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Wiring a web for global good

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    Can I say how delighted I am to be away
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    from the calm of Westminster and Whitehall? (Laughter)
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    This is Kim, a nine-year-old Vietnam girl,
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    her back ruined by napalm,
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    and she awakened the conscience of the nation of America
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    to begin to end the Vietnam War.
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    This is Birhan, who was the Ethiopian girl
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    who launched Live Aid in the 1980s,
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    15 minutes away from death when she was rescued,
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    and that picture of her being rescued is one that went round the world.
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    This is Tiananmen Square.
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    A man before a tank became a picture
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    that became a symbol for the whole world of resistance.
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    This next is the Sudanese girl,
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    a few moments from death,
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    a vulture hovering in the background,
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    a picture that went round the world
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    and shocked people into action on poverty.
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    This is Neda, the Iranian girl
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    who was shot while at a demonstration with her father in Iran
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    only a few weeks ago, and she is now the focus, rightly so,
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    of the YouTube generation.
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    And what do all these pictures and events have in common?
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    What they have in common is what we see unlocks
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    what we cannot see.
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    What we see unlocks the invisible ties
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    and bonds of sympathy that bring us together
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    to become a human community.
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    What these pictures demonstrate is that
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    we do feel the pain of others,
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    however distantly.
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    What I think these pictures demonstrate
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    is that we do believe in something bigger than ourselves.
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    What these pictures demonstrate is
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    that there is a moral sense across all religions, across all faiths,
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    across all continents -- a moral sense that
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    not only do we share the pain of others,
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    and believe in something bigger than ourselves
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    but we have a duty to act when we see things
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    that are wrong that need righted,
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    see injuries that need to be corrected,
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    see problems that need to be rectified.
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    There is a story about Olof Palme, the Swedish Prime Minister,
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    going to see Ronald Reagan in America in the 1980s.
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    Before he arrived Ronald Reagan said --
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    and he was the Swedish Social Democratic Prime Minister --
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    "Isn’t this man a communist?"
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    The reply was, "No, Mr President, he’s an anti-communist."
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    And Ronald Reagan said, "I don’t care what kind of communist he is!"
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    (Laughter)
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    Ronald Reagan asked Olof Palme,
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    the Social Democratic Prime Minister of Sweden,
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    "Well, what do you believe in? Do you want to abolish the rich?"
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    He said, "No, I want to abolish the poor."
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    Our responsibility is to let everyone have the chance
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    to realize their potential to the full.
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    I believe there is a moral sense and a global ethic
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    that commands attention from people of every religion
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    and every faith, and people of no faith.
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    But I think what's new is that we now have the capacity
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    to communicate instantaneously across frontiers
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    right across the world.
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    We now have the capacity to find common ground
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    with people who we will never meet,
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    but who we will meet through the Internet and through
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    all the modern means of communication;
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    that we now have the capacity to organize
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    and take collective action together
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    to deal with the problem or an injustice
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    that we want to deal with;
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    and I believe that this makes this a unique age in human history,
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    and it is the start of what I would call
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    the creation of a truly global society.
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    Go back 200 years when the slave trade was
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    under pressure from William Wilberforce and all the protesters.
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    They protested across Britain.
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    They won public opinion over a long period of time.
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    But it took 24 years for the campaign to be successful.
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    What could they have done with the pictures that they could have shown
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    if they were able to use the modern means of communication
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    to win people’s hearts and minds?
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    Or if you take Eglantyne Jebb,
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    the woman who created Save the Children 90 years ago.
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    She was so appalled by what was happening in Austria
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    as a result of the First World War and what was happening to children
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    who were part of the defeated families of Austria,
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    that in Britain she wanted to take action,
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    but she had to go house to house,
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    leaflet to leaflet, to get people to attend a rally
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    in the Royal Albert Hall
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    that eventually gave birth to Save the Children,
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    an international organization that is now fully recognized
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    as one of the great institutions in our land and in the world.
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    But what more could she have done
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    if she’d had the modern means of communications available to her
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    to create a sense that the injustice that people saw
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    had to be acted upon immediately?
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    Now look at what’s happened in the last 10 years.
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    In Philippines in 2001, President Estrada --
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    a million people texted each other about the corruption of that regime,
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    eventually brought it down and it was, of course, called the "coup de text." (Laughter)
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    Then you have in Zimbabwe the first election under Robert Mugabe a year ago.
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    Because people were able to take mobile phone photographs
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    of what was happening at the polling stations, it was impossible
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    for that Premier to fix that election in the way that he wanted to do.
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    Or take Burma and the monks that were blogging out,
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    a country that nobody knew anything about that was happening, until these blogs
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    told the world that there was a repression,
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    meaning that lives were being lost
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    and people were being persecuted and Aung San Suu Kyi,
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    who is one of the great prisoners of conscience of the world,
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    had to be listened to.
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    Then take Iran itself, and what people are doing today:
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    following what happened to Neda,
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    people who are preventing the security services of Iran finding those people
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    who are blogging out of Iran, any by everybody who is blogging,
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    changing their address to Tehran, Iran,
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    and making it difficult for the security services.
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    Take, therefore, what modern technology is capable of:
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    the power of our moral sense allied to the power of communications
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    and our ability to organize internationally.
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    That, in my view, gives us the first opportunity as a community
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    to fundamentally change the world.
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    Foreign policy can never be the same again. It cannot be run by elites;
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    it’s got to be run by listening to the public opinions of peoples who are blogging,
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    who are communicating with each other around the world.
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    200 years ago the problem we had to solve was slavery.
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    150 years ago I suppose the main problem in a country like ours
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    was how young people, children, had the right to education.
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    100 years ago in most countries in Europe, the pressure was for the right to vote.
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    50 years ago the pressure was for the right to social security and welfare.
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    In the last 50-60 years we have seen fascism, anti-Semitism, racism, apartheid,
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    discrimination on the basis of sex and gender and sexuality;
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    all these have come under pressure
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    because of the campaigns that have been run by people to change the world.
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    I was with Nelson Mandela a year ago, when he was in London.
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    I was at a concert that he was attending to mark his birthday
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    and for the creation of new resources for his foundation.
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    I was sitting next to Nelson Mandela -- I was very privileged to do so --
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    when Amy Winehouse came onto the stage. (Laughter)
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    And Nelson Mandela was quite surprised at the appearance of the singer
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    and I was explaining to him at the time who she was.
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    Amy Winehouse said, "Nelson Mandela and I have a lot in common.
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    My husband too has spent a long time in prison."
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    (Laughter)
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    Nelson Mandela then went down to the stage
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    and he summarized the challenge for us all.
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    He said in his lifetime he had climbed a great mountain, the mountain
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    of challenging and then defeating racial oppression and defeating apartheid.
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    He said that there was a greater challenge ahead,
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    the challenge of poverty, of climate change -- global challenges
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    that needed global solutions
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    and needed the creation of a truly global society.
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    We are the first generation which is in a position to do this.
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    Combine the power of a global ethic
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    with the power of our ability to communicate
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    and organize globally, with the challenges that we now face,
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    most of which are global in their nature.
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    Climate change cannot be solved in one country,
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    but has got to be solved by the world working together.
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    A financial crisis, just as we have seen, could not be solved
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    by America alone or Europe alone;
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    it needed the world to work together.
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    Take the problems of security and terrorism and, equally,
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    the problem of human rights and development:
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    they cannot be solved by Africa alone;
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    they cannot be solved by America or Europe alone.
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    We cannot solve these problems unless we work together.
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    So the great project of our generation, it seems to me,
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    is to build for the first time, out of a global ethic
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    and our global ability to communicate
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    and organize together, a truly global society,
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    built on that ethic but with institutions
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    that can serve that global society and make for a different future.
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    We have now, and are the first generation with, the power to do this.
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    Take climate change. Is it not absolutely scandalous
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    that we have a situation
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    where we know that there is a climate change problem,
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    where we know also that that will mean we have to give more resources
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    to the poorest countries to deal with that,
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    when we want to create a global carbon market,
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    but there is no global institution
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    that people have been able to agree upon
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    to deal with this problem?
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    One of the things that has got to come out of Copenhagen in the next few months
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    is an agreement that there will be
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    a global environmental institution
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    that is able to deal
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    with the problems of persuading the whole of the world
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    to move along a climate-change agenda.
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    (Applause)
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    One of the reasons why an institution is not in itself enough
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    is that we have got to persuade people around the world
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    to change their behavior as well,
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    so you need that global ethic of fairness and responsibility
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    across the generations.
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    Take the financial crisis.
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    If people in poorer countries can be hit by a crisis that starts in New York
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    or starts in the sub-prime market of the United States of America.
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    If people can find that that sub-prime product
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    has been transferred across nations
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    many, many times until it ends up in banks in Iceland
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    or the rest in Britain,
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    and people's ordinary savings are affected by it,
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    then you cannot rely on a system of national supervision.
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    You need in the long run for stability, for economic growth,
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    for jobs, as well as for financial stability,
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    global economic institutions that make sure
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    that growth to be sustained has to be shared,
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    and are built on the principle
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    that the prosperity of this world is indivisible.
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    So another challenge for our generation is to create global institutions
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    that reflect our ideas of fairness and responsibility,
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    not the ideas that were the basis
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    of the last stage of financial development over these recent years.
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    Then take development and take the partnership we need between our countries
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    and the rest of the world, the poorest part of the world.
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    We do not have the basis of a proper partnership for the future,
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    and yet, out of people’s desire for a global ethic
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    and a global society that can be done.
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    I have just been talking to the President of Sierra Leone.
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    This is a country of six and a half million people,
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    but it has only 80 doctors; it has 200 nurses;
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    it has 120 midwives.
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    You cannot begin to build a healthcare system for six million people
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    with such limited resources.
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    Or take the girl I met when I was in Tanzania,
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    a girl called Miriam.
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    She was 11 years old; her parents had both died from AIDS,
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    her mother and then her father.
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    She was an AIDS orphan being handed
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    across different extended families to be cared for.
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    She herself was suffering from HIV;
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    she was suffering from tuberculosis.
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    I met her in a field, she was ragged, she had no shoes.
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    When you looked in her eyes, any girl at the age of eleven
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    is looking forward to the future,
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    but there was an unreachable sadness in that girl’s eyes
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    and if I could have translated that to the rest of the world for that moment,
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    I believe that all the work that it had done for the global HIV/AIDS fund
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    would be rewarded by people being prepared to make donations.
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    We must then build a proper relationship between the richest and
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    the poorest countries
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    based on our desire that they are able to fend for themselves
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    with the investment that is necessary in their agriculture,
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    so that Africa is not a net importer of food, but an exporter of food.
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    Take the problems of human rights and
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    the problems of security in so many countries around the world.
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    Burma is in chains, Zimbabwe is a human tragedy,
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    in Sudan thousands of people have died unnecessarily
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    for wars that we could prevent.
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    In the Rwanda Children's Museum,
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    there is a photograph of a 10-year-old boy
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    and the Children's Museum is commemorating the lives that were lost
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    in the Rwandan genocide where a million people died.
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    There is a photograph of a boy called David.
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    Beside that photograph there is the information about his life.
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    It said "David, age 10."
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    David: ambition to be a doctor.
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    Favorite sport: football. What did he enjoy most?
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    Making people laugh.
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    How did he die?
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    Tortured to death.
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    Last words said to his mother who was also tortured to death:
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    "Don't worry. The United Nations are coming."
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    And we never did.
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    And that young boy believed our promises
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    that we would help people in difficulty in Rwanda,
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    and we never did.
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    So we have got to create in this world also
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    institutions for peacekeeping and humanitarian aid,
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    but also for reconstruction and security
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    for some of the conflict-ridden states of the world.
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    So my argument today is basically this.
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    We have the means by which we could create a truly global society.
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    The institutions of this global society can be created by our endeavors.
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    That global ethic can infuse the fairness and responsibility that is necessary
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    for these institutions to work,
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    but we should not lose the chance in this generation,
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    in this decade in particular, with President Obama in America,
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    with other people working with us around the world,
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    to create global institutions for the environment,
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    and for finance,
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    and for security and for development,
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    that make sense of our responsibility to other peoples,
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    our desire to bind the world together, and
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    our need to tackle problems that everybody knows exist.
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    It is said that in Ancient Rome that when Cicero spoke to his audiences,
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    people used to turn to each other and say about Cicero, "Great speech."
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    But it is said that in Ancient Greece
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    when Demosthenes spoke to his audiences,
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    people turned to each other and didn’t say "Great speech."
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    They said, "Let's march."
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    We should be marching towards a global society.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Wiring a web for global good
Speaker:
Gordon Brown
Description:

We're at a unique moment in history, says UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown: we can use today's interconnectedness to develop our shared global ethic -- and work together to confront the challenges of poverty, security, climate change and the economy.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
16:21
TED edited English subtitles for Wiring a web for global good
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