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  • (upbeat music)

  • - This book is Barack Obama convincing Barack Obama

  • to remain optimistic.

  • And what I mean by convincing Barack Obama,

  • I think of like a young Barack Obama.

  • I think of a fledgling Barack Obama.

  • Not trying to emulate you per se

  • but rather anyone who's trying to make a change

  • in the world or their world.

  • That's what it feels like.

  • If you are writing to young people

  • to be optimistic, in the book,

  • what are some of the frustrations

  • that you understand on their side

  • that may hinder that optimism?

  • You know, because if a young person says,

  • "Yeah but the system right now is crumbling more and more."

  • How do you maintain that optimism?

  • Or do you think that there has to be a point where they go,

  • "I'm not optimistic.

  • "I'm just fighting to break what it is

  • "to create something new."

  • - Part of the reason that it's 700 pages long is because,

  • by reading the book, they'll see,

  • "Man, there are a lot of structural problems

  • "or barriers,

  • in making this place better."

  • We're learning right now in vivid,

  • a vivid example of the fact that our democracy

  • is not,

  • the way we would imagine it to be, right?

  • There are all kinds of elements to it

  • where the most votes don't necessarily translate

  • into the equivalent amount of power.

  • Very popular proposals can wither

  • on the vine because of a filibuster in the Senate.

  • And so, I don't try to gloss those over.

  • The Paris Accord did not solve climate change

  • but it created the first global framework whereby

  • all countries agreed we have to do something about this,

  • and here's a mechanism to do it.

  • You can still be terrified about the pace

  • at which we are burning up the planet,

  • and yet think that was a worthwhile endeavor

  • because it gives us at least the opportunity,

  • maybe three, four, five years down the road

  • to keep building on that.

  • So, that is the kind of mentality

  • I want young people to have.

  • A certain impatience, a certain frustration,

  • a certain anger about the status quo.

  • There are times now where, you know,

  • you have younger activists criticizing me for,

  • "Obama, why didn't you take care of this

  • "or that or the other?"

  • And,

  • I,

  • welcome them feeling frustrated

  • and impatient because that's how I was before I got started.

  • And then they'll get their own knocks on the head.

  • And you know, some stuff won't work

  • out exactly the way they want,

  • but the impulse is the one that I want to encourage,

  • because it's as a consequence of that

  • constant striving and imagining something better

  • that things don't get exactly

  • as we want it, but they get better.

  • - Have you maintained connections with those worlds leaders.

  • Do you send Angela Merkel memes?

  • Like, who are you still close with,

  • just as a human being?

  • - You know, I don't send Angela Merkel memes,

  • but I talked to her sometime.

  • Sometimes, you know, she'll give me a call,

  • I'll give her a call and we'll trade notes.

  • You know, there are a handful of folks who,

  • you've been in the foxhole with right?

  • You've done some good, important work.

  • Some of them are still in power.

  • So I don't want to mention that, you know

  • that I'm giving them a call because you know

  • who knows that might give them, get them in trouble.

  • You mentioned somebody like an Angela Merkel.

  • Look, you know the stance she took in Europe,

  • relative to immigration and the enormous political costs

  • she paid for that,

  • and yet there was something inside her that said,

  • "Look, I'm not going to simply abandon

  • "a million people who are in desperate need."

  • You know, you see that in somebody and you say,

  • it encourages you,

  • that for all the,

  • cruelty and and venality

  • and corruption around the world,

  • there are a lot of good people doing good work.

  • And some of them actually rise

  • to significant positions of power.

  • And in that sense, democracy can work

  • the way it's supposed to.

  • If, you know, we have a vigilant citizenry

  • and that's not always the case.

  • - What do you believe a leader is,

  • not just somebody who's in power, but a leader?

  • - The program we did in Johannesburg,

  • we gathered up 200 young leaders

  • from 50 countries on the continent of Africa.

  • And it was as varied.

  • You had young women who had started rural health clinics.

  • - [Trevor] Yeah.

  • - You had MPs, you know,

  • who, who had taken a more conventional political route.

  • You had entrepreneurs.

  • The thing they all had in common though,

  • was

  • this

  • sense, not only that the world could be better

  • and that they had a role to play in it,

  • but also the belief that they couldn't do it by themselves,

  • and that they had to, in some ways,

  • unlock the potential and power of other people.

  • A speech I gave in Johannesburg in conjunction with that,

  • it was, it was for the anniversary

  • of Mandela's hundredth anniversary,

  • where I contrasted that

  • sort of democratic

  • inclusive leadership to the strong man leadership

  • that, in some ways, we've seen ascendant

  • in certain parts of the world,

  • in some ways has was ascendent here in the United States.

  • And those are two different stories of what it means

  • to be a leader and power.

  • And that conflict, that battle between a more democratic,

  • inclusive vision, and one that's top-down, dominant

  • subordinate, that's a contest that's taking place here

  • in the United States and around the world,

  • and it's not going to be finished

  • just because the election is over and Donald Trump

  • was defeated because you see examples

  • of this in the Philippines and Hungary,

  • in a variety of countries in Africa and Asia.

  • And, and so that contest is going to continue.

  • - Should the world follow America,

  • or is it time for the world to start doing its own thing

  • and America to be less the world police?

  • - I think, it is a good thing that other countries

  • catch up and have their own capabilities

  • and their own agency.

  • That's not something that I think America should fear.

  • My argument would be that even in a more multipolar world,

  • where you don't have just one big power,

  • but you have other countries who are coming into their own,

  • the principles that America articulated at its best

  • about rule of law, human rights, freedom of speech,

  • democracy, those values, at least I choose to believe,

  • are not exclusively American.

  • You as somebody who lived in South Africa,

  • know

  • the play that in other countries,

  • sometimes you hear where somebody

  • who's doing something entirely for power and money

  • and influence will say, if they're criticized,

  • they'll say "Ah, you know,

  • "you've been just influenced by Western thinking.

  • "That's colonial thinking."

  • No, no, no, no.

  • You are stealing from your people.

  • Don't, and when we criticize you,

  • don't claim that somehow,

  • this is some American hegemony

  • being asserted against you.

  • We're calling you on the fact that you're a thief.

  • I think it's important for us to,

  • recognize that for all its failings,

  • that the values that America is often articulated

  • on the world stage, had been ones that I would still

  • believe in and that a lot of people took comfort from.

  • And when we are not asserting them, oftentimes they don't

  • you know, they don't play out on the world stage.

  • - As someone who had to make decisions

  • and someone who was in that leadership position,

  • do you sometimes grapple with how America did

  • or did not help itself in how it acted with the world?

  • Because in the world, like

  • I'll tell you as an international person,

  • we would oftentimes go like,

  • "Man, yes, America is great

  • "and it's doing wonderful things."

  • But then be like "But also man,

  • "sometimes they just break the rules

  • "and no one can say anything about it."

  • - Absolutely.

  • Well and I record examples

  • in the book of where I'm grappling with this, right?

  • And one of the interesting challenges

  • of being President of the United States,

  • but I think being head of government

  • or state in any country is,

  • you inherit a legacy, right?

  • So

  • if

  • I come in as President and,

  • I can't undo the Iraq war,

  • the decision to go into Iraq.

  • Now I can

  • manage as best I can

  • how we can wind down that war,

  • mitigate some of the damage that's been done,

  • but I can't reverse it.

  • - Did you ever envy though,

  • how, like Trump just came in and basically

  • broke shit though?

  • 'Cause I mean he didn't care.

  • - No, I didn't envy it because I do care.

  • And I,

  • do not think that is an option,

  • to simply

  • pretend

  • that the legacy of problems

  • or issues that you inherit are somehow

  • things you can just brush aside.

  • So, the answer is, yes.

  • I would struggle with the fact that any action I took,

  • particularly when you're talking about

  • you know, counter-terrorism.

  • - Right.

  • - That's probably the area where I wrestled with this most.

  • Because my obligation first and foremost,

  • in the United States was to make sure

  • that people didn't get hurt.

  • That's sort of the bare minimum that you expect

  • out of a nation state that you're living in,

  • is that you can defend against harm.

  • Because you're dealing with non-state actors,

  • that meant that by the time I took office,

  • you had networks that were embedded in societies,

  • not necessarily supported by those societies

  • but they're there.

  • And they are plotting and they are planning.

  • And that wasn't made up.

  • And there were organizations that,

  • if they could blow up the New York subway system,

  • they would.

  • If they could get their hands on a biological weapon,

  • they would use it.

  • You then are wrestling with,

  • how do I

  • protect

  • the American people

  • from those actors,

  • but do it in a way

  • that is morally and ethically justified.

  • And war is madness.

  • Kinetic action of any sort,

  • military action of any sort,

  • that results in death and destruction,

  • at a certain level is not the thing

  • I would want humanity to do.

  • And what happens to people is,

  • tragic.

  • It is not something you gloss over.

  • What it does to our soldiers and our troops,

  • you know, as I talk about in the book,

  • it's not just the harm that our young men and women

  • suffered, and I would witness in Walter Reed,

  • but it's also how it changes them internally

  • when they have engaged in violence,

  • even if necessary and justified against others.

  • So the best I could come up with,

  • was

  • to never

  • glorify it,

  • to never pretend like it isn't a dilemma.

  • And so those kinds of,

  • questions, I think,

  • are ones that,

  • not only should American leaders have to grapple with,

  • but I think the American people have to be aware of.

  • And, and sometimes the media does not do a very good job.

  • It's a very binary, you know, the Iraq war,

  • it's glorious for the first year and a half,

  • and then suddenly it's not.

  • - Yes, yes.

  • - And we're shocked that us invading another country

  • might turn out to be messy.

  • Hopefully that's not a lesson we have to repeatedly relearn.

  • - Some activists criticized you for saying

  • they gotta be careful of snappy slogans,

  • you know, like "defund the police" because it loses people.

  • But I wonder, do you think that the slogan

  • is off, is the thing that makes people for or against you

  • or do you think people are just going to be for

  • or against you and then the slogan

  • doesn't really mean as much?

  • - Yeah, what's been fascinating

  • while I've been on this book tour,

  • is, you know, people have asked me,

  • what's my source of optimism.

  • And uniformly, what I have said is,

  • "Nothing made me more optimistic

  • "during a very difficult year than the activism

  • "that we saw in the wake of George Floyd's murder

  • "and Black Lives Matter."

  • And I have consistently

  • believed that

  • their courage,

  • activism, media savvy,

  • strategic resolve,

  • far exceeds anything

  • that I could have done at their age.

  • And I think has shifted the conversation

  • in ways that I would not even have even imagined

  • a couple of years ago.

  • So, throughout this slough of compliments,

  • I then said, "Well, what do you think

  • "about the particular slogan 'defund the police?'"

  • And I said, "Well, that particular slogan

  • "I think the concern is

  • "that there may be potential allies out there that you lose.

  • "And the issue always is,

  • "how do you

  • "get enough people

  • "to support your cause that you can actually

  • "institutionalize it and translate it into laws,

  • "structures, and so forth."

  • There were two or three writers who I admire,

  • who wrote "Obama's making it a mission

  • "to chastise Black Lives Matter."

  • And you go, "what?

  • "Hold on a second.

  • "I just spent the whole summer complimenting them.

  • "What are you talking about?"

  • That the reason it caught attention,

  • I suspect, is there were some in the democratic party

  • who suggested the reason we didn't do better

  • in

  • the congressional elections this time out,

  • was because of this phrase.

  • And I think that people assumed that somehow

  • I was making an argument that that's why we didn't get

  • you know, a bigger democratic majority.

  • That actually was not the point I was making.

  • I was making a very particular point around,

  • if we in fact want to translate

  • the very legitimate belief

  • that how we do policing needs to change.

  • And that if there is, for example,

  • a homeless guy ranting and railing

  • in the middle of the street,

  • sending a a mental health worker,

  • rather than an armed untrained police officer

  • to deal with that person might be a better outcome

  • for all of us and make us safer, right?

  • That if we describe that to

  • not just white folks

  • but let's say Michelle's mom, that makes sense to them.

  • But if we say defund the police,

  • not just white folks but Michelle's mom might say,

  • "If I'm getting robbed, who am I going to call?

  • "And is somebody going to show up, right?"

  • So the issue here becomes,

  • you know, at any given time how are we translating

  • and using language, not to make people more comfortable,

  • quote unquote, right?

  • Because that's always a strain.

  • And historically, right?

  • The concern in these debates is also,

  • is often or are we just trying to make white people

  • comfortable rather than speaking truth to power, right?

  • That's the framework we tend to think about these things.

  • - Right, yeah.

  • - The issue, to me, is not making them comfortable,

  • It is, can we be precise with our language enough

  • that people who might be persuaded

  • around that particular issue,

  • to make a particular change

  • that gets a particular result that we want,

  • what's the best way for us to describe that?

  • But I want to go back to something you said earlier

  • which I think is really important.

  • And I said this in the wake of some of this criticism.

  • I said, "Look, part of this is also,

  • "everybody has different roles to play.

  • "An activist, a movement leader,

  • "is gonna provide a prophetic voice

  • "and speak certain truths that somebody who

  • "is going to be elected into office

  • "will not be able to say."

  • I re-read James Baldwin's "A Fire Next Time" this summer.

  • How is it that something written 50 years ago,

  • 55 years ago applies directly today, right?

  • Despite everything that's happened.

  • To me, that is as searing and as honest,

  • a portrayal of

  • the gaping wound of race in America.

  • But of course, James Baldwin can be elected to the US Senate

  • or unlikely that he would want to be the mayor of a city,

  • who's responsible for figuring out,

  • how do I deal with the police union, right?

  • That's somebody else's role.

  • - Is it just a political thing in America

  • where if you're in the Republican party

  • you can be completely bombastic in what you believe in?

  • And then as a Democrat, you're trying to toe the line

  • between centrists and left leaning?

  • - Well, because I think in fact,

  • the Republican party is the minority party in this country.

  • The only reason that it doesn't look

  • like they're the minority party is because of structures

  • like the US Senate and the Electoral College

  • that don't render them the majority party.

  • So, they have certain built-in advantages

  • around power, given their population distribution

  • and how our government works.

  • But the truth of the matter is,

  • is that 60% of the people are occupying,

  • what I would consider a more reality based universe.

  • And those are the constituents we're speaking to.

  • And that is a more diverse group.

  • It, you know, I described,

  • in the book the first time I go to the Republican House

  • Caucus to speak to them.

  • And I think there was an Asian guy

  • or gal and maybe a couple of Hispanics.

  • And that was it.

  • It is much more homogeneous,

  • which means that yes they have to do less work,

  • but it also

  • means that they are,

  • they can talk to themselves.

  • And as a consequence

  • of the way our democracy,

  • our Republic is structured,

  • they don't have to appeal to as broad of a base.

  • That's not fair.

  • But you know,

  • I, at least, would prefer not having the Progressive's

  • model ourselves out of, or model ourselves

  • on the current Republican party.

  • That doesn't feel like a good strategy to me

  • to get the outcomes that we want.

  • - Being president of the United States is arguably

  • the toughest job in the world.

  • When you transitioned back to personal life,

  • I wonder what that is like.

  • Because unlike you, I don't have that power.

  • I've never been able to like

  • just change a thing in the world

  • or do something about it.

  • But now, in many ways you are like me,

  • in that you see the thing on the TV

  • and then you get angry or sad

  • but you cannot really do anything about it.

  • And so I wonder, as former president Barack Obama,

  • have you transitioned into that completely,

  • or do you find different ways to try and fix the problems

  • that you see in the world?

  • - Well, first of all, I'm not an anything like you.

  • I still have a lot more influence and clout.

  • (Trevor laughing)

  • So let's just be clear.

  • Come on, man.

  • (Trevor laughing)

  • - I was hoping you'd let that slide.

  • - Let's try to keep things in perspective here.

  • - I was hoping you'd just let that one slide.

  • I was hoping you'd just be like,

  • "Yeah, you know Trevor, in many ways."

  • - The truth is that,

  • I did not have those kinds of withdrawals.

  • And I know that there are people who I know

  • who've had them when they leave public life,

  • and very visibly, you know,

  • they want to get back on stage.

  • Michelle and I, that's something we share.

  • We feel good about the work we did.

  • We don't feel anxiety about not being

  • the center of attention.

  • We get frustrated, like I think citizens

  • around the world and here in the country do

  • when we see something unjust or unfair.

  • And yes, the goal I think for us

  • is to find new ways to,

  • have that same impact.

  • Understanding that we'll never have

  • the exact same impact as you have in the Oval Office.

  • But you know, a lot of the work around the foundation

  • is, you know, you said create a lot of Obama's,

  • I'm not sure that's the goal,

  • but to, you know, if 10 years, 20 years down the road,

  • they are a thousand, 10,000, a hundred thousand

  • young people who are now moving into positions

  • of authority and power, and in some ways

  • have been shaped by our example in a positive way,

  • that's the legacy that may exceed

  • anything that we did you know, while we were in,

  • our formal positions.

  • And, and, and that feels pretty good.

  • (upbeat music)

(upbeat music)

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オバマ大統領への8つの質問|日刊ゲンダイショー (Eight Questions For President Obama | The Daily Social Distancing Show)

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    Franco Leung に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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