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I want to start by telling you
two things about myself
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before I get into the full talk.
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And the first is that I've been writing
about manners and civility
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for more than 20 years,
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as a book author
and as a magazine columnist.
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The second is,
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my friends know to be very wary
of inviting me over for dinner,
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because any faux pas
that happens at the table
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is likely to wind up in print.
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(Laughter)
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So, I'm watching, I can see back there
and I can see through the portals, too.
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(Laughter)
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So, speaking of dinner parties,
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I want to take you back to 2015
and a dinner party that I went to.
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To place this in time,
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this was when Caitlyn Jenner
was first coming out,
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shedding her identity as a Kardashian,
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and moving into her life
as a transgender activist.
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I wrote a column
in "People" magazine at the time,
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talking about the importance of names,
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and how names are our identity.
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And that to misuse them or not to use them
erases us in a certain way
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and especially with Caitlyn Jenner,
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I talked about Caitlyn,
but also the use of her pronouns.
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Her pronouns.
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So I'm at this dinner,
delicious, wonderful, fun,
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when my host goes on a rant
about Caitlyn Jenner.
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And she is saying that it is
disrespectful for Caitlyn Jenner
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to force her to use a new name
and to use these new pronouns.
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She's not buying it,
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and I'm listening
and because I do meditation,
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I took my sacred pause before I responded.
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(Laughter)
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And I reminded her
that when she got married
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she changed her name.
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And that she took the name of her husband.
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And that's the name all of us now use.
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We don't use it just
because it's her legal name,
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but we use it because it's respectful.
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Ditto for Miss Jenner.
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She didn't buy it
and we didn't speak for years.
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(Laughter)
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So ...
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I am known as the civilist.
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And it's probably a word
that you're not that familiar with.
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It's not in common parlance and it comes
from the Latin and the French.
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And it means an individual
who tries to live by a moral code,
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who is striving to be a good citizen.
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The word civility is derived from that
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and the original definition of civility
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is citizens willing to give of themselves
for the good of the city,
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for the good of the commonwealth,
the larger good.
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So, in this talk,
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you're going to learn
three new ways to be civil, I hope,
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and it will be according
to the original definition of civility.
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My first problem is,
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civility is an obsolete word.
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My second problem is,
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civility has become
a dirty word in this country.
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And that is whether you lean right
or whether you lean left.
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And in part, that's because modern usage
equates civility with decorum,
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with formal politeness, formal behavior.
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We've gotten away
from the idea of citizenship.
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So, let me start by talking a little bit
about my friends on the right,
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who have conflated civility with
what they call political correctness.
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And to them, call outs for civility
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are really very much like
what George Orwell wrote in "1984,"
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He called it "Newspeak."
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And this was an attempt
to change the way we talk
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by forcibly changing
the language that we use.
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To change our ideas
by changing the meaning of words.
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And I think my dinner host
might have had some of that
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rattling around there.
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And I first personally understood, though,
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the Rights' problem with civility
when I wrote a column
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about then-candidate Donald Trump.
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And he had just said
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he did not have time
for total political correctness,
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and he did not believe
the country did, either.
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And I took that to heart, it was very ...
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The audience was very engaged
about that online, as you can imagine,
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there was a thousand responses,
and this one stood out to me,
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because it was representative.
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"Political correctness
is a pathological system
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that lets liberals dominate
a conversation,
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label, demonize and shout down
the opposition."
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So, I think to the right,
civility translates into censure.
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So that's the right.
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Now, my friends on the left
also have a problem with it.
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And for example, there have been those
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who have harassed
Trump administration officials
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who support the President's border wall.
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They've been called out as rude,
they've been called out as nasty,
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they've been called out as worse.
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And after one such incident last year,
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even the Washington Post --
You know, left-leaning Washington Post --
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wrote an editorial and sided with decorum.
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And they argued that officials
should be allowed to dine in peace.
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Hm.
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You know, the wall
is the real incivility here.
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The tear-gassing of kids,
the separations of families.
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That's what the protestors say.
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And imagine if we had sided,
in this country,
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with decorum and courtesy
throughout our history.
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You know, I think about the suffragettes.
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They marched, they picketed.
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They were chastised, they were arrested
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for pursuing the vote
for women in the 1920s.
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You know, I also think about
the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr,
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the father of American
nonviolent civil disobedience.
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He was labeled as uncivil in his attempt
to promote racial and economic justice.
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So I think you get a sense
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of why civility has become
a problem, a dirty word here.
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Now, does this mean we can't disagree
that we can't speak our minds?
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Absolutely not.
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I recently spoke with
Dr. Carolyn Lukensmeyer.
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She's kind of the guru
of civility in this country,
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and the executive director of a body
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called the National Institute
for Civil Discourse.
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And she told me,
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"Civility does not mean appeasement
or avoiding important differences.
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It means listening and talking
about those differences with respect."
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In a healthy democracy,
we need to do that.
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And I call that respectful engagement.
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But civil discourse also needs rules,
it needs boundaries.
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For instance, there's a difference
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between language that is simply
rude or demeaning,
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and speech that invokes
hatred and intolerance.
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And specifically, of groups.
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And I'm thinking
of racial and ethnic groups,
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I'm thinking of the LGBTQ community.
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I'm thinking of the disabled.
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We, snowflakes,
call this speech hate speech.
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And hate speech can lead to violence.
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So, to that point, in the fall of 2018,
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I wrote a column about
Dr. Christine Blasey Ford.
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You may remember her,
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she was one of the women who accused
Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh,
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of sexual assault.
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And among the responses,
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I received this message,
a personal message,
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which, you can see here on the slide.
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It's been largely redacted.
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(Laughter)
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This message was 50-words long,
10 of them were of the F-bomb.
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And the Democrats were called out,
President Obama was called out,
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and I was referred to in a pretty darn,
vulgar and coarse way.
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There was an explicit threat
in that message,
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and that is why my editors at The Post
sent it to authorities.
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This came shortly before the pipe bombs
were sent to other media outlets,
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so everybody was really
kind of on guard there.
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And the larger context was,
only a few months before,
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five staffers had been killed
at a Maryland newspaper.
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They had been shot dead
by a reader with a grudge.
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"Shut up or else."
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And it was around that same time
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that a different reader of mine
started stalking me online.
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And at first, it was ...
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I'll call it light and fluffy.
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It was around this time last year
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and I still had my
Christmas decorations up
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and he sent me a message saying,
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"You should take your
Christmas decorations down."
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And then he noticed that my dog
was off leash one day,
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and then he commented
that I had gone to the market.
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And then he wrote me one that said,
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"If anyone were to shoot and kill you,
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it would not be a loss at all."
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I wish that were the end of the story.
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Because then a few months later,
he came to my door, my front door,
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in a rage, and tried
to break the door down.
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I now own mace, security system
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and a Louisville Slugger baseball bat.
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"Shut up or else."
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So, what's to be done
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to forestall civility from turning ugly,
from turning violent?
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My first rule is to deescalate language.
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And I've stopped using
trigger words in print.
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And by trigger words, I mean
"homophobe," I mean "racist,"
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I mean "xenophobe," I mean "sexist."
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All of those words.
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They set people off.
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They're incendiary
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and they do not allow us
to find common ground,
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they do not allow us
to find a common heart.
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And so to this point,
when John McCain died in 2018,
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his supporters noted that he
never made personal attacks.
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But his opponents agreed as well,
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and I though that was
what was really noteworthy.
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He challenged people's policies,
he challenged their positions.
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But he never made it personal.
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And so that's the second rule.
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So the problem of civility
is not only an American one.
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In the Netherlands, there are calls
for civility offensive right now
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and as one Dutch philosopher has put it,
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the country has fallen
under a spell of "Verhuftering."
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Now, this is not a word that I knew before
and I did quite a bit of research.
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It loosely means bullying
and the disappearance of good manners.
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It actually means much worse than that,
but that's what I'm saying here.
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When you have a specific word though
to describe a problem like that,
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you know you really have a problem.
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And in the United Kingdom,
the [2016] Brexit vote ...
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you know, has divided
a nation even more so.
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And one critic of the break up
called those who favor it --
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I just love this phrase --
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"the frightened parochial
lizard brain of Britain."
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The frightened parochial
lizard brain of Britain.
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That's personal.
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And it makes me miss "Downton Abbey"
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and its patina of civility.
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But therein lies the third rule:
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don't mistake decorum for civility.
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Even if you have a dowager countess
as fabulous as Dame Maggie Smith.
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(Laughter)
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So let me end with one last story.
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Not that long ago, I was at a bakery
and they make these amazing scones.
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So, long line, there are a lot of scones.
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And one by one,
the scones were disappearing
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until there was one woman
in between me and that last scone.
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(Laughter)
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Praise the Lord, she said,
"I'll have a croissant."
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So when it became my turn, I said,
"I'll take that scone."
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The guy behind me --
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I never turned around, never seen him --
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he shouted, "That's my scone!
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I've been waiting in line 20 minutes."
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And I was like, "Who are you?
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I've been waiting in Lin 20 minutes
and you're behind me."
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So, I grew up here in New York,
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and went to high school
not that far from here.
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And I may seem, you know,
very civil here and so on,
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but I can hip check anybody for taxicab
in this room, on these streets.
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So I was surprised
when I said to this guy,
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"Would you like half?"
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"Would you like half?"
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I didn't think about it, it just came out.
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And then he, he was very puzzled,
and I could see his face change
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and he said to me,
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"Well, how about if I buy another pastry
and we'll share both of them?"
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And he did and we did.
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And we sat and talked.
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We had nothing in common.
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(Laughter)
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We had nothing in common, nationality,
sexual orientation, occupation.
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But through this moment of kindness,
through this moment of connection
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we developed a friendship,
we have stayed in touch.
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(Laughter)
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Although he was appalled to learn
that I'm called the civilist after that.
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(Laughter)
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But I call this the joy of civility.
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The joy of civility.
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And it led me to wonder,
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what is the good we forgo,
not just the trouble we avoid
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when we choose to be uncivil.
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And by good, I mean friendship,
I mean connection.
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I mean sharing 1000 calories.
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But I also mean it in a larger way.
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You know, as communities
and as a country and as a world.
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What are we missing out on?
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So, today, we are engaged in a great
civil war of ideas and identity.
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And we have no rules for them.
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You know, there are rules for war.
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Think about the Geneva Conventions.
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They ensure that every soldier
is treated humanly,
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on and off the battlefield.
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So, frankly I think we need
a Geneva Convention of civility,
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to set the rules for discourse
for the parameters of that.
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To help us become better citizens
of our communities and of our countries.
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And if I have anything to say about it,
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I would base those rules
on the original definition of civility
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from the Latin and from the French.
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Civility:
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citizens willing to give of themselves
for the greater good.
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For the good of the city.
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So I think civility with that
understanding is not a dirty word.
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And I hope the civilist will not become,
or will not say, obsolete.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)