1. In 1979, a Frenchman called
Bernard Kouchner,
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2. who had founded
Medecins Sans Frontieres,
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3. chartered an old cargo ship,
and he went to rescue
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4. thousands of starving refugees
trapped on a tiny island.
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5. Refugees that no-one else
seemed to care about.
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6. They were fleeing from
the new communist government
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7. that had taken over Vietnam.
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8. To many liberals in the West,
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9. the communists had been heroes
in their fight against America,
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10. which meant that the refugees
did not deserve to be helped.
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11. To Kouchner, this was outrageous.
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12. The point is people are dying
in the China Sea.
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13. I mean, the boat people
are now facing piracy.
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14. I mean, they are attacked by pirates
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15. ten times in their trip,
if they are still alive,
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16. and nobody are taking care of them.
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17. And that's our purpose.
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18. It's not possible to shut up now.
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19. Kouchner's action
had a powerful effect in the West,
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20. because it started to undermine the
self-belief of a whole generation,
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21. who saw themselves
as radical and pure...
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22. .. that possibly being good
was not as easy as it seemed.
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23. It began when the singer Joan Baez
came out in support of Kouchner.
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24. In the 1960s,
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25. she had been deeply involved
in the Civil Rights protests...
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26. The mothers gave me five children
to fully register...
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27. You can't go in,
nobody but students and parents.
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28. .. and also one of the leaders
of the anti-Vietnam War movement.
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29. She was a symbol
of the idealism at its heart.
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30. I'd like to try, if I may.
You can't get in.
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31. But now she said that the refusal
to help the refugees
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32. showed how radicals had become
not only uncaring, but corrupt.
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33. They would allow thousands
of people to die,
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34. simply because they had
the wrong ideology.
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35. Baez went on French television
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36. and she gave an interview
that caused a sensation.
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37. No, I never defended
the government of Vietnam.
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38. I spoke for the people
inside of Vietnam.
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39. I was against the violence
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40. that this country
perpetrated inside of Vietnam,
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41. but... I was equally
against an American boy
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42. being shot out of a plane
as I was the women and children
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43. of Vietnam being bombed,
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44. so it was never possible
for my position to be clear,
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45. particularly somewhere like France,
where peace movement means left.
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46. I'm not left.
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47. Baez was immediately attacked
by other anti-war activists,
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48. led by Jane Fonda.
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49. They accused Baez
of being an unwitting agent
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50. of American imperialism.
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51. .. and leftism in a way that I'm not.
I think that's as simple as...
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52. Despite the row,
Kouchner carried on,
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53. rescuing thousands of refugees
lost at sea in tiny sinking boats.
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54. Kouchner believed
that what he was doing
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55. might also be the start of
a completely new kind of radicalism,
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56. one that really would
make the world a better place.
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57. The reaction in the West, he said,
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58. had shown that the old political
ideologies of left and right
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59. had now lost all credibility.
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60. Kouchner had an alternative idea
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61. that was going to go very deep
in the imagination of the West.
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62. It said that we are all one world,
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63. linked together
simply as individuals,
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64. not divided by political ideas
or by nations.
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65. And we, the good people in the West,
had a duty to intervene
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66. to help the victims
of all evil political ideas,
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67. wherever they were across the world.
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68. We don't care on leftist
and rightist countries,
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69. there is no leftist
and rightist suffering,
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70. and there is no possibility
to split the world in good people
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71. and bad people,
good dead and bad dead.
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72. Because we think that
this is a new kind of policy.
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73. For us, human being is one.
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74. To let the people speak
to each other before dying.
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75. Julia Grant had grown up in the
north of England, near Blackpool.
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76. But, in the 1970s,
she had moved south
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77. and became part of the growing
gay scene, and a drag artist.
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78. She knew inside herself
that she was a woman -
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79. that was her true self.
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80. Which made her
an outsider everywhere,
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81. including in the gay world.
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82. When I was living on the apparently
gay scene and being a drag artist...
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83. .. nobody thought any...
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84. .. any bad if I sort of went out,
did my show,
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85. and, when I came off stage,
sort of toned down my make-up
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86. and put on a dress, because I was
accepted as a drag artist,
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87. whereas if I try to go to a gay pub
dressed as a woman...
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88. .. most gay people resent the fact
that a man wants to change his sex.
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89. Transvestites and transsexuals
are a minority
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90. within the actual gay world.
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91. To have
a gender reassignment operation,
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92. Julia was going to have to
go through a series of interviews
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93. with a state psychiatrist.
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94. He would decide who she really was.
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95. Julia was part of a new idea
rising up in the 1980s -
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96. it said that to change the world and
to make it a better place,
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97. you should fight to become
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98. who you as an individual truly were.
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99. That was real freedom.
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100. But, to do it,
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101. Julia was going to have to take on
the medical establishment.
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102. Do you have a letter
from your doctor for me?
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103. Right. Well, what is the problem?
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104. Well, I feel, um, that I've been
having a fight with myself
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105. for a long time,
and I've come to terms with the fact
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106. that I believe I am a woman...
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107. .. trapped within
sort of a man's body.
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108. Well, what do you mean
by being a woman?
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109. Well, my whole... All my thoughts
and everything are feminine,
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110. there's nothing masculine.
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111. I tend to reject my masculine body.
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112. You know it to be masculine?
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113. I identify it as masculine
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114. because society identify me
as masculine.
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115. Well, it's not a matter of society.
It's a matter of anatomy.
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116. You say you feel like a woman?
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117. Yes, I believe everything I do
is feminine.
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118. I believe I'm a woman inside.
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119. Well, Michelle,
how does it feel to be a woman?
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120. It just feels like being me.
Can't describe it as anything else.
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121. You see? She's right.
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122. Nobody knows
how anybody else feels inside.
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123. Well, I feel I don't...
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124. I believe I don't actually feel
the way a normal man should feel.
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125. It may be that you identify
with certain stereotypes
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126. of the female gender role -
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127. that is the traditions,
the behaviour, the ideas,
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128. but that doesn't make you a woman.
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129. You know, styles do change,
even if you think they don't.
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130. Shoulders are wider,
and they're higher.
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131. See, they all had to
have pads put in.
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132. And, insofar as we could,
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133. we've just lengthened them
a little bit because they're longer.
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134. And the thing we've learned is
never really press your hem.
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135. You know, sometimes
you see people ironing a dress,
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136. and they press along the hem
until it looks like a knife edge.
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137. And then, if you want to
let it down, you can't.
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138. Just leave the hem gently rolled,
and then you'll...
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139. Never press along the edge,
then you can let them down.
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140. The China News Agency supplied
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141. all the news for everyone in China,
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142. but it also ran
a privileged news service
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143. for the Communist Party elite.
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144. And the higher you were
in the party,
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145. the more truth
you were allowed to know.
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146. There were three levels of secret
newspapers published every day,
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147. and at the top there was
what was called Big Reference.
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148. Very few copies were printed,
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149. because they were only for
the top leadership,
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150. and it was printed
in extra large type
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151. to make it easier for the old men
who ran the country to read it.
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152. And at the very top
was now Deng Xiaoping.
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153. He was in complete control in China.
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154. He had defeated all his rivals,
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155. and to show his strength, in 1979,
he put his main enemy on trial,
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156. Jiang Qing.
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157. She was accused, along with the
other members of the Gang of Four,
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158. of killing and persecuting
thousands of people
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159. in the Cultural Revolution,
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160. but she refused to recognise
the court.
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161. She continually attacked the judges.
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162. The judges, she said,
were hypocrites.
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163. They had all followed Mao's ideas.
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164. They were just turning on her
to save themselves.
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165. Instead, she presented herself
as the one thing
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166. that she knew Deng Xiaoping
feared most -
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167. a defiant individual.
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168. As she was hustled out of the court,
she shouted,
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169. "I am without heaven,
and a law unto myself.
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170. "It is right to rebel."
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171. But Deng showed her no mercy.
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172. Deng Xiaoping decided to experiment
with democracy.
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173. He allowed people
to put up posters and sell magazines
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174. in Tiananmen Square.
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175. It was known as Democracy Wall...
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176. .. and it quickly became a symbol
of a new openness in China.
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177. But then it started
to run out of control.
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178. People published details
of widespread corruption, greed,
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179. incompetence, and nepotism at the
very top of the Communist Party...
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180. .. and then that force that Jiang
Qing had prophesied, individualism,
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181. re-emerged.
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182. Wei Jingsheng worked as
an electrician at Beijing Zoo.
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183. Wei he was a charismatic figure,
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184. and he quickly became
a leading force at Democracy Wall.
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185. He called for the overthrow
of Deng Xiaoping.
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186. He put up posters that said,
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187. "We want no more gods or emperors
or saviours of any kind.
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188. "We want to be our own masters.
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189. "Everything that is happening now
is just a new-fangled lie.
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190. "Deng is just a new
fascist dictator."
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191. The wall was closed down,
all the posters hosed off,
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192. and Wei was arrested.
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193. Wei Jingsheng's trial
was broadcast live on television.
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194. He was accused of
counter-revolutionary crimes
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195. and passing secrets
to foreign agents.
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196. Why was it necessary
to close down Democracy Wall?
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197. Well, you see,
on the democratic wall...
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198. .. everyone,
without putting his name...
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199. .. can blame or charge any person...
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200. .. without any ground. They can do it
without any legal obligation.
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201. Do you think in England,
do you have this kind of freedom?
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202. I don't think so.
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203. Blame any person without putting
on his own name in the wall paper.
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204. Do you think that is
a kind of freedom?
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205. I don't think so.
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206. Do you think that
there's freedom of speech?
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207. The way it looks in the West
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208. is that, the moment the lid came off
for a second in China,
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209. and people made contact
with western journalists...
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210. I think I have to go for another...
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211. Some work to do.
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212. Bernard Kouchner's humanitarian
vision of a world without borders
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213. was now spreading.
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214. Idealists from the West,
inspired by his ideas,
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215. were travelling to conflicts
all around the world.
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216. In Afghanistan,
they came to help the Mujahideen,
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217. who they saw as noble idealists
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218. struggling against
the Russian invasion.
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219. And, in 1984, it suddenly became
a truly global movement.
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220. It started
when the BBC shocked the world
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221. with a report about the effect
of a famine in Ethiopia.
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222. The response was Live Aid,
organised by Bob Geldof.
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223. It was driven by a vast outpouring
of sympathy
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224. for those who were starving
in Ethiopia...
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225. .. but also by an anger
and a frustration
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226. with all politicians in the West
who had done nothing to help.
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227. I find it incredible
that the mass of people
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228. probably feel that
something should be done,
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229. yet their own governments just don't
do anything. They do very little.
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230. The very fact that it has to be done
by people giving their own money
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231. is ridiculous. I mean, we've given
enough money into government.
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232. Why can't they spend
some of our money giving it back?
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233. I mean, at the moment, you've got
a problem with the butter mountain,
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234. you don't know
how to dispose of it.
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235. To sell it to the Russians
is the cheapest way.
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236. I'm sorry, but butter doesn't do
very much good in Africa,
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237. as you know.
Butter oil actually does.
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238. It's one of the major sources...
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239. Oh, butter OIL, if you can...
If you can get it...
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240. Well, it is a by-product of butter.
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241. Yes, but, look, a lot is going.
A lot of surplus food is going.
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242. But, Prime Minister,
there are millions dying,
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243. and that's the terrible thing.
Yes indeed...
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244. What Live Aid seemed to show
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245. was that it might be
possible to change the world...
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246. .. but, to do it,
you had to bypass all politics
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247. because politicians,
both left and right,
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248. had become corrupted
by power and petty nationalism.
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249. Instead, you connected directly
with others suffering
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250. around the planet, and rescued them.
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251. Bob Geldof travelled to Ethiopia
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252. to visit the camps
where the aid was being delivered.
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253. But he began to realise
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254. that something very strange
was happening.
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255. The Ethiopian regime was rounding up
thousands of the starving people
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256. who had come to the camps.
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257. They were being taken to airstrips,
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258. where they were loaded at gunpoint
onto giant transport planes.
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259. They were then flown to what
were called resettlement camps.
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260. Geldof was shocked
by what he was seeing.
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261. To him, it seemed to evoke
an evil ghost from Europe's past.
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262. The first pictures we saw
of resettlement were these ancient
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263. and beautiful people,
starving and in rags,
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264. under armed guard, going into
these vast Russian planes.
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265. They probably had
never seen a plane.
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266. They have nothing left,
only their dignity.
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267. And to the West, the immediate
psychological reaction
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268. is Jews being led at gunpoint
into cattle trucks by the Nazis.
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269. What Geldof had stumbled upon
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270. was something that those who ran
Ethiopia had been trying to hide -
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271. that the food brought in by Live Aid
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272. was being used as a weapon
in a civil war.
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273. Ethiopia's ruler was a brutal tyrant
called Colonel Mengistu.
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274. Mengistu had decided
that the only way to win the war
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275. was through a massive piece
of social engineering.
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276. He was going to literally
move millions of people
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277. out of the rebel areas in the north
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278. and relocate them
in the empty south,
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279. where they could no longer fight,
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280. and the food aid
was being used as bait
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281. to lure hundreds of thousands
of people into the refugee camps,
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282. where his troops then swooped in
and rounded them up.
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283. Live Aid was
an extraordinary achievement.
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284. It is estimated that it may have
cut the death toll in the famine
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285. by half.
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286. But the group Medecins Sans
Frontieres made the dramatic claim
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287. that the aid might have also
led to the same amount of deaths
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288. as it had saved.
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289. The mass relocations were so brutal,
they said,
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290. that over 100,000 people had died.
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291. It showed the weakness at the heart
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292. of the growing
humanitarian movement -
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293. that when they came face to face
with a brutal ruler
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294. like Colonel Mengistu, who was
using their aid not to save people,
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295. but to save himself and kill
thousands more in the process,
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296. they had no way of stopping him.
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297. They couldn't challenge power.
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298. I only wish I'd been born a woman,
then I'd have the same privileges
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299. as all the sort of women's libbers
who were sort of showing off
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300. about burning their bras
and all the rest of it.
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301. They can still marry. I can't.
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302. So I've got to try that little bit
harder by wearing make-up
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303. and trying to look good
all the time,
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304. feminists liking it or not.
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305. I think that
if a woman's got pride in herself
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306. and wants to look attractive
and wants to wear make-up,
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307. then, I don't know,
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308. more people will turn
and look at a fully-made-up woman.
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309. Well, it ain't right,
men dressing up as women.
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310. They're just a bunch of queers,
ain't they? BLEEP hell.
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311. How do you know that? What?
How do you know?
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312. We've got one in our school,
ain't we? Mr BLEEP.
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313. Yeah. He's a queer.
In the papers and everything.
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314. He goes round
touching all the kids' legs.
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315. They're a disgrace, touching
men's bollocks and everything.
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316. Well, she wasn't doing that,
was she?
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317. I dunno. It's not even a she, is it?
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318. It's a he trying be a she.
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319. Julia Grant was now
living as a woman,
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320. while she carried on being
interviewed by the NHS psychiatrist,
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321. but she was becoming increasingly
frustrated and angry
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322. with the process, and she decided
to challenge the power
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323. the psychiatrist had over her.
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324. She travelled to the south coast to
see a surgeon at a private clinic.
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325. She went with her partner, Amir.
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326. He was a refugee
who had fled persecution in Iraq.
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327. The surgeon agreed
to give Julia breast implants...
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328. .. and, after the operation, Julia
went to confront the psychiatrist.
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329. I am supposed to be
directing your case
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330. because it's primarily
a psychiatric matter,
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331. and I must confess, I take
exception to you doing that.
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332. Well, I thought it was
something permanent.
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333. I needed something to establish
that I was doing what I was doing.
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334. It's a medical matter.
It isn't a personal choice.
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335. I like to be informed.
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336. See, once again,
you're overstepping the mark,
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337. and I don't like it one bit.
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338. I don't wish to appear
to be petulant,
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339. but, really,
you're not arranging this affair
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340. in a manner that fits our protocol.
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341. We like to do it in our way,
where we know what's going on,
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342. and I don't like people
to step out of line.
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343. I find it, to say the very least,
irritating.
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344. Well, I'm having difficulties
with the guy I'm living with...
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345. So do many of my patients
with their associates.
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346. Why should you be different?
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347. I don't think you have conducted
yourself particularly tactfully
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348. in all this, and there
I think the interview will end.
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349. Thank you very much.
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350. You'd better come and see me
in another few months.
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351. Why can't I have the operation?
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352. Why can't I pay for it?
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353. They don't like that.
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354. They like you to be very placid
and just sit there
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355. and just do as you're told.
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356. And if you don't do as you're told,
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357. then you're going
against the system,
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358. and then the system won't help.
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359. After all, it's my mind.
I know what I want.
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360. Nobody else can get inside me.
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361. Julia went back north
to see her family,
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362. to tell them that she was going
to defy the medical establishment.
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363. She would find a way to pay
for the operation herself.
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364. She travelled through
the old industrial cities,
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365. where many of the factories
were now closing
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366. in the wave of de-industrialisation
that was sweeping through Britain.
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367. Factories and terraced houses.
That's all it is.
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368. It's like Coronation Street, innit?
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369. That whole view. It's amazing.
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370. Back-to-back.
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371. In the mid 1980s,
a young girl called Chai Ling
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372. had come from the provinces to study
psychology at Beijing University.
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373. She became fascinated by an American
psychologist called Abraham Maslow.
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374. He taught that
the human beings of the future
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375. would be driven by what he called
self-actualisation.
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376. They would be guided
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377. only by what they felt inside,
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378. not by what they were told to do.
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379. These are the people
who would resist suggestions.
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380. They would choose
what they wanted to do.
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381. You might urge them to do something,
and somebody else might,
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382. but it was their decision, doing
what they themselves decided to do.
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383. They look within,
making real the inner self,
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384. which is independent of the century,
independent of the culture, even.
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385. Then, one night,
Chai Ling was drugged
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386. and, she believed,
raped by another student,
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387. but the authorities did nothing,
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388. and she decided to join
the growing student protests
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389. against what they saw
as a corrupt regime
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390. that was now in charge of China.
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391. Deng Xiaoping had got rid of both
revolutionary ideas and democracy...
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392. .. and, in that void, corruption
had taken over the whole society.
Copy !req
393. Party officials everywhere
were looting billions of dollars.
Copy !req
394. All that mattered now in China
was money and connections.
Copy !req
395. The first thing in life
is money,
Copy !req
396. and the second thing is connections.
Copy !req
397. It is very important
to have connections.
Copy !req
398. When you know people,
Copy !req
399. then, wherever you go,
things become so much easier.
Copy !req
400. In April 1989, the one leader that
the students trusted, Hu Yaobang,
Copy !req
401. died of a heart attack
at a party meeting.
Copy !req
402. Students started to come
to Tiananmen Square to mourn him.
Copy !req
403. Chai Ling was among them.
Copy !req
404. And, as more and more people
came to the square,
Copy !req
405. she became one of the most vocal
of the protesters.
Copy !req
406. Soon, over a million protesters
filled the square...
Copy !req
407. .. but the government
refused the students' demands
Copy !req
408. for more democracy,
and the movement started to split.
Copy !req
409. The radical faction
began a hunger strike
Copy !req
410. to try and force
the government to respond.
Copy !req
411. Chai Ling had now risen
to become one of the leaders
Copy !req
412. of the radical movement.
Copy !req
413. She later wrote that the experience
made her an independent woman.
Copy !req
414. She herself was liberated,
and became a self-actualiser.
Copy !req
415. But many of the other student
leaders were frightened
Copy !req
416. that she was going to
create disaster.
Copy !req
417. The government was still
refusing to negotiate,
Copy !req
418. and the protest leaders
held a tense meeting.
Copy !req
419. Many of them argued that they should
retreat now, on such a high,
Copy !req
420. which would force the party
to accept real reform.
Copy !req
421. If they didn't,
there would be stalemate,
Copy !req
422. and then killing.
Copy !req
423. In the vote, Chai Ling raised
her hand, which made it unanimous.
Copy !req
424. But that evening,
she changed her mind,
Copy !req
425. and she helped persuade the students
to stay in the square.
Copy !req
426. The next day, she called an American
journalist called Phil Cunningham,
Copy !req
427. and gave an extraordinary interview.
Copy !req
428. Chai Ling had suddenly realised
Copy !req
429. that combining the new force of
individualism with collective action
Copy !req
430. was never going to work.
Copy !req
431. She felt the contradiction
deep within herself.
Copy !req
432. She had realised that,
in the age of the individual,
Copy !req
433. it was no longer
going to be possible
Copy !req
434. for people to give up their lives
for a greater cause.
Copy !req
435. To be honest, from the
day I called for a hunger strike,
Copy !req
436. I knew we would not get any results.
Copy !req
437. Certain people,
certain causes are bound to fail.
Copy !req
438. I have been very clear about this
all along...
Copy !req
439. .. but I've made an effort
to present a staunch image
Copy !req
440. to show that we were striving
for victory.
Copy !req
441. But, deep down,
I knew it was all futile.
Copy !req
442. All along, I've kept it to myself,
because, being Chinese,
Copy !req
443. I felt I shouldn't
bad-mouth the Chinese.
Copy !req
444. But I can't help thinking sometimes,
and I might as well say it.
Copy !req
445. You, the Chinese,
you are not worth my struggle.
Copy !req
446. You are not worth my sacrifice.
Copy !req
447. The students keep asking,
"What shall we do next?
Copy !req
448. "What can we accomplish?"
Copy !req
449. I feel so sad,
because how can I tell them
Copy !req
450. that what we are actually hoping for
is bloodshed?
Copy !req
451. For the moment
when the government has no choice
Copy !req
452. but to brazenly butcher the people?
Copy !req
453. Only when the square
is awash with blood
Copy !req
454. will the people of China
open their eyes.
Copy !req
455. Only then
will they really be united.
Copy !req
456. Are you going to stay
in the square yourself?
Copy !req
457. No, I won't.
Copy !req
458. I'm not going to let myself
be destroyed by this government.
Copy !req
459. I want to live.
Copy !req
460. Five days later,
Copy !req
461. Deng Xiaoping sent the troops
and tanks in to clear the square.
Copy !req
462. Boris Yeltsin was the president
of the new Russia.
Copy !req
463. He had promised to turn the country
into a mass democracy.
Copy !req
464. Yeltsin appointed
a group of young technocrats,
Copy !req
465. and they set out to do this through
what they called shock therapy,
Copy !req
466. advised by western bankers
and economists.
Copy !req
467. They believed
that they had to move fast
Copy !req
468. because the communists
might try and take power again.
Copy !req
469. But behind it
was a grander utopian idea
Copy !req
470. that it might start the spread
of democracy all around the world.
Copy !req
471. But at this very moment,
Copy !req
472. in the West,
the opposite started to happen.
Copy !req
473. The whole idea of mass democracy
began to be questioned
Copy !req
474. and undermined from inside
the political establishment itself.
Copy !req
475. It began almost unnoticed,
Copy !req
476. hidden behind the wave of enthusiasm
after the fall of communism.
Copy !req
477. But a political scientist
called Peter Mair
Copy !req
478. has argued
that what happened in the 1990s
Copy !req
479. was that the old idea of democracy
started to disappear in the West...
Copy !req
480. .. and it was replaced
by something else
Copy !req
481. which we haven't fully
comprehended yet, or even seen.
Copy !req
482. because it is outside
the old categories of politics.
Copy !req
483. Western politicians, Mair said,
literally changed their roles.
Copy !req
484. They gave up being
representatives of the people,
Copy !req
485. and instead they became the agents
of a new bureaucracy
Copy !req
486. which was rising up
and promising that it could manage
Copy !req
487. the dangerous and unpredictable
force of individualism
Copy !req
488. better than the politicians could.
Copy !req
489. Just as the activists in China
had found with Chai Ling,
Copy !req
490. individualism and its drive
to self-actualisation
Copy !req
491. can corrode and eat away at the
collective power of mass democracy.
Copy !req
492. Peter Mair said the same
was now happening in the West.
Copy !req
493. The first politician
to confront this was Bill Clinton.
Copy !req
494. He came to power
promising to represent
Copy !req
495. what he called
the forgotten middle class.
Copy !req
496. But very quickly, within weeks
of entering the White House,
Copy !req
497. Clinton agreed to give up
on many of his promised reforms,
Copy !req
498. and to give power
over to the financial world.
Copy !req
499. He did this not through
any cynical motive,
Copy !req
500. but because he knew
that the old power base
Copy !req
501. of mass politics had gone.
Copy !req
502. No-one joined political parties
any more.
Copy !req
503. Organised labour
was a vanishing force.
Copy !req
504. Clinton might be in office,
Copy !req
505. but he no longer had the collective
power of the people behind him.
Copy !req
506. The power that, in the past,
Copy !req
507. had allowed politicians
to challenge the elites in society.
Copy !req
508. And, in the face of that, Clinton
decided to give power instead
Copy !req
509. to the new force that promised
that it could create a wealthier
Copy !req
510. and happier society -
Copy !req
511. the bankers and the economists
and the management experts
Copy !req
512. who were now spreading
and multiplying
Copy !req
513. through the corridors of Washington.
Copy !req
514. We know big government
does not have all the answers.
Copy !req
515. We know there's not a programme
for every problem.
Copy !req
516. The era of big government is over.
Copy !req
517. If the new bureaucracy
delivered on their promises,
Copy !req
518. it was going to be
a wonderful world.
Copy !req
519. But if something went wrong,
Copy !req
520. then the politicians would have no
power with which to confront them.
Copy !req
521. The shift in politics had begun.
Copy !req
522. In Russia, the democracy experiment
had gone out of control.
Copy !req
523. The president, Boris Yeltsin,
had lost all power.
Copy !req
524. It had been seized by a small group
called the oligarchs,
Copy !req
525. who were using it to loot Russia.
Copy !req
526. There was massive inflation.
Copy !req
527. Millions of people were reduced
Copy !req
528. to selling what they owned
on the street.
Copy !req
529. The life expectancy of a Russian man
fell from 65 in 1987
Copy !req
530. to 58 in 1993.
Copy !req
531. There was fury
in the Russian parliament.
Copy !req
532. Its leader accused Yeltsin
of economic genocide,
Copy !req
533. and demanded
that he stop the experiment.
Copy !req
534. Nyet.
Copy !req
535. Yeltsin responded
by dissolving parliament.
Copy !req
536. He cut the phone lines
and sealed the building off.
Copy !req
537. But a group of protesters
broke through.
Copy !req
538. And fighting began
around the parliament,
Copy !req
539. and then spread
to the television station.
Copy !req
540. Yeltsin portrayed it as
a stark battle of good against evil.
Copy !req
541. He was backed by President Clinton.
Copy !req
542. Clinton said it was the only way
Copy !req
543. for Russia to become part
of the new global economy
Copy !req
544. and defeat its dangerous past.
Copy !req
545. But in among the fighting
Copy !req
546. was a man who believed that he knew
what was really happening.
Copy !req
547. Eduard Limonov had been expelled
from the Soviet Union
Copy !req
548. 20 years before.
Copy !req
549. He had lived in New York
in the 1970s,
Copy !req
550. the moment when the banks
who now ran the global system
Copy !req
551. were beginning their rise to power.
Copy !req
552. Limonov was convinced
that what was happening now
Copy !req
553. had nothing to do with democracy.
Copy !req
554. It was what he called
the geopolitics of money -
Copy !req
555. a force that had already enslaved
the American people
Copy !req
556. and now wanted to bend
the Russian people to its word.
Copy !req
557. And when Yeltsin ordered the tanks
to attack the Russian parliament,
Copy !req
558. backed by the American president
Copy !req
559. and by the bankers
and the economic experts,
Copy !req
560. Limonov decided
he was going to fight this system.
Copy !req
561. Because he knew its one weakness.
Copy !req
562. It told no stories about the past...
Copy !req
563. .. and it had no vision
of the future.
Copy !req
564. Its only aim
was to keep the system stable.
Copy !req
565. Limonov had visited
the Serbian nationalists
Copy !req
566. who were besieging
the city of Sarajevo.
Copy !req
567. He was the guest of their leader,
Radovan Karadzic.
Copy !req
568. Karadzic told him
about the powerful nationalism
Copy !req
569. that was now reawakening
after the fall of communism.
Copy !req
570. Serbs used to possess
the entire ground.
Copy !req
571. We own this country.
This is our country.
Copy !req
572. Turks have been here occupiers,
Copy !req
573. and the Muslims are successors
of those occupiers.
Copy !req
574. So traditional imposed geopolitics.
Copy !req
575. Geopolitics. Yes, exactly.
Copy !req
576. Limonov became notorious when he was
then filmed firing a machinegun -
Copy !req
577. in what seemed a random manner -
into the city below.
Copy !req
578. You are very courageous people,
Copy !req
579. despite anything
what is against you,
Copy !req
580. it's a great power of almost...
Copy !req
581. Almost the entire world.
Copy !req
582. Yeah, 15 countries against you
and you resist.
Copy !req
583. And I repeat again - we Russians,
we should take example from you.
Copy !req
584. Limonov realised that something was
re-emerging from the past in Bosnia
Copy !req
585. that might have
the power to confront
Copy !req
586. the new system of global money.
Copy !req
587. It was nationalism, and the national
myths that came with it.
Copy !req
588. They were powerful stories
that linked people together
Copy !req
589. and gave them a collective power.
Copy !req
590. Something that individualism
could never do.
Copy !req
591. What's Up
by 4 Non Blondes
Copy !req
592. All you girls that believe men
are bastards,
Copy !req
593. you should be near the front.
I'll need you later on.
Copy !req
594. Ah, they're coming.
Copy !req
595. Oh, I remember the '60s.
I used to dress like that.
Copy !req
596. In the end, Julia had realised
Copy !req
597. that her psychiatrist was never
going to let her have surgery.
Copy !req
598. "She was," he said,
"not ladylike enough and too pushy."
Copy !req
599. She had gone to a private surgeon
Copy !req
600. and finally become what she had
always known was the true person.
Copy !req
601. But, only weeks after the surgery,
she had collapsed from bleeding.
Copy !req
602. She was taken into hospital
unconscious,
Copy !req
603. where she was treated
for a suspected miscarriage
Copy !req
604. by doctors who had no idea
of her medical history.
Copy !req
605. The surgery was damaged,
she could no longer have sex...
Copy !req
606. .. and Amir left her...
Copy !req
607. .. and she was alone.
Copy !req
608. If the truth be known, some
of my friends have never, ever asked
Copy !req
609. how I feel, how I am,
why I'm always alone.
Copy !req
610. People...
Well, there are one or two people
Copy !req
611. that I actually discuss
the problems with.
Copy !req
612. The first time,
maybe five or six years ago,
Copy !req
613. and the person that I told...
Copy !req
614. .. only used it against me
and he went off with somebody else.
Copy !req
615. And when I asked why, you know,
it's thrown in my face.
Copy !req
616. "Well, you're not
a real woman anyway.
Copy !req
617. "What am I supposed to do?"
Copy !req
618. And when you get knocked like that,
Copy !req
619. and you have to face up
to that kind of thing,
Copy !req
620. I suppose it makes you
just a little bit weary.
Copy !req
621. Most people listening to that
would say,
Copy !req
622. "Oh, what a shame, how sad," but...
Copy !req
623. ..I suppose if love
slapped me in the face,
Copy !req
624. I wouldn't even recognise it now.
Copy !req
625. Julia had challenged
the old power in Britain.
Copy !req
626. She had stood up
against her psychiatrist and won.
Copy !req
627. Her victory was a symbol of
the decline of that old paternalism.
Copy !req
628. But now she had discovered how
difficult individualism could be.
Copy !req
629. That, when things go wrong,
you are weak and alone.
Copy !req
630. But as individuals
were beginning to feel
Copy !req
631. the limitations of their power,
Copy !req
632. the new class
that had grown up to manage them
Copy !req
633. was growing stronger
and more confident...
Copy !req
634. .. and they began to see democracy
Copy !req
635. not just as something
to be bypassed,
Copy !req
636. but as a potentially
dangerous force.
Copy !req
637. By the mid-1990s,
Copy !req
638. technocrats in the political
think-tanks in the West
Copy !req
639. were becoming frightened
that elections all across the world
Copy !req
640. were producing what they called
the wrong kind of result.
Copy !req
641. In Algeria, a party called
the Islamic Salvation Front
Copy !req
642. took the majority of votes
in the first round of an election.
Copy !req
643. It was a stunning victory.
Copy !req
644. But people feared that its real aim
was to turn the country
Copy !req
645. into an Islamist state
and get rid of democracy.
Copy !req
646. Western politicians found themselves
supporting a military coup
Copy !req
647. that stopped the elections.
Copy !req
648. But, in Europe,
the extreme right paraded openly.
Copy !req
649. They protested
against the immigrants
Copy !req
650. coming from Africa
and the Middle East.
Copy !req
651. The foreigners
take away houses in Germany,
Copy !req
652. bring drugs and all kinds of filth.
Copy !req
653. They steal German workplaces
and they filthy up the environment.
Copy !req
654. For me now, the most important
inspiration is Adolf Hitler.
Copy !req
655. And faced by the horror
in the Balkans,
Copy !req
656. President Clinton's representative,
called Richard Holbrooke,
Copy !req
657. brought the question
out into the open.
Copy !req
658. "Suppose elections
are free and fair," he said,
Copy !req
659. "and those elected
are racists, fascists, separatists.
Copy !req
660. "That is the dilemma."
Copy !req
661. An American political scientist
called Fareed Zakaria,
Copy !req
662. put it more bluntly.
Copy !req
663. "The people, we are told," he said,
"are the most important.
Copy !req
664. "We are driven by the phrase, 'the
American people are not stupid,'
Copy !req
665. "but what if they are?"
Copy !req
666. But the political scientists were
not alone in distrusting people,
Copy !req
667. for, at the same time,
a group of behavioural psychologists
Copy !req
668. who were becoming
increasingly influential
Copy !req
669. were insisting that individuals
Copy !req
670. also made the wrong decisions
in the marketplace.
Copy !req
671. They were not behaving in the
logical, self-interested ways
Copy !req
672. that economics said they should.
Copy !req
673. The most famous of them
was called Daniel Kahneman.
Copy !req
674. He would win a Nobel Prize
for his work.
Copy !req
675. For 30 years, Kahneman had been
studying human behaviour
Copy !req
676. and he had discovered, he said,
Copy !req
677. that human beings actually had
two systems inside their brains.
Copy !req
678. One of them they were aware of,
which they thought was in control.
Copy !req
679. The other was an instinctive part
Copy !req
680. that really drove
most of their actions.
Copy !req
681. A part that they were
completely unaware of.
Copy !req
682. This new psychology
was a powerful attack
Copy !req
683. on the whole idea
of the confident self.
Copy !req
684. Because the picture the
psychologists painted
Copy !req
685. of human society was
of millions of individuals
Copy !req
686. living most of the time
thinking that they were rational
Copy !req
687. and in control...
Copy !req
688. .. whilst something else inside them
Copy !req
689. was really guiding
many of their actions...
Copy !req
690. .. without them knowing it.
Copy !req
691. But, Kahneman said,
Copy !req
692. there was an underlying pattern
to this irrational behaviour.
Copy !req
693. It meant that if somehow
you could gather enough data
Copy !req
694. on human beings' behaviour,
you could see the patterns
Copy !req
695. and so predict what they would do,
and manage them.
Copy !req
696. But, to do that,
Copy !req
697. you would have to bypass and ignore
their conscious self,
Copy !req
698. because it was the behaviour -
not the thoughts - that counted.
Copy !req
699. ♪ Put your lovin' arms
around me
Copy !req
700. In Russia, President Yeltsin
had lost all control.
Copy !req
701. He was drunk most of the time.
Copy !req
702. He had become the puppet
of the oligarchs,
Copy !req
703. who had taken over all the media
and blocked any opposition.
Copy !req
704. But there was one opponent.
Copy !req
705. It was Eduard Limonov.
Copy !req
706. .. the Queen, the fascist regime!
Copy !req
707. He had started his own tiny party.
Copy !req
708. He called it
the National Bolsheviks.
Copy !req
709. It was, he said,
a fusion of fascism and communism,
Copy !req
710. and the party flag
was designed to show this.
Copy !req
711. But it wasn't simple nostalgia.
Copy !req
712. Limonov wanted to shock people
out of accepting
Copy !req
713. the completely corrupt society
around them.
Copy !req
714. He wanted to go back to the original
roots of fascism and nationalism.
Copy !req
715. To the idea
that if you can find a story
Copy !req
716. powerful enough to inspire people,
Copy !req
717. you can then use
that collective power
Copy !req
718. both to sweep away the corrupt
rulers and change reality.
Copy !req
719. It was something
that had been wiped and forgotten
Copy !req
720. because of the horrors it had led to
in the past.
Copy !req
721. And the individualism that had been
promoted so strongly in the West
Copy !req
722. after the Second World War had been
a force shield against that.
Copy !req
723. A shield of one world
composed of just individuals.
Copy !req
724. Limonov was the reappearance
of the frightening old dream.
Copy !req
725. Vechnaya Vesna
by Grazhdanskaya Oborona
Copy !req
726. The third person to join the party
was the musician Yegor Letov.
Copy !req
727. He had led the opposition
to communism in the 1980s.
Copy !req
728. Now he sang songs about how Russia
was trapped in a frozen world,
Copy !req
729. buried under a mass of meaningless
broken fragments from the past.
Copy !req
730. Ghosts from the past were returning
at the margins in England, too.
Copy !req
731. In August 1999, a farmer in Norfolk
called Tony Martin
Copy !req
732. shot two burglars
who were travellers.
Copy !req
733. He killed one of them,
called Fred Barras.
Copy !req
734. Tony Martin was a recluse.
Copy !req
735. He lived in a remote, half-ruined
building called Bleak House.
Copy !req
736. Tony Martin considered himself
a victim.
Copy !req
737. He'd been plagued by burglars
for years.
Copy !req
738. He lived in squalid conditions,
paranoid about being burgled.
Copy !req
739. The stairs of the house
were booby trapped.
Copy !req
740. He slept fully dressed with
his boots on and a gun by his bed.
Copy !req
741. Martin was found guilty of murder
and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Copy !req
742. His conviction
touched off a wave of protest.
Copy !req
743. On the surface, it was about
Martin's right to defend himself...
Copy !req
744. .. but it also expressed
a much wider feeling
Copy !req
745. that was simmering
under the surface.
Copy !req
746. That the very institutions that were
supposed to protect the people -
Copy !req
747. the law, the police
and the politicians -
Copy !req
748. were now being turned against them.
Copy !req
749. A growing sense that you couldn't
trust those in power any longer -
Copy !req
750. what began to be called the elites.
Copy !req
751. The Labour government was shocked
by the anger that burst out.
Copy !req
752. Tony Blair wrote in a private memo,
simply, "We have lost touch."
Copy !req
753. But what Blair and the other modern
politicians had forgotten
Copy !req
754. was that that suspicion of the
elites did not come out of nowhere.
Copy !req
755. It had its roots
back in Britain's past,
Copy !req
756. at the moment
when the empire was collapsing.
Copy !req
757. And Tony Martin himself was
a direct link back to that anger.
Copy !req
758. In the 1950s, Martin's uncle
had been a leading member
Copy !req
759. of a group called
the League of Empire Loyalists.
Copy !req
760. The League were powerful
because some of their members
Copy !req
761. were at the heart
of the Conservative Party.
Copy !req
762. They were convinced
that there was a global conspiracy
Copy !req
763. to destroy the British Empire.
Copy !req
764. It was being run
by bankers in America,
Copy !req
765. working together
with communists in Russia.
Copy !req
766. But they also believed that
many of those in charge in Britain
Copy !req
767. were also involved
in this conspiracy,
Copy !req
768. including most politicians.
Copy !req
769. Well, my reasons for joining
the Empire Loyalists are many,
Copy !req
770. but they largely stem from the fact
that I believe in the thesis
Copy !req
771. of nationalism
and national independence
Copy !req
772. as opposed to internationalism,
Copy !req
773. which I consider would in time
devolve into a world government
Copy !req
774. which would, of necessity,
by sheer weight of numbers,
Copy !req
775. become a communist-controlled
world government,
Copy !req
776. with the control of the world
in the hands of very few people.
Copy !req
777. This would be a tyranny,
and I consider the only way
Copy !req
778. to combat this possibility
of a tyranny
Copy !req
779. is to encourage a nation
toward a nationality.
Copy !req
780. And that anger was about to return.
Copy !req
781. By now, politicians in the West
Copy !req
782. had given large amounts
of their power away.
Copy !req
783. What had begun with Bill Clinton
in the early 1990s had spread.
Copy !req
784. When Tony Blair came to power,
Copy !req
785. he had immediately given control
over much of the economy
Copy !req
786. to the Bank of England.
Copy !req
787. But, in 1998,
the global financial system
Copy !req
788. showed how unstable it could be.
Copy !req
789. An economic crisis that began
in Russia, and then spread to Asia,
Copy !req
790. had consequences
throughout the world.
Copy !req
791. In response to the crisis,
Copy !req
792. the Bank of England had insisted
that interest rates be raised.
Copy !req
793. But this made many British goods
too expensive to export.
Copy !req
794. And in the north of England,
factories began to close.
Copy !req
795. Tony Blair insisted, though, that it
was a price the country had to pay
Copy !req
796. for being part of
what he called the world economy.
Copy !req
797. He can say a world economy
till he's blue in the face,
Copy !req
798. but it's not just us, is it?
It's other people.
Copy !req
799. "He can say"? Mr Blair can say
the world economy...?
Copy !req
800. He can say, "World economy,
world economy," but...
Copy !req
801. So what do you say? People in the
Northeast are suffering,
Copy !req
802. but why has he given all that power
to the Bank of England? Why?
Copy !req
803. Why, you know? Why is that?
Copy !req
804. Is he passing the buck?
What's he doing?
Copy !req
805. So he can't be blamed for things
like this that go wrong. He can say,
Copy !req
806. "Well, it's the Bank of England's
interest rates, none of us did it."
Copy !req
807. I don't know.
Copy !req
808. They're just opening their mouths
Copy !req
809. and letting the wind
waffle their tongues about,
Copy !req
810. as far as I'm concerned.
Get up here and get things sorted.
Copy !req
811. You vote a Labour government in,
Copy !req
812. you vote for them all your life and
Copy !req
813. this is the crap you get off of
them.
Copy !req
814. You think it's all wrong, what's
happened, what could they have done?
Copy !req
815. Give us more support, stepped in,
put a shoulder behind us,
Copy !req
816. show a bit more muscle. Just...
Copy !req
817. .. let them know
that they canna do this.
Copy !req
818. And at the end of the century,
Copy !req
819. a new anger began to grow
out of in the margins of England,
Copy !req
820. that in the future would get mixed
up with the furies of the past.
Copy !req
821. But the politicians
increasingly found
Copy !req
822. that there was little they could do
to respond to this anger.
Copy !req
823. Because, over the past ten years,
Copy !req
824. all kinds of new organisations
had grown up
Copy !req
825. that were deliberately designed
to limit the politicians' power,
Copy !req
826. because national politics
was dangerous
Copy !req
827. to the stability
of the global system.
Copy !req
828. The idea had originally
come from technocrats
Copy !req
829. inside the European Union.
Copy !req
830. One of the leaders
was a political scientist
Copy !req
831. called Giandomenico Majone.
Copy !req
832. "Politicians," Majone said,
Copy !req
833. "were always driven by short-term,
self-interested motives."
Copy !req
834. Which meant that they, too,
were irrational.
Copy !req
835. The solution, he said, was to bypass
the politicians completely.
Copy !req
836. Pardon?
Copy !req
837. .. later in the afternoon...
Copy !req
838. And in the 1990s, behind the scenes
Copy !req
839. of the political debate
in the European Union,
Copy !req
840. Majone and a group of technocrats
created a range of new institutions
Copy !req
841. that were deliberately designed
to avoid political interference,
Copy !req
842. and instead run large areas
of society in a rational way.
Copy !req
843. Majone gave them
a boring bureaucratic name.
Copy !req
844. He called them
non-majoritarian institutions.
Copy !req
845. But, in reality, they were
a completely radical invention
Copy !req
846. that challenged
the very idea of democracy.
Copy !req
847. "These new organisations,"
Majone said,
Copy !req
848. "are, by design,
not directly accountable to voters
Copy !req
849. "or to their elected
representatives."
Copy !req
850. Out of it was going to come
the massive range
Copy !req
851. of new bureaucracies that today
run large parts of the modern world.
Copy !req
852. Not just central banks,
Copy !req
853. but all kinds
of regulatory agencies,
Copy !req
854. special courts and expert bodies.
Copy !req
855. All of which govern
not through political policies,
Copy !req
856. but through rational scientific
assessment and measured outcomes.
Copy !req
857. And the European Union became
the centre of this experiment.
Copy !req
858. In front of house,
Copy !req
859. the elected politicians
debated subjects like human rights,
Copy !req
860. but continually failed
to come to any conclusion.
Copy !req
861. Are we concerned with rights
or with political objectives?
Copy !req
862. And much of what we're going
to discuss today is...
Copy !req
863. But quietly, behind the scenes,
what were being created
Copy !req
864. were, in Majone's words,
"specialised institutions
Copy !req
865. "staffed with neutral experts,
carrying out policies
Copy !req
866. "with a level of efficiency
and effectiveness
Copy !req
867. "politicians cannot
and never will achieve."
Copy !req
868. The original idea
behind mass democracy
Copy !req
869. had been that the politicians
would be the bridgehead
Copy !req
870. for the people into power.
Copy !req
871. They would challenge
the powerful groups
Copy !req
872. at the top of society
on behalf of the people.
Copy !req
873. But then the people,
driven by the new individualism,
Copy !req
874. had retreated
into their own private worlds.
Copy !req
875. So the politicians switched sides
and became instead
Copy !req
876. the representatives of the
new powerful technocratic class.
Copy !req
877. It still looked
like they were powerful
Copy !req
878. and had control over events.
Copy !req
879. But now the people had gone,
Copy !req
880. beneath them was a void.
Copy !req
881. But, in 1999, Tony Blair realised
that there might still be a way
Copy !req
882. to change the world dramatically
and recapture some of that power.
Copy !req
883. The conflict between the Serbs
and the Muslims in the Balkans
Copy !req
884. had erupted again.
Copy !req
885. Serbian nationalists were attacking
the Albanian population in Kosovo.
Copy !req
886. Blair worked hard to persuade
a reluctant President Clinton
Copy !req
887. to join in a bombing campaign
to force the Serbs
Copy !req
888. to stop the ethnic cleansing.
Copy !req
889. And it succeeded.
Copy !req
890. Tony Blair came to Kosovo
and was welcomed as a hero.
Copy !req
891. At the refugee camp,
Blair presented what they had done
Copy !req
892. as an expression of that epic vision
Copy !req
893. that Bernard Kouchner
had put forward 20 years before.
Copy !req
894. We are all one world linked together
simply as individuals,
Copy !req
895. not divided by political ideas
or by nations.
Copy !req
896. And we,
the good politicians in the West,
Copy !req
897. have a duty to intervene,
Copy !req
898. to help the victims
of all evil dictators,
Copy !req
899. wherever they are in the world.
Copy !req
900. This is not a battle for territory.
Copy !req
901. This is a battle for humanity.
Copy !req
902. It is a just cause.
Copy !req
903. It is a rightful cause to make sure
that these people, innocent people,
Copy !req
904. who have been driven from
their homes at the point of a gun,
Copy !req
905. are allowed by the world community,
acting together,
Copy !req
906. back to their homeland,
back to Kosovo.
Copy !req
907. So these people can become symbols
of hope, humanity and peace.
Copy !req
908. Thank you.
Copy !req
909. And the new ruler
of the independent Kosovo,
Copy !req
910. appointed by the United Nations,
was Bernard Kouchner.
Copy !req
911. We are taking a significant step
towards stability
Copy !req
912. and democratic self-government
in Kosovo.
Copy !req
913. In the 1990s,
Copy !req
914. the triumph over communism
had ushered in a new era.
Copy !req
915. Liberal politicians in the West
Copy !req
916. had willingly given up
much of their power
Copy !req
917. in the interests of the greater good
of global stability.
Copy !req
918. The power had gone first
to the global financial system.
Copy !req
919. And now it was being given
to the American military as well.
Copy !req
920. It looked like a new world.
Copy !req
921. But, underneath, the old forces
of money and military power
Copy !req
922. were reassembling
and resuming their dominance...
Copy !req
923. .. just as they had
in the pre-democratic days
Copy !req
924. of the old empires.
Copy !req
925. And that was going to lead
to other strange forces
Copy !req
926. rising up and coming back
to haunt the West.
Copy !req
927. Alert! Alert!
We have located the Doctor!
Copy !req