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Dangerous times call for dangerous women

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    Recently,
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    I've been declaring
    to anyone who would listen
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    that I am a dangerous woman.
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    (Applause)
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    Now, declaring that boldly like this
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    still feels a bit dangerous,
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    but it also feels right.
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    At this time in my life,
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    about to be 77,
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    I have --
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    (Applause)
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    I love when you're applauded
    for your age --
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    (Laughter)
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    but I'll take it.
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    (Applause)
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    About to be 77, I realize
    that I have nothing left to prove,
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    less to lose,
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    and I'm more impatient about everything.
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    The true, slow pace towards equality,
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    the rise in sexism, racism,
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    violence against women and girls ...
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    And I'm angry, too,
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    at the climate deniers
    who are stealing the future
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    from our children and grandchildren.
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    Friends, we are living in dangerous times.
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    And such times call for all of us
    to be more dangerous.
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    Now, what do I mean by this?
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    I don't mean being feared.
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    It's not that kind of dangerous.
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    But I do mean being more fearless.
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    I mean speaking the truth
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    when silence is a lot safer.
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    I mean speaking up in rooms
    for those who aren't present,
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    especially those rooms
    where decisions are made
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    about our lives and our bodies.
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    We need to be in those rooms,
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    showing up for one another,
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    challenging the cultural construct
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    that encourages us,
    especially women and girls,
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    to compete, compare,
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    criticize.
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    We have to end this.
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    And speaking out
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    against the policies and the politics
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    that divide us and diminish
    our collective power
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    as a global community of women,
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    and the men and the allies
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    who stand with us.
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    Becoming dangerous also means
    embracing whatever risks are necessary
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    to create a world
    where women and girls are safe
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    in their homes and at work,
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    where all voices are represented
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    and respected,
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    all votes counted,
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    the planet protected.
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    And this is all possible.
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    Because we're ready for this.
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    We're better prepared
    than any generation ever before us,
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    better resourced, better connected.
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    In many parts of the world,
    we're living longer than ever.
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    Women over 65 are among
    the fastest-growing populations on earth,
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    with the potential for becoming
    the most powerful, too.
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    Now --
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    (Applause)
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    What a change this represents.
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    Postmenopausal women like me,
    not that long ago,
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    were considered useless
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    or crazy.
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    We were valued for caregiving
    and grandmothering --
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    and I really love that part.
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    But we were pushed aside
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    and expected to retire
    to our rocking chairs.
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    Women on the dangerous side of 60
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    are not retiring.
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    We are rewiring --
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    (Applause)
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    taking all that we know and have done --
    and that is a lot --
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    to redefine what age looks like,
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    can do, can accomplish.
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    But becoming dangerous isn't about
    becoming a certain age,
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    because at each end of the age spectrum,
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    brave women and girls are stepping up,
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    taking the risk to create change.
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    I became a risk-taker
    early in my life's journey.
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    I had to,
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    or have my life defined by the limitations
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    for a girl growing up in the rural South,
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    with no money, no connections,
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    no influence.
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    But what wasn't limited
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    was my curiosity about the world
    beyond my small town,
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    beyond the small minds
    of a still-segregated South,
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    a world that I glimpsed in the newsreels
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    at the one movie theater in town,
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    and a world that got a lot closer to me
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    when I met Miss Shirley Rountree,
    my eighth-grade English teacher.
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    From the minute she walked
    into the classroom,
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    her high heels clicking,
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    she was a woman in charge,
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    with perfect hair, signature red lips,
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    colorfully coordinated, head to toe.
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    I wanted to be her.
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    Gratefully, she became my first mentor
    and helped me become me.
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    With her support, I got
    a scholarship to college --
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    the first in my family --
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    and landed at a big state university,
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    right in the middle of two
    great social justice movements:
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    civil rights for African Americans
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    and equal rights for women.
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    I joined both with enthusiasm,
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    only to discover that my newfound activism
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    and my fermenting feminism
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    would often be in direct conflict
    with my deeply embedded need to please
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    and be popular.
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    In my first job as a college teacher,
    I broke the rules,
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    and I encouraged students
    to join me in the protest marches.
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    And when I found out
    that my male colleague
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    with the same experience and education
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    was being paid more than me,
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    I mounted a personal protest.
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    When my raise was denied,
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    with the excuse that
    he had a family to support,
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    so did I as a single mom.
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    But I dropped my protest to keep my job.
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    Today, millions of women
    are making this compromise,
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    staying in their jobs without equal pay
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    for equal work.
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    And as one of the first women
    on television in the '70s,
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    I was warned that focusing
    on women's stories
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    would limit my career opportunities,
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    and maybe it did.
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    But I got to produce and host
    breakthrough programming for women,
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    while at the same time,
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    remaining silent
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    about sexual harassment
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    and listening to consultants
    who were hired to advise me
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    about my appearance.
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    "Become a blonde."
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    I did.
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    "Lower your voice."
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    I tried.
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    "Lower your necklines."
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    I didn't.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I did wear those ugly anchor suits
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    with those scarves that look
    something like men's ties.
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    And later, in the power
    positions in media,
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    often as the first or only woman,
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    aware of being judged
    through that gender lens,
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    I struggled from time to time
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    to find the right balance between
    being a leader for women
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    and not being entirely defined
    as a woman leader.
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    But today, I'm proud to be known
    as a woman leader.
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    (Applause)
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    As an activist, advocate, feminist
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    and as a newly declared dangerous woman,
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    I'm caring less what others say
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    and saying more clearly
    what I think and feel.
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    And let me be clear:
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    I acknowledge my privilege
    in being able to do that,
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    to speak my truth.
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    And to stand here today
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    with this opportunity
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    to talk to you about women and power --
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    note I did not say "empowered."
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    I don't think we're waiting
    to be empowered.
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    I think we have power.
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    (Applause)
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    What we need are more opportunities
    to claim it, to use it,
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    to share it.
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    And yes, I know --
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    there are women with power
    who don't use it well or wisely
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    and who don't share it.
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    I've heard, as I'm sure you have,
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    those stories that begin with,
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    "The worst boss I ever had
    was a woman ... "
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    And we could all name women leaders
    who have not made us proud.
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    But we can change all of that
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    with a simple but brilliant idea
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    that I first heard from a risk-taking,
    dangerous congresswoman from New York
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    named Bella Abzug.
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    Bella said, "In the 21st century,
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    women will change the nature of power
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    rather than power changing
    the nature of women."
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    From the moment I heard that --
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    (Applause)
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    I thought, "This is our call to action.
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    This is our biggest opportunity."
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    And as a journalist and an activist,
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    I've seen this idea in action,
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    documenting the stories of women
    on both sides in long-term conflicts,
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    coming together
    and defying the official power
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    to form alliances and find their own ways
    to ending violence in their communities.
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    And as an activist,
    I've traveled to places
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    where it's dangerous to be born a woman,
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    like eastern Congo,
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    where a war is being waged
    on the bodies of women.
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    There, at a healing and leadership
    center called City of Joy,
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    brave Congolese women
    are transforming pain into power
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    by training survivors of sexual assault
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    to return to their villages as leaders.
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    And at recent climate summits,
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    I've observed women climate leaders
    working behinds the scenes,
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    out of the public spotlight,
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    making sure that the negotiations
    toward global climate agreement
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    continue to move forward.
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    So as we move forward
    in our lives and work
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    and we have more power and influence,
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    let's change the nature of power
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    by dismantling some of the barriers
    that remain for those who follow
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    by advocating and agitating
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    for fairer and truer
    and more equal representation
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    in every room and at every table.
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    Now, be warned:
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    if you advocate for a woman
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    for an open position or promotion,
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    you could be challenged with,
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    "You're playing the women's card"
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    or "the race card"
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    if advocating for a woman of color.
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    I've had this experience,
    as I'm sure you have.
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    "Are you running an affirmative
    action program here at PBS?"
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    asked one of my board members
    when, as a new president,
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    I announced my first hires
    as five qualified women.
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    Now, my affirmative action had been
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    to ask that the search firm
    bring me a candidate list
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    that included the names of women
    and people of color
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    who just happened to be, in my judgment,
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    the best candidates
    for the position as well.
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    I say, dangerous women
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    and our allies:
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    it's time to play the women's card,
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    play the race card,
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    play all our cards.
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    (Applause)
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    Not to win the power game,
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    but to lead to better outcomes
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    for everyone.
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    And it's time, too,
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    to discard that scarcity theory,
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    the one that says,
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    there's only room
    for one of us at the top,
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    so protect your turf,
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    don't make friends or allies.
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    Changing the nature of power
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    transforms "protect your turf"
    into "share your turf,"
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    it encourages coalitions,
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    it builds alliances,
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    it strengthens and sustains friendships.
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    My women friends
    are my source of renewable energy.
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    (Applause)
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    So are my mentors, my champions,
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    my supporters, my sponsors,
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    and all of the ways that we can
    and do show up for each other.
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    We can become our sources
    of renewable power
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    for each other.
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    And along the way,
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    we need to take better care of ourselves,
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    and here, I am not the best role model.
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    I don't meditate.
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    I don't exercise regularly.
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    But I do live aerobically.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Because I believe we can't be dangerous
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    from the sidelines,
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    and there's just too much to be done.
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    So let's use all our power.
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    How about the power of money?
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    Let's allocate more
    of our philanthropic dollars,
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    our campaign donations,
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    our investment funds,
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    to increase economic and political equity.
  • 14:51 - 14:54
    And let's leverage the power
    of media and technology
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    that we have
    in our hands, quite literally,
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    to elevate each other's stories and ideas;
  • 15:04 - 15:06
    to practice civility;
  • 15:06 - 15:07
    to seek the truth,
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    which is diminishing
  • 15:10 - 15:14
    and is threatening
    free and open societies.
  • 15:15 - 15:21
    Yes, we have all that we need
    to move our communities forward.
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    And the best thing we have,
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    and what we must remember,
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    is to be there for each other.
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    We will move forward together,
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    willing now to take more risk,
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    to be more fearless,
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    to speak up, speak out
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    and show up
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    for one another.
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    George Bernard Shaw once wrote
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    that he believed in his opinion
    that his life belonged to the community,
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    that the harder he worked,
    the more he lived
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    and that he wanted to be
    thoroughly used up when he died.
  • 16:02 - 16:03
    He went on to write,
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    "Life is no brief candle to me
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    but a splendid torch
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    that I have got hold of for a moment
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    before passing to future generations."
  • 16:17 - 16:21
    I, too, do not view my life
    as a brief candle,
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    although I am burning it at both ends.
  • 16:24 - 16:25
    (Laughter)
  • 16:25 - 16:28
    And I do want it, and me,
  • 16:28 - 16:33
    to be thoroughly used up when I die.
  • 16:34 - 16:37
    But at this point in my life's journey,
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    I am not passing my torch.
  • 16:41 - 16:46
    I am holding it higher than ever,
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    boldly, brilliantly,
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    inviting you to join me
    in its dangerous light.
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    Thank you.
  • 16:57 - 17:00
    (Applause)
Title:
Dangerous times call for dangerous women
Speaker:
Pat Mitchell
Description:

Pat Mitchell has nothing left to prove and much less to lose -- she's become a "dangerous woman." Not dangerous as in feared, she says, but fearless: a force to be reckoned with. In this powerful call to action, Mitchell invites all women, men and allies to join her in embracing the risks necessary to create a world where safety, respect and truth burn brighter than the darkness of our current times.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:14

English subtitles

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