Gordon Brown on global ethic vs. national interest

48,896 views ・ 2009-12-01

TED


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00:26
Chris Anderson: Thank you so much, Prime Minister,
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that was both fascinating and quite inspiring.
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So, you're calling for a global ethic.
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Would you describe that as global citizenship?
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Is that an idea that you believe in, and how would you define that?
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Gordon Brown: It is about global citizenship
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and recognizing our responsibilities to others.
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There is so much to do over the next few years
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that is obvious to so many of us
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to build a better world.
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And there is so much shared sense of what we need to do,
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that it is vital that we all come together.
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But we don't necessarily have the means to do so.
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So there are challenges to be met.
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I believe the concept of global citizenship
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will simply grow out of people talking to each other across continents.
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But of course the task is to create the institutions
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that make that global society work.
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But I don't think we should underestimate
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the extent to which massive changes in technology
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make possible the linking up of people across the world.
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CA: But people get excited about this idea of global citizenship,
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but then they get confused a bit again
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when they start thinking about patriotism,
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and how to combine these two.
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I mean, you're elected as Prime Minister
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with a brief to bat for Britain.
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How do you reconcile the two things?
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GB: Well, of course national identity remains important.
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But it's not at the expense of people accepting their global responsibilities.
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And I think one of the problems of recession
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is that people become more protectionist,
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they look in on themselves,
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they try to protect their own nation,
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perhaps at the expense of other nations.
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When you actually look at the motor of the world economy,
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it cannot move forward
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unless there is trade between the different countries.
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And any nation that would become protectionist over the next few years
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would deprive itself of the chance of getting the benefits
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of growth in the world economy.
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So, you've got to have a healthy sense of patriotism;
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that's absolutely important.
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But you've got to realize that this world has changed fundamentally,
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and the problems we have cannot be solved by one nation and one nation alone.
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CA: Well, indeed.
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But what do you do when the two come into conflict
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and you're forced to make a decision
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that either is in Britain's interest, or the interest of Britons,
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or citizens elsewhere in the world?
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GB: Well I think we can persuade people
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that what is necessary for Britain's long-term interests,
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what is necessary for America's long-term interests,
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is proper engagement with the rest of the world,
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and taking the action that is necessary.
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There is a great story, again, told about Richard Nixon.
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1958, Ghana becomes independent,
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so it is just over 50 years ago.
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Richard Nixon goes to represent the United States government
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at the celebrations for independence in Ghana.
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And it's one of his first outings as Vice President to an African country.
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He doesn't quite know what to do,
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so he starts going around the crowd
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and starts talking to people
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and he says to people in this rather unique way,
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"How does it feel to be free?"
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And he's going around, "How does it feel to be free?"
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"How does it feel to be free?"
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And then someone says,
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"How should I know? I come from Alabama."
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(Laughter)
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And that was the 1950s.
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Now, what is remarkable
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is that civil rights in America were achieved in the 1960s.
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But what is equally remarkable
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is socioeconomic rights in Africa have not moved forward very fast
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even since the age of colonialism.
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And yet, America and Africa have got a common interest.
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And we have got to realize that if we don't link up
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with those people who are sensible voices and democratic voices in Africa,
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to work together for common causes,
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then the danger of Al Qaeda and related groups
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making progress in Africa is very big.
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So, I would say that what seems sometimes
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to be altruism, in relation to Africa, or in relation to developing countries,
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is more than that.
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It is enlightened self-interest for us to work with other countries.
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And I would say that national interest
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and, if you like, what is the global interest
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to tackle poverty and climate change
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do, in the long run, come together.
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And whatever the short-run price for taking action on climate change
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or on security, or taking action to provide opportunities
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for people for education,
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these are prices that are worth paying
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so that you build a stronger global society
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where people feel able to feel comfortable with each other
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and are able to communicate with each other in such a way
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that you can actually build stronger links between different countries.
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CA: I still just want to draw out on this issue.
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So, you're on vacation at a nice beach,
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and word comes through that there's been a massive earthquake
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and that there is a tsunami advancing on the beach.
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One end of the beach, there is a house containing a family of five Nigerians.
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And at the other end of the beach there is a single Brit.
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You have time to --
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(Laughter)
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you have time to alert one house.
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What do you do?
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(Laughter)
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GB: Modern communications.
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(Applause)
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Alert both.
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(Applause)
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I do agree that my responsibility
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is first of all to make sure that people in our country are safe.
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And I wouldn't like anything that is said today to suggest
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that I am diminishing the importance of the responsibility
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that each leader has for their own country.
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But I'm trying to suggest that there is a huge opportunity
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open to us that was never open to us before.
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But the power to communicate across borders
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allows us to organize the world in a different way.
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And I think, look at the tsunami, it's a classic example.
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Where was the early warning systems?
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Where was the world acting together
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to deal with the problems that they knew arose
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from the potential for earthquakes,
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as well as the potential for climate change?
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And when the world starts to work together,
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with better early-warning systems,
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you can deal with some of these problems in a better way.
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I just think we're not seeing, at the moment,
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the huge opportunities open to us by the ability of people to cooperate
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in a world where either there was isolationism before
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or there was limited alliances based on convenience
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which never actually took you to deal with some of the central problems.
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CA: But I think this is the frustration
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that perhaps a lot of people have, like people in the audience here,
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where we love the kind of language that you're talking about.
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It is inspiring.
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A lot of us believe that that has to be the world's future.
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And yet, when the situation changes,
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you suddenly hear politicians talking as if,
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you know, for example, the life of one American soldier
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is worth countless numbers of Iraqi civilians.
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When the pedal hits the metal,
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the idealism can get moved away.
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I'm just wondering whether you can see that changing over time,
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whether you see in Britain
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that there are changing attitudes,
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and that people are actually more supportive
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of the kind of global ethic that you talk about.
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GB: I think every religion, every faith,
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and I'm not just talking here to people of faith or religion --
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it has this global ethic at the center of its credo.
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And whether it's Jewish or whether it's Muslim
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or whether it's Hindu, or whether it's Sikh,
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the same global ethic is at the heart of each of these religions.
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So, I think you're dealing with something
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that people instinctively see as part of their moral sense.
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So you're building on something that is not pure self-interest.
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You're building on people's ideas and values --
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that perhaps they're candles that burn very dimly on certain occasions.
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But it is a set of values that cannot, in my view, be extinguished.
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Then the question is,
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how do you make that change happen?
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How do you persuade people that it is in their interest
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to build strong --
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After the Second World War,
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we built institutions, the United Nations,
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the IMF, the World Bank,
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the World Trade Organization, the Marshall Plan.
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There was a period in which people talked about an act of creation,
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because these institutions were so new.
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But they are now out of date. They don't deal with the problems.
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You can't deal with the environmental problem
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through existing institutions.
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You can't deal with the security problem in the way that you need to.
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You can't deal with the economic and financial problem.
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So we have got to rebuild our global institutions,
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build them in a way that is suitable to the challenges of this time.
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And I believe that if you look at the biggest challenge we face,
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it is to persuade people to have the confidence
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that we can build a truly global society
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with the institutions that are founded on these rules.
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So, I come back to my initial point.
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Sometimes you think things are impossible.
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Nobody would have said 50 years ago
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that apartheid would have gone in 1990,
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or that the Berlin wall would have fallen at the turn of the '80s and '90s,
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or that polio could be eradicated,
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or perhaps 60 years ago,
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nobody would have said a man could gone to the Moon.
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All these things have happened.
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By tackling the impossible, you make the impossible possible.
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CA: And we have had a speaker who said that very thing,
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and swallowed a sword right after that, which was quite dramatic.
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(Laughter)
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GB: Followed my sword and swallow.
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CA: But, surely a true global ethic is for someone to say,
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"I believe that the life of every human on the planet
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is worth the same, equal consideration,
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regardless of nationality and religion."
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And you have politicians who have --
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you're elected.
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In a way, you can't say that.
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Even if, as a human being, you believe that,
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you can't say that.
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You're elected for Britain's interests.
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GB: We have a responsibility to protect.
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I mean look, 1918, the Treaty of Versailles,
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and all the treaties before that,
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the Treaty of Westphalia and everything else,
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were about protecting the sovereign right of countries
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to do what they want.
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Since then, the world has moved forward,
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partly as a result of what happened with the Holocaust,
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and people's concern about the rights of individuals
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within territories where they need protection,
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partly because of what we saw in Rwanda,
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partly because of what we saw in Bosnia.
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The idea of the responsibility to protect
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all individuals who are in situations where they are at humanitarian risk
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is now being established as a principle which governs the world.
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So, while I can't automatically say
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that Britain will rush to the aid of any citizen of any country, in danger,
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I can say that Britain is in a position
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where we're working with other countries
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so that this idea that you have a responsibility
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to protect people who are victims of either genocide or humanitarian attack,
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is something that is accepted by the whole world.
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Now, in the end, that can only be achieved
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if your international institutions work well enough to be able to do so.
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And that comes back to what the future role of the United Nations,
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and what it can do, actually is.
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But, the responsibility to protect is a new idea that is, in a sense,
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taken over from the idea of self-determination
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as the principle governing the international community.
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CA: Can you picture, in our lifetimes,
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a politician ever going out on a platform
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of the kind of full-form global ethic, global citizenship?
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And basically saying, "I believe that all people across the planet
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have equal consideration,
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and if in power we will act in that way.
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And we believe that the people of this country
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are also now global citizens and will support that ethic."
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GB: Is that not what we're doing in the debate about climate change?
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We're saying that you cannot solve
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the problem of climate change in one country;
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you've got to involve all countries.
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You're saying that you must, and you have a duty to help those countries
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that cannot afford to deal with the problems of climate change themselves.
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You're saying you want a deal
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with all the different countries of the world
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where we're all bound together
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to cutting carbon emissions in a way that is to the benefit of the whole world.
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We've never had this before because Kyoto didn't work.
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If you could get a deal at Copenhagen, where people agreed,
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A, that there was a long-term target for carbon emission cuts,
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B, that there was short-range targets that had to be met
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so this wasn't just abstract;
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it was people actually making decisions now
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that would make a difference now,
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and if you could then find a financing mechanism
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that meant that the poorest countries that had been hurt
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by our inability to deal with climate change
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over many, many years and decades
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are given special help
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so that they can move to energy-efficient technologies,
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and they are in a position financially
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to be able to afford the long-term investment
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that is associated with cutting carbon emissions,
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then you are treating the world equally,
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by giving consideration to every part of the planet
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and the needs they have.
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It doesn't mean that everybody does exactly the same thing,
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because we've actually got to do more financially
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to help the poorest countries,
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but it does mean there is equal consideration
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for the needs of citizens in a single planet.
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CA: Yes.
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And then of course the theory is still that those talks get rent apart
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by different countries fighting over their own individual interests.
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GB: Yes, but I think Europe has got a position,
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which is 27 countries have already come together.
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I mean, the great difficulty in Europe
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is if you're at a meeting and 27 people speak,
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it takes a very, very long time.
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But we did get an agreement on climate change.
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America has made its first disposition on this
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with the bill that President Obama should be congratulated
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for getting through Congress.
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Japan has made an announcement.
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China and India have signed up to the scientific evidence.
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And now we've got to move them to accept
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a long-term target, and then short-term targets.
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But more progress has been made, I think, in the last few weeks
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than had been made for some years.
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And I do believe that there is a strong possibility
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that if we work together, we can get that agreement to Copenhagen.
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I certainly have been putting forward proposals
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that would have allowed the poorest parts of the world
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to feel that we have taken into account their specific needs.
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And we would help them adapt.
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And we would help them make the transition to a low-carbon economy.
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I do think a reform of the international institutions is vital to this.
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When the IMF was created in the 1940s,
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it was created with resources that were five percent or so of the world's GDP.
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14:58
The IMF now has limited resources, one percent.
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It can't really make the difference
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that ought to be made in a period of crisis.
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So, we've got to rebuild the world institutions.
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And that's a big task:
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persuading all the different countries
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with the different voting shares in these institutions to do so.
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There is a story told about the three world leaders
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of the day getting a chance to get some advice from God.
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And the story is told that Bill Clinton went to God
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and he asked when there will be successful climate change
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and a low-carbon economy.
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And God shook his head and said,
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"Not this year, not this decade, perhaps not even in [your] lifetime."
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And Bill Clinton walked away in tears
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because he had failed to get what he wanted.
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And then the story is that Barroso, the president of the European Commission,
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went to God and he asked,
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"When will we get a recovery of global growth?"
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15:52
And God said, "Not this year, not in this decade,
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perhaps not in your lifetime."
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So Barroso walked away crying and in tears.
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And then the Secretary-General of the United Nations
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came up to speak to God and said,
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"When will our international institutions work?"
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And God cried.
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(Laughter)
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It is very important to recognize that this reform of institutions
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is the next stage after agreeing upon ourselves
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that there is a clear ethic upon which we can build.
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CA: Prime Minister, I think there are many in the audience
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who are truly appreciative of the efforts you made
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in terms of the financial mess we got ourselves into.
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And there are certainly many people in the audience
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who will be cheering you on as you seek to advance this global ethic.
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Thank you so much for coming to TED.
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GB: Well, thank you.
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(Applause)
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