Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - VP Kamala Harris on Courageous Leadership and Winning in 2024
Episode Date: October 28, 2024A conversation with Vice President Kamala Harris about the strength and fragility of democracy, the power of strong coalitions and collaborations, and how a commitment to justice and fairness can both... ground us and drive action. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everyone, I'm Brené Brown and this is Unlocking Us.
Welcome back to the final episode in our eight-part series that I am calling On My Heart and Mind.
We started the series with my conversation with Valerie Kaur on the power of revolutionary love,
the importance of a multicultural democracy, what it means to be a sage warrior.
I've talked to the stunning Dr. Sarah Lewis on her book, The Unseen Truth, Roxane Gay
on her essay on black gun ownership.
I talked to Mary Claire Haver, my friend, OB-GYN on menopause and the epic failure of the American medical field
to focus research and learning on women
in their 40s and 50s and beyond.
Had a great conversation, hard conversation with my sisters
on grief and love and unexpected joy.
My mom died on Christmas Day last year
and we were her primary caregivers along with my husband
and we fought and loved and struggled.
And we talk about what we learned
about ourselves and each other.
And in this final episode of What's on My Heart and Mind,
I am so honored and grateful to share a conversation
I'm so honored and grateful to share a conversation with you that I had with Vice President Kamala Harris.
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Hey everybody, I'm Ashley C. Ford
and I'm the host of Into the Mix,
a Ben and Jerry's podcast about joy and justice
produced with Vox Creative.
And in our new mini series, we're talking about voter fraud.
For years now, former president Donald Trump has made it a key talking point,
despite there being no evidence of widespread fraud.
But what impact do claims like these have on ordinary voters?
People like Olivia Coley-Pearson, a civil servant in Douglas, Georgia,
who was arrested for voter fraud because she showed a first-time voter how the voting machines worked.
Hear how she fought back on the latest episode of Into the Mix.
Subscribe now wherever you listen.
I want to say a few things about the podcast before we jump right into it.
The first is I am an unapologetic Harris Wall supporter. I have studied leadership for the last
couple of decades. I have been inside of many, many of the Fortune 100 companies kind of in this
country and around the world, inside of NGOs, worked with military leaders. Leadership is something that's really important to me.
And this conversation is really the conversation that I insist on having with CEOs and executive
directors and military commanders before I agree to do work within their organization.
You know, if you take a CEO in corporate sector, I can listen to earnings calls, I can track
stocks, I can read engagement data and performance data.
But what's really important to me is to sit down with a leader and understand their capacity
for full presence, understand their values, understand what they believe in, why they're fighting
for what they're fighting for.
And that's what this conversation is.
I think Vice President Harris has done an incredible job speaking to policy, writing
about policy.
If you go to her website, there's detailed policy, everything from foreign policy, economic policy, abortion,
guns, the things that matter from the moment we wake up to the moment we go to sleep.
This is a conversation about who is she, what does she believe in, why is she fighting. I will tell
you that in terms of high performance, high stress leaders,
I've met very few as solid as Vice President Harris.
I'm excited to bring you into the conversation,
Vice President Harris.
Vice President Kamala Harris, welcome to Unlocking Us.
Thank you.
It is so good to be with you, Dr. Brown.
It is so good to be with you, Dr. Brown. It is so good to be with you.
Thank you.
I'm just thrilled and ready to dig in.
Me too.
Okay.
We're going to start where we start all of these.
Tell us your story and start from the very beginning.
Oh, Lord.
How much time do you have?
Well, we don't have it.
We, you know, five, 10 minutes.
I mean, this is an important part because I've heard bits and pieces, but I'm going
to ask hard questions along the way.
Okay.
Okay.
So, I am one of two daughters who we were raised primarily by my mother.
My parents divorced when I was five, and I'm the eldest. And my
mother had two goals in her life, to raise her two daughters and to end breast cancer.
She was a breast cancer researcher. And one of the very few women, and certainly one of
the very few women of color. And a lot of my work on women's health was formed, you know, as I was growing up,
listening to her and watching her passion
about the need for women to have dignity
in the healthcare system.
We grew up in an incredible neighborhood
where the kids, we would ride our bikes,
just all of us together, you know,
because the way we were all raised was just go out and play.
Just get out the house. The bike gang. Right, and we did have the bike gang. Yeah, you got it because the way we were all raised was just go out and play. Just get out the house.
The bike gang.
Right?
And we did have the bike gang.
Yeah, you got it.
Oh yeah, no.
Yes, I had my banana seat.
Seriously, right?
And then the tassels and, right?
Oh, we were very serious about this.
Yeah, and you knew where everyone was because there'd be 30 of those bikes in someone's
front yard.
But that's exactly, and wherever you ended up around dinnertime is where you ate.
That's it.
I have to.
Oh yeah.
Right?
And so I had the blessing of a really great childhood because it was like, it was a working
class neighborhood of...
You know, I try to explain to people, have you ever known a neighborhood where people
are...
They're proud of their lawn.
Oh yeah.
You know what I mean?
Oh yeah. You know what I mean? Oh yeah.
Out there trimming their roses, out there mowing their lawn
and just pride in neighborhood, pride in community.
It was the kids of the community.
We were raised where, I talk about this,
which is that I had and have an incredible family. And it is the family that I have that
is by blood and it is the family that I have by love. And that's how I was raised, that
you create your family as much as you are born into your family, right?
And so I grew up with this expectation also, a joke about it.
We were raised in a community of people that told all of us as kids that we were special.
We weren't particularly special.
But they told us we were and we believed them, right?
And I think that in parenting, there are certain things that we do for the children in our lives that teachers
do so beautifully that we can all do that is just about inspiring a kid to believe that
they are loved and they are special.
And then you create a high standard for them and they know they're supposed to rise to
it.
You know?
Oh, God. Yeah. I mean, I see you.
Right?
Yeah. And I see you and I know what you're capable of and it's tremendous.
And that's it.
That's it.
And that's it. And then when you do that, you know how kids are, especially, you know, like 12 and
under and you tell them that and they just start walking around with their chest out and their chin up. And
that's one of the best things you can give a child. And then you let them explore and
you tell them they are special, which also means that we expect a lot of them.
So I'm going to pause you here.
Okay.
Because this is, if you look at the parenting research, this follow-up piece is key, which is not your special and
you don't have to work at anything, not your special and you don't have to do anything.
Your special and therefore.
Therefore.
Yeah.
I mean, I was part of, and I am like this with our kids and with, you know, I have baby
nieces who I just love to pieces.
They're my nieces'
children. And when you turn into like your 20s and then you look at your parents and
you're like, these are all the things you did wrong, right? And I remember saying to
my mother, you never took my side. Because if I came home with any problem and talked to my mother about it, the first thing
she would do was not, oh honey, come here, let me hug you.
Oh honey, let me take care of it.
The first thing she would do is look at you and say, well, what did you do?
What's your part?
And what I-
That's not how she what I realized later is that she was teaching me and us that reflect
on what your agency was at that moment and what was your responsibility and to the extent
that you can control it, don't let things happen to you.
Okay, I have to pause you again here because this is my nerdy research thing.
Yeah.
Hope.
Yeah.
You know, people think hope is a gauzy emotion of possibility.
Hope is actually mostly taught by parents in a learned cognitive behavioral process.
What's interesting about it is the positive correlation between hopefulness and a sense
of agency.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I see, as you say that, I see that.
Yeah.
So hope is actually three, this is C.R. Schneider's work out of Kansas.
Hope is goal, I can set a goal, pathway.
I can find a path to it that includes plan B, C, D, and E, if plan A doesn't work, and
agency.
I believe in my ability to do it.
Right.
And the hope is the driver.
The hope is the driver.
Exactly.
But this pause that your mom made about, let's talk about your agency here.
In a way that also requires you to, I think it's very important to also, in any situation,
and certainly it's a rule for today among those who call themselves leaders, to then
think about it in the context of reflection, because it also requires reflection.
Say more.
What happened?
What could have happened? What role did I play in what happened?
Oh, yeah.
And what role did I play could be something where you should critically analyze it or
to know that there's a lesson learned, right? And I think that's important.
It's a hallmark of courageous leadership. It's a hallmark of our leadership work is that your ability anytime you're giving corrective
feedback or coaching to anticipate you're going to have a part.
Right.
But that's exactly right.
And that's right because, you know, as a leader, I'm very hard on myself.
And one of the things that I feel and take very seriously is my responsibility to be
prepared.
Also, I've got this little thing about it's really important to me to be on time.
Someone teased me recently who's worked with a lot of elected leaders and I've never seen
an elected leader is always sudden time. But I feel that I owe other people the respect of knowing their
time is important, right? And the very least I can do is respect that in terms of what
they've had to do in their day to meet with me, what they've had to put aside to do that.
But there are these things that are about just what is your role in a moment
of responsibility and also duty.
You know, I gave a speech years ago about the distinction that I see between duty and
charity, right?
Right?
I'm making a face.
You all can't see it, but I'm making a face.
Right?
And there's a big difference. There's a huge difference. Right? Charity kind of is, you know, I'm oversimpl. You all can't see it, but I'm making a face. Right? And there's a big difference.
Yes, there's a huge difference.
Right?
Charity kind of is, I mean, I'm oversimplifying it obviously, but charity is, well, I have
a little extra to give and I will be benevolent and I will give you some of what I have.
Duty is the responsibility that you have.
It's not an option.
No.
It is a responsibility. You should not expect to be applauded for it because it is actually
what you are supposed to do. And I connect that to something I've seen my whole life and then most
recently when I visited the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. And I went to a lot of the relief centers
and you've probably seen this.
Oh yeah, Houstonian.
Right. And what you've probably seen this. Oh yeah, Houstonian. Right.
And what you've probably seen there and I've seen throughout my life, it is often the case
that the people who have the least to give, give the most.
Yes, 100% of the time.
Right.
I mean, we actually see that in the research on charitable giving.
Right.
It's incredible.
It's incredible.
And that's what I mean about duty. It's not if
you have. I have two pennies, I give you one. Right?
Yeah. I mean, it just makes me emotional as somebody who's lived through a lot of that, you know, we're Houstonians, we've seen it
all go away. It takes me back to Harvey, when the people getting us out of our home were
part of the Cajun Navy. They were fishermen. Right. Yeah. That came here in their F-150s,
pulling their boats, you know, Gator fan boats, all kinds of stuff, with all kinds
of interesting accrued to moms on them. But they were putting us in those boats. And so
it is, I have to ask you a question. Sure. And you can just say I'm wrong. No, anything.
I'm sensing some serious firstborn energy here. Oh, for sure. I'm like, I see you. I see you. You know, I was just talking with my
team about this today. I try not to harp on it, but there is certainly something to birth order.
The research is so muddy, but every researcher who studies it goes, you know, we don't know,
but it's true. Yeah. Well, like I grew up from the age of two, being told, look after your sister.
Yeah.
I mean, I tell a story about I'm the oldest of four and, you know, sometimes my therapist
will say like, this really inflated sense of importance.
And I was like, when you grow up hearing, put the toilet lid down or your sisters will
die, you get a pretty big sense of like, wow, every decision
I make has pretty big consequences.
Absolutely right.
Okay, I've got to ask you this question. You get to Howard. I heard it was a Houstonian
that termed, that created the term, is it C cubed?
So C cubed was my, C cubed was the name that I was given by my sorority when I joined the sorority.
We all had our nickname and that was mine and it stands for Cool, Calm and Collective.
So yes, that was a very long time ago and that was the name I was given.
I had to track it back because I actually started the research on the short haircut.
Yeah. Oh, you did?
Yeah, because someone sent it to me in this moment of excitement about you running and
said she had to have listened to Depeche Mode, look at the haircut, we're going hard. And
I was like, okay, wait.
So let me just tell you, my husband loves Depeche Mode and I am not, it's not my thing.
So that's funny you say that, but I did have that shortcut, but that was like those days.
But you know what, you're right.
It was, well, so the person who kind of managed our sorority when I joined was a Houstonian.
So yes.
I love this story.
Yes, yes. Okay. First time you fell in love. So, yes. I love this story. Yes, yes. Okay, first time you fell in love?
Oh, goodness. In high school.
Did you?
Yeah.
Did you get your heart broken or did you break someone's heart?
I didn't get my heart broken. I kind of just, I went to college. You know, but there's also,
I mean, my best friend from kindergarten
is still one of my best friends. Oh, you're kidding.
No, in fact, she's been out campaigning for me in North Carolina knocking on doors.
Let's go. Right? I love my girlfriends. Like, we have
a sisterhood. Like, I have my sister and in addition, my chosen sisters, who we have traveled life together,
right? I am Godmother to their children. Our husbands are like brothers, right? And it's
a big part of my life. It's a big part of my life. And it's a big part of probably my
sanity.
Oh, for sure. Yes.
Right? You know? In fact, I tell women, I mentor a lot of women and men, and I say this to the youngest
though, including our kids, including younger, you know, adults, know that, again, this gets
back to agency, know you have a choice to decide who will be in your friend circle. And choose those people who are going to root for you.
Those people who are not going to judge you, but at the same time are going to say,
girl, you need a mint.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Those who will laugh with you when you trip and fall and then they'll pull you back up
and push you out.
And sometimes I just simplify it this way because I did that a long time ago in my life.
I'm not going to have mean friends.
No.
But you have to be intentional about these things, right?
You do.
Especially if you ever experience, I mean, one of the things that we do with our kids
is we do this little metaphor where we have them put a little, like, pretend there's a
flame in their hand and say, when you get really bright and shine, make sure you don't
hang out with anyone that comes by and blows it out because your light's too bright.
Oh, that's beautiful.
I like that.
You know, just like you want someone that says, hey, man, you're shining.
Let me help you block the wind for a minute.
Right.
And that's right.
And we have to teach, and including other adults,
you actually, you have the right
to not have mean people in your life,
and to sit back and actually be intentional
about how do people make you feel.
And it doesn't mean that people are just blowing smoke.
That feels bad too, actually.
And it does.
But yes, people feel bad too.
And it absolutely does.
Right.
And it will not take you to a good place.
No.
Right?
And there's no trust in that.
No, but there's not.
And there's no safety in that either.
Right?
Yeah, it's really interesting.
I saw a quote the other day that said, how someone treats you says more about you than
them.
How you allow them to treat you says more about you. That's great.
Yeah.
And I think that's true.
And I think that's adult friendships, like you said, it's walking a very difficult path.
Right.
But you have to be intentional about it.
You have to be intentional.
This is not like a television program where it's just going to happen because you just
end up being someone's roommate.
Right.
Right?
No, it's work.
Relationships.
And it is work. And friendships are work. And it's work that's good work. It's work that can be
joyful work. And important.
And it can be hard.
Yeah, it can be hard. But-
Sisterhood's the same way, don't you think?
But it is. Of course.
Yeah. I mean, I've had some of the most, Ashley and Barrett are two of the most important people
in my life.
You have two sisters.
I have two. They're identical twins. Oh, yeah.
When my parents brought them home in New Orleans, I was like, holy crap, are both of them staying?
How old were you when they were born?
Eight.
And my brother's between us.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
And so you're close to your brother?
Yeah.
Codename, Sister Superior.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
But that's great.
All three of them call you Sister Superior?
Only on occasion and only once.
Yeah, and usually around like a Thanksgiving dinner.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, we just did a podcast, the one before this is with my sisters about my
mom's death. And kind of there was a funny moment where I said, well, no, I just wanted
it to go this way. And I said, what did you want Ashley? Ashley said, I just wanted you
to stop telling me what to do mostly. I was like, that's my job.
Well, you and I have had that experience of our mother's passing and what that and during
an illness what that does, right? Because it's interesting, the relationship between adult
siblings in the context of your parents can have the effect of having you revert to your
12 year old self. Oh my God. I mean, all of a sudden, right, like Scooby Doo is on.
Right. Like you can lead the world, but you are just back to being 12.
No, in a heartbeat.
Yeah, it's not pretty.
They push the buttons because they install them.
Exactly. That's good.
Yeah.
Oh, you've got, I just feel like I should be writing notes right now.
Yeah, I know. I read a lot of quotes.
OK, I'm going to transition to leadership,
because I have a question for you.
So we've been studying courageous leadership, daring
leadership for 15 years.
We have found that daring leaders often
have one or two values that are core to them.
And we all have a lot of values.
But one or two that are core core where every other value is forged.
What would you say as a leader that your primary one or two values, how would you identify
them?
Yeah, they're probably directly connected.
Fairness and justice.
That's so powerful.
That's really, really important to me.
Fairness and justice.
Yeah.
I mean, I have, I mean, it prompts me to act if I see something that is unjust or unfair.
And at the same time, fighting for that for others is something that is a real motivator of mine and actually
will cause me to have a very almost emotional feeling about the importance of it.
Fairness and justice. Okay, another leadership question. I've been watching you. You're making a funny face.
Yikes.
Okay.
And it's interesting.
I see in you, there's a generational difference in leadership.
So folks who are 10, 15, 20 years older than us come from a brand of leadership that is
very command and control. It's somewhat ego protective. And our generation
is kind of caught in between that and highly collaborative, highly coalition building.
And in the best moments, surrounding ourselves by experts who are high performers, have deep knowledge and understanding
and great strategy skills.
You seem to move toward coalition and collaborative leadership.
Is that a fair assessment?
Very much.
Say more.
Say more.
My lived experience is to know that the vast majority of us have more in common than what separates us.
And okay, so, you know, Gen Z and others will kind of, they've got this whole meme about me and my, dare I say, obsession with Venn diagrams.
I love Venn diagrams.
Ain't nobody over 40 that done like a Venn diagram, y'all. Just get used to it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. We love a Venn diagram. If you're faced with conflict, done like a Venn diagram. Y'all just get used to it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We love a Venn diagram.
If you're faced with conflict, pull out a Venn diagram.
And the matte pencils to color.
I'm telling you, in fact, you know, when my goddaughter went to college, she's now a sophomore
and she comes and stays with me from time to time because we're both on the East Coast
right now.
And it was one of her first weekends in her freshman year.
And she's like, Auntie, I've got, and it's all these different groups.
And she's trying, and I was like, honey, we're going to pull out the Venn diagram.
That Venn diagram had about 11 circles on it.
Perfect.
I mean, that's it.
And I was like, okay, we're going to figure out where's the intersection and then
let's figure out where you're going to fit into it.
I literally still have this Venn diagram.
But I just think that if we work toward coalition building, we are
stronger as a society. I just know it. And I know that when you bring together seemingly
different people and you bring people around a table, you can watch, and it's so exciting, you watch how the silos break down. Oh, yeah.
And everyone leaves a bit taller.
For sure.
You know?
Seeing her valued, contributed.
And, you know, part of the struggle that I think we have increasingly in the society as it is
evolving, in some ways, devolving, people are feeling alone.
And when you feel alone, it's very disempowering.
And when we can bring people together and they see the commonality, it is then empowering
of the individual as well as what it does for the collective.
That's right. That's right. Right? That's right. Yeah.
I mean, that's actually the secret sauce of high performing teams.
And it doesn't matter whether I'm working with a corporate team, an NGO team, a military
special, that is you're not alone.
And we are more alike than we're different.
I have to say something now because I'm trying to win the over under on not casting during
the podcast. Go for it. Just go for it. No, no, I have to say something now because I'm getting, I'm trying to win the over under, I'm not cussing during the podcast.
Go for it.
Just go for it.
No, no, I have to say this.
What you're describing is very different than what I saw from the previous Trump administration
and certainly a stark difference in what he's committing to do in the next four years if
he's president.
And I want to talk about something really specific. And this is very
difficult for me just as a woman as a person, but also someone who has studied leadership
for decades. He's talking about loyalists, not experts in positions of authority, people
that will serve him, not our country, including most recently a comment about using the military against Americans
who disagree with him.
The enemy within.
He talks about the enemy within.
American citizens.
I have to catch my breath for a second. I have to understand, or I want to understand, I don't have to understand, but I want to
understand.
If I were working in an organization, a Fortune 100 company, and I saw a leader surrounding
himself or herself with loyalists who serve a person rather than a mission and a purpose
and shareholders are a board.
That would last five seconds.
Do you think this fear about putting loyalists in place is a real fear?
It is a very real fear.
And we have heard, look, the people who know Donald Trump best,
who worked with him, members of his political party,
who worked with him inside the Oval Office, inside the Situation Room,
who were his chief of staff, most recently the one who spoke out, a four-star Marine general,
his national security advisor, two secretaries of defense, and his former vice president
have all said he is unfit to serve as president and he is dangerous.
Donald Trump is someone who has said he would terminate the Constitution of the United States.
I have taken the oath to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. I have taken the oath to
uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States six times, twice as DA, twice
as Attorney General, as a United States Senator, and now as Vice President. There are very
few oaths, you know, one that you make to your spouse, to God, but to the Constitution of the United States is
the highest duty, the most sacred duty that any office holder, especially President of
the United States. And this man says he would terminate the Constitution of the United States.
And talking about enemies within, I mean, that harkens back to like McCarthyism. No, it, yeah, I mean, it's like a straight line.
It's a short line.
It's a short walk.
Yeah.
And so the fear is real and legitimate and very well founded.
But what I urge everyone to do is do something with that fear, which is understand that we, as long
as we hold onto it, have a democracy. And in a democracy in our country, the people
have the power through their vote to determine who will be their leaders and who will be
president of the United States and the direction of our country right now. We are truly at
an inflection point. We are truly at an inflection point.
We are truly at an inflection point.
I believe that.
And I see it.
And I just did a two part special with Heather Cox Richardson.
Yeah, she's so wonderful.
Yeah, the historian.
And she among many historians right now are just reminding voters that authoritarian rule does not come into power with 1950s grainy black and white movies
of tanks rolling in or guns being held to people's heads in almost, I mean, if you look
at Hungary, if you look at, I mean, like what's happening is we vote someone in.
And so this, yeah, the enemy within.
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Hey there, I'm Ashley C. Ford, and I host Into the Mix,
a Ben and Jerry's podcast about joy and justice
produced with Vox Creative.
As former President Donald Trump continues to claim,
without evidence, that voter fraud is a key issue
in the 2024 presidential election,
we wanted to know what impact can claims like this have on ordinary voters?
Olivia Coley-Pearson, or Miss Livy as she is known in her community, comes from a family
of proud voters and civil rights activists.
So as an adult, civil service came naturally to her.
In 2012, while she was volunteering at the polls,
a first-time voter asked Ms. Livy
how the voting machine worked.
And of course, she showed them.
Years later, in 2016, Ms. Livy was arrested
for voter fraud because of it.
In her mind, this arrest wasn't about voter fraud.
It was about intimidating
black voters. Listen to her story on the first episode of our new three-part series on Into
the Mix, out now.
Can I run something by you?
Anything.
It's a theory that I have about what I see going on.
And I see it from a different perspective than probably political because I study human
behavior and emotion.
I actually get the attraction of the Trump-Vance approach, and I'm going to tell you why I
get it.
I get it because we are not neurobiologically hardwired for uncertainty.
Antonio Demacio is a neuroscientist.
He always said, don't ever believe that we're thinking machines who have feelings.
We are feeling machines who on occasion think.
And so...
Which is the key to the survival of the species.
Right, which is the key to the survival of the species.
And so what ends up happening, I think, with this kind of, what we're seeing with Trump
and Vance especially is it is really good reality television.
It is kind of what we would call in the social sciences, emotional pornography, that the
country is somewhat numb to a base level of emotion, I think, because we've been through so much in the
last few years, that it takes extraordinary emotion to get our attention. And the bigger
and the blustery, the emotion. And what ends up happening is a strategy of emotional, just
kind of emotional nuttiness. And're gonna win and we're gonna do this
and everyone's like yes and then you I find you standing in front of not fans
with hats on that match your campaign but undecided voters talking about the
Middle East and Ukraine and economic policy.
Yeah.
And that is, I mean, really, I hate this metaphor, but I am a fifth generation Texan.
My grandpa would say, damn, girl, you brought a knife to a gunfight.
Like you're talking policy.
You're talking, you're actually talking about what's going to, in my opinion, and I'm not
being overwrought here.
You're talking about the things that I believe could keep my children alive.
Yeah.
That's my intention.
Especially my daughter.
That's my intention.
So you're talking about how it's going to work.
And I'm going to tell you something, we are going to win.
It is not going to be easy.
We are going to win.
I believe that the majority of Americans not only love our country deeply.
I believe that.
Right.
But understand that at the end of the day, the true measure of the strength of a
leader is not based on who you beat down, it's based on who you lift up. It's what we teach
our kids, it's what we want in leaders in terms of how they look at us and think about us. And,
you know, I talk about it on the campaign trail, because I truly believe people are exhausted with the Trump era.
You're done.
No matter what the differences between us,
we know that it is not healthy and it does not strengthen us
as a nation to have Americans pointing their fingers
at each other.
No.
Right?
I mean, it's not only is it exhausting, it is.
It's debilitating. It's debilitating.
It's debilitating and it's somewhat traumatizing to track that level of emotionality and rhetoric,
especially in the study of power, we talk about power over versus power within power
too.
And in the type of leadership-
I think about that in freedom, freedom from freedom too.
Yes, yes, exactly. And so the leadership you're talking about in freedom, freedom from freedom to yes, yes, exactly.
And so the leadership you're talking about is power within to you.
The problem with power over there's a lot of problems with it.
But the biggest, the biggest thing I've seen over the past 20 years of my career is to
maintain power over, you have to be willing to exercise occasional cruelty against vulnerable populations. Otherwise,
you don't lose that fear that power over depends on.
But the cruelty.
Yeah, the cruelty.
Is a key part of what you were talking about.
And that's traumatizing for us. Yes, it is. And it is demeaning, but it is also traumatizing in what we know,
and you know, you're the expert at this table. Trauma, it numbs the individual, it numbs the
people. And when we are numb, we will not achieve our capacity, not to mention we will not achieve not only our capacity in terms
of productivity, but in terms of equality of life.
I mean, I think about it and I think it is an important thing to think about, you know,
what brings you joy.
I think that's important.
Oh my God, it's key.
Right?
And think of it this way, if you've ever tried to talk with someone who's depressed, and
you try to literally and figuratively open the curtains and say, look, the sun's out,
it's a beautiful day and they can't see it.
And there is something about trauma that is very similar in terms of it blunts our senses
and ability to see the good, the things that will bring joy.
It's not healthy.
And so we have to, to your point, diagnose it and we have to treat it.
And one of the ways to treat it ultimately is not only to deal with the symptoms, but
deal with the cause.
And that's what I'm trying to do.
I want to talk to you about this because I think this is interesting.
One of the emotional pulls that my friends, I've talked to a lot of people preparing for
the interview.
Some, because that's what I do, but just the research and some undecided, some voting for
you, but thinking, should I mobilize and just like really get after it and fight?
And I'm like, yes, we should, yes.
I want to talk about the emotional pornography
that's being used and the false narratives.
So part of the narrative that's really being used,
I think by some extremists, and not
all, because let me tell you, I have an awkward family table at Thanksgiving.
I got people all, I mean, again, this comes with the territory of the fifth generation
Texan, right?
I don't know how to say out loud.
When you think you're the party or the people who own toughness, God, patriotism, responsible gun
ownership and family, then anyone who disagrees with you is not patriotic, hates God, is weak
and not tough. And what is crazy about that is not true. So can I take them one by one with you?
Of course, of course, of course.
There was a moment at the Democrat National Convention
when I saw this still photo of you
and below you were people holding signs
that say we fight when we win.
And I was like, this is one of the first people in my party
to acknowledge that we have to fight to win.
Yep.
Oh, yeah.
You're not afraid of owning the fact that sometimes winning takes fighting.
Absolutely.
And here's how I think about that.
If you know what you stand for, then you know what to fight for.
It's not fighting for the sake of fighting. Say that again. If you know what you stand for, you know what to fight for. It's not fighting for the sake of fighting. Say that again.
If you know what you stand for, you know what to fight for. I stand for the freedom of women
to make decisions about their own body. I stand for the fact that we should treat each other with
dignity and respect. I stand for the proposition that we need to lift up working people and
give them access to opportunity.
These are the kinds of things I stand for, so I fight for them.
And if you look at the history, I think of our party, the expansion of liberty and justice,
the protection of people and the values we hold dear. You know, we are tough as nails.
So I love the fact that you're unapologetic. If you say that, if you know what you stand for,
you know what to fight for. You know what to fight for. And I took the second image,
and this is this is gets kind of complicated, but this is in my jam right here. This was
seeing how much the walls, children adore their dad. I know, and it was beautiful. And I thought for a moment, Carl Jung said that paradox, this
ability to hold seemingly contradictory things, is the most important spiritual gift we have
and the closest thing that captures the truth to being human. And when I saw you fight to
win and I saw the Walls family, what I thought is,
these are not different things. These are born of the courage to love and the courage
to lead.
You're absolutely right. And you hit it on the head because it is not only if you know
what to stand for, you know what to fight for. If you love, you know what to fight for.
And I know this is going to sound corny, but I love our country.
You really do.
I do.
I can tell.
I do.
And I believe in the promise of America.
I am empirical evidence of the promise of America.
I know what we can do. I know what we... I
believe in the foundational principles and maybe that's being trained as a
lawyer and one of the reasons I wanted to become a lawyer. I believe that we can
make true all of those words we spoke about our commitment to equality, to
liberty, to justice. I believe in all that. But none of it will come without us being
vigilant. No, it won't. You know, on democracy, look, I think there's a duality to its nature.
Yeah.
Right? On the one hand, strength. When a democracy is intact, what it does to protect the rights and
the freedoms and the liberties of its people. Incredible strength.
Yeah.
On the other hand, incredibly fragile.
Oh, there's a fertility.
It will only be as strong as our willingness to fight for it.
I guess that's your point also about the duality in terms of the paradox.
Yeah, that's the paradox.
That's right.
Yeah.
I want to say something else about in this kind of like fake narratives that are just not true and emotionally resonant for people but untrue. No party gets God. Like, I love
God. I mean, I taught vacation Bible school. There is no long-term evaluation of how those
kids are doing or whether they're, you know, all still okay. But like, I love God. And if you measure your faith and your commitment to the sacred, not
by proclamation.
I'm with you. I'm so with you.
But by the willingness to protect the most vulnerable among us.
Faith in your works.
Faith. Oh my God, I was just going to say that.
Faith without action.
No.
So, I don't care how much you say you love God.
I'm so with you.
And I have never, I have, as an elected person, purposely not talked a lot because I just
find that the people who do tend to be
hypocrites.
Oh, yeah.
And I was raised in the black church.
I was raised to believe in a loving God.
And the God that I believe in and pray to is a God that says, do justice, have mercy.
It is about do good, it is about feed the hungry, it is about care for the poor and
the elderly, it is about love thy neighbor, it is about the good Samaritan who in the
face, I mean, that's one of my favorite, the parable of the Good Samaritan,
which is, you know, my way of talking about it is that we should in the face of a stranger
see a neighbor, right?
Beautiful, yeah.
Right? And getting back to what I saw in terms of the relief centers after Hurricane Helene.
That's it.
That is doing the work of living your faith.
Yeah.
I like to say faith is a verb.
For sure.
Right?
I mean, because it is about knowing something even when you can't see it, but it is also
about then manifesting it, right?
And then making it real.
And so then, that's when you see faith and you have faith, right?
When you see it in the works and the deeds as an expression of your deeply held beliefs.
Yes! I mean, yes, and just for the record, this is for me, don't quote her, quote me,
you don't get God. Like, no party gets God, no group gets God.
No, no, of course not.
Like, that's a terrible way to weaponize God. And it's just not what we're talking about.
And I feel, I have to tell you, I feel the same way about the co-opting of patriotism.
Yeah, I agree.
Like, you know, I think patriotism is protest, disagreement, debate.
And it is the highest form of patriotism, I believe, to fight for the ideals of our
country.
Yes.
Right?
That fragile and strong democracy.
That's exactly right.
And so in this election, fighting for free and fair elections. Fighting for the fact that we will have a president who does not aspire to be a dictator.
Admiring people like the president of Russia.
We will have in our leaders those who vow to uphold and protect the Constitution of the United States, not terminate it.
Isn't that, aren't those examples of what we believe patriotism to be,
which is the love of our country, understanding the oath and the responsibility
in particular that elected leaders have to foundational principles?
Metrolinx and Crosslinx are reminding everyone to be careful as Eglinton-Crosstown LRT train
testing is in progress.
Please be alert as trains can pass at any time on the tracks.
Remember to follow all traffic signals, be careful along our tracks and only make left
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Be alert, be aware, and stay safe.
Hi folks, this is Kara Swisher. This week in my podcast On with Kara Swisher, I'm talking to Tony Stark, also known as Iron Man, also known as Oscar winning actor Robert Downey Jr. about his Broadway
debut in McNeil. He plays a writer who goes down the AI rabbit hole
and doesn't come out.
We are in a new era where I believe
that we ultimately will wrest control of these things
because the few may have had too much power for too long,
but I feel that McNeil particularly,
people are leaving the theater
feeling a little bit less terrified and a little more hopeful because they're feeling
that this was ultimately a human story.
Along with playwright Aad Akhtar and director Bart Scherr, we talk about the play, the implications
of AI for creatives, and whether or not new tech can change social power dynamics.
We also talked about the MCU. Of course, I'm
a huge fan. Have a listen to On with Kara Swisher wherever you get your podcasts.
I have to read this to you because when I read this, I heard about it on the news, but
when I read the National Security Leaders for America letter. So I do a ton of work
with the military and with veterans. I know some
of the people who signed this letter, these people are not kidding around.
And they're not political people.
They're not political people. And if they were, I would imagine they were probably conservative
Republicans, to be honest with you.
I agree with you.
Yeah. And so I just want to read part of it. We are former public servants. This is on
September 22nd, 2024. We are former public servants. This is on September 22nd, 2024.
We are former public servants who
swore an oath to the Constitution.
Many of us risked our lives for it.
We are retired generals, admirals,
senior non-commissioned officers, ambassadors,
and senior civilian national security leaders.
We are Republicans, Democrats, and independents.
We are loyal to the ideals of our nation,
like freedom, democracy, and the rule of law, not
to any individual or party.
We do not agree on everything, but we all adhere to two fundamental principles.
First, we believe in America's national security requires a serious and capable commander in
chief.
Second, we believe American democracy is invaluable.
Each generation has a responsibility to defend it. That is why
we, the undersigned, proudly endorse Kamala Harris to be the next president of the United
States. This election is a choice between serious leadership and vengeful impulsiveness.
It is a choice between democracy and authoritarianism. Vice President Harris defends America's democratic ideals
while former President Donald Trump endangers them.
So I, as Vice President of the United States,
I have now met over 150 world leaders,
presidents, prime ministers, chancellors, and kings,
many of them multiple times, we're on a first name basis.
When we walk in those rooms around the world
representing the United States of America, we have traditionally been able to walk in
those rooms chin up, shoulders back with the earned and self-appointed authority to talk
about things like democracy and rule of law.
That's right.
But being a role model means people watch what you do to see if it matches up to what
you say.
And look for one opportunity to dismiss.
What otherwise imperfect though we may be is a gold standard, if not the gold standard.
And I will tell you that part of my hope and prayer for us as a country is that among the
stakes that we understand are at play in this election, that we all understand
how important America is to the rest of the world.
I hope and I pray we fully understand what we mean to the rest of the world.
Where people in various parts of the world are fighting for democracy,
where women are fighting for their ability to be educated, to have rights.
And so, you know, these national security leaders having their support and endorsement,
I'm deeply honored, but it also is testament to the fact that just like John Kelly recently
speaking out publicly about his concerns about Trump and fascism and all of that, think of
their letter as a 911 call to the American people.
It took my breath away.
They talked about your steadfastness in the situation room. They talked about your
toughness. And they talked with real fear about what would happen, that Trump would
remain absolutely unchecked and has developed relationships far deeper than what we understand
with some of the most dangerous people threatening everything we believe in. And this is not 2016 or 2020.
No.
He is also increasingly unstable and unhinged.
And the significance of even the words that you read about, you know, I asked people to
imagine we can all picture the Oval Office.
You've seen it on TV.
Imagine the Oval Office in your head, just imagine it, on January 20th of 2025.
If Donald Trump is sitting there, he will be stewing over his enemies list.
Oh, I think that's true.
People talk about their fear.
Right?
Versus what I intend to do, which is sitting there thinking of the American people
working on my to-do list. There's a big difference.
The gotcha list and the to-do list?
I mean, this goes back to the difference of loyals to serve him.
That's right. We've come full circle.
Yes.
That's right.
So, fifth generation Texan, I cannot let you out
of this conversation without saying that I'm really scared
for the women in my state.
I'm scared for my daughter.
I spoke Monday in San Antonio to 7,500 educators.
And I want to tell you something that really
was devastating to me.
On stage, I was asked by the person facilitating
the conversation what I thought about the fact
that some of their members, these educators,
did not come because it was being held in San Antonio.
And they would not come because of the Machiavellian abortion
laws here. Yeah.
And I thought, well, I believe in staying up for what you believe in.
And as it turns out, I can barely talk about it.
I mean, as it turns out, many of the women who chose not to come
actually chose not to come because they are pregnant.
I know. I assume that's where you're going because I've heard...
Yeah, they were afraid if something happened. There are a lot of pregnant women who do not want to travel to states with Trump abortion
bans for exactly that reason that, God forbid something happens, God forbid they are experiencing
a difficulty with their pregnancy or miscarriage.
Yeah, like clotting or bleeding.
Absolutely.
All of a sudden, their choices are go to jail or die.
Yeah. Go to jail or die.
It's again, this gets back to the fact that we must be vigilant and we have to remember
that we can never take our rights for granted.
Back to your point about talking with folks about whether they should get very activated
around this election and knock on doors and tell people why they care and why it matters
and why they should vote. This is the day, this is the time, because this is, this is. And I mean,
the fundamental, the notion that in the United States of America in this year of Our Lord 2024,
that women don't have the right to make decisions about their own body. I mean, what
could be more fundamental? We're not talking about property rights. We're literally talking
about the right to make decisions about your own body. And in Texas, the law provides up-to-prison
for life for a physician, a healthcare provider, for performing the care that they deem in the
best interest of their patient. And can you imagine what's happening now is that I've
talked to a lot of physicians and medical school professors and they're seeing a decline
in their postdocs who want to go into family medicine, particularly reproductive health care, because these students, they
don't want to go to states.
And we now have 20 states with Trump abortion bans.
And you already look at the fact that we still have the sad reality of America is we still
have the highest rate of maternal mortality of any so-called wealthy nation.
If you look at the reasons behind that, it includes the lack of appropriate and adequate care for women
in the context of their reproductive systems, whether it be pre-pregnancy, during pregnancy,
postpartum. We have so many deserts, we call them deserts for maternal care.
Oh, yeah.
And you have then the effect that includes that people don't want to go into reproductive
health care.
I'm the first vice president and never has there been a president who's gone to a reproductive
health clinic.
I wanted to go because I wanted to highlight the fact that in these clinics also, it's
not only abortion care.
That's where they do PAPs.
They do breast cancer screenings.
They do HIV screenings.
I saw nobody except a planned parenthood nurse practitioner for 15 years.
Right. But exactly right. And because you knew and so many people know you walk into that clinic,
and that's where you're going to be treated with dignity, you're not going to be judged,
it's a safe place. That's what these clinics offer.
Usually they are run by women and they're closing in many places because of the laws
that are present in those states.
So you're talking about so many ramifications, whether it be students going into medical
practice for reproductive care, whether it be clinics closing, whether
it be pregnant women not wanting to travel, whether it be kids like some of my godchildren
who in high school are making college application decisions based on which state, right?
The ramifications of this highlight a fact, which is that Donald Trump, through his decision
to put those three members on the Supreme Court to undo Roe, has created a healthcare crisis in America.
This is a healthcare crisis.
This is a healthcare crisis for sure.
Okay, our time is up.
I'm getting a sign.
We could keep going, but...
I know, like I could sit here and talk to you all afternoon.
Yeah, I'm going to end with something that we always end up with, which is part of the
rapid fire.
Just one question.
Okay.
A snapshot of an ordinary moment in your life that gives you true joy.
Sunday family dinner, hands down.
In my normal life, I love to cook.
And Sunday family dinner is non-negotiable. Everyone comes, whoever's in town, they can bring their friends.
And I cook, we have our routines.
Sunday family dinner, hands down.
We have a big Sunday family dinner, too.
I mean, we hold hands and sing grace.
It's the whole thing, right?
Really?
Yeah, we do.
Yeah.
I will say the snapshot of an ordinary moment in my life that gives me true joy
Yeah. I will say the snapshot of an ordinary moment in my life that gives me true joy
is you and your commitment to justice and your commitment to duty and service. And I am
as activated as I can be. And I can't- Thank you for your voice. I said it to you before we started the program, but
you give voice to so many people who rightly must be seen and heard and talk about leadership.
What you do with your voice and your platform is really build community in a very important
way.
And I thank you for that because that's in the best interest of all of us.
So thank you.
And it's great to be with you.
I look forward to talking with you again.
I do too.
Let's fight and win.
Yes, we will.
Okay.
I really appreciate y'all being here for the conversation.
I learned a lot about, I guess I was surprised in some ways.
I don't know why about her values,
it completely checks out that fairness and
justice are the deep,
deep core values that she turns to when things are tough.
We all have many values,
but there's normally we have found in our research one or
two that is the space where all other values are forged. We all have many values, but there's normally, we have found in our research, one or two,
that is the space where all other values are forged.
And it means something to me to have a leader of this democracy that's committed to justice
and fairness, that's committed to building a collaborative, high-performing strategic
leadership team around her, rather than a team of loyalists
that don't serve the country but serve the leader.
I think in any other sector where you and I would be at work or in nonprofits, wherever
we go every day, the team of loyals has never gone down in global history as courageous, meaningful leadership.
I hope you vote.
I hope you take seriously the oath that maybe we have not taken because we are not formal
elected leaders, but the oath that we all take as citizens in a democracy.
I'm grateful for you.
I'm grateful for this community.
Stay awkward, brave, and kind, and vote.
Unlocking Us is produced by Brene Brown Education and Research Group.
The music is by Keri Rodriguez and Gina Chavez. Get
new episodes as soon as they're published by following Unlocking Us on your favorite
podcast app. We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Discover more award-winning
shows at podcasts.voxmedia.com. I'm Ashley C. Ford, and I host Into the Mix, a Ben and Jerry's podcast about joy and justice
produced with Vox Creative.
We're back with new episodes taking a look at voter fraud, specifically how the fear
of voter fraud accusations can lead to voter suppression.
As the 2024 election draws nearer,
former President Donald Trump continues to claim,
without evidence, that widespread voter fraud
lost him the election in 2020.
So we wanted to know, how do claims like this
affect ordinary voters?
Here are the story of a civil servant
who faced felony charges and years in prison
for helping a
first time voter figure out how to use a voting machine.
That story and more on Into the Mix, a Ben and Jerry's podcast.