A Case for Color Blindness | Coleman Hughes | TED

401,604 views ・ 2023-08-09

TED


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I want to do a quick exercise.
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Close your eyes.
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I want you to picture your best friend.
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Think about what specifically you love about them.
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What trait makes them them?
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Now open your eyes.
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I don't know what each of you came up with,
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but I'm pretty sure I know what you didn't come up with.
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I’m pretty sure none of you thought,
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"What makes Jim Jim is the fact that he's six-foot-two and a redhead."
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I'm guessing you chose their inner qualities,
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their sense of humor,
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their generosity, their intelligence,
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qualities they would have no matter what they looked like.
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There's one more quality I'm pretty sure you didn't choose.
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Their race.
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Of all the things you could list about somebody,
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their race is just about the least interesting you can name,
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right down there with height and hair color.
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Sure, race can be good source material for jokes at a comedy club,
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but in the real world,
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a person's race doesn't tell you whether they're kind or selfish,
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whether their beliefs are right or wrong,
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whether they'll become your best friend or your worst enemy.
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But over the past ten years,
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our societies have become more and more fixated on racial identity.
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We've all been invited to reflect on our inner whiteness or inner Blackness,
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as if these racial essences define who we are.
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Meanwhile, American society has experienced the greatest crisis
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in race relations in a generation.
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Gallup has been asking Americans how they feel about race relations,
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and this chart is the result.
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So as you can see, between 2001 and 2013,
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most Americans felt good about race relations.
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Then both lines take a nosedive.
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It's no exaggeration to call this one of the greatest crises of our time.
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And clearly we need new ways of thinking about race
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if we're going to reverse this trend.
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So today I'm going to offer an old idea,
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but it's an idea that's been widely misunderstood.
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You've probably heard it before, it's called color blindness.
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What do I mean by color blindness?
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After all, we all see race.
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We can't help it.
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And what's more, race can influence how we're treated
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and how we treat other people.
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So in that sense, nobody is truly colorblind.
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But to interpret the word colorblind so literally
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is to misunderstand it.
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Colorblind is a word like warmhearted.
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It uses a physical metaphor to capture an abstract idea.
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To call someone warmhearted isn’t to talk about the temperature of their heart
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but about the kindness of their soul.
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And similarly, to advocate for color blindness
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is not to pretend you don't notice race.
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It's to support a principle
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that we should try our best to treat people without regard to race,
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both in our personal lives and in our public policy.
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And you might be thinking, what's so controversial about that?
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Well, the fact is the philosophy of color blindness is under attack.
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Critics say that it's naive
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or that we're not yet ready for it as a society
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or even that it's white supremacy in disguise.
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And many people agree with these feelings.
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For example, a few years ago,
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a young adult fantasy author came under pressure
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to halt the release of her new book.
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Why?
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Because the marketing blurb for the book went like this:
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"In a world where the princess is the monster,
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oppression is blind to skin color,
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and good and evil exist in shades of gray ..."
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Now that one sentence clause
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about oppression being blind to skin color,
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describing a fantasy world, mind you,
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was enough to provoke an online backlash.
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Now, part of this reaction to color blindness
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is actually a fault of its advocates.
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People will say things like,
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“I don’t see color” as a way of expressing support for color blindness.
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But this phrase is guaranteed to produce confusion
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because you do see color, right?
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I think we should all get rid of this phrase
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and replace it with what we really mean to say,
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which is, "I try to treat people without regard to race."
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Now, that said,
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most of the pushback to color blindness comes from critics
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who misrepresent it as somehow a conservative idea.
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Now, this could not be further from the truth.
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The philosophy of color blindness does not come from conservatives.
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It actually comes from the radical wing of the antislavery movement
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in the 19th century.
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The earliest mentions of color blindness come from Wendell Phillips,
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who was the president of the American Anti-Slavery Society
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and a man whose nickname was "abolition's golden trumpet."
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He believed in immediate full equality for Black Americans.
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And in 1865, he called for the creation of a "government colorblind,"
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by which he meant the permanent end of all laws that mention race.
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What about the other critiques of color blindness?
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Wouldn’t color blindness render us unable to fight racism?
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Wouldn't it mean getting rid of policies like affirmative action
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that benefit people of color?
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I believe that eliminating race-based policies
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does not equal eliminating policies meant to reduce inequality.
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It simply means that those policies should be executed
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on the basis of class instead of race.
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Why class over race?
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I'll give two reasons.
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First because class is almost always a better proxy
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for true disadvantage than race.
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Imagine we picked ten Americans at random.
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And our task is to sort them from least privileged on one end
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to most privileged on the other.
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Now, there's no direct measure of privilege,
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so we have to choose a proxy measure.
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My claim here is that lining them up by income or wealth
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would get us closer to achieving that task
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than simply lining people up by race.
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That's what I mean when I say that class is usually a better proxy
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for disadvantage than race.
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And the second reason is that class-based policies tend to be more popular
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and less controversial because they don't penalize anyone
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for immutable biological traits.
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Think of policies like need-based financial aid
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or the earned-income tax credit.
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These are policies that address inequality
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without anyone having to feel the sting of racial discrimination.
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I want to give you an example of a disastrous race-based policy.
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It was called the Restaurant Revitalization Fund.
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Over 70,000 restaurants closed in 2020 due to the pandemic,
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and this fund allocated 29 billion dollars to help these restaurants.
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But for the first three weeks of the program,
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only people of color, women and veterans could apply.
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So soon after it began,
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white male restaurant owners sued, alleging discrimination.
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A judge ruled in their favor, and the program was stopped.
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But by that time, two thirds of the money was already gone.
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And it wasn't just white men that got discriminated against in this policy.
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Around 3,000 women and people of color were promised money
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before the judge stopped the program
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and then unpromised that money just after.
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And the remaining 10 billion then went to white men
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who had initially been put at the back of the line.
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So the net result of this policy was a double dose of discrimination.
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Initially, thousands of white men were discriminated against
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and then thousands of women and people of color were discriminated against.
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And it's a virtual guarantee
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that there are people out there who lost their restaurant
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in both of those camps because they were the wrong skin color.
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Can anyone really argue
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that a colorblind program wouldn't have produced better results for everybody?
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So I just gave an example of a disastrous race-based policy.
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Now, I want to give you an example
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of a colorblind policy that has worked quite well.
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America has been struggling with the issue of racial bias in policing
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for a very long time.
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And a solution to one aspect of this problem
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is to issue tickets using traffic cameras instead of human beings.
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Cops can be racially biased, consciously or not,
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but traffic cameras, red light cameras and speeding cameras can't.
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So you would think anyone interested in reducing racial bias in policing
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would support these traffic cameras.
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But you'd be wrong.
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Some have opposed them on the grounds
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that they don't yield statistically equal ticketing rates by race,
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and they remain illegal in many US states.
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So here's an example
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where the philosophy of color blindness cuts through confusion like a knife.
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If we’re guided by color blindness,
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our goal should be to eliminate bias from systems that affect people's lives
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wherever possible,
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not to manufacture statistically equal outcomes by any means necessary.
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So my talk has been focused on America,
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but my message is really for any key decision maker
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at any institution anywhere in the world.
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If you care about fighting racism, embrace color blindness.
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Support class-based policies.
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Create colorblind processes in your own world.
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If you're a professor,
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grade your students' papers blind to their names.
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Think creatively about how to apply color blindness to your life.
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Color blindness is the best principle by which to govern a multiracial,
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multiethnic democracy.
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It's the best way to lower the temperature of tribal conflict in the long run.
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And if we wait for the moment when society is ready for it,
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we'll be waiting forever.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Chris Anderson: Coleman, thank you for this.
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You know, Mellody Hobson came to TED a few years ago,
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and she had a very different message for us.
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She said, be color brave, not colorblind.
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Her argument was that being colorblind is dangerous
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because it's effectively ignoring the problem.
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What would you want to say to her?
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Coleman Hughes: Yeah.
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One thing I would say is, like I said,
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color blindness as a philosophy, that is the goal.
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That's an idea that comes from the anti-slavery movement, right?
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That's not an example of ignoring the problem.
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That's an example of having the best philosophy
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with which to address the problem, in my view.
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CA: But could you argue that that dealt with one part of the problem
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but in today's world, there are still many situations where it's not enough.
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Take this story of an orchestra, right,
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an orchestra, and it's largely white.
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And that doesn't feel right.
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So they institute a policy of color blindness where,
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you know, there can't be any racial discrimination
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because new musicians are auditioned behind a screen.
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That's colorblind.
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So, so far, so good.
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And maybe that helps.
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But maybe the actual situation
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is that the minority kids in that area
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just don't have access to instruments,
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it's just harder for them ever to get the kind of training and stuff they need.
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And the orchestra needs to be taking a lead to bring people through
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so that there are people in that orchestra who can inspire the kids
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and so forth.
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CH: Yeah, so I would propose a different --
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So if I were leading that orchestra, what I would do is I'd say,
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let's continue to audition everyone behind the veil,
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be colorblind in that sense,
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and then let's separately invest in the community
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so that we can get kids instruments when they're young
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and then judge them by a colorblind standard
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when they come to audition.
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See, if you rig it at this level,
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then you're just changing the bar by which you would measure progress
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to begin with, right?
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So I think that is a kind of an artificial solution,
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whereas we want to maintain colorblind standards,
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but actually address the root causes of the problem.
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(Applause)
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CA: Coleman, you're an incredibly powerful voice on this issue,
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and I really thank you for the courage to come here, make this case.
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Good luck with the book.
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CH: Thank you, TED.
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