The political power of being a good neighbor | Michael Tubbs

53,205 views ・ 2019-07-16

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00:12
So I know for sure there's at least one thing I have in common with dentists.
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I absolutely hate the holiday of Halloween.
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Now, this hatred stems not from a dislike of cavities,
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nor was it a lifetime in the making.
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Rather, this hatred stems from a particular incident
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that happened nine years ago.
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Nine years ago, I was even younger, I was 20 years old,
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and I was an intern in the White House.
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The other White House.
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And my job was to work with mayors and councilors nationwide.
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November 1, 2010 began just like any other day.
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I turned on the computer, went on Google and prepared to write my news clips.
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I was met with a call from my mother, which isn't that out the norm,
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my mom likes to text, call, email, Facebook, Instagram, all that.
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So I answered the phone expecting to hear maybe some church gossip,
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or maybe something from WorldStarHipHop she had discovered.
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But when I answered the phone,
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I was met with a tone that was unlike anything I had ever heard from my mother.
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My mother's loud.
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But she spoke in a hush, still, muffled tone
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that conveyed a sense of sadness.
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And as she whispered, she said, "Michael,
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your cousin Donnell was murdered last night,
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on Halloween,
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at a house party in Stockton."
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And like far too many people in this country,
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particularly from communities like mine,
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particularly that look like me,
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I spent the better part of the year dealing with anger, rage, nihilism,
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and I had a choice to make.
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The choice was one between action and apathy.
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The choice was what could I do to put purpose to this pain.
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I spent a year dealing with feelings of survivor's guilt.
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What was the point of me being at Stanford,
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what was the point of me being at the White House
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if I was powerless to help my own family?
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And my own family was dying, quite literally.
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I then began to feel a little selfish and say,
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what's the point of even trying to make the world a better place?
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Maybe that's just the way it is.
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Maybe I would be smart to take advantage of all the opportunities given to me
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and make as much money as possible,
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so I'm comfortable, and my immediate family is comfortable.
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But finally, towards the end of that year,
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I realized I wanted to do something.
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So I made the crazy decision, as a senior in college,
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to run for city council.
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That decision was unlikely for a couple of reasons,
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and not just my age.
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You see, my family is far from a political dynasty.
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More men in my family have been incarcerated than in college.
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In fact, as I speak today, my father is still incarcerated.
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My mother, she had me as a teenager,
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and government wasn't something we had warm feelings from.
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You see, it was the government
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that red-lined the neighborhoods I grew up in.
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Full of liquor stores and no grocery stores,
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there was a lack of opportunity and concentrated poverty.
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It was the government and the politicians
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that made choices,
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like the war on drugs and three strikes,
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that have incarcerated far too many people in our country.
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It was the government and political actors
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that made the decisions that created the school funding formulas,
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that made it so the school I went to receive less per pupil spending
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than schools in more affluent areas.
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So there was nothing about that background that made it likely for me to choose
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to be involved in being a government actor.
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And at the same time, Stockton was a very unlikely place.
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Stockton is my home town, a city of 320,000 people.
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But historically, it's been a place people run from, rather than come back to.
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It's a city that's incredibly diverse.
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Thirty-five percent Latino, 35 percent white,
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20 percent Asian, 10 percent African American,
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the oldest Sikh temple in North America.
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But at the time I ran for office,
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we were also the largest city in the country at that time
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to declare bankruptcy.
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At the time I decided to run for office,
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we also had more murders per capita than Chicago.
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At the time I decided to run for office,
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we had a 23 percent poverty rate,
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a 17 percent college attainment rate
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and a host of challenges and issues beyond the scope of any 21-year-old.
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So after I won my election,
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I did what I usually do when I feel overwhelmed,
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I realized the problems of Stockton were far bigger than me
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and that I might need a little divine intervention.
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So as I prepared for my first council meeting,
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I went back to some wisdom my grandmother taught me.
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A parable I think we all know,
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that really constitutes the governing frame we're using
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to reinvent Stockton today.
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I remember in Sunday school, my grandmother told me
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that at one time, a guy asked Jesus, "Who was my neighbor?
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Who was my fellow citizen?
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Who am I responsible for?"
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And instead of a short answer, Jesus replied with a parable.
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He said there was a man on a journey,
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walking down Jericho Road.
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As he was walking down the road,
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he was beat up, left on the side of the road,
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stripped of all his clothes,
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had everything stolen from and left to die.
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And then a priest came by, saw the man on the side of the road,
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maybe said a silent prayer,
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hopes and prayers, prayers that he gets better.
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Maybe saw the man on the side of the road
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and surmised that it was ordained by God
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for this particular man, this particular group
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to be on the side of the road, there's nothing I can do to change it.
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After the priest walked by, maybe a politician walked by.
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A 28-year-old politician, for example.
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Saw the man on the side of the road and saw how beat up the man was,
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saw that the man was a victim of violence, or fleeing violence.
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And the politician decided, "You know what?
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Instead of welcoming this man in, let's build a wall.
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Maybe the politician said,
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"Maybe this man chose to be on the side of the road."
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That if he just pulled himself up by his bootstraps,
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despite his boots being stolen,
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and got himself back on the horse,
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he could be successful, and there's nothing I could do."
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And then finally, my grandmother said, a good Samaritan came by,
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saw the man on the side of the road
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and looked and saw not centuries of hatred
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between Jews and Samaritans,
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looked and saw not his fears reflected,
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not economic anxiety,
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not "what's going to happen to me because things are changing."
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But looked and saw a reflection of himself.
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He saw his neighbor, he saw his common humanity.
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He didn't just see it, he did something about it,
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my grandmother said.
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He got down on one knee,
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he made sure the man was OK,
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and I heard, even gave him a room at that nice Fairmont,
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the Pan Pacific one.
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(Laughter)
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And as I prepared to govern,
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I realized that given the diversity of Stockton,
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the first step to making change will be to again answer the same question:
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Who is our neighbor?
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And realizing that our destiny as a city was tied up in everyone.
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Particularly those who are left on the side of the road.
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But then I realized that charity isn't justice,
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that acts of empathy isn't justice,
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that being a good neighbor is necessary but not sufficient,
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and there was more that had to be done.
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So looking at the story,
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I realized that the road, Jericho Road, has a nickname.
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It's known as the Bloody Pass, the Ascent of Red,
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because the road is structured for violence.
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This Jericho Road is narrow, it's conducive for ambushing.
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Meaning, a man on the side of the road wasn't abnormal.
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Wasn't strange.
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And in fact, it was something that was structured to happen,
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it was supposed to happen.
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And Johan Galtung, a peace theorist,
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talks about structural violence in our society.
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He says, "Structural violence is the avoidable impairment
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of basic human needs."
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Dr. Paul Farmer talks about structural violence
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and talks about how it's the way
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our institutions, our policies, our culture
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creates outcomes that advantage some people and disadvantage others.
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And then I realized, much like the road in Jericho,
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in many ways, Stockton, our society,
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has been structured for the outcomes we complain about.
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That we should not be surprised
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when we see that kids in poverty don't do well in school,
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that we should not be surprised to see wealth gaps by race and ethnicity.
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We should not be surprised to see income pay disparities between genders,
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because that's what our society, historically, has been structured to do,
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and it's working accordingly.
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(Applause)
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So taking this wisdom,
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I rolled up my sleeves and began to work.
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And there's three quick stories I want to share,
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that point to not that we figured everything out,
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not that we have arrived,
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but we're trending in the right direction.
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The first story, about the neighbor.
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When I was a city council member,
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I was working with one of the most conservative members in our community
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on opening a health clinic for undocumented people
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in the south part of the city, and I loved it.
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And as we opened the clinic,
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we had a resolution to sign,
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he presented me a gift.
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It was an O'Reilly Factor lifetime membership pin.
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(Laughter)
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Mind you, I didn't ask what he did to get such a gift.
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What blood oath -- I had no idea how he got it.
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But I looked at him and I said,
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"Well, how are we working together to open a health clinic,
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to provide free health care for undocumented people,
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and you're an O'Reilly Factor member?"
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He looked at me and said,
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"Councilman Tubbs, this is for my neighbors."
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And he's a great example of what it means
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to be a good neighbor, at least in that instance.
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The robbers.
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So after four years on city council, I decided to run for mayor,
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realizing that being a part-time councilman wasn't enough
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to enact the structural changes we need to see in Stockton,
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and I came to that conclusion by looking at the data.
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So my old council district, where I grew up,
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is 10 minutes away from a more affluent district.
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And 10 minutes away in the same city,
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the difference between zip code 95205 and 95219
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in life expectancy is 10 years.
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Ten minutes away, 4.5 miles,
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10 years life expectancy difference,
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and not because of the choices people are making.
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Because no one chose to live in an unsafe community
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where they can't exercise.
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No one chose to put more liquor stores than grocery stores in the community.
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No one chose these things, but that's the reality.
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I realized, as a councilman,
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to enact a structural change I wanted to see,
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where between the same zip codes
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there's a 30 percent difference in the rate of unemployment,
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there's a 75,000 dollars a year difference in income,
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that being a councilman was not going to cut it.
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So that's when I decided to run for mayor.
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And as mayor, we've been focused on the robbers and the road.
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So in Stockton, as I mentioned,
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we have historically had problems with violent crime.
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In fact, that's why I decided to run for office in the first place.
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And my first job as mayor was helping our community
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to see ourselves, our neighbors,
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not just in the people victimized by violence
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but also in the perpetrators.
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We realized that those who enact pain in our society,
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those who are committing homicides and contributing to gun violence,
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are oftentimes victims themselves.
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They have high rates of trauma, they have been shot at,
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they've known people who have been shot.
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That doesn't excuse their behavior, but it helps explain it,
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and as a community, we have to see these folks as us, too.
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That they too are our neighbors.
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So for the past three years --
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(Applause)
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So for the past three years, we've been working on two strategies:
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Ceasefire and Advance Peace,
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where we give these guys as much attention, as much love
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from social services, from opportunities, from tattoo removals,
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in some cases even cash,
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as a gift from law enforcement.
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And last year, we saw a 40 percent reduction in homicides
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and a 30 percent reduction in violent crime.
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(Applause)
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And now, the road.
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I mentioned that my community has a 23 percent poverty rate.
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As someone who comes from poverty, it's a personal issue for me.
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So I decided that we wouldn't just do a program,
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or we wouldn't just do something to go around the edges,
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but we would call into question the very structure
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that produces poverty in the first place.
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So starting in February, we launched a basic income demonstration,
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where for the next 18 months,
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as a pilot, 130 families, randomly selected,
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who live in zip codes at or below the median income of the city,
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are given 500 dollars a month.
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And we're doing this for a couple of reasons.
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We're doing it because we realize
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that something is structurally wrong in America,
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when one in two Americans can't afford one 400-dollar emergency.
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We're doing it because we realize that something is structurally wrong
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when wages have only increased six percent between 1979 and 2013.
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We're doing it because we realize something is structurally wrong
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when people working two and three jobs,
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doing all the jobs no one in here wants to do,
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can't pay for necessities, like rent,
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like lights, like health care, like childcare.
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(Applause)
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So I would say, Stockton again, we have real issues.
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I have constituent emails in my phone now, about the homelessness issue,
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about some of the violent crime we're still experiencing.
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But I would say, I think as a society, we would be wise to go back
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to those old Bible stories we were taught growing up,
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and understand that number one,
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we have to begin to see each other as neighbors,
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that when we see someone different from us,
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they should not reflect our fears, our anxieties, our insecurities,
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the prejudices we've been taught, our biases -- but we should see ourselves.
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We should see our common humanity.
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Because I think once we do that,
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we can do the more important work of restructuring the road.
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Because again, I understand some listening are saying,
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"Well, Mayor Tubbs, you're talking about structural violence and structural this,
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but you're on the stage.
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That the structures can't be too bad if you could come up from poverty,
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have a father in jail, go to Stanford,
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work in the White House and become mayor."
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And I would respond by saying the term for that is exceptionalism.
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Meaning that we recognize it's exceptional for people to escape the structures.
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Meaning by our very language,
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we understand that the things we're seeing in our world are by design.
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And I think that task for us, as TEDsters,
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and as good people, just people, moral people,
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is really do the hard work necessary of not just joining hands as neighbors,
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but using our hands to restructure our road,
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a road that in this country has been rooted in things like white supremacy.
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A road like in this country has been rooted in things like misogyny.
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A road that's not working for far too many people.
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And I think today, tomorrow and 2020 we have a chance to change that.
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So as I prepare to close,
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I started with a story from nine years ago and I'll end with one.
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So after my cousin was murdered,
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I was lucky enough to go on the Freedom Rides
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with some of the original freedom riders.
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And they taught me a lot about restructuring the road.
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And one guy in particular, Bob Singleton, asked me a question
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I'm going to leave with us today.
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We were going to Anniston, Alabama, and he said, "Michael,"
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and I said, "Yes, sir."
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He said, "I was arrested on August 4, 1961.
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Now why is that day important?"
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And I said, "Well, you were arrested,
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if you weren't arrested, we wouldn't be on this bus.
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if we weren't on this bus, we wouldn't have the rights we enjoy."
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He rolled his eyes and said, "No, son."
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He said, "On that day, Barack Obama was born."
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And then he said he had no idea that the choice he made
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to restructure the road
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would pave the way,
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so a child born as a second class citizen,
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who wouldn't be able to even get a cup of water at a counter,
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would have the chance, 50 years later, to be president.
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Then he looked at me and he said,
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"What are you prepared to do today
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so that 50 years from now
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a child born has a chance to be president?"
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And I think, TED, that's the question before us today.
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We know things are jacked up.
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I think what we've seen recently isn't abnormal
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but a reflection of a system that's been structured
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to produce such crazy outcomes.
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But I think it's also an opportunity.
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Because these structures we inherit aren't acts of God
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but acts of men and women, they're policy choices,
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they're by politicians like me, approved by voters like you.
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And we have the chance and the awesome opportunity
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to do something about it.
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So my question is: What are we prepared to do today,
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so that a child born today, 50 years from now
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isn't born in a society rooted in white supremacy;
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isn't born into a society riddled with misogyny;
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isn't born into a society riddled with homophobia and transphobia
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and anti-Semitism and Islamophobia and ableism,
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and all the phobias and -isms?
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What are we prepared to do today,
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so that 50 years from now
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we have a road in our society that's structured
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to reflect what we hold to be self-evident?
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That all men, that all women,
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that even all trans people
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are created equal
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and are endowed by your Creator with certain unalienable rights,
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including life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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