ENGLISH SPEECH MARK ZUCKERBERG Find Your Purpose English Subtitles

President Faust, Board of Overseers, faculty,
alumni, friends, proud parents, members of

the ad board, and graduates of the greatest
university in the world.

I’m honored to be with you today because,
let’s face it, you accomplished something

I never could.

If I get through this speech, it’ll be the
first time I actually finish something at

Harvard.

Class of 2017, congratulations!

I’m an unlikely speaker, not just because
I dropped out, but because we’re technically

in the same generation.

We walked this yard less than a decade apart,
studied the same ideas and slept through the

same Ec10 lectures.

We may have taken different paths to get here,
especially if you came all the way from the

Quad, but today I want to share what I’ve
learned about our generation and the world

we’re building together.

But first, the last couple of days have brought
back a lot of good memories.

How many of you remember exactly what you
were doing when you got that email telling

you that you got into Harvard?

I was playing Civilization and I ran downstairs,
got my dad, and for some reason, his reaction

was to video me opening the email.

That could have been a really sad video.

I swear getting into Harvard is still the
thing my parents are most proud of me for.

What about your first lecture at Harvard?

Mine was Computer Science 121 with the incredible
Harry Lewis.

I was late so I threw on a t-shirt and didn’t
realize until afterwards it was inside out

and backwards with my tag sticking out the
front.

I couldn’t figure out why no one would talk
to me—except one guy, KX Jin, he just went

with it.

We ended up doing our problem sets together,
and now he runs a big part of Facebook.

And that, Class of 2017, is why you should
be nice to people.

But my best memory from Harvard was meeting
Priscilla.

I had just launched this prank website Facemash,
and the ad board wanted to “see me”.

Everyone thought I was going to get kicked
out.

My parents came to help me pack.

My friends threw me a going-away party.

As luck would have it, Priscilla was at that
party with her friend.

We met in line for the bathroom in the Pfoho
Belltower, and in what must be one of the

all-time romantic lines, I said: “I’m
going to get kicked out in three days, so

we need to go on a date quickly.”

Actually, any of you graduating can use that
line.

I didn’t end up getting kicked out—I did
that to myself.

Priscilla and I started dating.

And, you know, that movie made it seem like
Facemash was so important to creating Facebook.

It wasn’t.

But without Facemash I wouldn’t have met
Priscilla, and she’s the most important

person in my life, so you could say it was
the most important thing I built in my time

here.

We’ve all started lifelong friendships here,
and some of us even families.

That’s why I’m so grateful to this place.

Thanks, Harvard.

Today I want to talk about purpose.

But I’m not here to give you the standard
commencement about finding your purpose.

We’re millennials.

We’ll try to do that instinctively.

Instead, I’m here to tell you finding your
purpose isn’t enough.

The challenge for our generation is creating
a world where everyone has a sense of purpose.

One of my favorite stories is when John F.
Kennedy visited the NASA space center, he

saw a janitor carrying a broom and he walked
over and asked what he was doing.

The janitor responded: “Mr. President, I’m
helping put a man on the moon.”

Purpose is that sense that we are part of
something bigger than ourselves, that we are

needed, that we have something better ahead
to work for.

Purpose is what creates true happiness.

You’re graduating at a time when this is
especially important.

When our parents graduated, purpose reliably
came from your job, your church, your community.

But today, technology and automation are eliminating
many jobs.

Membership in communities is declining.

Many people feel disconnected and depressed,
and are trying to fill a void.

As I’ve traveled around, I’ve sat with
children in juvenile detention and opioid

addicts, who told me their lives could have
turned out differently if they just had something

to do, an after-school program or somewhere
to go.

I’ve met factory workers who know their
old jobs aren’t coming back and are trying

to find their place.

To keep our society moving forward, we have
a generational challenge—to not only create

new jobs, but create a renewed sense of purpose.

I remember the night I launched Facebook from
my little dorm in Kirkland House.

I went to Noch’s with my friend KX.

I remember telling him I was excited to connect
the Harvard community, but one day someone

would connect the whole world.

The thing is, it never even occurred to me
that someone might be us.

We were just college kids.

We didn’t know anything about that.

There were all these big technology companies
with resources.

I just assumed one of them would do it.

But this idea was so clear to us—that all
people want to connect.

So we just kept moving forward, day by day.

I know a lot of you will have your own stories
just like this.

A change in the world that seems so clear
you’re sure someone else will do it.

But they won’t.

You will.

But it’s not enough to have purpose yourself.

You have to create a sense of purpose for
others.

I found that out the hard way.

You see, my hope was never to build a company,
but to make an impact.

And as all these people started joining us,
I just assumed that’s what they cared about

too, so I never explained what I hoped we’d
build.

A couple years in, some big companies wanted
to buy us.

I didn’t want to sell.

I wanted to see if we could connect more people.

We were building the first News Feed, and
I thought if we could just launch this, it

could change how we learn about the world.

Nearly everyone else wanted to sell.

Without a sense of higher purpose, this was
the startup dream come true.

It tore our company apart.

After one tense argument, an advisor told
me if I didn’t agree to sell, I would regret

the decision for the rest of my life.

Relationships were so frayed that within a
year or so every single person on the management

team was gone.

That was my hardest time leading Facebook.

I believed in what we were doing, but I felt
alone.

And worse, it was my fault.

I wondered if I was just wrong, an imposter,
a 22 year-old kid who had no idea how the

world worked.

Now, years later, I understand that is how
things work with no sense of higher purpose.

It’s up to us to create it so we can all
keep moving forward together.

Today I want to talk about three ways to create
a world where everyone has a sense of purpose:

by taking on big meaningful projects together,
by redefining equality so everyone has the

freedom to pursue purpose, and by building
community across the world.

First, let’s take on big meaningful projects.

Our generation will have to deal with tens
of millions of jobs replaced by automation

like self-driving cars and trucks.

But we have the potential to do so much more
together.

Every generation has its defining works.

More than 300,000 people worked to put a man
on the moon—including that janitor.

Millions of volunteers immunized children
around the world against polio.

Millions of more people built the Hoover Dam
and other great projects.

These projects didn’t just provide purpose
for the people doing those jobs, they gave

our whole country a sense of pride that we
could do great things.

Now it’s our turn to do great things.

I know, you’re probably thinking: I don’t
know how to build a dam, or get a million

people involved in anything.

But let me tell you a secret: No one does
when they begin.

Ideas don’t come out fully formed.

They only become clear as you work on them.

You just have to get started.

If I had to understand everything about connecting
people before I began, I never would have

started Facebook.

Movies and pop culture get this all wrong.

The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous
lie.

It makes us feel inadequate since we haven’t
had ours.

It prevents people with seeds of good ideas
from getting started.

Oh, you know what else movies get wrong about
innovation?

No one writes math formulas on glass.

That’s not a thing.

It’s good to be idealistic.

But be prepared to be misunderstood.

Anyone working on a big vision will get called
crazy, even if you end up right.

Anyone working on a complex problem will get
blamed for not fully understanding the challenge,

even though it’s impossible to know everything
upfront.

Anyone taking initiative will get criticized
for moving too fast, because there’s always

someone who wants to slow you down.

In our society, we often don’t do big things
because we’re so afraid of making mistakes

that we ignore all the things wrong today
if we do nothing.

The reality is, anything we do will have issues
in the future.

But that can’t keep us from starting.

So what are we waiting for?

It’s time for our generation-defining public
works.

How about stopping climate change before we
destroy the planet, and getting millions of

people involved manufacturing and installing
solar panels?

How about curing all diseases and asking volunteers
to track their health data and share their

genomes?

Today we spend 50x more treating people who
are sick than we spend finding cures so people

don’t get sick in the first place.

That makes no sense.

We can fix this.

How about modernizing democracy so everyone
can vote online, and personalizing education

so everyone can learn?

These achievements are within our reach.

Let’s do them all in a way that gives everyone
in our society a role.

Let’s do big things, not only to create
progress, but to create purpose.

So taking on big meaningful projects is the
first thing we can do to create a world where

everyone has a sense of purpose.

The second is redefining equality to give
everyone the freedom they need to pursue purpose.

Many of our parents had stable jobs throughout
their careers.

Now we’re all entrepreneurial, whether we’re
starting projects or finding or role.

And that’s great.

Our culture of entrepreneurship is how we
create so much progress.

Now, an entrepreneurial culture thrives when
it’s easy to try lots of new ideas.

Facebook wasn’t the first thing I built.

I also built games, chat systems, study tools
and music players.

I’m not alone.

JK Rowling got rejected 12 times before publishing
Harry Potter.

Even Beyonce had to make hundreds of songs
to get “Halo.”

The greatest successes come from having the
freedom to fail.

But today, we have a level of wealth inequality
that hurts everyone.

When you don’t have the freedom to take
your idea and turn it into a historic enterprise,

we all lose.

Right now our society is way over-indexed
on rewarding success and we don’t do nearly

enough to make it easy for everyone to take
lots of shots.

Let’s face it.

There is something wrong with our system when
I can leave here and make billions of dollars

in 10 years while millions of students can’t
afford to pay off their loans, let alone start

a business.

Look, I know a lot of entrepreneurs, and I
don’t know a single person who gave up on

starting a business because they might not
make enough money.

But I know lots of people who haven’t pursued
dreams because they didn’t have a cushion

to fall back on if they failed.

We all know we don’t succeed just by having
a good idea or working hard.

We succeed by being lucky too.

If I had to support my family growing up instead
of having time to code, if I didn’t know

I’d be fine if Facebook didn’t work out,
I wouldn’t be standing here today.

If we’re honest, we all know how much luck
we’ve had.

Every generation expands its definition of
equality.

Previous generations fought for the vote and
civil rights.

They had the New Deal and Great Society.

Now it’s our time to define a new social
contract for our generation.

We should have a society that measures progress
not just by economic metrics like GDP, but

by how many of us have a role we find meaningful.

We should explore ideas like universal basic
income to give everyone a cushion to try new

things.

We’re going to change jobs many times, so
we need affordable child care to get to work

and health care that aren’t tied to one
company.

We’re all going to make mistakes, so we
need a society that focuses less on locking

us up or stigmatizing us.

And as technology keeps changing, we need
to focus more on continuous education throughout

our lives.

And yes, giving everyone the freedom to pursue
purpose isn’t free.

People like me should pay for it.

Many of you will do well and you should too.

That’s why Priscilla and I started the Chan
Zuckerberg Initiative and committed our wealth

to promoting equal opportunity.

These are the values of our generation.

It was never a question of if we were going
to do this.

The only question was when.

Millennials are already one of the most charitable
generations in history.

In one year, three of four US millennials
made a donation and seven out of ten raised

money for charity.

But it’s not just about money.

You can also give time.

I promise you, if you take an hour or two
a week—that’s all it takes to give someone

a hand, to help them reach their potential.

Maybe you think that’s too much time.

I used to.

When Priscilla graduated from Harvard she
became a teacher, and before she’d do education

work with me, she told me I needed to teach
a class.

I complained: “Well, I’m kind of busy.

I’m running this company.”

But she insisted, so I taught a middle-school
program on entrepreneurship at the local Boys

and Girls Club.

I taught them lessons on product development
and marketing, and they taught me what it’s

like feeling targeted for your race and having
a family member in prison.

I shared stories from my time in school, and
they shared their hope of one day going to

college too.

For five years now, I’ve been having dinner
with those kids every month.

One of them threw me and Priscilla our first
baby shower.

And next year they’re going to college.

Every one of them.

First in their families.

We can all make time to give someone a hand.

Let’s give everyone the freedom to pursue
their purpose—not only because it’s the

right thing to do, but because when more people
can turn their dreams into something great,

we’re all better for it.

Purpose doesn’t only come from work.

The third way we can create a sense of purpose
for everyone is by building community.

And when our generation says “everyone,”
we mean everyone in the world.

Quick show of hands: How many of you are from
another country?

Now, how many of you are friends with one
of these folks?

Now we’re talking.

We have grown up connected.

In a survey asking millennials around the
world what defines our identity, the most

popular answer wasn’t nationality, religion
or ethnicity, it was “citizen of the world”.

That’s a big deal.

Every generation expands the circle of people
we consider “one of us.”

For us, it now encompasses the entire world.

We understand the great arc of human history
bends towards people coming together in ever

greater numbers—from tribes to cities to
nations—to achieve things we couldn’t

on our own.

We get that our greatest opportunities are
now global—we can be the generation that

ends poverty, that ends disease.

We get that our greatest challenges need global
responses too—no country can fight climate

change alone or prevent pandemics.

Progress now requires coming together not
just as cities or nations, but also as a global

community.

But we live in an unstable time.

There are people left behind by globalization
across the world.

It’s hard to care about people in other
places if we don’t feel good about our lives

here at home.

There’s pressure to turn inwards.

This is the struggle of our time.

The forces of freedom, openness and global
community against the forces of authoritarianism,

isolationism, and nationalism.

Forces for the flow of knowledge, trade and
immigration against those who would slow them

down.

This is not a battle of nations, it’s a
battle of ideas.

There are people in every country for global
connection and good people against it.

This isn’t going to be decided at the UN
either.

It’s going to happen at the local level,
when enough of us feel a sense of purpose

and stability in our own lives that we can
open up and start caring about everyone.

The best way to do that is to start building
local communities right now.

We all get meaning from our communities.

Whether our communities are houses or sports
teams, churches or music groups, they give

us that sense we are part of something bigger,
that we are not alone; they give us the strength

to expand our horizons.

That’s why it’s so striking that for decades,
membership in all kinds of groups has declined

as much as one-quarter.

That’s a lot of people who now need to find
purpose somewhere else.

But I know we can rebuild our communities
and start new ones because many of you already

are.

I met Agnes Igoye, who’s graduating today.

Where are you, Agnes?

She spent her childhood navigating conflict
zones in Uganda, and now she trains thousands

of law-enforcement officers to keep communities
safe.

I met Kayla Oakley and Niha Jain, graduating
today, too.

Stand up.

Kayla and Niha started a nonprofit that connects
people suffering from illnesses with people

in their communities willing to help.

I met David Razu Aznar, graduating from the
Kennedy School today.

David, stand up.

He’s a former city councilor who successfully
led the battle to make Mexico City the first

Latin American city to pass marriage equality—even
before San Francisco.

This is my story too.

A student in a dorm room, connecting one community
at a time, and keeping at it until one day

we connect the whole world.

Change starts local.

Even global changes start small—with people
like us.

In our generation, the struggle of whether
we connect more, whether we achieve our biggest

opportunities, comes down to this—your ability
to build communities and create a world where

every single person has a sense of purpose.

Class of 2017, you are graduating into a world
that needs purpose.

It’s up to you to create it.

Now, you may be thinking: Can I really do
this?

Remember when I told you about that class
I taught at the Boys and Girls Club?

One day after class I was talking to them
about college, and one of my top students

raised his hand and said he wasn’t sure
he could go because he’s undocumented.

He didn’t know if they’d let him in.

Last year I took him out to breakfast for
his birthday.

I wanted to get him a present, so I asked
him and he started talking about students

he saw struggling and said, “You know, I’d
really just like a book on social justice.”

I was blown away.

Here’s a young guy who has every reason
to be cynical.

He didn’t know if the country he calls home—the
only one he’s known—would deny him his

dream of going to college.

But he wasn’t feeling sorry for himself.

He wasn’t even thinking of himself.

He has a greater sense of purpose, and he’s
going to bring people along with him.

It says something about our current situation
that I can’t even say his name because I

don’t want to put him at risk.

But if a high-school senior who doesn’t
know what the future holds can do his part

to move the world forward, then we owe it
to the world to do our part too.

Before you walk out those gates one last time,
as we sit in front of Memorial Church, I am

reminded of a prayer, Mi Shebeirach, that
I say whenever I face a challenge, that I

sing to my daughter thinking about her future
when I tuck her into bed.

It goes:”May the source of strength, who
blessed the ones before us, help us find the

courage to make our lives a blessing.”

I hope you find the courage to make your life
a blessing.

Congratulations, Class of ’17!

Good luck out there.

浮士德校长、监督委员会、教师、
校友、朋友、自豪的父母、

广告委员会成员以及世界上最伟大
大学的毕业生。

我很荣幸今天能和你在一起,因为,
让我们面对现实吧,你完成了

我永远做不到的事情。

如果我通过这次演讲,那将是
我第一次在哈佛真正完成一些事情

2017届毕业生,恭喜!

我不太可能成为一名演讲者,不仅仅是因为
我辍学了,还因为我们在技术上

属于同一代人。

我们相隔不到十年就在这个院子里散步,
学习相同的想法,并在

相同的 Ec10 讲座中睡觉。

我们可能采取了不同的方式到达这里,
特别是如果你从四方一路来到这里

,但今天我想分享我
对我们这一代人以及

我们正在共同建设的世界的了解。

但首先,过去几天让我
想起了很多美好的回忆。

你们中有多少人清楚地记得
当你收到那封

告诉你你进入哈佛的电子邮件时你在做什么?

我在玩《文明》,我跑下楼,
找到了我父亲,出于某种原因,他的反应

是视频我打开电子邮件。

那可能是一个非常悲伤的视频。

我发誓进入哈佛仍然是
我父母为我最自豪的事情。

你在哈佛的第一堂课怎么样?

我的是计算机科学 121 和令人难以置信的
Harry Lewis。

我迟到了,所以我穿上一件 T 恤,
直到后来才意识到它是由里向外

和向后的,我的标签伸出在
前面。

我不明白为什么没有人愿意和
我说话——除了一个叫 KX Jin 的人,他只是随口

而去。

我们最终一起完成了我们的问题集
,现在他管理着 Facebook 的很大一部分。

这就是 2017 届毕业生为什么
要对人友善的原因。

但我在哈佛最美好的记忆是遇见
普莉希拉。

我刚刚推出了这个恶作剧网站 Facemash
,广告牌想“见我”。

每个人都以为我会被
踢出去。

我爸妈过来帮我收拾行李。

我的朋友们为我举办了一场告别派对。

幸运的是,普莉希拉
和她的朋友一起参加了那个聚会。

我们在 Pfoho Belltower 排队上厕所

,我说:“我
将在三天后被赶出去,所以

我们需要约会 迅速地。”

实际上,任何毕业的人都可以使用那条
线。

我最终并没有被踢出去——我
是对自己这样做的。

普莉希拉和我开始约会。

而且,你知道,那部电影让
Facemash 看起来对创建 Facebook 非常重要。

不是。

但如果没有 Facemash,我就不会遇到
Priscilla,她

是我生命中最重要的人,所以你可以说这是
我在这里建立的最重要的东西

我们都在这里开始了终生的友谊,
我们中的一些人甚至是家人。

这就是为什么我非常感谢这个地方。

谢谢,哈佛。

今天我想谈谈目的。

但我不是来给你一个
关于找到你的目标的标准开始。

我们是千禧一代。

我们会尝试本能地做到这一点。

相反,我在这里告诉你,找到你的
目的是不够的。

我们这一代人面临的挑战是创造
一个人人都有目标感的世界。

我最喜欢的一个故事是,当约翰·
肯尼迪参观美国宇航局太空中心时,他

看到一个看门人拿着扫帚,他
走过去问他在做什么。

看门人回答说:“先生。 总统,我正在
帮助一个人登上月球。”

目的是那种感觉,我们是
比自己更大的事物的一部分,我们被

需要,我们有更好
的工作要做。

目的是创造真正幸福的东西。

你毕业的时候,这是
特别重要的。

当我们的父母毕业时,目标可靠地
来自你的工作、你的教会、你的社区。

但是今天,技术和自动化正在消除
许多工作。

社区成员人数正在减少。

许多人感到脱节和沮丧,
并试图填补空白。

当我四处旅行时,我
和少年拘留所的孩子和阿片类药物

成瘾者坐在一起,他们告诉我
,如果他们只是有

事可做、课后活动或去某个地方
,他们的生活可能会有所不同。

我遇到过工厂工人,他们知道他们的
旧工作不会回来,并正在

努力寻找自己的位置。

为了让我们的社会不断向前发展,我们
面临着代际挑战——不仅要创造

新的就业机会,还要创造新的使命感。

我记得
我在 Kirkland House 的小宿舍里推出 Facebook 的那个晚上。

我和我的朋友 KX 去了 Noch’s。

我记得告诉他我很高兴能
连接哈佛社区,但有一天有人

会连接整个世界。

问题是,我什至从未想过
有人可能是我们。

我们只是大学生。

我们对此一无所知。

有所有这些
拥有资源的大型科技公司。

我只是假设他们中的一个会这样做。

但这个想法对我们来说非常清楚——
所有人都想联系。

所以我们只是继续前进,日复一日。

我知道你们中的很多人都会有这样的
故事。

世界上的变化似乎如此清晰,以至于
您确信其他人会这样做。

但他们不会。

你会。

但自己有目标是不够的。

你必须为他人创造一种目标感

我发现很难。

你看,我的希望从来不是建立一家公司,
而是产生影响。

当所有这些人开始加入我们时,
我只是假设这也是他们所关心的

,所以我从未解释过我希望我们会
建立什么。

几年后,一些大公司
想收购我们。

我不想卖。

我想看看我们是否可以连接更多的人。

我们正在构建第一个 News Feed,
我想如果我们能推出这个,它

可以改变我们了解世界的方式。

几乎所有其他人都想出售。

没有更高的目标感,这
就是创业梦想成真。

它撕裂了我们的公司。

在一次激烈的争论之后,一位顾问告诉
我,如果我不同意出售,我会

为我的余生后悔这个决定。

关系如此紧张,以至于在
一年左右的时间里,管理

团队中的每个人都走了。

那是我领导 Facebook 最艰难的时期。

我相信我们正在做的事情,但我感到
孤独。

更糟糕的是,这是我的错。

我想我是不是错了,一个冒名顶替者,
一个不知道世界如何运作的 22 岁孩子

现在,多年后,我明白事情就是这样
运作的,没有更高的目的感。

由我们来创造它,这样我们就可以
一起继续前进。

今天我想谈谈创造
一个每个人都有目标感的世界的三种方法

:一起承担有意义的大项目,
重新定义平等,让每个人都有

追求目标的自由,以及
在世界各地建立社区。

首先,让我们做一些有意义的大项目。

我们这一代人将不得不处理
数以千万计的工作,这些工作被

自动驾驶汽车和卡车等自动化所取代。

但我们有潜力一起做更多的事情

每一代人都有其决定性的作品。

超过 300,000 人努力将一个人
送上月球——包括那个看门人。

数以百万计的志愿者
为世界各地的儿童接种脊髓灰质炎疫苗。

数以百万计的人建造了胡佛水坝
和其他伟大的项目。

这些项目不仅为
从事这些工作的人们提供了目标,它们还让

我们整个国家感到自豪,我们
可以做伟大的事情。

现在轮到我们做伟大的事情了。

我知道,你可能在想:我不
知道如何建造水坝,或者让一百

万人参与任何事情。

但是让我告诉你一个秘密:
当他们开始的时候没有人这样做。

想法并没有完全形成。

只有在您处理它们时,它们才会变得清晰。

你只需要开始。

如果我必须在开始之前了解有关连接
人的一切,我永远不会

创建 Facebook。

电影和流行文化都错了。

一个单一的尤里卡时刻的想法是一个危险的
谎言。

这让我们感到不足,因为我们
没有我们的。

它阻止了有好主意的人
开始。

哦,你知道电影在创新方面还有什么问题
吗?

没有人在玻璃上写数学公式。

那不是一回事。

理想主义很好。

但要做好被误解的准备。

任何致力于远大愿景的人都会被称为
疯子,即使你最终是对的。

任何处理复杂问题的人都会
因为没有完全理解挑战而受到指责,

即使不可能预先知道所有事情

任何主动的人都会
因为行动太快而受到批评,因为总

有人想让你慢下来。

在我们的社会中,我们经常不做大事,
因为我们太害怕犯错误

,以至于如果我们什么都不做,我们今天会忽略所有错误的
事情。

现实情况是,我们所做的任何事情在未来都会有问题

但这不能阻止我们开始。

那么我们还在等什么?

现在是我们这一代定义公共
工程的时候了。

在我们破坏地球之前阻止气候变化
,让数百

万人参与制造和安装
太阳能电池板怎么样?

如何治愈所有疾病并要求
志愿者跟踪他们的健康数据并分享他们的

基因组?

今天,我们治疗
生病的人的花费比寻找治愈方法的花费多 50 倍,因此人们一开始

就不会生病。

这是没有意义的。

我们可以解决这个问题。

如何实现民主现代化,让每个人都
可以在线投票,以及个性化教育,

让每个人都可以学习?

这些成就是我们力所能及的。

让我们以一种让我们社会中的每个人都发挥作用的方式来完成它们

让我们做大事,不仅要创造
进步,还要创造目标。

因此,开展有意义的大型项目是
我们可以做的第一件事,以创造一个

每个人都有目标感的世界。

第二个是重新定义平等,给予
每个人追求目标所需的自由。

我们的许多父母在
他们的职业生涯中都有稳定的工作。

现在我们都是企业家,无论我们是在
开始项目还是在寻找或角色。

这很棒。

我们的创业文化是我们
创造如此多进步的方式。

现在,当尝试许多新想法很容易时,创业文化就会蓬勃发展

Facebook 不是我创建的第一件事。

我还开发了游戏、聊天系统、学习工具
和音乐播放器。

我不孤独。

JK罗琳在出版哈利波特之前被拒绝了12次

即使是碧昂丝也必须制作数百首歌曲
才能获得“光环”。

最大的成功来自拥有
失败的自由。

但是今天,我们的财富不平等程度
会伤害到每个人。

当你没有自由将
你的想法变成一个历史性的企业时,

我们都输了。

目前,我们的社会
对奖励成功的评价过高,我们做得还

远远不够,让每个人都能轻松拍摄
很多照片。

面对现实吧。


我可以离开这里并在 10 年内赚到数十亿美元

,而数百万学生
无力偿还贷款时,我们的系统就有问题,更不用说

创业了。

看,我认识很多企业家,我
不知道有一个人

因为可能
赚不到钱而放弃创业。

但我知道很多人没有追求
梦想,因为

如果他们失败了,他们没有缓冲可以依靠。

我们都知道,我们不会仅仅通过有
一个好主意或努力工作就能成功。

我们也因幸运而成功。

如果我必须支持我的家人成长而
不是有时间编写代码,如果我不知道

如果 Facebook 不成功我会没事的,
我今天就不会站在这里。

如果我们是诚实的,我们都知道
我们有多少运气。

每一代人都在扩展其对
平等的定义。

前几代人为投票和
公民权利而战。

他们有新政和大社会。

现在是我们为我们这一代定义新的社会
契约的时候了。

我们应该拥有一个衡量进步的社会,
不仅通过 GDP 等经济指标,而且

通过我们中有多少人拥有我们认为有意义的角色。

我们应该探索诸如普遍基本收入之类的想法
,为每个人提供尝试新事物的缓冲

我们将多次更换工作,因此
我们需要负担得起的托儿服务才能上班,

以及不依赖于一家
公司的医疗保健。

我们都会犯错,所以我们
需要一个不那么关注关押

我们或污名化我们的社会。

随着技术的不断变化,我们需要
更多地关注

我们一生的持续教育。

是的,给每个人追求
目标的自由并不是免费的。

像我这样的人应该为此付出代价。

你们中的许多人会做得很好,你也应该做得很好。

这就是为什么普莉希拉和我发起了陈
·扎克伯格倡议并将我们的财富

用于促进平等机会。

这些是我们这一代人的价值观。

我们是否要这样做从来都不是问题

唯一的问题是什么时候。

千禧一代已经是历史上最慈善的
一代人之一。

一年内,四分之三的美国千禧一代
捐款,十分之七

为慈善事业筹集资金。

但这不仅仅是钱的问题。

你也可以给时间。

我向你保证,如果你每周花一
两个小时——这就是

帮助某人,帮助他们发挥潜力所需要的一切。

也许你认为时间太长了。

我曾经。

Priscilla 从哈佛毕业后
成为一名教师,在她

和我一起做教育工作之前,她告诉我我需要教
一门课。

我抱怨道:“好吧,我有点忙。

我正在经营这家公司。”

但她坚持,所以我
在当地的男孩女孩俱乐部教了一个关于创业的中学课程

我教他们有关产品开发
和营销的课程,他们教我

感觉自己的种族成为目标并
让家人入狱是什么感觉。

我分享了我上学时的故事,
他们也分享了有一天上大学的希望

五年来,我
每个月都和那些孩子共进晚餐。

其中一个给我和普里西拉扔了我们的第一个
婴儿淋浴。

明年他们要上大学了。

他们每一个人。

在他们的家庭中排名第一。

我们都可以腾出时间帮助别人。

让我们给每个人追求
自己目标的自由——不仅因为这是

正确的事情,而且因为当更多的人
可以将他们的梦想变成伟大的事情时,

我们都会变得更好。

目标不仅仅来自工作。

我们可以为每个人创造目标感的第三种方法
是建立社区。

当我们这一代人说“每个人”时,
我们指的是世界上的每个人。

快速举手:你们中有多少人来自
另一个国家?

现在,你们中有多少人
是这些人之一的朋友?

现在我们正在谈论。

我们长大了。

在一项询问世界各地千禧一代的调查中,
我们的身份是什么,

最受欢迎的答案不是国籍、宗教
或种族,而是“世界公民”。

这是一件大事。

每一代人都在扩大
我们认为“我们中的一个”的人的圈子。

对我们来说,它现在涵盖了整个世界。

我们了解人类历史的伟大弧线
是越来越多的人聚集在一起

——从部落到城市再到
国家——以实现我们靠自己无法实现的目标

我们知道,我们最大的机会
现在是全球性的——我们可以成为

终结贫困、终结疾病的一代。

我们知道,我们面临的最大挑战也需要全球
应对——没有一个国家可以单独应对气候

变化或预防流行病。

现在的进步
不仅需要城市或国家团结起来,还需要全球

社区团结起来。

但我们生活在一个不稳定的时代。 世界各地

都有人被全球化抛在后面

如果我们对自己在家里的生活感觉不好,就很难关心其他地方的人

有向内转的压力。

这是我们时代的斗争。

自由、开放和全球
社区的力量反对威权

主义、孤立主义和民族主义的力量。

知识、贸易和移民流动的力量
反对那些会放慢速度的人

这不是民族之战,而是
思想之战。

每个国家都有人支持全球
连接,也有好人反对它。

这也不会在联合国决定

这将在地方层面发生,
当我们中的足够多的人

在自己的生活中感到目标感和稳定感时,我们可以
敞开心扉,开始关心每个人。

做到这一点的最好方法是立即开始建立
当地社区。

我们都从我们的社区中获得意义。

无论我们的社区是房屋还是运动
队、教堂还是音乐团体,它们都让

我们感觉到我们是更大事物的一部分
,我们并不孤单; 它们给了

我们扩大视野的力量。

这就是为什么它如此引人注目,以至于几十年来,
各种团体的成员人数减少

了多达四分之一。

很多人现在需要在
其他地方找到目标。

但我知道我们可以重建我们的社区
并开始新的社区,因为你们中的许多人已经

是。

我遇到了今天即将毕业的 Agnes Igoye。

你在哪里,艾格尼丝?

她在乌干达的冲突地区度过了她的童年时光
,现在她培训了数千

名执法人员以确保社区
安全。

我遇到了今天毕业的 Kayla Oakley 和 Niha Jain

站起来。

Kayla 和 Niha 创办了一个非营利组织,将
患有疾病的人

与社区中愿意提供帮助的人联系起来。

我遇到了大卫·拉祖·阿兹纳尔,他
今天从肯尼迪学院毕业。

大卫,站起来。

他是一名前市议员,成功地
领导了这场战斗,使墨西哥城成为第一个

通过婚姻平等的拉丁美洲城市——甚至
在旧金山之前。

这也是我的故事。

一个学生在宿舍里,一次连接一个
社区,一直坚持到有一天

我们连接整个世界。

改变从本地开始。

即使是全球性的变化也是从小事开始的——从
我们这样的人开始。

在我们这一代,我们是否能
更多地联系,是否能获得最大

机会的斗争归结为这一点——你
建立社区和创造一个

每个人都有目标感的世界的能力。

2017 届毕业生,你们
即将进入一个需要目标的世界。

由您来创建它。

现在,你可能会想:我真的可以
这样做吗?

还记得我告诉过你
我在男孩女孩俱乐部教的那门课吗?

一天下课后,我和他们
谈论大学的事情,我的一个顶尖学生

举手说他不确定
他能不能去,因为他没有证件。

他不知道他们是否会让他进来。

去年我带他出去吃
早餐过生日。

我想送他一份礼物,所以我问
他,他开始谈论

他看到挣扎的学生并说:“你知道,我
真的很想要一本关于社会正义的书。”

我被吹走了。

这是一个完全有理由愤世嫉俗的年轻人

他不知道这个他称之为家的国家——他所知道的
唯一一个国家——是否会剥夺他

上大学的梦想。

但他并不为自己感到难过。

他甚至都没有为自己考虑。

他有更大的使命感,
他会带着人们一起来。

它说明了我们目前的情况
,我什至不能说出他的名字,因为我

不想让他处于危险之中。

但是,如果一个不
知道未来会怎样的高中生能够尽自己的一份

力量推动世界前进,那么我们也应该
为世界尽自己的一份力量。

在你最后一次走出那些大门之前,
当我们坐在纪念教堂前时,我

想起了 Mi Shebeirach 的一个祈祷,
每当我面临挑战时,我

都会对我的女儿唱歌,思考她的
未来 把她塞到床上。

上面写着:“愿力量之源,
祝福我们前人,帮助我们找到

勇气,让我们的生活成为祝福。”

我希望你能找到勇气,让你的生活
变得美好。

恭喜,17 年级!

祝你好运。