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A free world needs satire

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    I've been a political cartoonist
    on the global stage for the last 20 years.
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    Hey, we have seen a lot of things
    happen in those 20 years.
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    We saw three different Catholic popes,
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    and we witnessed that unique moment,
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    the election of a pope
    on St. Peter's Square --
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    you know, the little white smoke
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    and the official announcement.
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    [It's a boy!]
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    We saw four American presidents.
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    Obama, of course.
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    Oh, Europeans liked him a lot.
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    He was a multilateralist.
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    He favored diplomacy.
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    He wanted to be friends with Iran.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then ...
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    reality imitated caricature
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    the day Donald Trump became the President
    of the United States of America.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    You know, people come to us and they say,
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    "It's too easy for you cartoonists.
    I mean -- with people like Trump?"
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    Well, no, it's not easy
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    to caricature a man
    who is himself a caricature.
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    (Laughter)
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    No.
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    (Applause)
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    Populists are no easy target for satire
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    because you try to nail them down one day,
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    and the next day, they outdo you.
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    For example, as soon as he was elected,
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    I tried to imagine the tweet
    that Trump would send on Christmas Eve.
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    So I did this, OK?
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    [Merry Christmas to all!
    Except all those pathetic losers. So sad.]
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    (Laughter)
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    And basically, the next day,
    Trump tweeted this:
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    [Happy New Year to all,
    including to my many enemies
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    and those who have fought me
    and lost so badly
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    they just don't know what to do. Love!]
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    (Laughter)
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    It's the same.
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    (Applause)
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    This is the era of strongmen.
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    And soon, Donald Trump was able to meet
    his personal hero, Vladimir Putin,
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    and this is how the first meeting went:
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    [I'll help you find the hackers.
    Give me your password.]
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    (Laughter)
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    And I'm not inventing anything.
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    He came out of that first meeting
    saying that the two of them had agreed
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    on a joint task force on cybersecurity.
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    This is true, if you do remember.
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    Oh, who would have imagined
    that things we saw over these 20 years.
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    We saw Great Britain run towards
    a European Union exit.
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    [Hard Brexit?]
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    (Laughter)
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    In the Middle East,
    we believed for a while
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    in the democratic miracle
    of the Arab Spring.
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    We saw dictators fall,
    we saw others hang on.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then there is the timeless
    Kim dynasty of North Korea.
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    These guys seem to be coming
    straight out of Cartoon Network.
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    I was blessed to be able
    to draw two of them.
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    Kim Jong-il, the father,
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    when he died a few years ago,
    that was a very dangerous moment.
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    [That was close!]
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    (Laughter)
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    That was --
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    (Applause)
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    And then the son, Kim Jong-un,
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    proved himself a worthy
    successor to the throne.
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    He's now friends with the US president.
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    They meet each other all the time,
    and they talk like friends.
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    [What kind of hair gel?]
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    (Laughter)
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    Should we be surprised
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    to be living in a world
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    ruled by egomaniacs?
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    What if they were just
    a reflection of ourselves?
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    I mean, look at us, each of us.
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    (Laughter)
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    Yeah, we love our smartphones,
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    we love our selfies,
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    we love ourselves.
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    And thanks to Facebook,
    we have a lot of friends
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    all over the world.
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    Mark Zuckerberg is our friend.
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    [Address book]
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    (Laughter)
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    You know, he and his peers
    in Silicon Valley
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    are the kings and the emperors
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    of our time.
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    Showing that the emperors have no clothes,
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    that's the task of satire, right?
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    Speaking truth to power.
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    This has always been the historical role
    of political cartooning.
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    In the 1830s, postrevolutionary France
    under King Louis Philippe,
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    journalists and caricaturists fought hard
    for the freedom of the press.
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    They were jailed, they were fined,
    but they prevailed.
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    And this caricature of the king by Daumier
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    came to define the monarch.
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    It marked history.
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    It became the timeless symbol
    of satire triumphing over autocracy.
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    Today, 200 years after Daumier,
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    are political cartoons
    at risk of disappearing?
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    Take this blank space on the front page of
    Turkish opposition newspaper "Cumhuriyet."
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    This is where Musa Kart's
    cartoon used to appear.
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    In 2018, Musa Kart was sentenced
    to three years in jail.
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    For doing what?
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    For doing political cartoons
    in Erdoğan's Turkey.
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    As I speak, he sits in prison.
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    Cartoonists from Venezuela, Russia, Syria
    have been forced into exile.
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    Look at this image.
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    It seems so innocent, right?
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    Yet it is so provocative.
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    When he posted this image,
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    Hani Abbas knew it would change his life.
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    It was in 2012, and the Syrians
    were taking to the streets.
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    Of course, the little red flower
    is the symbol of the Syrian revolution.
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    So pretty soon, the regime was after him,
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    and he had to flee the country.
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    A good friend of his,
    cartoonist Akram Raslan,
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    didn't make it out of Syria.
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    He died under torture.
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    In the United States of America recently,
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    some of the very top cartoonists,
    like Nick Anderson and Rob Rogers --
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    this is a cartoon by Rob --
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    [Memorial Day 2018.
    (on tombstone) Truth. Honor. Rule of Law.]
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    they lost their positions
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    because their publishers
    found their work too critical of Trump.
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    And the same happened
    to Canadian cartoonist Michael de Adder.
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    Hey, maybe we should start worrying.
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    Political cartoons
    were born with democracy,
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    and they are challenged when freedom is.
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    You know, over the years,
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    with the Cartooning for Peace Foundation
    and other initiatives,
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    Kofi Annan -- this is not well
    known -- he was the honorary chair
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    of our foundation,
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    the late Kofi Annan, Nobel Peace Laureate.
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    He was a great defender of cartoons.
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    Or, on the board of the Association
    of American Editorial Cartoonists,
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    we have advocated on behalf of jailed,
    threatened, fired, exiled cartoonists.
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    But I never saw a case
    of someone losing his job
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    over a cartoon he didn't do.
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    Well, that happened to me.
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    For the last 20 years, I have been
    with the "International Herald Tribune"
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    and "The New York Times."
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    Then something happened.
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    In April 2019,
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    a cartoon by a famous
    Portuguese cartoonist
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    which was first published
    in a newspaper "El Expresso" in Lisbon,
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    was picked by an editor
    at "The New York Times"
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    and reprinted in
    the international editions.
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    This thing blew up.
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    It was denounced as anti-Semitic,
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    triggered widespread outrage,
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    apologies
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    and a lot of damage control by The Times.
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    A month after, my editor told me
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    they were ending
    political cartoons altogether.
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    So we could, and we should,
    have a discussion about that cartoon.
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    Some people say it reminds them
    of the worst anti-Semitic propaganda.
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    Others, including in Israel,
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    say no, it's just
    a harsh criticism of Trump,
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    who is shown as blindly following
    the Prime Minister of Israel.
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    I have some issues with this cartoon,
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    but that discussion did not happen
    at "The New York Times."
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    Under attack, they took the easiest path:
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    in order to not have problems
    with political cartoons in the future,
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    let's not have any at all.
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    Hey, this is new.
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    Did we just invent
    preventive self-censorship?
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    I think this is bigger than cartoons.
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    This is about opinion and journalism.
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    This, in the end, is about democracy.
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    We now live in a world
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    where moralistic mobs
    gather on social media
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    and rise like a storm.
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    The most outraged voices
    tend to define the conversation,
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    and the angry crowd follows in.
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    These social media mobs,
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    sometimes fueled by interest groups,
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    fall upon newsrooms
    in an overwhelming blow.
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    They send publishers and editors
    scrambling for countermeasures.
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    This leaves no room
    for meaningful discussions.
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    Twitter is a place for fury,
    not for debate.
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    And you know what?
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    Someone described pretty well
    our human condition in this noisy age.
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    You know who?
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    Shakespeare, 400 years ago.
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    ["(Life is) a tale told by an idiot, full
    of sound and fury, signifying nothing."]
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    This speaks to me.
    Shakespeare is still very relevant, no?
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    But the world has changed a bit.
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    [Too long!]
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    (Laughter)
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    It's true.
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    (Applause)
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    You know, social media is both
    a blessing and a curse for cartoons.
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    This is the era of the image,
    so they get shared, they get viral,
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    but that also makes them a prime target.
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    More than often, the real target
    behind the cartoon
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    is the media that published it.
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    [Covering Iraq?
    No, Trump!]
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    That relationship between
    traditional media and social media
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    is a funny one.
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    On one hand, you have
    the time-consuming process
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    of information, verification, curation.
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    On the other hand,
    it's an open buffet, frankly,
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    for rumors, opinions, emotions,
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    amplified by algorithms.
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    Even quality newspapers mimic the codes
    of social networks on their websites.
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    They highlight the 10 most read,
    the 10 most shared stories.
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    They should put forward
    the 10 most important stories.
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    (Applause)
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    The media must not be
    intimidated by social media,
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    and editors should stop
    being afraid of the angry mob.
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    (Applause)
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    We're not going to put up warnings
    the way we put on cigarette packs, are we?
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    [Satire can hurt your feelings}
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    (Laughter)
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    Come on.
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    [Under your bikini
    you could be hiding a sex bomb]
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    Political cartoons are meant
    to provoke, just like opinions.
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    But before all, they are meant
    to be thought-provoking.
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    You feel hurt?
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    Just let it go.
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    You don't like it?
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    Look the other way.
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    Freedom of expression
    is not incompatible with dialogue
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    and listening to each other.
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    But it is incompatible with intolerance.
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    (Applause)
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    Let us not become our own censors
    in the name of political correctness.
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    We need to stand up, we need to push back,
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    because if we don't,
    we will wake up tomorrow
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    in a sanitized world,
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    where any form of satire and political
    cartooning becomes impossible.
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    Because, when political pressure
    meets political correctness,
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    freedom of speech perishes.
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    (Applause)
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    Do you remember January 2015?
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    With the massacre
    of journalists and cartoonists
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    at "Charlie Hebdo" in Paris,
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    we discovered the most
    extreme form of censorship:
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    murder.
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    Remember how it felt.
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    [Without humor we are all dead]
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    Whatever one thought
    of that satirical magazine,
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    however one felt about
    those particular cartoons,
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    we all sensed that something
    fundamental was at stake,
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    that citizens of free societies --
    actually, citizens of any society --
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    need humor as much as the air we breathe.
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    This is why the extremists,
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    the dictators, the autocrats and, frankly,
    all the ideologues of the world
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    cannot stand humor.
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    In the insane world we live in right now,
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    we need political cartoons more than ever.
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    And we need humor.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A free world needs satire
Speaker:
Patrick Chappatte
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:29
  • 11:53 - 11:55
    [Under your bikini
    you could be hiding a sex bomb]
    # bikini -> burkini
    See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burkini

  • I think the following texts in the pictures also should be included in the subtitles:

    00:50 [barack wants to become your friend NO/YES]

    01:07 [U.S. Democracy]

    03:06 [Assad]

    04:26 [Address Book]

English subtitles

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