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Special Olympics let me be myself -- a champion

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    Hello.
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    My name is Matthew Williams,
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    and I am a champion.
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    I have won medals
    in three different sports
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    and national games in Canada,
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    competed at the international level
    in basketball,
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    and was proud to represent Canada
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    on the world stage.
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    (Applause)
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    I train five days a week
    for basketball and speed skating,
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    work with top quality coaches
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    and mental performance consultants
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    to be at my best in my sport.
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    By the way, all that is through
    Special Olympics?
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    Does that change the way
    you think of me
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    and my accomplishments?
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    The world does not see
    all people like me as champions.
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    Not long ago, people like me
    were shunned and hidden away.
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    There has been lots of change
    since Special Olympics began in 1968,
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    but in too many cases,
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    people with intellectual disabilities
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    are invisible to the wider population.
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    People use the r-word in front of me
    and they think it doesn't matter.
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    That's the word "retard" or "retarded"
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    used in a derogatory manner.
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    They're not thinking about how much
    it hurts me and my friends.
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    I don't want you to think I'm here
    because I'm a charity case.
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    I am here because there is still
    a big problem with the way
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    many people see individuals
    with intellectual disabilities,
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    or, too often,
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    how they don't see them at all.
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    Did you know the World Games
    happened this year?
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    I was one of over 6,500 athletes
    with intellectual disabilities
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    from 165 countries who competed in LA.
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    There was over 62,000 spectators
    watching opening ceremonies,
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    and there was live coverage
    on TSN and ESPN.
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    Did you even know that happened?
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    What do you think of
    when you see someone like me?
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    I am here today to challenge you
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    to look at us as equals.
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    Special Olympics transforms
    the self-identity of athletes
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    with intellectual disabilities
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    and the perceptions of everyone watching.
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    For those of you who aren't familiar,
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    Special Olympics are for athletes
    with intellectual disabilities.
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    Special Olympics is separate
    from the Paralympics and Olympics.
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    We offer high-quality
    year round sports programs
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    for people with intellectual disabilities
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    that changes lives and perceptions.
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    This movement has changed my life
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    and those of so many others,
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    and it has changed the way
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    the world sees people
    with intellectual disabilities.
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    I was born with epilepsy
    and an intellectual disability.
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    Growing up, I played hockey
    until I was 12 years old.
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    The older I got, the more I felt
    it was harder to keep up
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    with everyone else,
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    and I was angry and frustrated.
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    For a while, I did not play any sports,
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    didn't have many friends,
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    and felt left out and sad.
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    There was a time when people
    with intellectual disabilities
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    were hidden away from society.
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    No one thought they could
    participate in sports,
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    let alone be a valued member of society.
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    In the 1960s, Dr. Frank Hayden,
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    a scientist at the University of Toronto,
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    was studying the effects
    of regular exercise
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    on the fitness levels of children
    with intellectual disabilities.
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    Using rigorous scientific research,
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    Dr. Hayden and other researchers
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    came to the conclusion
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    that it was simply the lack
    of opportunity to participate
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    that caused their fitness
    levels to suffer.
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    Lots of people doubted
    that people with intellectual disabilities
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    could benefit from fitness programs
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    and sports competition opportunities,
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    but pioneers like Dr. Hayden
    and Eunice Kennedy Shriver,
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    the founder of Special Olympics,
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    persevered,
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    and Special Olympics athletes
    have proved them right
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    four and a half million times over.
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    (Applause)
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    Before I joined Special Olympics,
    I was nervous
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    because I was young, shy, not confident,
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    and didn't have many friends.
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    When I got there, though,
    everyone was very encouraging,
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    supportive, and let me be myself
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    without being judged.
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    Now, I am a basketball player
    and speed skater
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    who has competed at provincial,
    national games,
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    and this year made it all the way
    to the World Summer Games in LA,
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    where I was part of the first ever
    Canadian basketball team
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    to compete at World Games.
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    (Applause)
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    I am one of more than four and a half
    million athletes around the globe,
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    and I've heard so many similar stories.
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    Being Special Olympics athletes
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    restores our pride and dignity.
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    Special Olympics also addresses
    critical health needs.
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    Studies have shown that on average,
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    men with intellectual disabilities
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    die 13 years younger than men without,
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    and women with intellectual disabilities
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    die 20 years younger than women without.
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    Special Olympics keeps us healthy
    by getting us active
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    and participating in sport.
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    Also, our coaches teach us
    about nutrition and health.
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    Special Olympics also provides
    free health screening
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    for athletes who have difficulty
    communicating with a doctor
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    or accessing health care.
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    At the 2015 World Summer Games,
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    my Team Canada teammates and I
    played the Nigerian basketball team.
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    The day before our game,
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    the Nigerian basketball team went to
    the World Games Healthy Athlete Screening,
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    where seven of 10 members
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    were given hearing aids for free
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    and got to hear clearly
    for the first time.
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    (Applause)
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    The change in them was amazing.
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    They were more exciting,
    happy, and confident,
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    because their coach could vocally
    communicate with them.
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    And they were emotional
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    because they could hear
    the sounds of the basketball,
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    the sounds of the whistle,
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    and the cheering fans in the stands,
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    sounds that we take for granted.
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    Special Olympics is transforming more
    than just the athlete and their sport.
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    Special Olympics is transforming
    their lives off the field.
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    This year, research finding showed
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    that nearly half of the adults in the U.S.
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    don't know a single person
    with an intellectual disability,
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    and the 44 percent of Americans
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    who don't have personal conflict
    with intellectual disabilities
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    are significantly less accepting
    and positive.
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    Then there's the r-word,
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    proving that people
    with intellectual disabilities
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    are still invisible
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    to far too many people.
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    People use it as a casual term
    or an insult.
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    It was tweeted more than
    nine million times last year,
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    and it is deeply hurtful
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    to me and my four and a half million
    fellow athletes around the planet.
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    People don't think it's insulting,
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    but it is.
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    As my fellow athlete and global messenger
    John Franklin Stephens wrote
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    in an open letter to a political pundit
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    who used the r-word as an insult,
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    "Come join us someday at Special Olympics.
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    See if you walk away
    with your heart unchanged."
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    (Applause)
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    This year, at the 2015 World Summer Games,
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    people lined up for hours
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    to get into the final night
    of powerlifting competition.
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    So it was standing room only
    when my teammate Jackie Barrett,
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    the Newfoundland Moose,
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    deadlifted 655 pounds
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    and lifted 611 pounds in the squat --
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    (Applause) --
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    setting huge new records
    for Special Olympics.
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    Jackie is a record holder
    among all power lifters in Newfoundland,
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    not just Special Olympics,
    all power lifters.
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    Jackie was a huge star in LA
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    and ESPN live-tweeted
    his record-breaking lifts
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    and were wowed by his performance.
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    Fifty years ago, few imagined
    individuals with intellectual disabilities
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    could do anything like that.
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    This year, 60,000 spectators filled
    the famous LA Memorial Coliseum
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    to watch the opening ceremonies
    of World Games
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    and cheer athletes from 165 countries
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    around the world.
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    Far from being hidden away,
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    we were cheered and celebrated.
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    Special Olympics teaches athletes
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    to be confident and proud of themselves.
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    Special Olympics teaches the world
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    that people with intellectual disabilities
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    deserve respect and inclusion.
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    (Applause)
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    Now, I have dreams
    and achievements in my sport,
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    great coaches,
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    respect and dignity,
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    better health,
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    and I am pursuing a career
    as a personal trainer.
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    (Applause)
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    I am no longer hidden, bullied
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    and I am here doing a TEDTalk.
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    (Applause)
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    The world is a different place
    because of Special Olympics,
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    but there is still farther to go.
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    So the next time you see someone
    with an intellectual disability,
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    I hope you will see their ability.
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    The next time someone uses
    the r-word near you,
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    I hope you will tell them
    how much it hurts.
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    I hope you will think about getting
    involved with Special Olympics.
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    (Applause)
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    I would like to leave you
    with one final thought.
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    Nelson Mandela said, "Sports has
    the power to change the world."
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    Special Olympics is changing the world
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    by transforming four and a half
    million athletes
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    and giving us a place to be confident,
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    meet friends,
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    not be judged,
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    and get to feel like and be champions.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Special Olympics let me be myself -- a champion
Speaker:
Matthew Williams
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:12

English subtitles

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