Get together, share ideas, listen, think, grow.

DonateNow

Sign up to be the first to hear about what we’re doing around the state.

Digest

News related to this program.

May 2013 Think and Drink Reinvent America

Apr 22

The 2013 Think & Drink series, How to Love America, explores our relationship to the nation we call home. The second conversation of four... More

Think & Drink Audio Archive

May 16

Did you miss one of our happy hour conversations? You can find the audio here.

Think & Drink 2013: Dissent and Defend

Feb 27

How do we balance optimism for a better future and awareness of present problems? How do we hold onto our love of country while... More

Think & Drink 2013

Feb 06

Americans have never been shy about professing pride in and love for our young nation—a nation that many of us are also constantly... More

Robotic Warfare Think & Drink Video

Nov 19

If you didn’t make it to our fascinating Think & Drink conversation on the Future of Robotic Warfare with Tung Yin, a professor at Lewis... More

Pages:  1 2 3 >  Last »

Think & Drink

 

Think & Drink is a happy-hour series that sparks provocative conversations about big ideas. The series, which invites the public to think and talk together, reflects Oregon Humanities' emphasis on infusing important public conversations with critical thinking and fresh ideas. All Think & Drink events are free and open to the public.

Think & Drink: Future of War
Think & Drink Looks at the Future of War

What will the wars of tomorrow look like? Given current advances in robotics, electronic surveillance, and digital sabotage, future battles may be fought as much from cubicles as in the trenches. Will a future of robotic warfare lessen the human cost of international conflict, or will fighting by proxy desensitize us to the horrors of war? Or both?

Join Oregon Humanities in considering these questions and others like them with Tung Yin, a professor at Lewis & Clark Law School, and General Merrill A. McPeak, former Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force, in the final conversation in Oregon Humanities’ 2012 Think & Drink series on Wednesday, October 24, at the Mission Theater, 1624 NW Glisan St., Portland, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Minors allowed when accompanied by an adult. Think & Drink events are free and open to the public. Doors open at 5 p.m.

Tung Yin teaches national security law at Lewis & Clark Law School. He has published numerous scholarly articles and editorials on domestic legal issues arising out of the United States’ military and prosecutorial responses to the 9/11 attacks, including such matters as the jurisdiction of the federal courts to entertain habeas petitions by Guantanamo Bay detainees, the theory of unilateral executive branch war powers, and the potential constitutional rights available to alien detainees outside the country.

General Merrill A. (“Tony”) McPeak entered the Air Force in 1957. He was a member of the Air Force’s elite aerobatic team, the Thunderbirds, and flew 269 combat missions in Vietnam. He commanded the 20th Fighter Wing in NATO, the Twelfth Air Force and the Pacific Air Forces, and was Air Force chief from 1990 to 1994. He is a member of the New York City Council on Foreign Relations and Chairman of the American Battle Monuments Commission.

Richard Read, economics and international affairs reporter for the Oregonian, will moderate the conversation.

If you missed the last Think & Drink, which explored the future of human intelligence, you can watch a video of the event thanks to our series media sponsor, KZME radio. Willamette Week is also a media sponsor of the 2012 Think & Drink series.

13 September 2012 | Permalink | Comments? (2 so far)

Commentary

Will the Think and Drink program continue and if so can you let me know the next day of discussion ?

Thank you

Shalena Bos | Portland | 05 Nov at 07:25 PM


Hi, Shalena. We will begin a new series of Think & Drink programs in 2013. Be sure to sign up for our enewsletter (in the column to the left) so you receive that information as soon as it’s available.

Kathleen Holt | 06 Nov at 10:48 AM

Add a comment

Oregon Humanities welcomes your commentary. We encourage lively public discourse and civil debate, but please be respectful in expressing your views.

Name
E-mail address*
Location
Web site


Captcha instructions.