The political power of being a good neighbor | Michael Tubbs

53,143 views ・ 2019-07-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
So I know for sure there's at least one thing I have in common with dentists.
0
12708
5060
00:17
I absolutely hate the holiday of Halloween.
1
17792
4351
00:22
Now, this hatred stems not from a dislike of cavities,
2
22167
3642
00:25
nor was it a lifetime in the making.
3
25833
2351
00:28
Rather, this hatred stems from a particular incident
4
28207
3144
00:31
that happened nine years ago.
5
31375
2059
00:33
Nine years ago, I was even younger, I was 20 years old,
6
33458
3851
00:37
and I was an intern in the White House.
7
37333
2143
00:39
The other White House.
8
39500
1268
00:40
And my job was to work with mayors and councilors nationwide.
9
40792
3226
00:44
November 1, 2010 began just like any other day.
10
44042
3934
00:48
I turned on the computer, went on Google and prepared to write my news clips.
11
48000
4726
00:52
I was met with a call from my mother, which isn't that out the norm,
12
52750
3309
00:56
my mom likes to text, call, email, Facebook, Instagram, all that.
13
56083
3334
01:00
So I answered the phone expecting to hear maybe some church gossip,
14
60667
4184
01:04
or maybe something from WorldStarHipHop she had discovered.
15
64875
3934
01:08
But when I answered the phone,
16
68833
2226
01:11
I was met with a tone that was unlike anything I had ever heard from my mother.
17
71083
4518
01:15
My mother's loud.
18
75625
1434
01:17
But she spoke in a hush, still, muffled tone
19
77083
4268
01:21
that conveyed a sense of sadness.
20
81375
2476
01:23
And as she whispered, she said, "Michael,
21
83875
2434
01:26
your cousin Donnell was murdered last night,
22
86333
3226
01:29
on Halloween,
23
89583
1268
01:30
at a house party in Stockton."
24
90875
2351
01:33
And like far too many people in this country,
25
93250
2434
01:35
particularly from communities like mine,
26
95708
1935
01:37
particularly that look like me,
27
97667
1684
01:39
I spent the better part of the year dealing with anger, rage, nihilism,
28
99375
5018
01:44
and I had a choice to make.
29
104417
1726
01:46
The choice was one between action and apathy.
30
106167
3392
01:49
The choice was what could I do to put purpose to this pain.
31
109583
3875
01:54
I spent a year dealing with feelings of survivor's guilt.
32
114292
3226
01:57
What was the point of me being at Stanford,
33
117542
2017
01:59
what was the point of me being at the White House
34
119583
2310
02:01
if I was powerless to help my own family?
35
121917
2184
02:04
And my own family was dying, quite literally.
36
124125
3809
02:07
I then began to feel a little selfish and say,
37
127958
2268
02:10
what's the point of even trying to make the world a better place?
38
130250
3059
02:13
Maybe that's just the way it is.
39
133333
1935
02:15
Maybe I would be smart to take advantage of all the opportunities given to me
40
135292
3767
02:19
and make as much money as possible,
41
139083
1685
02:20
so I'm comfortable, and my immediate family is comfortable.
42
140792
3101
02:23
But finally, towards the end of that year,
43
143917
2101
02:26
I realized I wanted to do something.
44
146042
2226
02:28
So I made the crazy decision, as a senior in college,
45
148292
3226
02:31
to run for city council.
46
151542
2059
02:33
That decision was unlikely for a couple of reasons,
47
153625
3059
02:36
and not just my age.
48
156708
1560
02:38
You see, my family is far from a political dynasty.
49
158292
3684
02:42
More men in my family have been incarcerated than in college.
50
162000
4226
02:46
In fact, as I speak today, my father is still incarcerated.
51
166250
3851
02:50
My mother, she had me as a teenager,
52
170125
2351
02:52
and government wasn't something we had warm feelings from.
53
172500
3268
02:55
You see, it was the government
54
175792
1684
02:57
that red-lined the neighborhoods I grew up in.
55
177500
2476
03:00
Full of liquor stores and no grocery stores,
56
180000
2143
03:02
there was a lack of opportunity and concentrated poverty.
57
182167
3226
03:05
It was the government and the politicians
58
185417
2351
03:07
that made choices,
59
187792
1267
03:09
like the war on drugs and three strikes,
60
189083
1976
03:11
that have incarcerated far too many people in our country.
61
191083
3060
03:14
It was the government and political actors
62
194167
2476
03:16
that made the decisions that created the school funding formulas,
63
196667
3101
03:19
that made it so the school I went to receive less per pupil spending
64
199792
3684
03:23
than schools in more affluent areas.
65
203500
1934
03:25
So there was nothing about that background that made it likely for me to choose
66
205458
3726
03:29
to be involved in being a government actor.
67
209208
2060
03:31
And at the same time, Stockton was a very unlikely place.
68
211292
3434
03:34
Stockton is my home town, a city of 320,000 people.
69
214750
3768
03:38
But historically, it's been a place people run from, rather than come back to.
70
218542
4351
03:42
It's a city that's incredibly diverse.
71
222917
2101
03:45
Thirty-five percent Latino, 35 percent white,
72
225042
2809
03:47
20 percent Asian, 10 percent African American,
73
227875
2476
03:50
the oldest Sikh temple in North America.
74
230375
2268
03:52
But at the time I ran for office,
75
232667
1851
03:54
we were also the largest city in the country at that time
76
234542
3226
03:57
to declare bankruptcy.
77
237792
1476
03:59
At the time I decided to run for office,
78
239292
2017
04:01
we also had more murders per capita than Chicago.
79
241333
3226
04:04
At the time I decided to run for office,
80
244583
1935
04:06
we had a 23 percent poverty rate,
81
246542
2767
04:09
a 17 percent college attainment rate
82
249333
2518
04:11
and a host of challenges and issues beyond the scope of any 21-year-old.
83
251875
5184
04:17
So after I won my election,
84
257083
1518
04:18
I did what I usually do when I feel overwhelmed,
85
258625
2268
04:20
I realized the problems of Stockton were far bigger than me
86
260917
3726
04:24
and that I might need a little divine intervention.
87
264667
2809
04:27
So as I prepared for my first council meeting,
88
267500
2142
04:29
I went back to some wisdom my grandmother taught me.
89
269666
3018
04:32
A parable I think we all know,
90
272708
1851
04:34
that really constitutes the governing frame we're using
91
274583
2572
04:37
to reinvent Stockton today.
92
277179
2005
04:39
I remember in Sunday school, my grandmother told me
93
279208
2393
04:41
that at one time, a guy asked Jesus, "Who was my neighbor?
94
281625
3934
04:45
Who was my fellow citizen?
95
285583
1893
04:47
Who am I responsible for?"
96
287500
1851
04:49
And instead of a short answer, Jesus replied with a parable.
97
289375
3184
04:52
He said there was a man on a journey,
98
292583
2435
04:55
walking down Jericho Road.
99
295042
2184
04:57
As he was walking down the road,
100
297250
1559
04:58
he was beat up, left on the side of the road,
101
298833
2476
05:01
stripped of all his clothes,
102
301333
1435
05:02
had everything stolen from and left to die.
103
302792
2934
05:05
And then a priest came by, saw the man on the side of the road,
104
305750
4393
05:10
maybe said a silent prayer,
105
310167
1892
05:12
hopes and prayers, prayers that he gets better.
106
312083
2976
05:15
Maybe saw the man on the side of the road
107
315083
2018
05:17
and surmised that it was ordained by God
108
317125
2934
05:20
for this particular man, this particular group
109
320083
2435
05:22
to be on the side of the road, there's nothing I can do to change it.
110
322542
3434
05:26
After the priest walked by, maybe a politician walked by.
111
326000
3226
05:29
A 28-year-old politician, for example.
112
329250
2351
05:31
Saw the man on the side of the road and saw how beat up the man was,
113
331625
4601
05:36
saw that the man was a victim of violence, or fleeing violence.
114
336250
3309
05:39
And the politician decided, "You know what?
115
339583
2018
05:41
Instead of welcoming this man in, let's build a wall.
116
341625
2518
05:44
Maybe the politician said,
117
344167
1351
05:45
"Maybe this man chose to be on the side of the road."
118
345542
3184
05:48
That if he just pulled himself up by his bootstraps,
119
348750
2559
05:51
despite his boots being stolen,
120
351333
1643
05:53
and got himself back on the horse,
121
353000
2143
05:55
he could be successful, and there's nothing I could do."
122
355167
3267
05:58
And then finally, my grandmother said, a good Samaritan came by,
123
358458
4060
06:02
saw the man on the side of the road
124
362542
2684
06:05
and looked and saw not centuries of hatred
125
365250
2684
06:07
between Jews and Samaritans,
126
367958
1685
06:09
looked and saw not his fears reflected,
127
369667
4434
06:14
not economic anxiety,
128
374125
1393
06:15
not "what's going to happen to me because things are changing."
129
375542
2976
06:18
But looked and saw a reflection of himself.
130
378542
2017
06:20
He saw his neighbor, he saw his common humanity.
131
380583
2976
06:23
He didn't just see it, he did something about it,
132
383583
2286
06:25
my grandmother said.
133
385893
1250
06:27
He got down on one knee,
134
387167
1309
06:28
he made sure the man was OK,
135
388500
1934
06:30
and I heard, even gave him a room at that nice Fairmont,
136
390458
2935
06:33
the Pan Pacific one.
137
393417
1559
06:35
(Laughter)
138
395000
2750
06:39
And as I prepared to govern,
139
399333
1435
06:40
I realized that given the diversity of Stockton,
140
400792
2976
06:43
the first step to making change will be to again answer the same question:
141
403792
4892
06:48
Who is our neighbor?
142
408708
1518
06:50
And realizing that our destiny as a city was tied up in everyone.
143
410250
5309
06:55
Particularly those who are left on the side of the road.
144
415583
3476
06:59
But then I realized that charity isn't justice,
145
419083
3935
07:03
that acts of empathy isn't justice,
146
423042
2767
07:05
that being a good neighbor is necessary but not sufficient,
147
425833
3185
07:09
and there was more that had to be done.
148
429042
2184
07:11
So looking at the story,
149
431250
1268
07:12
I realized that the road, Jericho Road, has a nickname.
150
432542
3559
07:16
It's known as the Bloody Pass, the Ascent of Red,
151
436125
3434
07:19
because the road is structured for violence.
152
439583
3060
07:22
This Jericho Road is narrow, it's conducive for ambushing.
153
442667
3684
07:26
Meaning, a man on the side of the road wasn't abnormal.
154
446375
3226
07:29
Wasn't strange.
155
449625
1351
07:31
And in fact, it was something that was structured to happen,
156
451000
2851
07:33
it was supposed to happen.
157
453875
1518
07:35
And Johan Galtung, a peace theorist,
158
455417
2059
07:37
talks about structural violence in our society.
159
457500
2934
07:40
He says, "Structural violence is the avoidable impairment
160
460458
4060
07:44
of basic human needs."
161
464542
1767
07:46
Dr. Paul Farmer talks about structural violence
162
466333
2976
07:49
and talks about how it's the way
163
469333
1524
07:50
our institutions, our policies, our culture
164
470881
3637
07:54
creates outcomes that advantage some people and disadvantage others.
165
474542
4476
07:59
And then I realized, much like the road in Jericho,
166
479042
2767
08:01
in many ways, Stockton, our society,
167
481833
2476
08:04
has been structured for the outcomes we complain about.
168
484333
2685
08:07
That we should not be surprised
169
487042
1517
08:08
when we see that kids in poverty don't do well in school,
170
488583
2726
08:11
that we should not be surprised to see wealth gaps by race and ethnicity.
171
491333
3518
08:14
We should not be surprised to see income pay disparities between genders,
172
494875
3434
08:18
because that's what our society, historically, has been structured to do,
173
498333
3643
08:22
and it's working accordingly.
174
502000
1542
08:24
(Applause)
175
504417
5559
08:30
So taking this wisdom,
176
510000
1518
08:31
I rolled up my sleeves and began to work.
177
511542
2351
08:33
And there's three quick stories I want to share,
178
513917
2267
08:36
that point to not that we figured everything out,
179
516208
2310
08:38
not that we have arrived,
180
518542
1434
08:40
but we're trending in the right direction.
181
520000
2476
08:42
The first story, about the neighbor.
182
522500
2476
08:45
When I was a city council member,
183
525000
1601
08:46
I was working with one of the most conservative members in our community
184
526625
3476
08:50
on opening a health clinic for undocumented people
185
530125
3393
08:53
in the south part of the city, and I loved it.
186
533542
2684
08:56
And as we opened the clinic,
187
536250
1559
08:57
we had a resolution to sign,
188
537833
2351
09:00
he presented me a gift.
189
540208
1935
09:02
It was an O'Reilly Factor lifetime membership pin.
190
542167
4642
09:06
(Laughter)
191
546833
2643
09:09
Mind you, I didn't ask what he did to get such a gift.
192
549500
4268
09:13
What blood oath -- I had no idea how he got it.
193
553792
3226
09:17
But I looked at him and I said,
194
557042
1517
09:18
"Well, how are we working together to open a health clinic,
195
558583
3893
09:22
to provide free health care for undocumented people,
196
562500
3268
09:25
and you're an O'Reilly Factor member?"
197
565792
2434
09:28
He looked at me and said,
198
568250
1268
09:29
"Councilman Tubbs, this is for my neighbors."
199
569542
2851
09:32
And he's a great example of what it means
200
572417
2226
09:34
to be a good neighbor, at least in that instance.
201
574667
3517
09:38
The robbers.
202
578208
1268
09:39
So after four years on city council, I decided to run for mayor,
203
579500
3226
09:42
realizing that being a part-time councilman wasn't enough
204
582750
3351
09:46
to enact the structural changes we need to see in Stockton,
205
586125
3434
09:49
and I came to that conclusion by looking at the data.
206
589583
3518
09:53
So my old council district, where I grew up,
207
593125
2268
09:55
is 10 minutes away from a more affluent district.
208
595417
3017
09:58
And 10 minutes away in the same city,
209
598458
2101
10:00
the difference between zip code 95205 and 95219
210
600583
5310
10:05
in life expectancy is 10 years.
211
605917
2708
10:09
Ten minutes away, 4.5 miles,
212
609708
3018
10:12
10 years life expectancy difference,
213
612750
2143
10:14
and not because of the choices people are making.
214
614917
2434
10:17
Because no one chose to live in an unsafe community
215
617375
2434
10:19
where they can't exercise.
216
619833
1268
10:21
No one chose to put more liquor stores than grocery stores in the community.
217
621125
3572
10:24
No one chose these things, but that's the reality.
218
624721
2338
10:27
I realized, as a councilman,
219
627083
1351
10:28
to enact a structural change I wanted to see,
220
628458
2143
10:30
where between the same zip codes
221
630625
1559
10:32
there's a 30 percent difference in the rate of unemployment,
222
632208
2851
10:35
there's a 75,000 dollars a year difference in income,
223
635083
2893
10:38
that being a councilman was not going to cut it.
224
638000
2239
10:40
So that's when I decided to run for mayor.
225
640263
2046
10:42
And as mayor, we've been focused on the robbers and the road.
226
642333
4143
10:46
So in Stockton, as I mentioned,
227
646500
1518
10:48
we have historically had problems with violent crime.
228
648042
2517
10:50
In fact, that's why I decided to run for office in the first place.
229
650583
3185
10:53
And my first job as mayor was helping our community
230
653792
2434
10:56
to see ourselves, our neighbors,
231
656250
1726
10:58
not just in the people victimized by violence
232
658000
2351
11:00
but also in the perpetrators.
233
660375
2184
11:02
We realized that those who enact pain in our society,
234
662583
3310
11:05
those who are committing homicides and contributing to gun violence,
235
665917
3191
11:09
are oftentimes victims themselves.
236
669132
2177
11:11
They have high rates of trauma, they have been shot at,
237
671333
2572
11:13
they've known people who have been shot.
238
673929
2047
11:16
That doesn't excuse their behavior, but it helps explain it,
239
676000
2851
11:18
and as a community, we have to see these folks as us, too.
240
678875
2726
11:21
That they too are our neighbors.
241
681625
1809
11:23
So for the past three years --
242
683458
2018
11:25
(Applause)
243
685500
4768
11:30
So for the past three years, we've been working on two strategies:
244
690292
3351
11:33
Ceasefire and Advance Peace,
245
693667
2309
11:36
where we give these guys as much attention, as much love
246
696000
2643
11:38
from social services, from opportunities, from tattoo removals,
247
698667
3184
11:41
in some cases even cash,
248
701875
1684
11:43
as a gift from law enforcement.
249
703583
1560
11:45
And last year, we saw a 40 percent reduction in homicides
250
705167
4559
11:49
and a 30 percent reduction in violent crime.
251
709750
3101
11:52
(Applause)
252
712875
5518
11:58
And now, the road.
253
718417
1267
11:59
I mentioned that my community has a 23 percent poverty rate.
254
719708
3810
12:03
As someone who comes from poverty, it's a personal issue for me.
255
723542
4017
12:07
So I decided that we wouldn't just do a program,
256
727583
2893
12:10
or we wouldn't just do something to go around the edges,
257
730500
2684
12:13
but we would call into question the very structure
258
733208
2351
12:15
that produces poverty in the first place.
259
735583
2060
12:17
So starting in February, we launched a basic income demonstration,
260
737667
3267
12:20
where for the next 18 months,
261
740958
1726
12:22
as a pilot, 130 families, randomly selected,
262
742708
3518
12:26
who live in zip codes at or below the median income of the city,
263
746250
3768
12:30
are given 500 dollars a month.
264
750042
1726
12:31
And we're doing this for a couple of reasons.
265
751792
2101
12:33
We're doing it because we realize
266
753917
1642
12:35
that something is structurally wrong in America,
267
755583
2268
12:37
when one in two Americans can't afford one 400-dollar emergency.
268
757875
3393
12:41
We're doing it because we realize that something is structurally wrong
269
761292
3351
12:44
when wages have only increased six percent between 1979 and 2013.
270
764667
4142
12:48
We're doing it because we realize something is structurally wrong
271
768833
3101
12:51
when people working two and three jobs,
272
771958
1893
12:53
doing all the jobs no one in here wants to do,
273
773875
2184
12:56
can't pay for necessities, like rent,
274
776083
2143
12:58
like lights, like health care, like childcare.
275
778250
3434
13:01
(Applause)
276
781708
4167
13:07
So I would say, Stockton again, we have real issues.
277
787000
3393
13:10
I have constituent emails in my phone now, about the homelessness issue,
278
790417
3684
13:14
about some of the violent crime we're still experiencing.
279
794125
2684
13:16
But I would say, I think as a society, we would be wise to go back
280
796833
4101
13:20
to those old Bible stories we were taught growing up,
281
800958
2518
13:23
and understand that number one,
282
803500
1518
13:25
we have to begin to see each other as neighbors,
283
805042
2239
13:27
that when we see someone different from us,
284
807305
2046
13:29
they should not reflect our fears, our anxieties, our insecurities,
285
809375
4518
13:33
the prejudices we've been taught, our biases -- but we should see ourselves.
286
813917
4267
13:38
We should see our common humanity.
287
818208
1643
13:39
Because I think once we do that,
288
819875
1524
13:41
we can do the more important work of restructuring the road.
289
821423
3220
13:44
Because again, I understand some listening are saying,
290
824667
2524
13:47
"Well, Mayor Tubbs, you're talking about structural violence and structural this,
291
827215
3844
13:51
but you're on the stage.
292
831083
1726
13:52
That the structures can't be too bad if you could come up from poverty,
293
832833
3560
13:56
have a father in jail, go to Stanford,
294
836417
2226
13:58
work in the White House and become mayor."
295
838667
2017
14:00
And I would respond by saying the term for that is exceptionalism.
296
840708
4935
14:05
Meaning that we recognize it's exceptional for people to escape the structures.
297
845667
4101
14:09
Meaning by our very language,
298
849792
1434
14:11
we understand that the things we're seeing in our world are by design.
299
851250
3309
14:14
And I think that task for us, as TEDsters,
300
854583
2976
14:17
and as good people, just people, moral people,
301
857583
3060
14:20
is really do the hard work necessary of not just joining hands as neighbors,
302
860667
5267
14:25
but using our hands to restructure our road,
303
865958
2393
14:28
a road that in this country has been rooted in things like white supremacy.
304
868375
3976
14:32
A road like in this country has been rooted in things like misogyny.
305
872375
3393
14:35
A road that's not working for far too many people.
306
875792
2726
14:38
And I think today, tomorrow and 2020 we have a chance to change that.
307
878542
4976
14:43
So as I prepare to close,
308
883542
1916
14:46
I started with a story from nine years ago and I'll end with one.
309
886708
3351
14:50
So after my cousin was murdered,
310
890083
1524
14:51
I was lucky enough to go on the Freedom Rides
311
891631
2595
14:54
with some of the original freedom riders.
312
894250
2268
14:56
And they taught me a lot about restructuring the road.
313
896542
3601
15:00
And one guy in particular, Bob Singleton, asked me a question
314
900167
3226
15:03
I'm going to leave with us today.
315
903417
2101
15:05
We were going to Anniston, Alabama, and he said, "Michael,"
316
905542
4559
15:10
and I said, "Yes, sir."
317
910125
1393
15:11
He said, "I was arrested on August 4, 1961.
318
911542
4184
15:15
Now why is that day important?"
319
915750
2809
15:18
And I said, "Well, you were arrested,
320
918583
2601
15:21
if you weren't arrested, we wouldn't be on this bus.
321
921208
2435
15:23
if we weren't on this bus, we wouldn't have the rights we enjoy."
322
923667
3059
15:26
He rolled his eyes and said, "No, son."
323
926750
1858
15:28
He said, "On that day, Barack Obama was born."
324
928632
2500
15:32
And then he said he had no idea that the choice he made
325
932333
3685
15:36
to restructure the road
326
936042
1559
15:37
would pave the way,
327
937625
1268
15:38
so a child born as a second class citizen,
328
938917
3476
15:42
who wouldn't be able to even get a cup of water at a counter,
329
942417
3559
15:46
would have the chance, 50 years later, to be president.
330
946000
3059
15:49
Then he looked at me and he said,
331
949083
1601
15:50
"What are you prepared to do today
332
950708
3185
15:53
so that 50 years from now
333
953917
1642
15:55
a child born has a chance to be president?"
334
955583
2060
15:57
And I think, TED, that's the question before us today.
335
957667
3392
16:01
We know things are jacked up.
336
961083
2560
16:03
I think what we've seen recently isn't abnormal
337
963667
2351
16:06
but a reflection of a system that's been structured
338
966042
3101
16:09
to produce such crazy outcomes.
339
969167
2101
16:11
But I think it's also an opportunity.
340
971292
2142
16:13
Because these structures we inherit aren't acts of God
341
973458
2601
16:16
but acts of men and women, they're policy choices,
342
976083
2334
16:18
they're by politicians like me, approved by voters like you.
343
978441
2827
16:21
And we have the chance and the awesome opportunity
344
981292
2642
16:23
to do something about it.
345
983958
1726
16:25
So my question is: What are we prepared to do today,
346
985708
3976
16:29
so that a child born today, 50 years from now
347
989708
3518
16:33
isn't born in a society rooted in white supremacy;
348
993250
4268
16:37
isn't born into a society riddled with misogyny;
349
997542
3934
16:41
isn't born into a society riddled with homophobia and transphobia
350
1001500
3976
16:45
and anti-Semitism and Islamophobia and ableism,
351
1005500
2768
16:48
and all the phobias and -isms?
352
1008292
1517
16:49
What are we prepared to do today,
353
1009833
2726
16:52
so that 50 years from now
354
1012583
1810
16:54
we have a road in our society that's structured
355
1014417
2809
16:57
to reflect what we hold to be self-evident?
356
1017250
3601
17:00
That all men, that all women,
357
1020875
2934
17:03
that even all trans people
358
1023833
2101
17:05
are created equal
359
1025958
1518
17:07
and are endowed by your Creator with certain unalienable rights,
360
1027500
3768
17:11
including life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
361
1031292
4392
17:15
Thank you.
362
1035708
1268
17:17
(Applause)
363
1037000
6875
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7