4.4 • 6.8K Ratings
🗓️ 16 September 2020
⏱️ 117 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
“Let’s create not only some healing here but some real change. … Change is automatic, but progress is not. And so this is a conversation today to see if we can create some progress. … What this is really about is getting to what we can do to tap into unity, and love, and compassion, and connection to one another. What can we do to move forward?” – Tony Robbins
It’s been over three months since the death of George Floyd, the unarmed, 46-year-old black man, who was unconscionably killed by police in broad daylight during an arrest in Minneapolis. Captured on cell-phone video and amplified in the media, the whole world witnessed his horrific death, and it has reignited a centuries-long conversation around race supremacy in the United States and the injustice that African Americans can face.
The aftermath of George Floyd’s death — and combined stacking of others like Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, and most recently the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis. — has brought this nation to a threshold. With thousands of people around the world in grief, humanity is speaking loud and clear: enough is enough, the time is now to create real change rooted in our nation’s foundation of ‘justice for all.’ Beyond change, we need progress. As Tony said in the first episode of this special two-part podcast series, change is automatic – but progress is not.
The conversation continues. In this 2-hour episode, Tony hosts a panel of five unique, multi-generational leaders who share their experience of what it is to be Black in America and lend their voice to what we, as a unified society, need to listen to and hear, to unite, to make progress, and ultimately to tap into love, compassion, and our deep connection to one another.
“If love is not yet won, the battle is not yet over.”
– Martin Luther King III
Part 2 Guests:
Charlamagne tha God (Radio show host, author, influencer)
Rev. Jesse Jackson (Civil rights activist, former aide to Martin Luther King, Jr.)
Barbara Becnel (Journalist, film producer, prison reform advocate)
Van Jones (Author, television host)
Derrick Johnson (President and CEO of the NAACP)
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hello everyone. We're back for our second conversation with extraordinary leaders. Conversation |
0:13.7 | designed to unify, not divide, a conversation designed to take a stand against injustice |
0:18.2 | and to create lasting change, not just inspiration. I want to thank you for joining us again. |
0:24.9 | This continued conversation is because Reverend Jesse Jackson was available last time and |
0:30.0 | it gave us an opportunity to think of some other individuals and I'm so grateful that |
0:33.6 | we're going to join us to add to the voices. The goal here is to get to a deep level of |
0:38.3 | our own feeling and emotion, to understand even greatly more than understand, appreciate, |
0:43.5 | feel, experience the compassion and the love for our brothers and sisters who have had |
0:48.2 | unique experience, unfortunately, starting in slavery and then still experiencing what |
0:53.5 | we're experiencing the George Floyd's of the world. The Ahmad Arbor is the, the tale |
0:59.5 | is the complete insanity and injustice that happens over something as insane as the |
1:06.4 | color of one's skin instead of the Holy One's character. We tend to be so tribal, you |
1:11.7 | know, tribal about religion, tribal about race, tribal about politics, divided. And so this |
1:17.9 | is an opportunity to perhaps shut up and listen and hear and feel and really try to step |
1:23.9 | in the shoes of those that have lived this life and the people that we have in our extraordinary |
1:28.2 | human beings here, their leaders and they also have to be African-American as well, but extraordinary |
1:32.6 | leaders. That's why I asked them to be here about half of our friends of mine for years |
1:36.6 | and the other half I'm just getting to meet myself along with you here for the first |
1:39.6 | time today. So I want to introduce them and then I'd like to try to create the frame of |
1:44.0 | what we want to accomplish here and then we'll just dive straight in. First of all, we |
1:48.2 | have Van Jones, CNN political contributor. He's the host of the Van Jones Show and the |
1:53.3 | Redemption Project. Man, I have so much respect for you, brother. You have a van of such |
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