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There's this quote by activist and punk
rock musician Jello Biogra that I love.
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He says,
"Don't hate the media. Be the media."
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I'm an artist.
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I like working with media and technology
because A - I'm familiar with them
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and I like the power they hold.
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And B - I hate them and I'm terrified
of the power they hold.
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(Laughter)
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I remember watching in 2003, an interview
between Fox News host Tony Snow
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and then-U.S. Defense Secretary,
Donald Rumsfeld.
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They were talking about the recent
invasion of Iraq and Rumsfeld is asked
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the question,
"Well, we're hear about our body counts,
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but we never hear about theirs, why?"
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And Rumsfeld's answer is,
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"Well, we don't do body counts
on other people."
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Right?
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It's estimated that between 150,000
to one million Iraqis, civilans
-
have died as a result of the U.S. led
invasion in 2003.
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That number is in stark contrast with
the 4,486 U.S. service members who died
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during that same window of time.
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I wanted to do more than just bring
awareness to this terrifying number.
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I wanted to create a monument
for the individual
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civilians who died as
a result of the invasion.
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Monuments to war, such as
Maya Lin's Vietnam Memorial
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are often enormous in scale.
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Very powerful and very one-sided.
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I wanted my monument to live
in the world, and to circulate.
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I remember when I was a boy in school,
my teacher assigned us
-
this classic civics assignment where
you write -- you take a sheet of paper
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and you write a member of your government.
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And we were told, if we wrote a really
good letter, if we really thought about it
-
we would get back more than just a simple
formed letter as a reply.
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This is my notepad.
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What looks like an everyday, yellow legal
tablet of paper, is actually a monument
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to the individual Iraqi civilians that
died as a result of the U.S. invasion.
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Notepads in act of protest and an act
of commemoration disguised
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as an everyday tablet of paper.
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The lines of the paper, when magnified
are revealed to be micro-printed text
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that contain the details, the names,
the dates and locations of individual
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Iraqi civilians that died.
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So, for the last 5 years, I've been taking
pads of this paper -- tons of this stuff
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and smuggling it into the stationary
supplies of the United States
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and the coalition governments.
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(Applause)
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I don't have to tell you guys, this is not
the place to discuss how I did that.
-
(Laughter)
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But also, I've been meeting one-on-one
with members and former members
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of the so-called Coalition of the Willing,
who assisted in the invasion.
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And so, whenever I can, I meet with one
of them and I share the project with them.
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And last summer I had the chance to meet
with former United States Attorney General
-
and Torture Memo author,
Alberto Gonzales.
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Matt Kenyon: "May I give this to you?
This is a special legal tablet."
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"It's actually part of an on-going
art project."
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Alberto Gonzalez:
"Is it a special legal pad?"
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MK: "Yes. I know
you won't believe me,
-
but it's in the collection
of the Museum of Modern Art."
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"I'm an artist."
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AG: "OK."
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MK: "All of the lines
of the paper are actually --"
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AG: "Are they going to disappear?"
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MK: "No, they're micro-printed text that
contain the names
-
of individual Iraqi civilians, who have
died since the invasion of Iraq."
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AG: "Yeah. OK."
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AG: "Thank you."
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(Laughter)
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The way he says thank you
really creeps me out.
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(Laughter)
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OK, so I'd like each of you
to look under your chairs.
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There's an envelope.
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And please open it.
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The paper you're holding in your hand
contains the details of Iraqi civilians
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that died as result of the invasion.
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I'd like you to use this paper
and write a member of government.
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You can help smuggle this civilian body
count into government archives.
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Because every letter that's sent
in to the government, and this is
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all across the world of course,
every letter that is sent in
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is archived, filed and recorded.
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Together we can put this in the mailboxes
and under the noses of people in power.
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Everything that's sent in, eventually
becomes part of the permanent archive
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of our government, our shared
historical record.
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Thank you.
-
(Applause)
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So, tell me Matt, how did this idea come
into your head, of notepad?
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I had just finished a project that dealt
with the U.S. coalition side of the war
-
and it was a black armband that was called
the Improvised Empathetic Device
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which accumulated, in realtime, the names,
ranks, cause of death and location
-
of U.S. service members who had
died overseas and each time the Department
-
of Defense or Syncom released
their data, it would stab me in the arm.
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And so, I became aware that there was
a spectacle associated with our own
-
people who are dying overseas, but
a disproportionate amount of casualties
-
were the civilian casualties.
-
Thank you so much.
-
Thank you.
Brian Greene
The headline for this talk has been updated.
The new headline is: A secret memorial for civilian casualties