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TED, an elite ideas conference for the brilliant and wealthy, can't avoid the Trump effect

It turns out that it's impossible to keep Trump and politics out of a conference about ideas.

Garry Kasparov at TED

At the opening session of the TED 2017 conference in Vancouver, Canada, curator Chris Anderson made a remark that was intended to set the tone for the rest of the event: "Speaking personally, I'm completely sick of politics right now," he said to rapturous applause. "This week, we're not going to escape it entirely, but we will do our best to put it in its rightful place."

Almost immediately after he uttered those words, politics entered the picture. Chess champion (and vocal Putin critic) Garry Kasparov managed to avoid the topic during his talk on artificial intelligence, but Anderson brought Trump's election up onstage with Kasparov afterwards.

"As we found out, Putin skipped taking over Poland and went straight to Wisconsin," Kasparov said. A collective "ooh" emerged from the audience; my seatmate muttered, "Give me a break."

The final talk of the first session came from Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, a British rabbi and scholar who called for unity in the face of a divided world. "He should run for office," an attendee said to me later that evening.

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Traditionally, TED has tried (successfully, in most cases) to stay a step removed from political conversations. It's a conference about big ideas, and the most popular talks of all time cover topics like creativity in schools, body language, and the power of introverts.

Attendance at the event costs $10,000 for a standard ticket (first-time, early-career attendees can get a discount), which means the in-person TED experience is filled with notable leaders in science and technology. But TED's brand also relies on the millions of people who watch the talks for free online, so associating with a particular political identity could be damaging.

While a number of attendees I spoke with highlighted the less political talks as their favorites, ACLU executive director Anthony Romero's presentation got some of the biggest applause of the conference thus far. "We

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