Bono: Action for Africa

66,377 views ・ 2007-01-12

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:27
Well, as Alexander Graham Bell famously said
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on his first successful telephone call,
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"Hello, is that Domino's Pizza?"
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(Laughter)
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I just really want to thank you very much.
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As another famous man, Jerry Garcia, said,
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"What a strange, long trip."
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And he should have said,
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"What a strange, long trip it's about to become."
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At this very moment, you are viewing my upper half.
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My lower half is appearing at a different conference
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(Laughter)
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in a different country.
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You can, it turns out, be in two places at once.
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But still, I'm sorry I can't be with you in person.
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I'll explain at another time.
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And though I'm a rock star,
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I just want to assure you that none of my wishes will include a hot tub.
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But what really turns me on about technology
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is not just the ability to get more songs on MP3 players.
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The revolution -- this revolution -- is much bigger than that.
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I hope, I believe.
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What turns me on about the digital age,
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what excites me personally,
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is that you have closed the gap between dreaming and doing.
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You see, it used to be that if you wanted to make a record of a song,
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you needed a studio and a producer.
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Now, you need a laptop.
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If you wanted to make a film, you needed a mass of equipment
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and a Hollywood budget.
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Now, you need a camera that fits in your palm,
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and a couple of bucks for a blank DVD.
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Imagination has been decoupled from the old constraints.
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And that really, really excites me.
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I'm excited when I glimpse that kind of thinking writ large.
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What I would like to see is idealism decoupled from all constraints.
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Political, economic, psychological, whatever.
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The geopolitical world has got a lot to learn from the digital world.
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From the ease with which you swept away obstacles
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that no one knew could even be budged.
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And that's actually what I'd like to talk about today.
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First, though, I should probably explain why, and how,
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I got to this place.
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It's a journey that started 20 years ago.
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You may remember that song, "We Are the World,"
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or, "Do They Know It's Christmas?"
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Band Aid, Live Aid.
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Another very tall, grizzled rock star, my friend Sir Bob Geldof,
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issued a challenge to "feed the world."
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It was a great moment, and it utterly changed my life.
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That summer, my wife, Ali, and myself went to Ethiopia.
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We went on the quiet to see for ourselves what was going on.
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We lived in Ethiopia for a month, working at an orphanage.
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The children had a name for me.
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They called me, "The girl with the beard."
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(Laughter)
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Don't ask.
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Anyway, we found Africa to be a magical place.
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Big skies, big hearts, big, shining continent.
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Beautiful, royal people.
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Anybody who ever gave anything to Africa got a lot more back.
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Ethiopia didn't just blow my mind; it opened my mind.
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Anyway, on our last day at this orphanage
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a man handed me his baby and said,
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"Would you take my son with you?"
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He knew, in Ireland, that his son would live,
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and that in Ethiopia, his son would die.
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It was the middle of that awful famine.
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Well, I turned him down.
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And it was a funny kind of sick feeling, but I turned him down.
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And it's a feeling I can't ever quite forget.
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And in that moment, I started this journey.
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In that moment, I became the worst thing of all:
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I became a rock star with a cause. (Laughter)
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Except this isn't the cause, is it?
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Six-and-a-half thousand Africans dying every single day from AIDS --
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a preventable, treatable disease --
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for lack of drugs we can get in any pharmacy.
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That's not a cause. That's an emergency.
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11 million AIDS orphans in Africa,
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20 million by the end of the decade.
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That's not a cause. That's an emergency.
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Today, every day, 9,000 more Africans
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will catch HIV because of stigmatization and lack of education.
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That's not a cause. That's an emergency.
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So what we're talking about here is human rights.
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The right to live like a human.
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The right to live, period.
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And what we're facing in Africa is
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an unprecedented threat to human dignity and equality.
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The next thing I'd like to be clear about is what this problem is,
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and what this problem isn't.
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Because this is not all about charity.
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This is about justice. Really.
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This is not about charity. This is about justice.
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That's right.
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And that's too bad, because we're very good at charity.
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Americans, like Irish people, are good at it.
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Even the poorest neighborhoods give more than they can afford.
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We like to give, and we give a lot.
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Look at the response to the tsunami -- it's inspiring.
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But justice is a tougher standard than charity.
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You see, Africa makes a fool of our idea of justice.
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It makes a farce of our idea of equality.
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It mocks our pieties. It doubts our concern.
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It questions our commitment.
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Because there is no way we can look at what's happening in Africa,
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and if we're honest,
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conclude that it would ever be allowed to happen anywhere else.
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As you heard in the film, anywhere else, not here.
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Not here, not in America, not in Europe.
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In fact, a head of state that you're all familiar with
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admitted this to me. And it's really true.
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There is no chance this kind of hemorrhaging of human life
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would be accepted anywhere else other than Africa.
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Africa is a continent in flames.
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And deep down, if we really accepted that Africans were equal to us,
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we would all do more to put the fire out.
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We're standing around with watering cans,
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when what we really need is the fire brigade.
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You see, it's not as dramatic as the tsunami.
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It's crazy, really, when you think about it.
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Does stuff have to look like an action movie these days
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to exist in the front of our brain?
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The slow extinguishing of countless lives
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is just not dramatic enough, it would appear.
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Catastrophes that we can avert
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are not as interesting as ones we could avert.
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Funny, that.
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Anyway, I believe that that kind of thinking
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offends the intellectual rigor in this room.
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Six-and-a-half thousand people dying a day in Africa may be Africa's crisis,
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but the fact that it's not on the nightly news,
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that we in Europe, or you in America,
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are not treating it like an emergency --
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I want to argue with you tonight that that's our crisis.
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I want to argue that though Africa is not the front line in the war against terror,
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it could be soon.
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Every week, religious extremists take another African village.
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They're attempting to bring order to chaos.
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Well, why aren't we?
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Poverty breeds despair. We know this.
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Despair breeds violence. We know this.
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In turbulent times, isn't it cheaper, and smarter,
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to make friends out of potential enemies
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than to defend yourself against them later?
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"The war against terror is bound up in the war against poverty."
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And I didn't say that. Colin Powell said that.
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Now when the military are telling us that this is a war
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that cannot be won by military might alone,
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maybe we should listen.
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There's an opportunity here, and it's real.
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It's not spin. It's not wishful thinking.
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The problems facing the developing world
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afford us in the developed world
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a chance to re-describe ourselves to the world.
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We will not only transform other people's lives,
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but we will also transform the way those other lives see us.
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And that might be smart in these nervous, dangerous times.
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Don't you think that on a purely commercial level,
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that anti-retroviral drugs are great advertisements
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for Western ingenuity and technology?
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Doesn't compassion look well on us?
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And let's cut the crap for a second.
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In certain quarters of the world, brand EU, brand USA,
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is not at its shiniest.
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The neon sign is fizzing and cracking.
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Someone's put a brick through the window.
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The regional branch managers are getting nervous.
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Never before have we in the west been so scrutinized.
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Our values: do we have any?
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Our credibility?
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These things are under attack around the world.
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Brand USA could use some polishing.
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And I say that as a fan, you know?
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As a person who buys the products.
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But think about it.
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More anti-retrovirals make sense.
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But that's just the easy part, or ought to be.
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But equality for Africa --
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that's a big, expensive idea.
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You see, the scale of the suffering numbs us into a kind of indifference.
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What on earth can we all do about this?
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Well, much more than we think.
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We can't fix every problem, but the ones we can,
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I want to argue, we must.
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And because we can, we must.
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This is the straight truth, the righteous truth.
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It is not a theory.
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The fact is that ours is the first generation
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that can look disease and extreme poverty in the eye,
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look across the ocean to Africa, and say this, and mean it:
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we do not have to stand for this.
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A whole continent written off -- we do not have to stand for this.
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(Applause)
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And let me say this without a trace of irony --
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before I back it up to a bunch of ex-hippies.
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Forget the '60s. We can change the world.
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I can't; you can't, as individuals; but we can change the world.
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I really believe that, the people in this room.
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Look at the Gates Foundation.
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They've done incredible stuff, unbelievable stuff.
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But working together, we can actually change the world.
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We can turn the inevitable outcomes,
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and transform the quality of life for millions of lives
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who look and feel rather like us, when you're up close.
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I'm sorry to laugh here, but you do look so different
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than you did in Haight-Ashbury in the '60s.
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(Laughter)
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But I want to argue that this is the moment that you are designed for.
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It is the flowering of the seeds you planted
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in earlier, headier days.
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Ideas that you gestated in your youth.
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This is what excites me.
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This room was born for this moment,
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is really what I want to say to you tonight.
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Most of you started out wanting to change the world, didn't you?
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Most of you did, the digital world.
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Well, now, actually because of you,
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it is possible to change the physical world.
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It's a fact.
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Economists confirm it, and they know much more than I do.
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So why, then, are we not pumping our fists into the air?
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Probably because when we admit we can do something about it,
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we've got to do something about it.
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It is a pain in the arse.
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This equality business is actually a pain in the arse.
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But for the first time in history, we have the technology;
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we have the know-how; we have the cash;
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we have the life-saving drugs.
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Do we have the will?
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I hope this is obvious, but I'm not a hippie.
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And I'm not really one for the warm, fuzzy feeling.
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I do not have flowers in my hair.
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Actually, I come from punk rock.
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The Clash wore big army boots, not sandals.
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But I know toughness when I see it.
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And for all the talk of peace and love on the West Coast,
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there was muscle to the movement that started out here.
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You see, idealism detached from action is just a dream.
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But idealism allied with pragmatism,
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with rolling up your sleeves and making the world bend a bit,
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is very exciting. It's very real. It's very strong.
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And it's very present in a crowd like you.
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Last year at DATA, this organization I helped set up,
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we launched a campaign to summon this spirit
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in the fight against AIDS and extreme poverty.
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We're calling it the ONE Campaign.
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It's based on our belief that the action of one person
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can change a lot,
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but the actions of many coming together as one
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can change the world.
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Well, we feel that now is the time to prove we're right.
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There are moments in history when civilization redefines itself.
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We believe this is one.
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We believe that this could be the time when the world finally decides
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that the wanton loss of life in Africa is just no longer acceptable.
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This could be the time that we finally get serious
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about changing the future for most people who live on planet Earth.
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Momentum has been building.
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Lurching a little, but it's building.
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This year is a test for us all,
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especially the leaders of the G8 nations,
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who really are on the line here,
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with all the world in history watching.
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I have been, of late, disappointed with the Bush Administration.
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They started out with such promise on Africa.
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They made some really great promises,
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and actually have fulfilled a lot of them.
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But some of them they haven't.
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They don't feel the push from the ground, is the truth.
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But my disappointment has much more perspective
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when I talk to American people,
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and I hear their worries about the deficit,
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and the fiscal well being of their country.
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I understand that.
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But there's much more push from the ground than you'd think,
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if we got organized.
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What I try to communicate, and you can help me if you agree,
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is that aid for Africa is just great value for money
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at a time when America really needs it.
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Putting it in the crassest possible terms,
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the investment reaps huge returns.
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Not only in lives saved, but in goodwill, stability
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and security that we'll gain.
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So this is what I hope that you will do, if I could be so bold,
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and not have it deducted from my number of wishes.
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(Laughter)
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What I hope is that beyond individual merciful acts,
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that you will tell the politicians to do right by Africa,
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by America and by the world.
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Give them permission, if you like,
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to spend their political capital and your financial capital,
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your national purse on saving the lives of millions of people.
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That's really what I would like you to do.
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Because we also need your intellectual capital:
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your ideas, your skills, your ingenuity.
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And you, at this conference, are in a unique position.
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Some of the technologies we've been talking about, you invented them,
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or at least revolutionized the way that they're used.
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Together you have changed the zeitgeist from analog to digital,
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and pushed the boundaries.
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And we'd like you to give us that energy.
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Give us that kind of dreaming, that kind of doing.
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As I say, there're two things on the line here.
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There's the continent Africa.
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But there's also our sense of ourselves.
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People are starting to figure this out.
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Movements are springing up.
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Artists, politicians, pop stars, priests, CEOs,
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NGOs, mothers' unions, student unions.
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A lot of people are getting together, and working
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under this umbrella I told you about earlier, the ONE Campaign.
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I think they just have one idea in their mind,
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which is, where you live in the world
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should not determine whether you live in the world.
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(Applause)
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History, like God, is watching what we do.
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When the history books get written,
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I think our age will be remembered for three things.
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Really, it's just three things this whole age will be remembered for.
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The digital revolution, yes.
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The war against terror, yes.
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And what we did or did not do to put out the fires in Africa.
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Some say we can't afford to. I say we can't afford not to.
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Thank you, thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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Okay, my three wishes.
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The ones that TED has offered to grant.
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You see, if this is true, and I believe it is,
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that the digital world you all created has uncoupled
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the creative imagination from the physical constraints of matter,
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this should be a piece of piss.
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(Laughter)
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I should add that this started out as a much longer list of wishes.
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Most of them impossible, some of them impractical
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and one or two of them certainly immoral.
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(Laughter)
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This business, it gets to be addictive, you know what I mean,
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when somebody else is picking up the tab.
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Anyway, here's number one.
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I wish for you to help build a social movement
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of more than one million American activists for Africa.
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That is my first wish.
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I believe it's possible.
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A few minutes ago, I talked about all the citizens' campaigns that are springing up.
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You know, there's lots out there.
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And with this one campaign as our umbrella,
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my organization, DATA, and other groups,
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have been tapping into the energy and the enthusiasm
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that's out there from Hollywood into the heartland of America.
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We know there's more than enough energy to power this movement.
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We just need your help in making it happen.
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We want all of you here, church America, corporate America,
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Microsoft America, Apple America, Coke America,
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Pepsi America, nerd America, noisy America.
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We can't afford to be cool and sit this one out.
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I do believe if we build a movement that's one million Americans strong,
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we're not going to be denied.
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We will have the ear of Congress.
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We'll be the first page in Condi Rice's briefing book,
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and right into the Oval Office.
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If there's one million Americans -- and I really know this --
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who are ready to make phone calls,
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who are ready to be on email,
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I am absolutely sure that we can actually change
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the course of history, literally, for the continent of Africa.
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Anyway, so I'd like your help in getting that signed up.
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I know John Gage and Sun Microsystems are already on board for this,
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23:27
but there's lots of you we'd like to talk to.
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Right, my second wish, number two.
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I would like one media hit for every person on the planet
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who is living on less than one dollar a day.
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23:48
That's one billion media hits.
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Could be on Google, could be on AOL.
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23:54
Steve Case, Larry, Sergey -- they've done a lot already.
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It could be NBC. It could be ABC.
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24:02
Actually we're talking to ABC today about the Oscars.
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We have a film, produced by Jon Kamen at Radical Media.
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24:11
But you know, we want, we need some airtime for our ideas.
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24:15
We need to get the math; we need to get the statistics out to the American people.
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24:19
I really believe that old Truman line,
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that if you give the American people the facts,
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they'll do the right thing.
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24:27
And, the other thing that's important is that this is not Sally Struthers.
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24:31
This has to be described as an adventure, not a burden.
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24:36
(Video): One by one they step forward,
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a nurse, a teacher, a homemaker,
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24:40
and lives are saved.
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The problem is enormous.
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24:44
Every three seconds one person dies.
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Another three seconds, one more.
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24:50
The situation is so desperate in parts of Africa,
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Asia, even America,
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24:55
that aid groups, just as they did for the tsunami,
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are uniting as one, acting as one.
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We can beat extreme poverty, starvation, AIDS.
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But we need your help.
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25:08
One more person, letter, voice
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25:10
will mean the difference between life and death
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for millions of people.
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25:16
Please join us by working together.
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Americans have an unprecedented opportunity.
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We can make history.
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25:23
We can start to make poverty history.
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25:26
One, by one, by one.
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25:28
Please visit ONE at this address.
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25:31
We're not asking for your money. We're asking for your voice.
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25:36
Bono: All right. I wish for TED to truly show the power of information,
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its power to rewrite the rules and transform lives,
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by connecting every hospital, health clinic and school
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in one African country.
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And I would like it to be Ethiopia.
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I believe we can connect every school in Ethiopia,
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every health clinic, every hospital --
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26:09
we can connect to the Internet.
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26:12
That is my wish, my third wish.
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26:14
I think it's possible.
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I think we have the money and brains in the room to do that.
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26:18
And that would be a mind-blowing wish to come true.
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26:24
I've been to Ethiopia, as I said earlier.
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It's actually where it all started for me.
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26:34
The idea that the Internet, which changed all of our lives,
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can transform a country -- and a continent
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that has hardly made it to analog, let alone digital -- blows my mind.
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But it didn't start out that way.
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26:52
The first long-distance line from Boston to New York
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was used in 1885 on the phone.
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It was just nine years later that Addis Ababa
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was connected by phone to Harare, which is 500 kilometers away.
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Since then, not that much has changed.
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The average waiting time to get a landline in Ethiopia
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is actually about seven or eight years.
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But wireless technology wasn't dreamt up then.
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Anyway, I'm Irish, and as you can see,
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I know how important talking is.
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Communication is very important for Ethiopia -- will transform the country.
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27:39
Nurses getting better training,
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pharmacists being able to order supplies,
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27:43
doctors sharing their expertise in all aspects of medicine.
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It's a very, very good idea to get them wired.
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And that is my third and final wish for you at the TED conference.
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Thank you very much once again.
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27:58
(Applause)
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Original video on YouTube.com
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