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To future generations of women, you are the roots of change

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    Gloria Steinem: Yes, hello, hello.
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    Pat Mitchel: Hello, hello.
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    What a thrill to have this opportunity.
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    When we ask all of our
    TED community, many of them,
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    "Who would you like to hear from
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    if we're going to look forward and onward,
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    when it comes to women in the world?"
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    Unanimously, the answer
    was Gloria Steinem.
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    Now I know you're way too modest
    to accept that easily,
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    so before we move onward,
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    may I go back a bit,
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    since we have known each other
    for a long time,
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    and talk about those early days
    when you were building a movement,
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    challenging stereotypes,
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    moving beyond cultural norms.
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    You must have had some manifestation
    of fearless in your life.
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    What were your fears
    and how did you overcome them?
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    GS: No, I certainly had a lot of fears,
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    and chief among them
    was speaking in public,
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    just like I am now.
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    Because, you know, we choose
    to express ourselves
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    in the way that is most natural,
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    and I became a writer
    because I didn't want to talk.
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    So the first thing I had to overcome
    was the fear of public speaking
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    and because I was afraid
    to do it by myself,
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    I asked a friend to do it with me --
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    Dorothy Pitman Hughes,
    and then Flo Kennedy --
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    anyway, so we became,
    in that way, somewhat accidentally
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    one white woman, one Black woman
    speaking together,
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    which, you know,
    was very helpful to express
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    that the movement was for everyone.
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    PM: And in those early days,
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    when you were becoming,
    not only a really powerful public speaker
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    in spite of your fears,
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    you were also normalizing and creating
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    response to a word that became the anthem
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    for so many of us,
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    literally changing lives,
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    standing in front of crowds and saying,
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    feminism is for every woman.
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    And I see now as you do
    that there are still ways
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    in which feminism
    is not understood as a concept.
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    Misunderstood, criticized,
    sometimes ridiculed.
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    How do you describe feminism?
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    GS: Well, it's just the radical idea
    that human beings are all equal
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    and we can dispense with the labels
    of gender and class and race
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    and begin to realize
    our unique individuality.
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    Of course feminism
    was misunderstood in the beginning,
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    as if it were about female superiority
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    or it was movement for lesbians only,
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    not for all women,
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    I mean, you know, there were all kinds
    of misunderstandings,
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    not to mention ridicule.
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    But I hope that that's past.
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    I used to just send people
    to the dictionary
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    to look up feminism, very helpful.
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    PM: How do you feel the new generation
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    and the next generation of young women,
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    what is their relationship with the word
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    and the concept of, there's still
    a lot to be done to reach that equal step?
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    GS: Yeah, well I don't think that --
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    I mean, the word is still there,
    womanism, women's liberation,
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    there are all kinds of words,
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    but I think it's much more about content
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    and not worrying too much about form.
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    So Black Lives Matter was started
    by three young Black feminists.
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    You know, that was their creation
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    that is beginning to change much
    that needs to be changed.
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    And they just assumed
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    that of course they were there
    as three young Black feminists.
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    PM: And in the early days
    of the women's movement
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    and continuing all the way through,
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    one of the ways that we have learned
    to talk to each other
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    about difficult issues
    in which we may have disagreements,
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    were sort of the talking circles
    or the consciousness raising,
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    but do you see -- is this
    something we could do
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    to begin to build back
    the bridges between us?
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    GS: You know, I regret
    the emphasis on divisions
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    because we are more unified
    than any other movement in history.
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    So I think we ought
    to celebrate that fact.
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    And it comes out of talking circles
    as you point out,
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    which used to be called
    consciousness raising groups.
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    And it just means
    that you sit in a circle,
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    as Native Americans taught us long ago,
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    and you each get to speak in turn --
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    Native Americans passed
    around a talking stick --
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    and everybody has to listen
    while each person --
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    and in that way,
    you say unsayable things
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    and somebody on the other
    side of the circle says,
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    "Oh, I've experienced that too."
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    And you discover what is shared
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    and also you discover
    how you can help each other.
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    There's no substitute
    for those kinds of talking circles.
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    PM: I want to be the first
    to volunteer with you, Gloria,
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    to start the talking circles
    and passing the talking sticks again.
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    One of the surprising things
    that people who come into your presence
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    are always surprised to find out
    what a great sense of humor you have.
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    And one of my favorite books
    of the many you have written
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    sits by my bedside
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    and the title of it, forgive me
    those who might not like bad language,
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    the title is "The Truth Will Set You Free,
    But First It Will Piss You Off!"
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    So I'm wondering now what truth
    is setting you free
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    and what continues to piss you off?
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    GS: Well actually, right at this moment
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    I mean, the truth is COVID --
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    you know, and we understand
    that it's a universal experience
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    and danger we're all dealing with,
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    and what pisses me off is
    that we don't use that experience
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    in the positive sense.
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    In the sense that we learn from dangers
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    as well as from accomplishments.
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    It pisses me off that this is not
    used in a positive way
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    to overcome the idea
    of categories of human beings
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    or of national boundaries or of countries.
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    I mean, we're all here on spaceship Earth.
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    We're all citizens of spaceship Earth
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    and COVID knows that,
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    so it should help to teach us that.
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    PM: And as we're looking
    at out current reality,
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    we've seen yet another
    great milestone for women,
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    in this country for sure,
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    with the newly elected
    vice president Kamala Harris,
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    who said in her speech, you know,
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    "I may be the first,
    but I won't be the last,"
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    and I think of the many times
    that you and I and others have said that.
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    What difference will it make,
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    in our country and around the world,
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    when there are more women
    in all leadership positions,
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    what are our differences as leaders?
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    GS: Well, I mean for one thing,
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    we will have the advantage of using
    all of human intelligence
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    instead of only a small portion of it;
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    this would be a good thing.
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    And we will also allow children
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    to see themselves as leaders universally,
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    instead of just one small group.
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    Because right now,
    when kids look at leaders,
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    they don't necessarily see themselves.
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    PM: When we look at you,
    we see a leader, Gloria,
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    and there are so many things
    that you could point to with pride,
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    although I know you don't.
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    But what is it that motivates you
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    or keeps you on the path onward
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    in those moments of doubt
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    or the times when things look bleak
    or there are fears,
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    or do you ever fear,
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    ever feel those feels?
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    GS: No, of course I fear,
    I mean, definitely.
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    But as the slogan goes,
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    "follow the fear and do it anyway"
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    "fear is a sign of growth."
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    (Laughs)
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    It's a good thing, right?
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    PM: Right.
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    GS: I'm so inspired by young women,
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    I mean, I keep feeling
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    as if I just had to wait
    for some of my friends to be born.
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    And to see that this is profoundly
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    a global movement, as it always has been.
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    I mean, you know, even the response
    to the march right after the inauguration
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    of the current president, in every --
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    Latin America, Africa, you know,
    were marching together.
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    It really has become a global movement,
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    thanks in large part to technology
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    because we can see each other
    as we are now,
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    and also just to the contagion
    of the idea of freedom, you know.
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    If women spend nine months
    being pregnant and caring for a child,
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    why isn't it that men are responsible
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    for spending that much more
    than half the time
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    taking care of the child, hello?
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    (Laughs)
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    Logic is in the eye
    of the logician, right?
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    (Laughs)
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    So you know, wherever you look,
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    there's just a discovery of freedom,
    of common sense, of companionship.
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    PM: Is there,
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    of all the things in your life,
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    what has been the greatest source
    of confidence building and inspiration?
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    Is it the global sisterhood
    that you've built around the world?
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    GS: Well it's just other women.
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    I mean, I would not
    have been able to ever conquer
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    my fear of public speaking,
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    which is where we started out,
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    if it hadn't been for my fearless friend,
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    Dorothy Pitman Hughes,
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    you know, for doing it together.
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    So you know, it's just,
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    it's learning from each other,
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    and just remembering to ask, really,
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    because the help is there,
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    the inspiration is there,
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    the sense of community is there,
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    and I hope that technology
    can help us in this way,
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    especially because for women,
    that's important,
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    because we can communicate in safety.
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    But I do regret and worry
    about the COVID emergency,
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    because we do also need to be together
    with all five senses
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    in order to truly emphatize.
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    So I look forward to the day
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    when you and I can once again
    be in the same room.
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    PM: Well, you and I have been
    in a lot of the same rooms
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    and even when you're not
    in the same room with women everywhere,
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    you have inspired them, Gloria.
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    And to see the full and total story,
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    well, at least part
    of the full and total story,
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    the movie has been made
    about Gloria's life.
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    It's called "The Glorias"
    based on her book "My Life on the Road,"
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    which is certainly the way
    you spent your life,
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    and it's available for streaming
    on Amazon Prime
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    and I do highly recommend it.
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    Gloria, thank you for your work,
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    for your life,
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    for the fearless way in which
    you have led us all forward,
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    and one last next step
    for moving onward from you?
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    What advice or counsel?
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    GS: Ah.
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    Just do it.
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    (Laughs) You know, I think we kind of wait
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    for instructions from up there
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    or we worry or something
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    and you know, if we just
    get up in the morning and say,
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    "OK, I'm going to do this,
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    and I'm going to get in touch
    with three or four other people,"
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    and just think of change
    as a tree, you know,
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    it doesn't grow from the top down,
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    so we shouldn't be waiting
    for somebody to tell us what to do.
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    It grows from the bottom up,
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    and we are the roots of change.
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    PM: We are bearing the roots
    of your work, Gloria, with gratitude.
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    Thank you very much
    for joining us for TEDWomen 2020.
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    GS: No, and thank you
    for bringing women together,
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    which is the magic.
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    Thank you.
Title:
To future generations of women, you are the roots of change
Speaker:
Gloria Steinem
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:07

English subtitles

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