Bryan Stevenson: We need to talk about an injustice | TED

1,835,401 views ・ 2012-03-05

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00:16
Well, this is a really extraordinary honor for me.
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I spend most of my time in jails, in prisons, on death row.
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I spend most of my time in very low-income communities,
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in the projects and places where there's a great deal of hopelessness.
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And being here at TED and seeing the stimulation, hearing it,
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has been very, very energizing to me.
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And one of the things that's emerged in my short time here
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is that TED has an identity.
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And you can actually say things here that have impacts around the world.
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And sometimes when it comes through TED, it has meaning and power
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that it doesn't have when it doesn't.
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And I mention that because I think identity is really important.
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And we've had some fantastic presentations.
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And I think what we've learned is that, if you're a teacher,
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your words can be meaningful,
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but if you're a compassionate teacher, they can be especially meaningful.
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If you're a doctor, you can do some good things,
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but if you're a caring doctor, you can do some other things.
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So I want to talk about the power of identity.
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And I didn't learn about this actually practicing law
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and doing the work that I do.
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I actually learned about this from my grandmother.
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I grew up in a house that was the traditional African American home
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that was dominated by a matriarch,
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and that matriarch was my grandmother.
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She was tough, she was strong, she was powerful.
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She was the end of every argument in our family.
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(Laughter)
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She was the beginning of a lot of arguments in our family.
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(Laughter)
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She was the daughter of people who were actually enslaved.
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Her parents were born in slavery in Virginia in the 1840s.
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She was born in the 1880s,
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and the experience of slavery
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very much shaped the way she saw the world.
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And my grandmother was tough, but she was also loving.
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When I would see her as a little boy,
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she'd come up to me and give me these hugs.
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And she'd squeeze me so tight I could barely breathe,
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and then she'd let me go.
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And an hour or two later, if I saw her,
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she'd come over to me and say, "Bryan, do you still feel me hugging you?"
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If I said, "No," she'd assault me again,
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and if I said, "Yes," she'd leave me alone.
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And she just had this quality that you always wanted to be near her.
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And the only challenge was that she had 10 children.
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My mom was the youngest of her 10 kids.
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And sometimes when I would go and spend time with her,
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it would be difficult to get her time and attention.
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My cousins would be running around everywhere.
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And I remember, when I was about eight or nine years old,
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waking up one morning, going into the living room,
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and all of my cousins were running around.
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And my grandmother was sitting across the room,
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staring at me.
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And at first, I thought we were playing a game.
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And I would look at her, and I'd smile, but she was very serious.
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And after about 15 or 20 minutes of this,
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she got up and she came across the room,
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and she took me by the hand,
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and she said, "Come on, Bryan. You and I are going to have a talk."
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And I remember this just like it happened yesterday.
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I never will forget it.
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She took me out back and said, "Bryan, I'm going to tell you something,
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but you don't tell anybody what I tell you."
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I said, "OK, Mama."
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She said, "Now, you make sure you don't do that."
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I said, "Sure."
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Then she sat me down and she looked at me,
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and she said, "I want you to know I've been watching you."
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And she said, "I think you're special."
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She said, "I think you can do anything you want to do."
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I will never forget it.
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And then she said, "I just need you to promise me three things, Bryan."
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I said, "OK, Mama."
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She said, "The first thing I want you to promise me
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is that you'll always love your mom."
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She said, "That's my baby girl,
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and you have to promise me now you'll always take care of her."
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Well, I adored my mom, so I said, "Yes, Mama. I'll do that."
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Then she said, "The second thing I want you to promise me
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is that you'll always do the right thing,
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even when the right thing is the hard thing."
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And I thought about it, and I said, "Yes, Mama. I'll do that."
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Then finally, she said, "The third thing I want you to promise me
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is that you'll never drink alcohol."
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(Laughter)
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Well, I was nine years old, so I said, "Yes, Mama. I'll do that."
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I grew up in the country in the rural South,
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and I have a brother a year older than me and a sister a year younger.
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When I was about 14 or 15,
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one day, my brother came home and he had this six-pack of beer;
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I don't know where he got it.
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He grabbed me and my sister, and we went out in the woods,
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and we were just out there doing the stuff we crazily did,
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and he had a sip of this beer and gave some to my sister
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and she had some, and they offered it to me.
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I said, "No, that's OK. Y'all go ahead. I'm not going to have any."
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My brother said, "Come on. We're doing this today; you always do what we do.
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I had some, your sister had some. Have some beer."
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I said, "No, I don't feel right about that. Y'all go ahead."
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And then my brother stared at me and said, "What's wrong with you? Have some beer."
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Then he looked at me real hard and said,
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"Oh, I hope you're not still hung up on that conversation Mama had with you."
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(Laughter)
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I said, "What are you talking about?"
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He said, "Oh, Mama tells all the grandkids that they're special."
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(Laughter)
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I was devastated.
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(Laughter)
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And I'm going to admit something to you.
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I'm going to tell you something I probably shouldn't.
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I know this might be broadcast broadly.
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But I'm 52 years old,
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and I'm going to admit to you
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that I've never had a drop of alcohol.
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(Applause)
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I don't say that because I think that's virtuous;
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I say that because there is power in identity.
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When we create the right kind of identity,
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we can say things to the world around us
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that they don't actually believe make sense.
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We can get them to do things that they don't think they can do.
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When I thought about my grandmother,
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of course she would think all her grandkids were special.
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My grandfather was in prison during prohibition.
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My male uncles died of alcohol-related diseases.
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And these were the things she thought we needed to commit to.
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Well, I've been trying to say something about our criminal justice system.
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This country is very different today than it was 40 years ago.
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In 1972, there were 300,000 people in jails and prisons.
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Today, there are 2.3 million.
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The United States now has the highest rate of incarceration
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in the world.
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We have seven million people on probation and parole.
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And mass incarceration, in my judgment,
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has fundamentally changed our world.
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In poor communities, in communities of color,
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there is this despair,
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there is this hopelessness
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that is being shaped by these outcomes.
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One out of three Black men between the ages of 18 and 30
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is in jail, in prison, on probation or parole.
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In urban communities across this country --
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Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington --
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50 to 60 percent of all young men of color
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are in jail or prison
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or on probation or parole.
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Our system isn't just being shaped in these ways
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that seem to be distorting around race,
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they're also distorted by poverty.
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We have a system of justice in this country
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that treats you much better if you're rich and guilty
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than if you're poor and innocent.
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Wealth, not culpability, shapes outcomes.
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And yet, we seem to be very comfortable.
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The politics of fear and anger have made us believe
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that these are problems that are not our problems.
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We've been disconnected.
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It's interesting to me.
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We're looking at some very interesting developments in our work.
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My state of Alabama, like a number of states,
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actually permanently disenfranchises you if you have a criminal conviction.
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Right now in Alabama,
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34 percent of the Black male population has permanently lost the right to vote.
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We're actually projecting that in another 10 years,
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the level of disenfranchisement will be as high as it's been
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since prior to the passage of the Voting Rights Act.
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And there is this stunning silence.
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I represent children.
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A lot of my clients are very young.
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The United States is the only country in the world
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where we sentence 13-year-old children
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to die in prison.
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We have life imprisonment without parole for kids in this country.
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And we're actually doing some litigation.
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The only country in the world.
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I represent people on death row.
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It's interesting, this question of the death penalty.
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In many ways, we've been taught to think that the real question is:
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Do people deserve to die for the crimes they've committed?
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And that's a very sensible question.
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But there's another way of thinking about where we are in our identity.
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The other way of thinking about it is not:
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Do people deserve to die for the crimes they commit?,
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but: Do we deserve to kill?
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I mean, it's fascinating.
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Death penalty in America is defined by error.
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For every nine people who have been executed,
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we've actually identified one innocent person
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who's been exonerated and released from death row.
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A kind of astonishing error rate --
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one out of nine people, innocent.
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I mean, it's fascinating.
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In aviation, we would never let people fly on airplanes
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if, for every nine planes that took off,
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one would crash.
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(Laughter)
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But somehow, we can insulate ourselves from this problem.
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It's not our problem.
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It's not our burden.
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It's not our struggle.
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I talk a lot about these issues.
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I talk about race
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and this question of whether we deserve to kill.
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And it's interesting,
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when I teach my students about African American history,
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I tell them about slavery.
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I tell them about terrorism,
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the era that began at the end of reconstruction
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that went on to World War II.
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We don't really know very much about it.
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But for African Americans in this country,
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that was an era defined by terror.
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In many communities, people had to worry about being lynched.
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They had to worry about being bombed.
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It was the threat of terror that shaped their lives.
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And these older people come up to me now and say,
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"Mr. Stevenson, you give talks, you make speeches,
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you tell people to stop saying we're dealing with terrorism
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for the first time in our nation's history after 9/11."
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They tell me to say, "No, tell them that we grew up with that."
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And that era of terrorism, of course, was followed by segregation
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and decades of racial subordination
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and apartheid.
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And yet, we have in this country
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this dynamic where we really don't like to talk about our problems.
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We don't like to talk about our history.
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And because of that, we really haven't understood
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what it's meant to do the things we've done historically.
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We're constantly running into each other.
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We're constantly creating tensions and conflicts.
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We have a hard time talking about race,
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and I believe it's because we are unwilling to commit ourselves
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to a process of truth and reconciliation.
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In South Africa,
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people understood that we couldn't overcome apartheid
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without a commitment to truth and reconciliation.
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In Rwanda, even after the genocide, there was this commitment.
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But in this country, we haven't done that.
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I was giving some lectures in Germany about the death penalty.
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It was fascinating,
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because one of the scholars stood up after the presentation
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and said, "Well, you know, it's deeply troubling
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to hear what you're talking about."
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He said, "We don't have the death penalty in Germany,
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and of course, we can never have the death penalty in Germany."
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And the room got very quiet,
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and this woman said,
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"There's no way, with our history,
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we could ever engage in the systematic killing of human beings.
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It would be unconscionable for us
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to, in an intentional and deliberate way,
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set about executing people."
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And I thought about that.
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What would it feel like to be living in a world
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where the nation-state of Germany was executing people,
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especially if they were disproportionately Jewish?
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I couldn't bear it.
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It would be unconscionable.
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And yet, in this country,
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in the states of the Old South,
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we execute people --
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where you're 11 times more likely to get the death penalty
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if the victim is white than if the victim is Black,
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22 times more likely to get it
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if the defendant is Black and the victim is white --
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in the very states where there are, buried in the ground,
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the bodies of people who were lynched.
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And yet, there is this disconnect.
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Well, I believe that our identity is at risk,
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that when we actually don't care about these difficult things,
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the positive and wonderful things are nonetheless implicated.
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We love innovation.
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We love technology. We love creativity.
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We love entertainment.
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But ultimately,
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those realities are shadowed by suffering,
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abuse, degradation,
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marginalization.
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And for me, it becomes necessary to integrate the two,
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because ultimately, we are talking about a need to be more hopeful,
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more committed, more dedicated
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to the basic challenges of living in a complex world.
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And for me, that means
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spending time thinking and talking about the poor, the disadvantaged,
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12:33
those who will never get to TED,
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12:36
but thinking about them in a way that is integrated in our own lives.
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12:40
You know, ultimately, we all have to believe things we haven't seen.
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12:43
We do.
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As rational as we are, as committed to intellect as we are,
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12:47
innovation, creativity, development
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comes not from the ideas in our mind alone.
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They come from the ideas in our mind
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that are also fueled by some conviction in our heart.
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13:00
And it's that mind-heart connection that I believe compels us
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13:05
to not just be attentive to all the bright and dazzly things,
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13:10
but also the dark and difficult things.
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13:13
Václav Havel, the great Czech leader, talked about this.
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13:15
He said, "When we were in Eastern Europe and dealing with oppression,
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13:19
we wanted all kinds of things.
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13:20
But mostly what we needed was hope,
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13:22
an orientation of the spirit,
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13:24
a willingness to sometimes be in hopeless places
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13:27
and be a witness."
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13:28
Well, that orientation of the spirit is very much at the core of what I believe
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13:34
even TED communities have to be engaged in.
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13:38
There is no disconnect around technology and design
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13:42
that will allow us to be fully human
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13:45
until we pay attention to suffering,
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13:47
to poverty, to exclusion, to unfairness, to injustice.
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13:51
Now, I will warn you
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13:52
that this kind of identity is a much more challenging identity
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13:57
than ones that don't pay attention to this.
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14:00
It will get to you.
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14:01
I had the great privilege, when I was a young lawyer,
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14:04
of meeting Rosa Parks.
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And Ms. Parks used to come back to Montgomery every now and then,
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14:08
and she would get together with two of her dearest friends,
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14:11
these older women,
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Johnnie Carr, who was the organizer of the Montgomery bus boycott --
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14:16
amazing African American woman --
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and Virginia Durr, a white woman,
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14:19
whose husband, Clifford Durr, represented Dr. King.
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14:22
And these women would get together and just talk.
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14:24
And every now and then Ms. Carr would call me,
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14:26
and she'd say, "Bryan, Ms. Parks is coming to town.
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14:29
We're going to get together and talk. Do you want to come over and listen?"
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14:32
And I'd say, "Yes, ma'am, I do."
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14:34
She'd say, "What are you going to do when you get here?"
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14:37
I said, "I'm going to listen."
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14:38
And I'd go over there and I would, I'd just listen.
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14:40
It would be so energizing and so empowering.
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14:43
And one time I was over there listening to these women talk,
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14:45
and after a couple of hours, Ms. Parks turned to me and said,
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14:48
"Bryan, tell me what the Equal Justice Initiative is.
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14:51
Tell me what you're trying to do."
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14:52
And I began giving her my rap.
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14:54
"We're trying to challenge injustice.
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14:56
We're trying to help people who have been wrongly convicted.
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14:59
We're trying to confront bias and discrimination
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15:01
in the administration of criminal justice.
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15:03
We're trying to end life without parole sentences for children.
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15:06
We're trying to do something about the death penalty.
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15:08
We're trying to reduce the prison population.
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15:11
We're trying to end mass incarceration."
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15:12
I gave her my whole rap, and when I finished she looked at me
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15:15
and she said, "Mmm mmm mmm.
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15:17
That's going to make you tired, tired, tired."
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15:19
(Laughter)
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15:20
And that's when Ms. Carr leaned forward, she put her finger in my face,
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15:24
she said, "That's why you've got to be brave, brave, brave."
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15:29
And I actually believe that the TED community
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15:31
needs to be more courageous.
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15:34
We need to find ways to embrace these challenges,
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15:38
these problems, the suffering.
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15:40
Because ultimately, our humanity depends on everyone's humanity.
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15:44
I've learned very simple things doing the work that I do.
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15:47
It's just taught me very simple things.
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15:49
I've come to understand and to believe
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15:52
that each of us is more than the worst thing we've ever done.
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3884
15:55
I believe that for every person on the planet.
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15:59
I think if somebody tells a lie, they're not just a liar.
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16:02
I think if somebody takes something that doesn't belong to them,
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16:05
they're not just a thief.
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1210
16:06
I think even if you kill someone, you're not just a killer.
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16:09
And because of that, there's this basic human dignity
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16:12
that must be respected by law.
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16:14
I also believe
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1699
16:16
that in many parts of this country,
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16:18
and certainly in many parts of this globe,
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16:21
that the opposite of poverty is not wealth.
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16:25
I don't believe that.
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1311
16:26
I actually think, in too many places,
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16:29
the opposite of poverty is justice.
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16:32
And finally, I believe
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1772
16:35
that, despite the fact that it is so dramatic and so beautiful
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3711
16:38
and so inspiring and so stimulating,
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2546
16:41
we will ultimately not be judged by our technology,
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4076
16:45
we won't be judged by our design,
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2254
16:47
we won't be judged by our intellect and reason.
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2349
16:50
Ultimately, you judge the character of a society
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3572
16:53
not by how they treat their rich and the powerful and the privileged,
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3265
16:57
but by how they treat the poor,
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1722
16:58
the condemned,
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17:00
the incarcerated.
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1271
17:01
Because it's in that nexus
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1381
17:03
that we actually begin to understand truly profound things
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17:06
about who we are.
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1650
17:09
I sometimes get out of balance.
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1501
17:11
I'll end with this story.
390
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1212
17:12
I sometimes push too hard.
391
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1382
17:13
I do get tired, as we all do.
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2024
17:16
Sometimes those ideas get ahead of our thinking
393
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3231
17:19
in ways that are important.
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1437
17:21
And I've been representing these kids
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17:23
who have been sentenced to these very harsh sentences.
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2556
17:25
And I go to the jail and I see my client, who's 13 and 14,
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2859
17:28
and he's been certified to stand trial as an adult.
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2389
17:30
I start thinking, well, how did that happen?
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2074
17:33
How can a judge turn you into something that you're not?
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3067
17:36
And the judge has certified him as an adult, but I see this kid.
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3015
17:39
And I was up too late one night and I started thinking,
402
1059697
2591
17:42
well, if the judge can turn you into something you're not,
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2751
17:45
the judge must have magic power.
404
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1559
17:46
Yeah, Bryan, the judge has some magic power.
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2069
17:48
You should ask for some of that.
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1738
17:50
And because I was up too late and wasn't thinking real straight,
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3015
17:53
I started working on a motion.
408
1073564
1474
17:55
I had a client who was 14 years old, a young, poor Black kid.
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3181
17:58
And I started working on this motion, and the head of the motion was:
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1078267
3269
18:01
"Motion to try my poor, 14-year-old Black male client
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2523
18:04
like a privileged, white, 75-year-old corporate executive."
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3352
18:07
(Laughter)
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1103
18:08
(Applause and cheers)
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4473
18:13
And I put in my motion that there was prosecutorial misconduct
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2933
18:16
and police misconduct and judicial misconduct.
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2175
18:18
There was a crazy line in there
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1494
18:19
about how there's no conduct in this county, it's all misconduct.
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3069
18:22
And the next morning, I woke up and I thought,
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2170
18:25
now, did I dream that crazy motion, or did I actually write it?
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2969
18:28
And to my horror, not only had I written it,
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2065
18:30
but I had sent it to court.
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1332
18:31
(Applause)
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2289
18:34
A couple months went by,
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2214
18:36
and I just had forgotten all about it.
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2500
18:39
And I finally decided,
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1921
18:41
"Gosh, I've got to go to the court and do this crazy case."
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2858
18:43
And I got in my car, and I was feeling really overwhelmed -- overwhelmed.
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3442
18:47
And I got in my car and went to this courthouse.
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2266
18:49
And I was thinking, this is going to be so difficult, so painful.
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3073
18:52
And I finally got out of the car and started walking up to the courthouse.
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3528
18:56
And as I was walking up the steps,
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1668
18:57
there was an older Black man who was the janitor in this courthouse.
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3192
19:01
When this man saw me, he came over and said, "Who are you?"
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2906
19:04
I said, "I'm a lawyer." He said, "You're a lawyer?" I said, "Yes, sir."
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3352
19:07
And this man came over to me, and he hugged me.
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2364
19:10
And he whispered in my ear.
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1518
19:12
He said, "I'm so proud of you."
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2298
19:15
And I have to tell you, it was energizing.
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2583
19:18
It connected deeply with something in me
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2612
19:21
about identity,
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1488
19:22
about the capacity of every person to contribute to community,
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3975
19:26
to a perspective that is hopeful.
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1799
19:28
Well, I went into the courtroom.
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1558
19:30
And as soon as I walked in, the judge saw me coming.
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2449
19:32
He said, "Mr. Stevenson, did you write this crazy motion?"
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2736
19:35
I said, "Yes, sir. I did." And we started arguing.
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2406
19:38
And people started coming in,
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1405
19:39
just outraged I'd written these crazy things.
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2174
19:41
And police officers were coming in
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1632
19:43
and assistant prosecutors and clerk workers.
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2070
19:45
Before I knew it, the courtroom was filled with people
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2541
19:48
angry that we were talking about race,
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1814
19:49
that we were talking about poverty, talking about inequality.
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3231
19:53
And out of the corner of my eye, I could see this janitor pacing back and forth.
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3843
19:57
He kept looking through the window and could hear all the holler.
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3062
20:00
And finally, this older Black man with a very worried look on his face
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3309
20:03
came into the courtroom and sat behind me, almost at counsel table.
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3476
20:07
Ten minutes later, the judge said we'd take a break.
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2441
20:10
During the break, there was a deputy sheriff who was offended
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2867
20:13
that the janitor had come into court.
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1767
20:15
The deputy jumped up and ran over to this older Black man.
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2721
20:17
He said, "Jimmy, what are you doing in this courtroom?"
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2604
20:20
And this older Black man stood up and looked at that deputy
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2769
20:23
and he looked at me,
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1480
20:24
and he said, "I came into this courtroom to tell this young man,
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4222
20:29
'Keep your eyes on the prize, hold on.'"
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2835
20:32
I've come to TED
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1151
20:33
because I believe that many of you understand
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2907
20:36
that the moral arc of the universe is long,
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2025
20:38
but it bends toward justice;
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1840
20:40
that we cannot be full, evolved human beings
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20:43
until we care about human rights and basic dignity;
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2791
20:45
that all of our survival is tied to the survival of everyone;
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4026
20:49
that our visions of technology and design
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2510
20:52
and entertainment and creativity
476
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1577
20:54
have to be married with visions of humanity, compassion and justice.
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5381
20:59
And more than anything, for those of you who share that,
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3177
21:02
I've simply come to tell you
479
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2099
21:04
to keep your eyes on the prize, hold on.
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2592
21:07
Thank you very much.
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1197
21:08
(Applause and cheers)
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21:28
Chris Anderson: Brian, so you heard and saw
483
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2795
21:31
an obvious desire by this audience, this community,
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2978
21:34
to help you on your way and to do something on this issue.
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3172
21:37
Other than writing a check,
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2318
21:40
what could we do?
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2503
21:42
BS: Well, there are opportunities all around us.
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21:44
If you live in the state of California, for example,
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2486
21:47
there's a referendum coming up this spring
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2020
21:49
where there's going to be an effort to redirect some of the money we spend
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3496
21:53
on the politics of punishment.
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1464
21:54
For example, here in California,
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1540
21:56
we're going to spend one billion dollars
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2220
21:58
on the death penalty in the next five years --
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2155
22:00
one billion dollars.
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1966
22:02
And yet, 46 percent of all homicide cases don't result in arrest,
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4357
22:06
56 percent of all rape cases don't result.
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2111
22:09
So there's an opportunity to change that.
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1976
22:11
And this referendum would propose
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1585
22:12
having those dollars go to law enforcement and safety.
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3466
22:16
And I think that opportunity exists all around us.
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2342
22:18
CA: There's been this huge decline in crime in America
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22:22
over the last three decades.
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1336
22:23
And part of the narrative of that
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1980
22:25
is sometimes that it's about increased incarceration rates.
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4037
22:29
What would you say to someone who believed that?
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2244
22:31
BS: Well, actually, the violent crime rate has remained relatively stable.
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3487
22:35
The great increase in mass incarceration in this country
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22:37
wasn't really in violent crime categories.
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2036
22:40
It was this misguided war on drugs.
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1763
22:41
That's where the dramatic increases have come
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22:43
in our prison population.
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1424
22:45
(Applause)
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22:46
And we got carried away with the rhetoric of punishment.
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2977
22:49
And so we have "Three Strikes" laws
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1682
22:51
that put people in prison forever
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1977
22:53
for stealing a bicycle, for low-level property crimes,
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2546
22:56
rather than making them give those resources back
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2468
22:58
to the people who they victimized.
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23:00
I believe we need to do more
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23:01
to help people who are victimized by crime,
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2004
23:03
not do less.
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1151
23:05
And I think our current punishment philosophy
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23:07
does nothing for no one.
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23:08
And I think that's the orientation that we have to change.
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23:11
(Applause)
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23:13
CA: Bryan, you've struck a massive chord here.
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23:16
You're an inspiring person.
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23:17
Thank you so much for coming to TED. Thank you.
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23:19
(Applause and cheers)
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23:29
BS: Thank you. Thank you.
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23:31
(Applause and cheers)
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3674
About this website

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