1 00:00:00,897 --> 00:00:03,856 Let me ask you all a question. 2 00:00:04,393 --> 00:00:06,923 How much weapons grade nuclear material 3 00:00:06,923 --> 00:00:11,650 do you think it would take to level a city the size of San Francisco? 4 00:00:11,650 --> 00:00:13,521 How many of you think it would be an amount 5 00:00:13,521 --> 00:00:16,080 about the size of this suitcase? 6 00:00:16,928 --> 00:00:22,078 Okay, and how about this minibus? 7 00:00:22,078 --> 00:00:26,392 All right. Well actually, under the right circumstances, 8 00:00:26,392 --> 00:00:28,685 an amount of highly enriched uranium 9 00:00:28,685 --> 00:00:31,697 about the size of your morning latte 10 00:00:31,697 --> 00:00:34,639 would be enough to kill 100,000 people 11 00:00:34,639 --> 00:00:36,601 instantly. 12 00:00:36,601 --> 00:00:40,616 Hundreds of thousands of others would become horribly ill, 13 00:00:40,616 --> 00:00:43,546 and parts of the city would be uninhabitable for years, 14 00:00:43,546 --> 00:00:45,677 if not for decades. 15 00:00:45,677 --> 00:00:48,580 But you can forget that nuclear latte, 16 00:00:48,580 --> 00:00:51,724 because today's nuclear weapons 17 00:00:51,724 --> 00:00:54,574 are hundreds of times more powerful 18 00:00:54,574 --> 00:00:58,891 even than those we dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 19 00:00:58,891 --> 00:01:04,234 and even a limited nuclear war involving say, tens of nuclear weapons, 20 00:01:04,234 --> 00:01:08,710 could lead to the end of all life on the planet. 21 00:01:09,609 --> 00:01:11,243 So it's really important 22 00:01:11,243 --> 00:01:12,852 that you know 23 00:01:12,852 --> 00:01:18,174 that right now we have over 15,000 nuclear weapons 24 00:01:18,174 --> 00:01:20,064 in the hands of nine nations, 25 00:01:20,064 --> 00:01:22,532 and if you live in a city, 26 00:01:22,532 --> 00:01:25,063 or near a military facility, 27 00:01:25,063 --> 00:01:28,243 one is likely pointed right at you. 28 00:01:28,634 --> 00:01:31,457 In fact, if you live in any of the rural areas 29 00:01:31,457 --> 00:01:34,064 where nuclear weapons are stored globally, 30 00:01:34,064 --> 00:01:36,307 one is likely pointed at you. 31 00:01:36,307 --> 00:01:39,059 About 1,800 of these weapons 32 00:01:39,059 --> 00:01:40,891 are on high alert, 33 00:01:40,891 --> 00:01:44,235 which means they can be launched within 15 minutes 34 00:01:44,235 --> 00:01:48,033 of a presidential command. 35 00:01:48,033 --> 00:01:51,930 So I know this is a bummer of an issue, 36 00:01:51,930 --> 00:01:54,713 and maybe you have that, what was it, psychic fatigue 37 00:01:54,713 --> 00:01:56,616 that we heard about a little bit earlier? 38 00:01:56,616 --> 00:01:59,368 So I'm going to switch gears for just a second, and I'm going to talk 39 00:01:59,368 --> 00:02:01,482 about my imaginary friend, 40 00:02:01,482 --> 00:02:04,427 who I like to think of as Jasmine, 41 00:02:04,427 --> 00:02:05,797 just for a moment. 42 00:02:05,797 --> 00:02:08,337 Jasmine, at the age of 25, 43 00:02:08,337 --> 00:02:12,582 is part of a generation that is more politically and socially engaged 44 00:02:12,582 --> 00:02:14,939 than anything we've seen in 50 years. 45 00:02:14,939 --> 00:02:16,815 She and her friends think of themselves 46 00:02:16,815 --> 00:02:20,247 as change agents and leaders and activists. 47 00:02:20,247 --> 00:02:24,272 I think of them as Generation Possible. 48 00:02:24,272 --> 00:02:27,285 They regularly protest about the issues they care about, 49 00:02:27,285 --> 00:02:30,025 but nuclear weapons are not one of them, 50 00:02:30,025 --> 00:02:33,767 which makes sense, because Jasmine was born in 1991, 51 00:02:33,767 --> 00:02:36,820 at the end of the Cold War, so she didn't grow up hearing a lot 52 00:02:36,820 --> 00:02:38,206 about nuclear weapons. 53 00:02:38,206 --> 00:02:41,727 She never had to duck and cover under her desk at school. 54 00:02:41,727 --> 00:02:46,128 For Jasmine, a fallout shelter is an app in the Android store. 55 00:02:46,128 --> 00:02:49,004 Nuclear weapons help win games, 56 00:02:49,004 --> 00:02:51,461 and that is really a shame, 57 00:02:51,461 --> 00:02:54,758 because right now, we need Generation Possible 58 00:02:54,758 --> 00:02:59,324 to help us make some really important decisions about nuclear weapons. 59 00:02:59,324 --> 00:03:06,005 For instance, will we further reduce our nuclear arsenals globally, 60 00:03:06,005 --> 00:03:08,945 or will we spend billions, 61 00:03:08,945 --> 00:03:11,295 maybe a trillion dollars, 62 00:03:11,295 --> 00:03:14,640 to modernize them so they last throughout the 21st century, 63 00:03:14,640 --> 00:03:17,962 so that by the time Jasmine is my age, she's talking to her children 64 00:03:17,962 --> 00:03:19,916 and maybe even her grandchildren 65 00:03:19,916 --> 00:03:22,805 about the threat of nuclear holocaust? 66 00:03:22,805 --> 00:03:24,921 And if you're paying any attention at all 67 00:03:24,921 --> 00:03:30,174 to cyberthreats, or for instance if you've read about the Stuxnet virus, 68 00:03:30,174 --> 00:03:33,908 or for God's sake, if you've ever had an email account or a Yahoo account 69 00:03:33,908 --> 00:03:35,705 or a phone hacked, 70 00:03:35,705 --> 00:03:39,681 you can imagine the whole new world of hurt that could be triggered 71 00:03:39,681 --> 00:03:44,103 by modernization in a period of cyberwarfare. 72 00:03:44,103 --> 00:03:46,343 Now, if you're paying attention to the money, 73 00:03:46,343 --> 00:03:49,163 a trillion dollars could go a long way 74 00:03:49,163 --> 00:03:52,507 to feeding and educating and employing people, 75 00:03:52,507 --> 00:03:56,533 all of which could reduce the threat of nuclear war to begin with. 76 00:03:56,533 --> 00:03:57,642 So -- 77 00:03:57,642 --> 00:04:00,300 (Applause) -- 78 00:04:01,042 --> 00:04:03,518 this is really crucial right now, 79 00:04:03,518 --> 00:04:06,908 because nuclear weapons, they're vulnerable. 80 00:04:06,908 --> 00:04:08,635 We have solid evidence 81 00:04:08,635 --> 00:04:12,450 that terrorists are trying to get ahold of them, 82 00:04:12,450 --> 00:04:16,429 and just this last spring, when four retirees 83 00:04:16,429 --> 00:04:20,249 and two taxi drivers were arrested in the Republic of Georgia 84 00:04:20,249 --> 00:04:23,711 for trying to sell nuclear materials for 200 million dollars, 85 00:04:23,711 --> 00:04:26,250 they demonstrated that the black market for this stuff 86 00:04:26,250 --> 00:04:27,980 is alive and well. 87 00:04:27,980 --> 00:04:29,846 And it's really important because 88 00:04:29,846 --> 00:04:34,268 there have been dozens of accidents involving nuclear weapons, 89 00:04:34,268 --> 00:04:37,084 and I bet most of us have never heard anything about them. 90 00:04:37,084 --> 00:04:39,153 Just here in the United States, 91 00:04:39,153 --> 00:04:43,346 we've dropped nuclear weapons on the Carolinas twice. 92 00:04:43,346 --> 00:04:45,594 In one case, one of the bombs, 93 00:04:45,594 --> 00:04:47,637 which fell out of an air force plane, 94 00:04:47,637 --> 00:04:52,158 didn't detonate because the nuclear core was stored somewhere else on the plane. 95 00:04:52,158 --> 00:04:55,900 In another case, the weapon did arm when it hit the ground, 96 00:04:55,900 --> 00:05:00,388 and five of the switches designed to keep it from detonating failed. 97 00:05:01,158 --> 00:05:03,545 Luckily, the sixth one didn't. 98 00:05:03,545 --> 00:05:06,434 But if that's not enough to get your attention, 99 00:05:06,434 --> 00:05:10,656 there was the 1995 Black Brant incident. 100 00:05:10,656 --> 00:05:12,883 That's when Russian radar technicians 101 00:05:12,883 --> 00:05:15,425 saw what they thought was a US nuclear missile 102 00:05:15,425 --> 00:05:18,228 streaking towards Russian airspace. 103 00:05:18,228 --> 00:05:21,078 It later turned out to be a Norwegian rocket 104 00:05:21,078 --> 00:05:23,522 collecting data about the northern lights. 105 00:05:23,522 --> 00:05:26,289 But at that time, Russian President Boris Yeltsin 106 00:05:26,289 --> 00:05:28,495 came within five minutes 107 00:05:28,495 --> 00:05:32,624 of launching a full-scale retaliatory nuclear attack 108 00:05:32,624 --> 00:05:35,640 against the United States. 109 00:05:35,640 --> 00:05:40,990 So, most of the world's nuclear nations 110 00:05:40,990 --> 00:05:45,088 have committed to getting rid of these weapons of mass destruction. 111 00:05:45,088 --> 00:05:47,867 But consider this: 112 00:05:47,867 --> 00:05:51,348 the treaty on the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons, 113 00:05:51,348 --> 00:05:54,808 which is the most widely adopted arms control treaty in history, 114 00:05:54,808 --> 00:05:57,254 with 190 signatories, 115 00:05:57,254 --> 00:06:02,837 sets no specific date by which the world's nuclear armed nations 116 00:06:02,837 --> 00:06:05,397 will get rid of their nuclear weapons. 117 00:06:05,397 --> 00:06:08,747 Now, when John F. Kennedy sent a man to the moon 118 00:06:08,747 --> 00:06:11,330 and decided to bring him back, or decided to do both those things, 119 00:06:11,330 --> 00:06:14,800 he didn't say, "Hey, whenever you guys get to it." 120 00:06:14,800 --> 00:06:16,916 He gave us a deadline. 121 00:06:16,916 --> 00:06:18,761 He gave us a challenge 122 00:06:18,761 --> 00:06:21,676 that would have been incredible just a few years earlier, 123 00:06:21,676 --> 00:06:23,813 and with that challenge, 124 00:06:23,813 --> 00:06:26,253 he inspired scientists and marketers, 125 00:06:26,253 --> 00:06:29,373 astronauts and schoolteachers. 126 00:06:29,373 --> 00:06:32,380 He gave us a vision. 127 00:06:32,380 --> 00:06:34,102 But along with that vision, 128 00:06:34,102 --> 00:06:37,416 he also tried to give us, and most people don't know this either, 129 00:06:37,416 --> 00:06:39,758 he tried to give us a partner 130 00:06:39,758 --> 00:06:45,131 in the form of our fiercest Cold War rival, the Soviet Union, 131 00:06:45,131 --> 00:06:47,931 because part of Kennedy's vision for the Apollo program 132 00:06:47,931 --> 00:06:51,975 was that it be a cooperation, not a competition with the Soviets. 133 00:06:51,975 --> 00:06:56,150 And apparently, Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet premier, agreed. 134 00:06:56,150 --> 00:06:59,489 But before that cooperation could be realized, 135 00:06:59,489 --> 00:07:01,183 Kennedy was assassinated 136 00:07:01,183 --> 00:07:04,026 and that part of the vision was deferred. 137 00:07:04,026 --> 00:07:07,596 But the promise of joint innovation 138 00:07:07,596 --> 00:07:09,673 between these two nuclear superpowers 139 00:07:09,673 --> 00:07:12,512 wasn't totally extinguished, 140 00:07:12,512 --> 00:07:16,428 because in 1991, which is the year that Jasmine was born 141 00:07:16,428 --> 00:07:18,937 and the Soviet Union fell, 142 00:07:18,937 --> 00:07:21,300 these two nations engaged in a project 143 00:07:21,300 --> 00:07:24,283 that genuinely does seem incredible today 144 00:07:24,283 --> 00:07:26,948 in the truest sense of that world, 145 00:07:26,948 --> 00:07:31,432 which is that the US sent cash to the Russians when they needed it most 146 00:07:31,432 --> 00:07:34,211 to secure loose nuclear materials 147 00:07:34,211 --> 00:07:37,261 and to employ out-of-work nuclear scientists. 148 00:07:37,261 --> 00:07:41,339 They worked alongside American scientists 149 00:07:41,339 --> 00:07:44,341 to convert weapons-grade uranium 150 00:07:44,341 --> 00:07:48,244 into the type of fuel that could used for nuclear power instead. 151 00:07:48,244 --> 00:07:52,202 They called it Megatons To Megawatts. 152 00:07:52,202 --> 00:07:55,007 So the result is that for over 20 years, 153 00:07:55,007 --> 00:07:56,895 our two nations 154 00:07:56,895 --> 00:07:59,265 had a program that meant that 155 00:07:59,265 --> 00:08:02,030 one in 10 lightbulbs in the United States 156 00:08:02,030 --> 00:08:06,691 was essentially fueled by former Russian warheads. 157 00:08:07,530 --> 00:08:11,905 So, together these two nations did something truly audacious. 158 00:08:11,905 --> 00:08:13,728 But the good news is 159 00:08:13,728 --> 00:08:19,663 that the global community has the chance to do something just as audacious today. 160 00:08:19,663 --> 00:08:23,591 To get rid of nuclear weapons 161 00:08:23,591 --> 00:08:28,010 and to end the supply of the materials required to produce them, 162 00:08:28,010 --> 00:08:31,326 some experts tell me would take 30 years. 163 00:08:31,326 --> 00:08:33,426 It would take a renaissance of sorts, 164 00:08:33,426 --> 00:08:35,884 the kinds of innovation that for better or worse 165 00:08:35,884 --> 00:08:40,147 underpinned both the Manhattan Project, which gave rise to nuclear weapons, 166 00:08:40,147 --> 00:08:43,160 and the Megatons To Megawatts program. 167 00:08:43,160 --> 00:08:45,665 It would take design constraints. 168 00:08:45,665 --> 00:08:48,407 These are fundamental to creativity, 169 00:08:48,407 --> 00:08:52,187 things like a platform for international collaboration, 170 00:08:52,187 --> 00:08:56,511 a date certain, which is a forcing mechanism, 171 00:08:56,511 --> 00:09:00,911 and a positive vision that inspires action. 172 00:09:00,911 --> 00:09:03,958 It would take us to 2045. 173 00:09:03,958 --> 00:09:07,893 Now, 2045 happens to be the 100th anniversary 174 00:09:07,893 --> 00:09:12,656 of the birth of nuclear weapons in the New Mexico desert, 175 00:09:12,656 --> 00:09:17,245 but it's also an important date for another reason. 176 00:09:17,245 --> 00:09:18,677 It's predicted to be 177 00:09:18,677 --> 00:09:21,011 the advent of the singularity, 178 00:09:21,011 --> 00:09:23,526 a new moment in human development 179 00:09:23,526 --> 00:09:28,918 where the lines between artificial intelligence and human intelligence blur, 180 00:09:28,918 --> 00:09:33,455 where computing and consciousness become almost indistinguishable, 181 00:09:33,455 --> 00:09:39,214 and advanced technologies help us solve the 21st century's greatest problems: 182 00:09:39,214 --> 00:09:42,371 hunger, energy, poverty, 183 00:09:42,371 --> 00:09:46,644 ushering in an era of abundance. 184 00:09:46,644 --> 00:09:51,413 And we all get to go to space on the way to becoming a multi-planetary species. 185 00:09:51,413 --> 00:09:54,532 Now, the people who really believe this vision 186 00:09:54,532 --> 00:09:56,174 are the first to say they don't yet know precisely how we're going to get there. 187 00:09:56,174 --> 00:09:58,295 But the values behind their vision 188 00:09:58,295 --> 00:10:05,957 and the willingness to ask "how might we?" 189 00:10:05,957 --> 00:10:08,884 have inspired a generation of innovators. 190 00:10:08,884 --> 00:10:12,502 They are working backward from the outcomes they want 191 00:10:12,502 --> 00:10:16,729 using the creative problem-solving methods of collaborative design. 192 00:10:16,729 --> 00:10:19,117 They are busting through obstacles. 193 00:10:19,117 --> 00:10:23,760 They're redefining what we all consider possible. 194 00:10:23,760 --> 00:10:25,870 But here's the thing: 195 00:10:25,870 --> 00:10:28,584 that vision of abundance isn't compatible 196 00:10:28,584 --> 00:10:31,842 with a world that still relies 197 00:10:31,842 --> 00:10:35,754 on a 20th century nuclear doctrine 198 00:10:35,754 --> 00:10:40,848 called "mutually assured destruction." 199 00:10:40,848 --> 00:10:43,443 It has to be about building 200 00:10:43,443 --> 00:10:46,686 the foundations for the 22nd century. 201 00:10:46,686 --> 00:10:51,864 It has to be about strategies for mutually assured prosperity, 202 00:10:51,864 --> 00:10:54,124 or at the very least, 203 00:10:54,124 --> 00:10:57,382 mutually assured survival. 204 00:10:57,382 --> 00:11:02,347 Now, every day, I get to meet people who are real pioneers 205 00:11:02,347 --> 00:11:04,363 in the field of nuclear threats, 206 00:11:04,363 --> 00:11:07,888 and as you can see, many of them are young women, 207 00:11:07,888 --> 00:11:11,162 and they are doing fiercely interesting stuff, 208 00:11:11,162 --> 00:11:14,801 like Mareena Robinson Snowden here, who is developing new ways, 209 00:11:14,801 --> 00:11:17,628 better ways to detect nuclear warheads, 210 00:11:17,628 --> 00:11:19,675 which will help us overcome a critical hurdle 211 00:11:19,675 --> 00:11:21,776 to international disarmament, 212 00:11:21,776 --> 00:11:24,879 or Melissa Hanham, who is using satellite imaging 213 00:11:24,879 --> 00:11:26,576 to make sense of what's going on 214 00:11:26,576 --> 00:11:29,129 around far-flung nuclear sites. 215 00:11:29,129 --> 00:11:31,849 Or we have Beatrice Fihn in Europe, 216 00:11:31,849 --> 00:11:36,146 who has been campaigning to make nuclear weapons illegal 217 00:11:36,146 --> 00:11:38,084 in international courts of law, 218 00:11:38,084 --> 00:11:40,810 and just won a big victory at the UN last week. 219 00:11:40,810 --> 00:11:43,235 (Applause) 220 00:11:44,202 --> 00:11:47,429 And yet, and yet, 221 00:11:47,429 --> 00:11:51,399 with all of our talk in this culture about moon shots, 222 00:11:51,399 --> 00:11:53,742 too few members of Generation Possible 223 00:11:53,742 --> 00:11:55,991 and those of us who mentor them 224 00:11:55,991 --> 00:11:58,659 are taking on nuclear weapons. 225 00:11:58,659 --> 00:12:01,899 It's as if there's a taboo. 226 00:12:01,899 --> 00:12:04,494 But I remember something that Kennedy said 227 00:12:04,494 --> 00:12:06,597 that has really stuck with me, 228 00:12:06,597 --> 00:12:08,208 and that is something to the effect 229 00:12:08,208 --> 00:12:12,551 that humans can be as big as the solutions to all the problems we've created. 230 00:12:12,551 --> 00:12:15,918 No problem of human destiny, he said, 231 00:12:15,918 --> 00:12:19,535 is beyond human beings. 232 00:12:19,535 --> 00:12:21,504 I believe that. 233 00:12:21,504 --> 00:12:24,742 And I bet a lot of you here believe that too. 234 00:12:24,742 --> 00:12:28,199 And I know Generation Possible believes it. 235 00:12:28,199 --> 00:12:32,380 So it's time to commit to a date. 236 00:12:32,380 --> 00:12:40,932 Let's end the nuclear weapons chapter on the 100th anniversary of its inception. 237 00:12:40,932 --> 00:12:45,869 After all, by 2045, we will have held billions of people hostage 238 00:12:45,869 --> 00:12:48,167 to the threat of nuclear annihilation. 239 00:12:48,167 --> 00:12:51,045 Surely 100 years will have been enough. 240 00:12:51,045 --> 00:12:55,367 Surely a century of economic development 241 00:12:55,367 --> 00:12:58,244 and the development of military strategy 242 00:12:58,244 --> 00:13:02,953 will have given us better ways to manage global conflict. 243 00:13:02,953 --> 00:13:07,580 Surely if ever there was a global moon shot worth supporting, 244 00:13:07,580 --> 00:13:09,722 this is it. 245 00:13:09,722 --> 00:13:12,634 Now, in the face of real threats, 246 00:13:12,634 --> 00:13:15,504 for instance North Korea's recent nuclear weapons test, 247 00:13:15,504 --> 00:13:17,908 which fly in the face of sanctions, 248 00:13:17,908 --> 00:13:20,018 reasonable people disagree 249 00:13:20,018 --> 00:13:23,849 about whether we should maintain some number of nuclear weapons 250 00:13:23,849 --> 00:13:26,041 to deter aggression. 251 00:13:26,041 --> 00:13:30,205 But the question is, what's the magic number? 252 00:13:30,205 --> 00:13:31,957 Is it a thousand? 253 00:13:31,957 --> 00:13:35,421 Is it a hundred? Ten? 254 00:13:35,421 --> 00:13:37,194 And then we have to ask, 255 00:13:37,194 --> 00:13:40,236 who should be responsible for them? 256 00:13:40,236 --> 00:13:41,732 I think we can agree, however, 257 00:13:41,732 --> 00:13:45,993 that having 15,000 of them represents a greater global threat 258 00:13:45,993 --> 00:13:49,000 to Jasmine's generation than a promise. 259 00:13:49,000 --> 00:13:52,026 So it's time that we make a promise 260 00:13:52,026 --> 00:13:54,991 of a world in which we've broken the stranglehold 261 00:13:54,991 --> 00:13:58,779 that nuclear weapons have on our imaginations, 262 00:13:58,779 --> 00:14:01,566 in which we invest in the creative solutions 263 00:14:01,566 --> 00:14:05,459 that come from working backward from the future we desperately want, 264 00:14:05,459 --> 00:14:07,731 rather than plodding forward from a present 265 00:14:07,731 --> 00:14:12,565 that brings all of the mental models and biases of the past with it. 266 00:14:12,565 --> 00:14:17,539 It's time that we pledge our resources as leaders across the spectrum 267 00:14:17,539 --> 00:14:21,034 to work on this old problem in new ways, 268 00:14:21,034 --> 00:14:24,206 to ask "How might we?" 269 00:14:24,206 --> 00:14:26,621 How might we make good on a promise 270 00:14:26,621 --> 00:14:30,120 of greater security for Jasmine's generation 271 00:14:30,120 --> 00:14:33,675 in a world beyond nuclear weapons? 272 00:14:33,675 --> 00:14:37,621 I truly hope you will join us. 273 00:14:37,621 --> 00:14:40,008 Thank you. 274 00:14:40,008 --> 00:14:46,181 (Applause)