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[This talk contains graphic language
and descriptions of sexual violence]
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[Viewer discretion is advised]
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"Ashley Judd, stupid fucking slut."
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"You can't sue someone
for calling them a cunt."
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"If you can't handle the Internet,
fuck off, whore."
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"I wish Ashley Judd
would die a horrible death.
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She is the absolute worst."
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"Ashley Judd, you're the reason
women shouldn't vote."
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"'Twisted' is such a bad movie,
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I don't even want to rape it."
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"Whatever you do,
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don't tell Ashley Judd.
She'll die alone with a dried out vagina."
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"If I had to fuck an older woman,
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oh my God,
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I would fuck the shit out of Ashley Judd,
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that bitch is hot af.
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The unforgivable shit I would do to her."
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Online misogyny is a global
gender rights tragedy,
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and it is imperative that it ends.
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(Applause)
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Girls' and women's voices,
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and our allies' voices
are constrained in ways
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that are personally, economically,
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professionally and politically damaging.
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And when we curb abuse,
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we will expand freedom.
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I am a Kentucky basketball fan,
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so on a fine March day last year,
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I was doing one of the things I do best:
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I was cheering for my Wildcats.
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The daffodils were blooming,
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but the referees were not blowing
the whistle when I was telling them to.
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(Laughter)
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Funny, they're very friendly
to me before the opening tip,
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but they really ignore me during the game.
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(Laughter)
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Three of my players were bleeding,
so I did the next best thing ...
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I tweeted.
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[@ArkRazorback dirty play can kiss
my team's free throw making a --
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@KySportsRadio @marchmadness
@espn Bloodied 3 players so far.]
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It is routine for me to be treated
in the ways I've already described to you.
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It happens to me every single day
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on social media platforms
such as Twitter and Facebook.
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Since I joined Twitter in 2011,
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misogyny and misogynists
have amply demonstrated
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they will dog my every step.
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My spirituality, my faith,
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being a hillbilly --
I can say that, you can't --
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all of it is fair game.
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And I have responded to this
with various strategies.
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I've tried engaging people.
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This one guy was sending me
hypersexual, nasty stuff,
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and there was a girl in his avatar.
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I wrote him back and said ...
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"Is that your daughter?
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I feel a lot of fear
that you may think about
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and talk to women this way."
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And he surprised me by saying,
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"You know what?
You're right. I apologize."
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Sometimes people
want to be held accountable.
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This one guy was musing
to I don't know who
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that maybe I was the definition of a cunt.
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I was married to a Scot for 14 years,
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so I said, "Cunt means many
different things in different countries --
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(Laughter)
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but I'm pretty sure you epitomize
the global standard of a dick."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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I've tried to rise above it,
I've tried to get in the trenches,
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but mostly I would scroll through
these social media platforms
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with one eye partially closed,
trying not to see it,
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but you can't make
a cucumber out of a pickle.
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What is seen goes in.
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It's traumatic.
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And I was always secretly hoping
in some part of me
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that what was being said to me
and about me wasn't ...
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true.
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Because even I,
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an avowed, self-declared feminist,
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who worships at the altar of Gloria --
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(Laughter)
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internalize the patriarchy.
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This is really critical.
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Patriarchy is not boys and men.
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It is a system
in which we all participate,
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including me.
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On that particular day, for some reason,
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that particular tweet
after the basketball game
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triggered something called a cyber mob.
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This vitriolic, global outpouring
of the most heinous hate speech:
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death threats, rape threats.
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And don't you know,
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when I was sitting at home
alone in my nightgown,
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I got a phone call,
and it was my beloved former husband,
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and he said on a voice mail,
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"Loved one ...
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what is happening to you is not OK."
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And there was something about him
taking a stand for me that night ...
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that allowed me
to take a stand for myself.
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And I started to write.
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I started to write about sharing the fact
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that I'm a survivor
of all forms of sexual abuse,
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including three rapes.
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And the hate speech
I get in response to that --
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these are just some of the comments
posted to news outlets.
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Being told I'm a "snitch" is really fun.
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[Jay: She enjoyed every second of it!!!!!]
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Audience: Oh, Lord Jesus.
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Ashley Judd: Thank you, Jesus.
May your grace and mercy shine.
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So, I wrote this feminist op-ed,
it is entitled,
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"Forget Your Team:
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It Is Your Online Gender Violence
Toward Girls And Women
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That Can Kiss My Righteous Ass."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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And I did that alone,
and I published it alone,
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because my chief advisor said,
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"Please don't,
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the rain of retaliatory garbage
that is inevitable --
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I fear for you."
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But I trust girls and I trust women,
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and I trust our allies.
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It was published, it went viral,
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it proves that every single day
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online misogyny is a phenomenon
endured by us all,
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all over the world,
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and when it is intersectional,
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it is worse.
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Sexual orientation, gender identity,
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race, ethnicity, religion --
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you name it,
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it amplifies the violence
endured by girls and women,
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and for our younger girls, it is worse.
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It's clearly traumatizing.
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Our mental health,
our emotional well-being
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are so gravely affected
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because the threat of violence
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is experienced
neurobiologically as violence.
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The cortisol shoots up,
the limbic system gets fired,
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we lose productivity at work.
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And let's talk about work.
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Our ability to work is constrained.
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Online searches of women applying for jobs
reveal nude pictures of them,
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false allegations they have STDs,
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their addresses indicating
that they are available for sex
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with real examples
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of people showing up
at this house for said sex.
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Our ability to go to school is impaired.
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96 percent of all postings
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of sexual images of our young people ...
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girls.
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Our girls.
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Our boys are two to three
times more likely --
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nonconsensually --
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to share images.
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And I want to say a word
about revenge porn.
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Part of what came out of this tweet
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was my getting connected
with allies and other activists
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who are fighting
for a safe and free internet.
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We started something
called the Speech Project;
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curbing abuse, expanding freedom.
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And that website
provides a critical forum,
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because there is no global, legal thing
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to help us figure this out.
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But we do provide on that website
a standardized list of definitions,
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because it's hard to attack
a behavior in the right way
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if we're not all sharing
a definition of what that behavior is.
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And I learned that revenge porn
is often dangerously misapplied.
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It is the nonconsensual
sharing of an image
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used tactically to shame
and humiliate a girl or woman
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that attempts to pornography us.
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Our natural sexuality is --
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I don't know about yours --
pretty gorgeous and wonderful.
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And my expressing it
does not pornography make.
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(Applause)
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So, I have all these resources
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that I'm keenly aware
so many people in the world do not.
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I was able to start
the Speech Project with colleagues.
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I can often get a social media
company's attention.
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I have a wonderful visit
to Facebook HQ coming up.
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Hasn't helped the idiotic
reporting standards yet ...
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I actually pay someone
to scrub my social media feeds,
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attempting to spare my brain
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the daily iterations
of the trauma of hate speech.
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And guess what?
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I get hate speech for that.
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"Oh, you live in an echo chamber."
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Well, guess what?
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Having someone post a photograph
of me with my mouth open
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saying they "can't wait
to cum on my face,"
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I have a right to set that boundary.
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(Applause)
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And this distinction
between virtual and real is specious
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because guess what --
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that actually happened to me
once when I was a child,
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and so that tweet brought up that trauma,
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and I had to do work on that.
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But you know what we do?
We take all of this hate speech,
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and we disaggregate it,
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and we code it,
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and we give that data
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so that we understand
the intersectionality of it:
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when I get porn,
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when it's about political affiliation,
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when it's about age,
when it's about all of it.
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We're going to win this fight.
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There are a lot of solutions --
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thank goodness.
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I'm going to offer just a few,
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and of course I challenge you
to create and contribute your own.
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Number one: we have to start
with digital media literacy,
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and clearly it must have a gendered lens.
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Kids, schools, caregivers, parents:
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it's essential.
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Two ...
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shall we talk about our friends in tech?
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Said with dignity and respect,
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the sexism in your workplaces must end.
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(Applause)
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(Cheers)
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EDGE,
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the global standard for gender equality,
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is the minimum standard.
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And guess what, Silicon Valley?
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If L'Oréal in India,
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in the Philippines, in Brazil
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and in Russia can do it,
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you can, too.
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Enough excuses.
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Only when women have critical mass
in every department at your companies,
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including building platforms
from the ground up,
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will the conversations
about priorities and solutions change.
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And more love for my friends in tech:
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profiteering off misogyny
in video games must end.
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I'm so tired of hearing you
talk to me at cocktail parties --
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like you did a couple
weeks ago in Aspen --
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about how deplorable #Gamergate was,
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when you're still making
billions of dollars off games
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that maim and dump women for sport.
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Basta! -- as the Italians would say.
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Enough.
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(Applause)
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Our friends in law enforcement
have much to do,
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because we've seen
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that online violence
is an extension of in-person violence.
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In our country,
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more girls and women have been
murdered by their intimate partners
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than died on 9/11
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and have died since
in Afghanistan and Iraq combined.
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And it's not cool to say that,
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but it is true.
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We care so much geopolitically
about what men are doing over there
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to women over there ...
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In 2015,
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72,828 women used intimate
partner violence services in this country.
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That is not counting the girls
and women and boys who needed them.
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Law enforcement must be empowered
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with up-to-date internet technology,
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the devices and an understanding
of these platforms --
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how they work.
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The police wanted to be helpful
when Amanda Hess called
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about the death threat
she was getting on Twitter,
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but they couldn't really when they said,
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"What's Twitter?"
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Our legislators must write
and pass astute legislation
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that reflects today's technology
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and our notions of free and hate speech.
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In New York recently, the law
could not be applied to a perpetrator
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because the crimes
must have been committed --
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even if it was anonymous --
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they must have been committed
by telephone, in mail,
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by telegraph --
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(Laughter)
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The language must be
technologically neutral.
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So apparently,
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I've got a pretty bold voice.
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So, let's talk about our friends ...
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white men.
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You have a role to play
and a choice to make.
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You can do something,
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or you can do nothing.
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We're cool in this room,
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but when this goes out, everyone will say,
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"Oh my God, she's a reverse racist."
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That quote was said
by a white man, Robert Moritz,
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chairperson, PricewaterhouseCoopers,
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he asked me to include it in my talk.
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We need to grow support lines
and help groups,
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so victims can help each other
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when their lives and finances
have been derailed.
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We must as individuals disrupt
gender violence as it is happening.
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92 percent of young people
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29 and under witness it.
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72 percent of us have witnessed it.
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We must have the courage and urgency
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to practice stopping it
as it is unfolding.
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And lastly,
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believe her.
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Believe her.
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(Applause)
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This is fundamentally
a problem of human interaction.
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And as I believe that human interaction
is at the core of our healing,
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trauma not transformed
will be trauma transferred.
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Edith Wharton said,
"The end is latent in the beginning,"
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so we are going to end this talk
replacing hate speech with love speech.
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Because I get lonely in this,
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but I know that we are allies.
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I recently learned
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about how gratitude and affirmations
offset negative interactions.
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It takes five of those
to offset one negative interaction,
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and gratitude in particular --
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free, available globally
any time, anywhere,
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to anyone in any dialect --
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it fires the pregenual anterior cingulate,
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a watershed part of the brain
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that floods it with great, good stuff.
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So I'm going to say
awesome stuff about myself.
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I would like for you
to reflect it back to me.
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It might sound something like this --
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(Laughter)
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I am a powerful and strong woman,
and you would say, "Yes, you are."
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Audience: Yes, you are.
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Ashley Judd: My mama loves me.
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A: Yes, she does.
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AJ: I did a great job with my talk.
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A: Yes, you did.
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AJ: I have a right to be here.
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A: Yes, you do.
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AJ: I'm really cute.
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(Laughter)
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A: Yes, you are.
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AJ: God does good work.
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A: Yes, He does.
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AJ: And I love you.
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Thank you so much
for letting me be of service.
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Bless you.
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(Applause)