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How to overcome our biases? Walk boldly toward them

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    I was on a long road trip this summer,
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    and I was having
    a wonderful time listening
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    to the amazing Isabel Wilkerson's
    "Warmth of Other Suns."
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    It documents six million black folks
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    fleeing the South from 1915 to 1970
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    looking for a respite
    from all the brutality
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    and trying to get to a better
    opportunity up North,
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    and it was filled with stories
    of the resilience and the brilliance
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    of African-Americans,
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    and it was also really hard to hear
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    all the stories of the horrors
    and the humility,
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    and all the humiliations.
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    It was especially hard to hear
    about the beatings and the burnings
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    and the lynchings of black men.
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    And I said, "You know,
    this is a little deep.
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    I need a break. I'm going
    to turn on the radio."
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    I turned it on, and there it was:
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    Ferguson, Missouri.
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    Michael Brown,
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    18-year old black man,
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    unarmed, shot by a white police officer,
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    laid on the ground dead,
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    blood running for four hours
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    while his grandmother and little children
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    and his neighbors watched in horror,
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    and I thought,
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    here it is again,
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    This violence, this brutality
    against black men
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    has been going on for centuries.
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    I mean, it's the same story.
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    It's just different names.
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    It could have been Amadou Diallo.
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    It could have been Sean Bell.
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    It could have been Oscar Grant.
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    It could have been Trayvon Martin.
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    This violence, this brutality,
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    is really something that's part
    of our national psyche.
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    It's part of our collective history.
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    What are we going to do about it?
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    You know that part of us that still
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    crosses the street,
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    locks the doors,
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    clutches the purses,
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    when we see young black men?
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    That part.
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    I mean, I know we're not
    shooting people down in the street,
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    but I'm saying that the same
    stereotypes and prejudices
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    that fuel those kinds of tragic incidents
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    are in us.
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    We've been schooled in them as well.
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    I believe that we can stop
    these types of incidents,
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    these Fergusons from happening,
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    by looking within
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    and being willing to change ourselves.
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    So I have a call to action for you.
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    There are three things that I want
    to offer us today to think about
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    as ways to stop Ferguson
    from happening again;
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    three things that I think will help us
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    reform our images of young black men;
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    three things that I'm hoping
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    will not only protect them
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    but will open the world
    so that they can thrive.
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    Can you imagine that?
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    Can you imagine our country
    embracing young black men,
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    seeing them as part of our future,
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    giving them that kind of openness,
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    that kind of grace we give
    to people we love?
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    How much better would our lives be?
    How much better would our country be?
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    Let me just start with number one.
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    We gotta get out of denial.
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    Stop trying to be good people.
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    We need real people.
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    You know, I do a lot of diversity work,
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    and people will come up to me
    at the beginning of the workshop.
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    They're like, "Oh, Ms. Diversity Lady,
    we're so glad you're here"
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    -- (Laughter) --
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    "but we don't have a biased bone in our body."
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    And I'm like, "Really?
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    Because I do this work every day,
    and I see all my biases."
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    I mean, not too long ago, I was on a plane
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    and I heard the voice of a woman
    pilot coming over the P.A. system,
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    and I was just so excited, so thrilled.
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    I was like, "Yes, women,
    we are rocking it.
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    We are now in the stratosphere." You know?
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    It was all good, and then it started
    getting turbulent and bumpy,
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    and I was like,
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    "I hope she can drive."
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    (Laughter)
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    I know. Right.
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    But it's not even like
    I knew that was a bias
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    until I was coming back on the other leg
    and there's always a guy driving
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    and it's often turbulent and bumpy,
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    and I've never questioned
    the confidence of the male driver.
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    The pilot is good.
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    Now, here's the problem.
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    It's like if you ask me explicitly,
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    I would say "Female pilot awesome."
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    But it appears that when things get funky
    and a little troublesome, a little risky,
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    I lean on a bias that I didn't
    even know thatI had.
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    You know, fast-moving planes in the sky,
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    I want a guy.
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    That's my default.
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    Men are my default.
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    Who is your default?
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    Who do you trust?
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    Who are you afraid of?
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    Who do you implicitly feel connected to?
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    Who do you run away from?
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    I'm going to tell you
    what we have learned.
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    The implicit association test,
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    which measures unconscious bias,
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    you can go online and take it.
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    Five million people have taken it.
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    Turns out, our default is white.
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    We like white people.
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    We prefer white. What do I mean by that?
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    When people are shown images of black men
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    and white men,
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    we are more quickly able to associate
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    that picture with a positive word,
    that white person with a positive word,
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    when we are trying to associate
    positive with a black face,
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    and vice versa.
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    When we see a black face,
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    it is easier for us to connect
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    black with negative
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    than it is white with negative.
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    Seventy percent of white people
    taking that test prefer white.
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    Fifty percent of black people
    taking that test prefer white.
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    You see, we were all outside
    when the contamination came down.
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    What do we do about the fact
    that our brain automatically associates?
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    You know, one of the things
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    that you probably are thinking about,
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    and you're probably like, you know what,
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    I'm just going to double down
    on my color-blindness.
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    Yes, I'm going to recommit to that.
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    I'm going to suggest to you no.
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    We've gone about as far as we can go
    trying to make a difference
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    trying to not see color.
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    The problem was never that we saw color.
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    It was what we did when we saw the color.
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    It's a false ideal.
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    And while we're busy pretending not to see
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    we are not being aware of the ways
    in which racial difference
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    is changing people's possibilities,
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    that's keeping them from thriving,
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    and sometimes it's causing them
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    an early death.
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    So in fact, what the scientists
    are telling us is no way.
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    Don't even think about color blindness.
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    In fact, what they're suggesting is,
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    stare at awesome black people.
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    (Laughter)
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    Look at them directly in their faces
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    and memorize them,
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    because when we look
    at awesome folks who are black,
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    it helps to dissociate
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    the association that happens
    automatically in our brain.
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    Why do you think I'm showing you
    these beautiful black men behind me?
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    There were so many, I had to cut them.
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    Okay, so here's the thing:
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    I'm trying to reset your automatic
    associations about who black men are.
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    I'm trying to remind you
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    that young black men
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    grow up to be amazing human beings
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    who have changed our lives
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    and made them better.
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    So here's the thing.
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    The other possibility in science,
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    and it's only temporarily changing
    our automatic assumptions,
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    but one thing we know
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    is that if you take a white person
    who is, like, odious, that you know,
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    and stick it up next to a person of color,
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    a black person, who is fabulous,
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    then that sometimes actually
    causes us to disassociate too.
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    So think, like, Jeffrey Dahmer
    and Colin Powell.
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    Like, just stare at them, right?
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    But these are the things.
    So go looking for your bias.
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    Please, please, just get out of denial
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    and go looking for disconfirming data
    that will prove that in fact
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    your old stereotypes are wrong.
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    Okay, so that's number one: number two,
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    what I'm going to say is move toward
    young black men instead of away from them.
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    And, you know, it's not
    the hardest thing to do,
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    but it's one of these things where
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    you have to be conscious
    and intentional about it.
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    You know, I was on
    a Wall Street area one time,
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    several years ago when
    I was with a colleague of mine,
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    and she's really wonderful
    and she does diversity work with me
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    and she's a woman of color, she's Korean.
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    And we were outside,
    it was late at night,
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    and we were sort of wondering where
    we were going, we were lost.
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    And I saw this person across the street,
    and I was thinking, "Oh great, black guy."
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    You know, I was going toward him
    without even thinking about it.
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    And she was like,
    "Oh, that's interesting."
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    The guy across the street, you know,
    he was a black guy.
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    I think black guys generally
    know where they're going.
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    I don't know why exactly I think that,
    but that's what I think.
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    So she was saying, "Oh, you
    were going, 'Yay, a black guy'?"
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    She said, "I was going,
    'Ooh, a black guy.'"
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    Other direction. Same need,
    same guy, same clothes,
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    same time, same street,
    different reaction.
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    And she said, "I feel so bad.
    I'm a diversity consultant.
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    I did the black guy thing.
    I'm a woman of color. Oh my God!"
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    And I said, "You know what? Please.
    We really need to relax about this."
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    I mean, you gotta realize
    I go way back with black guys.
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    My dad is a black guy.
    You see what I'm saying?
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    I've got a 6'5" black guy son.
    I was married to a black guy.
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    My black guy thing
    is so wide and so deep
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    that I can pretty much sort
    and figure out who that black guy is,
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    and he was my black guy.
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    He said, "Yes ladies, I know
    where you're going. I'll take you there."
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    You know, biases are the stories
    we make up about people
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    before we know who they actually are.
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    But how are we going to know who they are
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    when we've been told to avoid
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    and be afraid of them?
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    So I'm going to tell you
    to walk toward your discomfort.
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    And I'm not asking you
    to take any crazy risks.
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    I'm saying, just do an inventory,
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    expand your social
    and professional circles.
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    Who's in your circle?
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    Who's missing?
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    How many authentic relationships
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    do you have with young black people,
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    folks, men, women?
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    Or any other major difference
    from who you are
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    and how you roll, so to speak?
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    Because you know what?
    Just look around your periphery.
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    There may be somebody at work,
    in your classroom,
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    in your house of worship, somewhere,
    there's some black young guy there.
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    And you're nice. You say hi.
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    I'm saying go deeper, closer, further,
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    and build the kinds of relationships,
    the kind of friendships that actually
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    cause you to see the holistic person
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    and to really go against the stereotypes.
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    I know some of you are out there,
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    I know because I have some white
    friends in particular that will say,
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    "You have no idea how awkward I am.
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    Like, I don't think this
    is going to work for me.
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    I'm sure I'm going to blow this."
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    Okay, maybe,
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    but this thing is not about perfection.
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    It's about connection.
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    And you're not going to get comfortable
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    before you get uncomfortable.
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    I mean, you just have to do it.
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    And young black men,
    what I'm saying is
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    if someone comes your way genuine
    and authentically, take the invitation.
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    Not everyone is out to get you.
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    Go looking for those people
    who can see your humanity.
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    You know, it's the empathy
    and the compassion
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    that comes out of having relationships
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    with people who are different from you.
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    Something really powerful
    and beautiful happens:
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    you start to realize that they are you,
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    that they are part of you,
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    that they are you in your family,
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    and then we cease to be bystanders
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    and we become actors,
    we become advocates,
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    and we become allies.
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    So go away from your comfort
    into a bigger, brighter thing,
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    because that is how we will stop
    another Ferguson from happening.
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    That's how we create a community
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    where everybody, especially
    young black men, can thrive.
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    So this last thing is going to be harder,
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    and I know it, but I'm just going
    to put it out there anyway.
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    When we see something, we have to have
    the courage to say something,
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    even to the people we love.
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    You know, it's holidays
    and it's going to be a time
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    when we're sitting around the table
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    and having a good time.
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    Many of us, anyways, will be in holidays,
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    and you go to listen to
    the conversations around the table.
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    You start to say things like,
    "Grandma's a bigot."
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    (Laughter)
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    "Uncle Joe is racist."
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    And you know, we love Grandma
    and we love Uncle Joe. We do.
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    We know they're good people,
    but what they're saying is wrong,
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    and we need to be able to say something,
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    because you know who else is at the table?
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    Children are at the table.
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    And we wonder why these biases don't die
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    and move from generation to generation?
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    Because we're not saying anything.
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    We gotta be willing to say, "Grandma,
    we don't call people that anymore."
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    "Uncle Joe, it isn't true
    that he deserved that.
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    No one deserves that."
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    And we've got to be willing
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    to not shelter our children
    from the ugliness of racism
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    when black parents don't
    have the luxury to do so,
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    especially those who have
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    young black sons.
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    We gotta take our lovely darlings,
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    our future, and we've got to tell them
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    we have an amazing country
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    with incredible ideals.
  • 15:34 - 15:36
    We have worked incredibly hard,
    and we have made some progress,
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    but we are not done.
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    We still have in us this old stuff
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    about superiority and it is causing us
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    to embed those further
    into our institutions
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    and our society and generations,
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    and it is making for despair
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    and disparities and a devastating
    devaluing of young black men.
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    We still struggle, you have to tell them,
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    with seeing both the color
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    and the character of young black men,
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    but that you, and you expect them
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    to be part of the forces of change
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    in this society
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    that will stand against injustice
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    and is really above all other things
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    to make a society where
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    young black men can be seen
    for all of who they are.
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    So many amazing black men,
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    those who are the most amazing
    statesmen that have ever lived,
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    brave soldiers,
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    awesome, hardworking laborers.
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    These are people who
    are powerful preachers.
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    They are incredible scientists
    and artists and writers.
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    They are dynamic comedians.
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    They are doting grandpas,
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    caring sons.
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    They are strong fathers,
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    and they are young men
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    with dreams of their own.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How to overcome our biases? Walk boldly toward them
Speaker:
Verna Meyers
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:49

English subtitles

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