the country using names, emails and documents that were quickly suspected to be phony.

Graceland opened as a museum and tourist attraction in 1982 and draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. A large Presley-themed entertainment complex across the street from the museum is owned by Elvis Presley Enterprises. Presley died in August 1977 at the age of 42.

The public notice for the foreclosure sale of the 13-acre estate said Promenade Trust, which controls the Graceland museum, owed $3.8 million after failing to repay a 2018 loan. Actor Riley Keough, Presley’s granddaughter, inherited the trust and ownership of the home after the death of her mother, Lisa Marie Presley.

Keough filed a lawsuit claiming fraud, and a judge halted the proposed auction with an injunction. Naussany Investments and Private Lending — the bogus lender authorities say Findley created — said Lisa Marie Presley had used Graceland as collateral for the loan, according to the foreclosure sale notice. Keough’s lawsuit alleged that Naussany presented fraudulent documents regarding the loan in September 2023 and that Lisa Marie Presley never borrowed money from Naussany.

Kimberly Philbrick, the notary whose name is listed on Naussany’s documents, indicated she never met Lisa Marie Presley nor notarized any documents for her, according to the estate’s lawsuit. The judge said the notary’s affidavit brings into question the authenticity of the signature.

In halting the foreclosure sale, the judge said Elvis Presley’s estate could be successful in arguing that a company’s attempt to auction Graceland was fraudulent.

A statement emailed to The Associated Press after the judge stopped the sale said Naussany would not proceed with the sale because a key document in the case and the loan were recorded and obtained in a different state, meaning “legal action would have to be filed in multiple states.” The statement, sent from an email address for Naussany listed in court documents, did not specify the other state.

After the scheme fell apart, Findley tried to make it look like the person responsible was a Nigerian identity thief, prosecutors said. An email sent May 25, 2024, to the AP from the same email as the earlier statement said in Spanish that the foreclosure sale attempt was made by a Nigerian fraud ring that targets old and dead people in the U.S. and uses the internet to steal money.