WEBVTT 00:00:13.898 --> 00:00:16.915 Two years ago, after having served four years 00:00:16.915 --> 00:00:18.030 in the United States Marine Corps 00:00:18.030 --> 00:00:19.992 and deployed both to Irak and Afghanistan, 00:00:19.992 --> 00:00:22.565 I found myself in Port-au-Prince 00:00:22.565 --> 00:00:26.662 leading a team of veterans and medical professionals 00:00:26.662 --> 00:00:28.678 in some of the hardest hit areas of that city, 00:00:28.678 --> 00:00:30.424 three days after the earthquake. 00:00:30.424 --> 00:00:32.087 We were going to the places nobody else would go. 00:00:32.087 --> 00:00:34.787 The places nobody else could go 00:00:34.787 --> 00:00:38.077 and after three weeks, we realized something -- 00:00:38.077 --> 00:00:41.957 military veterans are very, very good at disaster response. 00:00:41.957 --> 00:00:44.083 And coming home, my co-founder and I, 00:00:44.083 --> 00:00:46.425 we looked at it, we said, 00:00:46.425 --> 00:00:51.492 "There are two problems. The first problem is an Inadequate Disaster Response. 00:00:51.492 --> 00:00:55.522 It's slow, it's antiquated. It's not using the best technology. 00:00:55.522 --> 00:00:57.576 It's not using the best people." 00:00:57.576 --> 00:01:00.048 The second problem that we became aware of 00:01:00.048 --> 00:01:02.256 was a very inadequate veteran reintegration. 00:01:02.256 --> 00:01:04.296 And this is the topic, that is a front page news right now. 00:01:04.296 --> 00:01:05.253 Those veterans are coming home right now, 00:01:05.253 --> 00:01:06.859 from Iraq and Afghanistan, 00:01:06.859 --> 00:01:09.293 and they are struggling to reintegrate into civilian life. 00:01:09.293 --> 00:01:11.840 We sat here and we looked into these two problems 00:01:11.840 --> 00:01:13.138 and finally we came to a realization. 00:01:13.138 --> 00:01:15.678 These aren't problems, these are actually solutions. 00:01:15.678 --> 00:01:17.653 And what do I mean by that? 00:01:17.653 --> 00:01:20.726 We can use disater response as an opportunity 00:01:20.726 --> 00:01:23.012 for service for the veterans coming home. 00:01:23.012 --> 00:01:25.446 Recent surveys show that 92 percent of veterans 00:01:25.446 --> 00:01:28.322 want to continue the service when they take off the uniform. 00:01:28.322 --> 00:01:31.276 And we can use veterans to improve disaster response. 00:01:31.276 --> 00:01:33.843 Now, on the surface this makes a lot of sense, 00:01:33.843 --> 00:01:37.272 our organisation Rubicon was born in 2010, 00:01:37.272 --> 00:01:39.223 we responded to the tsunami in Chile, 00:01:39.223 --> 00:01:41.160 the floods in Pakistan, 00:01:41.160 --> 00:01:43.553 we sent training teams to the Thai - Burma border. 00:01:43.553 --> 00:01:45.309 And we went to South Sudan, 00:01:45.309 --> 00:01:46.352 shortly after the independence, 00:01:46.352 --> 00:01:49.603 to train doctors and support surgical techniques. 00:01:49.603 --> 00:01:53.710 But it was earlier this year, when one of our original members, 00:01:53.710 --> 00:01:56.796 caused us to shift focus in the organisation. 00:01:56.796 --> 00:01:58.494 This is Clay Hunt. 00:01:58.494 --> 00:02:01.882 Clay was a Marine with me, we served together in Iraq and Afghanistan. 00:02:01.882 --> 00:02:06.310 We served in the same sniper team in the Helmand Valley in 2008. 00:02:06.310 --> 00:02:08.427 Clay was with us in Port-au-Prince, 00:02:08.427 --> 00:02:10.209 he was also with us in Chile. 00:02:10.209 --> 00:02:13.854 Earlier this year, in March, Clay took his own life. 00:02:13.854 --> 00:02:15.773 This was a tragedy. 00:02:15.773 --> 00:02:18.445 It rocked out the organisation, but it really forced us 00:02:18.445 --> 00:02:22.070 to refocus what it is that we were doing. 00:02:22.070 --> 00:02:26.406 You know, Clay didn't kill himself [because of] what happened in Iraq or Afghanistan. 00:02:26.406 --> 00:02:30.198 Clay killed himself bacasue of what he lost when he came home. 00:02:30.198 --> 00:02:34.174 He lost purpose. He lost his community. 00:02:34.174 --> 00:02:39.106 And perhaps, most tragically, he lost his self-worth. 00:02:39.106 --> 00:02:43.933 So, as we evaluated and as the dust settled from this tragedy -- 00:02:43.933 --> 00:02:46.874 we realized that, of those two problems, 00:02:46.874 --> 00:02:49.322 and the initial iteration of our organisation, 00:02:49.322 --> 00:02:53.663 we were a disater response organisation that was using veteran's service. 00:02:53.663 --> 00:02:54.889 We had a lot of success 00:02:54.889 --> 00:02:56.943 and we really thought like we were changing 00:02:56.943 --> 00:02:59.446 the disaster response paradigm. 00:02:59.446 --> 00:03:01.142 But after Clay we shifted that focus 00:03:01.142 --> 00:03:04.531 and suddenly, now moving forward, we see ourselves 00:03:04.531 --> 00:03:06.942 as a veteran service organisation 00:03:06.942 --> 00:03:09.337 that's using disaster response. 00:03:09.337 --> 00:03:13.198 That might not seem like a major shift in focus for many people out here, in this audience, 00:03:13.198 --> 00:03:14.490 but I'll tell you why it is. 00:03:14.490 --> 00:03:17.010 Because we think that we can give that purpose, 00:03:17.010 --> 00:03:20.037 that community and that self-worth back to the veteran. 00:03:20.037 --> 00:03:23.721 And tornados in Tuscaloosa and Joplin and then later hurricane Irene, 00:03:23.721 --> 00:03:26.143 gave us the opportunity to look at that. 00:03:26.143 --> 00:03:29.574 Now, I want you to imagine for a second an 18-year-old boy 00:03:29.574 --> 00:03:32.128 who graduates from highschool in Kansas City, Missouri. 00:03:32.128 --> 00:03:34.606 He joins the army, the army gives him a rifle, 00:03:34.606 --> 00:03:35.879 they send him to Iraq. 00:03:35.879 --> 00:03:39.030 Everyday he leaves the wire with a mission. 00:03:39.030 --> 00:03:42.746 That mission is to defend the freedom of the family that he left at home, 00:03:42.746 --> 00:03:44.846 it's to keep the man around him alive, 00:03:44.846 --> 00:03:47.161 it's to pacify the village that he works in. 00:03:47.161 --> 00:03:50.961 And he's got a purpose. But he comes home to Kansas City, Missouri, 00:03:50.961 --> 00:03:53.284 maybe he goes to college, maybe he's got a job, 00:03:53.284 --> 00:03:55.263 but he doesn't have that same sense of purpose. 00:03:55.263 --> 00:03:58.472 You give him a chainsaw and you send him to Joplin, Missouri, after a tornado, 00:03:58.472 --> 00:03:59.791 he regains that. 00:04:00.360 --> 00:04:04.018 Going back, that same 18 year old boy graduates from highschool in Kansas City, Missouri. 00:04:04.018 --> 00:04:06.195 He joins the army, army gives him a rifle, 00:04:06.195 --> 00:04:07.895 they send him to Iraq -- 00:04:07.895 --> 00:04:10.362 Everyday he looks in the same set of eyes around him, 00:04:10.362 --> 00:04:13.556 he leaves the wire, he knows that those people have his back. 00:04:13.556 --> 00:04:15.728 They've slept on the same sand, they've lived together, 00:04:15.728 --> 00:04:18.826 they've eaten together, they've bled together. 00:04:18.826 --> 00:04:21.815 He goes home to Kansas City, Missouri. 00:04:21.815 --> 00:04:23.912 He gets out of military, takes his uniform off. 00:04:23.912 --> 00:04:25.604 He doesn't have this community anymore. 00:04:25.604 --> 00:04:28.595 But you drop 25 of those veterans in Joplin, Missouri, 00:04:28.595 --> 00:04:31.530 they get that sense of community back. 00:04:31.530 --> 00:04:35.605 Again, you have an 18 year old boy who graduates from highschool in Kansas City. 00:04:35.605 --> 00:04:37.094 He joins the army, army gives him a rifle, 00:04:37.094 --> 00:04:38.929 they send him to Iraq -- 00:04:38.945 --> 00:04:40.304 They pin a medal on his chest, 00:04:40.304 --> 00:04:42.564 he goes home to a ticker tape parade -- 00:04:42.564 --> 00:04:45.644 He takes the uniform off, he is no longer sergeant Jones in his community, 00:04:45.644 --> 00:04:47.905 he's now Dave from Kansas City. 00:04:47.905 --> 00:04:49.585 He doesn't have that same self-worth. 00:04:49.585 --> 00:04:52.711 But you send him to Joplin after a tornado 00:04:52.711 --> 00:04:54.927 and somebody once again is walking up to him 00:04:54.927 --> 00:04:57.638 and shaking his hand and thanking him, for his service. 00:04:57.638 --> 00:04:59.980 Now, they have self-worth again -- 00:04:59.980 --> 00:05:02.556 So what? What's it mean? 00:05:02.556 --> 00:05:04.838 I think it's very important. 00:05:04.838 --> 00:05:08.294 Becasue right now, there's a void in leadership in this country. 00:05:08.294 --> 00:05:11.528 And somebody needs to step up as we have corruption, 00:05:11.528 --> 00:05:15.637 and scams on tops of industry and politics 00:05:15.637 --> 00:05:17.325 and institutions of higher learning. 00:05:17.325 --> 00:05:20.457 So, we need to step up and take that role of leadeship in this country, 00:05:20.457 --> 00:05:22.556 and move this country forward, 00:05:22.556 --> 00:05:24.801 in the direction that it's meant to move. 00:05:24.801 --> 00:05:26.723 And this generation of veterans has the opportunity 00:05:26.723 --> 00:05:29.256 to do that, if they are given the chance. 00:05:29.256 --> 00:05:30.324 Thank you very much. 00:05:30.324 --> 00:05:33.769 (Applause)