Loretta J. Ross Dont call people out call them in TED

First of all, thank y’all
for listening to me.

I come to y’all because most Black women
don’t go to Klu Klux Klan rallies

on purpose.

(Laughter)

I did because it was my job;
I monitored hate groups.

But I really wanted to find out

how people could hate strangers so much.

Mostly, I wanted to work
for peace and justice.

But fortunately for me,

my mentor at the time was the legendary
civil rights leader Reverend C.T. Vivian,

who’d been an aide
to Dr. Martin Luther King.

And C.T. used to say,

“When you ask people to give up hate,

then you need to be there
for them when they do.”

Now, at the time C.T. said those words,

I started muttering under my breath,

because you can’t curse out
a preacher, you know?

But his words didn’t make any sense to me,

because if the Klan hated Black folks,

I was all right with hating them back.

Sounded OK to me.

But then something happened.

It became my job to help people
who were leaving hate groups,

and then once I got to know them,

I couldn’t hate them anymore.

And then I got confused.

I’m a survivor of racial violence,
rape and incest,

and I needed to find another
moral compass for my life’s work.

And that compass had to shift
from hate to love.

And so that improbable journey
is why I’m here to talk to y’all today.

You know, because I really, really
want to build a culture

and a world

that invites people in
instead of pushing them out.

It’s called a “calling-in culture.”

Now, some people really do believe

that the only way to do human rights work
is the way they want –

you know, my way or the highway.

But the problem is, when many different
people think many different thoughts

and they move in the same direction,

that’s a movement.

But when many different people
think one thought,

and they move in the same direction,

that’s a cult.

(Laughter)

And when you treat
potential allies like enemies,

you’re behaving like a cult,

not the human rights movement.

My friend Dázon Dixon Diallo,
who’s a very smart woman,

says that she believes that calling in

will be to this digital age human rights
movement of the 21st century

what nonviolence was to the civil rights
movement in the 20th century:

a new way to understand
how to truly achieve justice.

It’s not a matter of what we do,
but how we do it.

Now, all of us know what calling out is –

our “cancel culture,” as it’s called –

you think somebody
has done something wrong,

you think they should be
held accountable for it,

and you think they should
be punished for it.

So one of those calling-out examples
is, “I can’t believe you just said that.

You’re racist, sexist,
toxic, manipulative.”

With this approach,
you’ve guaranteed one thing:

with this blaming and shaming,

you just invited them to a fight,
not a conversation,

because you’re publicly humiliating them.

Now, some people actually
think call-outs should be used

to hold powerful people accountable,

and there’s a lot to that.

I mean, that’s what the human rights
movement has always done.

But most people are calling
others out out of fear.

Or they’re feeling that they
need to belong to something.

And some people think that they’ll feel
better about themselves

if they put somebody else down.

And then there’s too many
people, in my opinion,

who think that they can become famous
by defaming somebody else.

Most of us want all of this
violence to stop,

but we don’t know where to begin.

And most of us stay silent

because we’re afraid
that we’ll become the next target.

So even if something feels unfair,

we’re silent.

And if you’re unlucky enough
to have something that you regretted

captured on cell phone or in a tweet,

you’re walking around
with an unexploded gotcha bomb

just waiting to blow up
your life or your career

or your reputation.

I guess I need to ask:

How many of us here
have done something in our past

that could come back to haunt us?

One of my students once said,

“A call-out is not
an invitation for growth.

It’s the expectation
that you’ve already grown.”

This is the culture we’re trapped in now.

On the other hand,

there is calling in.

“Calling in” is a phrase
invented by Loan Tran,

and basically, a call-in
is a call-out done with love.

So when you think somebody
has done something wrong

and you want to hold them accountable,

you don’t react with anger or hate.

You just remain calm
and look at them and say –

and you can do this online
and in person, too –

but you just look at them calmly,
and you tell them,

“That’s an interesting viewpoint.

Tell me more.”

With that, you’ve invited them
into a conversation

instead of a fight.

And you don’t have to agree with somebody
to offer them loving attention.

All you’re admitting at that moment

is that there’s a possibility
that they’re as complicated as you are.

And everybody deserves to be heard
and to be respected.

And if you use this call-in practice
like I’m teaching,

what you’ll do is several things.

First of all, you’ll lead
with love instead of anger

and allow somebody else to grow.

Secondly, it’ll affirm
your own inner empathy

and your compassion,

and you’ll feel so good about yourself
when you learn that you can grow, too,

in embracing and inviting
more people into the world.

And then the third thing is that you can
call in your friends, your families,

your neighbors, your coworkers,

all the people you might have
given up on in the past

because of how they’ve hurt you.

Now, if you’re going to embrace
this calling-in practice,

you need some preparation.

It begins with self-assessment.

First of all, you need
to know your motives.

Why are you choosing to call
somebody in or out?

Are you in a healed enough space

for somebody else’s feelings?

If you’re not, maybe you’re not ready
to do the calling in yet.

But still, you have those options.

And I’ve taught these tactics
to eighth-graders, to college students,

to C-suite executives.

And as I said, they all
feel better about themselves

for reaffirming their optimism

and their hope that they can make
a difference in the world.

This is so, so important.

And so, if you’re not really ready
to invest in somebody else’s growth

with a call-in,

or you don’t want the inevitable fight
if you call them out,

there actually is a third option.

You can call on them
to be a better person.

And this was a phrase created
by Sonya Renee Taylor.

My favorite calling-on response

is to look the person dead in the eye,

cock my head to the side,
like I really care,

and say, “I beg your pardon.”

And then I wait.

Many times, they’ll start
walking back their words

just because I’m looking at them
like they lost their minds.

(Laughter)

We can use this calling-in, calling-out,
calling-on approach

as part of the spectrum of responses
we can make to each other,

and that’s so, so important.

One time – let me put it this way –

one time, I misgendered
a student in my class.

And I froze in shame because I expected
the student to jump down my throat,

because misgendering somebody
is a really big deal nowadays.

And instead, this student looked at me
and offered me grace by saying,

“Oh, that’s all right, professor.
I misgender myself sometimes.”

(Laughter)

An 18-year-old. Showing me grace.

Now, I believe that one of the most
effective expressions of calling-in

is forgiveness.

And the most powerful example
of radical forgiveness I’ve ever seen

happened after the 2015 church massacre
in Charleston, South Carolina,

where nine people were killed.

And one of the victim’s sons,
Chris Singleton,

offered his mother’s killer – I mean,
his mother’s killer – forgiveness.

And I can’t get his words exactly right,
but Chris basically said,

“Forgiveness is more powerful
than people realize,

because it lifts all of this
stuff off of you.

It’s freedom – freedom from revenge,

freedom from anger,

freedom from hatred.”

Sadly, he was called out for saying that.

I believe that it’s very possible
to use these strategies,

so I’m going to tell you
about my Uncle Frank.

He ain’t really my uncle but, you know,

he’s still living so I can’t call him out.

Anyway.

He came to a family reunion

and decided to talk about
Mexican Americans stealing jobs.

And everybody had been
chatting and eating quite happily

till his racism silenced the room.

Most people buried their faces
in their plate,

because this was Uncle Frank.

This is what he does.

But I decided to respond,
but not with anger.

I kind of organized a few comments
and asked him a question.

“Uncle Frank, I know you.

I love you.

I respect you.

And what I know about you
is that you’d run into a burning building

and save somebody if you could.

And you wouldn’t care
what race that person is,

you wouldn’t care whether
they were gay or an immigrant.

So, Uncle Frank, that’s the man
I love and respect.

So tell me: How can I reconcile
that good Uncle Frank that I know you are

with the words that just
came out of your mouth?”

You haven’t called him in.
You haven’t called him out.

You called on him to decide
how he’s going to be.

And with this approach,
he’s less likely to become defensive,

because you haven’t actually attacked him.

And while he’s organizing what to say,

you’ve affirmed that he has options
about how he wants to be,

especially in his niece’s eyes
and his family’s eyes.

But most importantly,
the third thing you’ve achieved

is that you did not let
his bigotry go unchallenged,

and that was witnessed
by the entire family:

how you stand up to bigotry
at a family reunion

without hate, argument
and throwing over the table.

Now, anybody can learn
these tactics, as I’ve said,

and we really need to understand
that we can offer people forgiveness

and a chance to redeem themselves
from their mistakes.

Somebody gave us a chance to grow,

and we can offer that to others.

So I invite you to join me
in this calling-in culture,

this calling-in world that we’re building.

I think you will have
a lot of joy and satisfaction in it,

like I’ve found.

We don’t actually risk anything,

because all we risk losing is our pain.

And then you’ll learn
the most powerful lesson I’ve learned

from five decades of being
a social justice activist:

fighting hate should be fun.

(Laughter)

It’s being a hater that sucks.

Thank y’all.

(Applause and cheers)