Katherine Fulton: You are the future of philanthropy

17,314 views ・ 2009-06-26

TED


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00:18
I want to help you re-perceive what philanthropy is,
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what it could be,
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and what your relationship to it is.
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And in doing that, I want to offer you a vision,
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an imagined future, if you will,
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of how, as the poet Seamus Heaney has put it,
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"Once in a lifetime
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the longed-for tidal wave of justice can rise up,
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and hope and history rhyme."
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I want to start with these word pairs here.
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We all know which side of these we'd like to be on.
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When philanthropy was reinvented a century ago,
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when the foundation form was actually invented,
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they didn't think of themselves on the wrong side of these either.
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In fact they would never have thought of themselves
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as closed and set in their ways,
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as slow to respond to new challenges,
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as small and risk-averse.
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And in fact they weren't. They were reinventing charity in those times,
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what Rockefeller called "the business of benevolence."
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But by the end of the 20th century,
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a new generation of critics and reformers
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had come to see philanthropy just this way.
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The thing to watch for
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as a global philanthropy industry comes about --
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and that's exactly what is happening --
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is how the aspiration is to flip
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these old assumptions,
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for philanthropy to become open and big
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and fast and connected, in service of the long term.
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This entrepreneurial energy
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is emerging from many quarters.
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And it's driven and propelled forward by new leaders, like many of the people here,
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by new tools, like the ones we've seen here,
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and by new pressures.
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I've been following this change for quite a while now, and participating in it.
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This report is our main public report.
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What it tells is the story of how today
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actually could be as historic
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as 100 years ago.
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What I want to do is share some of the coolest things
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that are going on with you.
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And as I do that, I'm not going to dwell much
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on the very large philanthropy that everybody already knows about --
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the Gates or the Soros or the Google.
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Instead, what I want to do
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is talk about the philanthropy of all of us:
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the democratization of philanthropy.
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This is a moment in history when the average person
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has more power than at any time.
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What I'm going to do is look at five categories of experiments,
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each of which challenges an old assumption of philanthropy.
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The first is mass collaboration, represented here by Wikipedia.
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Now, this may surprise you.
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But remember, philanthropy is about giving of time and talent, not just money.
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Clay Shirky, that great chronicler of everything networked,
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has captured the assumption that this challenges
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in such a beautiful way.
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He said, "We have lived in this world
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where little things are done for love
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and big things for money.
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Now we have Wikipedia.
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Suddenly big things can be done for love."
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Watch, this spring, for Paul Hawken's new book --
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Author and entrepreneur many of you may know about.
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The book is called "Blessed Unrest."
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And when it comes out, a series of wiki sites
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under the label WISER, are going to launch at the same time.
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WISER stands for World Index
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for Social and Environmental Responsibility.
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WISER sets out to document, link and empower
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what Paul calls the largest movement,
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and fastest-growing movement in human history:
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humanity's collective immune response
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to today's threats.
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Now, all of these big things for love -- experiments --
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aren't going to take off.
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But the ones that do
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are going to be the biggest, the most open,
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the fastest, the most connected form of philanthropy in human history.
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Second category is online philanthropy marketplaces.
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This is, of course, to philanthropy
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what eBay and Amazon are to commerce.
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Think of it as peer-to-peer philanthropy.
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And this challenges yet another assumption,
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which is that organized philanthropy is only for the very wealthy.
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Take a look, if you haven't, at DonorsChoose.
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Omidyar Network has made a big investment in DonorsChoose.
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It's one of the best known of these new marketplaces
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where a donor can go straight into a classroom
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and connect with what a teacher says they need.
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Take a look at Changing the Present,
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started by a TEDster, next time you need a wedding present or a holiday present.
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GiveIndia is for a whole country.
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And it goes on and on.
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The third category is represented by Warren Buffet,
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which I call aggregated giving.
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It's not just that Warren Buffet was so amazingly generous
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in that historic act last summer.
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It's that he challenged another assumption,
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that every giver should have his or her own
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fund or foundation.
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There are now, today, so many new funds
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that are aggregating giving and investing,
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bringing together people
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around a common goal, to think bigger.
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One of the best known is Acumen Fund, led by Jacqueline Novogratz,
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a TEDster who got a big boost here at TED.
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But there are many others: New Profit in Cambridge,
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New School's Venture Fund in Silicon Valley,
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Venture Philanthropy Partners in Washington,
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Global Fund for Women in San Francisco.
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Take a look at these.
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These funds are to philanthropy
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what venture capital, private equity, and eventually mutual funds
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are to investing,
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but with a twist --
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because often a community forms around these funds,
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as it has at Acumen and other places.
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Now, imagine for a second
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these first three types of experiments:
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mass collaboration, online marketplaces, aggregated giving.
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And understand how they help us re-perceive
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what organized philanthropy is.
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It's not about foundations necessarily; it's about the rest of us.
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And imagine the mash-up, if you will, of these things, in the future,
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when these things come together in the experiments of the future --
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imagine that somebody puts up, say,
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100 million dollars
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for an inspiring goal --
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there were 21 gifts of 100 million dollars or more in the US last year,
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not out of the question --
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but only puts it up if it's matched
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by millions of small gifts from around the globe,
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thereby engaging lots of people,
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and building visibility and engaging people
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in the goal that's stated.
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I'm going to look quickly at the fourth and fifth categories,
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which are innovation, competitions and social investing.
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They're betting a visible competition, a prize,
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can attract talent and money to some of the most difficult issues,
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and thereby speed the solution.
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This tackles yet another assumption,
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that the giver and the organization is at the center,
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as opposed to putting the problem at the center.
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You can look to these innovators
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to help us especially with things that require
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technological or scientific solution.
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That leaves the final category, social investing,
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which is really, anyway, the biggest of them all,
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represented here by Xigi.net.
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And this, of course, tackles the biggest assumption of all,
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that business is business,
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and philanthropy is the vehicle of people who want to create change in the world.
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Xigi is a new community site
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that's built by the community,
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linking and mapping this new social capital market.
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It lists already 1,000 entities
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that are offering debt and equity for social enterprise.
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So we can look to these innovators
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to help us remember
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that if we can leverage even a small amount of the capital
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that seeks a return,
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the good that can be driven could be astonishing.
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Now, what's really interesting here
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is that we're not thinking our way
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into a new way of acting;
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we're acting our way into a new way of thinking.
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Philanthropy is reorganizing itself
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before our very eyes.
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And even though all of the experiments and all of the big givers
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don't yet fulfill this aspiration,
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I think this is the new zeitgeist:
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open, big, fast, connected,
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and, let us also hope, long.
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We have got to realize that it is going to take a long time to do these things.
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If we don't develop the stamina to stick with things --
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whatever it is you pick, stick with it --
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all of this stuff is just going to be, you know, a fad.
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But I'm really hopeful.
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And I'm hopeful because it's not only philanthropy
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that's reorganizing itself,
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it's also whole other portions of the social sector,
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and of business,
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that are busy challenging "business as usual."
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And everywhere I go, including here at TED,
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I feel that there is a new moral hunger
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that is growing.
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What we're seeing is people really wrestling
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to describe what is this new thing that's happening.
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Words like "philanthrocapitalism,"
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and "natural capitalism," and "philanthroentrepreneur,"
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and "venture philanthropy."
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We don't have a language for it yet.
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Whatever we call it,
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it's new, it's beginning,
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and I think it's gong to quite significant.
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And that's where my imagined future comes in,
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which I am going to call the social singularity.
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Many of you will realize that I'm ripping a bit off of the science fiction writer
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Vernor Vinge's notion of a technological singularity,
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where a number of trends accelerate and converge
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and come together to create, really, a shockingly new reality.
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It may be that the social singularity
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ahead is the one that we fear the most:
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a convergence of catastrophes,
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of environmental degradation,
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of weapons of mass destruction, of pandemics,
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of poverty.
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That's because
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our ability to confront the problems that we face
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has not kept pace with our ability to create them.
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And as we've heard here,
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it is no exaggeration to say
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that we hold the future of our civilization in our hands
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as never before.
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The question is, is there a positive social singularity?
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Is there a frontier for us
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of how we live together?
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Our future doesn't have to be imagined.
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We can create a future where hope and history rhyme.
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But we have a problem.
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Our experience to date, both individually and collectively,
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hasn't prepared us for what we're going to need to do,
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or who we're going to need to be.
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We are going to need
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a new generation of citizen leaders
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willing to commit ourselves to growing and changing and learning
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as rapidly as possible.
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That's why I have one last thing I want to show you.
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This is a photograph taken about 100 years ago
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of my grandfather and great-grandfather.
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This is a newspaper publisher and a banker.
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And they were great community leaders.
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And, yes, they were great philanthropists.
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I keep this photograph close by to me --
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it's in my office --
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because I've always felt a mystical connection to these two men,
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both of whom I never knew.
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And so, in their honor,
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I want to offer you this blank slide.
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And I want you to imagine
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that this a photograph of you.
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And I want you to think about the community
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that you want to be part of creating.
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Whatever that means to you.
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And I want you to imagine
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that it's 100 years from now,
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and your grandchild, or great-grandchild,
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or niece or nephew or god-child,
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is looking at this photograph of you.
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What is the story you most want for them to tell?
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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