How to win an argument (at the US Supreme Court, or anywhere) | Neal Katyal

266,209 views ・ 2020-10-02

TED


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00:13
Fourteen years ago,
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I stood in the Supreme Court to argue my first case.
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And it wasn't just any case,
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it was a case that experts called
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one of the most important cases the Supreme Court had ever heard.
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It considered whether Guantanamo was constitutional,
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and whether the Geneva Conventions applied to the war on terror.
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It was just a handful of years after the horrific attacks
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of September 11.
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The Supreme Court had seven Republican appointees
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and two Democratic ones,
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and my client happened to be Osama bin Laden's driver.
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My opponent was the Solicitor General of the United States,
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America's top courtroom lawyer.
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He had argued 35 cases.
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I wasn't even 35 years old.
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And to make matters worse,
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the Senate, for the first time since the Civil War,
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passed a bill to try and remove the case from the docket of the Supreme Court.
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Now the speaking coaches say
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I'm supposed to build tension and not tell you what happens.
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But the thing is, we won.
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How?
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Today, I'm going to talk about how to win an argument,
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at the Supreme Court or anywhere.
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The conventional wisdom is that you speak with confidence.
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That's how you persuade.
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I think that's wrong.
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I think confidence is the enemy of persuasion.
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Persuasion is about empathy,
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about getting into people's heads.
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That's what makes TED what it is.
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It's why you're listening to this talk.
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You could have read it on the cold page,
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but you didn't.
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Same thing with Supreme Court arguments --
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we write written briefs with cold pages,
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but we also have an oral argument.
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We don't just have a system in which the justices write questions
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and you write answers.
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Why?
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Because argument is about interaction.
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I want to take you behind the scenes to tell you what I did,
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and how these lessons are generalizable.
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Not just for winning an argument in court,
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but for something far more profound.
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Now obviously, it's going to involve practice,
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but not just any practice will do.
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My first practice session for Guantanamo,
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I flew up to Harvard
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and had all these legendary professors throwing questions at me.
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And even though I had read everything, rehearsed a million times,
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I wasn't persuading anyone.
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My arguments weren't resonating.
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I was desperate.
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I had done everything possible,
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read every book, rehearsed a million times,
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and it wasn't going anywhere.
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So ultimately, I stumbled on this guy --
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he was an acting coach, he wasn't even a lawyer.
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He'd never set foot in the Supreme Court.
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And he came into my office one day wearing a billowy white shirt
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and a bolo tie,
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and he looked at me with my folded arms and said,
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"Look, Neal, I can tell
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that you don't think this is going to work,
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but just humor me.
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Tell me your argument."
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So I grabbed my legal pad,
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and I started reading my argument.
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He said, "What are you doing?"
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I said, "I'm telling you my argument."
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He said, "Your argument is a legal pad?"
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I said, "No, but my argument is on a legal pad."
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He said, "Neal, look at me.
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Tell me your argument."
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And so I did.
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And instantly, I realized,
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my points were resonating.
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I was connecting to another human being.
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And he could see the smile starting to form
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as I was saying my words,
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and he said, "OK, Neal.
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Now do your argument holding my hand."
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And I said, "What?"
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And he said, "Yeah, hold my hand."
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I was desperate, so I did it.
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And I realized, "Wow, that's connection.
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That's the power of how to persuade."
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And it helped.
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But truthfully, I still got nervous as the argument date approached.
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And I knew that even though argument
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was about getting into someone else's shoes
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and empathizing,
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I needed to have a solid core first.
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So I did something outside of my comfort zone.
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I wore jewelry -- not just anything,
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but a bracelet that my father had worn his whole life,
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until he passed away, just a few months before the argument.
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I put on a tie
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that my mom had given me just for the occasion.
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And I took out my legal pad and wrote my children's names on it,
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because that's why I was doing this.
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For them, to leave the country better than I had found it.
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I got to court, and I was calm.
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The bracelet, the tie, the children's names
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had all centered me.
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Like a rock climber extending beyond the precipice,
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if you have a solid hold, you can reach out.
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And because argument is about persuasion,
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I knew I had to avoid emotion.
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Displays of emotion fail.
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It's kind of like writing an email in all bold and all caps.
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It persuades no one.
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It's then about you, the speaker,
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not about the listener or the receiver.
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Now look, in some settings, the solution is to be emotional.
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You're arguing with your parents,
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and you use emotion and it works.
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Why?
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Because your parents love you.
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But Supreme Court justices don't love you.
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They don't like to think of themselves
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as the type of people persuaded by emotion.
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And I reverse engineered that insight too,
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setting a trap for my opponent to provoke his emotional reaction,
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so I could be seen as the calm and steady voice of the law.
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And it worked.
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And I remember sitting in the courtroom to learn that we had won.
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That the Guantanamo tribunals were coming down.
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And I went out onto the courthouse steps and there was a media firestorm.
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Five hundred cameras, and they're all asking me,
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"What does the decision mean, what does it say?"
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Well, the decision was 185 pages long.
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I hadn't had time to read it, nobody had.
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But I knew what it meant.
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And here's what I said on the steps of the Court.
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"Here's what happened today.
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You have the lowest of the low --
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this guy, who was accused of being bin Laden's driver,
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one of the most horrible men around.
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And he sued not just anyone,
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but the nation, indeed, the world's most powerful man,
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the president of the United States.
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And he brings it not in some rinky-dink traffic court,
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but in the highest court of the land,
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the Supreme Court of the United States ...
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And he wins.
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That's something remarkable about this country.
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In many other countries,
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this driver would have been shot,
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just for bringing his case.
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And more of the point for me, his lawyer would have been shot.
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But that's what makes America different.
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What makes America special."
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Because of that decision,
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the Geneva conventions apply to the war on terror,
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which meant the end of ghost prisons worldwide,
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the end of waterboarding worldwide
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and an end to those Guantanamo military tribunals.
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By methodically building the case,
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and getting into the justices' heads,
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we were able to quite literally change the world.
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Sounds easy, right?
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You can practice a lot,
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avoid displays of emotion,
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and you, too, can win any argument.
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I'm sorry to say, it's not that simple,
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my strategies aren't foolproof,
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and while I've won more Supreme Court cases
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than most anyone,
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I've also lost a lot too.
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Indeed, after Donald Trump was elected,
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I was, constitutionally speaking, terrified.
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Please understand, this is not about Left versus Right,
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or anything like that.
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I'm not here to talk about that.
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But just a week in to the new president's term,
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you might remember those scenes at the airports.
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President Trump had campaigned on a pledge, saying, quote,
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"I, Donald J. Trump am calling for a complete and total shutdown
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of all Muslim immigration to the United States."
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And he also said, quote, "I think Islam hates us."
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And he made good on that promise,
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banning immigration from seven countries with overwhelmingly Muslim populations.
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My legal team and others went into court right away and sued,
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and got that first travel ban struck down.
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Trump revised it.
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We went into court again and got that struck down.
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He revised it again,
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and changed it, adding North Korea,
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because we all know,
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the United States had a tremendous immigration problem with North Korea.
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But it did enable his lawyers to go to the Supreme Court and say,
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"See, this isn't discriminating against Muslims,
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it includes these other people too."
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Now I thought we had the killer answer to that.
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I won't bore you with the details,
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but the thing is, we lost.
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Five votes to four.
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And I was devastated.
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I was worried my powers of persuasion had waned.
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And then, two things happened.
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The first was,
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I noticed a part of the Supreme Court's travel ban opinion
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that discussed the Japanese American interment.
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That was a horrific moment in our history,
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in which over 100,000 Japanese Americans had been interned in camps.
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My favorite person to challenge this scheme
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was Gordon Hirabayashi,
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a University of Washington student.
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He turned himself in to the FBI,
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who said, "Look, you're a first-time offender,
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you can go home."
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And Gordon said,
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"No, I'm a Quaker, I have to resist unjust laws,"
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and so they arrested him and he was convicted.
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Gordon's case made it to the Supreme Court.
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And again, I'm going to do that thing
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where I quash any sense of anticipation you have,
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and tell you what happened.
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Gordon lost.
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But he lost because of a simple reason.
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Because the Solicitor General,
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that top courtroom lawyer for the government,
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told the Supreme Court
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that the Japanese American internment was justified by military necessity.
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And that was so,
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even though his own staff had discovered
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that there was no need for the Japanese American interment
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and that the FBI and the intelligence community
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all believed that.
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And indeed, that it was motivated by racial prejudice.
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His staff begged the Solicitor General,
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"Tell the truth, don't suppress evidence."
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What did the Solicitor General do?
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Nothing.
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He went in and told the "military necessity" story.
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And so the Court upheld Gordon Hirabayashi's conviction.
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And the next year, upheld Fred Korematsu's interment.
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Now why was I thinking about that?
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Because nearly 70 years later,
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I got to hold the same office,
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Head of the Solicitor General's Office.
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And I got to set the record straight,
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explaining that the government had misrepresented the facts
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in the Japanese interment cases.
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And when I thought about the Supreme Court's travel ban opinion,
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I realized something.
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The Supreme Court, in that opinion,
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went out of its way to overrule the Korematsu case.
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Now, not only had the Justice Department said
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the Japanese interment was wrong,
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the Supreme Court said so too.
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That's a crucial lesson about arguments -- timing.
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All of you, when you're arguing, have that important lever to play.
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When do you make your argument?
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You don't just need the right argument,
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you need the right argument at the right moment.
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When is it that your audience -- a spouse, a boss, a child --
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is going to be most receptive?
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Now look, sometimes, it's totally out of your control.
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Delay has costs that are too extensive.
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And so you've got to go in and fight
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and you very well may, like me, get the timing wrong.
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That's what we thought in the travel ban.
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And you see,
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the Supreme Court wasn't ready, so early in President Trump's term,
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to overrule his signature initiative,
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just as it wasn't ready to overrule FDR's Japanese American interment.
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And sometimes, you just have to take the risk.
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But it is so painful when you lose.
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And patience is really hard.
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But that reminds me of the second lesson.
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Even if vindication comes later,
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I realized how important the fight now is,
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because it inspires, because it educates.
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I remember reading a column by Ann Coulter about the Muslim ban.
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Here's what she said.
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"Arguing against Trump was first-generation American,
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Neal Katyal.
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There are plenty of 10th-generation America-haters.
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You couldn't get one of them to argue we should end our country
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through mass-immigration?"
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And that's when emotion,
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which is so anathema to a good argument,
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was important to me.
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It took emotion outside the courtroom to get me back in.
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When I read Coulter's words, I was angry.
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I rebel against the idea
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that being a first-generation American would disqualify me.
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I rebel against the idea that mass immigration
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would end this country,
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instead of recognizing that as literally the rock on which this country was built.
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When I read Coulter,
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I thought about so many things in my past.
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I thought about my dad,
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who arrived here with eight dollars from India,
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12:50
and didn't know whether to use the colored bathroom or the white one.
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I thought about his first job offer, at a slaughter house.
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Not a great job for a Hindu.
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12:59
I thought about how, when we moved to a new neighborhood in Chicago
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13:03
with one other Indian family,
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13:05
that family had a cross burned on its lawn.
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Because the racists aren't very good
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13:10
at distinguishing between African Americans and Hindus.
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13:12
And I thought about all the hate mail I got
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during Guantanamo,
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for being a Muslim lover.
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13:18
Again, the racists aren't very good
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13:19
with distinctions between Hindus and Muslims, either.
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13:22
Ann Coulter thought that being the child of an immigrant was a weakness.
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She was profoundly, profoundly wrong.
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It is my strength,
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because I knew what America was supposed to stand for.
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I knew that in America,
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me, a child of a man who came here with eight dollars in his pocket,
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13:43
could stand in the Supreme Court of the United States
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on behalf of a detested foreigner,
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like Osama bin Laden's driver,
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and win.
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And it made me realize,
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even though I may have lost the case,
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13:56
I was right about the Muslim ban too.
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No matter what the court decided,
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14:00
they couldn't change the fact
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14:02
that immigrants do strengthen this country.
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14:04
Indeed, in many ways, immigrants love this country the most.
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14:08
When I read Ann Coulter's words,
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14:11
I thought about the glorious words of our Constitution.
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14:14
The First Amendment.
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Congress shall make no law establishing religion.
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14:19
I thought about our national creed,
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"E plurbis unum,"
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14:23
"out of many come one."
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Most of all, I realized,
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14:27
the only way you can truly lose an argument
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14:31
is by giving up.
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14:32
So I joined the lawsuit by the US Congress
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3072
14:35
challenging President Trump's addition of a citizenship question to the census.
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14:40
A decision with huge implications.
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14:43
It was a really hard case.
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14:44
Most thought we would lose.
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1976
14:46
But the thing is, we won.
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14:48
Five votes to four.
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14:50
The Supreme Court basically said
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14:52
President Trump and his cabinet's secretary had lied.
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14:56
And now I've gotten back up and rejoined the fight,
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14:59
and I hope each of you, in your own ways, does so too.
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15:02
I'm getting back up
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15:04
because I'm a believer that good arguments do win out in the end.
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3479
15:08
The arc of justice is long,
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2039
15:10
and bends, often, slowly,
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15:12
but it bends so long as we bend it.
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15:15
And I've realized the question is not how to win every argument.
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15:20
It's how to get back up when you do lose.
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15:23
Because in the long run,
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15:24
good arguments will win out.
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15:27
If you make a good argument,
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15:28
it has the power to outlive you,
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15:31
to stretch beyond your core,
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15:33
to reach those future minds.
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15:35
And that's why all of this is so important.
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15:38
I'm not telling you how to win arguments for the sake of winning arguments.
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15:42
This isn't a game.
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15:43
I'm telling you this because even if you don't win right now,
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15:48
if you make a good argument, history will prove you right.
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15:51
I think back to that acting coach all the time.
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15:54
And I've come to realize
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15:56
that the hand I was holding was the hand of justice.
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16:00
That outstretched hand will come for you.
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16:03
It's your decision to push it away
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16:06
or to keep holding it.
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Thank you so much for listening.
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About this website

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