We need to talk about an injustice Bryan Stevenson

this is a really extraordinary honor for

me I spend most of my time in jails and

prisons on death row I spend most of my

time in very low-income communities and

the projects in places where there’s a

great deal of hopelessness and being

here at Ted and and seeing the

stimulation hearing it has been very

very energizing to me and one of the

things that’s emerged in my short time

here is that ted has an identity and you

can actually say things here that have

impacts around the world and sometimes

when it comes through Ted it has meaning

and power that it doesn’t have when it

doesn’t and I mention that because I

think identity is really important we’ve

had some fantastic presentations and I

think what we’ve learned is that if

you’re a teacher your words can be

meaningful but if you’re a compassionate

teacher they can be especially

meaningful if you’re a doctor you can do

some good things but if you’re a caring

doctor you can do some other things and

so I want to talk about the power of

identity and I didn’t learn about this

actually practicing law and doing the

work that I do I actually learned about

this from my grandmother I grew up in a

house that was the traditional African

American home that was dominated by a

matriarch and that matriarch was my

grandmother

as she was tough she was strong she was

powerful she was the end of every

argument in our family she was the

beginning of a lot of arguments in our

family she was the daughter of people

who were actually enslaved her parents

were born in slavery in Virginia in the

1840s she was born in the 1880s and the

experience of slavery very much shaped

the way she saw the world and my mother

and my grandmother was tough but she was

also loving when I would see her as a

little boy she’d come up to me and she’d

give me these hugs and she’d squeeze me

so tight I could barely breathe and then

she’d let me go

and an hour or two later if I saw her

she’d come over to me to say Brian do

you still feel me hugging you and if I

said no she’d assault me again and I’ve

had to say yes she’d leave me alone and

then she just had this quality you

always wanted to be near her and the

only challenge was that she had ten

children my mom was the youngest of her

ten kids and sometimes when I would go

in

spend time with her it’d be difficult to

get her time and attention my cousins

would be running around everywhere and I

remember when I was about eight or nine

years old waking up one morning going

into the living room and all of my

cousins were running around and my

grandmother was sitting across the room

staring at me and at first I thought we

were playing a game and I would look at

her and I’d smile but she was very

serious and after about 15 or 20 minutes

of this she got up and she came across

the room and she took me by the hand and

she said come on Brian you’re not gonna

have a talk and I remembered this just

like it happened yesterday I never will

forget it she took me out back and she

said Brian I’m gonna tell you something

but you don’t tell anybody what I tell

you I said okay mama she said now you

make sure you don’t do that I said sure

then she sat me down and she looked at

me and she said I want you to know I’ve

been watching you and she said I think

you’re special she said I think you can

do anything you want to do I will never

forget it and then she said I just need

you to promise me three things Brian I

said okay mama she said the first thing

I want you to promise me is that you’ll

always love your mom she said that’s my

baby girl you have to promise me now

you’ll always take care of her well I

adored my mom so I said yes mama

I’ll do that then she said the second

thing I want you to promise me is that

you’ll always do the right thing even

when the right thing is the hard thing

and I thought about it and I said yes

mama I’ll do that then finally she said

the third thing I want you to promise me

is that you’ll never drink alcohol well

I was nine years old so I said yes mama

I’ll do that I grew up in the country in

the rural south and have a brother

you’re older than me and a sister you’re

younger when I was about 14 or 15 one

day my brother came home and he had this

six-pack of beer I don’t know where he

got it and he grabbed me and my sister

we went out in the woods and we were

kind of just out there doing the stuff

we crazily did and he had a sip of this

beer and he gave some to my sister and

she had some and they offered it to me I

said no no no no that’s okay y’all go

ahead I’m not gonna have any beer and my

brother said come on we’re doing this

today you always do what we do I had

some your sister had some have some beer

I said no I don’t feel right about that

y’all go ahead y’all go ahead and then

my

that started staring at me he said what

is what’s wrong with you have some beer

then he looked at me real hard he said

oh I hope you’re not still hung up on

that conversation mama had with you I

said well what are you talking about he

says oh mama tells all the grandkids

that they’re special I I was devastated

and I’m going to admit something to you

I’m gonna tell you something I probably

shouldn’t I know this might be broadcast

broadly but I’m I’m 52 years old and I’m

gonna admit to you that I’ve never had a

drop of alcohol I don’t I don’t say that

because I think that’s virtuous I say

that because there is power in identity

when we create the right kind of

identity we can say things to the world

around us that they don’t actually

believe makes sense we can get them to

do things that they don’t think they can

do when I thought about my grandmother

cart of course she would think all her

grandkids were special my grandfather

was in prison during Prohibition my male

uncle’s died of alcohol related diseases

and these were the things she thought we

needed to commit to well I’ve been

trying to say something about our

criminal justice system this country is

very different today than it was 40

years ago in 1972 there were 300,000

people in jails in prisons today there

are 2.3 million the United States now

has the highest rate of incarceration in

the world we have 7 million people on

probation and parole and mass

incarceration in my judgment has

fundamentally changed our world in poor

communities and communities of color

there is this despair there is this

hopelessness that is being shaped by

these outcomes but one out of three

black men between the ages of 18 and 30

is in jail in prison on probation or

parole in urban communities across this

country Los Angeles Philadelphia

Baltimore Washington 50 to 60 percent of

all young men of color in jail or prison

or on probation and parole our system

isn’t just being shaped in these ways

that seem to be distorting around race

they’re also distorted by poverty we

have a system of justice in this country

that treats you much better

if you’re rich and guilty than if you’re

poor and innocent wealth not culpability

shapes outcomes and yet we seem to be

very comfortable the politics of fear

and anger has made us believe that these

are problems that are not our problems

we’ve been disconnected it’s interesting

to me we’re looking at some very

interesting developments in our work my

state of Alabama like a number of states

actually permanently disenfranchise us

you if you have a criminal conviction

right now in Alabama 34 percent of the

black male population is permanently

lost the right to vote

we’re actually projecting in another 10

years the level of disenfranchisement

will be as high as it’s been since prior

to the passage of the Voting Rights Act

and there is this stunning silence I

represent children a lot of my clients

are very young the United States is the

only country in the world where we

sentenced 13 year old children to die in

prison we have life imprisonment without

parole for kids in this country and

we’re actually doing some litigation

only country in the world I resent

people on death row it’s interesting

this question of the death penalty in

many ways we’ve been taught to think

that the real question is do people

deserve to die for the crimes they’ve

committed and that’s a very sensible

question but there’s another way of

thinking about where we are in our

identity the other way of thinking about

it is not do people deserve to die for

the crimes they commit but do we deserve

to kill means fascinating death penalty

in America is defined by error for every

nine people who have been executed we’ve

actually identified one innocent person

who’s been exonerated and released from

death row a kind of astonishing error

rate one out of nine people innocent I

mean it’s fascinating in aviation we

would never let people fly on airplanes

if for every nine planes it took off one

would crash but somehow we can insulate

ourselves from this problem it’s not our

problem it’s not our burden it’s not our

struggle well I talk a lot about these

issues I talk about a race and this

question whether we deserve to kill and

it’s interesting when I teach my

students about african-american history

I tell them about slavery

I tell them about terrorism the era that

began at the end of Reconstruction that

went on to World War two we don’t really

know very much about it but for African

Americans in this country that was an

era defined by terror in many

communities people had to worry about

being lynched they had to worry about

being bombed it was the threat of terror

that shaped their lives and these older

people come up to me now

and they say mr. Stevenson you give

talks you make speeches you tell people

to stop saying we’re dealing with

terrorism for the first time in our

nation’s history after 9/11 they tell me

to say no tell them that we grew up with

that and that era of terrorism of course

was followed by a segregation a decades

of racial subordination and apartheid

and and yet we have in this country this

dynamic where we really don’t like to

talk about our problems we don’t like to

talk about our history and because of

that we really haven’t understood what

it’s meant to do the things we’ve done

historically and we’re constantly

running into each other we’re constantly

creating tensions and conflicts we have

a hard time talking about race and I

believe it’s because we are unwilling to

commit ourselves to a process of truth

and reconciliation in South Africa

people understood that we couldn’t

overcome or part time without a

commitment to truth and reconciliation

in Rwanda even after the genocide there

was this commitment but in this country

we haven’t done that I was giving this

lecture in Germany some lectures in

Germany about the death penalty it was

fascinating because one of the scholars

stood up after the presentation and said

well you know it’s deeply troubling to

hear what you’re talking about I said we

don’t have the death penalty in Germany

and of course we can never have the

death penalty in Germany and the room

got very quiet and this woman said

there’s no way with our history we can

ever engage in the systematic killing of

human beings it would be unconscionable

for us to intentional deliberate way set

about executing people but I thought

about that what would it feel like to be

living in a world where the nation-state

of Germany was executing people

especially if they were

disproportionately Jewish I couldn’t

bear it it would be unconscious

and yet in this country in the states of

the old South we execute people where

you’re 11 times more likely to get the

death penalty if the victim is white

than if the victim is black 22 times

more likely to get it if the defendant

is black and the victim is white in the

various states where there are buried in

the ground the bodies of people who were

lynched and yet there is this disconnect

well I believe that our identity is at

risk that when we actually don’t care

about these difficult things the

positive and wonderful things are

nonetheless implicated we love

innovation we love technology we love

creativity we love entertainment but

ultimately those realities are shadowed

by suffering abuse degradation

marginalization and for me it becomes

necessary to integrate the two because

ultimately we are talking about a need

to be more hopeful more committed more

dedicated to the basic challenges of

living in a complex world and for that

mean for me that for me that means

spending time thinking and talking about

the poor the disadvantaged those who

will never get to Ted but thinking about

them in a way that is integrated in our

own lives you know ultimately we all

have to believe things we haven’t seen

we do as rational as we are as committed

to intellect as we are innovation

creativity development comes not from

the ideas in our mind alone they come

from the ideas in our mind that are also

fueled by some conviction in our heart

and it’s that mynhardt connection that I

believe compels us to not just be tended

attentive to all the bright and dazzling

things but also the dark and difficult

things

václav havel the great Czech leader

talked about this he said when we were

in Eastern Europe and dealing with

oppression we wanted all kinds of things

but mostly what we needed was hope an

orientation of the spirit a willingness

to sometimes be in hopeless places and

be a witness well that or

Taoiseach of the spirit is very much at

the core of what I believe even Ted

communities have to be engaged in there

is no disconnect around technology and

design that will allow us to be fully

human until we pay attention to

suffering to poverty to exclusion to

unfairness to injustice now I will warn

you that this kind of identity is a much

more challenging identity than ones that

don’t pay attention to this it will get

to you I have the great privilege when I

was a young lawyer meeting Rosa Parks

and Miss parks used to come back to

Montgomery every now and then and she

would get together with two of her

dearest friends these older women a

Johnny car who was the organizer of the

Montgomery bus boycott amazing

african-american woman and Virginia

Durrell white woman whose husband

Clifford Durr I represented dr. King and

these women would get together and just

talk and every now and then this car

would call me and she’d say Brian miss

parks is coming to town we’re gonna get

together and talk do you want to come

over and listen and I’d say yes ma’am I

do and she said well what are you gonna

do when you get here I said I’m gonna

listen and I’d go over then I would I

would just listen it was be so

energizing and so empowering and one

dime I was over there listening to these

women talk and after a couple of hours

miss parks turned to me and she said no

Brian tell me what the equal justice

initiative is tell me what you’re trying

to do

I began giving her my rap I said well

we’re trying to challenge injustice

we’re trying to help people have been

wrongly convicted we’re trying to

confront a bias and discrimination the

administration of criminal justice we’re

trying to end life without parole

sentences for children were trying to do

something about the death penalty we’re

trying to reduce the prison population

we’re trying to end mass incarceration I

gave her my whole rap and when I

finished she looked at me and she said

mmm she said that’s gonna make you tired

tired tired

and that’s what miss Carlene Ford she

put her finger my patient says that’s

why you’ve got to be brave brave brave

and I actually believe that the Ted

community needs to be more courageous we

need to find ways to to embrace these

challenges these problems the suffering

because ultimately our humanity depends

on everyone’s humanity I’ve learned very

simple things doing the work that I do

it’s just taught me very simple things

I’ve come to understand and to believe

that each of us is more than the worst

thing we’ve ever done I believe that for

every person on the planet I think if

somebody tell us a lie they’re not just

a liar I think if somebody takes

something that doesn’t belong to them

they’re not just a thief I think even if

you kill someone you’re not just a

killer and because of that there’s this

basic human dignity that must be

respected by law I also believe that in

many parts of this country and certainly

in many parts of this globe that the

opposite of poverty is not wealth I

don’t believe that I actually think in

too many places the opposite of poverty

is justice and finally I believe that

despite the fact that it is so dramatic

and so beautiful and so inspiring and so

stimulating we will ultimately not be

judged by our technology we won’t be

judged by our design we won’t be judged

by our intellect in reason ultimately

you judge the character of a society not

by how they treat the rich and the

powerful and the privileged but by how

they treat the poor the condemned the

incarcerated because it’s in that Nexus

that we actually begin to understand

truly profound things about who we are I

sometimes get out of balance all in with

this story I sometimes push too hard I

do get tired as we all do sometimes

those ideas get ahead of our kind of

thinking in ways that are important and

I’ve been representing these kids who

have been sentenced to do these very

harsh sentences and I go to the jail and

I see my client who’s 13 and 14 and he’s

been certified to stand trial as an

adult I keep start thinking well how did

that have

then how can a judge turn you into

something that you’re not and the judge

is certified him as an adult but I see

this kid and I and I was up too late one

night I started thinking well gosh if

the judge can turn you into something

that you’re not the judge must have

magic power

so yeah Brian the judge had some magic

power you should ask for some of that

and because I was up too late and wasn’t

thinking real straight that started

working on a motion and I had a client

it was 14 years old a young poor black

kid and start working on this motion

within the head of the motion was a

motion to try my poor 14 year old black

male client like a privileged white 75

year old corporate executive and I’ve

put in my motion that there was

prosecutorial misconduct and police

misconduct and judicial misconduct it

was a crazy line in there about how

there’s no conduct in this county it’s

all misconduct and at the next morning I

woke up and I thought did I dream that

crazy motion or did I actually write it

into my horror not only had I written it

but I had sent it to court

couple months went by and I just had

forgotten all about it

and I finally decided oh gosh I got to

go to the port and do this crazy case

and I got in my car and I was feeling

really overwhelmed overwhelmed and I got

in my car and I went to this courthouse

and was sitting what this is gonna be so

difficult so so painful I finally got

out of the car and I started walking up

to the courthouse and as I was walking

up the steps of this courthouse there

was an older black man who was the

janitor in this courthouse when this man

saw me he came over to me and he said

who are you I said I’m a lawyer he said

you a lawyer I said yes sir and this man

came over to me and he hugged me and he

whispered in my ear he said I’m so proud

of you and I have to tell you it was

energizing it connected deeply with

something in me about identity about the

capacity of every person to contribute

to community to perspective that is

hopeful well I went into the courtroom

soon as I walked inside the judge saw me

coming and he said mr. Stevenson did you

write this crazy motion I said yes sir I

didn’t we started arguing people started

coming in because they were just

outraged I had written these crazy

things and police officers were coming

in and system prosecutors and clerk

workers before

the court was filled with people angry

that we were talking about race that we

were talking about poverty that we were

talking about inequality

and out of the corner of my eye I could

see this janitor pacing back and forth

and kept looking through the window and

he could hear all of this hot air he

kept pacing back and forth and finally

this older black man with this very

worried look on his face came into the

courtroom and sat down behind me almost

a council table

about ten minutes later the judge said

we would take a break and during the

break there was a deputy sheriff who was

offended that the janitor had come into

court and this deputy jumped up and he

ran over to this older black man he said

Jimmy what are you doing in this

courtroom this older black man stood up

and he looked at that deputy and he

looked at me and he said I came into

this courtroom to tell this young man

keep your eyes on the prize hold on I’ve

come to Ted because I believe that many

of you understand that the moral arc of

the universe is long but it bends toward

justice that we cannot be full evolved

human beings until we care about human

rights and basic nigde T that all of our

survival is tied to the survival of

everyone that our visions of technology

and design and entertainment and

creativity have to be married with the

divisions of humanity compassion and

justice and more than anything for those

of you who share that I’ve simply come

to tell you that to keep your eyes on

the prize hold on thank you very much

so you heard and saw an obvious desire

by this audience this community to help

you on your way and to do something on

this issue other than writing a check

what what could we do well there are

opportunities all around us if you live

in the state of California for example

there is a referendum coming up this

spring where actually there’s going to

be an effort to redirect some of the

money we spend on the politics of

punishment for example here in

California we spend we’re going to spend

1 billion dollars on the death penalty

in the next 5 years 1 billion dollars

and yet 46% of all homicide cases don’t

result in arrests 56% of all rape cases

don’t result so there’s an opportunity

to change that and this referendum would

propose having those dollars go to law

enforcement and safety and I think that

opportunity exists all around us now

there’s been this huge decline in crime

in in America over the last three

decades and part of the narrative of

that is sometimes that it’s about

increased incarceration rates what would

you say to someone who believe that well

actually the violent crime rate has

remained relatively stable you know the

the great increase in mass incarceration

in this country wasn’t really in violent

crime categories it was this misguided

war on drugs now that’s where the

dramatic increases have come in our

prison population and we got carried

away with the rhetoric of punishment and

so we have three strikes laws that put

people in prison forever for stealing a

bicycle for low-level property crimes

rather than making them give those

resources back to the people who they

victimized I believe we need to do more

to help people who are victimized by

crime not do less and I think our

current punishment philosophy does

nothing for no one and I think that’s

the orientation that we have to change

Brian you’ve you’ve struck a massive

chord here you’re an inspiring person

thank you so much for coming to talk

you

这对我来说是一个非常非凡的荣誉

我大部分时间都在监狱和

死囚牢房里 我大部分

时间都在非常低收入的社区和

那些充满绝望的地方的项目中度过

并且在 Ted 看到

刺激听到它对

我来说非常非常有活力,

在我短暂的时间里出现的一件事

是 ted 有一个身份,你

实际上可以在这里说一些对世界有影响的事情

,有时

当它来临时 通过 Ted,它具有意义

和力量,当它没有时,它

没有,我提到这一点,因为我

认为身份非常重要,我们

有一些精彩的演讲,我

认为我们学到的是,如果

你是 一个老师,你的话可能是

有意义的,但如果你是一个富有同情心的

老师,他们会特别

有意义,如果你是一名医生,你可以做

一些好事,但如果你是一个有爱心的

医生,你可以做一些其他的事情,

所以我想要 到吨 谈论身份的力量

,我没有了解这

实际上是在执业法律和从事我所做的

工作我实际上是

从祖母那里了解到这一点的 我在一个

传统的非裔

美国人家庭中长大

女族长,那位女族长是我的

祖母,

因为她很坚强 她很坚强 她很

强大 她是我们家每一次

争论的终结 她是我们家

很多争论的开始

她是

那些实际上被她奴役的人的女儿 父母

于 1840 年代出生在弗吉尼亚州的奴隶制中,

她出生于 1880 年代

,奴隶制的经历极大地塑造

了她看待世界的方式,我的母亲

和祖母很坚强,

但当我将她视为一个

小男孩,她会走到我身边,

给我这些拥抱,她会

紧紧地挤压我,我几乎无法呼吸,然后

她会放开我

,一两个小时后,如果我看到她,

她会 过来找我说B rian

你还觉得我在拥抱你吗?如果我

说不,她会再次袭击我,我

不得不说是的,她会让我一个人呆着,

然后她就拥有你

一直想靠近她的品质,也是

唯一的 挑战是她有十个

孩子,我妈妈是她

十个孩子中最小的一个,有时当

我去陪她时,很难得到她的时间和注意力,我的表兄弟

会到处乱跑,我

记得当我 大约八九岁的

一天早上醒来

走进客厅,我所有的

堂兄弟都在跑来跑去,我的

祖母坐在房间对面

盯着我看,起初我以为我们

在玩游戏,我会看看

她和我会微笑,但她非常

严肃,大约 15 或 20 分钟

后,她起身

穿过房间,拉着我的手

说,拜托,布莱恩,你

不会说话 我记得

这就像昨天发生的一样,我从来没有 会

忘记的 她带我出去 她

说布赖恩 我要告诉你一些事情

但你不要告诉任何人 我告诉

你的 我说好的 妈妈 她说现在你

确保你不要那样做 我

当时肯定 她让我坐下 她看着

我 她说我想让你知道 我

一直在看着你 她说我觉得

你很特别 她说我觉得你可以

做任何你想做的事 我永远不会

忘记 然后她说我只需要

你答应我三件事布赖恩我

说好的妈妈她说

我要你答应我的第一件事就是你会

永远爱你妈妈她说那是我的

宝贝女儿你现在必须答应我

“我会一直好好照顾她的我很

崇拜我妈妈,所以我说是的,妈妈

我会那样做的,然后她说

我想让你向我保证的第二件事是,即使正确的事情是

正确的,你也会永远做

正确的事情 困难的事情

,我想了想,我说是的,

妈妈,我会这样做,最后她

说第三件事我要你答应 我

是说你永远不会好好喝酒

我才九岁 所以我说是的 妈妈

我会那样做 我在

南方农村长大 有一个

比我大的兄弟和一个比我大的妹妹

在我大约 14 或 15 岁的时候,有

一天我哥哥回到家,他喝了这

六包啤酒,我不知道他

从哪里弄来的,他抓住了我和我姐姐

就像在外面做

我们疯狂做的事情,他喝了一口这种

啤酒,他给了我姐姐

一些,她吃了一些,他们给了我,我

说不,不,不,没关系,你们都

去吧我 我不会喝啤酒,我

哥哥说来吧,我们

今天要这样做,你总是做我们该做的事

你们都去吧 然后

我的

那个开始盯着我 他说

你怎么了 喝点啤酒

然后他认真地看着我 他说

哦 我希望你不是 st 我挂断了

妈妈和你的谈话我

说好吧你在说什么他

说哦妈妈告诉所有的

孙子他们很特别我被摧毁了

我要向你承认一些事情

我要告诉你 我可能

不应该做的事情 我知道这可能会被

广泛传播,但我已经 52 岁了,我

要向你承认我从来没有喝过

一滴酒 我没有 我没有说 那是

因为我认为这是美德 我

说因为身份有力量

当我们创造正确的

身份时,我们可以对我们周围的世界

说他们实际上并不

认为有意义的事情 我们可以

让他们做他们认为的事情

当我想到我祖母的推车时,他们认为他们做不到

当然她会认为她所有的

孙子孙女都很特别 我

祖父在禁酒令期间入狱 我的

叔叔死于与酒精有关的疾病

,这些是她认为我们

需要做的事情 好吧,我一直

想说点什么 关于我们的

刑事司法系统 这个国家

今天与 40

年前的 1972 年有很大不同

今天有 300,000 人在监狱里

有 230 万美国现在

的监禁率

是世界上最高的 我们有 700 万 在我看来,

缓刑、假释和大规模

监禁的人

从根本上改变了我们在贫困

社区和有色人种社区中的世界

有这种绝望有这种

绝望正在被这些结果所塑造,

但三分之一的

黑人在 18 岁之间 30 人

因缓刑或

假释在

全国各地的城市社区入狱 洛杉矶 费城

巴尔的摩 华盛顿 50% 到 60%

的有色人种年轻人在监狱或监狱

或缓刑和

假释中

这些似乎扭曲了种族的方式

它们也被贫困扭曲了我们

在这个国家有一个司法系统

来对待你

如果你富有和有罪,比你

贫穷和无辜的财富更好,而不是罪责决定

结果,但我们似乎

很自在,恐惧

和愤怒的政治让我们

相信这些问题不是我们的问题,

我们 ‘已经断开连接 这

对我来说很有趣 我们正在研究我们工作中的一些非常

有趣的发展 我

的阿拉巴马州就像许多州

实际上永久剥夺了我们的权利

如果你

现在在阿拉巴马州有刑事定罪 34% 的

黑人男性 人口永久

失去投票权

我们实际上预计在接下来的 10

年中,被剥夺权利的程度

与《投票权法》通过之前的水平一样高,

而且这种令人震惊的沉默我

代表了很多孩子 我的客户

非常年轻

美国是世界上唯一一个我们

判处 13 岁儿童在监狱中死去的国家

这个国家的孩子们,

我们实际上正在做一些诉讼

世界上唯一的国家 我讨厌

死囚牢房里的人

这个死刑问题很有趣,在

很多方面我们被教导

认为真正的问题是人们

应该为他们所犯的罪行而死

,这是一个非常明智的

问题,但是还有另一种

思考我们

身份的方式,另一种思考

方式是人们不应该为

他们所犯的罪行而死,而是这样做 我们

应该杀戮意味着迷人

的美国死刑的定义是每

九个被处决的人犯错我们

实际上已经确定了一个无辜的

人被无罪释放并从

死囚牢房释放了一种惊人的错误

率九分之一的无辜者 我的

意思是航空业很有趣,

如果每起飞九架飞机

就会坠毁,我们永远不会让人们乘坐飞机,但我们可以以某种方式将

自己与这种情况隔离开来 s 问题 这不是我们的

问题 这不是我们的负担 这不是我们的

斗争很好 我谈论了很多关于这些

问题 我谈论了一个种族和这个

问题我们是否应该杀人

当我教我的

学生关于非裔美国人的历史时很有趣

我告诉 他们关于奴隶制

我告诉他们关于恐怖主义的时代

重建结束时

开始的时代一直持续到第二次世界大战 我们对此

知之甚少,但对于

这个国家的非洲裔美国人来说

社区的人们不得不担心

被处以私刑 他们不得不担心

被轰炸 这是恐怖的威胁

塑造了他们的生活,这些

老年人现在来找我

,他们说先生。 史蒂文森,你

发表演讲,你发表演讲,你告诉

人们不要再说我们

在 9/11 之后我们国家历史上第一次在处理恐怖主义,他们告诉

我说不,告诉他们我们是在

那个和那个恐怖主义时代长大的 当然

,随之而来的是几十年

的种族从属地位和种族隔离

,但我们在这个国家有这种

动态,我们真的不喜欢

谈论我们的问题,我们不喜欢

谈论我们的历史,正因为

如此 我们真的不明白

做我们在历史上做过的事情意味着什么

,我们不断

地相互碰撞,我们不断地

制造紧张和冲突,

我们很难谈论种族,我

相信这是因为我们是 不愿

致力于南非的真相与和解进程的

人们明白,即使在种族灭绝之后,我们也无法

克服或暂时不

致力于卢旺达的真相与和解

以前是这样的承诺,但在这个国家,

我们还没有做到这一点

听听你在说什么

曾经参与过系统性的杀戮,

如果

我们故意故意处死人是不合情理的,

但我想,如果

生活在一个德国民族国家正在处死人的世界里,那会是什么

感觉? 如果他们是

不成比例的犹太人,我无法

忍受,那将是无意识的

,但是在这个旧南方各州的国家,

我们处决的人比

你高出 11 倍 l

如果受害者是白人,则被判处死刑的

可能性比受害者是黑人的高 22 倍如果被告

是黑人而受害者是白人

,则在埋

在地下的人的尸体的各个州 被

处以私刑,但这种脱节

很好

最终,这些现实

因遭受虐待退化

边缘化而蒙上阴影,对我来说,有

必要将两者结合起来,因为

最终我们谈论的是

需要更有希望、更致力于更

致力于应对

生活在一个复杂世界中的基本挑战,这

意味着 对我来说,这对我来说意味着

花时间思考和

谈论穷人,弱势群体,那些

永远不会得到t的人 o 特德,但

以一种融入我们自己生活的方式来思考它们,

你知道最终我们都

必须相信我们没有看到的事情

我们所做的事情是理性的,因为我们

致力于智力,因为我们是创新

创造力的发展不是来自于

仅在我们头脑中的想法它们

来自我们头脑中的想法,这些想法也

受到我们内心的某种信念的推动

,我相信正是这种 mynhardt 联系

迫使我们不仅要

关注所有明亮和令人眼花缭乱的

事物,而且还要关注 黑暗和困难的

事情

伟大的捷克领导人瓦茨拉夫·哈维尔

谈到了这一点,他说,当我们

在东欧处理

压迫时,我们想要各种各样的东西,

但最需要的是希望

,精神的方向,

愿意有时陷入绝望

我相信即使是 Ted

社区也必须参与其中

的核心,并成为一个很好的见证人。 技术和

设计将使我们成为完全的

人,直到我们关注

苦难到贫困到排斥到

不公平到不公正现在我会警告

你,这种

身份比那些不关注的身份更具挑战性

当我

还是一名年轻的律师时,我很荣幸见到罗莎·帕克斯

,帕克斯小姐过去常常不时回到

蒙哥马利,她会和她

最亲爱的两个朋友这些年长的女人和一辆

约翰尼汽车聚在一起 谁是

蒙哥马利巴士抵制惊人的

非洲裔美国女性和弗吉尼亚·

杜瑞尔白人女性的组织者,她的丈夫

克利福德·杜尔我代表博士。 金和

这些女人会聚在一起

聊天,时不时这辆车

会打电话给我,她会说布赖恩小姐

帕克斯要来镇上我们要聚

在一起谈谈你想过来听我说吗?

我会说是的,女士,我

愿意,她说

你到了这里你会怎么做我说我会

听我会过去然后我会我

会听它是如此

充满活力和如此授权 一

毛钱我在那边听这些

女人说话,几个小时

后帕克斯小姐转向我,她说不,

布赖恩告诉我平等正义

倡议是什么告诉我你

想做什么

我开始给她我的 说唱 我说得很好

我们正在努力挑战不公正

我们正在努力帮助那些被

错误定罪的人 我们正在努力

对抗偏见和歧视

刑事司法管理 我们正在

努力结束没有

假释的儿童生命 试图对

我们不想要的死刑

做点什么 试图减少监狱人口

我们试图结束大规模监禁 我

给了她我的全部说唱,当我

说完时,她看着我,她说

嗯,她说这会让你

累累累

,这就是卡琳福特小姐她

对她说的 手指我的病人说这就是

为什么你必须勇敢勇敢

勇敢我真的相信泰德

社区需要更加勇敢我们

需要找到方法来

迎接这些挑战这些问题痛苦

因为最终我们的人性

取决于每个人的人性 我在

做我所做的工作时学到了非常简单的东西

它只是教会了我非常简单的东西

我已经开始理解并

相信我们每个人都不是我们做过的最糟糕的

事情我相信对于

每个人来说 在这个星球上,我认为如果

有人对我们说谎,他们不只是

个骗子

一个

杀手,正因为如此,这种

基本的人类尊严必须受到

法律的尊重 实际上认为在

太多的地方,贫穷的反面

是正义,最后我相信,

尽管它是如此戏剧性

、如此美丽、如此鼓舞人心和如此

刺激,我们最终不会

被我们的技术评判,我们也不会被

评判 我们的设计我们不会

以理性的智慧来评判

你最终判断一个社会的性格,而

不是他们如何对待富人、有

权势和特权者,而是

他们如何对待穷人、被谴责的

被监禁者,因为它在那个 Nexus

我们实际上开始

真正深刻地理解关于我们是谁的事情我

有时会在

这个故事中失去平衡我有时过于努力我

确实像我们一样感到疲倦有时

那些我 deas

以重要的方式超越了我们的思维方式,

我一直在代表

这些被判处非常

严厉的判决的孩子,我去监狱,

我看到我的客户,他分别是 13 岁和 14 岁,他

已获得认证 作为一个

成年人接受审判我一直在思考那是怎么回事

那么法官怎么能把你变成

你不是的东西,

法官证明他是成年人,但我看到

这个孩子,我和我也起来了 一天

深夜,我开始想,天哪,

如果法官可以把你变成

你不是法官的东西,那么你一定有

魔力

所以是的,法官布莱恩有一些魔力,

你应该要求一些

,因为我起得太晚了 并没有

真正思考开始

制定一项议案,我有一个客户

,当时他 14 岁,是一个年轻的贫穷黑人

孩子,并开始在议案

的头脑中开展这项议案,这是一项

尝试我可怜的 14 岁孩子的议案

像特权白人一样的黑人男性客户 75

岁的公司高管和我

提出了我的动议,认为存在

检控不当行为、警察

不当行为和司法不当行为,

关于

这个县没有任何行为,这

都是不当行为,这是一条疯狂的路线,第二天早上我

醒来 我想我是不是梦到那个

疯狂的动作,还是我真的把它

写进了我的恐惧中,不仅我写了它,

而且我已经把它送到法庭

几个月过去了,我只是

忘记了这一切

,我终于决定哦,天哪,我

要去港口做这个疯狂的

案子 我上了我的车 我

真的不知所措 不知所措 我上

了我的车 我去了这个

法院 坐在那儿 这将是多么

困难 如此痛苦 我 终于

下了车,我开始

走向法院,当我

走上法院的台阶时,

有一个年长的黑人男子是

法院的看门人,当这个人

看到我时,他向我走来,他 赛 d

你是谁 我说我是律师 他说

你是律师 我说是的 先生 然后这个人

走到我身边 他拥抱了我 他

在我耳边低语 他说我

为你感到骄傲 我必须 告诉你,这让我

充满活力,它与我内心深处的

某种东西有关,

关于每个人为社区做出贡献的能力,

以及充满希望的观点。

当我走进法庭时,法官看到我

来了,他说先生。 史蒂文森你

写了这个疯狂的议案吗我说是的先生我

没有我们开始争论人们开始

进来是因为他们只是

愤怒我写了这些疯狂的

事情警察在法庭被填满之前进来

了系统检察官和书记员

人们

对我们在谈论种族我们

在谈论贫困我们在

谈论不平等

而在我的眼角余光

看到这个看门人来回踱步

并一直透过窗户看

他能听到所有的声音 这股热气让他

来回踱步,最后

这位年长的黑人

满脸担忧地走进

法庭,在我身后坐了下来,大

约十分钟后,法官说

我们要休息一下。

中间有一个副警长,他

对看门人进了

法庭感到很生气,这个副警长跳了起来,他

跑到这个年长的黑人面前,他说

Jimmy wh 你在这个法庭上做什么?

这位年长的黑人站起来

看着那个副手,他

看着我,他说我来到

这个法庭是为了告诉这个年轻人

你的眼睛盯着我来的奖品

特德,因为我相信你们中的许多

人都理解宇宙的道德

弧线很长,但它倾向于

正义,我们不能成为完全进化的

人类,除非我们关心

人权和基本的黑人 T 我们所有的

生存都与

每个人的生存,我们对技术

、设计、娱乐和

创造力的愿景必须与

人类同情和正义的分裂相结合

非常感谢您,

因此您听到并看到

了这个社区的观众明显希望

在您的道路上为您提供帮助并在这个问题上做点什么,

而不是写一张支票

我们能做些什么 好吧,

如果你住

在加利福尼亚州,我们周围就有机会,例如

今年春天即将举行公投

,实际上我们

将努力将

我们花在惩罚政治上的一些钱重新定向

,例如这里

加州 我们将在未来 5 年内花费

10 亿美元用于死刑

10 亿

美元但 46% 的凶杀案不会

导致逮捕 56% 的强奸案

不会导致因此有 一个

改变这一点的机会,这次公投将

提议将这些美元用于

执法和安全,我认为

现在我们周围都存在机会

,在过去的三

十年里,美国的犯罪率大幅下降,这也是

有时这

与监禁率的增加

有关 这个国家大规模监禁的大幅增加

并不是真正的暴力

犯罪类别,而是这场被误导

的毒品战争,现在我们的

监狱人口急剧增加,我们被

惩罚的言论冲昏了头脑,

所以我们有三个 罢工的法律将

人们因偷

自行车而犯下低级财产犯罪

而永远监禁,而不是让他们将这些

资源归还给他们受害的人

我相信我们需要做更多的事情

来帮助受犯罪侵害的人而

不是减少 我认为我们

目前的惩罚理念

对任何人都没有任何作用,我认为这

是我们必须改变的方向

布赖恩,你在这里引起了很大的

共鸣,你是一个鼓舞人心的人,

非常感谢你来和你说话