How to Build a Global Pro-Democracy Movement | Yordanos Eyoel | TED

43,343 views ・ 2023-12-22

TED


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It is September 1991.
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I'm wearing my new green and white uniform,
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and I show up to my second grade class with both excitement and trepidation.
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It should have been a walk in the park,
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but my first grade year was disrupted by a coup d’état,
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which was a culmination of a 17-year civil war in Ethiopia.
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As a second grader,
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I was now emerging back into the world after months of lockdown.
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What should have been this euphoric moment to reunite with my friends,
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however, became one of the most haunting moments of my life,
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shaping both my worldview and my future life's work.
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You see, in my prior six years of life, up until this point,
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I had no idea that I was a multiethnic individual
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in the Ethiopian context.
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I knew my parents belonged to different ethnic tribes,
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but I had not assigned meaning to these labels.
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But that formative September,
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I began to realize the political significance
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of each of my identities
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as systematically orchestrated by the new ruling government.
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So as any child trying to fit in and avoid bullying,
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I began the journey of claiming one ethnic identity, my father's,
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and hiding the other, my mother's.
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I spent my entire childhood navigating this identity minefield.
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Eventually, at 13, I immigrated to the US.
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And let me tell you what I learned.
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Exclusion -- it's global.
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You see, whether in a quasidemocracy like Ethiopia
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or a developed one like the United States,
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we are confronted with the ideology of both inclusion and othering.
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So the question becomes,
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how do we build societies that are both functional and inclusive?
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This is a question I've been wrestling with since second grade.
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I strongly believe the answer is democracy.
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This is not to say democracy as we have it today is perfect.
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In fact, it is struggling in so many ways,
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including in being effective and representative.
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However, with its inherent values of individual choice and collective voice,
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democracy is the most compelling vision we have for self-governance.
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So straightening democracy has become my life's work.
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In 2022, I founded the nonpartisan, nonprofit organization Keseb
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to address two challenges facing democracy:
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the rise of authoritarianism and the need to reimagine democracy.
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These are enormous challenges that I'm talking about,
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and addressing them requires a global pro-democracy movement.
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So how do we do it? How do we build this movement?
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I believe we need to make democracy inspiring.
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We need to accelerate the pace of innovation
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in the pro-democracy movement,
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and we as a global community need to come together
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to embrace our interconnectedness.
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I'll explain what I mean.
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Let's start with: make democracy inspiring and relevant.
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For a few decades now, democracy has been in crisis.
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We have to ask, why is this happening?
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In my work, we have found four key drivers:
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economic change and inequality;
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dysfunctional and unregulated information ecosystems;
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rapid demographic changes;
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and finally, the interplay between opportunistic populist leaders
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and political elites.
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Collectively, these forces are driving the crisis of democracy globally.
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This has left many people feeling disillusioned
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and thus more susceptible to manipulation by authoritarian narratives,
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activating what researchers call the “authoritarian reflex,”
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which is really about people's desire for answers and security.
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Authoritarian leaders are exploiting this
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by offering very simplistic
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and often ethnonationalist and malinformed solutions
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to address our everyday challenges,
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like building a wall to promote security.
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And unfortunately, they're succeeding.
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To make democracy inspiring,
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we have to tell a better story about democracy.
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Let me ask you this.
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Have you ever found yourself waking up before sunrise,
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thinking about the state of democracy?
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(Laughter)
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No? I mean, I do. It's my job.
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But I'm sure there are lots of you who do as well.
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But the vast majority of us,
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we wake up thinking about food, our families,
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our health, our jobs,
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the day-to-day life matters.
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Compared to these issues, often democracy seems so distant.
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But it isn't.
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It is embedded in everything that affects our daily life.
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We fight authoritarianism not only through elections,
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but also through a compelling pro-democracy narrative
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that is both practical and inspirational.
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Practical in that it speaks to how democracy meets our everyday needs
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and inspirational in that it addresses
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what political scientists call the “root ideas.”
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Who we are as a people,
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what we value, what matters to us.
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And we're seeing innovative examples for how to do this.
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In the US, the nonpartisan media organization PushBlack
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promotes civic engagement through sharing Black history,
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presenting information often people never learned in school.
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PushBlack's nine million subscribers
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are responsible for one of the most effective
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voter engagement programs in America.
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In Israel, before the war, a historic citizen-led movement
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had galvanized people across the ideological spectrum
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to stand up for democratic norms and institutions.
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This has led to the creation of a new political center
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that will impact the future of both Israel and Palestine.
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These are examples of ordinary people coming together
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to create compelling pro-democracy narratives
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that unite communities.
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Second, we need to accelerate the pace of innovation
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in the pro-democracy movement.
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The battle between autocracy and democracy is both conceptual and tactical.
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It requires offensive and defensive strategies,
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and on this front, the authoritarians have been quite innovative.
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Through effective cross-border learning,
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they have developed what scholars call "The Authoritarian Playbook."
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From North America to Southeast Asia to Europe,
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you see this playbook in motion.
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It consists of strategies such as undermining institutions,
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spreading disinformation,
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exploiting racial and religious differences,
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weaponizing fear,
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and stoking political violence.
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I call this playbook the “authoritarian innovation ecosystem,”
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because the tactics are not static.
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They are continually being perfected based on wins and losses across the globe.
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I'll give you an example.
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Election denialism.
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In 2020, former US President Donald Trump
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catalyzed a movement claiming the presidential election was stolen.
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This led to the January 6, 2021 riots in Washington, DC,
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and continues to define American politics today.
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Soon after that,
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Brazil's former president Jair Bolsonaro,
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also known as Trump of the Tropics,
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started to claim fraud in his upcoming election
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and then refused to acknowledge his loss.
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This led to the January 8, 2022 riots in Brasilia,
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and similar to the US, the country remains highly polarized.
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So if authoritarians are learning from each other
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and supporting one another,
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we have to ask: Why aren’t our best pro-democracy innovators doing the same?
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Currently, the pro-democracy movement is stymied
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because we operate in silos divided by national borders.
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We find ourselves responding to crises as opposed to preventing them.
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But the good news is that we don't have to start from scratch.
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There are pro-democracy innovations all over the world.
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What we need to do is learn from them and then weave them together globally.
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In Brazil, the organization Pacto pela Democracia
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builds cross-partisan coalitions to protect elections.
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Guess what? The American organization Protect Democracy does the same thing.
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Or take Academy for Future Leaders in France
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and Futurelect in South Africa.
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Both organizations are working to train young people
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to pursue political office based on their values.
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There are innovative pro-democracy organizations like these
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all over the world.
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Most of them don't even know about each other.
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We need strong transnational learning platforms,
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convenings and pro-democracy networks
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to enable these democracy champions
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to learn from each other and support one another.
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I believe if lessons can be imported and exported
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by the authoritarians to dismantle democracy,
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we can use the same strategy to save it.
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Third,
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we need to embrace our interconnectedness as a global community.
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I don't need to tell you how badly polarization is impacting us.
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We demonize each other within borders and across borders.
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This is a key component of the authoritarian playbook.
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The reality is that democracies depend on one another to survive,
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just as autocracies do,
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which means that we, as people of different nations
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also depend on one another.
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We can use this interdependence to promote oppression or liberation.
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We see this throughout history.
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For example, concentration camps
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were not actually an invention of Nazi Germany.
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They first appeared in Spanish Cuba and South Africa
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long before there was ever an Auschwitz.
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Concentration camps were an exported innovation
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for oppression.
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On the other side of the spectrum,
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civil disobedience that served as the anchor strategy
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for the US civil rights movement
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was honed by the nonviolent movement in India against British rule.
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An example of an imported innovation for liberation.
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Innovation for oppression, or innovation for liberation:
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it is up to us to choose.
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In today’s political discourse,
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isolationism is often presented as a solution to our many problems.
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But we know that's not the answer.
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We can be locally rooted and globally connected.
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We can be proud of our unique national identity and culture
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without disparaging another.
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The authoritarians want us to believe that problem is the other.
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I have been the other.
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In Ethiopia, in the US and most places I've ever visited or lived in.
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But I also know what it feels like to be a part of something,
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a part of a collective
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that is working towards a common and unifying vision,
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a better world.
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Our future lies in our togetherness,
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not in our separation within our countries and across borders.
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In this century, I believe we can be imaginative and audacious
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about what is possible.
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From Addis to Atlanta, from Brasilia to Berlin,
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from Jakarta to Jerusalem.
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This is our moment, for all of us,
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not only for professional democracy advocates like me,
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but for every single one of us
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to come together and build a truly global pro-democracy movement.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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