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A path to security for the world's deadliest countries

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    Picture your dream vacation.
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    Maybe you're dying to go
    to Rio for Carnival,
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    or you really just want to hang out
    on a Mexican beach,
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    or maybe you're going to join me
    in New Orleans for Jazz Fest.
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    Now, I know it's less pleasant,
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    but picture for a moment
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    one of the most violent places on Earth.
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    Did anyone think of the same place?
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    Brazil is the most violent country
    in the world today.
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    More people have been dying there
    over the last three years
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    than in Syria.
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    And in Mexico, more people have died
    over the last 15 years
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    than in Iraq or Afghanistan.
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    In New Orleans, more people
    per capita are dying
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    than in war-torn Somalia.
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    The fact is, war only results
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    in about 18 percent
    of violent deaths worldwide.
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    Today, you are more likely
    to die violently
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    if you live in a middle-income democracy
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    with high levels of income inequality
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    and serious political polarization.
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    The United States has four of the 50
    most violent cities on Earth.
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    Now, this is a fundamental alteration
    in the nature of violence, historically,
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    but it's also an opportunity,
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    because while few people
    can do much to end war,
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    violence in our democracies
    is our problem.
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    And while regular voters
    are a big part of that problem,
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    we're also key to the solution.
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    Now, I work at a think tank,
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    the Carnegie Endowment
    for International Peace,
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    where I advise governments
    on what to do about violence,
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    but the dirty secret is,
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    most policymakers haven't figured out
    these changes to violence today.
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    They still believe that the worst violence
    happens in countries at war
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    or places that are too poor,
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    too weak,
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    to fight violence and control crime.
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    And that had been my assumption too.
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    But if you look at a map
    of the most violent places on Earth,
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    you see something strange.
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    Some of them are at war,
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    and a few are truly failed states.
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    The violence in these places is horrific.
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    But they happen to have small populations,
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    so it actually affects few people.
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    Then there's South Africa,
    Brazil, Venezuela.
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    These places are not poor.
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    Maybe they're weak.
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    My research assistant and I mapped places
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    based on how well they delivered
    on World Bank projects
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    and whether they could get
    public services to their people,
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    and if you did well on both of those,
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    if you could get sanitation
    and electricity to your people
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    and deliver vaccines, you were
    in the upper right hand quadrant.
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    And then we overlaid that
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    with a map of places
    where journalists were being murdered.
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    Some were happening in weak states,
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    but an awful lot of journalists
    were being killed in places
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    plenty capable of protecting them.
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    I traveled to every
    settled continent on Earth,
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    comparing places that had faced
    massive violence and recovered
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    and those that hadn't,
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    and I kept seeing the same pattern.
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    I came to call it "privilege violence,"
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    because it happened
    in highly unequal democracies
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    where a small group of people
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    wanted to hold on
    to inordinate power and privilege,
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    and if they didn't think they
    could get those policies past the voters,
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    sometimes they would turn
    to violent groups for help.
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    Drug cartels would finance
    their campaigns.
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    Organized criminals
    would help them get out the vote.
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    Gangs would suppress the vote.
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    And in exchange,
    they'd be given free reign,
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    and violence would grow.
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    Take Venezuela.
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    It's the most violent country
    in the world today,
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    if you look at deaths per capita.
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    Twenty years ago, the current regime
    gained power in legitimate elections,
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    but they didn't want to risk losing it,
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    and so they turned to gangs
    called colectivos, for help.
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    The gangs were told
    to get out the vote for the government
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    and force people to vote for the regime
    in some neighborhoods
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    and keep opposition voters
    away from the polls in others,
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    and, in exchange,
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    they'd be given control.
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    But if criminals have control,
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    then police and courts
    can't do their jobs.
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    So the second stage in privilege violence
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    is that courts and police are weakened,
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    and politicians politicize budgets,
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    hiring, firing,
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    so that they and the violent groups
    that they collude with stay out of jail.
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    Now, pretty soon, good cops leave,
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    and many that remain become brutal.
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    They start off usually with rough justice.
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    They kill a drug dealer that they think
    will be let off by the corrupt courts.
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    But over time, the worst of them realize
    that there will be no repercussions
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    from the politicians they're in bed with,
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    and they go into business for themselves.
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    In Venezuela, nearly one in three murders
    is by the security services.
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    Now, the poor are hid hardest
    by violence all over the world,
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    but they're hardly going to turn
    to such predatory cops for help.
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    So they tend to form vigilante groups.
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    But arm a bunch of 18-year old boys
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    and pretty soon they devolve
    into gangs over time.
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    Other gangs come in, mafias come in,
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    and they offer to protect people
    from the other criminals
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    and from the police.
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    Unlike the state,
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    the criminals often try to buy legitimacy.
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    They give charity. They solve disputes.
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    Sometimes they even
    build subsidized housing.
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    The last stage of privilege violence
    happens when regular people
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    start committing a significant
    portion of the murder.
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    Bar fights in neighborhood arguments
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    turn deadly
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    when violence has become normal
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    and repercussions have evaporated.
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    To outsiders, the culture looks depraved,
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    as if something is deeply wrong
    with those people.
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    But any country can become this violent
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    when the government is by turns
    absent and predatory.
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    Actually, that's not quite true.
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    It takes one more step
    for this level of violence to reign.
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    It takes mainstream society
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    to ignore the problem.
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    You'd think that would be impossible,
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    that violence at this level
    would be unbearable,
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    but it's actually quite bearable
    to people like you and me.
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    That's because,
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    in every society in the world,
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    even the most violent,
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    violence is highly concentrated.
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    It happens to people
    on the wrong side of town,
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    people who are poor, often darker,
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    often from groups that are marginalized,
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    groups that mainstream society
    can separate ourselves from.
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    Violence is so concentrated
    that we're shocked
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    when the pattern deviates.
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    In Washington, DC, in 2001,
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    a young white college-educated intern
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    went missing after a hike in Northwest DC,
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    and her case was in the papers
    nearly every day.
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    On the other side of town,
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    a black man had been killed
    every other day that year.
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    Most of those cases
    never made the papers even once.
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    Middle class society
    buys their way out of violence.
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    We live in better neighborhoods.
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    Some people buy private security.
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    And we also tell ourselves a story.
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    We tell ourselves that most
    of the people who are killed
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    are probably involved in crime themselves.
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    By believing that somehow,
    some people deserve to be murdered,
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    otherwise good people
    allow ourselves to live
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    in places where life chances
    are so deeply skewed.
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    We allow ourselves.
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    Because, after all, what else can you do?
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    Well, it turns out, quite a lot.
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    Because violence today is not
    largely the result of war,
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    but is because of rotten politics
    in our democracies.
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    regular voters are
    the greatest force for change.
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    Consider the transformation of Bogotá.
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    In 1994, Colombia's incoming president
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    was caught taking millions of dollars
    in campaign contributions
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    from the Cali drug cartel,
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    and the capital was overrun
    with gangs and paramilitary groups.
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    But fed up voters overcame
    really rabid partisanship
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    and they delivered
    nearly two thirds of the vote
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    to an independent candidate,
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    enough to really overcome
    business as usual.
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    On Mayor Mockus's first day in office,
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    the police barely bothered
    to even brief him on homicide,
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    and when he asked why,
    they just shrugged and said,
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    "It's just criminals killing criminals."
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    The corrupt city council
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    wanted to give police
    even more impunity for brutality.
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    It's a really common tactic
    that's used worldwide
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    when politicians want to posture
    as tough on crime
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    but don't actually want
    to change the status quo.
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    And research shows it backfires
    all over the world.
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    If you throw a lot
    of low-level offenders into jails,
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    usually already overcrowded jails,
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    they learn from each other
    and they harden.
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    They start to control the prisons
    and from there the streets.
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    Instead, Mockus insisted that police
    begin investigating every death.
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    He fought the right-wing city council
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    and he abandoned
    SWAT-style police tactics,
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    and he fought the left-wing unions,
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    and fired thousands of predatory cops.
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    Honest police were finally free
    to do their jobs.
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    Mockus then challenged citizens.
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    He asked the middle class
    to stop opting out of their city,
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    to follow traffic laws and otherwise
    behave as if they shared
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    the same community of fate.
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    He asked the poor to uphold
    social norms against violence,
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    often at immense personal risk.
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    And he asked the wealthy to give
    10 percent more in taxes voluntarily.
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    63,000 people did,
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    and at the end of the decade that spanned
    Mayor Mockus's two terms in office,
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    homicide in Bogotá was down 70 percent.
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    (Applause)
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    People in places with the most violence,
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    whether it's Colombia
    or the United States,
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    can make the biggest difference.
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    The most important thing we can do
    is abandon the notion
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    that some lives are just
    worth less than others,
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    that someone deserves
    to be raped or murdered,
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    because after all they did something,
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    they stole or they did something
    to land themselves in prison
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    where that kind of thing happens.
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    This devaluing of human life,
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    a devaluing we barely admit
    even to ourselves,
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    is what allows the whole
    downward spiral to begin.
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    It's what allows a bullet shot
    in a gang war in Rio
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    to lodge in the head
    of a two-year old girl
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    climbing in a jungle gym nearby.
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    And it's what allows a SWAT team
    hunting for a meth dealer in Georgia
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    to throw a flash bang grenade
    into the crib of a little boy,
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    exploding near his face
    and maiming him for life.
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    The fact is, most violence everywhere
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    happens to people
    on the wrong side of town
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    at the wrong time,
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    and some of those people
    are from communities
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    that we consider quite different.
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    Some of them are people
    who have done horrible things.
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    But reducing violence begins
    with privileging every human life,
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    both because it's right
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    and because only by prizing each life
    as worthy of at least due process
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    can we create societies
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    in which the lives of innocents are safe.
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    Second, recognize that today,
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    inequality within our countries
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    is a vastly greater cause of violence
    than war between countries.
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    Now, inequality leads to violence
    for a whole host of reasons,
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    but one of them is that
    it lets us separate ourselves
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    from what's happening
    on the other side of town.
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    Those of us who are
    middle class or wealthy,
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    who are benefiting from these systems,
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    have to change them
    at immense cost to ourselves.
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    We have to pay enough taxes
    and then demand that our governments
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    put good teachers in other kids' schools
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    and well-trained police
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    to protect other peoples' neighborhoods.
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    But of course that's not
    going to do any good
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    if the government is stealing the money
    or fueling the violence,
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    and so we also need better politicians
    with better incentives.
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    The fact is, we actually know a lot
    about what it takes to reduce violence.
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    It's policies like putting more cops
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    in the few places
    where most violence occurs.
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    But they don't fit easily into the boxes
    of the left or the right,
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    and so you need really honest politicians
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    who are willing to buck
    knee-jerk partisanship
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    and implement solutions.
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    And if we want good politicians to run,
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    we need to start respecting politicians.
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    There's also a lot we can do to fight
    privilege violence in other countries.
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    The most violent regimes
    tend to be fueled by drugs,
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    and then they launder the profits
    through financial systems
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    in New York and London,
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    through real estate transactions,
  • 13:26 - 13:28
    and through high-end resorts.
  • 13:29 - 13:31
    If you use drugs,
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    know your supply chain top to bottom,
  • 13:34 - 13:37
    or admit the amount of pain
    you're willing to cause others
  • 13:37 - 13:38
    for your own pleasure.
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    Meanwhile, I would love to see
    one of those tourist sites
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    team up with investigative journalists
  • 13:45 - 13:47
    and create a little tiny icon.
  • 13:47 - 13:50
    right next to the one for "Free WiFi"
    and if a place has a swimming pool,
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    there could be a little tiny gun
  • 13:52 - 13:55
    for "likely criminal
    money-laundering front."
  • 13:55 - 13:57
    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    But until then,
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    if you're booking a place
    in a dangerous country,
  • 14:05 - 14:08
    whether that's Jamaica or New Orleans,
  • 14:08 - 14:09
    do a little web research.
  • 14:09 - 14:11
    See if you can see any criminal ties.
  • 14:11 - 14:12
    And, to make that easier,
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    support legislation
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    that makes our financial systems
    more transparent,
  • 14:17 - 14:20
    things like banning anonymous
    company ownership.
  • 14:20 - 14:23
    Now, this all probably sounds
    pretty quixotic,
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    kind of like recycling your cans,
  • 14:25 - 14:28
    just a tiny drop in the ocean
    of a gigantic problem,
  • 14:29 - 14:31
    but that's actually a misconception.
  • 14:31 - 14:34
    Homicide has been falling for centuries.
  • 14:34 - 14:37
    Battle deaths have been
    dropping for decades.
  • 14:37 - 14:39
    In places where people
    have demanded change,
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    violent death has fallen
    from Colombia to New York City,
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    where homicide is down
    85 percent since 1990.
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    The fact is, violence
    will always be with us,
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    but it's not a constant.
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    It has been falling for centuries,
    and it could fall further faster.
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    Could it drop by 25 percent
    in the next quarter century, a third?
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    Many of us actually think it could.
  • 15:04 - 15:06
    I think of all the kids
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    who grow up with their dads,
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    all the families that get
    their sisters back,
  • 15:12 - 15:13
    their brothers.
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    All it needs is one small push.
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    It needs us to care.
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    Thank you.
  • 15:23 - 15:27
    (Applause)
Title:
A path to security for the world's deadliest countries
Speaker:
Rachel Kleinfeld
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:40

English subtitles

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