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I am a public policy wonk.
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I investigate data that points to problems
in the American economy.
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Problems like rising household debt,
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declining wages and benefits,
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shortfalls in public revenue.
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And I try to pinpoint solutions
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to make our economy
more prosperous for more people.
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I geek out about tax policy
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and infrastructure investments,
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and I get really excited
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by a gracefully designed
regulatory regime.
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(Laughter)
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These are the kinds of topics
that I was talking about
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on a public television
live call-in show, in August of 2016.
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I was about half way through the program,
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when a man called in,
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identified as Gary from North Carolina,
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and he said,
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"I'm a white male and I'm prejudiced."
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He then went on to detail his prejudice,
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talking about black men and gangs,
and drugs and crime.
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But then he said something
that I'll never forget.
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He said, "But I want to change.
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And I want to know what I can do
to become a better American."
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Now, remember, my career
is about economic policy,
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as translated into dollars and cents,
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not personal thoughts and feelings.
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But when I opened my mouth
to respond to this man on live television,
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the most surprising words came out.
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I said,
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"Thank you."
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I thanked him for admitting his prejudice,
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for wanting to change.
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and for knowing somehow that
that would make him a better American.
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The exchange between Gary
and me went viral.
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It's been viewed over eight million times,
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and inspired waves
of social media commentary
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and news coverage.
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And I think people were surprised
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that a black woman
would show such compassion
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for a prejudiced white man,
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and they were surprised
that a white man would admit his bias
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on national television.
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Not long after Gary and my viral moment,
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we met in person.
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He said that he had taken my advice.
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He said that my words had been
like someone wiped the dust from a window
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and let the light in.
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Over the years,
Gary and I have become friends.
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And Gary would tell you
that I've taught him a lot
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about systemic racism in America,
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and public policy.
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But I've learned a lot from Gary too.
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And the biggest lesson for me
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has been that Gary's prejudice
has caused him to suffer.
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Fear, anxiety, isolation.
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And it's made me rethink
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many of the economic problems
I've been focusing on
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my entire career.
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I wondered,
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is it possible that our society's racism
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has likewise been backfiring
on the very same people
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set up to benefit prom privilege?
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Driven by this question,
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I've spent the past few years
traveling the country,
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researching and writing a book.
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My conclusion?
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Racism leads to bad policy making.
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It's making our economy worse.
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And not just in ways
that disadvantage people of color.
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It turns out it's not a zero-sum.
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Racism is bad for white people too.
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Take, for example,
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America's underinvestment
in our public goods.
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The things that we all need,
that we share in common,
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our schools and roads and bridges.
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Our infrastructure gets a D plus
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from the American Society
of Civil Engineers,
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and we invest less per capita
than almost every other advanced nation.
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But it wasn't always this way.
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I traveled to Montgomery, Alabama,
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and there, I saw how racism
can destroy a public good
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and the public will to support it.
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In the 1930s and '40s,
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the United States went on a nationwide
building boom of public amenities
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funded by tax dollars,
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which in Montgomery, Alabama,
included the Oak Park pool.
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Which was the grandest one for miles.
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You know, back then,
people didn't have air conditioners,
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and so they spent their hot summer days
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in a steady rotation
of sunning and splashing
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and then cooling off
under a ring of nearby trees.
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It was the meeting place for the town.
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Except the Oak Park pool,
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though it was funded
by all of Montgomery citizens,
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was for whites only.
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When a federal court
finally deemed this unconstitutional,
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the reaction of the town
council was swift.
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Effective January 1, 1959,
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they decided
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they would drain the public pool
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rather than let black families swim too.
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This destruction of public goods
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was replicated across the country
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in towns not just in the South.
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Towns closed their public parks,
pools and schools,
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all in response to desegregation orders,
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all throughout the 1960s.
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In Montgomery, they shut down
the entire Parks department
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for a decade.
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They closed the recreation centers,
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they even sold off the animals in the zoo.
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Today, you can walk
the grounds of Oak Park, as I did.
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But very few people do.
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They never rebuilt the pool.
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Racism has a cost for everyone.
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I remember having that same thought
on September 15, 2008,
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when I learned the breaking news
that Lehman Brothers was collapsing.
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Now Lehman was,
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like the other financial firms
that would go under in the coming days,
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done in by overexposure
to a toxic financial instrument,
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based on something
that used to be simple and safe,
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a 30-year fixed-rate home loan.
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But the mortgages at the center
and the root of the financial crisis
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had strange new terms.
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And they were developed
and aggressively marketed for years
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in black and brown
middle class communities,
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like the one that I visited
when I met a home owner named Glenn.
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Glenn had owned a home
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on a leafy street in the Mount Pleasant
neighborhood of Cleveland
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for over a decade.
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But when I met him,
he was near foreclosure.
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Like nearly all of his neighbors,
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he'd received a knock on the door
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from a broker promising
to refinance his mortgage.
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But what the broker didn't tell him
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was that this was a new kind of mortgage.
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A mortgage with an inflated interest rate,
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and a balloon payment,
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and a prepayment penalty
if he tried to get out of it.
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Now the common misperception,
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then and still today,
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is that people like Glenn were buying
properties they couldn't afford.
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That they themselves were risky borrowers.
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I saw how this stereotype
made it harder for policy makers
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to see the crisis for what it was
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back when we still had time to stop it.
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But that's all it was.
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A stereotype.
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The majority of subprime mortgages
went to people who had good credit,
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like Glenn.
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And African Americans and Latinos
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were three times as likely,
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even if they had good credit,
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than white people,
to get sold these toxic loans.
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The problem wasn't the borrower.
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The problem was the loan.
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After the crash,
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most of the nation's big lenders,
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from Wells Fargo to Countrywide,
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would go on to be fined
for racial discrimination.
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But that realization came too late.
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These loans, super profitable
for the lenders,
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but designed to fail for the borrowers,
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spread out past the confines
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of black and brown
neighborhoods like Glenn's,
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and into the wider,
whiter mortgage market.
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All of the nation's big Wall Street firms
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bet on these loans.
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At its peak,
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one out of every five mortgages
in the country was in this mold,
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and the crisis,
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the crisis that my colleagues
and I saw coming,
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would go on to cost us all.
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Nineteen trillion in lost wealth.
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Pensions, home equity, savings.
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Eight million jobs vanished.
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A home ownership rate
that has never recovered.
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My years of advocating in vain
for home owners like Glenn
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left me convinced
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we would not have had a financial crisis
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if it weren't for racism.
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In 2017, I traveled to Mississippi,
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where a group of auto-factory workers
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was trying to organize into a union.
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Now, the benefits they were fighting for,
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higher pay, better healthcare coverage,
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a real pension,
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they would have helped
everybody at the plant.
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But in person after person
that I talked to,
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white, black, for the union,
against the union,
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race kept coming up.
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A white man named Joey put it this way.
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He said,
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"White workers think I ain't voting yes
if the blacks are voting yes.
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If the blacks are for it, I'm against it."
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A white man named Chip told me,
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the idea is that
if you uplift black people,
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you're downing white people.
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It's like the world's got this
crab in a barrel mentality.
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Now the union vote failed.
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Wages at the plant are still lower
than their unionized peers,
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and people there still worry
about their health care.
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You know, it's tempting perhaps,
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to focus on the prejudiced attitudes
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of the men and the workers
that I heard in Mississippi.
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But I'm more interested
in holding accountable
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the people who are selling
racist ideas for their profit,
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than those who are desperate
enough to buy it.
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My travels also took me to places
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where I saw, however,
that it doesn't have to be this way.
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I went to Maine,
the whitest state in the nation,
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the oldest,
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where there are more deaths
every year than births,
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and I went to this dying
mill town called Lewiston,
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that is being revitalized by new people,
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mostly African, mostly Muslim,
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immigrants and refugees.
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There, I met a woman named Cecile,
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whose parents had been part
of the last wave of new people
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to come to Lewiston.
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These are French Canadian mill workers
at the turn of the century.
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Cecile is retired, but she had found
a new purpose in life,
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by organizing Congolese refugees
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to join with the white retirees
at the Franco Heritage Center.
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(Laughter)
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These men and women from the Congo
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were helping these retirees
remember the French
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that they hadn't spoken
since their childhoods.
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And together, these two communities
helped each other feel at home.
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You know, for all the political talk
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about the newcomers
being a drain on the town,
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a bipartisan think tank found
that the local refugee community there
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created 40 million dollars in tax revenue,
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and 130 million in income.
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And I talked to the town administrator,
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who was boasting about the fact
that Lewiston was building a new school,
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when all the rest of towns
like theirs in Maine
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was closing them.
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You know, it costs us so much
to remain divided.
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This zero-sum thinking,
that's what's good for one group
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has to come at the expense of another,
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it's what's gotten us into this mess.
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I believe it's time to reject
that old paradigm
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and realize that our fates are linked.
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An injury to one is an injury to all.
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You know, we have a choice.
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Our nation was founded
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on a belief in a hierarchy of human value.
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But we are about to be a country
with no racial majority.
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So we can keep pretending
like we're not all on the same team.
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We can keep sabotaging our success
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and hamstringing our own players.
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Or we can let the proximity
of so much difference
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reveal our common humanity.
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And we can finally invest
in our greatest asset.
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Our people.
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All of our people.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)