Wiring a web for global good | Gordon Brown

448,364 views ・ 2009-07-22

TED


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

00:13
Can I say how delighted I am to be away
0
13160
4000
00:17
from the calm of Westminster and Whitehall? (Laughter)
1
17160
3000
00:22
This is Kim, a nine-year-old Vietnam girl,
2
22160
4000
00:26
her back ruined by napalm,
3
26160
5000
00:31
and she awakened the conscience of the nation of America
4
31160
4000
00:35
to begin to end the Vietnam War.
5
35160
3000
00:38
This is Birhan, who was the Ethiopian girl
6
38160
5000
00:43
who launched Live Aid in the 1980s,
7
43160
4000
00:47
15 minutes away from death when she was rescued,
8
47160
3000
00:50
and that picture of her being rescued is one that went round the world.
9
50160
4000
00:55
This is Tiananmen Square.
10
55160
3000
00:58
A man before a tank became a picture
11
58160
4000
01:02
that became a symbol for the whole world of resistance.
12
62160
4000
01:06
This next is the Sudanese girl,
13
66160
4000
01:10
a few moments from death,
14
70160
3000
01:13
a vulture hovering in the background,
15
73160
3000
01:16
a picture that went round the world
16
76160
3000
01:19
and shocked people into action on poverty.
17
79160
3000
01:23
This is Neda, the Iranian girl
18
83160
3000
01:26
who was shot while at a demonstration with her father in Iran
19
86160
4000
01:30
only a few weeks ago, and she is now the focus, rightly so,
20
90160
5000
01:35
of the YouTube generation.
21
95160
3000
01:38
And what do all these pictures and events have in common?
22
98160
5000
01:43
What they have in common is what we see unlocks
23
103160
3000
01:46
what we cannot see.
24
106160
3000
01:49
What we see unlocks the invisible ties
25
109160
5000
01:54
and bonds of sympathy that bring us together
26
114160
3000
01:57
to become a human community.
27
117160
4000
02:02
What these pictures demonstrate is that
28
122160
3000
02:05
we do feel the pain of others,
29
125160
2000
02:07
however distantly.
30
127160
2000
02:09
What I think these pictures demonstrate
31
129160
3000
02:12
is that we do believe in something bigger than ourselves.
32
132160
4000
02:16
What these pictures demonstrate is
33
136160
3000
02:19
that there is a moral sense across all religions, across all faiths,
34
139160
5000
02:24
across all continents -- a moral sense that
35
144160
4000
02:28
not only do we share the pain of others,
36
148160
2000
02:30
and believe in something bigger than ourselves
37
150160
2000
02:32
but we have a duty to act when we see things
38
152160
2000
02:34
that are wrong that need righted,
39
154160
2000
02:36
see injuries that need to be corrected,
40
156160
2000
02:38
see problems that need to be rectified.
41
158160
3000
02:42
There is a story about Olof Palme, the Swedish Prime Minister,
42
162160
4000
02:46
going to see Ronald Reagan in America in the 1980s.
43
166160
3000
02:49
Before he arrived Ronald Reagan said --
44
169160
2000
02:51
and he was the Swedish Social Democratic Prime Minister --
45
171160
2000
02:53
"Isn’t this man a communist?"
46
173160
2000
02:56
The reply was, "No, Mr President, he’s an anti-communist."
47
176160
4000
03:00
And Ronald Reagan said, "I don’t care what kind of communist he is!"
48
180160
3000
03:03
(Laughter)
49
183160
2000
03:05
Ronald Reagan asked Olof Palme,
50
185160
3000
03:08
the Social Democratic Prime Minister of Sweden,
51
188160
3000
03:11
"Well, what do you believe in? Do you want to abolish the rich?"
52
191160
4000
03:15
He said, "No, I want to abolish the poor."
53
195160
3000
03:18
Our responsibility is to let everyone have the chance
54
198160
3000
03:21
to realize their potential to the full.
55
201160
3000
03:25
I believe there is a moral sense and a global ethic
56
205160
4000
03:29
that commands attention from people of every religion
57
209160
3000
03:32
and every faith, and people of no faith.
58
212160
3000
03:36
But I think what's new is that we now have the capacity
59
216160
4000
03:40
to communicate instantaneously across frontiers
60
220160
2000
03:42
right across the world.
61
222160
3000
03:45
We now have the capacity to find common ground
62
225160
2000
03:47
with people who we will never meet,
63
227160
2000
03:49
but who we will meet through the Internet and through
64
229160
5000
03:54
all the modern means of communication;
65
234160
2000
03:56
that we now have the capacity to organize
66
236160
2000
03:58
and take collective action together
67
238160
3000
04:01
to deal with the problem or an injustice
68
241160
3000
04:04
that we want to deal with;
69
244160
2000
04:06
and I believe that this makes this a unique age in human history,
70
246160
3000
04:09
and it is the start of what I would call
71
249160
3000
04:12
the creation of a truly global society.
72
252160
4000
04:16
Go back 200 years when the slave trade was
73
256160
3000
04:19
under pressure from William Wilberforce and all the protesters.
74
259160
4000
04:24
They protested across Britain.
75
264160
2000
04:26
They won public opinion over a long period of time.
76
266160
3000
04:29
But it took 24 years for the campaign to be successful.
77
269160
4000
04:33
What could they have done with the pictures that they could have shown
78
273160
3000
04:36
if they were able to use the modern means of communication
79
276160
4000
04:40
to win people’s hearts and minds?
80
280160
2000
04:42
Or if you take Eglantyne Jebb,
81
282160
2000
04:44
the woman who created Save the Children 90 years ago.
82
284160
3000
04:47
She was so appalled by what was happening in Austria
83
287160
4000
04:51
as a result of the First World War and what was happening to children
84
291160
4000
04:55
who were part of the defeated families of Austria,
85
295160
4000
04:59
that in Britain she wanted to take action,
86
299160
2000
05:01
but she had to go house to house,
87
301160
2000
05:03
leaflet to leaflet, to get people to attend a rally
88
303160
3000
05:06
in the Royal Albert Hall
89
306160
3000
05:09
that eventually gave birth to Save the Children,
90
309160
3000
05:12
an international organization that is now fully recognized
91
312160
3000
05:15
as one of the great institutions in our land and in the world.
92
315160
4000
05:19
But what more could she have done
93
319160
2000
05:21
if she’d had the modern means of communications available to her
94
321160
3000
05:24
to create a sense that the injustice that people saw
95
324160
3000
05:27
had to be acted upon immediately?
96
327160
2000
05:29
Now look at what’s happened in the last 10 years.
97
329160
3000
05:32
In Philippines in 2001, President Estrada --
98
332160
3000
05:35
a million people texted each other about the corruption of that regime,
99
335160
5000
05:40
eventually brought it down and it was, of course, called the "coup de text." (Laughter)
100
340160
5000
05:46
Then you have in Zimbabwe the first election under Robert Mugabe a year ago.
101
346160
5000
05:51
Because people were able to take mobile phone photographs
102
351160
3000
05:54
of what was happening at the polling stations, it was impossible
103
354160
3000
05:57
for that Premier to fix that election in the way that he wanted to do.
104
357160
4000
06:01
Or take Burma and the monks that were blogging out,
105
361160
4000
06:05
a country that nobody knew anything about that was happening, until these blogs
106
365160
4000
06:09
told the world that there was a repression,
107
369160
2000
06:11
meaning that lives were being lost
108
371160
2000
06:13
and people were being persecuted and Aung San Suu Kyi,
109
373160
3000
06:16
who is one of the great prisoners of conscience of the world,
110
376160
4000
06:20
had to be listened to.
111
380160
2000
06:22
Then take Iran itself, and what people are doing today:
112
382160
4000
06:26
following what happened to Neda,
113
386160
3000
06:29
people who are preventing the security services of Iran finding those people
114
389160
6000
06:35
who are blogging out of Iran, any by everybody who is blogging,
115
395160
3000
06:38
changing their address to Tehran, Iran,
116
398160
3000
06:41
and making it difficult for the security services.
117
401160
2000
06:43
Take, therefore, what modern technology is capable of:
118
403160
4000
06:47
the power of our moral sense allied to the power of communications
119
407160
7000
06:54
and our ability to organize internationally.
120
414160
3000
06:57
That, in my view, gives us the first opportunity as a community
121
417160
4000
07:01
to fundamentally change the world.
122
421160
4000
07:05
Foreign policy can never be the same again. It cannot be run by elites;
123
425160
3000
07:08
it’s got to be run by listening to the public opinions of peoples who are blogging,
124
428160
5000
07:13
who are communicating with each other around the world.
125
433160
3000
07:16
200 years ago the problem we had to solve was slavery.
126
436160
3000
07:20
150 years ago I suppose the main problem in a country like ours
127
440160
4000
07:24
was how young people, children, had the right to education.
128
444160
3000
07:27
100 years ago in most countries in Europe, the pressure was for the right to vote.
129
447160
5000
07:32
50 years ago the pressure was for the right to social security and welfare.
130
452160
5000
07:37
In the last 50-60 years we have seen fascism, anti-Semitism, racism, apartheid,
131
457160
6000
07:43
discrimination on the basis of sex and gender and sexuality;
132
463160
5000
07:48
all these have come under pressure
133
468160
2000
07:50
because of the campaigns that have been run by people to change the world.
134
470160
4000
07:54
I was with Nelson Mandela a year ago, when he was in London.
135
474160
4000
07:58
I was at a concert that he was attending to mark his birthday
136
478160
5000
08:03
and for the creation of new resources for his foundation.
137
483160
5000
08:08
I was sitting next to Nelson Mandela -- I was very privileged to do so --
138
488160
4000
08:12
when Amy Winehouse came onto the stage. (Laughter)
139
492160
3000
08:15
And Nelson Mandela was quite surprised at the appearance of the singer
140
495160
4000
08:19
and I was explaining to him at the time who she was.
141
499160
4000
08:24
Amy Winehouse said, "Nelson Mandela and I have a lot in common.
142
504160
6000
08:30
My husband too has spent a long time in prison."
143
510160
5000
08:35
(Laughter)
144
515160
3000
08:38
Nelson Mandela then went down to the stage
145
518160
4000
08:42
and he summarized the challenge for us all.
146
522160
3000
08:45
He said in his lifetime he had climbed a great mountain, the mountain
147
525160
4000
08:49
of challenging and then defeating racial oppression and defeating apartheid.
148
529160
4000
08:53
He said that there was a greater challenge ahead,
149
533160
3000
08:56
the challenge of poverty, of climate change -- global challenges
150
536160
4000
09:00
that needed global solutions
151
540160
2000
09:02
and needed the creation of a truly global society.
152
542160
4000
09:06
We are the first generation which is in a position to do this.
153
546160
4000
09:10
Combine the power of a global ethic
154
550160
3000
09:13
with the power of our ability to communicate
155
553160
5000
09:18
and organize globally, with the challenges that we now face,
156
558160
4000
09:22
most of which are global in their nature.
157
562160
3000
09:25
Climate change cannot be solved in one country,
158
565160
3000
09:28
but has got to be solved by the world working together.
159
568160
3000
09:31
A financial crisis, just as we have seen, could not be solved
160
571160
2000
09:33
by America alone or Europe alone;
161
573160
2000
09:35
it needed the world to work together.
162
575160
2000
09:37
Take the problems of security and terrorism and, equally,
163
577160
3000
09:40
the problem of human rights and development:
164
580160
2000
09:42
they cannot be solved by Africa alone;
165
582160
2000
09:44
they cannot be solved by America or Europe alone.
166
584160
4000
09:48
We cannot solve these problems unless we work together.
167
588160
3000
09:51
So the great project of our generation, it seems to me,
168
591160
3000
09:54
is to build for the first time, out of a global ethic
169
594160
3000
09:57
and our global ability to communicate
170
597160
2000
09:59
and organize together, a truly global society,
171
599160
3000
10:02
built on that ethic but with institutions
172
602160
4000
10:06
that can serve that global society and make for a different future.
173
606160
4000
10:10
We have now, and are the first generation with, the power to do this.
174
610160
5000
10:15
Take climate change. Is it not absolutely scandalous
175
615160
2000
10:17
that we have a situation
176
617160
2000
10:19
where we know that there is a climate change problem,
177
619160
4000
10:23
where we know also that that will mean we have to give more resources
178
623160
3000
10:26
to the poorest countries to deal with that,
179
626160
2000
10:28
when we want to create a global carbon market,
180
628160
3000
10:31
but there is no global institution
181
631160
2000
10:33
that people have been able to agree upon
182
633160
2000
10:35
to deal with this problem?
183
635160
2000
10:37
One of the things that has got to come out of Copenhagen in the next few months
184
637160
3000
10:40
is an agreement that there will be
185
640160
2000
10:42
a global environmental institution
186
642160
2000
10:44
that is able to deal
187
644160
2000
10:46
with the problems of persuading the whole of the world
188
646160
3000
10:49
to move along a climate-change agenda.
189
649160
2000
10:52
(Applause)
190
652160
5000
10:58
One of the reasons why an institution is not in itself enough
191
658160
5000
11:03
is that we have got to persuade people around the world
192
663160
2000
11:05
to change their behavior as well,
193
665160
2000
11:07
so you need that global ethic of fairness and responsibility
194
667160
3000
11:10
across the generations.
195
670160
2000
11:12
Take the financial crisis.
196
672160
2000
11:14
If people in poorer countries can be hit by a crisis that starts in New York
197
674160
6000
11:20
or starts in the sub-prime market of the United States of America.
198
680160
4000
11:24
If people can find that that sub-prime product
199
684160
2000
11:26
has been transferred across nations
200
686160
2000
11:28
many, many times until it ends up in banks in Iceland
201
688160
2000
11:30
or the rest in Britain,
202
690160
2000
11:32
and people's ordinary savings are affected by it,
203
692160
3000
11:35
then you cannot rely on a system of national supervision.
204
695160
3000
11:38
You need in the long run for stability, for economic growth,
205
698160
3000
11:41
for jobs, as well as for financial stability,
206
701160
3000
11:44
global economic institutions that make sure
207
704160
3000
11:47
that growth to be sustained has to be shared,
208
707160
2000
11:49
and are built on the principle
209
709160
2000
11:51
that the prosperity of this world is indivisible.
210
711160
3000
11:54
So another challenge for our generation is to create global institutions
211
714160
3000
11:57
that reflect our ideas of fairness and responsibility,
212
717160
4000
12:01
not the ideas that were the basis
213
721160
2000
12:03
of the last stage of financial development over these recent years.
214
723160
5000
12:08
Then take development and take the partnership we need between our countries
215
728160
4000
12:12
and the rest of the world, the poorest part of the world.
216
732160
5000
12:17
We do not have the basis of a proper partnership for the future,
217
737160
4000
12:21
and yet, out of people’s desire for a global ethic
218
741160
3000
12:24
and a global society that can be done.
219
744160
3000
12:27
I have just been talking to the President of Sierra Leone.
220
747160
3000
12:30
This is a country of six and a half million people,
221
750160
3000
12:33
but it has only 80 doctors; it has 200 nurses;
222
753160
4000
12:37
it has 120 midwives.
223
757160
3000
12:40
You cannot begin to build a healthcare system for six million people
224
760160
4000
12:44
with such limited resources.
225
764160
3000
12:47
Or take the girl I met when I was in Tanzania,
226
767160
2000
12:49
a girl called Miriam.
227
769160
2000
12:51
She was 11 years old; her parents had both died from AIDS,
228
771160
4000
12:55
her mother and then her father.
229
775160
2000
12:57
She was an AIDS orphan being handed
230
777160
3000
13:00
across different extended families to be cared for.
231
780160
3000
13:03
She herself was suffering from HIV;
232
783160
2000
13:05
she was suffering from tuberculosis.
233
785160
2000
13:07
I met her in a field, she was ragged, she had no shoes.
234
787160
4000
13:11
When you looked in her eyes, any girl at the age of eleven
235
791160
3000
13:14
is looking forward to the future,
236
794160
3000
13:17
but there was an unreachable sadness in that girl’s eyes
237
797160
4000
13:21
and if I could have translated that to the rest of the world for that moment,
238
801160
5000
13:26
I believe that all the work that it had done for the global HIV/AIDS fund
239
806160
4000
13:30
would be rewarded by people being prepared to make donations.
240
810160
3000
13:33
We must then build a proper relationship between the richest and
241
813160
4000
13:37
the poorest countries
242
817160
2000
13:39
based on our desire that they are able to fend for themselves
243
819160
3000
13:42
with the investment that is necessary in their agriculture,
244
822160
3000
13:45
so that Africa is not a net importer of food, but an exporter of food.
245
825160
4000
13:49
Take the problems of human rights and
246
829160
2000
13:51
the problems of security in so many countries around the world.
247
831160
3000
13:54
Burma is in chains, Zimbabwe is a human tragedy,
248
834160
5000
13:59
in Sudan thousands of people have died unnecessarily
249
839160
3000
14:02
for wars that we could prevent.
250
842160
3000
14:05
In the Rwanda Children's Museum,
251
845160
3000
14:08
there is a photograph of a 10-year-old boy
252
848160
4000
14:12
and the Children's Museum is commemorating the lives that were lost
253
852160
6000
14:18
in the Rwandan genocide where a million people died.
254
858160
4000
14:22
There is a photograph of a boy called David.
255
862160
3000
14:25
Beside that photograph there is the information about his life.
256
865160
4000
14:29
It said "David, age 10."
257
869160
3000
14:32
David: ambition to be a doctor.
258
872160
3000
14:35
Favorite sport: football. What did he enjoy most?
259
875160
4000
14:39
Making people laugh.
260
879160
3000
14:42
How did he die?
261
882160
3000
14:45
Tortured to death.
262
885160
2000
14:47
Last words said to his mother who was also tortured to death:
263
887160
5000
14:52
"Don't worry. The United Nations are coming."
264
892160
4000
14:56
And we never did.
265
896160
3000
14:59
And that young boy believed our promises
266
899160
2000
15:01
that we would help people in difficulty in Rwanda,
267
901160
3000
15:04
and we never did.
268
904160
2000
15:06
So we have got to create in this world also
269
906160
2000
15:08
institutions for peacekeeping and humanitarian aid,
270
908160
2000
15:11
but also for reconstruction and security
271
911160
3000
15:14
for some of the conflict-ridden states of the world.
272
914160
3000
15:17
So my argument today is basically this.
273
917160
3000
15:20
We have the means by which we could create a truly global society.
274
920160
3000
15:23
The institutions of this global society can be created by our endeavors.
275
923160
6000
15:29
That global ethic can infuse the fairness and responsibility that is necessary
276
929160
4000
15:33
for these institutions to work,
277
933160
3000
15:36
but we should not lose the chance in this generation,
278
936160
3000
15:39
in this decade in particular, with President Obama in America,
279
939160
4000
15:43
with other people working with us around the world,
280
943160
3000
15:46
to create global institutions for the environment,
281
946160
2000
15:48
and for finance,
282
948160
2000
15:50
and for security and for development,
283
950160
2000
15:52
that make sense of our responsibility to other peoples,
284
952160
3000
15:55
our desire to bind the world together, and
285
955160
3000
15:58
our need to tackle problems that everybody knows exist.
286
958160
4000
16:02
It is said that in Ancient Rome that when Cicero spoke to his audiences,
287
962160
5000
16:07
people used to turn to each other and say about Cicero, "Great speech."
288
967160
6000
16:13
But it is said that in Ancient Greece
289
973160
2000
16:15
when Demosthenes spoke to his audiences,
290
975160
3000
16:18
people turned to each other and didn’t say "Great speech."
291
978160
3000
16:21
They said, "Let's march."
292
981160
2000
16:23
We should be marching towards a global society.
293
983160
3000
16:26
Thank you.
294
986160
1000
16:27
(Applause)
295
987160
6000
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