Theo E.J. Wilson: A black man goes undercover in the alt-right
Theo E.J. Wilson encourages us to break through the divides that separate us. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
about the things that I cared about,
the next morning
through a national tragedy.
and my exposure,
in American life,
of a digital lightning rod.
of police brutality
to say about the topic.
of the Black Lives Matter furor
to me to articulate their viewpoints,
has this interesting quality.
brought the world together,
was being dumped on us
of people across the globe.
is a lot like money.
inside you and amplifies it.
with the phenomenon of the internet troll.
beneath the bridges
the enlightenment of the internet age.
the anonymity of the internet
were pretty creative, actually,
the post-traumatic world
being killed on my timeline.
can be kind of divisive?
in epic battles in the comment section --
actually had brains,
and what to understand them even further.
to be original thought,
getting these arguments from?
of alternative universe
optional over there?
Like, I wanted to know.
about digital echo chambers.
of the products you like to buy
of the news that you like to hear.
my worldview back to me.
or Infowars or Fox News.
and The Daily Show,
the dimensional doorway
that I didn't necessarily agree with,
but it wasn't enough,
that I like to hear.
and went crazy.
it was very simple,
it was kind of daunting,
that I had experienced.
is that my trolls were inoculating me,
that I didn't necessarily agree with,
as I would have several months prior.
also worked on YouTube,
white supremacist lurker --
the infamous alt-right movement.
John Carter character --
a Confederate soldier.
I would have needed acting training
commenting on videos,
and Black Lives Matter.
like Eric Holder and Barack Obama
the antiblack sentiments
it was kind of exhilarating.
clicking through my new racist profile --
It was something else.
visiting some of the pages
were just regular Joes,
hunters, computer nerds,
with videos of their families.
could be in this room right now. Right?
I found a lovely plethora of characters,
Richard Spencer and David Duke.
thought leaders in their own right,
ended up using their information
led to the momentum of the alt-right:
of everything white and male.
you're in league with Satan.
find that offensive?
get a lifetime of diet brand history.
on filling its textbooks
of its dark past.
race and the anger associated with it,
for alt-facts to grow.
rebranded "Mein Kampf" ideas
failed by public schools.
through the subtext of those arguments,
for who I cannot help but be?
that resonated with me.
against attempts to demonize me
as something that I'm not,
a menace to society.
of black males and white males
by this perspective,
that I could have some kind of compassion
like I want to be friends.
to extend to people
to see me on this planet. Right?
how they got to where they are.
have this wide acceptance for everybody
conservative viewpoints.
this country and mean it. Right?
was this fear that they had
as "white genocide,"
that would wipe them out.
gentrification, police shootings,
than enough reasons to stay up at night.
and you are not,
about your race. That's man-made.
are expendable to that aim.
of that racist identity
what race ain't about to die out:
but that's another TED Talk.
to this point of understanding,
will not take that journey
and conservatives.
as some of their points were,
in their own echo chambers,
in their worldview.
certain anti-racist and political voices,
Boyce Watkins, Tariq Nasheed.
to the questions that they want,
due to the power of these echo chambers.
of these digital divides,
become more dangerous.
taught me something:
out there, not the one in here.
the emotional intelligence,
forbearance, compassion,
that these devices, however advanced,
needs an upgrade.
in any kind of unbeatable monster.
without perhaps a simple Achilles heel.
to actually overcome this
the same way that you see the world?
indeed the key to that upgrade,
of virtual reality.
of the physical world,
we change the physical world.
that humans use
about online safe conversations
conversations with real, breathing people.
like running a community forum
somebody's been there, right?
that change lives.
right where they are,
from divert gang violence in real time
of trust in the black community
agency into our own hands,
in that barber shop.
organize what was already going on.
was mining these alternative viewpoints
into controversial talking points.
these live conversations
the safety of their laptops
to have real conversations
and I reflect on the paradox
in our own communities --
to so many other communities,
to the Arab immigrant community
with a Confederate flag on their hat
that actually matter.
around the human experience.
each other to get these things.
are the way that these bridges are built.
seeing people as people
that we project onto them or react to.
to the very things that we want.
and conscious evolution.
a terribly popular cell phone video
and start a community dialogue
of your existence,
that the key to this upgrade
not some device that we create,
to this experience is now,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Theo E.J. Wilson - Public intellectualTheo E.J. Wilson encourages us to break through the divides that separate us.
Why you should listen
Theo E.J. Wilson is a founding member of the Denver Slam Nuba team, who won the National Poetry Slam in 2011. He's also know as slam poet Lucifury. He began his speaking career in the N.A.A.C.P. at the age of 15, and he has always had a passion for social justice. He attended Florida A&M University, where he obtained his B.A. in theater performance. Upon graduating, he interned as a full-time actor at the St. Louis Black repertory company.
Wilson is the executive director of Shop Talk Live, Inc. The organization uses the barbershop as a staging ground for community dialogue and healing. In 2013, Wilson began speaking with "Rachel's Challenge," an organization dedicated to ending school violence through compassion. After viral video success beginning in 2015, he published his first book in 2017, The Law of Action. The book addresses some of the misconceptions about the law of attraction and the role direct action plays into manifestation.
Theo E.J. Wilson | Speaker | TED.com