"Wisdom is the art and science of learning how to live well together. We're not doing a very good job of it." -- Kathy Kelly, co-coordinator for Voices for Creative Nonviolence
John Noltner finally got fed up with the anger, hate and blaming. So the Bloomington resident set out to create a forum where people with a wide range of opinions, experiences and perspectives could share their thoughts without starting an argument.
"During the last election cycle, I got so frustrated with the lack of dialogue," he said. "Everything in the public discourse was taken over by the angry voices. I thought that there has to be a way for the more reasonable voices to be heard."
He created a website called A Peace of My Mind (www.apeaceofmymind.net). He interviews people about peace -- whatever the term means to them -- and posts their audio responses along with photographs of them.
Every response is different.
"That's what I think is so interesting," he said. "Peace to a homeless man is entirely different from peace to a business executive. Peace to a Holocaust survivor is not the same as peace to a Buddhist minister."
"There are many ways to find it [peace], but it takes a whole lot to acquire it." -- David Diempre Jr., homeless disabled vet
Noltner, 42, is a free-lance photographer. The son of a social worker and a teacher, he usually has some sort of nonprofit project going in his spare time. In April, he was looking for a new project when he thought of the peace dialogue.