podcast / en Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics /news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics <span>Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/1566" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Sarah Holland</span></span> <span>Wed, 12/11/2024 - 15:23</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><div class="align-left"> <div class="field field--name-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/small_content_image/public/2024-12/24-382_mayer_and_victor_aep_cover_copy.png?itok=CZemb240" width="350" height="350" alt="Graphic of Jeremy Mayer and Jennifer Victor on green ombre background with the podcast title and the George Mason logo. " loading="lazy" typeof="foaf:Image" /></div> </div> <p><span class="intro-text">Another presidential election has come and gone. Reactions to the reelection of Donald Trump are wide and varied. And we’re facing a growing divide across our nation as we transition, once again, from one party in control to another. How did we get here? Are these truly unprecedented times? </span></p> <p>On this riveting episode of Access to Excellence, President Washington is joined by two experts on the political process—Jeremy Mayer and Jennifer Victor, associate professors of political science in the Schar School—to discuss the impacts of polls, economic perceptions, and more on the 2024 presidential election.</p> <p> </p> <p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?i=n5zti-176a8ca-pb&from=pb6admin&share=1&download=1&rtl=0&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics" width="100%"></iframe></p> <figure class="quote"><p>"Every single county in Virginia had lower turnout in 2024 than they did in 2020, every single county. But as you know, there is a voting precinct on George Mason's campus in Merten Hall. And that voting precinct, yes, had lower turnout, but it only had one percentage point down lower turnout. It was one point lower, whereas all the rest of the county was on average, nine points lower. So that to me says our efforts to encourage Mason students to vote had an eight point impact. We did eight points better than we would have in terms of voter turnout at Merten Hall, at that particular precinct than we would have in the absence of this effort we put together." — Jennifer Victor</p> </figure><figure class="quote"><p>"I think the word [unprecedented] is overused, but for this election, I don't think it's overused. And here's why. You have a president who faced two impeachments, who tried to steal the last election by causing a riot, uh, to stop the count...He should be labeled an unprecedented victor in the sense that no one has ever come back from this kind of infamy. It would be like Nixon after Watergate somehow working his way into the 1980 election. And that was absolutely inconceivable. Well, Trump conceived it and accomplished it." — Jeremy Mayer</p> </figure></div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="83e49579-5ea4-4a81-9b9d-1a2b28f60f87" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p>Intro (00:00:04):<br /> Trailblazers in research; innovators in technology; and those who simply have a good story. All make up the fabric that is AV. We're taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington: this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:00:26):<br /> Another presidential election has come and gone. Reactions to the reelection of Donald Trump are wide and varied, and we're facing a growing divide across our nation as we transition once again from one party in control to another. How did we get here? Are these truly unprecedented times? Today I'm joined by two experts whose combined knowledge covers the breadth of the political process from presidential history to current social networking methods. Jeremy Mayer is an associate professor and director of the political science doctoral and master's programs in the Schar School of Policy and Government at AV. He's offered political commentary on topics such as presidential image management, Christian right politics, and comparative political socialization to major networks, as well as to many national newspapers. Jennifer Victor is an associate professor of political sciences in the Schar school. Her public scholarship on topics such as legislative organization and behavior, political parties and lobbying has also appeared in the New York Times, Thee conversation, OUP blog, and LSE U.S. Politics blog. Jennifer and Jeremy, welcome to the show.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:02:06):<br /> Great to be here.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:02:07):<br /> Good to be here.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:02:08):<br /> Well, great to have both of you here. Well, look, we gonna have to jump right into this thing. This is <laugh>. I've actually been looking forward to this episode. Now, we've seen both of your names in the media recently offering your perspectives on the presidential campaigns and the outcomes of the election. So the first thing I just want to get to is, was the outcome of this election a surprise to either of you?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:02:38):<br /> I wouldn't say it was a surprise, exactly. You know, coming into the election there were seven so-called swing states where the polls were essentially all within the margin of error. Um, and it looked like the election was, could really go either way depending on what happened in those states. I saw in the last five or six days before the election, some signals that I thought might have indicated that Harris was pulling ahead in a few places. I clearly misread those because the election turned out to be a sweep in that Donald Trump won all seven of those swing states. So, not a surprise exactly, but certainly a more compelling result than perhaps I had anticipated.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:03:31):<br /> And I, I would agree with that. I wasn't shocked like I was in 2016. I got that election all wron. This time, I knew it was very close. But I will say this, once again, the polls were off and they were off systematically. They were off in their underestimation of Trump's support and the fact that he won all seven swing states and some of them being close, but he won all of them. And then the whole nation, 90% of counties swung upward in Trump's support compared to 2020. That's a very strong showing for Trump and the Republicans.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:04:09):<br /> Can I push back a little bit on that, Jerry? So nothing that you said is inaccurate except that the polls, I would say did pretty well this year. They were off in that there was a systematic error, but I think upon reflection, once we get all the data in, we're gonna find that the polls were pretty good in terms of being within those margins of error. And the pollsters that were using this prior presidential vote as their corrective device that a lot of folks were skeptical of turned out to...even that was undercounting Republican votes. But it turned out to be a pretty good way to, uh, get closer to the estimate. So they're off systematically, but as a whole, polling did pretty well this election relative to the last couple.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:04:55):<br /> So let's talk about that for a second because I'm actually one of a few people who think the polls did absolutely predicted the outcome of the race. And let me explain. You had seven swing states. The last set of polls that I looked at, every single one of those seven was in a margin of error.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:05:17):<br /> That's right.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:05:18):<br /> The challenge is that as Americans, we don't understand the math.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:05:25):<br /> That's right.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:05:27):<br /> If a state has Harris up by two points and the margin of error is plus or minus three, that means that in that state, Harris can actually be down a point, or she could be up five. If a state had Trump up one point, right, with a three percentage points margin of error, Trump could actually be up four points in that state or down two points or, I'm sorry, or down one point, right?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:06:04):<br /> Yep.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:06:05):<br /> So it's the margin of error piece that I think we lack a fundamental understanding of. And as long as there's a margin of error there, you actually can't call it one way or the other. Right?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:06:22):<br /> Well--</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:06:23):<br /> If I were to push back and say, you know, but Trump won all seven, the fact that they were swing states says that all seven were in a margin of error, right? What I would predict as a loss, or the poll getting it wrong, is that they actually predicted a Harris state that Trump won, or they predicted a Trump state that Harris won. And I didn't see that happen in this election. There were seven swing states. Trump took all seven. They were all within the margin of error. He didn't take any of the seven beyond the margin of error. At least that's how I read it. Now you all are the expert, but--</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:07:05):<br /> That's absolutely correct.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:07:07):<br /> Well, if I'm the poster doing the polls, I'm like, eh, I think we got it right here, not wrong.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:07:13):<br /> Yeah. So my complaint, and I've, I've had this complaint for a number of years now, and I've, I've written about it is not so much with the polling, although there is some challenges in polling, particularly it looks like when, when Trump is on the ballot. And I think they did better this year than previously in 2016 and 2020. But my complaint is with how the polling gets communicated and how it gets reported. And I don't wanna go on a anti-media tear 'cause that's not fair, but I think it is appropriate to be critical of how these things get reported. Because what's happening is the media has an interest in promoting the horse race, in talking about who's ahead and projecting a sense of certainty even in the face of complete ambiguity about what's going to happen. And I think part of the reason that happens is because we live in such partisan, polarized times, and when the parties are so far apart, people feel election losses much harder, and they truly dread election losses much more than during times when the parties are not that far apart.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:08:20):<br /> Because a loss just puts the status quo way far from your ideal point, so to speak. And the media knows that, and they're sort of counting on people's emotions and trying to, in essence, project perhaps more of a sense of either alarm or certainty or calm or whatever it is that they're sort of playing on. Where, in fact, what the message should be that last week is nobody knows what's gonna happen. And focusing on those, as you said, they'll say like, Harris up one point, Trump up two points, whatever...is really a false way to report it because it's all a range, it's all a margin. And the the polls got it within those margins. And so mathematically it was correct, but the perception that people had, I think, was quite a bit different than that reality because of how it gets communicated.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:09:13):<br /> I can accept that. So let's move from math <laugh>. Let's talk about history, because the other thing that I've been hearing bantied around throughout the press, throughout this whole process is that we live in unprecedented times. That whole tagline has worked its way into the common lexicon over the past four years. Is it really unprecedented times? Right? You're experts on elections, you are presidential historians, you know this, you know, how does the 2024 presidential election--I even heard this, the greatest comeback in history, the greatest comeback in history, right? How does this compare over previous ones?</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:10:01):<br /> So I think it is unprecedented. I think the word is overused, but for this election, I don't think it's overused. And here's why. You have a president who faced two impeachments, who tried to steal the last election by causing a riot, uh, to stop the count. And everyone in this town from Mitch McConnell on down assumed that Trump could never make it back from the shame and humiliation of January 6th, 2021. But he did. And so Trump's comeback, well, it's not the biggest victory, it's like the 41st largest electoral margin, which is not that large. He should be labeled an unprecedented victor in the sense that no one has ever come back from this kind of infamy. It would be like Nixon after Watergate somehow working his way into the 1980 election. And that was absolutely inconceivable. Well, Trump conceived it and accomplished it.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:11:03):<br /> Yeah, I I think that's right. I agree with criticism of overusing the phrase unprecedented. And I agree with Jerry's take about what makes the upcoming presidency unique. But another point of view to offer is that some of what we are experiencing in US politics now is a populist wave that is anchored in the Republican party that has an anti-democratic/authoritarian streak to it. And arguably that is not new in the United States. Arguably, between about 1877 and 1965, the entire southern region of the United States operated in an era of Jim Crow that was authoritarian rule. One party sort of undemocratic, uh, states. They still experienced elections, they experienced a lot of the trappings of what looked like democracy. But most scholars would look at that region in that time period and say, that wasn't democratic. And so to say that the US is entering a period with a political party that is willing to counter the norms of democracy and willing to challenge some of the institutions of democracy and so on and so forth, one pushback against that is to say, yeah, and we've been here before at, at least, you know, not in a lot of people's lifetimes. Um, you know, a lot of folks who pay attention to politics today maybe either didn't live there or didn't experience, uh, that, but it it wasn't that long ago. It's not that unique.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:12:41):<br /> Let me push back a little bit on both of you relative to this, and I, I wanna throw something out and get your reaction to it. Okay? I, I definitely agree that you had two impeachments <laugh>, you had behaviors that some would consider just abhorrent. You've had all of these issues, but yet still Donald Trump wins and wins by a comfortable margin, right? This was not a close election in the end. Okay? So even though it was close in terms of number of votes in terms of the electoral college, it wasn't that close. So when you look at it from that perspective, and I'm gonna harken back to the four words echoed by another former US president Bill Clinton during his campaign: "it's the economy, stupid". You all remember that one?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:13:47):<br /> Oh, yeah.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:13:48):<br /> So we're at a time now where you can say, okay, the, uh, the, the general, we don't have huge unemployment, but we still have significant inflation. Wages have not kept up. People haven't been able--</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:14:04):<br /> Actually they have.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:14:05):<br /> Yeah, I was just gonna point that out. This inflation was terrible in the immediate aftermath of the pandemic. It is now under control, wage growth matched it, and our economy is the envy of the western world. There's not a European major nation that wouldn't trade places with our numbers right now in terms of GDP growth.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:14:27):<br /> No, no, no. I, I, I agree with you with all of that, but perception is not always true. It's always real. If I were to say what I have seen, the biggest mistake that was made by the Harris campaign was that they never really embraced an economy that was the best house on the block right? Now, I would contend to you that every party in power across the world experienced losses in elections this year, right? That's not happening because of, uh, of people's perceptions that things are not necessarily better. Uh, you know, people perceive that things are somewhat worse, and whether it's true or not, it's real to the people who feel it. I have members of my family who go back to what the price of a dozen of eggs was. Yes, inflation's under control now, but those increases, the, the increases stayed, the price never went back down. It's just the rate of increase slow down. So to a person buying, uh, you, you know, it's really interesting. You go back and look at the price. We're looking at another vehicle for our home, and I looked at vehicles, the same make and model of a vehicle that I bought three years ago. Same, make, same model, same options. The cost is 30, 35% higher.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:16:11):<br /> Wow.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:16:11):<br /> Just amazing. I, I don't, I don't think we all realize how much prices have actually changed and gone up, but there are sensitive portions of the population that actually do feel that. And when 30-40,000 votes one way or another can swing an election, and you just keep getting the message beat into you that a, it's worse than it was four years ago, it is so much worse than it was for you. And you start to believe it. They say, oh, look at the prices of eggs. Look at the prices of meat. Look at, right. And you do that, guess what happens? You, and so maybe it's just something, it's not unprecedented at all. Americans may just be voting their perceived pocketbooks, and that's what they did.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:17:03):<br /> Well, you're the one that brought up, "it's the economy, stupid." And I do think Harris had a tough job similar to what George Bush the first did in 1992. We had been in a short, sharp recession, and the numbers said we were coming out of the recession, right? And his team told George Bush, the elder, Hey, claim victory. But as he did that, he looked like he didn't care about the suffering of the average voter. So Harris had a tough, tough messaging saying, I'm going to claim the best house on the block, while acknowledging the pain of the inflation that the whole world went through. And she, she didn't land that very difficult messaging.<br /> President Gregory Washington (00:17:44):<br /> I, I agree. And to me, that's the point, Jeremy, I think you're nailing it. You're hitting and hit. I I feel this was, you know, people said, look, hey, yeah, there may be things I like about Trump. There may be things I don't like about Trump. There's a cohort of the population that loves him that is real. And for that cohort of the population, he can do no wrong, he's gonna carry that cohort of votes. And it's incredibly sticky.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:18:14):<br /> You know, I wanna come back to an observation that you made a a minute ago though, which is that every single developed democracy on the planet that had elections this year, and there were a lot of them, uh, saw incumbent losses. And so there's an argument to be made that it didn't matter who the Democrats ran or what the message was or who the candidate was, that the Democrats were gonna lose this election. That we were gonna see that county by county swing towards Republicans relative to 2020 in this election. And that's like a very institutional, you know, it doesn't have to do with the candidates or the message, it's not anything about that. It's just it was gonna be a Republican year. I think what's gonna happen over the next year or so is some political scientists are going to dig in and answer this question that I think you rightly posed, which is, is it the case that in fact, it was just the institutions, this is just like a covid inflation hangover election.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:19:18):<br /> And that's what we saw voters voting on, as you were just saying. And it didn't matter who was on the ticket or, you know, all those numbers from the United States that said, you know, our economy was doing better, we had growth, we beat the inflation, yada yada. It would not have been unfair to look at this election beforehand and say, yeah, sure, all of the democracies are experiencing incumbent election loss, but we've done better than them. And so we should expect our election to also, uh, the, the incumbent party to not get hit as hard. Right? That would be a reasonable expectation. Now, that's not what happened. And so the question going forward for the political scientists is gonna be why is that because the institutions of the inflation just took over and that's what explains the variance? Or was it what you're talking about with, they didn't hit the messaging on the head, you know, maybe there's some racial animus with respect to and or hostile sexism with respect to a black female candidate at the top of the ticket. Like, are there other things about the candidate, about the campaign that explained why the US didn't do better than we might have been expecting based on some of those aggregate or, or macroeconomic indicators.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:20:26):<br /> So let me pose it this way. The reality of the situation is this: clearly the economic issues that we saw sweeping the rest of the world meant that even in this country, even though we're doing better, you probably had a window that wasn't as open. Your margins were tighter.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:20:47):<br /> Right.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:20:47):<br /> Right? And then when you couple that with the fact that you're running against an iconic candidate for whatever people believe yes or no about Trump, he is, he is iconic in, in, in who he is and what he represents and--</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:21:03):<br /> And is unprecedented, to use that word again, he has survived so many scandals that would've torpedoed any other candidate in living memory. And I've said he's a battleship that floats on exploding torpedoes.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:21:18):<br /> <laugh> Absolutely!</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:21:20):<br /> One scandal happened before we can focus on it, we're onto the next one. Just this morning, he has a guy next to him, Boris Epstein, who's been selling access to the nomination process. And if Harris had had someone like that this summer, who'd been selling, you know, Secretary of Treasury, give me a hundred thousand dollars a month retainer and I'll make sure you're Secretary of Treasury, it would've been a huge scandal. The phrase is, she had to be flawless and he can be lawless because this is not going to bother him. This should, in any other White House in transition, this would be days and days and days of scandal. What did the president know? When did he know it? Why didn't he know it? Trump is just gonna ignore this.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:22:06):<br /> You know, it's, it's amazing, but you hit the nail. This is, but both of you are knocking this thing out of the park. It is really funny. But let me ask the question in a slightly different way. You all remember the John Edwards campaign?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:22:22):<br /> Oh yeah.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:22:22):<br /> Great campaign. He has, he's still the best stump speech I've ever seen in person. He was amazing.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:22:28):<br /> But that thing crumbled over a scandal that today would seem, oh, really? <laugh> that would be, uh, there has been--</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:22:43):<br /> <crosstalk> for a Republican. For a Republican it would, because the Republican party has shown, particularly with Trump, but also with some others, that they just don't care if someone on their tribe does something. So Democrats had a senator from Minnesota who clearly took liberties with some women, and Al Franken was gone from the Senate. Even though, if we judge by the severity of the crime, it's nothing compared to what we've seen on the other side. And that is tolerated.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:23:15):<br /> That's kind of how it is.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:23:18):<br /> I think, you know, when we see things like this in politics, it's common to just point at it and say, well, that's hypocrisy. Like just folks are being hypocritical. They forgive it here, they don't forgive it there. And while that's a fair critique to me, it's unsatisfying as a critique. Like hypocrisy itself isn't, I'm sorry, we're all hypocrites <laugh>, like we're all humans with flawed brains that can't keep stuff straight. We all have contradicting ideas in our heads, like it's part of the beauty of being a human being. So to me, it's not the hypocrisy itself that is such a charge. It's that when you identify the hypocrisy, it reveals a set of values. And it's the values that I think are, can be fairly criticized, right? So republicans saying, okay, we'll forgive Matt Gaetz for his sexual improprieties, but we won't forgive Al Franken for his. That is revealing something about having a higher bar of forgiveness for people of your own political stripe that shows that your values about sexual morality are not in fact true values about sexual morality. It's, it's saying that your partisanship matters more.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:24:27):<br /> Let's dig into that a little bit. Is that actually the case, or is it more nuanced and complex? Could it be that when you feel that the world is against you, or when you feel the media is against you as a group of individuals, right? And you feel that this is polarized against you, that you let some things slide that you would not have let slide because oh, this is just another example of these folk who are coming after me. I mean, governments do this all the time with their people, right? You know, don't look at the challenges in my administration. Don't look at how poorly we are performing. It's the Americans who are doing this to us. It is such and such, or it's the Russians or it's whoever, right? You, you name your country. Could, could that be the reason, Jennifer?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:25:30):<br /> Yeah. I mean, what we, what, what the political science tells us is that we view the world through the lens of our own identities, right? Everybody's got identities, everybody's got multiple identities. And over the last 20 or so years, what we've seen in the United States is this phenomenon where partisanship is increasingly an important part of people's identities, much more so than it was in the eighties and nineties and, and previously. And so what happens is, whatever's happening in the world, whatever scandal is going on, whichever parties in power, etc cetera, people are looking at that critically through the lens of their own partisanship and evaluating. If it seems like their co partisans are in favor of it, then they, you know, have a more rosy view of it. And if it seems like their out partisans are in favor of it, then now they don't like it and they're critical of it.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:26:27):<br /> You can see this really clearly in economic indicators where you ask people how they feel about the state of the economy. Just in the couple of weeks since the election, since November 5th, over the course of the last few weeks. Prior to the election, Democrats, if you could just go ask public opinion polls, just like Gallop or whatever, ask people, how do you feel about, like, what's your general feeling about the economy? Democrats were saying, ah, pretty good, you know, up like 80% or so. And Republicans would say, no, it's terrible. You know, 20% whatever. And in the few weeks since the election, those numbers are already starting to shift where Democrats are starting to say the economy is getting worse. And we're seeing it actually more on the Republican side, I think, because, uh, Trump is getting a lot more press these days than Biden, where republicans are already starting to feel better about the economy, more rosy about things.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:27:17):<br /> So we're all viewing political events, economic indicators, all of this stuff through a partisan lens. And we're not, I'm sorry, we're not coming up with these ideas on our own. We're listening to the media, we're listening to elites, we're listening to politicians, we're listening to members of Congress, how they're talking about it, and we're incorporating that into how we understand the world. So if you go and interview any random schmo, Democrat or Republican about their political attitudes, more often than not, you will hear them parrot things that you hear on Fox and MSNBC and so forth. They use the same words, the same language, because that's where their ideas are coming from, from whatever elites they're listening to, from whatever media they're consuming. That's how they're learning about the world, and they're just deciding if they're agreeing with it or disagreeing with it based on their own co partisanship or, or out partisanship.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:28:11):<br /> No, I hear you. I hear you. It's actually interesting. It seems to me that president-elect Trump is now president.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:28:21):<br /> Yeah.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:28:22):<br /> If look at how the market is reacting, if you look at how foreign countries are, if you look, look at what happened in in Ukraine, you know, war in Russia, you look at what's happening in the whole Hezbollah, Israel, Gaza, uh, conflict, countries are now making moves based on what they know is coming. And that's having a, at least on the surface of things as we know them right now, a very positive effect for president elect Trump.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:28:58):<br /> So I think this is--</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:29:00):<br /> Donald Trump is a media genius. We have to remember how good he is at using the media and training attention on him. Um, so that, that's part of what's going on. Sorry Jerry, I didn't mean to cut you off.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:29:12):<br /> Well, I, I absolutely agree to, to jump on your point, uh, Trump has, uh, one great skill, and that is the ability to manipulate the media. How many rich people have had divorces in New York City in the last a hundred years? Dozens upon dozens. He was the only one to run the tabloids. So that his mistress' statement, "best sex I ever had" was a headline. And he did that by being his own backdoor source, a guy named Baron, a name that he's always loved. So he has this ability to lead the media stream that gives him great power. But your point, President Washington about the transition, "Trump already seems like president." One of the weird things about American politics is the very long period between the election and inauguration in Britain, in Germany, in most other democracies, you have an election and sometimes the next day the moving vans arrive and Downing Street empties out. And that's a more modern way. We have the oldest written constitution in the world. And so we have embedded this long two month period, used to be five months, where we don't have the new president that we just elected. And we should really consider changing that.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:30:31):<br /> Oh, wow. That's really interesting.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:30:34):<br /> That's not the first thing I would change though,</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:30:36):<br /> Oh no, me neither.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:30:37):<br /> <laugh>.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:30:38):<br /> The sitting duck period is kind of silly. It, we have the old Congress and the old president with a tremendous amount of power if they choose to use it. And that has not always worked out well for our democracy.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:30:52):<br /> That is interesting. Wow. Oh man, there are so many directions we can go with this. This is really--</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:30:58):<br /> Well, can I, I, something else that you said like 20 minutes ago is still ringing in my head because you brought up the, the famous James Carville line from the 1992 campaign. "It's the economy, stupid", and to some extent yes, I, I see what you're talking about, about applying that to this election, but I think more accurately, rather than it being the economy that fully explains what's going on, "it's the inequality, stupid" that really helps explain what's happening in the United States today. You know, we can talk about people's focus on identity and partisanship and filtering things through different lenses and so on and so forth, but all of that sort of dismisses, um, the fact that a lot of Americans are super frustrated and that economic mobility is more hampered today than it has been in any of our lifetimes. Right? So the ability of when I was a kid, the probability that I would wind up being more economically successful than my parents, that probability was much higher than, than it is for kids today.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:31:59):<br /> Economic mobility is just become stagnant for a lot of Americans, and I think it's because of crises in four particular policy areas. We've got a crisis in housing and being able to afford housing. We've got a crisis in healthcare because we got a ridiculous healthcare system that costs a lot of money. We've got a crisis in education, which I don't have to explain to this crowd because it costs so much. And we've got a crisis in dependent care, whether that's for young children or the elderly. Those four things, those four costs are so draining on so many Americans that it's making it difficult for them to advance economically beyond where their parents were. And I think people are super frustrated and rightfully so by that. And I don't think either political party has come up with good answers for these, for these problems. And I think that's some of what we're seeing.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:32:47):<br /> Yeah, it's some of it. No, go ahead, Jeremy.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:32:49):<br /> So I agree, but I do think that it matters what answers the campaigns gave the people for that sense of inequality. And I really believe that Harris had some very good policies that addressed some of those questions. And Trump had almost nothing except he addressed the inequality and the unease and the frustration by telling America, you should be mad at trans people.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:33:15):<br /> No, actually I think he did something, he did do that, but I think he did something different that is not as nefarious. He continued to say, "Hey, all of these economic trials you had just go back and remember when I was president. You didn't have them then, right?"</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:33:39):<br /> But we did. If it's the inequality that Jennifer's talking about that was present during his four years, people have this false memory. And I, I will say though, that he did have that one brilliant policy proposal about making tips tax free. Now that is really, really stupid from a policy perspective, but it does speak to a lot of the Americans at the margins, and we should consider ways to help them, just not this way. And I heard a Republican pollster say that when he talked to swing state voters about what was the image of the campaign that resonated after the election, the biggest one was Trump working at the McDonald's. And I can't tell you how my liberal friends made fun of that. My democratic friends are like, what an idiot, you know, dad. But it's to people, people that said he understands where we eat, what we eat, why we eat, where we eat. It wasn't true. But he's got that gift of, of symbolism that breaks through in ways that the elite don't even get the charisma that he has.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:34:43):<br /> That's correct.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:34:43):<br /> Could I, could I bring up something that, that I wanted to say something about the trans issues. People are saying now that Harris needed a Sister Souljah moment from the '92 campaign where Bill Clinton went to the Jesse Jackson group, the Rainbow Coalition, and criticized a rapper who'd said, it's now time to kill white people for a week after the '92 Rodney King riots. Bill Clinton did it in '92. Barack Obama did it on gay marriage in 2008. He was not for gay marriage. She needed to do something like that because the trans issue really worked for Trump. It was his biggest ad, it ran on sporting events. Harris needed an answer and she had nothing.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:35:24):<br /> Yeah, I wanna piggyback on that because we were super critical of Republicans, uh, earlier in the podcast. So now we can do some criticism of Democrats. I think Jerry's right, and I think one of the challenges that the Democratic party has been having and continues to have is that their capacity or their strategy for building a big tent, like all political parties, have to be some big tent thing. Their strategy for building a big tent is to not anybody off. It's to keep everybody a little bit happy so that you don't lose people out of the coalition. But that's nonsense. Trump's way of building a coalition was not about not people off. It was about directly people off, right? What the Democrats should be willing to do, and now they're in this, you know, sort of, we've lost period of reflection. How are we gonna reform before our next, uh, chance of the ballot box is figuring out how to engage in a more strategic, rational coalition politics in which they may be willing to anger some elements of their coalition. Does that mean that those people will leave the coalition? Maybe, but maybe not. Because where else are they gonna go?</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:36:35):<br /> You know, I would caution against any group Republican or Democrat making broad changes in policy and platform after a minor loss in an election.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:36:52):<br /> In an election that was so driven by macroeconomic trends.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:36:56):<br /> Without question, I think every, you all will do this. This is what you do, right? Over the next couple of years, you will examine everything, right? Theses will be written, oh, there's some great theses that will be, can be written on what happened during this. Uh, you, you, you, you know what I'm saying? I tell our young people all the time, this might be the best time ever in history to be a student, right? Especially to be a political scientists without question. I've learned things about our constitution and about the inner workings of government more over the last five years than I've learned over the previous 40. And that is without question, right? I mean, from January 6th on the intricacies of our government and how it's structured, oh my goodness, it's just for those who really want to learn and understand, it has been a gift, to be quite honest with you. You are in an exciting field at an exciting time, right? Even though it's fraught with uncertainty, we got polarization, we had all of these issues, but to me, that's kind of what makes it exciting right now.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:38:16):<br /> Well, it's the old curse, "may you live in interesting times." And I can't tell you how many people come up to me and say, oh my gosh, you're a political scientist. You must be having the time of your life. Honestly, it doesn't feel like that.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:38:27):<br /> <laugh></p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:38:27):<br /> Because I got into this loving these institutions and I very much fear they're on fire.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:38:34):<br /> Some of them are, but not, you mentioned something both of you, and I wanna go back to it. You talked about these four institutions and how they're in trouble. And you mentioned education relative to cost, right? Again, there is perception which are real, and that is the real perception of many Americans. But then there's truth, right? If you take the privates out, which in my opinion there's far too much discussion on institutions who serve far too few Americans, okay? I literally can take most of the Ivy League and put it in George Mason, most of the whole Ivy League. I'm not talking one institution, I'm talking Harvard, I'm talking Yale, I'm talking Dartmouth, I'm talking Brown. I can take all of those institutions and put 'em in Mason and still serve more students. Okay? I just wanna make sure you get an idea of scale here.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:39:32):<br /> And we're one single public, right? Most of our Americans are being educated in public institutions, and the average public debt, the average debt of students graduating from a public institution is about 30,000 dollars. I mean, not a year, about 30,000, okay? You can't tell me what big ticket item can you buy for that price, right? And if I go back and look over the last 10 years, the growth in public higher education cost is around inflation. It's not actually much higher than inflation at all. And debt over the last 10 years has actually gone down for public higher ed, not, uh, that's the way the majority of Americans are educated, but that's not the discussion. And so...</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:40:22):<br /> Let's go back to your point about perception, though. So I, I'm, I'm here to listen to you evangelize higher education all day long. That's my cup of tea. However, I think for a lot of folks, they're looking at what happened, you know, in the, the middle and latter part of the 20th century where people could get a summer job and earn enough wages to pay tuition at the local public school for the upcoming year. And that's just not possible anymore, right? Even at George Mason, the percentage of the overall budget of the university that comes from the state today is significantly smaller than it was 50 years ago, right? Like the whole value proposition where government is supporting this public good of higher education has just been compromised. It's been practically demolished over the last couple of generations. And it means that higher education is more inaccessible to more people and more and more people are apparently hostile to even the idea of higher education and not seeing that the value is worth it. And I think that's a huge shame because I think everybody's better off.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:41:32):<br /> I, right? No, no, I get it.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:41:34):<br /> Better off raising all that.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:41:36):<br /> I get it. But it's all a perception. It doesn't match the data, it doesn't match the facts. We have a perception problem in higher ed, and I could, this is not a discussion on that, but you've given me an idea. I need to do a podcast on this issue and I will. But the reality is that in all of those factors value what you're getting out rather than what you put in, salaries after graduation, and the like, and debt all favor public higher ed. They don't necessarily favor privates, but it actually all favors publics.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:42:11):<br /> You all have highlighted a couple of things that I do want to steer us in a direction to talk about. There are a couple of programs coming out of both of your orgs that I want you to talk about. I want you to talk about the outcomes of those programs relative to what we saw in the election. And so, Jeremy, you have your class on political polarization, right? Where you looked at exit polls in three Fairfax precincts. Have you been able to take a look at that data and talk about what you found out relative to how people were voting in what their feelings are in terms of the candidates and the politics?</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:42:49):<br /> Sure. So we ran exit polls in these three precincts and Fairfax, we selected them because they were bellwethers of how Virginia voted in 2020. What that means is the outcome in these three precincts was within one percentage point of the statewide outcome for Biden/Trump in 2020. And we thought that'd be a good predictor. It's an old method, you know, modern exit polls, they would cover many, many precincts all over the state if they wanted to call it. But we did what we could. And what we found is polarization. So these precincts which had mirrored the statewide outcome were now 15 points overestimating Biden's support because they were blue precincts. And so the hatred for Trump went deeper in those areas. The polarized people. We found the ones that hated Trump and loved Harris. That was one of our definitions. If you actually chose to say you hate Trump, they tended to be many more Democrats than Republicans.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:43:46):<br /> The Republicans that we had in those precincts tended to be the more moderate non haters. And so we got the whole state wrong. We really thought that Trump would not do even as well as he did in 2020. And in fact, we missed the surge nationwide and statewide for Trump. But I do think that our results taught the students a great deal about how exit polls work. And also when we look back at our refusers, one of the reason we got it wrong, and one of the reasons I think the polls still are systematically wrong is our refusers look more like Trump voters. And one of the reasons the polls were systematically wrong towards, uh, or against Trump is I think because his people tend to just hate academics, hate the media, and choose not to participate.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:44:32):<br /> But they vote.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:44:34):<br /> But they vote.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:44:36):<br /> So Jennifer, your research project, "The Choice is Yours", work with volunteers from the First-Year Democracy Lab, residential learning community to uncover the most effective way to promote greater voter turnout in the 18 to 24 demographic. Do we have any data on how that demographic turned out in this election? And what are your findings?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:45:02):<br /> We don't have the data about the campus turnout overall yet because people can vote in lots of different states and it'll take us a while. But I'm, I'm really excited to talk about this project a bit. So this is my third year and I'll be rotating off next year. So I won't do this again next year. This has been my third year running the Democracy Lab, which is this first year residential learning community of all government students. They live in the same dorm and I do academic programming for them. And we do one of these projects each year around student voting and under questions, research questions related to voting. In Virginia, we run elections every year. So it's pretty easy.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:45:36):<br /> Every year.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:45:37):<br /> And in the previous one year we did a panel wave survey. Last year we did an experi field experiment design. And this year we implemented some of what we've learned and now we're doing a post-election survey. So what we learned last year is we randomized classrooms into either classrooms that got email encouragement to their students for voting, or a in-person presentation from our students who would come and talk about voting or they were in a control group and they got none of these things. And what we found was that the students who were in the classrooms that got the in-person presentation were 11 points more likely to vote than the email group or the control group. So it was really a much larger effect than we even anticipated. Of course, the downside of this is it means if we want to encourage, uh, voting on campus, we can't just email kids and hope that they will turn out to vote. We really got to, you know, press the shoe leather and talk to people. Conversations are, are really what it's about.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:46:36):<br /> So this year what we did is we took that finding to heart and I had 75 students, 50 Democracy lab students and another 25 student volunteers that we called Mason Voting Ambassadors. And in coordination with the local chapter of the League of Women Voters, the provost office, through their office of Community Engagement and Civic Learning, and through Housing and Residential Life, the Mason Votes Organization, all of these units were coordinated. We had a Monday morning quarterbacking call <laugh> every morning for the last, for the two months, three months before the election starting in August in which we all got coordinated. And we got these Mason voting ambassadors into as many classrooms as possible. So they talked to thousands of students, they gave dozens and dozens of presentations. There was tabling, there was voter registration, there was just this all out campus effort towards getting students to vote. And what we found was really remarkable. So if you look at the turnout data across the state of Virginia, every single county in Virginia had lower turnout in 2024 than they did in 2020.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:47:38):<br /> Every single county. Actually the turnout was more down in democratic leaning counties than in Republican leaning counties. You can already see that sort of swing just in the turnout data. In Fairfax County, there's 22 or something like that, precincts across Fairfax County. Again, every single county had lower turnout on average lower turnout in 24 relative to to 2020. And on average, Fairfax County precincts were down nine points. But as you know, there is a voting precinct on George Mason's campus in Merten Hall, and we were pushing students to register to be able to vote at that voting precinct. And that voting precinct, yes, had lower turnout, but it only had one percentage point down lower turnout. It was one point lower, whereas all the rest of the county was on average nine points lower. So that to me says our efforts to encourage Mason students to vote had an eight point impact. We did eight points better than we would have in terms of voter turnout at Merten Hall at that particular precinct than we would have in the absence of this effort we put together.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:48:40):<br /> Wow, that's amazing. <laugh>. So a year from now, Virginians will return to the polls to elect, among other things, a new governor, right? How do you hope the work that both of you have been involved in will influence how candidates approach our demographic, our young people?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:49:03):<br /> Oh, you asked a totally different question than I thought you were gonna ask <laugh>.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:49:06):<br /> Yep. <laugh>.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:49:10):<br /> So historically, the pattern of politics in Virginia is whichever candidate, whichever political party wins the White House in the presidential election year. The other party wins the governor's mansion in Virginia the following year. So Donald Trump Republicans won the White House this year. That means, uh, ostensibly the Democrats will have an edge in the election. So there's this typical sort of anti-party swing in Virginia. It's very much looking like highly likely that Abigail Spanberger will be the Democratic party nominee for governor in Virginia. So she'll be out in force and campaigning and she will certainly focus attention on Northern Virginia because there's a lot of democratic votes to be won here. You basically can't win as a democratic candidate in Virginia if you don't get a strong turnout from Northern Virginia. So I do expect, uh, she'll probably be on campus, uh, in the fall, if not even in the spring.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:50:02):<br /> What message will she be bringing to our students? I don't know. But I do hope our students bring their A-game and ask the tough questions about how AV can get parity from the legislature in terms of funding relative to some other publics in the state, such as the flagship down there in Charlottesville. I hope that, you know, they ask her questions about campus safety and keeping tuition down and maybe they've got questions about gender and, and sports. I, I don't really know exactly what issues are of greatest concern to our students, but I know that they've got strong voices and I expect that they will bring them, uh, to the candidate and to whoever the Republican candidate is too, of course.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:50:46):<br /> Alright. Jeremy?</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:50:48):<br /> So I don't think there is much in my project that will help us predict how next year will go, but I agree with Jennifer that Virginia has that traditional role of going against the national tide. I think the question for the Republicans of Virginia is, do they look for another Youngkin who had that foot in establishment Republican politics and a foot in the Trump world. And he never, I mean, no one in America played that better because it's so easy to offend Trump if you don't embrace him. And it's so easy to get hit by Trump fire if you're too close to him. And Youngkin is a great politician and we'll see if the Republicans try to find another one or if they go with a fully Trumpy kind of candidate. If they go full Trump, I would expect the Democrats will have a much easier time beating them.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:51:41):<br /> Wow, that's amazing. Let's, as, as we, as we wrap up here, I, I want to talk about some fringe, more fringe type issues because you actually saw less of this influence in this election, but you're seeing a greater influence on the backend. And this is this whole deal about third parties, right? You always have this gaggle of young people talking about third parties, the Green Party, the Libertarian Party, so forth and so on. That wasn't as big of a push this to go around, was it? Or this whole deal with RFK, is it? It's RFK, it is RFK, right? <laugh>?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:52:25):<br /> Yeah, definitely.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:52:26):<br /> He was a third party candidate that then threw his support behind Trump and now is a nominee for a major secretary. Help me to understand how all of that, you know, what happened to third parties in this election and what's happening in the aftermath.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:52:45):<br /> So polarization is really hurting third parties. So many of the partisans on the left or the right are Democrats not 'cause they love the Democrats, they're Democrats 'cause they hate Republicans. And even more so on their Republican party side, they just literally think the Democrats are demonic communists. And when you think that way, you're unlikely to take a gamble on a third party, either the Libertarians or some other right wing or on the left the Greens. So that's sucking the lifeblood out of third parties. What's working in third party's favor though is that Americans are so sick of the polarization that we've created so that there is this opportunity for something like the No Labels movement to come along and rise up and for a brief shining moment be non-polarized the way Macron in France and his first campaign was above the standard debate in politics, but No Labels didn't make it to November in part because the Democrats did a very good job of making sure no credible Democrat entered in and took the nomination. So, there's a lawsuit now about that. We'll see where that goes. There is an opportunity for third parties in American politics given how unhappy we all are, but polarization works against them.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:54:04):<br /> I agree with that. I would add that really what we're seeing is textbook, it's exactly what we would expect to see in how third parties operate in US politics. The dominance of the two party system in America is not driven by whether or not you've got quality candidates or quality alternatives coming out of these third party movements. It's driven by the way we run elections, the election rules. Any system that has majority rule wins for special post elections and single member districts. So we elect one member of Congress per congressional district to the house for example. Any system that has those two features tends to have two political parties. It's like a theorem in in political science, right? Duverger's law, we call it. And what happens is when third parties arise in one of these systems, one of the two dominant parties, one winds up incorporating whatever that movement is into their dominant coalition.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:55:01):<br /> They just suck up all the air in the room and they, they sort of eat them up. We're seeing some of that, you know, the way that, like you mentioned RFK Jr., he sort of wound up getting sucked up into the, the Trump side of the movement this year. One thing though that I think we can see as potentially, we need to wait for more data to come out, potential impact of some third party influence in this past election comes at more regional or local levels, right? So the whole two party thing, two party rule I just described works, but it doesn't always work on the national scale. It works really well at the local level. Um, makes a lot of sense at the local level. So where you go, for example in Canada you've got a Quebecois, you know, regionalist movement that acts as a third party spoiler in some Canadian elections.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:55:46):<br /> But still in most places it's still two parties. It's just that the Quebecois is one of the parties, uh, that that dominates. Right? So, but if you go in this past election to some places in Michigan, I think we're gonna find that there were a bunch of Michiganders who were super disappointed, who were democratic identifying and were very disappointed in the Biden administration's policy on Israel and Netanyahu and the war. And who either stayed home or voted third party voted for Jill Stein. And I don't think any of that was enough to spoil Michigan or to turn the election or whatever. I do think that it shows that there are instances where third parties can have a significant impact in a regional or local way.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:56:30):<br /> Understood. Understood. Well rapid fire as we wrap up rapid fire. So I'm gonna ask one question to you Jennifer and one question to you 'cause I got so many that I can ask Jennifer. What do you think President Biden's final weeks in office will look like?</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:56:47):<br /> Well, so I'll just go based on history. What we usually see presidents get involved in doing a few pardons. So we'll probably see a few of those. I expect we'll see some movement on some creating national monuments, national land kind of stuff. We saw that previously, like when Obama was leaving office. I expect he's going to try to solidify some of the things that we expect the Trump administration to do in terms of making it harder for the new incoming Trump administration to, for example, reduce the federal workforce, eliminate uh, particular departments and so on and so forth. I think the Biden administration is gonna try to tick as many boxes off of their to-do list, get as many of their waiting appointments as through as possible and run through that finish line at the end.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:57:33):<br /> Okay. So Jeremy, what do you think the Trump administration's first moves will be as soon as he gets in office in January?</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:57:44):<br /> So this is going to be a very different Trump administration. It's been a very, very different transition. It is a confident Trump. He was uncertain the last time he won in 2016. This time it's moving very, very fast and releasing very unusual names that show Trump's confidence. I expect that to continue into his first couple months. He's not going to have the breaks that he had before, the defense secretaries and the chiefs of staff who were either mainstream Republicans or mainstream national security people. He's going to have his own people. And so I expect him to move in a radical way on mass deportation. I expect him to move in a radical way on imposing tariffs, even in violation of treaties that he negotiated. So, uh, buckle up. It's gonna be Trump Unbound</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:58:37):<br /> <laugh>. Alright, well I think I'm gonna have to leave it there. Jennifer Victor, Jeremy Mayer. Thank you. This is, I wish I had two sessions on this 'cause there are at least 10 questions I did not get to.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:58:55):<br /> Come to class, man.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:58:57):<br /> Come to class. Exactly. You know, a a a big part of this is for the others who are not here with us who need to get at, you know, get the wisdom that you two bring.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:59:13):<br /> They're welcome in my class too.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:59:15):<br /> Alright, well you might see some of 'em show up after hearing this, but thank you both. Thank you for your time. I know we're right before the Thanksgiving break. Thank you for giving us some of your time and happy Thanksgiving to you and your families.</p> <p>Jeremy Mayer (00:59:30):<br /> To you as well. Thank you for having us.</p> <p>Jennifer Victor (00:59:33):<br /> Much gratitude. Thanks very much.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (00:59:35):<br /> Alright. I am Mason President Gregory Washington saying thanks for listening. And tune in next time for more conversations that show why we are All Together, Different.</p> <p>Outro (00:59:51):<br /> If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> <p> </p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:call_to_action" data-inline-block-uuid="3cc77fb1-56b2-4d56-9637-a2fa78cdb0bf"> <div class="cta"> <a class="cta__link" href="/podcast"> <h4 class="cta__title">Learn more about the Access to Excellence podcast <i class="fas fa-arrow-circle-right"></i> </h4> <span class="cta__icon"></span> </a> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="d6272331-6662-4456-81b8-231060ca0e7c" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/556" hreflang="en">Schar School of Policy and Government</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/2671" hreflang="en">political science</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/20531" hreflang="en">Schar School News for December 2024</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18801" hreflang="en">Schar School Featured Stories</a></div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="0d30b398-289c-415a-8c96-9e1c4cd86ac4" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="fb71eb1e-69fd-40d3-a5bc-f4a82eaae9f9" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Listen to more episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-cfcf0cf62e13206219bdd849c3877ed7ba47766ebe675b6ae7f3f36ea99b9d70"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - 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09:49</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><figure role="group" class="align-left"><div> <div class="field field--name-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/small_content_image/public/2024-11/241010204_copy.jpg?itok=_ocH5D_l" width="350" height="350" alt="Anamaria Berea wearing headphones in the WGMU studio" loading="lazy" typeof="foaf:Image" /></div> </div> <figcaption>Photo by Evan Cantwell/Office of University Branding</figcaption></figure><p><span class="intro-text">Since putting the first man on the Moon in 1969, scientists have continued to push our knowledge and understanding of life and existence in vast unknown frontiers of space. Whether through Mars colonies or alien life forms, we're all wondering what and who can survive beyond Earth's atmospheres. </span></p> <p>In this episode of Access to Excellence, associate professor of computational and data sciences Anamaria Berea discusses her research on Mars settlements and Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon as she and President Gregory Washington debate the question on everyone’s mind: is there life beyond Earth?  </p> <p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?i=45dky-17425b1-pb&from=pb6admin&share=1&download=1&rtl=0&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="24dfeb86-2d92-49b6-8ac0-a15ab962ab9b" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><figure class="quote"><sup><span class="intro-text">"So we have an unidentified phenomenon, so it might be a new physical or atmospheric phenomenon that we haven't discovered yet, right? Because we don't know everything in science right now. Until we can actually scientifically analyze these, it's really difficult for us to say: what are these things? And we cannot say that only based on public opinion or allegations. We do need rigorous scientific studies so that we can turn that unidentified into identified."</span></sup></figure></div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="7ffb6e52-3a9b-4559-8a6f-3845b3a578a9" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p>Intro:</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology, and those who simply have a good story: all make up the fabric that is AV. We're taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Since putting the first man on the Moon in 1969, scientists have continued to push our knowledge and understanding of life and existence in vast unknown frontiers of space. Whether through Mars colonies or alien life forms, we're all wondering what and who can survive beyond Earth's atmospheres. Joining me today is someone who's working to unravel the mysteries of life beyond Earth, both human and otherwise. Anamaria Berea is an associate professor of computational and data sciences, researching the emergence of communications and fundamental patterns of communication in both living and non-living systems. Anamaria has worked with NASA and others to help humanity boldly go where no man or woman has gone before. Anamaria, welcome to the show.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Thank you. It's good to be here.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Well, look, this is gonna be really fun. You've got a lot of cool stuff you're working on, and I am really, really excited to jump into it. So let's start with your work at NASA. You were selected to participate in an independent study on UAPs or unidentified anomalous phenomenon. Our listeners are probably more familiar with the term that I grew up with, which is UFOs, <laugh>, Unidentified Flying Objects. So can you explain the difference between these terms and what is the rationale behind the change in terminology?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sure. So UFOs comes from Unidentified Flying Objects, which was the original term that the community and the public used for several decades after the forties when we had allegedly the first observation of what more popular was called the flying saucer. Right. But to get things more serious and into the scientific realm, scientists decided to change the name into Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, which is not necessarily about flying phenomena. Right? So this can be any type of unidentified phenomena, maybe coming from the sea or sub sea. Most of them might have been observed in our atmosphere. So the rationale for the change in the name has been to basically cast this serious scientific lens to the phenomenon so that we can actually study it.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Well, that's interesting because I'm gonna tell you, you know, you hear the term UAPs and that sounds as mysterious and intriguing as UFOs. I was always afraid of them growing up because there was this connection with UFOs and UAPs and, and popular culture with extraterrestrials and alien life forms. Right. But there are terrestrial objects, as you, you just highlighted, that could be included in the category of UAPs. Is that right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That is correct. So the idea here is to actually emphasize the word unidentified, and the other word is phenomenon <laugh>. Right? Right. So I'm a scientist at the core. So for us in, in science, whenever we see something that we cannot explain or understand, we want to cast the, um, scientific method and to try to understand this phenomenon. So it's science that draws that unidentified to identified, right? So what we have in the middle, whether it's anomalous, whether it's flying, whether it's terrestrial, whether it's under the sea, that is a different story. So that speaks to where that observation has been made.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Understood. Understood. So if we were to just pull back for a second and ask some very general questions about UAPs, like what are the potential impacts of UAPs on issues of national security, right, or on our economic , uh, uh, structure?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So that is the big question, right? And when it comes to UAPs, we, for a very long time, we have not had actually scientists looking at this phenomenon. They did come mostly from the defense side, if I can say so. And one of the reasons they are still unidentified is due to all the, um, classified observations. And these classified observations are not necessarily because the government doesn't want us to know what they are, but because they have been made by sensors or people that were at the time under classified conditions. Right? So obviously these can pose, um, problems for national defense. They can pose problems on the economic side. They can also pose problems in, uh, the social realm. So maybe some, some of these Hollywood movies kind of allude to the idea that once the discovery of alien life is made, that we can potentially have riots.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>We can potentially have conflicts, which all of these will pose problems both to the national defense and to economics. But while popularly, we are thinking about UAPs and UFOs connected to alien life, right? And whether we have alien life that is right here next to us, right on, on Earth, that is not always a connection, right? So again, I want to stress the fact that we have an unidentified phenomenon that we don't know what it is. So it might as well be a new physical or atmospheric phenomenon that we haven't discovered yet. Right? Because we don't know everything in science right now, or in physics or in chemistry. Maybe it is an optical phenomenon, right? So until we can actually scientifically analyze this, it's really difficult for us to say, what are these things? Right? And we cannot say that only based on public opinion, and we cannot say that only based on intuition or allegations. We do need rigorous scientific studies for this so that we can turn that unidentified into identified.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Understood. Understood. So you are also affiliated with the SETI or S.E.T.I. Institute, commonly known as the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. Can you tell us a little bit more about that institute, and a little bit more about your work?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yeah, sure. So I've been affiliated with the SETI Institute for a few years now, since before I was in, uh, the, uh, independent study panel with NASA because the institute is looking at all aspects of alien life. So we are not talking about little green men. What we are talking about is microbial life that can potentially be on other planets or moons within our solar system or outside of our solar system, and also potential intelligent life, which can also be potentially within our galaxy. So the SETI Institute actually has two different axis of study. One is with respect to biosignatures, as I was mentioning, microbial life, whether it's current or past on planets like Mars or on the Moon, like, uh, Europa. And this October we have Europa Clipper that is going to launch to study that further or Titan, right, which is the moon of, of Saturn, or, and the other axis is on techno signatures. So techno signatures mean finding signals or signs of technology anywhere in the universe, and particularly on exoplanets. Uh, so exoplanets being planets that orbit other suns than our own.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Right. Well, you mentioned Europa. What is Europa and why is it important?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Right. So Europa, it's what's called an icy moon. So that means that with some past missions that were just doing flybys, so flybys Jupiter and the moons of Jupiter, they observed that Europa is enveloped in an ice crust. But underneath this ice crust, there is a very vast ocean. And wherever you have water, there is a high probability of life. Now, the only way we can accurately determine whether there is life underneath the icy crust of Europa is by sending a probe, right? Sending a mission there to basically sample in C two and analyze the composition of the ocean on, uh, Europa. So Europa is one of the high probability candidates when it comes to finding these biosignatures within our solar system. So Europa is one, Io is another one, which is another moon of Jupiter, and Titan is another one. And there will be another mission called Dragonfly that will launch probably late in the 2030s and look for signals of life on, um, Titan, which has oceans of methane</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Outstanding. So any plans or analyses or studies in the work works to look at planets outside of our solar system?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yes. So that is the main purpose of the James Webb telescope. So the James Webb telescope is sampling through spectrometry, the exoplanetary atmospheres on these exoplanets that orbit, uh, suns that are not our own sun. Right. Okay. And through the composition of these atmospheres, scientists try to determine whether some of those chemicals or combinations of chemicals can be produced by biological processes. Right? So you can infer from the composition of the atmosphere if there can be life on that planet. So going back to your question about my affiliation with the SETI Institute, it's actually then when my affiliation with the institute came about when I was part of this project with Frontier Development Lab, where we simulated the exoplanetary atmospheres based on metabolic networks. So finding metabolic networks on the, uh, surface of a planet. How will that processes, how will they change the composition of an, uh, atmosphere on that exoplanet, right? And we create lots of simulations and try to understand what kind of combinations we can have at the micro scale on the surface of the planet in this metabolic networks and the macro scale with respect to the planetary atmosphere.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So as a computational scientist, what is actually your role in the search for life beyond Earth?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So I mostly look at data and analyzing data and that creating simulations. So again, we can have data with respect to the observation of the atmospheres, right? And we know what kind of compositions and chemicals are in those exoplanetary atmospheres. So we combine the data analysis with simulations. We also have data with respect to metabolic networks as we understand life on Earth, but trying to eliminate many of the biases or constraints that we currently have about life on Earth, because we are not looking just for life that is similar to life on Earth. We can look for life that can be quite different from life on Earth. So it's there where this idea of creating synthetic data from simulations where it comes in. So in the project that I was mentioning with metabolic networks, we actually took data from E. coli, which is, uh, has a well-known genome, and we modified that with zeros and ones, right? So we simulated that genome, with zeros and ones, and then we created different types of E. coli that don't necessarily exist on Earth right now. And that could feed from, or that exude other types of gases than the ones that we know that E. coli has on Earth. Right?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Oh, really? So you were able to create this?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>In the computer, right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yes. In theory.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>In theory in the computer. Right? And we, uh, by creating these simulations, again, we were trying to understand which kinds of genomes or alterations in the genomes for E. coli could produce those kind of gases or combinations of gasses. And we looked particularly greenhouse gases, which are more likely to be a bio signature for life on the surface. So again, which kind of combinations in the metabolic networks on and the, uh, genome of E. coli could render those combinations that we can potentially observe with the James Webb, uh, telescope.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So another recent project of yours was an exploration of the future of Mars colonists through an agent-based modeling approach.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Mm-Hmm. <affirmative>. That's right. So agent-based modeling is a type of simulation. It's different than the simulation that I was mentioning for exoplanetary atmospheres. So in this case, with an agent-based model, we are able to model interactions between agents and these agents can be people or can be animals. They can interact with an environment. Most of the times it's people. Right. So in this particular project, we'll, um,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>You were looking at people in this project.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>In this project, we are looking at people. So this project came to me as, um, so a collaborator of mine: he basically saw this paper that was published by another author who used a mathematical, uh, model, which was very similar to population dynamics models and trying to figure out what is the minimum number of people that we can have on a planet so that we can sustain a colony on Mars in, in this case. Right. Right. So basically, how many people do you need to send to Mars so that you can have a sustainable colony there?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>That's right. And I think he came out with, what, 22 people? Is that right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p><laugh>? No, that's my number. So, okay. He came up with a very large number, 150. And this collaborator of mine from Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, he came and he asked me, can I verify that number? Right. And can we validate that? And at that point, my students and I, we created this simulation agent-based model where we looked at, okay, if we send people on Mars, assuming we have the technology, which currently by the way, doesn't exist, right? So we are, we're still working on that technology.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Maybe! Elon Musk, Elon Musk will. Right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p><laugh>. Alright. So assuming we have that technology, which currently doesn't exist, right? And we can put the first man on Mars, which again, it's still probably at least a couple of decades away from us, uh, let's say that, uh, yeah, we can send some people to Mars and how many of these do we need so that we can have a sustainable colony? In our model, our assumptions, I think are a little bit more realistic than the pure mathematical model in the sense that we assume that you can't really send a hundred people at once. Right. It's any of these shuttles they can have at maximum four astronauts. And, uh, assuming that you can send first four astronauts and then later maybe another four and so on, right? You create this colony, which by the way, uh, now we are referring to it as settlement.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So there have been some debates in the field about terminology here between colony, habitat, settlements. So now we are more on, uh, the settlement side, <laugh>. Right? Okay. So another assumption in our model is the interactions between people, which the other mathematical model did not have. And through the interactions of the people, this can have both positive and negative effects in terms of psychology, but also in terms of work and how they can live and work together in a habitat, which basically you are thinking of a very closed environment, right? It's not like you would be able to just roam around the planet given the inhospitable conditions. And we included in our model many factors with respect to how much air they would need, how much food, how much water, how much of that they can extract from the planet, by breaking down the water that, uh, you can find on the ice shelves on Mars.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>And we accounted for that. We also accounted for resupply shuttles because if we are to be realistic, it's not like you send a bunch of people on Mars and you just leave them there. Right. And that's it. They, you cut off with Earth. Once you can send the first shuttle, you'd be able to send several others. And it's just like, it happens now with the ISS, right? The International Space Station, they have resupply shuttles all the time. So we assume for that, and we came up in our simulations, we have a much lower number than the one that was advanced by that paper: 150. So in our paper, basically anything in terms of tens, right? So anything above 40, 50 people should be able to have a stable settlement on Mars. And the lowest number that we could come up in our simulation under very specific conditions was 22.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So that's where that 22 number comes from.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>I see.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>And those are based on, again, like very specific conditions with respect to how many disasters can be on the habitat, or how many disasters can be with the resupply shuttles, how long will it take. We also accounted for a technology factor. So we are assuming that in time technology will improve. And that it'll be able to send people and goods there in faster time than right now: the average is between six and nine months. And yeah, we accounted for a very small improvement in technology too. So,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So, but you would need to have some mechanism, I presume, for people to grow their own food, is that right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yes, that's right. And there are many scientists right now working on growing, for example, tomatoes out of soil that is very similar to the Martian soil. And what type of enrichment do you need to do for that specific soil so that you can, uh, grow food and yeah. There are many people who are looking at, especially in, uh, in botany, in the botany field, just like in the movie The Martian, right. <laugh>.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Just like in The Martian.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p><laugh>. Yeah. They're looking though at tomatoes, not necessarily potatoes. So <laugh>.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Understood. Understood. So, you know, at some point in time you always should ask the question why, right. What are the benefits to a future settlement on Mars? What do, what do you imagine, uh, that, and what do you imagine it will look like?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yeah. Yeah. That is a very good question because I've seen lots of articles in the media with respect to mining the Moon or mining an asteroid or mining Mars. Right. And there have been very few economic studies actually, with respect to how much return on investment you can get from mining these really far away places and...</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>It depends on what's there.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>It depends on what's there, but even, let's say it's diamonds, right? Which many people say it's rare Earth minerals or it's diamonds and you'll bring them back to Earth, but once you bring them back to Earth and you flood the markets on Earth, the price will go down. Right? That's right. So I dunno how much return on investment you can have with that. I think the bigger question with respect to both Mars and Moon is geopolitical ones. So it makes more sense from the geopolitical advantage and from the, um, scientific advantage than it actually does from an economic standpoint. Maybe later on, I dunno, decades from now, hundreds of years from now, yes, you can have a sustainable economy between Mars, Moon, and Earth, right? But it's something that it's probably not going to happen too soon.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Understood. Understood. So artificial intelligence is a major topic of discussion right now, and it plays a role in your work and in data science, obviously. How could AI play a role in a Mars settlement?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Mm-Hmm. <affirmative>. So that, that's a really good question. When it comes to studying phenomena that can potentially happen in the future, we don't have tons of data for that, right? Because it's something that's gonna happen, didn't happen in the past. In the absence of data, you can't really actually use AI. But another way through which we can look at this is either through synthetic data. So we can create data, just like I was mentioning with the other project, with the explanatory atmospheres. That's one way or another way, which we are doing right now, is to collect lots of case studies from proxy environments. So we advanced that project with the mars settlement. We are actually now looking at the Moon, and we are looking at how we can help the Artemis IV and V program. So the Artemis IV program will put space station around the Moon.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Artemis V will put the, uh, Moon base on, uh, the South Pole of the Moon. So in order for us to be as accurate as possible so that we can actually help the program, that is by looking at the proxy case studies of human behavior in extreme environments. So we've taken as many case studies and future that we could from research outpost in Antarctica, from the submarines, from oil rigs, and other similar kinds of, uh, extreme environments from the analog missions such as Mars analogs and Moon analogs that are, uh, on Earth and obviously the International Space Station. And by amassing all the data analyzing that we are hoping to identify those nuggets of interesting human behavior or human psychology that will play a significant role in the success of these missions on, um, at this point we are looking at the Moon, hopefully in the future at Mars too.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Oh, that's really cool. Alright, so now we get to the moment of truth.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Alright.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So I got a series of questions, you know, we're gonna, we're gonna get a little fun here.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sounds good.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>If you don't mind.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Okay. Question number one: do you believe that there is intelligent...Well, let me take the question back. Do you believe that there is life on other planets?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yes, I believe the probability to find life on other planets. I do think it's quite high if we are talking about all the planets in, at least in our galaxy, and let's not mention how many galaxies we know are out there.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Okay. So let me take that question to the next step. Give me an idea. Gimme your thoughts on intelligent life on other planets</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>With respect to intelligent life. And, and there actually even the other life. Are we talking about simultaneous life that exists right now living versus past versus future?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>I'm talking about right now.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Right now. Simultaneous with us</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Right now.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So for that, I actually have a low probability for that. We have the Drake equation. Which actually is good heuristic or indicator for us in how we can calculate these probabilities. And with the direct equation, while we might have lots of planets within, or exoplanets within the habitable zone, uh, where life can develop and emerge, there is an entirely different question with respect to whether that life can evolve into intelligent life. That's one step. The next step would be, can that intelligent life evolve into a life that can create technology, right. Because maybe they won't. Right? But just with respect to intelligent life, we actually don't know that because we only have a sample of one. Right?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>I know, I know. So. But, but let me, throw out some numbers and you tell me where I'm off.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Alright.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>We know that there is an estimated about a hundred billion galaxies.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Okay. Each galaxy, each single galaxy has billions of stars, as does ours. And each of those stars has in many sense, lots of planets on those individual stars. Right? A hundred billion galaxies, billions of stars each with most likely multiple planets. And so if you use the Kepler data, alone, it estimates 300 million habitable</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>In the habitable zone.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yes. With environments not too different from Earth.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yeah. 300 million. And out of those 300 million planets, your estimate is very low</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>For intelligent life.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>For intelligent life. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So my estimate...</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So help me, so help me understand why that, 'cause the numbers tell me that by golly, there's gotta be intelligent life.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So, uh, your numbers are correct in saying that the probability for life is high in generic. But now,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Again, I'm not talking about amebas and protos, I'm talking about</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>They're about humanlike. Right? Intelligence. Right. But again, evolutionary processes require, um, millions and millions of years. Right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>But we, but we're a young galaxy!</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yes. But the question is more about are we early in the evolution of emergence of intelligent life versus are we late on that? Right. If we are talking about galaxy times. So the question is whether they are simultaneous with us, right. And at the same level or similar level of intelligence with us. So that is actually a lower probability. <laugh>.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yeah, I hear you. We think we're smarter than what we are. I'm telling you right now, my estimate is that it is a high probability of intelligent life in multiple planets.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>But we also have the Fermi paradox, right? So if the probability of intelligent life is so high, then it means that we would have intelligent life for different levels of intelligence, then many of those would be more intelligent than us, right?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yes, I agree.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So we should be able to detect those. So how come we haven't?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Right? No, wait. Why, why would we, why would we be able to detect those? We're just now getting the capability to really see outside of our galaxy. Right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's true. And also, Jill Tarter, who is very famous in the techno signatures field, she said that basically we have only sample just one glass--if we compare to an ocean, one glass of water when it comes to the whole universe.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yeah, I, I agree with that.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>But again, when we are talking about different timelines here, so how long does it take for intelligence to emerge?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>There could be others that are way ahead. There could be some that are behind.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right. Yes.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>There could be some in the middle.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Or extinct. Yes.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Or extinct, right? Uh, there could be some places where life was distinguished intelligent life that was distinguished millions of years ago. Right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And so I, I I just think there are too many possibilities and, and actually life occurs so easily, right? It's not hard for, I'm not talking about intelligent life, I'm talking about just life in general. It occurs so easily here. Even in places where we think of are inhospitable, right? Like we wind up finding life in places where you never thought--Right? In volcanoes and and, uh, really cold--</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Subsea vents.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Subsea areas.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yeah. In hydrothermal vents. That's right. In sulfuric acid type of environments. That's right. Mm-Hmm.<affirmative>.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So you find this life, you would never have thought that life could exist in these entities, but we are finding it. So my philosophy is you've gotta hold out the possibility for significant life now. But there's one other thing. You study this whole concept of unidentified anomalous phenomenon. Right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Well, I studied it while I was part of the independent study at NASA, but I'm, I'm not studying that in right now.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Okay. So, so let's pull back from that. Let's ask that--there are thousands of unexplained cases of phenomena. Some of which when you look at it, you say, oh, that looks strange, right? I got a friend who's a pilot. Who was a pilot in the Navy. And he's like, look, I'm telling you what I saw wasn't human. But it was real. You, you get what I'm saying?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yeah, absolutely. I mean...</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And when somebody with a trained military eye tells me that and I know 'em, then I'm like, okay. Okay. That, so, so we got hundreds of cases of this stuff.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sure, sure. We have lots of reports from pilots, not just in the military, actually some commercial pilots as well.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>But I trust the military pilot differently.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>It's not that we don't trust these testimonies. We trust all testimonies and we know that people are convinced of what they see, but also our brains are highly trained to identify patterns where patterns are not, right. Like finding Jesus in a loaf of bread. Right. Or finding the shape of a dog in the clouds and so many others. Right. Because that's how we are wired biologically.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>I know. But these cases are beyond that, right. When.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>When a guy's flying an aircraft and he's looking out of his window a few hundred meters away from him, he sees another craft.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And that craft takes off with a speed by which he can't even, he's already at, you know, Mach one and a half or so, this thing takes off and leaves him standing still.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yes.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>He's like, okay, that's something. That is not human.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>But what I trust more than any human, no matter how well trained they are, including astronauts, is sensors and sensor data. And we can make sense only what we observe, we respect to velocity, heat patterns. Right. In this phenomena. So unless we can observe these and we can compare them with ground truth. So it's not that they didn't see something, but it's what did they see? Right. So that is the question. Right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>No, I agree.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So that's a huge leap from seeing something that you don't know what it is and it's unusual and you cannot explain it versus having a leap that that is alien life. Right. There is no connection there.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>But we have to understand that if you are to see something like that here, they have discovered physics that we may not have discovered yet.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Sure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Right? You know, until Einstein's theories of relativity and others, we had an understanding of the world that people kind of accepted. And then here comes Einstein with these theories that turn it on its head. That it took 20, 30, 40, 50 years to validate some of these theories. But almost everything that Einstein has outlined, actually everything, has actually been validated and been verified. But many itinerant scientists, when he put his theories forward, suggested they were not true because of exactly what you're saying, because there were no physical phenomena to validate it. Right. And it was only after the physical phenomena began to become people, you know, ran studies to show, oh, well actually time does dilate. We can show that it dilates.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yeah. Right. So I mean, for us as scientists, we can only, and not just scientists, I mean, we can only do what we can do within the science and the history that we are at right now. Right. And there will be probably new discoveries in physics that will be very interesting. And then my question to you right back is that okay, if there is physics that we still don't know, then why can't we assume that these UAPs are a physical phenomenon, right. Of a physics that we don't know yet,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>That they may encompass some physics. So think about it this way, if you had to travel from another galaxy and get to this one, right? It would require some physics that we just don't have. Right. It's not--</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right. Because with the threshold of the, um, light speed right now, it's impossible to actually travel between galaxies and let's not forget that the universe is expanding. Right. And actually the space between galaxies is only increasing. Right. And up to a point that, I dunno how many billions of years our skies will be completely dark because we won't be even able to observe any galaxy. So imagine if you have a life form, in those times they won't even be able to even conceptualize or comprehend that there might be other life forms and other galaxies because they wouldn't know other galaxies exist.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Yeah. But over that time, their level of thinking and thought will actually progress and,</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Well, if we assume continuous evolution in civilizations, but given the past of our socializations, we don't know if a civilization is going to survive that long. Right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p><laugh>, you are bringing up really deep, deep, but this is great. This is the kind, and this is why I love these kind of conversations, because this is the kind of thing that our young people, our students, even our faculty and staff, it's the kind of thing that people should be talking about, these discussions, because they actually can lead to broader, more substantive discoveries. Right. I mean, the reality is if you were to be able to travel at those speeds and those distances, you probably wouldn't be using combustion, right? Because you would need a different kind of fuel.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Which means that you'd probably have a very different heat signature. So, so if you see something that moves at a very, very rapid speed and takes off and you say, well, look, the sensors didn't show anything with a heat signature capable of those speeds. Maybe the answer to that question is--</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>I mean, even right now--</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>--the physics associated with that didn't leave a heat signature because you're probably not combusting. Right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And so, so,</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So even right now, if I may say, JPL is working on an ion propulsion engine for Mars, right? So we won't have that kind of heat signature for if we really want to go into deep space and do human exploration into deep space.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So ion combustion, are they using the technology that was gathered from the aliens at Rosewell? <Laugh></p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Absolutely. <laugh>, of course. <laugh>.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Anyway. Yeah. Yeah. Look, to me, these are the kinds of conversations, uh, that we should have. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So no, absolutely. I mean, there is actually a good friend of mine, he is looking at the timeline of civilizations and whether 1 million year long civilizations can exist. Right. And we can actually do that right here at George Mason with computer simulations and grow artificial civilizations in computers and see what are the thresholds under which those...</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>This is good because this is at some point in time as our models, as the fidelity of our models become better and better. And we're able to process more and more data with artificial intelligence. I think the bots are gonna come back and tell us this is about how much time you have if you continue living like this.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Mm-Hmm. <Affirmative>. Yeah. I mean, there are so many variables for any civilization.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>But, but we, but we have so many, I'm I'm saying before parts of our planet literally become inhabitable. I mean, you're down in Florida. Yeah. You get hit with a storm, then you get hit with another one. What happens if you get hit with four or five right after that? At some point in time people say, look, I'm not going to live there because I'm basically, my home is destroyed every year. So, so these aren't farfetched notions. It's definitely not a farfetched notion to somebody who lives in that part of Florida. Right now, the debris that's right from one hurricane wasn't even removed before the next hurricane came in. And so</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And, and we're moving to a reality where you can have 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 of these in a row. Right. And so this is a real occurrence that we have to think is possible. And we have tools now. Yeah,</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right. So that's,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>That can help us discern that</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's why we are looking at extreme environments and how can humans survive in extreme environments that are not necessarily in space. But this will definitely help us get into space, perhaps so that we can live in space and also help us understand how we can survive the extreme environments right here on Earth. And going back to what you were saying: exactly, these kinds of questions can lead not just with respect to are there aliens, but can help us understand many other things with respect to what do we need to have long living civilizations? What is intelligence? What is actual, actually life? Because we don't have an accurate definition of life right now. They can help us perhaps identify the origins of life right here on Earth. So all these questions are actually related to these broad field, of, astrobiologists. So when we ask questions with respect to are we alone in the universe, we are touching upon so many other things, you know, in geology, in uh, chemistry, in social sciences, in computational sciences, in artificial intelligence, and so on.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>I love it. Yeah. Let me wrap up here. But, 'cause you're not only in accomplished professor here at George Mason, you're also an alum.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yes, I am.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Right. And you earned your PhD in computational science in 2012.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And so now you entered George Mason's computational science doctoral program while you were working on another doctorate.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Yep.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>A PhD from the Academy of Economic Studies in Romania. Right.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>And you completed your first PhD while you were taking classes at George Mason, but what inspired you to do a second doctorate? Because that was fascinating, too.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>So my PhD in Romania is actually in economics. Right, right. But at the time, I was really fascinated by the idea of complex systems and what are complex systems and system dynamics and these kinds of things. My PhD thesis was with respect to complex systems in economics, but I wanted to do more, and I've always wanted to do research and to do science. So that's why I applied here. I came here and it just happened actually to have the overlap between being accepted at AV with a fellowship and trying to finish up my other doctorate there. And yeah, I wanted to do more than, and to expand more beyond economics into this idea of complex systems, because as you can see, I really like interdisciplinarity, and I like.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>That is clear.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p><laugh> and that I like to dabble into several sciences, into many sciences and complex systems was one way. Astrobiology is another way through which I can find out more about really important and big problems, how we can ask questions, how we can apply science regardless of the science, and apply many methods. Right. So that's what I actually like to be able to dabble into methods between statistics and mathematics, all the way to computational methods that can be anything between simulations, deep learning, natural language processing, and so on. So I think as scientists, we kind of have to have, you know, a big toolbox and really good critical thinking. It's something that the economics field actually gave me how to think critically and very rationally about problems. And then just interacting with different scientists in different fields has been really, really beautiful.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Hmm. That is so cool. Yeah. How do you see the work that you've done in economics, the, the learnings that you had, how does that influence your work in astrobiology?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Oh, that's a good question. So once it's through critical thinking. So as we had this debate about probabilities low versus high, I really don't take anything at best face value <laugh>. Right. So I try to do my own research. So that actually comes from economics. Another thing that comes from economics is counterintuitive thinking. We are wired towards intuition and the taking leaps in our brain, causal leaps, which are not necessarily causal. Right. So correlation is not causation. So that's something that also came with me from economics. And then another thing that actually came with me from economics into astrobiology is something that you ask me a little bit in the beginning with respect to economic and social effects. And it's something I'm tangentially interested in, in what kind of social effects we can have when we have big discoveries, if we really have an announcement, right?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Mm-Hmm. <affirmative>, we found life. How will that have an effect into society, into economics? I'm not studying that, but I am in touch with people who are studying that. I am a part of the post detection hub, which is a hub hosted by St. Andrews University. And I'm also in the post detection committee at the International Astronomical Society, so that we can understand better what kind of protocols on the policy side we might need so that we can actually come together as a planet with multiple countries with different understandings of space and alien life. Right. And how we could mitigate any of the negative effects we might see in society when announcements of big discoveries are, are made.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>So you were also the first woman to earn a doctorate in computational, uh, social science from AV.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>That's right. I was the fifth graduate and the first woman right here. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Outstanding. So do you view yourself as a trailblazer in STEM?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>No, not really. I mean, I, um, I see myself as someone who is really passionate about my work as a scientist, right? Mm-Hmm. <affirmative>. And if my work is meaningful and impactful, I'm really happy about that. If, uh, students can learn from me, especially my students, and if I can work closely with my students and my collaborators in these cool teams, that's really nice and important for me. If trailblazing is an emergent phenomenon, speaking about complex systems, right? Is something that emergence of this, it's fine with me, but yeah, it's not something that I, I really wanna be a trailblazer. Uh, no.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>Well, that, that's, most people who become trailblazers are not necessarily seeking to become that they're just doing their work, right? Yeah. What do you hope other women in STEM can learn from your success?</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>They can do anything they want to do. If they really pursue what they like their passions, but also not to pay too much attention to trivial things, to follow their own path. It might be hard sometimes, but find good mentors and find Understood. Understood. Yeah. And find good teams to work in.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Well, we're gonna have to leave it there. Anamaria Berea, thank you for joining me to explore and explain some of the great unknowns of outer space.</p> <p><strong>Anamaria Berea: </strong>Anamaria Berea:</p> <p>Thank you.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: </strong>President Gregory Washington:</p> <p>I'm George Mason, president Gregory Washington. Thanks for listening. And tune in next time for more conversations that show why we are all together different.</p> <p>Outro:</p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:call_to_action" data-inline-block-uuid="00c9fe3c-db18-4f5a-a700-899f489e7863"> <div class="cta"> <a class="cta__link" href="/podcast"> <h4 class="cta__title">Learn more about the Access to Excellence Podcast <i class="fas fa-arrow-circle-right"></i> </h4> <span class="cta__icon"></span> </a> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="822329a1-8d2c-4794-911e-a958661a0cda" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/291" hreflang="en">College of Science</a></div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="c18c78dc-550f-448a-9c2f-f9fed71e015b" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="bf6470fc-5c8a-4f69-a42f-203d6bb7f387" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Listen to more episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-6cb8bb5f5d15e501ad9912fcbefc2b0dc47c9da9cbdeaa0df972708bc55e4277"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="ee34a61c-394c-4c3b-8003-dfe66799c3aa" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/president" hreflang="und">Gregory Washington</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Mon, 18 Nov 2024 14:49:37 +0000 Sarah Holland 114716 at Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water? /news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water <span>Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/1566" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Sarah Holland</span></span> <span>Mon, 10/21/2024 - 11:07</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><figure role="group" class="align-left"><div> <div class="field field--name-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/small_content_image/public/2024-10/240932102_copy_2.jpg?itok=c5i11Si3" width="350" height="350" alt="Jeffrey Moran sits in front of the WGMU microphone" loading="lazy" typeof="foaf:Image" /></div> </div> <figcaption>Photo by Evan Cantwell/Office of University Branding</figcaption></figure><p><span class="intro-text">Every day at AV, faculty like assistant professor Jeffrey Moran develop innovative solutions to the world’s grand challenges. And sometimes those grand challenges can have small solutions that come from the most unlikely of places.</span> </p> <p>In this episode of Access to Excellence, join Moran and President Gregory Washington as they discuss the water-cleaning powers of spent coffee grounds, aerosol experiments on the International Space Station, and finding inspiration for innovation in jazz.  </p> <p> </p> <p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?i=r8cgt-17138e6-pb&from=pb6admin&share=1&download=1&rtl=0&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?" width="100%"></iframe></p> <h4>Or Listen to this episode via</h4> <p><strong><a href="https://gmu.podbean.com/e/can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-the-key-to-clean-water/">Podbean</a> | </strong><strong><a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-the-key-to-clean-water/id1498236015?i=1000673851193">Apple Podcasts</a></strong> | <strong><a href="https://open.spotify.com/episode/2t64yFdr2vZoLYiXv8rmf6?si=q7CVkRtkQCeRNgFbYVEoAw">Spotify</a></strong></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="b913d192-612a-4a48-abfe-62fc4b7d6bc9" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p> <sup><span class="intro-text">The challenge is not necessarily lack of water per se, it's lack of access to methods to decontaminate the water that is already there, in ways that don't require extensive infrastructure... to basically use the materials they have available to them. Coffee is discarded by the millions of tons every year. It is hydrophobic so it can pick up other hydrophobic things. And if you look at a microscope image of a coffee ground, it has this very irregular, very dense surface where there's a lot of active surface area given the size of the coffee ground, which means it can pick up a large quantity of pollutants relative to its size…You could implement [CoffeeBots] in just a cup of water that you want to decontaminate. You could envision this being implemented on a small boat where there's a magnet on the back end of the boat. And so if you wanna clean up an oil spill in a small river, you can deploy it that way, deploy a large quantity of these coffee bots, and then move the boat along."</span></sup></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="29807d63-4c49-41cb-824d-964d9c3e99a1" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p><strong>Intro (00:04):</strong><br /> Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology, and those who simply have a good story: all make up the fabric that is AV. We're taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (00:27):</strong><br /> Every day at AV, our faculty are developing innovative solutions to the world's grand challenges. And the great thing about innovation is that sometimes those grand challenges can have small solutions that come from the most unlikely of places. Joining me today is someone who knows quite a bit about finding big solutions in small, unlikely places: like the bottom of his coffee cup. Jeffrey Moran is an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and is an affiliate faculty member in bioengineering. His research lies in understanding and using microscale thermofluid transport phenomena to enable new solutions to fundamental challenges facing humanity. Jeff, welcome to the show.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (01:22):</strong><br /> Thank you so much for having me. It's a pleasure and an honor to be here.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (01:27):</strong><br /> What some of you may not know is that Professor Moran and I have a connection, a really, really strong one. Uh, your postdoc advisor?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (01:39):</strong><br /> That's correct.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (01:40):</strong><br /> His postdoc advisor at MIT was a former student of mine back at Ohio State, and so we have a very, very close connection in terms of the work that he's actually doing.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (01:55):</strong><br /> I think we actually met before I came to Mason at one of the cookouts that he had.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (02:01):</strong><br /> Oh, that, that could very well, could very well.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (02:03):</strong><br /> I think you were visiting Boston and he had occasional get-togethers, Professor Cullen Buie is his name. And he actually just made full professor at MIT, you may have seen.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (02:13):</strong><br /> Yeah, I did. Yeah, I did. And I, I actually have not congratulated him. Yeah. So I need to go back and make sure he knows how proud of him I am. So let's talk a little bit about your work.</p> <p>Jeffrey Moran (02:24):<br /> Sure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (02:25):</strong><br /> So your work is in the field of microscale transport phenomena.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (02:29):</strong><br /> Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (02:29):</strong><br /> And for those listeners who are out in the audience, who could be just in other fields or students, can you explain a little bit of what that actually is?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (02:40):</strong><br /> Sure. So transport phenomena is a, a somewhat wonky term that basically means the science of how stuff goes from one place to another. And that sounds broad because it is, the stuff could be literal stuff like matter. Think about a drop of food coloring spreading in a glass of water. And if you don't stir the water, then the food coloring spreads smoothly and radially outward in a process called diffusion. It could be something like that, but the stuff could also be something like heat or something like electrical charge, or even fluid motion, a little vortex or an eddy. So transport phenomena, you could argue, underlie just about everything that happens in the universe. But usually when people use that term, they're referring to artificial, engineered systems. And I'm really fascinated by this topic because there are a lot of parallels in the way that different types of things are transported from place to place.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (03:46):</strong><br /> I mentioned the example of food coloring spreading in a glass of water. There's also heat, right?</p> <p>So you could imagine, like, your stove top in the morning after you make coffee in the morning, you turn the heat on and the temperature is hot right in the center of the burner. And then it spreads radially outward after you turn the heat off. And it turns out the math that describes that process is essentially identical to the math describing the food coloring: diffusing. And so it's fascinating from a fundamental perspective, but it's got lots of applications, especially in things like the chemical industry or in, uh, microfluidics: the science of fluid flow through small passageway. And the microscale is just referring to the fact that I like studying these phenomena at the microscopic level. And my fascination really derives from the fact that we can see some really bizarre consequences of those transport phenomena that you would never see at the macroscopic scale. And we'll get into this, but these include things like a tiny piece of platinum connected to a tiny piece of gold actually propelling itself at the microscale in hydrogen peroxide. Something you would never see at the macroscopic level. So that's a bit of a flavor of what transport phenomena refers to.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (05:06):</strong><br /> Well, that's interesting. So what do these phenomena look like? </p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (05:10):</strong><br /> Yeah. So some of them are visible to the naked eye, like I was saying, with the dye spreading in water. Some of them are invisible or they're only visible under a microscope. Something like molecules moving from place to place. Some of them are completely invisible. Like for example, my PhD work was studying these self-propelled particles, right? We're, and we'll talk a lot about these, but these are tiny rods, small enough that you need a microscope to be able to see them. And what's fascinating about them is that they actually propel themselves by pushing an electrical current through the solution. So ions are generated on the front end and consumed on the back end. And as a consequence of that, ion motion propulsion is generated. So that's invisible, right? Because if you were to just look at it under a microscope, you would just see the rods zipping around in the fluid in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. So some of them are visible like the dye spreading in the glass of water. Some of them are invisible, like the charges moving their way through the solution and ultimately causing a variety of different forces to be generated that lead to propulsion. So it really depends on the type of transport you're talking about.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (06:30):</strong><br /> So as a young person who's gotten into this field and developing a passion for it, how did that develop? What connected you to start looking at the micro and nano scale?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (06:44):</strong><br /> Yeah. So I got into research late in my undergraduate days. I was participating in a program where undergraduates could be paid to do research in a professor's lab. We have an analogous program at Mason called the Undergraduate Research Scholars Program, through which I've mentored about nine undergraduate students. And part of the reason for that is that I, it was such a valuable experience for me, and I just had the chance to work for a professor whose lab focused on microfluidics. As far as how I got into the self-propelled particles specifically, that was by accident. It happened when I went to a master's thesis defense early in my graduate school days. And there was a student who was defending his master's thesis. And the thesis topic was how to manufacture the platinum gold rods I was talking about. And the focus of his work was on more efficient ways to manufacture them.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (07:44):</strong><br /> But he just happened to mention offhand that they happened to propel themselves in water, if you add hydrogen peroxide as a fuel, and that intrigued me. So I raised my hand and I said, how did they do that exactly? And it wasn't really his main focus, but he, his explanation, so he can be forgiven for giving a somewhat arm wavy explanation, but he basically said, well, we don't really know, but it's, it has something to do with the flow being induced in the fluid near the rod's surface. And you know, the flow goes backward and the rod goes forward. And I sat back and I thought, Hmm. So I had the fortune of having a three year fellowship that allowed me the freedom to pursue whatever I wanted for my thesis work. So I approached my advisor and told him I was interested in really getting to the bottom of this.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (08:41):</strong><br /> And that eventually became my thesis. And you know, this is a very young field. It just started in 2004, and so it's just passing the 20 year mark. And I've just never been able to shake off this fascination with how we can make these seemingly inanimate objects that are not living in any way move and do things that mimic biological systems at the microscale. And as an engineer, I'm especially interested in what practical applications these sorts of devices could have. So my fascination with this really arose from that chance encounter at that thesis defense. But people have been thinking about this for a while. You know, there are classic films like Fantastic Voyage from the 1960s where a team of scientists shrink their submarine down small enough to enter the bloodstream of a colleague and treat a blood clot in his brain. So people have been thinking about this and what applications it could have, ways it could revolutionize medicine for, for quite a while.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (09:45):</strong><br /> And at Mason, I'm really trying to marry that fascination that I still have from my graduate school days with a sort of utilitarian outlook and thinking about ways that we can start to realize the vision articulated in things like the Fantastic Voyage film. So that's a little bit about how my fascination came about. You know, when I worked for Professor Buie at MIT, we were doing different things. We were working on some different areas. And it was still in the general field of transport phenomena, but it was much more focused on like batteries and energy devices. So this is a really multidisciplinary field. Transport phenomena cover a lot of different application areas.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (10:25):</strong><br /> Well, let's talk about that. Because that is what is so incredibly fascinating. Mm-Hmm. So earlier this year, members of your lab made the news with the invention of what's being called the CoffeeBot. And this is spent coffee grounds coated in iron oxide that can absorb pollutants and water.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (10:49):</strong><br /> That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (10:49):</strong><br /> So tell me about how it works.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (10:51):</strong><br /> Sure.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (10:52):</strong><br /> How do they move through the water? And then let's, let's get into it a little bit.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (10:56):</strong><br /> Yeah. So on that topic, I actually brought some visual aids here. So the, the listeners can't see this, but I'm holding a vial of what are just ordinary coffee grounds, right? And these are coffee grounds I literally brought from home.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (11:13):</strong><br /> Now spent coffee grounds, which means...</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (11:15):</strong><br /> Spent coffee grounds.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (11:15):</strong><br /> Which means they've been used.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (11:16):</strong><br /> That's correct.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (11:17):</strong><br /> That's even better.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (11:18):</strong><br /> That's correct. Yeah. And by one estimate, we throw away about 23 million tons of spent coffee waste per year. Much of that is being sent to landfills. Although increasingly I'm heartened to see that places like Starbucks are making just bags of the stuff available for folks to use for compost. So I've got a vial of spent coffee grounds here, and in my other hand I have a magnet. Now, if I hold the magnet up to the vial, nothing interesting happens. Coffee is not magnetic. However, if I have another vial here, these also look like spent coffee grounds. They are. But they've been coated in, as you said, iron oxide, which is the main chemical constituent of rust. So we sometimes call these rusty coffee grounds because in a real sense, they are rusty. And if I hold the magnet up, I don't know if you can see, uh, and for the listeners, the coffee grounds, once they've been coated in the iron oxide particles, they will actually follow the magnet.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (12:19):</strong><br /> So I can make them go wherever I want to by holding up a magnet to it. So the essence of what we did was develop a safe and eco-friendly approach to coating the coffee grounds with these little tiny bits of rust. So what does that do for us? Well, it does two important things. First, it allows us to use magnetic fields. You asked how they move. It allows us to use a magnetic field to drive them through the water. So for now, we're just propelling them with the external magnetic field. We can come back to that in a second. We're looking at ways to improve upon that. And one of the things we demonstrated was that moving coffee grounds will actually remove pollutants from water more efficiently than stationary ones do. And this makes intuitive sense because, in a sense, the moving coffee grounds encounter more pollutants per unit time than stationary ones do. So we demonstrated three different pollutant types: methylene blue, which is kind of a stand-in for a chemical pollutant. But methylene blue itself is a textile dye that has some negative health effects, that is itself a pollutant of concern in some areas of the world, particularly where textile production is common. Oil spills and microplastics: those are additional pollutants of concern.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (13:41):</strong><br /> So both of those are problematic...</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (13:43):</strong><br /> Absolutely.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (13:43):</strong><br /> Today.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (13:44):</strong><br /> Oil spills and microplastics. So much so fish today have an incredibly large amount of digested microplastics in their systems.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (13:56):</strong><br /> And potentially we do too, potentially. And because there are so many consumer products that contain plastic, they make their ways into waterways, right? And eventually in some areas, uh, it probably varies significantly. I haven't seen the statistics, but definitely lots of different forms of life are consuming these microplastics. And I wanna say, this is not my area, but I think we're still, as a community, figuring out exactly what the health effects are. But they're definitely something to be concerned about for sure. So we demonstrated that we can remove each of those three types.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (14:30):</strong><br /> So microplastics...</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (14:32):</strong><br /> Mm-Hmm. Oil and methylene blue as a model for a dye—methylene blue is, is a textile dye. And it's blue, as the name suggests. And that was convenient because then it's very straightforward to monitor how much of the methylene blue we've removed at any given time. Because you can use an instrument that essentially looks at how much blue light is being absorbed. You can use essentially the intensity at a certain wavelength to determine how much of the dye is left. So it was, it was partially out of convenience that we chose that.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (15:06):</strong><br /> Hmm. So reuse of these coffee grounds was mentioned.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (15:13):</strong><br /> Yeah. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (15:14):</strong><br /> So how often can you use them?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (15:15):</strong><br /> Yeah. So that brings me to the second major thing that the magnetism enables. So just to recap, the first thing the magnetism does is it allows us to drive them through the water. And that speeds up the pollutant removal process. The second thing it does is it allows us to take the magnet and pluck the coffee grounds out of the water after the treatment is complete. What we do next is rinse it off. We can rinse the pollutants off, and we do still have to dispose of the pollutants elsewhere. That is a separate issue that is, for now, tangential to the work that we're doing. We're mainly focusing on removing them from the water. But that is something that you do still have to do something with—the oil or with the microplastics. And that's something that other researchers are working on.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (16:00):</strong><br /> So then after you rinse them, we typically rinse them with an organic solvent like acetone. Acetone works pretty well. And then you can actually drop them back into the water. And we showed in the journal paper we published on this that you can reuse them at least four times with a minimal reduction in pollutant removal efficiency. So we haven't gone beyond that. But based on how well the first five trials went, and this is true, by the way, with each pollutant class: with dyes, oils, and microplastics, we have reason to believe that you could go further.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (16:34):</strong> So let me get this straight 'cause I want to make sure that the folk out there see the depth and the profoundness of what you are stating. Spent coffee grounds coated and iron oxide can be dropped into, say, an oil spill.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (16:56):</strong></p> <p>Absolutely.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (16:56):</strong></p> <p>And the coffee grounds will attach themselves to the oil.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (17:00):</strong></p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (17:01):</strong></p> <p>You have a process for then pulling those grounds, separating those grounds with the oil on them from the water. The oil is rinsed off where it can be disposed. You throw the grounds back out to repeat the process. And you can do it up to four times.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (17:18):</strong></p> <p>Five times total. Right. So four reuses.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (17:21):</strong></p> <p>Four reuses.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (17:22):</strong></p> <p>So five times total. So five total uses.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington</strong> (17:23):</p> <p>That's amazing.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (17:24):</strong> You nailed it. That's exactly right.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (17:26): And so when you talk about the coffee grounds attaching themselves to a pollutant like oil, or microplastic, how long does that take? Is it an immediate attachment or...</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (17:36):</strong></p> <p>So that's a good question. And it's one that we are really working on answering more systematically, to really be able to say, if you have, say, a section of a river that has a certain area, say, an acre, and you have a rough estimate of how much oil has spilled, there's been an oil spill and some X number of liters. We don't really currently have a number to say definitively, this is how much coffee you would need for that section of the river. But much of the testing we've done so far has been mainly on the size scale of, you know, a small beaker, a small container. That's maybe, maybe a quarter of a liter of water. And we can get away with about 50 milligrams of coffee. So just enough to sprinkle the coffee bots in a, a layer that will approximately sparsely coat that top layer.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (18:33):</strong></p> <p>And then as you say, the pollutants attach themselves to the coffee grounds.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington</strong> (18:37): Does that happen immediately?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (18:39):</strong></p> <p>It's not immediate. So it depends actually on how, whether the coffee grounds are moving, first of all. So if they're stationary by themselves, the testing we did was on the timescale of about 40 minutes. And after 40 minutes with stationary coffee grounds, some of the pollutant has been removed. Right? But if you drive them through the water, it increases from about 50, 60% to about 90 to 95% in the case of methylene blue. In the case of oil spills and microplastics, it's on a similar order.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (19:12):</strong></p> <p>Wow. That's amazing. So...go ahead.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (19:15):</strong></p> <p>Oh, I was just gonna say, because another question that I've gotten a lot, and that is a good question, is what is it that attaches the pollutants to the coffee grounds?</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (19:24):</strong></p> <p>Right. That's a fair question. And in the case of oil spills, it has to do with a property called hydrophobicity. And it means basically, as the name suggests, hydrophobic, it turns out that the coffee grounds are what we call hydrophobic. So for folks listening out there, if you've ever waxed your car, right? And you put some droplets of water on afterward, it kind of beads up. Because the wax has rendered the surface hydrophobic. It doesn't like water. So when water comes in contact with it, it tries to avoid touching the surface as much as possible. So that's why it forms that bead. And we have some pictures from the paper where if you take a bed of spent coffee grounds, it does the same thing. So why does that matter? It matters because things that don't like water tend to like oil. So the same interactions that cause oil droplets to coalesce together in say, salad dressing are also the forces we believe, and we have good reason to believe, that cause oil to glom onto the coffee bots. And there's some nice videos that are included with the paper, and also in the news segment that was featured on Channel 9 news in March of this process actually happening. So it looks kind of like the coffee grounds are kind of soaking up the oil.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (20:50):</strong></p> <p>Huh. Amazing.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (20:51):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. And a similar thing we think is happening with microplastics, because microplastics are also hydrophobic in general. So it's a good rule of thumb that hydrophobic things tend to like to congregate with other hydrophobic things.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (21:05):</strong></p> <p>Okay. So you know, this is amazing. So the question that I always have when confronted with, you know, this is an everyday product.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (21:17):</strong></p> <p>Sure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (21:18):</strong></p> <p>You know, we toss the coffee grounds all the time.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (21:22):</strong></p> <p>That's right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (21:23):</strong></p> <p>How did you discover such a use out of something that most of us consider trash?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (21:28):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. This is where I have to give credit to my group members. So I had two awesome members of my group who have since gone on to other things. It was a postdoc in my group named Amit Kumar Singh. And at the time, a high school senior named Tarini Basireddy. Amit is now a professor himself at a university back in India. And Tarini is just beginning her sophomore year at Johns Hopkins. We were trying to figure out a project for Tarini to work on, because she was doing a year long internship in my lab as part of a, she was a senior at Thomas Jefferson High School. And they had this program where, um, their seniors can do research internships, and Mason, quite understandably, has restrictions on things that minors can do in the lab.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (22:18):</strong></p> <p>Uh, so what happened was, you know, we were thinking about a project that would involve the things that I was interested in on using particles that move in liquids that would not involve any particular hazards. And it was one of those, Hey, what if we tried this kind of conversations that I've come to love, I've come to treasure those conversations because they can lead to interesting things like this. And I should say, we are not the first people to use self-propelled or magnetically propelled nanoparticles or microparticles to clean up water. There have been a variety of different studies in that direction already. The problem is a lot of those are just proof of concept demonstrations, that if you have a particle that's made of maybe a metal or some other toxic substance, but if it moves and it's able to break down pollutants, you know, people will publish that and they'll say, look, we can use propelled particles to clean up water. But one of the major focus areas of my lab in general is trying to engineer these kinds of particles from safe materials. And we were brainstorming one day and one of us said, I'm not sure that it was me. I don't think it was me. One of us said, what about coffee as a way to demonstrate water treatment with active particles?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (23:40):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. But why would they say coffee? You know what I'm saying? It makes, absolutely, that's not what you would think of when...</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (23:47):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. Well I have, uh...</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (23:50</strong>):</p> <p>I mean, I would think of sand before I would think of coffee.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (23:52):</strong></p> <p>Yeah, absolutely.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (23:53):</strong></p> <p>You know what I'm saying?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (23:54):</strong></p> <p>Well, sand is another material that we work with or silicon dioxide. And we'll, we will get to that in a separate project. But, you know, my postdoc, particularly Amit, I used to say, you give him any three materials, he would figure out a way to make, make a self-propelled particle out of it. And so he had a previous paper on using tea buds, like bits of tea, to make nanoparticle antibiofilm treatments. So things to treat bacterial biofilms, for example, which are part of how antibiotic resistance comes about.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (24:28):</strong></p> <p>So it was just one of those random sort of suggestions that once somebody said it, we all kind of sat back for a minute and thought about it. And it started to make more sense. Because first of all, as we've already said, coffee is discarded by the millions of tons every year. It is hydrophobic. So it, it can pick up other hydrophobic things. And if you look at a microscope image of a coffee ground, it has this very irregular, very dense surface where what I mean is that there's a lot of active surface area given the size of the coffee ground, which means it can pick up a large quantity of pollutants relative to its size. So the answer to the question "why coffee?" is really three-pronged: it's hydrophobicity, it's common and it's relatively safe to work with, and it has a high surface area to volume ratio, which turns out to be important.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (25:25):</strong></p> <p>Hmm. That is amazing. So what do you think a discovery like this could have on protecting and preserving water systems around</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (25:35):</strong></p> <p>Yeah, I mean, we certainly hope that this has far-reaching impacts across the world. In many regions, two things are true at the same time: one, there is an urgent lack of clean, accessible water, and two, coffee is produced and consumed in large quantities. Take Ethiopia, for example. It's currently facing a water crisis, and they also grow and consume more coffee than any other African country, to my knowledge. Brazil, Vietnam, Peru, and other coffee-producing countries face similar challenges. The issue often isn't a lack of water, but rather a lack of access to methods to decontaminate it without needing complex infrastructure, which isn't always available.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (26:42):</strong></p> <p>So our goal is to eventually disseminate this method, allowing people with little scientific training and without access to advanced equipment—like the nano-fabrication tools many in my field still use—to make use of materials they already have. For instance, it could be implemented in the home to decontaminate a simple cup of water. You could even imagine it being deployed in small boats, where a magnet on the boat could drag a bed of "coffee bots" to clean up an oil spill in a river. News segments have animated this process. In sewage treatment plants, where sewage is left to sit and decompose, you might just need to place coffee grounds on top. We believe this will absorb pollutants more efficiently than just leaving the sewage to decompose naturally.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (28:12):</strong></p> <p>Huh. Interesting.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (28:13):</strong></p> <p>Yeah, there are a lot of potential uses. We’ve applied for a patent on this.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (28:21):</strong></p> <p>Yeah, you should.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (28:22):</strong></p> <p>We published this work in a scientific journal a few months ago. Tarini, now a sophomore in college, is a joint first author on the paper.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (28:31):</strong></p> <p>Wow.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (28:31):</strong></p> <p>And I have to say, at her age, I didn’t even know what research was.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (28:35</strong>):</p> <p>Let’s be clear—most high school seniors don’t get a publication.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (28:42):</strong></p> <p>Oh yeah.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (28:43):</strong></p> <p>A first-author publication, no less. That’s really cool. Your previous advisor at MIT, when he was my student, came to me after his freshman year to start working in my lab.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (28:57):</strong></p> <p>I remember that.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington</strong> (28:58):</p> <p>So you're keeping that tradition alive.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (29:02):</strong></p> <p><laughs> Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (29:02):</strong></p> <p>That’s phenomenal.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (29:03):</strong></p> <p>Getting started early.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (29:05):</strong></p> <p>Exactly. You see where it can lead. I hope you stay in contact with her and guide her toward grad school.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (29:16):</strong></p> <p>She definitely has a bright future ahead.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (29:18):</strong></p> <p>Outstanding. Now, shifting gears a little. In August, it was announced that you and a colleague from Purdue University received NSF funding for a study to be conducted on the International Space Station. The goal is to better understand thermophoresis, or the migration of particles in response to temperature gradients, which can happen with or without gravity. Since your work typically focuses on particles moving through water, how did you realize there was a gap in knowledge about how aerosols migrate in response to temperature without gravity?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (30:02):</strong></p> <p>Mm-hmm <affirmative>. Yeah, so this is another example of a project that came from a casual “what if we tried this” conversation. The impetus was the National Science Foundation’s program called <em>Transport Phenomena Research on the ISS to Benefit Life on Earth</em>. Transport phenomena came up again. I should also mention that I’ve been obsessed with space since I was a kid. My childhood home is still filled with drawings of space shuttles and models of fighter jets. That passion for space was one of the reasons I got into engineering.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (30:45):</strong> I can relate to that.</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (30:48):</strong></p> <p>I’ve wanted to be an astronaut for a long time. I applied in 2016 but wasn’t selected. Still, sending an experiment to space is the next best thing.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (31:09):</strong></p> <p>Exactly.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (31:10):</strong></p> <p>So I was talking to my friend and collaborator David Warsinger—we’re going through the junior faculty process together. We met at MIT when he was a grad student, and I was a postdoc. I mentioned this project, and he asked, “Has anyone made a micro-swimmer that moves in air?” A micro-swimmer refers to self-propelled particles, also known as micro-motors or active colloids. Initially, it seemed like an odd question since my field is mostly concerned with propulsion through liquids and gels, not air.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (31:52):</strong></p> <p>But air is a fluid in some sense.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (31:55):</strong></p> <p>Absolutely, yes. That got me thinking. It was a bit like the time in 2008 during my master’s defense when someone mentioned that particles could swim. I sat back and thought, "Huh, how might that work?" I began considering mechanisms active in both liquids and gases. One of those mechanisms is thermophoresis, a transport phenomenon where particles in a temperature gradient—where one side is cold, and the other is hot—experience a force that pushes them either toward the hot or cold side.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (32:59):</strong></p> <p>Oh. So the force works both ways?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (33:02):</strong></p> <p>It depends.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington: (33:02):</strong></p> <p>So it's not always hot. Usually, it's cold to hot, right?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (33:05):</strong></p> <p>In liquids, it can be in either direction.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (33:08):</strong></p> <p>I see.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (33:08):</strong></p> <p>It depends on the liquid and it depends on what you add to the liquid. And I should mention in liquids, it's not really fully understood exactly what causes it to move towards hot or towards cold. In gases, however, it's more straightforward. In gases, motion by thermophoresis pretty much always occurs from hot to cold. So if you have a particle that's in air, and the air is hot on one side and cold on the other, then the nitrogen and oxygen molecules on the hot side are by definition zipping around with more velocity, right? When they collide with the surface of the particle, they impart a force to it. On the cold side, they're zipping around with less energy. So the force that they impart from the cold face is less. And so the end result is that there's a net force owing to the more forceful collisions on the hot side that pushes the particle towards cold.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (34:02):</strong></p> <p>So this is known to happen in gases, but then I got to thinking, okay, could we then quantify it somehow? And it's difficult to do on earth because of things like gravity, which will cause the particles to fall out of the air. And there's an additional problem with thermophoresis because hot air rises, right? So if you were to try to have a sample of particles and air, and you somehow kept them from falling to the ground and you heated the air on one side, it would rise. And that would cause the particles to move. And it would be hard to discern how much of the particle motion is really due to thermophoresis in that case.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (34:41):</strong></p> <p>I see. I see.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (34:42):</strong></p> <p>So what we realized was that in microgravity on the international Space Station, you don't have those confounding factors, right? And it would be possible, we think, to isolate just the component of thermophoresis that drives different types of particles through air.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (35:03):</strong></p> <p>So why would anybody care about this? Right. That was kind of the next question that we had while we were thinking about this. And it turns out that aerosols, small particles suspended in air, are very important to our understanding of the global climate. And they pose a pretty large amount of uncertainty actually, in terms of what their net effect is on the global climate. Some aerosols actually can exert an overall cooling effect. Some aerosols warm the planet. Aerosols are produced by volcanic eruptions, dust storms, other natural events like that. Human activity like burning fossil fuels also injects a bunch of aerosol into the atmosphere. And so it's a very active area of research in climate science right now. And so what we're intending to do is take measurements of how efficiently different aerosols move by thermophoresis. And the hope is to help climate scientists understand how important this mechanism is in the atmosphere, because the problem of aerosols in the atmosphere is only gonna increase. Rocket launches are another major source of, uh, space junk that can sometimes be in the aerosol range. Um, and it turns out that this phenomenon, thermophoresis, is most important at very high altitudes.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (36:27):</strong></p> <p>Hmm. Interesting.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (36:28)</strong></p> <p>So that's one part of the project. And the, the swimming part, the self propulsion part is to look at whether, instead of say applying heat on one side and cold on the other side, looking at just a single particle with half of its surface coated in a metal, something that absorbs light really efficiently shining a light on it, and then seeing if the metal side absorbs the light more efficiently than thus heating up faster, that will then heat the air surrounding the, the metal side leading to propulsion. This is something that's been demonstrated on earth but has never been seen in air before. So we call this self-thermophoresis because here the particle doesn't require an external temperature gradient, but it generates it itself and then moves. So we're gonna also see whether that happens and we call those micro flyers instead of micro swimmers</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (37:18):</strong></p> <p><laugh>. That is a great way to describe them. Hey, so there's a healthcare, uh, spin on this as well, right? I mean aren't the vectors for carrying disease, especially Covid, for example, as carried like an aerosol.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (37:35):</strong></p> <p>Yep, absolutely.</p> <p><strong>New Speaker (37:36):</strong></p> <p>And so, so you have, if you can deliver something harmful using this mechanism, you can actually deliver something helpful.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (37:47):</strong></p> <p>That's right. That's right. So I think NASA would probably balk at the idea of us sending virus-laden aerosols to the space station. They might have one or two issues with that.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (37:58):</strong></p> <p><laughs> I understand.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (37:58):</strong></p> <p>But it's a very good point. And that is an additional application we're interested in because if we find that thermophoresis indeed is an efficient way to move aerosols around, this could suggest another method to collect virus laden aerosols from say, the HVAC systems of hospitals, right? Which is obviously a big problem there. And we're still figuring out exactly which aerosol materials we're going to send. So we launch sometime likely in the second half of 2025. And most of the materials we're interested in are things like, I mentioned sand earlier, sulfate aerosols. These are aerosols that come from volcanic eruptions. They're also geoengineering proposals to intentionally inject aerosol to cool the planet.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (38:53):</strong></p> <p>Obviously controversial. Lots of research going on into them. So we're looking at that: sodium chloride, believe it or not, table salt. Comes from sea spray. And that can actually drift to different parts of the globe. And that can affect the climate in ways that we don't fully understand. But we're also looking at something that could act as a stand-in for an aerosol that is produced by say, somebody coughing or somebody sneezing, and we'll see what we see. But you could easily envision, and this has somewhat been explored before, but you could envision, say, having a stream of air where you have the stream going in one direction, and then a temperature gradient perpendicular to the stream of air so that the particles, the aerosols, if they migrate thermophoretically, they would bend toward the cold side. And just be collected on the cold plate. So the viability of that, you know, that is something you could in principle test on the ground, you could test</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (39:49):</strong></p> <p>On the ground and you can test that at scale.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (39:51)</strong></p> <p>Yeah, that's right. So what's gonna happen is on the space station, there's actually a microscope on the space station already. And so what we're doing is designing and building a, an apparatus to apply the temperature difference to a series of different cuvettes--tiny transparent containers--that each of which contains a different particle sample. And so the ISS crew is going to then look at those different samples, apply the hot and the cold as needed. We're gonna be able to watch in real-time as the astronauts perform the experiments and measure the migration speeds of these different aerosol particles as a function of say, what type of particle they are, you know, the temperature difference, things like that.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (40:39):</strong></p> <p>As we start to wrap up here. So what drives you to, towards this sort of innovative research?</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (40:46):</strong></p> <p>I could sum it up in one word, which is curiosity.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (40:51):</strong></p> <p>Hmm. Interesting.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (40:52):</strong></p> <p>I have in this job as a, one of my favorite parts of this job is that I have the privilege to pursue ideas that pique my interest without much more of an imperative than that. Actually, Professor Buie, my mentor, your protege, he once described it as being an idea entrepreneur. And, you know, it sounds like him, right? He's, he, he's, he's got a way with words, with he is a way of coining those kinds of phrases. But I think it captures a lot of what I love about this job, along with, of course, working with and teaching and mentoring students. That's definitely another favorite portion. But like I said, you know, both coffee bots and this ISS project both grew out of just conversations I was having. That piqued my curiosity. And because I have this role, I was able to follow up on that curiosity.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (41:46):</strong></p> <p>And in the case of the ISS project, write a grant proposal about it that just so happened to be funded. And so I really think curiosity-driven research is a buzzword you hear sometimes. And I think it's certainly good for doing research that is just kind of on the pure science side that is just, you know, to kind of satisfy our, our curiosity. But I think it's also a good way to unexpectedly discover new roots for applied research, like in the example of coffee. So I'm a big fan of curiosity. I think I've been able to work on a really eclectic mix of different problems as a faculty member from making more insulating wetsuits to the projects that we've been talking about today to other projects and collaborations I have that are more on the medical side where we're trying to, say, penetrate a bacterial biofilm with active particles.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (42:44)</strong></p> <p>A lot of these really, the impetus for me, really stems from my curiosity. That's what got me into this self-propelled particles field in the first place. Just that I wasn't really satisfied with the answer that I got in that master's thesis defense. And, you know, I was able to just follow up on it and make it my thesis. So if there's one driving force, it, it would definitely be that just, I'm just a curious person by nature, and I have a hard time shaking off questions that really get under my skin and that I really wanna know more about.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (43:13):</strong></p> <p>No, that's cool. Well, Jeff, there's plenty of room at the bottom.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (43:17)</strong></p> <p><laugh> <laugh>. That's exactly right. That's exactly right. So I often invoke that speech <laugh> that, uh, there's plenty,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (43:25):</strong></p> <p>Plenty of room at the bottom.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (43:26):</strong></p> <p>There is, uh, the, the speech by Richard Feinman in 1959</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (43:30):</strong></p> <p>Fineman. That's exactly right.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (43:31)</strong></p> <p>And in that speech, he talks about swallowing the surgeon. He said, there's a friend of his that said it, it, it would be very interesting in medicine if you could swallow the surgeon that it goes inside the body and, you know, goes to an organ and looks around. And actually later in that speech, he challenged the community to build a tiny motor that fits inside a cube, 1/64th of an inch on its side. And a lot of what we're doing is, is exactly that, is we're really trying. In fact, we could probably fit much smaller than 1/64th of an inch. Some of the particles we work on are too small to even be seen on an optical microscope. So, well, yeah. There's plenty more to do. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (44:09):</strong></p> <p>That is really cool. Yeah. Um, that's cool for drug delivery. That's cool. For all types of treatments for disease. So really, really cool stuff.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (44:21):</strong></p> <p>And I should mention, you know, this has really grown in the last 20 years to a, a robust field in its own right. The first ever startup company that I'm aware of was founded recently by a guy in Spain named Samuel Sanchez, who's kind of one of the superstars of the field. They're looking to develop a better treatment for bladder cancer. Part of it has to do with making particles that use enzymes, nature's catalysts, as the engines, basically. And we have some other projects in the lab that use those very same enzymes partly for, for biofilm eradication or other sorts of applications like that. So it is growing, and I don't know if we're gonna see it, we're not gonna see it in clinics in a year or in five years, or probably not even in 10 years, but maybe in 15 years, right? There are some fundamental challenges that we still have to address. And on the medical side, we haven't really talked about that today, but on the medical side, we're really trying to address, uh, some of those, particularly making them from safe materials.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (45:21):</strong></p> <p>That is cool. As a wrap up here, one of the things that I really, really like about you is that your passion is not just in engineering. It's not just in the sciences. You know, I was happy to see, uh, one day when we had our jazz musician quartet at the house playing music for one of our events to say, wait a minute, that guy looks familiar.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (45:49):</strong></p> <p><laugh> Yep. Yep. That's me.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (45:49):</strong></p> <p>And so you, and so you moonlight as a freelance jazz musician. Specializing in the double bass.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (45:55):</strong></p> <p>That is correct.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (45:56)</strong></p> <p>So talk a little bit about that, how long you've been playing the double bass and what excites you about jazz.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (46:02):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. Well, I've been playing the bass since I was in sixth grade. So, quite a while, quite a while. But I've been entranced by the double base for as long as I can remember since I was about four, I think I was about four when I started begging my parents to get me an upright bass. And my mom still has some embarrassing photos of me as like a 4-year-old wearing a tuxedo for Halloween. I was a conductor trying to conduct the orchestra, and I can't really say what drew me to the bass. I still can't really fully explain it. And maybe that's part of a, a testament to how powerful it is. I just love the way it sounds. I love the depth, I love the character of a well-struck double bass string, a well-plucked double bass string, you could say. And so I did piano lessons as a kid, like many kids do. Didn't really enjoy them that much, but it really, it, it was useful though because I learned how to read music that way. And, you know, also having a pretty robust interest in math. I, I saw pretty quickly the parallels between music theory and mathematics.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (47:14):</strong></p> <p>Okay. So that was gonna be one of my next questions.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (47:16):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. Yeah. So <laugh>, but then in the sixth grade, I had the chance to take a music appreciation elective, and there was one day where they just turned us loose to try out different instruments and I made a beeline for the double bass and just haven't really set it down since. In college, in undergrad, I was briefly for about two years, a double major in jazz performance and mechanical engineering. I ended up just sticking with the engineering major. But during that time, I had the chance to study with a jazz bass instructor who really was a fantastic mentor to me, not just as a musician, but just as a, as a young adult. So I think I got what I needed because I realized that you don't need a music degree to play music. But the same is not exactly true for doing engineering work professionally.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (48:08):</strong></p> <p>So college was when I really started to freelance on the bass. And it ever since has been a creative outlet and it's been something I've been able to continue to do, which I'm really, really happy about. Um, so, so you asked about jazz. You know, we, we had jazz records playing in the house growing up. I was in, you know, classical orchestra in high school. And I still enjoy classical music as well. But I think part of what drew me to jazz was it can be very mathematical, it can be very complex in terms of the harmonies. So I think the mathematical side of me gets really, you know, intellectually stimulated by that. There are a lot of parallels actually between, and that's, this is the great thing about jazz is that it's such a mix of different rhythms, different traditions.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (48:59):</strong></p> <p>And so there's the, the left brain and the right brain side, right? I think both of those things appeal to me. Of course, the improvisation aspect. Improvisation is a very important part of jazz. So being able to play the same tune night after night after night, but differently each time is another thing that I really enjoy about jazz. So it's really, I think it marries the cerebral with the visceral, you know, because there's a lot of intellectual stuff to appreciate about it, but there's also a lot of rhythm and a lot of groove. And just having that complicated soup-- jazz is such a soup. It's a rich soup together. And I think it, that's</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (49:42):</strong></p> <p>Exactly right. That's why I love it. So, last question. So what would you say is the value of the arts in arts education and producing advancements in STEM? Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (49:57):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. It's really, I think, undervalued. I think I, I kind of like the acronym STEAM you know? science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics. There's a colleague down the hall from me who has a quote on their door. It's from, uh, Theo Jansen, the Dutch artist. You may be familiar with the Strandbeest. Those mechanisms that look like these big creatures that walk. And he has a quote. It's something like, the walls between art and engineering only exist in our minds, right?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (50:27):</strong></p> <p>I agree with that.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (50:28):</strong></p> <p>That engineering, I mean, you know this as an engineer yourself, that engineering at its best is a very creative pursuit. Even the pure sciences and mathematics can be creative pursuits as well. And so I would say, I mean, I can speak from my own experience. My main creative artistic outlet has been jazz bass. I think I'm absolutely a more effective and creative engineer for being a musician. It's certainly made me better at giving lectures because that's a performance, right? And so a lot of the same skills from playing jazz bass, like thinking on your feet and reading the crowd and reading their response. That comes in handy when you're giving a lecture too. I'm also a better musician for being a scientist and an, and an engineer because it made me appreciate the complex theory. And when I listen to a Charlie Parker solo, I can appreciate the genius that is on display there.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (51:25):</strong></p> <p>Right? In a very deep and richly satisfying way that I would not necessarily have if I didn't study jazz theory. Right.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (51:33):</strong></p> <p>Understood.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (51:53):</strong></p> <p>So for me, I guess maybe the value is in realizing how similar they are, how they're almost two sides of the same coin, you know, and they're just two different ways that I can be myself and be creative and produce things, right? So I think I would exhort everybody listening to this, particularly those who have a bent towards either the arts or towards science to try to explore the other thing too, right? And to start to see kind of the commonalities between them.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (52:06):</strong></p> <p>Outstanding. Outstanding. Well, we're gonna have to leave it there. Jeff Moran, thank you for working towards a cleaner, healthier future for us and for the planet.</p> <p><strong>Jeffrey Moran (52:20):</strong></p> <p>Thank you again for the invitation. And uh, it's really a pleasure to be here. And it's a pleasure to be working at Mason and I love it here. So hope to keep doing, hope to keep doing this for a, a very long time. Keep doing good stuff.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (52:34):</strong></p> <p>Alright. I am AV President Gregory Washington. Thanks for listening. And tune in next time for more conversations that show why we are All Together, Different.</p> <p><strong>Outro (52:52):</strong></p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="0875b4fe-f643-4527-88f5-5902cd071bb5" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><h4>In the media and Related Stories</h4> <p>How rusty coffee is cleaning water | <a href="https://youtu.be/DKIaRh_vmnM?si=nf1P2B3zAScHbQhS" title="How rusty coffee is cleaned - Video">WUSA9 video</a> | <a href="https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/virginia/rusty-coffee-cleaning-water-george-mason-university/65-0de9e05b-b8ed-4b5c-863d-de7323f75a09">Story</a></p> <p>Mason engineers develop “rusty” coffee grounds to remove pollutants from water | <a href="/news/2024-01/mason-engineers-develop-rusty-coffee-grounds-remove-pollutants-water" title="Mason engineers develop “rusty” coffee grounds to remove pollutants from water">Read more</a></p> <p>Space experiment could teach us how aerosols move in the atmosphere | <a href="/news/2024-08/space-experiment-could-teach-us-how-aerosols-move-atmosphere" title="Space experiment could teach us how aerosols move in the atmosphere ">Read more</a></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:call_to_action" data-inline-block-uuid="5cdc7a3d-7b85-40f7-98f9-4baa0e3c3721"> <div class="cta"> <a class="cta__link" href="/podcast"> <h4 class="cta__title">Learn more about the Access to Excellence Podcast <i class="fas fa-arrow-circle-right"></i> </h4> <span class="cta__icon"></span> </a> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="408febb4-fca6-4337-ad25-69e1ab894be5" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="4c6b54a2-a0df-4aca-a46d-75a754f860e6" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Listen to more episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-9db7dc6141f4ef7b7d669e514058805db356209f3d67e97f45d3b6414c936b42"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - 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Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea /news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea <span>Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/1566" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Sarah Holland</span></span> <span>Fri, 08/02/2024 - 16:02</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="07f52895-cafd-4d4a-9d20-cc86dd8c9c5e" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-08/mason%20korea%20ATE%2016x9%20LIM05676.jpg?itok=TH6c7VtY" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2024-08/mason%20korea%20ATE%2016x9%20LIM05676.jpg?itok=zuHUzGdn 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-08/mason%20korea%20ATE%2016x9%20LIM05676.jpg?itok=TH6c7VtY 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2024-08/mason%20korea%20ATE%2016x9%20LIM05676.jpg?itok=5bkSijl9 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="Two men, one in blue blazer, the other in short-sleeve blue shirt. Both wearing glasses." /></div> <div class="headline-text"> <div class="feature-image-headline"> <div class="field field--name-field-feature-image-headline field--type-string field--label-hidden field__item">Marking a Decade of Success at Mason Korea</div> </div> </div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p>Ten years ago, Mason Korea opened its doors at the Incheon Global Campus in Songdo, South Korea. Now, the campus offers degrees in six undergraduate and two graduate disciplines to students from around the world. To recognize this anniversary, President Gregory Washington is joined by former campus dean Robert Matz and associate professor Gyu Tag Lee to discuss the growth of Mason Korea, the influence of Korean pop on global culture, and the future of Mason at the Incheon Global Campus. </p> <p> </p> <p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?i=stmy6-1689c46-pb&from=pb6admin&share=1&download=1&rtl=0&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=auto&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="364d7537-d727-4eb6-a33e-7d719be304ca" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="3e911822-a9ec-4b83-91c8-8222edf2761a" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p><strong>Intro (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:04</a>):</strong></p> <p>Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology, and those who simply have a good story: all make up the fabric that is AV. We're taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates; and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:26</a>):</strong></p> <p>10 years ago, Mason Korea opened its doors at the Incheon Global Campus in Songdo, South Korea. Now the campus offers degrees in six undergraduate and two graduate disciplines to students literally from around the world. To recognize this anniversary, I'm joined by campus Dean Robert Matz and associate professor Gyu Tag Lee. Dean Matz has served as the campus dean of Mason Korea since 2019. Under his leadership Mason Korea enrollment grew by an average annual rate of 12%. Additionally, he worked with faculty to establish an enhanced governance structure and he established an Industry-University collaboration foundation--the South Korean corollary to a US Office of Sponsored Programs. Associate professor of global affairs Gyu Tag Lee, who received his doctorate in cultural studies from George Mason in 2013, has been teaching at Mason Korea since 2014. He is one of the most foremost experts in the world on Korean pop music, colloquially known as K-pop, and is a committee member of the Korean Music Awards. Robert, Gyu Tag, welcome to the show.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:54</a>):</strong></p> <p>Thank you. Glad to be here.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:57</a>):</strong></p> <p>Thank you.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:58</a>):</strong></p> <p>So let's talk a little bit about Mason Korea and where it is. I know I gave a brief description early on, but describe the setup of the Mason Korea campus and its connection to the Incheon Global Campus.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:11</a>):</strong></p> <p>Sure. So Songdo where the Incheon Global Campus is located is about 25 miles from Seoul and very close to the Incheon airport, just a 20, 30 minute drive. So it's an excellent location and we are on one of these global campus hubs, which we share with three other branch campuses of US and European universities. So there are four of us together here. At Mason Korea, we offer a full range of general ed courses, the Mason Core, six majors, two graduate programs, and we have about a thousand students. For our undergraduates, it is a three-one program, meaning they spend three years on this campus and one year on the Fairfax campus in the US or on one of our other US campuses. In terms of how we fit with Songdo, Songdo is one of the three districts that are the Incheon Free Economic Zone and these are zones that seek to promote international business. We support international businesses and the general internationalization of the Songdo area.</p> <p>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">03:30</a>):</p> <p>Outstanding. So what parts of the Mason Korea experience can students expect or what part of the George Mason experience can students expect when they attend Mason Korea?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">03:44</a>):</strong></p> <p>So one of the things we're most proud of is that they can expect just about every aspect of the Mason experience. When people from George Mason come up to Mason Korea, one of the things they often comment on is how much it feels like they're on one of our US campuses. It's not only that courses are the same, curricula are the same, but we really try to infuse Mason Korea with the same cultural values, the same spirit that we find at Mason. So very much will seem familiar. There are some differences. We are smaller, so we do not have the range of majors or courses that the home campus has. And that's one of the nice things about students being able to spend a year at the home campus and take courses that we can't offer. But the other part of that small size is there's a very tight communal feel here. I, I sometimes say we're sort of also like a small liberal arts college in Ohio as well as a big research university. And of course the other difference is you're in Korea. And so for our US students, that means being in a very different country and for our Korean students, that means closer to home, which they also enjoy.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">05:04</a>):</strong></p> <p>Uh, and my last visit there in particular, every time I come I'm just blown away with how the campus feels like George Mason in Fairfax, you know, we even got the statue of good old George standing outside of the building there as well. But the feel of the campus is a Mason feel, which I find to be pretty phenomenal, quite honestly, how that is replicated thousands of miles away.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">05:36</a>):</strong></p> <p>It was done really intentionally by the people who've set it up. One of the features of how the campus is run here is that the dean and the associate deans all have counterparts back in Fairfax. All of our staff have counterparts back in Fairfax. They communicate with them regularly. We have a program to send staff from Mason Korea to the US campuses and we also regularly have faculty from the US campus come and teach at Mason Korea. And these features are unique to Mason Korea. The other international campuses don't necessarily do all these things and I think that's part of what helps us maintain a close identity with the home campus, which is very important to us.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:27</a>):</strong></p> <p>Well you know, you spoke of these other universities and so what is the impact on our professors and their research and having faculty from different disciplines, different institutions and quite frankly different countries all inhabit the same set of facilities?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:47</a>):</strong></p> <p>I think we have cross-disciplinary conversations both within the building and among faculty from other universities, from the other branch campus universities here, as well as cross-cultural conversations. But I think it'd be great to turn that over to Gyu Tag and ask him how he's found any kinds of relationships with other faculty from some of the other campuses.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:13</a>):</strong></p> <p>Interestingly, in one of the Korean conference that I presented--it was last year I think--there was a also professor who taught at our neighbor. And I thought it was very interesting that though we didn't have a kind of very active relationship with the faculty in other campus here at IGC, but still we could see how we felt something kind of the very similar thing, kind of the very interesting experience here where faculty from different department, different discipline and I mean even different college working together at the very same building gave us a kind of opportunity to know each other. I mean not only between different university but even among ourselves in Mason Korea that we may not get on very opportunity easily in other campuses to know the professor or faculty whose major is very different from us, which gave us kind of the interesting opportunity to know what they are doing and what kind of the uh, research interest or academic field that they are in and how can we know each other to understand each other better. And also to know each other better in very different field, which has widened my information and knowledge what is going on in other fields of academia, which is kind of very inspiration also for me to know something different from my uh, own uh, academic background.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:50</a>):</strong></p> <p>I'll just mention that one of the things we started to do over the last couple years is have an annual research showcase with all four universities and I think that's for students and faculty presenting their work. And I think that's been one other occasion where faculty across the universities here have been able to get to know one another.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">09:10</a>):</strong></p> <p>So Gyu Tag, as a George Mason alum, you've actually experienced learning and teaching on both the Fairfax campus and the Mason Korea campus. So first of all, I want you to talk a little bit about the similarities and then I want you to highlight your techniques for balancing multiple different, different and perhaps sometimes opposing cultural practices in the two countries.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">09:37</a>):</strong></p> <p>One of the similarity that I can find here in Mason Korea and the Mason Fairfax that I studied like 10 or more years ago, the biggest similarity that I found is the way how we feel the actual cultural diversity both here in Mason Korea as well as, I mean the thing that I felt in Fairfax, the cultural diversity or other kinds of diversity that I found Fairfax, which made me very surprising because I could not see this kinds of diversity when I studied here in South Korea, but when I came back to Korea and have worked here, I could see how Mason could bring this kinds of culture diversity or other kinds of diversity to here Mason Korea in Songdo, which made a big difference between let's say Korean colleges going Korean universities and American universities. So I think this is the very big opportunity for Mason Korea to introduce or to let Korean students or even Korean society know, to know how American university, of course there, there are many similarities between Korean, South Korean and American university, but how American university can show some kind of different world to Korean society as well as the Korean students.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:56</a>):</strong></p> <p>I have been teaching a course called K-Pop: Korean Popular Culture since 2014, even till the very last semester, which is spring 2024. And there are always student from Fairfax and student from Korea almost half and half, or sometimes more American student than Korean student in that K-pop class. Though I have been teaching some other classes also there are like American student and Korean student and I could see that although they are studying at the very same classroom together, but I could see that there, there is a kind of the barrier between them because they do not know each other, not very well. So I try to make them more mixed. For example, I give, when I give a group work, I try to make a intentionally like half American student with the half Korean student in just one group. Not only just the group discussion in the classroom but also the group work or other kind of group presentation.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:57</a>):</strong></p> <p>And with this kinds of opportunity they came to have a chance to know each other and they come to understand each other how they are different as well as how they are very similar as the very same age, which is their early, mostly early their twenties. Also I gave kind of the topic for them to discuss or to compare what is the difference or what is the similarity between US and South Korea. For example, when there was a COVID-19 and there is a very similar thing happened both in United States and South Korea, but government as well as the student had a very different experience about this COVID-19 in their own countries. So when they talked about this COVID-19 experience that they had in the United States and South Korea, they could get a chance to know what is the difference between US and South Korea, the cultural differences or other kinds of like political, economic, cultural context differences as well as the similarity between US and South Korea, which made them to feel more together as a Mason students.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:03</a>):</strong></p> <p>Amazing. So it's interesting: DC, Maryland, and Virginia, if you look at that metropolitan area where all three of those entities kind of meet--we, we affectionately call it the DMV--that area is home to the third largest population of Koreans in the US and about half of those residents actually reside right here in Fairfax County. So you know, and this, this question's for both of you. Talk a little bit about the benefit of having a campus in Korea connected to such a large Korea population in and around George Mason proper here in Fairfax.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:50</a>):</strong></p> <p>I think one of the great benefits is that, as I mentioned, our undergraduates spend a year, usually their senior year on the Fairfax campus and on the one hand there's probably no better place or certainly one of the best places to experience America is in the capital city of America. So they're getting a quintessential American experience. At the same time, when I talk to them, I always reassure them, don't worry, you're gonna have really easy access to Korean culture, to Korean foods. You can go to the local H Mart, plenty of Korean barbecue, Korean chicken, Korean people. So you'll have a little bit of the feeling and taste of home as well. And in fact, as I prepare to, to leave for the US from this position, I also feel reassured that there will still be those aspects of Korean culture. And then I think it's also great for our US students, they have Korean friends, they obviously, they know global Korean culture, but they go to Koreatowns in Annandale or Centerville. They also are surrounded by Korean culture and are interested in it. And then they say, Hey, I want more. I'll spend a semester studying in Korea.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:11</a>):</strong></p> <p>That's really cool.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:12</a>):</strong></p> <p>I mean yes, uh, that's true. So just like Robert mentioned since there is a big Korean community in Fairfax or DC or Maryland, uh, Washington DC Metropolitan area, many Fairfax student coming to Mason Korea to study. They already know much about Korean culture, including like Korean pop culture, which is very getting popular these days as well as Korean food. Or some of them already know some Korean words, languages or some very like basic words including or aannyeong-haseyo or kamsahamnida. I I I, I was very surprised when I firstly met those like Fairfax student and to see they already know much about Korean culture, but still they want to know more about it when they come to Mason Korea because they can get more direct experience visiting some interesting places or even going to K-Pop concert or going to the other experiential learning with professors or other student in our Mason Korea as one of the part of our program, which also give them more opportunity to know even better about Korean culture that they already knew some of it.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:21</a>):</strong></p> <p>And I would just add some of them come with much more Korean than that. We had a student come from the Northern Virginia area who pretty much taught herself, while she was in high school, Korean over by YouTube. And in her first semester I think won our international business districts contest for the best foreign speaker of Korean.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:43</a>):</strong></p> <p>Outstanding.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:45</a>):</strong></p> <p>Yeah, her accent is, for those of us who struggle, is is remarkable. Really good.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:50</a>):</strong></p> <p>So the US State Department classifies Korean as a category four language, which means it's essentially the highest level. They estimate that it will take a native English speaker 88 weeks or 2200 classroom hours to reach professional working proficiency. This kind of dovetails directly into the conversation, uh, Dean Matz, you just brought forward and given the fact that I still believe that it, I know it used to be the case, but I still believe that George Mason offers the only Korean language program in Virginia, if I'm not mistaken. How do you both compare Mason Korea and George Mason's Korean language and culture? How do you compare those two in helping students gain professional working proficiency?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:50</a>):</strong></p> <p>When George Mason language students come up, they have a range of Korean courses they can take here at Mason Korea, but they also get to practice their Korean in the community and that certainly helps them. Although because we're an international business district, they actually have to work at it. There's a lot of English here. They gotta be kind of bold and say, no, I wanna talk to you in Korean because otherwise people will speak with them in English. The other way they get that proficiency outside the class is we have an internship program for students to work in jobs where they have to use Korean. So for example, some of these are office positions within Mason Korea where translation is required and so they will do some of the translation for us.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:41</a>):</strong></p> <p>So Robert, you've been learning Korean as well, if, if our conversations yield anything, so what is it like to be back in the classroom as a student and as a professor?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:53</a>):</strong></p> <p>I really loved it. I became a professor because I loved being a student and that love never really goes away. We talk about the commitment to lifelong learning at Mason and I really believe in it. One of the things when I am giving advice to students at a convocation speech or something, I I tell them to try and learn everything. Don't think of some things as requirements. You just never know where you'll use something you learned. And also that just learning how to learn is a great thing. So I surprise myself when I'm in the Korean classroom. I feel like I'm a 21-year-old student again. Uh, although I don't think I have the plastic brain of a 21-year-old. But, uh, but I very much enjoy it.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:40</a>):</strong></p> <p>Okay, so spill the beans: what, what are we talking about grade wise? How did you do?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:47</a>):</strong></p> <p>I got a C plus.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:48</a>):</strong></p> <p>Really?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:49</a>):</strong></p> <p>Really?</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:51</a>):</strong></p> <p>Wow.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:52</a>):</strong></p> <p>Yeah. Um,</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:54</a>):</strong></p> <p>It must have been, it must have been a pretty hard course.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:58</a>):</strong></p> <p>Uh, I understand that Korean is a category four language</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:01</a>):</strong></p> <p><laugh></p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:03</a>):</strong></p> <p>And it was, and I am gonna retake it when I come back to the US I will retake that course, but you know, I enjoy it.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:12</a>):</strong></p> <p>Do you feel that you are proficient enough to get around the community and you know, and get yourself out of an emergency situation if you had to utilize basic services and the like?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:26</a>):</strong></p> <p>I definitely feel more competent in Korean than even a couple of years ago. So things are a little easier. I understand signs a little better. I can usually explain to people what I want in a very basic Korean, uh, so it helps. But really I'm learning Korean because I love the culture, I love language. So that's really what pulls me to it.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:54</a>):</strong></p> <p>So this</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:54</a>):</strong></p> <p>If, if my life depended on it, I might be in trouble.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:59</a>):</strong></p> <p><laugh>, I hear you. If your life depended on it, you'd be surprised how much you knew. So according to the Modern Language Association latest census: enrollment in courses other than English dropped by 16.6% overall between 2016 and 2020. One of the very few exceptions to this is Korean, where enrollments grew by 38.3% from 2016 to 2021. And that now puts Korea in the top 10 relative to language enrollment. Some of this growth is attributed to the growth and a popularity of Korean pop music or K-pop among American students. So Gyu Tag, as a K-pop expert, what do you see as the appeal of K-pop music among American students?</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:00</a>):</strong></p> <p>As I've been teaching K-pop related courses for several years and there have been many like US students taking that course, we had um, many opportunity to discuss what makes them to fall in love with K-pop because most of them decided to come to Mason Korea to study because they were already K-pop fans. So, uh, I could see based on their own opinion as well as like my own analysis, I could see that there are two strengths for K-pop to be popularized among US student as well as like global audience. One is the thing which can be considered as the hybrid, uh, character of K-pop, which means that K-pop is very kind of global pop music, but still it is very local, which means that K-pop has some kind of like general or universal characters that could appeal to wider global audience, but still it is different from let's say American pop music or other kinds of global pop music because still it's very Korean or still it is very local.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:09</a>):</strong></p> <p>So when we listen to K-pop music, I believe all of you have listened at least one K-pop song, maybe Gangnam Style or others. But you could see that it is not very Korean traditional or ethnic music that you might expect before listening to K-pop actually it. Which means that it is actually a part of global pop music, which is not a very ethnic traditional one. But it does not mean that it is only the very, let's say copycat or imitation of American pop music because it has strong Korean characters including Korean lyrics or some kind of very melody lines, very Korean type or the way how it is represented by their musician. Usually call this K-pop idols with their like choreography with the way how they perform on the stage or with the way how they show their own style in visual or audio image, which makes it a bit different from American pop music or other kinds of global pop music.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">24:09</a>):</strong></p> <p>So it is very similar quite but not exactly the same with the American pop music, which could appeal to US audience as well as global audience. And the other thing that I can find is that K-pop is something like very fan made participatory culture or music, which means that it was not made by industry only or it was not made by government plan, but made by fans active choice that some of them found K-pop on YouTube or other kinds of social media as a way of like watching music video or other kinds of parody video. And they found it very interesting. Then it became very viral with all those audiences who accidentally found K-pop very interesting. So it think kind of the word of mouth became kind of very stronger mostly by fans power to become a global phenomenon that also could attract US student coming to our campus to study to and to know more about K-pop but also the other Korean culture, which means that K-pop is now becoming a kind of gateway for them to introduce other Korean culture including language history, food, et cetera.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:29</a>):</strong></p> <p>How, how would you classify the music? Like if you were to take the US equivalent in say K-pop is like blank music in America, how would you define it?</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:44</a>):</strong></p> <p>I think that K-pop is very similar in some respect kind of--there's a very big similarity between K-pop and I should say Latin pop. I mean it is very local kind of thing. When you listen to Latin pop sound, you could see wow it is very Latin with this lyrics with the musical style, but it does not mean that it cannot be a part of US music. So K-pop is very, that kind of music. It is very local Korean pop music, but still it is not very different from American things. So if I say in one word, blah blah music and I could see that K-pop is very hybridized, global pop music that could appeal to USA audience as well as global audience.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:27</a>):</strong></p> <p>You know, it's interesting but I see it, it has some elements of Korean culture as you highlighted, but if you really, you know, kind of close your eyes and don't think about the words, the rhythm, the beat, it's pop music.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:46</a>):</strong></p> <p>Yes, that's true. And one thing I would like to also focus is that K-pop has been very much influenced by African American music such as R&B, hip-hop or soul music. So one of our George Mason faculty, Crystal Anderson actually wrote a book about how K-pop has been very influenced by African American pop music. The book title that she wrote was Soul in Seoul. I think it was always very interesting because when we listen to K-pop, just like you mentioned Dr. Washington, it is very pop music but especially I can see big influence of African American music styles such as R&B, hip-hop or soul in K-pop, which is very interesting then, which makes us to see how K-pop has been a kind of the playground for Korean or other global audience to see local American and other kinds of global pop music all blended together.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">27:43</a>):</strong></p> <p>Yeah, I mean you, you're absolutely right. People don't realize that, you know, American pop music has strong connection as it roots to soul and and R&B music as well. So all of those pieces are kind of coming together in a very unique way in K-pop. While I was there, I was there not too long ago as you know, I think it was uh, about a week now I've been back. But while I was there, something unique was going on in pop music there in Korea that we don't experience here in the US and that is that a number of its male pop stars, you know, had to go off and serve in a military and had compulsory uh, military service. And I think K-pop star Jin completed his military service and was actually just completed it last week or about that time and was actually getting reintegrated back into the music. Is that a phenomenon that you're seeing?</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:49</a>):</strong></p> <p>It actually shows the characteristics of K-pop as being local, which means that all those: Yes, just like you mentioned, Dr. Washington, all Korean males who are in their 20 have to join the military service as a mandatory service. And even the very famous global pop star cannot be an exception. So I could see how they are very Korean, which means that it is very Korean culture, though the music or other kind of thing is very global or American influence or global influence pop music. So it cannot be fully separated from Korean cultural or social context.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">29:29</a>):</strong></p> <p>So Robert, you've often said that it's important to distinguish between globalization as Americanization and globalization in its ideal form, right? You see it as a two-way exchange and learning experience. How does Mason Korea embody the globalization ideal of a two-way street?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">29:56</a>):</strong></p> <p>Oh, I think it really does. And we've been talking about that. The students who come from the US, on the one hand, part of the reason they're coming is because of the outflow of Korean culture worldwide as part of the processes of globalization including to the US. And so when they come they are even more wanting to learn about Korean life, Korean culture, and they see aspects of the Korean state, how Koreans govern themselves. That is a learning experience for them. I think a really important learning experience. And that's part of being global Mason, that they are seeing this other world. At the same time, our Korean or other international students are learning about the US through some of the ways we teach, through the content of what we teach. So it really is a two-way street. And I remember the international business district, the International Free Economic Zone rather signed an MOU with all of the IGC universities, the ancient global campus universities and some other organizations within Incheon clearing the, IFEZ as a multilingual city, a dual language city, English and Korean.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">31:15</a>):</strong></p> <p>And within Incheon, the broader area that the, if a district is located, there was some concern about this, there was maybe a worry that people would have to learn English or that things would become Americanized. And one of the things I really believe is that as IFEZ and Songdo, Incheon opens itself up more to uh, the US to our US students coming over here, they're coming over really wanting to learn Korean. One of the great things, uh, I think one of the really, going back to what it's like being a student in Korean classes here, of course I'm not with the Korean students who don't need to take these classes. I'm with the US students who come over and it's just wonderful seeing their passion to learn Korean. And quite remarkable too because you know, Korean is spoken by, there are 51 million Korean citizens roughly. It's not a worldwide language in the way say Chinese is or Russian, but here are all these students from the US who are really sitting down trying to learn this quite difficult language. And I think that's part of the two way street.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:31</a>):</strong></p> <p>Understood, understood. So I think this connects directly to the IGC or the Incheon global campus, 'cause one of the goals of the IGC is to nurture the next generation of global leaders in education, economics, industry, culture and the arts. So how do you feel that Mason's presence in South Korea contributes to this goal?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:57</a>):</strong></p> <p>I think in a couple ways. First, there's knowledge exchange as we, uh, seek to leverage US expertise both here and from the US campuses in the service of Korean industry and government. But I think even more profoundly, we're doing it through our educational programs and we are really helping to create students who are global leaders, who are multilingual and multicultural. They have multicultural competencies and that's, as Korea again continues to want to be very international. They want students trained who can move across cultures. And that's one of the things we're doing here. And I, and I've talked about the passion of our US students to learn Korean, but I'm also just in awe every day of our Korean students who are doing a full college curriculum in their second language and doing it very well.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:59</a>):</strong></p> <p>So, you know, this is interesting you know, we always talk about how these cultures intermix and we talk about the popularity of K-pop on a global scale, but Gyu Tag, how is it actually perceived in Korea and how does that connect to this whole goal of Mason contributing to culture and the arts as, as expressed, uh, by the IGC</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:32</a>):</strong></p> <p>When firstly K-pop became internationally known or internationally popular? It was firstly in East Asia in late 1990 or early 2000 then outside East Asia since the early 2010, especially the big hit, after the big hit of Gangnam Style. Interestingly, not many Korean people actually believed that Korean culture, including K-pop and other kinds of Korean culture or Korea itself, could be recognized by, internationally, by people living outside East Asia. It was very first time for Korea to be actually a part of the big global, although it has been a part of big global, but still South Korean people themselves did not really feel that they are actually the part of big global world. But when K-pop has become popular in United States, in Latin America or in Europe or other parts of the world, Korean people can see how Korean culture can appeal to the wider global audience and how Korean as a country including their language, their history and other things can be the very thing that could draw attention from the international or other like other countries or outside Korea itself.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:56</a>):</strong></p> <p>And Mason Korea can be some kind of the very example how Korea could accept the culture or the system which is not their own, but try to learn something from the American university, American education system, or other kind of American culture and to blend or to hybridize with this local context to make something new or create something new, which has both characteristics, which is the very advantage of American thing, the advantage of Korean thing that could be very creative advantage that had not existed before. So K-pop and Mason Korea has a very similar character that they can create something based on two different culture but making something similar but still very different thing that has not been expected by anyone.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:52</a>):</strong></p> <p>You know, it's changing and it's expanding and scaling way beyond K-pop. Right? When I was in Korea and we were talking to Korean leadership there they not only talked about K-pop, but they also talked about K-food, they also talked about K-culture. Right? And so you're seeing this expansion and scaling of all things Korea into the global diaspora. What, what are your thoughts on that?</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">37:21</a>):</strong></p> <p>I think it was very interesting, just like I mentioned a bit earlier, of course it was K-pop first, but when global audience including like American audience came to know about K-pop and came to fall in love with K-pop, then many of them try to find some other Korean thing, which means that K-pop is only the very gateway for them to know more about Korean culture. Just like you mentioned Dr. Washington such as Korean food or other Korean history as other Korean culture. For example, Netflix series, Squid Game, which is kind of this series globally popular like a couple of years ago was a very interesting, uh, opportunity for global audience. Not only to know about Korean TV series, but also to know more about Korean culture that was described in the series such as Korean traditional games, even other kinds of everyday food that was not introduced to international audience.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:20</a>):</strong></p> <p>But now they come to know more about Korean culture by those things. And when even they come to have interest in Korea, then they also try to visit Korea to see what is actually going on. Not only about tasting the food, the actual ethnic Korean food in Korea, but also to know more about Korean culture, Korean history, Korean language. So I think it is very interesting thing that K-pop or other kinds of Korean pop culture is showing the very diversity of Korean culture or the other attractiveness of Korean culture that is also working well on international audience that makes also South Korea as a part of the global world that was not expected by Korean themselves.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">39:11</a>):</strong></p> <p>I would just add that when students come, they can enjoy the food that they've gotten a version of back in the US. They also experience things that you can't experience on Netflix or at your local Korean restaurant. For example, the way space is organized in Korea, because Korea is a small country relative to its population, there's much more public space. There aren't many private yards the way we have in the US but there are beautiful parks. And Korea is also a very safe country. Parks do not close at sunset as often parks in the US do, but rather they light up at night and there's this wonderful kind of festive feeling. It's a real experience that you can only get by being here or some parts, but you can only get by being here.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:05</a>):</strong></p> <p>Well Robert, as we start to wrap up here, what have you learned from your time as campus dean that you hope to bring back to the Fairfax campus?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:17</a>):</strong></p> <p>I would say, first of all, I've also brought a lot that I learned in Fairfax to Korea. I very much value the time that I, I worked in the US but I think what I learned here even more is the need to take risks and keep going. We're small and we have to grow and we, it's very complex. Sometimes you just gotta say, yeah, we're gonna try that and if it doesn't work exactly right the first time, we'll figure it out on the second pass because you gotta be nimble here. And so I, I think I've gotten even a little more confidence to just go ahead and do stuff.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:58</a>):</strong></p> <p>Outstanding. Outstanding. So Gyu Tag, what could the United States learn from South Korea regarding educational policy, culture and music?</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">41:13</a>):</strong></p> <p>I mean, first of all, if there is something that US could learn from Mason Korea and Korean education or Korean society, it could be something like--of course I know that America is a country of cultural diversity and just like I mentioned, is this the very strength that Mason Korea has provided to Korean student who did not have much experience about this kind of cultural diversity. But still, I could see when US campus, our Mason actually opened their campus here in Songdo, there are a lot of things that US university, even the university with diversity, Mason did not know much about Korea itself. Although there are many Koreans or Korean Americans who have studied Mason, including myself, who was an alum of the George Mason. So it could be a great opportunity for US or US education to know about what is the actual diversity that could be a part of US education system that they could learn here from local Korean context and how could they embrace all kinds of Korean students or other kinds of international students to make them as one altogether.</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:32</a>):</strong></p> <p>So I think it will be a great experience for US university to make these kinds of altogether university outside US setting and the music. I mean it is very interesting that these days when I see the newly debuted K-pop band, there are some musicians, members of the newly debuted K-pop band who is not Korean, who is not East Asian, but even like US people, including with the very diverse ethnic backgrounds including African American, Hispanic, East Asian, or Indian American, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So I think it is very interesting that although K-pop began as a Korean music with all Korean musicians, now it's actually getting really global with people with diverse backgrounds. So K-pop can be actual real global music with all kinds of diversity, still maintaining some kind of Korean cultural aspect, which could be the very future of K-pop thing, or which could be the thing that can show how the actual globalization can be achieved to other country, including United States.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:45</a>):</strong></p> <p>So Robert, as we start to pull all of this together, right now we have an increasing number of American universities who are partnering with Korean campuses, an increasing numbers of American students who are now studying abroad in Korea. So how is the US higher education system influencing South Korea's higher education system and what do you think is the path forward?</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">44:12</a>):</strong></p> <p>So that was one of the reasons that Mason Korea and the other IGC universities were established to provide a model, a different kind of model for education. So part of it is, you know, the way that we educate more dialogic and more participatory than Korean universities. But the other part is along the lines that Gyu Tag was talking about, that we really emphasize diversity. And that's something that Korea is very much grappling with right now, just as we are in a different way in the US trying to imagine what a multicultural Korea looks like and how to integrate immigrants into Korean society. And I think in the end, even more than pedagogy, when the Korean government like the Korean, the Incheon, education department looks to us, they're interested in what we say about pedagogy, but they're really, I think even more interested in how to create a multicultural society.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">45:22</a>):</strong></p> <p>So that I think is one of the values or characteristics that we are bringing to Korea that Koreans are looking at. Well, I was just gonna say also, when I think about what we have to learn from the Korean educational system, Korea is a great place to be a professor. The value of education in Korea is really high. I think they have the highest or one of the highest percentages of college educated population in the world. And to be a professor in Korea is to be really respected and learning is really respected. You know, I think that that's a model for us.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">46:02</a>):</strong></p> <p>Outstanding. Outstanding. So where do you hope to see Mason Korea in 10 years? I'm gonna ask it from you and I'm gonna ask it of Gyu Tag as we wrap up.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">46:15</a>):</strong></p> <p>I hope in 10 years that we will go from a thousand to 2000 students also, that we will increase the number of students from the US doing study abroad here. Of course, increasing that number of students means some new programs. And I think academic programs, I think we especially want to add some academic programs that relate very well to some of the target industries in Incheon, for example, in the biosciences and in information sciences. And also there for expanding our relationships with Incheon and Korean industry and organizations. And I hope that we continue to have this close relationship between Mason Korea campus and the US campus, including faculty continuing to come over from the US campus. And I hope when I retire, whoever is running the show here will have me aboard to teach them English courses.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">47:12</a>):</strong></p> <p><laugh>. Outstanding, outstanding. Gyu Tag?</p> <p><strong>Gyu Tag Lee (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">47:16</a>):</strong></p> <p>Yes. In 10 years, I mean actually Robert mentioned that Mason Korea has worked something like liberal arts colleges and I really like that characteristics. But still, I also hope that in 10 years there will be more graduate school here in Mason Korea because graduate school is always very necessary for more researchers, creative researchers. Of course we have doing our researches with our best effort, but graduate school could be the thing that we also can make our Mason Korea not only as a, I mean very academic college, but also as a research institute. And the other thing I would like to say about Mason Korea in 10 years is that Mason Korea could be the hub for study of East Asia and East Asian culture and society, even politics and other economy as well. Because South Korea is a great geographical location between China and Japan. But what also we can see East Asia and all part of Asia, the very broad uh, perspective, which could be our advantage to make Mason Korea as a part of like study hub of like East Asian studies. So I hope that in 10 years, Mason Korea could work as a kind of hub for East Asian studies as well.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:38</a>):</strong></p> <p>Well, this is outstanding, outstanding. I hope both outcomes come to fruition.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:44</a>):</strong></p> <p>Well, that's about all the time we have. I want to thank you both for joining me and thank you Robert for your five years of dedicated service to Mason Korea.</p> <p><strong>Robert Matz (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:56</a>):</strong></p> <p>Been a pleasure.</p> <p><strong>President Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:57</a>):</strong></p> <p>And cheers to both of you for 10 groundbreaking years of Mason Korea and we hope to see many more in the years to come. So I am Mason President Gregory Washington. Thank you all for listening and tune in next time for more conversations that show why we are all together different.</p> <p><strong>Outro (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/cQBjlWRDyUCA6E4gNTKlCSqajxzMYYttE8nnDj4dHoJ7rj1QUhkYEfHGphgKmgGQe6c7tQgzPzdAI2nxneHcOHMgRvQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">49:22</a>):</strong></p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="c2dcaf67-163d-48e6-a009-9343d52ab8ac" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="654cb92a-8c07-4197-a7f5-0adf7721a7de" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Access to Excellence Podcast Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-814681d962185165a03697851918976cb86a98052fc0379f2f7ec014e5a91a0c"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/856" hreflang="en">Mason Korea</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/19906" hreflang="en">Korean pop</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/17366" hreflang="en">Higher Education</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/391" hreflang="en">College of Humanities and Social Sciences</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/17356" hreflang="en">Strategic Direction</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Fri, 02 Aug 2024 20:02:41 +0000 Sarah Holland 113216 at Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow /news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow <span>Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/1566" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Sarah Holland</span></span> <span>Fri, 07/05/2024 - 10:36</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p><span class="intro-text">Jamil Jaffer, founder and executive director of the National Security Institute and assistant professor of law at AV's Antonin Scalia Law School, knows better than anyone the growing threats to national security during these rapidly changing times.</span></p> <div class="align-left"> <div class="field field--name-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/small_content_image/public/2024-07/jamil_jaffer_torres_1x1_240523906.jpg?itok=ofgkSt8B" width="350" height="350" alt="Jamil Jaffer Torres" loading="lazy" typeof="foaf:Image" /></div> </div> <p>In this fast-paced episode of Access to Excellence, Jaffer and George Mason President Gregory Washington discuss the U.S.'s position on the global stage, the power of the American Dream, and what we as citizens can do to start solving some of the country's stickiest problems.</p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="bf1b2e35-a294-4298-bc88-544ca97975b1" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p><iframe allowfullscreen="" allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="315" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?i=hyb23-6e8bcd-pbblog-playlist&share=1&download=1&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=auto&rtl=0&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7&size=315" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:315px;" title="Access to Excellence Podcast" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="45fe7027-d2f7-4b08-9a41-40e176cfba76" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p><sup><span class="intro-text">    [If] we want to think about how to fix our problems in the world, it begins here at home. It begins with voting. Voting every day. It is a crime that half the American people that could vote don't register. It's a crime that half those that are registered don't vote. Take responsibility. All our young people that are listening to this here at George Mason: every single one of you must register to vote. You wanna go protest? Go protest. But vote. Because at the end of the day, this isn't about Republican/Democrat. This is about America. This is about a vision. This is about a dream. This is about the ideals that we have in this country. And they are the right ones, and we are called to this mission. We have been since our founding and we still are today, no matter how hard it is." - Jamil Jaffer</span></sup></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="72d20e95-466e-42df-8a36-180f5e77c595" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><hr /><p> </p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="8d734de4-1a7a-4847-a69f-b5fa9ae9ea1a" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p><strong>Narrator:</strong> Trailblazers and research, innovators and technology, and those who simply have a good story. All make up the fabric that is AV. We're taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington: </strong>We certainly live in challenging times. as the U.S. navigates complex national security and cybersecurity issues abroad, as well as rising tensions on our own soil. We've got wars in the Middle East and Ukraine, rising tensions between the U.S. and Israel over Israel's handling of the war with Hamas, worries about an expansionist China in Taiwan and in the South China Sea, threats from Iran and North Korea. And a recent Microsoft analysis said that Russia, China, and Iran will likely ramp up new sophisticated interference efforts ahead of our 2024 elections. And believe me, that is scratching the surface.</p> <p>So let's dive deeper with AV's Jamil Jaffer, one of the most foremost experts on national security, foreign relations, cybersecurity, and counterintelligence in the country to bring this all into context. An assistance professor of law at George Mason's Antonin Scalia School of Law, Jaffer is director of the National Security Law and Policy Program and the Cyber Intelligence and National Security Programs. He is also the founder and executive director of the National Security Institute. Jamil, welcome to the show.</p> <p><strong>Jamil Jaffer:</strong> I’m thrilled to be here, President Washington.</p> <p>I've been looking forward to this one for quite some time. So I want to familiarize the audience with you and what you do. So for those of us who don't know what the National Security Institute does and why it exists, can you give us a little overview?</p> <p>Of course. It's an academic center at the Scalia Law School here at George Mason. We aim to teach young people, graduates of undergrad institutions, that are receiving a JM, a Juris Master's degree, a JD, a Juris Doctor degree, or an advanced degree in law, an LLM, in Cyber Intelligence and National Security.</p> <p>We aim to give them a well-rounded, deep education in these issues that spans the scope of foreign relations, cybersecurity, intelligence, national security, and a real deep understanding of the law and a deep analysis of the law.</p> <p>And in addition to being an academic center, we're also something of a think tank. We advocate, we discuss, we debate ideas. We have a broad group of experts from industry, from government, a lot of former government officials from across the political spectrum. But people that I think believe that America ought to lead in the world, lean forward, be the strongest ally to its friends, be the fiercest foe to its enemies, and be president active, right? The classic way that we've always thought about America from the bulk of our history of you, by the way, President's on the run in large part today.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Yeah, I hear you, man. I love what you're talking. So give us an idea of the size of your org.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> So, you know, when we talk about our advisory board, we've got about 60-70 advisory board members. These are senior, former government officials. These are folks that serve in Senate confirmed positions and the like.</p> <p>And then we've got about over 100 fellows that are, the folks who volunteer with us, who write, who advocate, who talk, who debate issues and ideas of our students. We've got about a dozen or so, maybe a little more than a dozen faculty members that teach students, adjuncts at the law school. And all these folks are around campus. They're in Arlington. They're out here in Fairfax. They're talking about the issues today. They're on television. They're in four committees of Congress.</p> <p>And a lot of them are going into government, into the administrations. We sent six of our advisory board members to the Trump administration. All women, interestingly enough, in Senate-confirmed positions. Eight to the Biden administration already. And more to come, I think, as the years go forward.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Outstanding. Outstanding. So you've given a whole bunch of metrics here. How do you measure success?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Look, I think at the end of the day, when you're thinking about success in an academic institution, as you well know, I mean, this is your world. It's about the students you educate, the people you put out into the world, the values and education you give them, the skill set they come with, and the work that they bring to bear on what they do in their jobs.</p> <p>Now, beyond that, we also look at the impact we have in the policy space as well, right? Are we moving the ball up on Capitol Hill? Are we convinced people that this vision of America is the right one? Because, as we talked about earlier, you know, back when I was growning up, right? My father went out to UC Irvine. I remember when UC Irvine, where you used to be, was a one building campus.</p> <p>We went out there. My dad was in the chemistry department at UCLA. They were trying to get them to come to UCI. We come out there and it's all farmland, right? But back of that era, there was no debate about America's role in the world. Everyone understood. America was the beacon of hope for the world, right? That is not how we view ourselves today. And I worry about that. I worry about a world devoid of American leadership.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Is that not how we view ourselves, or is that not how others view us?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> I think it's both, President Washington. I think it's how people view us because we don't view ourselves that way. We talk about leading from behind. We talk about other people leading in the front. The truth is, we are a world superpower. We've forgotten that here at home, and we don't believe that we can behave that way.</p> <p>Now, look, when we were a superpower, we acted like a superpower, there were things we did wrong. I don't suggest it was all unvarnished good. At the same time, if you wonder what a world devoid of American leadership looks like, all you need to do is look around the globe right now. You ran down a list. A war in Ukraine, a war in the heart of Europe, a war in the heart of the Middle East, a budding war in Asia, right?</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That’s right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Terrorists circling the globe, right? This is what a world devoid of American leadership looks like. Chaos.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>No, I agree with you 100%. So you've spoken at length here, but elsewhere, about there being this global pushback against the U.S. being so forward-facing and being in the front in the world. How does this perceive pushback against the U.S. being a front-facing power, being a lead power, being the global superpower, harm us in the cyber domain?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Well, I think in particular the cyber domain, where we don't lean forward, what we see is our adversaries taking advantage. So we've seen billions, maybe even trillions of dollars net walk out the backdoor of intellectual property, built in America, ideas, designed in universities like here in R1 institution like George Mason, that have gone out into practice being stolen by China and repurpose for economic purposes. in that country. Trillions of dollars in total, billions of dollars every single year over the last decade and even longer.</p> <p>My former boss, General Keith Alexander, the former director of the NSA, said it was the greatest transfer of wealth in modern human history and I think he was exactly right. But that's just one element of it. You see the Russians, you see the Chinese, you see the Iranians getting into our systems. They're stoking very real divides that are real in American society. But they're throwing gasoline on the fire. They're lighting it up.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> That’s exactly right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>And so they're using our own unwillingness to push back in the cyber domain and exploit it. And the worry that I have about that is, look, we know they're baiting our elections. We know they're stealing our IP. What happens when they make a tactical blunder and they make a mistake because they're trying to see how far they can push us because we're not pushing back? They push us too far and then they make a mistake, something bad happens. And now we have to respond. That's what I worry about. I worry about them making a mistake because we haven't set clear red lines and enforced them.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> No, that's a good point. You know, when you think about it, you talked about our IP and the commercialization efforts coming out of our universities, coming out of our companies. It's not necessarily happening just in the cyber domain. In fact, I contend to you the primary capital, and even in the country, is human capital. People are taking those efforts and taking them over to our adversaries and helping our adversaries be more successful against us. Right? It's not necessarily some person on a computer hacking into your system and stealing the plans for the next Boeing 787. It's literally an employee that works at the company that takes those plans.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right, right.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> And walks them over to an operative and gives the plans to an operative.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>That does happen quite often. And what's even worse about it is it's our own policies that drive part of this. We take the world's smartest, their best and brightest. We bring them to core research institutions like George Mason, we educate them. And then we tell them, “Hey, you know what? You can't stay here. You've got to go back to your home country and build your business there.”</p> <p>It is crazy. I mean, you know, Freeds of Korea said this the other day, I don't agree with Freed on a lot of things, but he said this the other day on TV, he said if you took a stupid system and made it crazy by adding a lottery on top of it, right? Our immigration system is so crazy, right?</p> <p>I mean, you would think we would do it. The Canadians have got it better. They picked the smartest, best, and brightest. They bring them to Canada, and then they incentivize them to stay and build their businesses and build their lives there.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> That's right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>It is crazy that we don't do that. I mean, you look at the Fortune 100, the vast majority of those businesses built by immigrants to this country. My father came first to Canada and then the United States. $300 in his wallet. Uncle you can stay with nothing else.</p> <p>Washington: Well, you know, I'll be honest with you. This is a relatively new occurrence, right? There's always been tensions between those individuals who have come into the country and those individuals who've already been here.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right. You want to pull the ladder up behind them.</p> <p>Washington: Oh, yeah. It's always been that tension.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right.</p> <p>Washington: That's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about policy. I'm talking about infrastructure has always been such that we find a way to allow many of those best and brightest into the country so that they can become successful.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And I'm afraid that this is our... one of the first times in our history where we're really, really losing that and we're losing it at a significant clip.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Yeah. I mean, imagine as you had a name for it, I don't know, call it the American dream. I mean, you know, it's...</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> [chuckling] Exactly. That, that to me tells you what we were doing.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right? We literally talked about it. We literally said, you come here, we will give you the incentives to stay and you can build your business here. I mean, look, let's be honest, even today, even as hard as it is in our country, as much of it is political challenges we have, nobody wants to build their business in Beijing or in Moscow or in Tehran, or even in Mexico. They want to build it here in the United States, even with all our challenges. And we tell these people, no, come here, get educated, take the best in our education system at universities like George Mason and then go build it at home. It is literally a crazy system. And it's only because of our own toxic politics that we can't figure out how to solve that. We know this is the problem. We know it's why we're losing the brain drain. It's because we're telling people you have to leave. It's crazy.</p> <p>Washington: That being said, you travel all across the world, right, and I've been and I know you've been as well. Most of the major continents - all the major continents, but most of the continents in general - there is still... there is no better place to live than where we are currently. They are nice places.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> There are places with great weather. There are places with great food. There are places with beautiful people. But there aren't better places and I will debate individuals on that context any day. And you start to add up all of the entities that go into just what makes quality of life great. And you see that there are places in this country that stack up with any place else in the world and exceed them by a significant margin.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Absolutely. And the American Dream is still alive here. We may have forgotten it. But the ability to move up is here. You know, my father, we had the chance when I worked for President Bush. At the end of the administration, the President invited people who worked in White House to bring their families to the White House. My parents came in and, you know, you walk into the Oval Office and they take a quick photo. The President says to my dad, he says “Now, Mom, Dad, where are you all from?”</p> <p>And my dad says “We're from Los Angeles.”</p> <p>He said “No, no, where's your family from?”</p> <p>My dad said “Well, you know, our family's from Tanzania.” Right?</p> <p>And President Bush says ”Well, I bet when you're growing up in Tanzania, dad, I bet you couldn't imagine that your son might one day work for the President of the United States.”</p> <p>My dad said, “No, Mr. President, that's what makes the country great.”</p> <p>And the president, that is what makes the country great, that in one generation, you can come from Tanzania to the United States, you can be an American. You can't go to Germany and become a German. You can't go to France and become a Frenchman. It's only you come to America and you become an American. You become part of the dream and become part of the people running the country.</p> <p>I mean, on national security, a Muslim during the war on terror in the Bush administration with a family from Tanzania, ethnically Indian. Nobody can imagine that. If you were told my parents that, they would have said, you're crazy.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> That's right. That's right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>And we still have that. We forget that we have that. That is still here. As much as we are mad at each other, as much as we argue and debate, we have got to remember this country is called to greatness. It is crazy that we are abandoning that because we can't get along with one another and figure out how to make things work in this country.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Man, there are so many directions I can go with this. Let's start here. So you've always said that at the end of the day, America leaning forward and being that forward beacon for the world is positive for our national security, our economic security, and for the average American. You want to expand on that?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah. Let's just take one example. There's a big debate today about whether we should support Ukraine in their fight against Russia. And people say, well, I don't understand why we can't get things fixed right at home. We can't fix the border. We can't do this. Why are we're spending all this money over in Ukraine?</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> You know where the bulk of that money is being spent, President Washington? It's being spent right here in America.</p> <p>Yes, we're sending weapons to Ukraine. But we're buying those weapons from American defense manufacturers, creating American jobs in the United States.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That’s right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>95% of that money is spent here in America.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>For some reason, we can't get past this conversation. People don't understand that basic fact.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> That's exactly right. And it's by and large not Americans who are on the front lines fighting against the Russians. It’s Ukrainians.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right. We are fighting an adversary, an adversary that hates us, that hates everything we stand for on the backs of others. By the way, as we fought ISIS with the Kurds, right? It wasn't us that we were there in small forces. In Ukraine, we're simply sending weapons and information and training folks. And the idea that we would say to ourselves, oh, no, we should really step back from that and we should focus here at home.</p> <p>I mean, how many times have we seen this story where America retreats home, retreats from the world thinking it's protected by its two oceans, and then we get hit at home with terrorism? Or we get dragged into a bigger, much worse war: World War I, World War II. We've seen it over and over again, and it's like we can't seem to remember the lessons of just a few years ago.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That's exactly right. It's like Lucy with the football.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>It's Charlie Brown.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> We repeat it over and over and over and over again. And I get it. I understand why, right? We do have challenges at home. We do need to focus on those challenges. And when the national rhetoric and the national discussion focuses on us being engaged elsewhere, I can see where a person would say, well, wait, a minute, but what about me? You know, you're fighting more for the Ukrainian than you're fighting for the American.</p> <p>Now, I don't believe that's true, but I understand why some would think it, why some would perceive it, because of how social media dominates our worldview and how, not just social media, but how the media in general nominates our worldview.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah, no, I was in Iowa and South Carolina and New Hampshire during this last election cycle, and, you know, talking to average folks. And you're exactly right, that is exactly how they feel. They think Washington, DC is fundamentally broken, that it doesn't have their interests at heart, that it's spending money abroad and not spending money here, and they don't understand why they feel worse off than they did. Name your time, whether it was the previous administration, the one before that, whatever it is. Whichever person you want to blame. You want to blame the big tech companies or social media or, you know, mean Donald Trump or mean Joe Biden, right? Everyone's got a beef.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That's right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>What people don't have, and what's crazy to me is that belief in America. And it's there. It's inside, and they know it's there. They just have forgotten that they've let this victimization take hold and they don't want to rise up. I mean, this country has always been a country of rising up.</p> <p>We've had real troubles. We have made huge mistakes as a nation. But what makes America great is our ability to figure that out, learn for those mistakes, and try to get past them. And today we're in retreat. We're saying, oh, well, look at all these mistakes we made and blame each other, blame ourselves.</p> <p>It's crazy. It's crazy.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Oh, without question. So if I were to ask you to tell me to step back and say, hey, what are the U.S.'s biggest threats and where are they coming from? What would be your answer to that?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Well, look, I think our long-term, large-scale threat is a rising China, right? And their desire to dominate not just their part of the world, but the globe. They have visions of a long-term empire around the globe. They believe that their oppression of their own people, right? The oppression of the Uyghurs, the Muslim Uyghurs, a million intern in camps, right? Modern-day gulags. Their oppression of democracy in Hong Kong. Their attempts to harass Taiwan. They want to expand that around the globe. And as a long-term threat, that is the real major threat. And we've allowed it to grow. We've addicted ourselves to cheap Chinese goods.</p> <p>And by the way, it's fine to buy T-shirts from... We don't need a car sales off from T-shirts from China, but buying semiconductors, relying on them for critical minerals, that's crazy. Right?</p> <p>And then when you add up the fact that China's increasingly cooperating with Russia. You see it in Ukraine. You see Russia and Iran. Iran sending drones to Russia, Russia is sending technology to Iran, right? These countries are now making it very clear of the whole world, how closely they work together, right?</p> <p>And I don't want to say, use a term like axis of evil or anything that got us into trouble before, but let's be real. Iran, Russia, China, North Korea, they are collaborating, and they're doing it out in the open. You don't need to... it's not behind closed doors.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Well, they're collaborating because they see, and at least this is my interpretation of it, they see that neither is strong enough or dominant enough to take on the U.S. by themselves. So let's band together.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Let's come together because then we have a fighting chance. It's almost an admittance of our relative strength.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>No, I think that's right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And so one hotspot we don't hear about much nationally that I started to follow here recently as Niger...</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> ... where a military coup occurred. The U.S. military is now withdrawing and reports say Russian military advisors, my understanding is Russian military advisors from Progozen, and this is his folk have been brought in. One senior U.S. military advisor told CBS News that the situation was a devastating blow to regional counterterrorism and to our counterterrorism efforts and peace in the region. Can you explain why Niger is such a focal point? What is it about it and why is it important?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah. Well, you know, for a long time, a lot of these terrorist groups operating out of Africa have operated out in Niger in that region. You're talking about Boko Haram. You're talking about what used to be al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, AQIM, now ISIS and West Africa. You've got a number of groups, JNIM, there's a number of terrorist groups there operating the region, right? And so we've had active counterterrorism operations there for a long time in Mali, in Niger, in Nigeria, working with the governments in Somalia and Ethiopia as well.</p> <p>And so these counterterrorism efforts have been really important because a lot of these groups at times have gotten interested in not just operating there in Africa, but expanding beyond the borders into Europe and into the United States, trying to affect operations here. Keeping that pressure up has been a really important part of it.</p> <p>Now, with this coup in Niger, the Russians and the Wagner group is exactly laid out getting in there. They actually are fomenting some of these coups in Chad. They were influential in trying to, trying to remove the government there. And so we see this movement.</p> <p>And the government there is a junta government, right? As you point out, a coup government? They at one point sort of wrote us a note, said, you need to leave. And then we're like, OK, I mean, if you don't want us here, we'll start packing up. Now there's a conversation, well, maybe, maybe we want you to stay. And so the conversation remains ongoing. The government there in Niger has benefited, both the coup government and the prior elected government was a government- the governments have benefited, the people in Niger benefited from the American presence there. They're not going to benefit when the Russians show up, right? The Russians are there for one purpose to engage and benefit Russian interests. And so we'll see how this plays out.</p> <p>I do worry, though, that that loss of that counter-terrorism capability will ultimately put the U.S. and our allies at greater risk, not just in Africa, but in Europe and the U.S. as well.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>So I'm going to go there. I'm going to ask you something. I'm going to make a statement here, and I want you to, let's just do a little engagement.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>All right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Since we're having fun.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> I like it. Let's do it.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> All right. Because I believe fundamentally that we are on an arc, a trajectory, and while that trajectory isn't straight up, it's jagged, it kind of oscillates up and down, but there's a trend, and that trend is better, not worse. Let me throw out some things, okay?</p> <p>Think about a moment in time. The pandemic had just ended. Isolationism was on the rise. There was anti-immigrant sentiment because of fear of other governments, socialism, communism, and the like. It'd been a crackdown on civil liberties. There were new technologies that were being brought into the household that were changing the way Americans think. There were state legislators who were now, with these new influences, felt the need to control curricula, felt the need to control the way in which people were expressing themselves.</p> <p>If I were to tell you, name that moment in time, you can easily say that that moment in time was today.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Or yesterday or tomorrow.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That's exactly right, right?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> But that moment in time was 1923. And in addition to those things, because you just had the flu pandemic that it just ended, right?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Radio was coming into households in a significant way and changing the way of Americans saw the world, right?</p> <p>But in addition to everything I just highlighted, the KKK had more than six million Americans who had joined their ranks because of anti-crime rhetoric and fear of crime. And that included 10 senators, 30 members of the House of Representatives, and five sitting governors. Right?</p> <p>And out of the midst of that, out of the midst of that, from 1923, until today, we have seen the greatest accumulation of wealth in the history of the world. You get what I'm saying?</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>I do.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>And that is still ongoing to this very day. I have three students, two students of mine who graduated. I do some work in AI. They got really good jobs at big tech companies in California. In two years out of graduation, they're both millionaires to this day.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Amazing.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Right? Now, that's far better than anything I did.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>You and me both.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>[laughing] Two years, two years out school.</p> <p>And so, look, we're living in a time of great peril and fraud, but we're also living in a time of tremendous opportunity and outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> How do we get people to balance? And how does NSI fit into all of that?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> I mean, tremendous opportunity outcomes that we have created in this country. Every major AI company in the world is here in the United States, Open AI, Anthropic, Scale AI, you name it. Every single major technological advancement, including the ones published in a paper just today about how the internal neurons work within large language models. They're using a single layer of neurons to say, okay, we're actually identifying the various things that code for.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Figuring out how they work.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> How they work. That is being discovered here in this country, not in Russia, not in China, not in Europe. Europeans love to pride themselves on, oh, we do this, we do that, right? Let's be real. The reason they don't innovate is because they don't have an economic system like ours. It may be close, but it's not like ours. And they don't give people the opportunity to rise up and rise to the ranks. They continue to maintain that largely class-based system.</p> <p>We have problems. Don't get me wrong. We are making that middle class smaller, and that's a problem. But we still have opportunity in this country, just to your point, that you raise about your two students.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> And people forget that. And so we've got to remember. You know, it's easy to think about the immediate moment. I'll admit, I'm probably guilty of it myself, that even this recency bias. That the things happen to me right now is, it's the worst possible.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>But it's not.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> It's not.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And that is the key thing for us to kind of internalize. You know, and I always struggle with whether I should talk about it or not for two reasons. Number one, I want people worried about our problems today. I want them focused on them. I want them engaged on them because, by golly, it can get worse.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Right.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Right?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> We've seen what it looks like in Europe when it gets worse.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> That’s exactly right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>We've seen the rise of fascism. We've seen the rise of communism.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> We've seen it. We've seen it. And secondly, man, we're on such a great trajectory, right?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> It’d be crazy to squander it now.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Be crazy.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> I want us to continue. You know, there have always been adversaries for America. Recently on Bill Mahar's real-time show, Jillian Ted, a member of the Financial Times editorial board, said, and you highlighted this earlier, that the new, “Axis of Evil” is Iran, Russia, and North Korea. China was left out of it, interesting enough. How does that fit into how you see the international picture today?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Well, I think she's certainly right about those three, but I think it's the most telling part is that they left China out.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>[laughs]</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>And what's funny is the-</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That's the biggest adversary.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>It's the biggest adversary. And the Europeans seem to think that- well, here's the bottom line. We don't survive in a real long-term fight with China without the Europeans. And they definitely don't survive without us.</p> <p>We need to make common cause across the Atlantic. And the idea that the Europeans see us as the problem, right? They literally, they hate American companies coming over there and sell them to their people. They're putting on all these trade barriers in place. And, you know, they put in, you know, GDPR, this law is about privacy. Everyone they sell, it's this amazing privacy law. GDPR ends up getting enforced only against American companies.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Yeah, isn't something?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>The real story is they want to cut American companies down to size because they don't like the fact that we're innovating faster.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And- that's right. The actual innovation rate is about twice the rate of European companies right now.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Oh, wow.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> I just push back at all of these folk. You hear it in the national rhetoric amongst our politicians about how America is worse than it's ever been and we've got to make America great again. The reality is that America is actually great right now. We got our challenges.</p> <p>Let me make sure I'm clear. But the country's a great country right now, and you know this by how all our competitor countries are acting. They're acting like we're great. They're banding together. They are figuring out ways to counter American strength and outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>We seem to be the only people in the world who don't realize how great we actually are.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> I agree with you 100%. So I was really fascinated... We're going down a lot of threads here. This is why I love it. I was really, really fascinated by this latest back and forth between Israel and Iran. They launched that attack on Israel on April 13th, and it was incredibly well telegraphed by the U.S. government. Like, we told them it was coming. We knew when it was coming. We knew, you know, pretty much what it was going to look like. We had very, very, very advanced intel, right?</p> <p>It was almost as if, and I'm stretching, here, but I'm saying anyway, it was almost as if the Iranians told us, we're going to launch the missiles here. Here's what we're going to launch all of them. And, you know, just so you know, we're launching them from right here, and we're going to launch them at about this time. Right?</p> <p>Talk to me about the security apparatus, the national intelligence infrastructure, and how it was able to basically telegraph that. How would it know?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Well, you know, we have a tremendous number of capabilities, sensors, satellites, and the like, that take pictures that identify threats. But the single most powerful intelligence collection tool that we have today that makes up the bulk of the President's Daily Brief, the most sensitive intelligence product in the U.S. government, is a capability called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Ahhh...</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>It's a law that allows us to collect communications intelligence about foreigners located overseas. So these are non-Americans outside the United States, but we're able to capture it here in the United States. You might say to yourself, I don't understand that. How could we capture the information about foreigners located overseas in the U.S.? It's because we built the world's communications infrastructure. It all comes to the United States.</p> <p>And so we're able to get tremendously valuable intelligence. And there's this big debate over, well, how do you deal with Americans that might be swept up in the middle of it? And the truth is, every time you collect a phone call, every time with a court order, you're going to get the person calling their dry cleaners or their- or their donut shop or whatever it might be, you know, ordering Chinese food, right?</p> <p>And the way we deal with that in the normal collection context, we turned that, we turned it on and off. If people ever watch The Wire, right, that great show about cops in Baltimore, you see them turn the listening device on and off.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>You know, if you watch Casino, right, you see the wives get on the phone. I don't mean to say anything bad. There are plenty of badass, you know, women gangsters, but in the case the casino, the wives get on the phone, pretend to talk about whatever, and then when you hear the FBI click off, they get the things to the bosses and they talk about the dirty stuff, right?</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> So that's how we do it in criminal context, in the foreign intelligence context, because we know that people are going to use code. We know that people are going to run these sort of operations. We listen continuously. We remove out Americans' names, American identifiers, the like. That's how we minimize collection there.</p> <p>And there's a big debate. Okay, Americans are being collected on what are we going to do. Those are fair debates to have. But the idea that we almost let that entire system stop and it almost expired.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Well, wait a minute. Now, we renewed it, but only for two years instead of five years.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>What challenge do you think that has?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>It just puts us back in the doom of having to do this over and over and over again. I mean, it's almost like a Russian roulette with our surveillance thing. Congress wants to force themselves to vote again.</p> <p>Here's the crazy thing about Congress, though. If they want to change the law, they don't have to wait for the two-year reauthorization. They don't wait for the five- year reauthorization. They can do it tomorrow. The problem is they create this cliff for themselves. So they force themselves to re-look at it and debate this thing over and over again.</p> <p>Be adults. Just do your job. If there's a problem, fix it. There's not a problem. Let it run. Make it permanent. Why do we keep torturing ourselves over and over again, one year, two years.</p> <p>And you know, by the way, two years is going to be right in the middle of the next administration, whoever that might be. And you know they're going to have an opinion. You know they're going to have an opinion.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Oh yeah, without question. A viable solution- Every single politician I've talked to, and I've, you know, given where we're located, gotten to spend a significant amount of time with a number of them. But every single politician I talk to say that a viable solution to a problem is to delay a decision on the solution. In other words, kick the can down the road. And that seems like what's happening here.</p> <p>For those of you who don't know what we're talking about, we're talking about FISA, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. And Jamil just really highlighted why it was put into place and in my understanding why its reauthorization is so important.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Well, you know, President Washington, why these politicians get to kick the can down the road? It's because we let them. We voters let them.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Now, there is one, on this particular issue if I stay focused here, there is some good reason for debate here, right?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Sure.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And it goes back to a guy named Edward Snowden, right? A good bit of what we see, the issues around the use of FISA, right? The use of surveillance really involved, not just foreign actors, but also involved Americans. And now it becomes a little difficult to how you use- relative to how you use these tools. Because we're so globalized, right? Is an adversary who is in Russia as much of a threat to us as an American who's been radicalized and who is now working on behalf of Russia, right? Both of them can cause you damage. FISA was created for one, right? But the other, we don't have as many protections against. And I understand why it's been confused, but can you talk a little bit about it?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah. So, you know, Edward Snowden, part of the story is a really important one. So Edward Snowden, when he stole the classified information that he was entitled receive, but wasn't entitled to disclose, when he engaged in that illegal activity of disclosing it. He did disclose one program that had a real impact of Americans' privacy and civil liberties. It was a program that involved the collection of phone records, right?</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Metadata.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>The numbers that you and I dialed, metadata, right? Dialed phone numbers, date time and duration of a call, no content, just the fact of the call. And yes, those were collected across the United States, my phone calls, your phone calls, through a set of American carriers, and all that data was collected.</p> <p>And what you could do is once that data was in a database, you could dip in and look for a terrorist phone number and pull out one, two, three, three hops. That was a lot of data, for sure. And that did, admittedly, have a very, a real impact on Americans' privacy and civil liberties to the extent that you believe metadata, right, the numbers you dial have a relevance.</p> <p>And they do, because you might be calling your, you might be calling, you know, somebody you don’t want people to know you're calling, I'm calling your lawyer, you might be calling your...</p> <p>Washington: But wait a minute. But let's pull that thread, because that to me, this is the whole point. This is the same point that I’m making. Let's suppose for a minute, and actually we're not supposing. We know that this happened, and this is how some of that data was used. You got terrorist X, right, who is actually working with operatives who are in the U.S. who are U.S. citizens.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And that person is making calls, passing out information, and the way they discovered the U.S. operatives who were assisting terrorist X was by the utilization of that program.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Right. And then if you want to collect on that American or anybody in the United States-</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>You need a warrant.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>You've got to get a FISA quarter order or warrant. Exactly. So there's no way you can even get that content unless you have a real court order. And so this whole sort of myth that developed around Snowden, that it was more than the metadata, there was something else going on here. None of that was true.</p> <p>And in fact, then you look at the other 99% of whatever it's Snowden revealed: highly sensitive information about very capable terrorism programs and surveillance programs against foreign actors overseas. The bulk of what he distributed, that were leaked out to all these newspapers and given to the Russians almost wholesale had nothing to do with America.</p> <p>It was one program. And yes, that program generated a good debate, right? The law was modified.</p> <p>By the way, it's worth noting that program was never stopped under the Obama administration. It was never discontinued. It kept going. Congress even modified and even authorized that program with more limited boundaries around it and ultimately decided not to continue that program, but that program was tremendously valuable, and the reality of the situation is that yes, there was one disclosure. The bulk of it is not Edward Snowden, the hero. The bulk of it is Edward Snowden, the traitor. And let's be real clear about that.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Well, look, you won't get any pushback from me on this one.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>And by the way, that man lives in Moscow today, and he has Russian citizenship. Let's not get it twisted about who that man really is. That man is not a hero.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>It's a very, very interesting. I did watch a docudrama on his life. I found it would be pretty intriguing.</p> <p>So for a while, your institute was focused on China. I want to spend a little bit of time here just because of TikTok and some of the other things. I really want to get your feeling.</p> <p>And so you were focused there. You did a lot of work there. But then it looks like it kind of tailed off somewhat. And I can see why with the Russia Ukraine piece, with the Israeli Gaza piece as well. But is China still at the top of your list in terms of a focus? And can you talk about its influence and why we should be concerned?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah. You know, they are at the top of the list. And what we're seeing increasingly is the collaboration of these various bad actors, right? The Russians, the Chinas, the Iranians and North Koreans.</p> <p>We just saw President Xi and President Putin meet in Beijing. It's their 40th-plus meeting in just the last few years. They met about a year or two ago previously, and if you remember at the end of that visit, there was a very telling moment where they both knew the cameras were on. And President Xi and what looked like a pull aside, but he knew the camera was running. He says to President Putin, he says, you know, the world is seeing, the biggest changes is seen in three decades. And we, you and I, the Russians and Chinese, were architecting that change.</p> <p>He wanted the world to hear that, that we are working together and we're moving the world. It's not America. It's not Europe. It's us.</p> <p>And that's a really telling moment. Right before Russia invaded Ukraine, China and Russia inked a no-limits partnership. No limits. They put the name on it, and they doubled down on it just this past week in Beijing. And so, you know, these actors, so when you see us talk about Russia, Ukraine, that is not different than China, Taiwan. That is not different than Israel, Hamas, and Iran's role in that, and Iran's role in Hezbollah, right?</p> <p>These are all interrelated, interconnected, and they're all working together, right? There's a reason why the North Korea nuclear program looks a lot like the Pakistan nuclear program, which looks a lot like the Iranian nuclear program. It's because the AQ Khan Network from Pakistan sold that information about how to make those centrifuges.</p> <p>So there are very direct connections between these actors in the world. Y’know, you think about it. China's interning a million Muslim Uyghurs in termicamps, in gulags, in the Xinjiang province, right? You know who says nothing about it? Nobody in the Middle East. Pakistan, Imran Khan, the famous cricketeer that all the Pakistanis love, right? Gives China a pass on interning a million Muslims. It's crazy, right?</p> <p>Why is the U.S. have to call out under both the Biden and the Trump administration that a genocide is happening in China to a million Muslim immigrants? Why isn't Saudi Arabia and Egypt and Jordan and all these people who are protesting about Palestinians and what's happening with Hamas and Gaza? Why don't we talk about the million Muslims in prison camps in China?</p> <p>Well, it's hard to talk about that because, you know, we get a lot of really cheap cars, a lot of really cheap shirts, a lot of really good semiconductors from there. It's hard to make trouble there. The NBA, the NBA, an American Basketball League, told its own owners and operators, don't talk bad about China because we make too much money there. They pushed Enos Cantor out of the league because he talked too much about the Uyghurs. Crazy.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>So the actual security concerns with regard to Chinese influence on American politics in mining user data, for example, has led to legislation calling for Chinese divestment of the app TikTok on national security concerns.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Why is it important that the U.S. government take these steps to potentially ban TikTok, in your opinion?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Look, you know, people say I don't understand why people care about TikTok. It's just kids having dance videos. You know, what's the big deal, right?</p> <p>But the reality is it's not just these videos. It's who you share them with. It's who your social network is. It's who you're communicating with. It's where you are and where your phone, where your devices at all times. It's connecting all of that data.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Metadata.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>All that metadata with the data the Chinese has stolen from our credit bureaus, from the security clearance databases. Everyone with security clearance had their information stolen from OPM. All of our Marriott Hotel records, right? All these health records from major insurers.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Wait a minute. They got our Marriott Hotel records?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>They got your My Bonvoy account, all gone. But think about what that means. Think about your credit records, your hotel records, your travel, your security clearance, you combine all that. Then you add in your social networks on TikTok, who your kids are communicating with, how they operate, how they play video games. Combine all that and then apply AI over that.</p> <p>And what you now have is an amazing, very detailed insight into the live of average Americans, including the people that hold the highest level security clearances and who their kids are friends with and how you can approach them for a target and take advantage of them.</p> <p>That is what TikTok is about. It's not about dance videos.</p> <p>And by the way, this whole claim that, oh, Americans' free speech rights are being trampled and being trampled upon.</p> <p>I mean, last time I checked, you got Twitter, you got Instagram, you got reels, you got so many places that put your voice out there. YouTube. You need TikTok? That's the only way is a Chinese government-controlled app that you can get your voice out there?</p> <p>If that's suppressing free speech, then we got real problems. So do you have any predictions on whether or not ByteDance will comply and identify?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>They will not.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Of course not.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Of course not.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And so, you know, my next question, right? What happens next?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>I mean, look, we put our foot down, right? I mean, it was, for a long time, it was very controversial, and ultimately, Congress has figured it out. You know, look, the truth is President Washington, the American people were waking up to the threat that is China, right?</p> <p>They realized it really during the pandemic, when we realized, wow, all of our PPE, our personal protective equipment, all of our pharmaceutical precursors are made in China.</p> <p>And so we started to realize that. We've now started to forget that a little bit because, you know, Americans were so innovative, we've moved so fast, we forget things happened recently. But I think that America is finally waking up to the reality of what China is and what they're doing in their long-term game here.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>So this is interesting. I was at a very, very high-level meeting here. We had some former high-ranking members of our government, also foreign European governments, a number of leaders from industry, from some tech companies from a very prominent chip manufacturer, who I will not mention. And we were having the similar discussion.</p> <p>And I asked the question, is Taiwan a Chinese entity? Because I know what the law says on this, and I know what the- you know...</p> <p>And I was surprised how the debate manifested, because many of the people there, basically tried to paint the picture highlighting that it wasn't, that it's not a Chinese entity. It was very clear to me that it's a Chinese entity.</p> <p>Then, you know, later on, as I began to pontificate and think as to why they had such an issue, it became very clear to me, well, if Taiwan is a Chinese-owned entity, then the main driver of wealth in this country, the semiconductor, is basically, at least in some sense, owned by the Chinese.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Because TSMC, which in my opinion is the most of, well, it's not in my opinion. It is clear they produce the highest quality chips. They produce the most complex chips. All of our major chip development companies use TSMC to manufacture their chips, and TSMC is easily five years or so ahead of the next closest rival.</p> <p>It's the one area. It's the one thing that, you know, when you look at the U.S. and we make design the chips here, right? You know, our great companies design those chips, but the bulk of them are actually manufactured by TSMC. And they don't even have a close rival. There's nobody anywhere near them.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Not even close. And we've spent billions of dollars in the Inflation Reduction Act, the bipartisan infrastructure law, to try and rebuild some capacity. It is a drop, is a tiny drop in the bucket compared to what TSM has got in the capabilities. There is no company in the world that can do a three to four nanometer process.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>That's exactly right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Other than TSMC. There's no company that builds the that builds the equipment to do that three to four nanometer process with EUV technology other than ASML, a Dutch company. None of these companies are American. And that is terrifying because we're creating those three to four nanometer processes, the ideas and design. But we can't execute it.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> We can't make the chips. And so this brings to the point. And to me, this is the number one security issue that we have.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>It's the harder.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> That's right. If China goes into- And I think this is driving all of this. It's like a chess game. They're trying to get your king. That's the king. The king is whoever controls TSMC has a very, very firm hold. All of this stuff we're talking about with Jensen Wong and NVIDIA and NVIDIA chips. Where are the chips being produced, right? Where's that? It's coming from TSMC.</p> <p>And if China goes in and takes Taiwan, TSMC is the primary reason for them doing it. I don't think they would care about Taiwan to the degree they do now if TSMC were not there. And I don't think we would care either, right? And so can you talk a little bit about this?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>I mean, imagine if your king on the chessboard had no pawns around it.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Right.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Because that's the situation with Taiwan right now. If the Chinese decided to invade tomorrow, and they're not going to invade tomorrow, because they don't think they're ready, right? They're not going to invade tomorrow. Maybe in a couple of years, but not tomorrow.</p> <p>If they were going to invade tomorrow, we couldn't get there in time to really put up a real fight. It would take us months to flow the forces to the region that we need. And we have already a carrier battle group in the region. We have a Marine Expeditionary Task Force out there nearby. We couldn't get there with enough forces in time to really have a force-on-force fight with the Chinese over Taiwan. By the time they went and took it, the game would be up, we wouldn't even get in the fight.</p> <p>The only way we could really fight that fight is if we put forces forward and no president, not Trump, not Biden, not Obama before him, not Bush before him, was willing to put the forces forward to do that. And until the American president is ready to do that, the Chinese will read that for what it is, which is America is not ready to defend Taiwan and won't do it.</p> <p>And so the only question: they're not waiting for us; they're waiting for themselves to be ready. The lesson they're taking from Russia, Ukraine is: don't go in and be not ready. Don't go  without a military you can trust. Know that you're ready to be able to take it. Make it a fait accompli within the first month.</p> <p>Yes, you may have to fight a long-term insurgency. Don't even let the U.S. get in the fight, and they don't want to be in the fight. They read what we see as a successful Ukraine policy: We've supported the Ukrainians. They've kept the fight going. They see it as American weakness. We're not willing to put boots on the ground. Every little bit we're eking in a little bit more every so often. We're not going to put M1A1 because you might use nuclear weapons. We won't put them in. And then eventually we put them in, oh, surprise, surprise. He doesn't use nuclear weapons.</p> <p>Chinese know that too. That's why they're tripling their nuclear force. They know that we're afraid of that, and we won't go up to the line. And so they view it as it's a question of not if but when. And that's the real scary thing.</p> <p>And the problem is the president's trying out there. He goes on TV all the time and says, we will defend Taiwan with American troops if we need to. He's done it four times in the last two years. But every time he does it, my friend Jake Sullivan comes to the White House podium and says, what the president really meant was we'll send weapons of Taiwan. He didn't mean troops.</p> <p>Now, the administration says, well, that's strategic ambiguity, right? We're keeping it unclear. But that kind of strategic ambiguity, it doesn't help. It creates risk. It tempts them to test our boundaries. You don't want to test our boundaries. They should have a clear understanding. You go to Taiwan. We will fight you toe to toe, and we're going to put the force forward to make that true.</p> <p>And the reason we won't do it today, and Trump wouldn't do it and Biden won't do it, they're afraid if we do that, that we'll be the ones who trip over the wire and start the thing. It's just like Russia, Ukraine: We put too many weapons in; we'll tip it over.</p> <p>That's the opposite. Our adversaries understand and respect power. We don't use it. We don't show it.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>But they know it's there.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>If we're ready to fight. They see us as unready to fight. They see the American people not ready, and they don't see the kind of leader who will step forward and bring the American people to- American people will fight a just war if they need to. But they have to be told by an American leader why it matters.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>So let's follow that thread just a little bit. What happens if they do take Taiwan.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Oh, it's bad.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Now, you say, okay, well, we can't stop them. And I tend to agree with you. We can't.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>In the immediate aftermath-</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>But we would see them coming, right? They would need to amass troops. We would know that it is getting ready to happen before it's happened.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Kind of like Russia Ukraine.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Right. Yeah, we saw, we saw them coming. And what I hear you saying is that they want to be ready. Do you think they want to be ready for a fight in Taiwan, or do they want to be ready for what they're going to have to deal with relative to us? I think it's the latter. I don't think that they're worried about the Taiwanese forces that much.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>They want to telegraph to us that they're going to take that island so fast and so directly that by the time we get there, we'd have to fight a rear insurgency for many, many years, and we lose a lot of lives to retake the island. They want to make it more costly for us than it was for them to go in, and they assess, I think... And now, I will admit that I may be applying an American mentality.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Yeah, I think you are.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>I may be mirror imaging, right? And so I may be wrong. But my worry is they see us as unwilling to fight fights. Post-Iraq, post-Afghanistan, the terrible departure from Afghanistan, the way we've left Iraq, the way we abandoned our Kurdish allies in the Trump administration... They see America is on the retreat, unwilling to defend its allies, unwilling to put its forces forward. They think we're weak and they think they can play their card. So they want to show strength and say, we got a strong hand. Don't even try coming here. We will make it very painful for you, and you don't want to bear that cost.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Okay. So I hear what you're saying. Let me tell you why I disagree.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> All right. I like this. All right.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> When it truly matters, we figure out a way to get it done. Right? When Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, right, we saw his troops massing at the border. We knew what was going to happen. We used the rhetoric and all of that to get our folk ready. You know what I'm saying?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>You're right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And then we went in and took care of Saddam Hussein. And that was to protect the free flow of oil, right? Because every major recession in our country, including the Great Recession, there was an oil shock. Not everyone, but most of them. There was an oil shock, a significant increase in the price of oil that preceded it, right? And so they knew that the connection, our economy's connection to oil is significant.</p> <p>Well, our economy's connection to chips is as significant, and I would contend to you, it might actually even be more significant now because of these other kinds of electric vehicles. There are other modes where we can make do without as much oil, right?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> You're right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>There is no substitute globally right now for TSMC.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>There's none. It goes away. It loses ability to do what it does. We can be a third rate power from a technology perspective.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> No, you're right. We would care a lot less about the Middle East if there weren't fossil fuels under that land.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>Of course. We care a lot less about Taiwan if TSMC weren't there. You're 100% correct.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>So we will figure out a way to do what we could to support and defend Taiwan. And I would be, we would be unwise if there aren't scenarios, if they're not people, hundreds of them right now, drawing up the battle plans and drawing up. up the scenario analysis relative to this very issue. I would be surprised if that were not happening to this day.</p> <p>You know, you and I are pretty smart people. There are smarter folk looking at this. I can I can tell you without a shadow of doubt.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>They're doing it. And the problem is that if we don't fight on day one for Taiwan and day two and day three, but we will wait till day 100 or day 150, it is a lot more costly a fight.</p> <p>And yes, you're right. We may very well take that fight on. But if you're right, and it's so critical, which I agree with you, by the way, 100%, you're absolutely correct. Then it would be insane for us not to be prepared to fight that fight on day one and win that fight on day one. And as a result, make it clear to the Chinese that that is our intent, it is our policy, and to put the forces in place to be ready to have that fight.</p> <p>Every day we don't do that, we tempt them to take action and we wait longer-</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> I hear you.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> And it's more costly.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>And this is, like I said, we're going to have a little bit of debate on this one. I actually think, while I can't give you a definitive answer on what strategy is, I don't know. I would be totally surprised if there were not a strategy. It's just too obvious that the Chinese are going to take it for the U.S. not to have a strategy here, right? Too many smart people with their time and resources on their hands, they're looking at this. They've got to be, right?</p> <p>So, you know, I'm prior military. I spent time in the military. And then I spent a significant amount of time on what's called a scientific advisory board for the Air Force. And when you're on those scientific advisory boards as a researcher, they use researchers in the country to help them deal with very difficult problems and challenges to deal with the government. You are routinely engaging members of the Pentagon, very high-ranking senior military officials and the like. Let me make no doubt about it. Some of the smartest people I've ever met.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>100%.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Brilliant. So there's not a competency issue there. Now, politics.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>That's what I'm talking about.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Murkies the water a little bit.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>I’m talking about the competence of politicians, the policymakers.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>But the politicians aren't going to prosecute that battle.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>They got to decide.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>They do.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>They're not ready. They don’t have the guts.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>They do, but the people that I engaged have already taken into account the fact that they may be slow to act or may not act at all. And they have scenario planning in place for those type of occurrences as well because they're too smart not to. And I know it's kind of a blind faith, but I believe it because I've spent time with these folk. I mean, real time.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>No, you're right.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Right. And so it will be an issue. I just don't know that I would be very, very surprised if we didn't have a plan in place for how to deal with it. And I think that not only do we have plans in place, I think the Chinese know that we have plans in place and that's why they haven't taken it. Do you see what I'm saying?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> I do. By the way, I don't think you're out of that far apart. I think we actually agree in large part on this, which is to say there are absolutely scenario plans. There are absolutely plans that would allow us to rapidly accelerate, build the defense force, the union, get them there fast, and fight that war, right?</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Or plans to totally isolate in wall-off significant portions of Chinese economy that causes them to have real, real challenges there as well, because them taking Taiwan won't just affect the Americans. It's actually also going to affect the Europeans. It's also going to affect other countries in Southeast Asia that are developing. It's going to affect Vietnam. It's going to affect the Japanese. It's going to affect the Indians. Everybody will be affected by this because TSMC is that dominant.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>And, by the way, let's not, and people don't want to talk about this, but let's not take it off the table that there are probably contingency plans to, if, in fact, the Chinese take TSMC off the map.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>I’m not saying that's the plan. I'm just saying, like, let's not kid ourselves that that's got to be in the cards as well.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>Well, they're building a facility here in the U.S.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer:</strong> Right. But here's what I worry about, right? I worry that we have a political system today and political leaders today who are increasingly responsive too much to what they perceive as the views of the American people rather than leading. We are not- We are a representative democracy. We are not a pure democracy. And the more we take this populist turn, whether you're a liberal or a conservative, doesn't matter.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Oh, without question.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>When you don't have leadership amongst policymakers, they're trying to take the pulse to the American people and do what the American people want every single day, that's when you make these failures. That's when you don't act when you need to act. And that's when you put our military and the men and women who put their lives on the line every day as you did for our country. That's when you put them at risk and greater risk every day. And we make it more dangerous and more costly for American treasure and American lives. And that, to me, is cavalier and inappropriate. We need real leaders in government. And you know how we get real leaders in government? We got to do our job. We got to hold our leaders accountable.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Actually, you've given me an idea. I'm going to get you and a couple of other folk together, and we're going to have a roundtable to discuss this very, very issue, the issue of leadership in this country. I think it's something that we should definitely talk about. And I think we actually have the right horses here at AV in order to do it.</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>We do.</p> <p><strong>Washington: </strong>I’m going to end on this question. As I understand it, your National Security Institute is a bipartisan entity. That being said, we have significant levels of partisanship in our government, and quite frankly, as we've been discussing in the public sphere. What can NSA do to break through that clutter?</p> <p><strong>Jaffer: </strong>I think the key is to talk to the American people about what makes this country great. And to recognize that, as you said earlier, all those elements of greatness are still here. We are still the most innovative country in the world. We are still the strongest economy in the world. We are still the strongest people. We have the best laws. They may not be perfect. Our political system may not be perfect. Our political leaders may not be perfect. But we have a duty to talk about who we are, to be proud of who we are, and to be a strong country.</p> <p>It is what we were built on, is what we were built to do. And every day that the American people spend time at each other's throats and allow our leaders to put ourselves at each other's throats is a day we are losing the battle to the people that want us to lose: to China, Russia, Iran, North Korea.</p> <p>So if we want to think about how to fix our problems in the world, it begins here at home. It begins with voting. Voting every day. It is a crime that half the American people that could vote don't register. It is a crime that half those that are registered don't vote. Take responsibility.</p> <p>All our young people that are listening to this here at George Mason, every single one you must register to vote. You want to go protest, go protest, but vote. And vote for adults. Vote for people who have real serious thoughts. And at the end of day, for me, that's about national security. That is about bipartisanship.</p> <p>Because at the end of the day, this isn't about Republican/Democrat. This is about America. This is about a vision. This is about a dream. This is about the ideals that we have in this country. And they are the right ones. And we are called to this mission. We have been since our founding, and we still are today, no matter how hard it is.</p> <p>And that's what NSI is out there talk about and fighting about every day.</p> <p><strong>Washington:</strong> Oh, man, I love it. I love it. Well, we're going to have to leave it there. Jamil Jaffer, thank you for connecting some dots for us in an extraordinarily complex puzzle. I am AV President Gregory Washington. Thanks for listening and tune in next time for more conversations that show why we are all together different.</p> <p><strong>Narrator: </strong>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="a3a263ee-fe4d-4216-adc0-93e27ca8a0c2" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><h2>Listen to this episode:</h2> <ul><li><strong><a href="https://gmu.podbean.com/e/cybersecurity-and-the-global-threats-of-tomorrow/" target="_blank" title="Episode on Podbean (opens in a new tab/window)">via Podbean</a></strong><br />  </li> <li><strong><a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cybersecurity-and-the-global-threats-of-tomorrow/id1498236015?i=1000661246310" target="_blank" title="Episode on Apple Podcasts (opens in new tab/window)">via Apple Podcasts</a></strong><br />  </li> <li><strong><a href="https://open.spotify.com/episode/0Rcw2cdKp9q4QrQbV9RDUC?si=8fc4ae7a82df4a70&nd=1&dlsi=2672f8b90e87479b" target="_blank" title="Episode on Spotify (opens in new tab/window)">via Spotify</a></strong></li> </ul></div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="221126df-b46d-49af-8dd3-ab8127cc3795" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/jjaffer" hreflang="en">Jamil N. Jaffer</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/president" hreflang="und">Gregory Washington</a></div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="a345cc2a-bce0-44e7-991f-acab118f918d" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="7b4c5ab4-3064-48c6-ac8e-c2bef24a7712" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Listen to more Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-8668d194f69f6ec4d57dd7ed1aa4f0872c3e864fa4bf424dd72ff7112cb2ab91"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="e473463e-a8d8-41c3-9569-8bfb8d137d71" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:call_to_action" data-inline-block-uuid="78442024-d758-402d-8e75-852eb634a546"> <div class="cta"> <a class="cta__link" href="/podcast"> <h4 class="cta__title">Learn more about the Access to Excellence Podcast <i class="fas fa-arrow-circle-right"></i> </h4> <span class="cta__icon"></span> </a> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/351" hreflang="en">Antonin Scalia Law School</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/11086" hreflang="en">National Security Institute</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Fri, 05 Jul 2024 14:36:52 +0000 Sarah Holland 112791 at Podcast - Ep 58: What will become of the Amazon? /news/2024-04/podcast-ep-58-what-will-become-amazon <span>Podcast - Ep 58: What will become of the Amazon?</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/266" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Damian Cristodero</span></span> <span>Mon, 04/22/2024 - 10:19</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="0f313b9d-ae45-40ae-8411-cf46fdfbab78" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-04/ATE%20campbell%20slider%20torres%20240418902.jpg?itok=2O_M5aL6" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2024-04/ATE%20campbell%20slider%20torres%20240418902.jpg?itok=U9FaNmq0 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-04/ATE%20campbell%20slider%20torres%20240418902.jpg?itok=2O_M5aL6 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2024-04/ATE%20campbell%20slider%20torres%20240418902.jpg?itok=LK442rAJ 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="Jeremy Campbell speaks with President Washington on his podcast Access to Excellence. Jeffrey is a white male, bald head, wearing a blue suit jacket and unbuttoned collared shirt." /></div> <div class="headline-text"> <div class="feature-image-headline"> <div class="field field--name-field-feature-image-headline field--type-string field--label-hidden field__item">What will become of the Amazon?</div> </div> </div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p><span><span><span>Jeremy Campbell, associate director for strategic engagement in AV’s Institute for a Sustainable Earth, says that at its current pace the vast Amazon rainforest, in five to 10 years, could pass a tipping point in which it could transform into grasslands. That process, fueled by deforestation and climate change, is a threat to the biodiversity and socio-cultural aspects that define the region, and has global implications as well. In this fascinating conversation in recognition of Earth Month, Campbell explains to Mason President Gregory Washington the magnitude of what the loss of the Amazon rainforest would really mean, and how the Institute for a Sustainable Earth in on the front lines in the region.</span></span></span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="7fc093c2-be75-4e37-b883-0630799a38d6" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?from=embed&i=a8rri-15f0b9d-pb&share=1&download=1&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=auto&rtl=0&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7&size=150" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="What will become of the Amazon?" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="4ab2670a-881b-4129-8ace-286807c43419" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p><span class="intro-text">Where there used to be forest, you’re not going to get any more of that transpiration cycle, and so the drying isn’t limited to the places where deforestation happens. Where things are dry, things get hotter. And then when you add like we had last year with the horrible situation throughout the Amazon of an El Nino-induced heat spike and drought, then you have villages that rely on fish, rely on the rivers to get around because the rivers are the highways of the Amazon, who are literally stranded. So the drying out of the Amazon is a tremendous biodiversity challenge, it’s also a tremendous economic challenge. But it’s also a human tragedy that is taking tremendous costs on the people of the Amazon as well."</span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="4f0bac06-0596-43ba-8b44-5c9b9c7373f1" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><hr /></div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="ccd6d3d8-8e07-4cd4-b79b-16595afaa568" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p>Narrator (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:04</a>):</p> <p>Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology, and those who simply have a good story. All make up the fabric that is AV, where taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:26</a>):</p> <p>The Amazon Basin, which holds the world's biggest river rainforest and a fifth of its fresh water is running dry. That was the news in the Washington Post recently. The New York Times went even further citing a study that says the Amazon rainforest could transform into grasslands in the coming decades because of climate change, deforestation, and severe drought, such as the one the region just experienced. Jeremy Campbell is a cultural anthropologist who studies land conflicts and environmental change in the Brazilian Amazon. He is also the associate director for strategic engagement at Mason's Institute for Sustainable Earth. Since 2020, Dr. Campbell has served as the president of the Society of Anthropology of Lowland South America. That's an international scholarly organization that advocates on behalf of peoples and environments in Amazonia and beyond. In this Earth Month, I am thrilled that Dr. Campbell has given us an opportunity to engage. Welcome Dr. Campbell.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:44</a>):</p> <p>Thank you so much Dr. Washington. It's a pleasure to be here.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:47</a>):</p> <p>Well, it's great to have you. So let's get right to the bad news.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:51</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, let's do it.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:53</a>):</p> <p>According to the Times and the study that was produced by an international team of scientists and published in the Journal Nature, the collapse of all or part of the Amazon rainforest would release the equivalent of several years of global emissions, possibly 20 years’ worth, into the atmosphere. Give us a template or an understanding for how that actually happens.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:19</a>):</p> <p>Sure. It's complex inherently because the Amazon is, is a very complex region. But to understand what's really going on, you have to really appreciate the size and the immensity and the complexity of the Amazon, which I think for most North Americans, certainly me growing up, I didn't really have much of an understanding other than maybe the, uh, back of the cereal box image of the canopy rainforest with monkeys and toucans and things like this. But you know, the Amazon is vast. It's the size of the lower 48 United States. Yeah, the Amazon Basin is that big.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:51</a>):</p> <p>The Amazon Basin is the size of essentially the US minus Alaska and Hawaii.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:58</a>):</p> <p>You got it. That's it. It's amazing. Yeah. Not only that, there are nine different nation states that share a portion of that basin going around from Bolivia in the southwest up to Peru, Ecuador, Columbia, Venezuela, Guiana, Surinam, French Guiana, which is an overseas part of the French Republic, so it's part of Europe, it's part of the EU. And then of course Brazil is the lion's share about 70% of the basin. You mentioned Dr. Washington, your stats are good. Your research is good that the Amazon is the world's biggest river by water discharge. Yes. But if you look at the top 20 hydrological discharges rivers in the world, six of them are tributaries of the Amazon. So you've got seven of the top 20 rivers in the world. Right. In that region. Okay. So it is a region that is so immense and so complex to say nothing of the diversity of different river types.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">03:49</a>):</p> <p>You have black river systems, you have clear water systems, you have white water systems. The subbasins are very complex. What that all adds up to is with this immense area, with immense amounts of water, it is big enough to generate its own weather. And so when we talk about the tipping point, the looming tipping point that actually our departed colleague Tom Lovejoy coined that phrase back in 2018. It's the idea that the neotropics, the subtropical system that is the Amazon is in danger of phase shifting from a robust complex rainforest to something like a Savannah, a grassland, or even in some cases something more like the Sahel region of Northern Africa</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:35</a>):</p> <p>That's near desert.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:35</a>):</p> <p>That's near desert. Exactly. And so how can that happen?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:38</a>):</p> <p>Now, now let's, let's put it in perspective. You're talking five years, we're talking five decades, or we're talking 500 years? What are we talking about?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:49</a>):</p> <p>Great question. So back in 2018, when Dr. Lovejoy and his colleague Dr. Carlos Nobre from the University of Sao Paulo, published in Nature, the first warning about the tipping point, they estimated what it would take to get to the tipping point is a gross deforestation of approximately 20 to 25% of the land in the entire basin. That was in 2018. At that time, about 18% of the basin had been deforested. Flash ahead six years we're at about 20% of the basin has been deforested. So depending on the projections, and depending on what we might be able to do to put the brakes on deforestation, we might be looking at a tipping point in the next five to 10 years. And again, to put that in perspective, you have the wettest place on earth, some parts of that place becoming a savanna due to deforestation,</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">05:40</a>):</p> <p>but the other crucial part, we can handle deforestation. It's difficult, but we can handle it. The other contributing factor to the tipping point is climate change. And that we're locked into in terms of warming that's affecting the Amazon. The Amazon is warming faster than other regions. It's already warmed 1.3 degrees Celsius since 1980. And it's on an upward trend. That means that some parts of the Amazon are getting wetter, especially the northern parts of the Amazon. But other parts of the Amazon within the global climate system are getting far, far drier. And that's irrespective of seasonal anomalies like an El Nino or a La Nina, which intensify things even further as we know. So you have deforestation cutting down trees that make their own weather through transpiration and evaporation. The Amazon is big enough to, through the transpiration process, there's literally rivers flying above your head.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:39</a>):</p> <p>That much water.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:39</a>):</p> <p>That much water. Exactly. And those rivers basically follow the trade winds that come from Senegal, from Cape Verde in Africa, and those winds pick up moisture over the South Atlantic. They pick up all the moisture at the Falls of the Amazon near the city of Belem. And then all of that goes kind of in a southwesterly direction towards the Andes. And the Andes is 20,000 feet high. So what happens when air hits that barrier?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:04</a>):</p> <p>It turns into ice and snow.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:05</a>):</p> <p>It turns to ice and snow. Some of it turns left, which is to say south and southeast and irrigates, South America's bread basket where most of South America's wheat in Argentina, soy in Paraguay and Bolivia and Brazil is grown. And then of course, cattle and pig operations. South America's economy over the past 20 years has been based on the export of commodities in the agricultural sector to East Asia. You turn off the spigot, which is the Amazon hydrogeological cycle, and you're going to see some drying out of that bread basket as well. And so the Amazon plays a crucial role in the global climate system sequestering carbon, we can get into some of the numbers for that if you like. But it also plays a key role in the hydrological and geochemical cycling beyond its borders in South America, which then has implications for global trade and for wellbeing of people who, you know, we've got 8 billion of us on this planet.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:04</a>):</p> <p>That’s exactly right</p> <p><strong>Speaker 3</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:04</a>):</p> <p>Hungry souls, right?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:05</a>):</p> <p>You got more than 8 billion. So climate change is affecting that way. I was also reading in the same Nature article where they were talking about the drought significantly reducing the depth in a number of the rivers and slso causing tremendous warming of the waters in some of the lakes. I think they talk about one of the lakes, I think it's pronounced Tefe</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:30</a>):</p> <p>Tefe. Yah, that's in Brazil.</p> <p><strong>Speaker 2</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:31</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, where the temperature had reached 40 degrees Centigrade. For those of us who are challenged on that system, it's 104 degrees Fahrenheit and you had large pods of dolphins over 150 of 'em, these freshwater dolphins that perished. 'cause the water got so warm. So that meant other water life didn't live either. If you major and if you major living, eating and living off and using the sea life that's right in that water for commerce, you probably saw some changes there as well.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">09:09</a>):</p> <p>Sure. And for subsistence living, I've done a quite a bit of work over the past 20 years with indigenous and other traditional peoples in the Amazon. And you're absolutely right. The stresses caused by climate change and by deforestation, which really do interact with one another dynamically to push us ever closer to that system change, that phase change from a stable system where water gets recycled to one where, you know, when you cut down a tree and around 20% of the forest is gone now, you are drying out that soil. You are drying out that part of that region. And basically the southern strip of the Amazon has been converted to pasture and cities in the past 40, 50 years. Where there used to be forests, you're not gonna get any more of that transpiration cycle. And so the drying isn't limited to the places where deforestation happens, where things are dry, things get hotter.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:01</a>):</p> <p>And then when you add, like we had last year with the horrible situation in Lago Tefe, but all throughout the Amazon of an El Nino induced heat spike and drought, then you have villages that rely on fish, rely on the rivers to get around because the rivers are the highways in the Amazon who are literally stranded without the ability to get to major cities, the without the ability to get healthcare. So the drying out of the Amazon is a tremendous biodiversity challenge. It's also a tremendous economic challenge in the ways we just talked about, but it's also a human tragedy, and it's taking tremendous costs on the people of the Amazon as well.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:41</a>):</p> <p>Wow. This is a pretty significant outcome. I've always wanted to get a better understanding of the impact that the Amazon can have on the planet in terms of a losing of substantial portion of it. What do you think that will do to the rest of us? So let's say if we lost, let's make it a big number, 50%. What are we talking about relative to what the rest of the globe will feel?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:10</a>):</p> <p>Well, the catastrophic loss of biodiversity, let's take that first, because the Amazon is estimated these are our best guesses.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:18</a>):</p> <p>I know. I look, I understand.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:19</a>):</p> <p>I mean, it's …</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:20</a>):</p> <p>But your guess is a scientific guess.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:24</a>):</p> <p>Well, that's right. That's right.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:25</a>):</p> <p>And that's better than me putting my index finger in the air and saying, you know, about, okay, so.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:31</a>):</p> <p>Right, right, right. And so, yeah, for the sake of argument, if we lose half of the rainforest, then I think we're definitely, even though there was some quibbling when Dr. Lovejoy and Dr. Nobre said tipping point will be reached at 25% deforestation. There was some pushback against that. But if we get to 50%, we're definitely seeing a phase change. We're gonna be seeing savannization, we're gonna be seeing the loss of endemic species diversity in the affected valleys. Again, the Amazon is the name we give to the river that goes west to east. But there are huge river systems that go north south and south north that feed that Amazon. And each one has its distinct biodiversity profile and has also distinct sociocultural properties, different social groups who speak different languages. And so, depending on what happens valley by valley, region by region, we could be experiencing a catastrophic loss of biodiversity.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">12:22</a>):</p> <p>What goes along with that, of course, is part of the mystery of life. Part of what makes us human is that we share this planet with other creatures. And so even before we're able to describe them scientifically, you would see thousands, if not millions of species being pushed to the brink of extinction. Of course, many minds would go towards the opportunity value or the, or the opportunity lost to develop medicines or to develop new technologies based upon things that we don't know, that we don't know in the Amazon, because it is such a biodiversity library. Library is also a good metaphor. Uh, and it's actually a metaphor that's used by my indigenous colleagues when deforestation or drought spikes and begins to challenge and affect indigenous lands. My indigenous colleagues describe that as the libraries of their people burning. Because the trees and the animals and the plant life are part of the traditional knowledge system. Part of how you make your way in the universe, know your place in the universe, find medicine, find food, find stories to pass down to the next generation. And so deforestation plays a sociocultural role in terms of challenging culture's ability to reproduce itself, right? And for people to continue to hold onto their languages and their traditional knowledges and medicines. Also, it's worth saying, because we're talking about climate change, that the system, the broader Amazonian system, sequesters roughly 200 billion tons of carbon dioxide, 200 billion tons. If we lost half of that, let's just go,</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:03</a>):</p> <p>Just cut it in half.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:04</a>):</p> <p>Really gross numbers here, exactly. A hundred billion tons goes into the atmosphere, poof, just like that. We, as the United States of America, the world's second largest emitter emitted 4 billion tons of carbon last year. So that's 25 years’ worth of our emissions.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:21</a>):</p> <p>Okay, so now we start to get an understanding of the magnitude exactly. Of what this loss can actually mean for us. And that's kind of what I wanted people to kind of grasp. Wow. It's a big number.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:36</a>):</p> <p>It’s a big number. And again, the loss of biodiversity. I mean, here in the United States, we're comfortable. We plug into our cell phones, we plug into cable news, whatever it is, it can feel like the Amazon's far away. But some major drugs have been developed based on traditional ecological knowledge and biodiversity. In the Amazon, for example, the very first drug that treated malaria quinine or quinine, right? Quinine is based on, uh, derived from the bark of a tree in the Amazon. And so that's kind of a big deal, right? There are others. There are,</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:09</a>):</p> <p>And there probably, you know, as we start to, uh, for lack of a better way of putting this, use AI and other tools to look at the pharmaceutical benefits of natural extracts from plants and from plant life and all throughout the planet, but particularly that in the Amazon, we're gonna discover many more.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:31</a>):</p> <p>That’s right, that’s right. So we're putting at peril future discoveries, we're putting at peril a big chunk of the mosaic of life and the big chunk of sociocultural diversity. Part of the bad news in the Amazon is in part the attitude that outsiders have taken and continue to take that understanding the region as a place where you can get rich quick, right? So I, I hear you, and it would be great if we could develop something that would be that elixir, but what the trick would be to develop that drug or develop that therapy and make sure the proceeds stay with the people of the Amazon. Because unfortunately, the more that we study the Amazon, and I've been working there for 25 years, there is chapter after chapter of economic boom that is all about getting a particular commodity out. First it was rubber.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:21</a>):</p> <p>The world's rubber supply was limited to the Amazon basin because it's native to the Amazon basin. So during the industrial revolution of the late 1800s, all the world's rubber came from the Amazon. So that resulted in actually a really bad impact on the Amazon, because rubber is hard to extract. You have to physically cut the trees and collect the sap. So basically slave labor, uh, indigenous peoples were enslaved other peoples from throughout the Americas were taken in and dropped into the Amazon by their bosses and forced to work in really terrible kinds of conditions. And that all basically flamed out when the British, during the British Empire, Grand Britannia, stole some rubber trees and began a rubber plantation in Malaysia, which allowed for other markets and other sources to open up for rubber. Then you get a gold boom, similar kind of extraction, where profits are extracted, leaving behind very little in the region itself. I would argue that the cattle and soy boom that's happening right now is similar. We have 50 million people living in the Amazon, 50 million individuals, 40 million of them live in cities. A lot of people don't understand that either, right? The Amazon is a highly urbanized place.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:34</a>):</p> <p>Interesting.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:34</a>):</p> <p>There are cities of 4 and 5 million people, but they are very low on the human development index because they are the sites of factories or farms or these sorts of things where labor and environmental protections are looked askant at or really not enforced. And people are getting by as best they can. And the investment that goes to the area, because it is an incredibly rich area, tends not to stay in the area. That's a key piece of this too. The environmental and social sustainability of the area depends on economic sustainability as well. I believe that crucially, you gotta have all three pillars, uh, all three legs of that stool. And that's a key piece that we really do need to be figuring out.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:17</a>):</p> <p>Well, that brings me to my next question, because recently it was announced that the governments of Brazil and France announced a plan to invest 1.1 billion in the Amazon over the next four years to protect the rainforest, right? Now on first blush, anytime you hear the word billion, you think, wow, it's a lot. But there was a part of me that says, given what you just told me now, it didn't seem like that much money for a region that vast. Now it's also been reported that Brazil has contemplated allowing oil exploration t certain parts of the Amazon as well. So, Can you talk a little bit about these plans and what your thoughts are relative to success?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:58</a>):</p> <p>Absolutely. Yeah. So it is good news that donor countries like Germany, like Norway, like France, like the United States, actually, the United States has pledged just under, I think around seven 50 million to the Amazon Fund, which is an international, it's based in Brazil, but it's an international scoped fund to try to set up conservation areas to set up sustainable business practices, to support community led conservation and all these sorts of things, which really are project by project wonderful examples of keeping the social, the environmental, and the economic flowing in the right direction. So that's to be applauded. But I think you're right. It's a drop in the bucket when compared to the potential revenues that Petrobras, which is Brazil's largest company, and the second largest petroleum company on the planet Sees when they look at oil exploration in the Amazon, and specifically in a place that is all in the news right now. Brazil has been investing in offshore oil drilling technology in the southern part, uh, near Rio, near Sao Paulo.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:06</a>):</p> <p>But a lot of oil has been found just where the Amazon River empties into the Atlantic. It's called the Falls of the Amazon. And so they are moving ahead quickly to begin to develop that area. And we're talking, if it's 1.1 billion that the French and the Germans and the Norwegians have pledged for doling out projects over the next couple years, we'll see 200, 300 multiples of that when it comes to the oil revenue based upon what's there in the offshore area. So the question then is, is that a good idea? Does that not</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:37</a>):</p> <p>Well, we, well, well, we can tell you that it's not a good idea once you have a spill. Uh, but the reality is, my fundamental philosophy on deposits of hydrocarbons in the ground is that people are going to develop 'em. To the extent that we develop technologies for mitigation, we need to, The reality of the situation is until the planet forces us to stoP, man will pull those hydrocarbons out of the ground and we'll burn them.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">21:08</a>):</p> <p>I tend to agree with you, provided that it isn't too expensive to get them out. There has to be an economic kind of motivator. And right now, at least for the foreseeable, we see oil selling at a high enough level to justify those offshore investments, which are in the billions themselves To get started. But I absolutely agree with you. And so then I think if we're realists about it, we need to think about mitigation. We need to think about, okay, with those tax revenues going into the public coffers of Brazilian nations or multicultural corporations, what is the dividend that needs to be paid forward to the Amazon to make sure that the commitment to climate change that you're getting by pumping those hydrocarbons outta the ground can be mitigated with the peoples and places? Here's a, a moment of hope, guarded hope next year in November of 2025, so 18 months from now, Brazil will be hosting the 30th meeting of the Convention of the Parties, COP, so COP Paris,</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:07</a>):</p> <p>Right, The Paris Agreement, et cetera. Copenhagen, Brazil and other Amazonian nations are eager, very eager to appear to be doing right by the Amazon, which they understand to be simultaneously a globally important asset, but also their particular sovereign ground, right? So Brazil, Brazil is not interested in any, in the UN or the US coming in and taking it over, right? But they are interested in a COP or in a huge international meeting being able to tell a good story about what they're doing. And so if they're gonna move ahead to your point, right? If they're gonna get those hydrocarbons out of the continental shelf, off the Falls of the Amazon, when everyone knows that, right? What can they do when they're up there on that stage to say, this is what we're doing to make sure that the Amazon is not gonna be the victim of these or other kinds of economic development schemes?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:02</a>):</p> <p>And so many of the people that I work with are pressing hard, both publicly and quietly in the back halls of power in Brasilia and other Amazonian capitals to make sure there can be some kind of, okay, if you're gonna do this, or you're gonna continue with agriculture as well, 'cause we could talk about deforestation, right? We need to have some real commitments, some measured commitments, and a plan on how to get there when it comes to putting the brakes on deforestation, protecting human rights, protecting biodiversity, and really investing in the potential there that's in the Amazon.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:33</a>):</p> <p>That leads me to my next question, and let me make it a little more specific. So what would you like to see in a response to outcomes like this, right? Not just from the Brazilian government, but from other governments in the United Nations. From the United States for crying out loud, right?. So what would you like to see in terms of a, a response?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:56</a>):</p> <p>So I think that the United States and the Brazilian government and all governments, and for that matter, NGOs and consumers, need to pay a little bit more attention to what's going on in the Amazon. And that's where I think getting some of that pretty basic, but often lacking context out there about the Amazon, that it is as big as it is, that it is really diverse. I mean, I, I don't think I mentioned this, but this is a good time to sort of say there's 300 different languages spoken in the Amazon.</p> <p><strong>Speaker 2</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">24:27</a>):</p> <p>Really?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">24:28</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, yeah, 300 different Amerindian languages to say nothing of the, the colonial languages, Spanish and Portuguese and French and and English, right? And many, many different kinds of societies. There are 2 million indigenous people. There are roughly 6 million Quilombola or Maroon communities. These are descendants of enslaved people who escaped slavery to the Amazon. A lot of people don't appreciate this, that Brazil was actually the destination of most enslaved Africans who were forced to cross in the middle passage.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:00</a>):</p> <p>Is that for sugar primarily, or what was it?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:02</a>):</p> <p>For sugar. For sugar in the Northeast and for coffee in the south of the country, right? And so enslaved people's fleeing for freedom would go to a place that was relatively uninhabited and set up their own communities called Quilombos starting in the 1600s, right? They would trade with indigenous people. Sometimes they would fight with indigenous peoples. But there were cultures set up, uh, Afro-Brazilian cultures set up that are thoroughly Amazonian and are thoroughly unique with their own cultural, religious, and subsistence practices. You have riverside communities as well, who are the descendants of, I talked about the rubber boom after the rubber bust when there was no more money in the very laborious production of rubber in the Amazon. The communities that were brought there, stayed there and basically hunted and fished and had a relationship with the environment. That was a very sustainable and interesting one. And so the Amazon, in addition to being an urbanized place, is also a place of tremendous social and cultural diversity. And it's a place of poverty, it's a place of corruption, it's a place of international crime. It's a place where all of this is happening. And so, as with any place, I mean, think again, it's, it's the size of the lower 48. Is there one policy solution to all the problems in the lower 48 United States?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:20</a>):</p> <p>Of course not.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:21</a>):</p> <p>So there are many different things that we need to think about that most of the time when we're in international audience, we just think climate or biodiversity or forest.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:31</a>):</p> <p>Right. We just think, yeah, stop deforesting.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:34</a>):</p> <p>Uh, and we need to That's absolutely crucial.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:36</a>):</p> <p>No, I get it, I get it. But what I hear you saying is that it's more than that.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:39</a>):</p> <p>Yeah. It really is. And so real partnership, real engagement, government to government or corporate or consumers needs to appreciate that diversity of the Amazon, needs to appreciate that Amazonian people have a lot to contribute to the world in terms of being stewards of the environment, in terms of the knowledge that they have and that they can share with us. But that, that has to be done in an equitable way. It's not the case that we can go save the Amazon from the United States, you know, like parachuting in. Their capacity is, is actually there in the region, but also the forces that are leading to its destruction are there in the region. Not to make this too political, but if you're in the United States and you're in higher education like you and I are, chances are you may be invested in a TIAA retirement account. Full disclosure, I've done research on this. I have the receipts, but they're not the only ones. Okay. So don't get at me, TIAA, please. They've invested, and subsequently, once this came to light, they divested, but they were investing in ranch properties on recently deforested land on the edges of the Amazon. And so, in other words, they were good investments, these ranches were accruing in value. But I didn't know, and maybe you didn't know that your own retirement is vested in, you know, deforestation.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:01</a>):</p> <p>This is, this is the very first time I'm hearing about it. Wow.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:04</a>):</p> <p>People are concerned about meat. And they should be, because it was the case in the 1980s and 1990s that Brazil was exporting meat grown on deforested land to the United States. That has stopped. So it's actually not the case that we should go after McDonald's for selling Amazonian beef in the United States, 'cause they don't. But that beef is going to China, so the rest of the world is engaged in benefiting from the Amazon's destruction. But the rest of the world can also show up in solidarity with the people who are the true stewards of the land, who are the indigenous and traditional people.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:41</a>):</p> <p>The, the reality is, is the people who are there trying to survive as well, right?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:47</a>):</p> <p>That’s right, yep.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:47</a>):</p> <p>And it's hard to tell them, hey, make a change in your lifestyle now and suffer now, starve now so that somebody in America or some other country could have a better quality of life, 10, 20, 30 years from now, right? And that's what makes it hard and a little self-serving when we sit here.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">29:13</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, right. I'd agree with that. And, and that actually brings to mind something that you ask how the US or how outsiders could engage. And one thing that I think we can do is support sustainable commodity chains, right? So verifiable chains of value that begin in the Amazon, and maybe the product goes to the United States, maybe just goes to urban Brazil or urban Argentina. But the majority of that profit gets reinvested in the local community. It does not get captured by a middleman or by the urban retailer, but instead it really gets returned much like shade grown coffee, you might think of that, right. It's not a good example for the Amazon, but you probably have heard, and maybe you've enjoyed acai, the wonderful super fruit from the Amazon, right? Yeah. Well, it is really wonderful and it's, it's a great way for the Amazon to be exported all throughout the world. But 90% of the economic value chain of acai rests outside the Amazon. Only 10% rests in the actual cultivation of the Amazon. So that needs to be switched, right?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:22</a>):</p> <p>Not surprised by that, right.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:24</a>):</p> <p>Yeah. Yeah.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:25</a>):</p> <p>So talk to me a little bit about Mason's Institute for Sustainable Earth and how it's involved with what's going on in Amazonia.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:32</a>):</p> <p>So we, at the ISC, the Institute for a Sustainable Earth, are involved in a lot of different projects with partners in the region, but we're also supporting a lot of really talented Mason faculty who are working on a variety of issues. And really what we try to do, our kind of theory of the case that the ISE, is to bring together teams that are interdisciplinary to do research that can be of impact, be of consequence, right? And so along those lines, I actually had the privilege of convening a high-level international symposium, I guess is the best way to to think about it, back in January of 2023, where we went to the Smithsonian Mason School of Conservation up in front Royal, spent a couple days really hashing out the priorities for international interdisciplinary research that includes communities that valorizes and really platforms scientists working in the region at Brazilian Peruvian Bolivian institutions,</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">31:38</a>):</p> <p>right so that it's a real partnership as opposed to, uh, global northern institution coming in and making the discoveries or taking the credit. And it was really eye-opening. We came out, we published a, a paper, basically a white paper, laying out what some of the big priorities are, and also where we want some of the funding mechanisms to go, whether it's agency funding for research or corporate funding or foundation funding for conservation, how that needs to be thought about and maybe redistributed in the context of the tipping point in the context of we have 10 years to make as much progress as possible with halting deforestation, with supporting the human right and dignity of Amazonian peoples with building socio, bio economy value chains that return economic investment to the region without cutting down the forest.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:36</a>):</p> <p>So Tom Lovejoy coined that tipping point phrase in 2018. What progress have we made since then?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:44</a>):</p> <p>Overall, we have done a good job since 2018, getting the word out. People are tuned into the Amazon more today than they have been, I would say since the 1988, 1989 forest fires grabbed the headlines and made the cover of Time Magazine. Remember Time Magazine?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:01</a>):</p> <p>I do.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:01</a>):</p> <p>So that was, that was a big deal, right?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:03</a>):</p> <p>That that was. So for those of you who don't know who Tom Lovejoy is, he was a world-renowned faculty member and Mason professor. And he was studying, spent a good bit of his life studying biodiversity in the Amazon, and would often take groups of very wealthy and very famous individuals, whether were actors and actresses. And I saw what Leonardo DiCaprio and</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:32</a>):</p> <p>That's right. Mel Gibson.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:34</a>):</p> <p>Mel Gibson, Cameron Diaz, and all of those people, Angelina Jolie, he would take them right into the Amazon to learn what you and I are talking about right now.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:46</a>):</p> <p>That’s right. And so Tom's</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:47</a>):</p> <p>And to physically see the diversity and to see the wildlife that was there.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:53</a>):</p> <p>It makes such a difference to be up close and personal. And Tom knew that Tom understood the power of the forest and the power of making that connection with the wildlife and with the people of the Amazon. And so</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:06</a>):</p> <p>Are we still doing that now, or has that subsided with Tom's passing?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:10</a>):</p> <p>We are still actively engaged as a mason community with the Forest Fragments project that he was basically his brainchild and which is under the care of one of our partner organizations, the Amazonian Institute for Research. We actually have a graduate student that is funded through an ISC grant doing research right there where Tom Lovejoy took Angelina Jolie and, and Tom Cruise. We've had regular check-ins. We have one of our colleagues, Dr. David Luther, continues to do research there. And Tom's legacy really has been putting that part of the Amazon on the map. I think it's inspired a whole lot of consciousness raising in the English-speaking world about what's going on in the Amazon. And so what we're trying to do at the ISE is press that forward, really press that legacy forward.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:58</a>):</p> <p>I got to spend a lot of time with Tom before he passed, and just one of the nicest people on Earth. I hate it we lost him so soon.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:06</a>):</p> <p>He's a towering figure still, for some reason, the phrase science diplomat comes to mind, right, 'cause he was thoroughly a scientist.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:15</a>):</p> <p>You would routinely, when I would have these meetings at his home, which was extraordinarily modest, right? It's such a Tom Lovejoy home, right? But you would routinely have the ambassador from Brazil or some dignitary from some foreign country. Some industrial leader.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:34</a>):</p> <p>Or a World Bank president.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:36</a>):</p> <p>A world bank president. Yeah. You’d routinely have those individuals at his home as well.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:41</a>):</p> <p>And as you say, he was so modest, so humble, but so passionate and singularly focused that the story about the Amazon got out there. And in addition to being a, an incredible advocate and a bridger of dialogues and a diplomat, he was also a brilliant scientist. But also the whole debt for nature idea where impoverished nations would have some of their debt forgiven in exchange for conserving areas and keeping them pristine. That was his idea, right? So I mean, practical applications that have really left their mark on the world.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:17</a>):</p> <p>And it's better and it was better than writing the debt off, right?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:20</a>):</p> <p>That's right. That's right.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:21</a>):</p> <p>No, outstanding, outstanding. So talk to me a little bit about your research. What is it you do, what are your next steps?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:30</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, great. Thank you for that. I, as I said, I'm a cultural anthropologist and I've been working with native people and other traditional riverside communities who are really taking the lead in defending their own lands. The phrase for this is forest defenders, although it goes by lots of different names depending on the language you're speaking. But it entails physically defending land from loggers, from miners, from government agencies that might want to do something different with the land. And doing so not only through the physical demarcation, but through political alliances, with non-profits, with advocacy organizations, with researchers. My role specifically has been in helping the sociocultural and environmental mapping of these areas so that there can be some translation of traditional ecological knowledge that's associated with a landscape into a kind of language that maybe an ecologist or a politician might understand as well, right? And so it's really fascinating, the interplay between the kind of ethic of responsibility to lands and non-humans and waters that an indigenous person has, and how that lines up with how an ecologist sees the interaction and interdependence of species and the abiotic world and, uh, climate, et cetera.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">37:54</a>):</p> <p>And so I sit at that node where indigenous peoples are organizing for their own defense, facing an existential threat, but helping connect them with data, with science, with storytellers, so that they can tell those stories. And I'll give you an example. The people that I've been working with for the past 10 years now, the Munduruku, have been tremendously successful in demarcating lands that were slated for, to basically to go to the bottom of a lake, a reservoir, that was going to be behind the world's second largest dam. But they stood up and organized themselves and protected their sacred land, protected the relationships that they have with non-humans. And were able to shelve that dam and have become sort of a real inspiration to other indigenous and traditional societies throughout the Amazon, standing up to not just dams; and dams, we can have a debate about whether that's green power, whether it's not.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:47</a>):</p> <p>But what they were really standing up to do was to stand up and say, we're here. I’m moved by their courage and the courage of others like them who stand up. And we see it with indigenous peoples here in, in North America as well, who stand up and refuse to say we are in the past, who refuse that may be social expectation that whether it's assimilation or you've given up your culture, that the expectation that indigenous people are, are no longer among us. And the Munduruku and others in the Amazon are standing up and saying, we're here and we know how to steward these lands. We know how to make sure that the biogeochemical cycles and hydrological cycles continue. They wouldn't say it in those terms, but the terms that they would use would be about balance, reciprocity, relationship with the forces of life that course around us.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">39:43</a>):</p> <p>So the ecology and the traditional learning really go hand in hand. And then we get them to policy through making arguments, through communication strategies, through raising awareness. There's a big push that I'm part of, and that the ISE is part of and supporting to try to preserve 80% of the Amazon by 2025. Now that's next year, we're not quite there. About 50% of the Amazon is officially protected, whether you're talking about national forests or national parks or indigenous lands, about 20% of it is deforested and urbanized, which leaves 30% up for grabs. And we're not gonna get there next year through a stroke of the pen to lock up the other 30% of it. The task here is to raise awareness and to, even in the 30% that remains, make sure that whatever happens to it, it's sustainable. That we don't see it kind of a zero-sum game. It's either a park or a paved cityscape right. There can actually be sustainable, thriving, living landscapes with people in them whose economic models are not based on extraction and destruction.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:54</a>):</p> <p>How much time do you spend in Brazil?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:55</a>):</p> <p>Well, I've got two small kids, so not as much as I used to. I'm sure you know how that goes. ... 9-year-old twins actually. Boy, girl twins. They keep me busy. But I'm down there once or twice a year usually to check up on research and to engage my research partners, but also to create new opportunities for Mason. I mentioned we've got some great faculty here that are working. We've got, uh, David Luther who works on birds. We've got Louise Shelley in the Schar School who works on transnational criminal networks, which is a big thing in the Peruvian, Colombian, Brazilian Amazon. So I've been working with her a little bit on sort of how to have conversations about rule of law and cross-border diplomacy when it comes to not just drug trafficking, but get this trafficking of species, trafficking of huge fish, the pirarucu, which is a fish that can grow up to 50, 60 kilos that is caught in Brazil, and then brought into Colombia illegally to feed an urban frontier in Colombia and, and Peru.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">41:56</a>):</p> <p>So money laundering, drug trafficking species, et cetera, Louisehas been doing some really great work with the IUCN on traceability. You got Mike Gilmore, who's working in Peru on anti-road demonstrations and building a biocultural corridor with the Maijuna people. So I don't just go to Brazil, that's where most of my research is, but I'm also working with Mason faculty, trying to connect them better and, and really get their research out into the community and the community present in what we do here at Mason, so. I used to live in Brazil. I lived in Brazil for three years. So I have dear friends and colleagues and family, so I wish I could get there more, but we've got good stuff going on here too in Fairfax.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:39</a>):</p> <p>So your award-winning book, “Conjuring Property: Speculation and Environmental Futures in the Brazilian Amazon,” gives a good sense of the conflict between indigenous land rights and the corporate colonization of the land for agriculture, for ranching, for mining, and for deforestation that goes along with that. So can you talk a little bit about the book? Give us a sense of how this all plays out in actuality.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:10</a>):</p> <p>It's not unlike, if you think about sort of the 19th century story of the United States, this whole idea of manifest destiny, that the western part of the continent was for the taking of the proud, ambitious pioneer, usually white, the bro, the white man, right?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:28</a>):</p> <p>The, the few, the bold.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:29</a>):</p> <p>Exactly, right. So Brazil, it's a very different country than the United States. I don't want to suggest that it's the, the same, but it is continental in scale and in size. And often it has at different key moments in its history likened itself to the United States. And so there was a kind of manifest destiny moment in the 1950s and 60s where the Brazilian government, which at the time was a dictatorship, encouraged people to leave the coast of Brazil and move into the Amazon, which in the popular imagination was the next frontier. It was empty. It was a place where you could go and make something of yourself. So there was a ton of propaganda. There was a ton of kind of social engineering to try to move the vast majority of the Brazilian population, which due to it being a colonial export colony, lived along the coast, lived along the places that were close to ports.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">44:25</a>):</p> <p>The average Brazilian thought of the Amazon as completely empty. The average Brazilian thought of it as a place where if I go and clear the forest, what I'm doing is improving the forest. What I'm doing is I'm making something where there is nothing, this terra nullius kind of idea. And so the book really traces how in the 21st century that idea continues to play out with both rich Brazilians and relatively impoverished Brazilians coming into the region and buying into and reproducing a kind of idea and ideology of the land belonging to them and their being no indigenous people there, and how they actually use land speculation and access to capital and access to political influence to undo some of the conservation and indigenous rights protections that were placed into law in the 1988 Brazilian constitution. So Brazil, as I mentioned, was in a dictatorship in the 1960s coming out of the dictatorship, had some of the most progressive environmental and human rights legislation and constitutional provisions of anywhere in the planet. But we've seen a backslide since then. And so the book really does explore that backslide and, and explore some of the social, political and environmental effects of this idea prevalent in Brazil, but again, I would say it's, it rhymes with what we have in the United States of there being no indigenous people there and it being the nation's goal to fill up this empty space with progress, and then how that motivated people's activities. It's the story that I tell in that book.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">46:08</a>):</p> <p>So, uh, you have a friend in Brazil, Alessandra Korap, I, I believe the name is, who is part of one of Brazil's indigenous nations, who you have quoted saying that the resistance from the indigenous population to those who would exploit the Amazon is a fight for all of us. I think I know where this is going. But talk to me about a fight for all of us and what exactly does fight mean?</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">46:37</a>):</p> <p>Alessandra Korap is an amazing person, so I absolutely want to answer your question, but if I can paint just a quick portrait of her. She stands all of maybe four foot one, but has the fight of a thousand people in her. She is 28 years old, a law student, basically went to law school from her village, grew up in a village in the middle of the recesses of the Amazon rainforest, has gone to law school to learn how to fight with the master's tools for the rights of her people. And so when she talks about all of us, what she means, I think, is really in three different registers. First is people like her, indigenous people who have been sidelined, who have been written out of existence, who have been bulldozed. Second, the entire world's population, because she understands, as her elders do, and as her brothers and sisters do, that the work that the Munduruku are doing and, and the other indigenous people are doing, not just in the Amazon, but throughout the world.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">47:47</a>):</p> <p>Here's another statistic. Indigenous people occupy and manage roughly 23, 24% of the world's terrestrial surface, where 80% of the world's biodiversity can be found; untold, name your metric of environmental service, whether it's clean water or wooden fiber, or carbon sequestration. So the work that indigenous people do, managing actively managing landscapes like the Amazon actually has a global benefit for all humans. So that's the other, all of us. The third all of us is non-human creatures, which for the Munduruku and many Amazonian people are literally relatives, literally brothers, sisters, uncles, cousins. And so there's that depth of compassion and empathy for the freshwater dolphins that you mentioned that literally baked or boiled alive in those warm waters. In Lago Tefe, she sees, Alessandro Korap, sees her advocacy on behalf of her people, on behalf of non-human relatives, and on behalf of all of us, even people, all of us humans, even people who might be her enemy. And so there's a kind of Gandhi-like, uh, stance or a Dr. King's stance to love even the person who would cut you down. That's what Alessandra Korap brings. It's not just me as a good friend and colleague of hers, but she received the, uh, RFK Leadership, Humanitarian Leadership Award two or three years ago. She's been to Switzerland, she's been to Germany, she's been to New York a couple times, really being an international sensation when it comes to advocating for the rights of her people and the rights of nature.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">49:23</a>):</p> <p>As we close, talk to me about your level of optimism that we can avoid the worst consequences of the Amazon Basin.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">49:31</a>):</p> <p>I am cautiously optimistic. My optimism meter goes up a point or two or several points. When I think about the indefatigable work of somebody like Alessandra Korap or other indigenous leaders who, unlike me, I, I have the luxury of being able to be in the thick of it but then come home, right? I can come home to Fairfax, I can come home to the United States. For Alessandra and for Ailton, the struggle's never ending, and they are positive. They are optimistic.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">50:02</a>):</p> <p>That's amazing.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">50:04</a>):</p> <p>They know that the world that they're giving to their children and their grandchildren is a better one, even though it is existentially threatened. So I think we all have to take our lead or, or take their lead and fall in place to do what we can to be innovative, to be a science diplomat in the model of a Tom Lovejoy, and to really try our best. I do think it's inevitable — here's just the caution part — I do think it's inevitable that 20, 30 years from now, the Amazon will be different because the world will be different, right? We've baked in a certain level of warming, we've baked in a certain level of anthropocenic and anthropogenic changes. But from the indigenous perspective, the world already ended in 1500 and has been ending in lots of different kinds of ways, and transforming in lots of different kinds of ways throughout all of that time. You know, 90% of the indigenous people who lived in the Amazon, there were 10 million there in 1500, 90% of 'em died, were gone by the time of 1600, right? So they know a lot about resilience, they know a lot about adaptation. They know a lot about bouncing back. And so I think we can take some inspiration from their lead in that respect, knowing though that the Amazon will be changing, we can nevertheless try to mitigate those changes and adapt to the new situation as it unfolds.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">51:22</a>):</p> <p>Well, let's hope we can stay on the right track</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">51:25</a>):</p> <p>Here. Here.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">51:25</a>):</p> <p>Jeremy Campbell, associate director for strategic engagement at AV's Institute for Sustainable Earth. Thank you for a great conversation.</p> <p><strong>Jeremy Campbell </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">51:38</a>):</p> <p>Thank you, Dr. Washington. It was a pleasure.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">51:40</a>):</p> <p>I am Mason President Gregory Washington saying, until next time, stay safe, Mason Nation.</p> <p><strong>Narrator </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/jqbhXtsATiHC0Qmjy4Gny69c6N3u_xiKJdI_FFtkv75TpzU4J_eJCwIsbdMoWwiY6XXkQTGIbYfU2Ghu2XLvjT4GXMQ?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">51:49</a>):</p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="72f9d8e1-d62a-4981-a3aa-0509bbd620c8" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Access to Excellence Podcast Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-6ebf305594e9e349fb9cd9f54a235cb38c154cf225becc729b3b53c7e71dc5f5"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/president" hreflang="und">Gregory Washington</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/561" hreflang="en">Institute for a Sustainable Earth (ISE)</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/3971" hreflang="en">Earth Day</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/291" hreflang="en">College of Science</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/911" hreflang="en">Sustainability</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/3006" hreflang="en">Sustainability Research</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/9816" hreflang="en">Amazon Rainforest</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Mon, 22 Apr 2024 14:19:56 +0000 Damian Cristodero 111711 at Podcast - Ep 57: Catherine Read, mayor of Fairfax City, Va., is outspoken, unfiltered /news/2024-03/podcast-ep-57-catherine-read-mayor-fairfax-city-va-outspoken-unfiltered <span>Podcast - Ep 57: Catherine Read, mayor of Fairfax City, Va., is outspoken, unfiltered</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/266" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Damian Cristodero</span></span> <span>Mon, 03/25/2024 - 11:10</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="b76a4491-6b2a-4c29-a729-b763b7e1baca" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-03/ATE%20Catherine%20Read%20slider%20Torres%20240321905%20copy.jpg?itok=udZYrSA8" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2024-03/ATE%20Catherine%20Read%20slider%20Torres%20240321905%20copy.jpg?itok=ePzkyGez 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-03/ATE%20Catherine%20Read%20slider%20Torres%20240321905%20copy.jpg?itok=udZYrSA8 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2024-03/ATE%20Catherine%20Read%20slider%20Torres%20240321905%20copy.jpg?itok=E9vZ1VS9 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="Fairfax mayor and Mason alumna Catherine Read records Access to Excellence podcast" /></div> <div class="headline-text"> <div class="feature-image-headline"> <div class="field field--name-field-feature-image-headline field--type-string field--label-hidden field__item">Fairfax Mayor is outspoken, unfiltered</div> </div> </div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p><span><span><span>Catherine Read is the first woman and first AV graduate (BA government and politics ’84) to be mayor of Fairfax City, Va., the university’s hometown, and she isn’t shy about touting a university she says helped teach her how to think critically. Want to know why it’s good to “disrupt the system,” why it’s important to get more women into policy-making decisions, and why our educational system doesn’t reward bold ideas? Read tells you in this Women's History Month conversation with Mason President Gregory Washington. She also is adamant that “if we can’t maintain democracy, if we can’t preserve our country’s rule of law, then all of these other things make zero difference.” <em>This podcast was recorded on March 21.</em></span></span></span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="8c1daaae-d00a-40b4-9a19-4785918ea13a" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <h2>Listen to this episode</h2> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?from=embed&i=h6uqt-15c0400-pb&share=1&download=1&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=auto&rtl=0&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7&size=150" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="Catherine Read, mayor of Fairfax City, Va., is outspoken, unfiltered" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="8d425d5a-57c7-433c-a850-995a28c9409a" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p><span class="intro-text"> As I started out doing nonprofit advocacy work, I became aware that we did not have enough women around the table for good public policy. A lot of the problems and the issues that exist are because women are not in a position to create policies around, such as, universal pre-K or affordable quality childcare or paid family leave. And you have to ask yourself, why? And it's because women have not been at the table.” </span></p> <p><sup><span class="intro-text">~ Catherine S. Read, Mayor, City of Fairfax, Virginia</span></sup></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="43406330-7502-47a3-87a3-490e1416e14f" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript | Fairfax Mayor is outspoken, unfiltered</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p><strong>Narrator</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:04</a>):</p> <p>Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology, and those who simply have a good story. All make up the fabric that is AV, where taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:26</a>):</p> <p>AV is a school for groundbreakers and trailblazers from globally impactful research to creating lasting change locally and beyond. Mason students, faculty, staff, and alumni put their stamps on their communities every day. With me today is one of those extraordinary alums, Catherine Reed. Class of 1984 with a bachelor's degree in government and politics is the first Mason graduate and the first woman to be mayor of the city of Fairfax, Virginia, the university's hometown. Katherine has dedicated herself to serving and supporting the city and its people. She's a small business owner with a social media consultancy firm. She is a long-time host of Fairfax Public Access shows Inside Scoop, Your Need to Know and Making Change Radio. She is also dedicated to bringing the city of Fairfax and George Mason into a closer partnership and that I can, so well, thank you for. I am so pleased she could be here during Women's History Month of all months to talk about the history she herself is making Catherine Read, welcome to the show.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:46</a>):</p> <p>Thank you so much for having me. It wasn't far to travel, actually, from City Hall to this radio station. Probably not even a mile.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">01:54</a>):</p> <p><laugh>. Hey. And that's the whole point, right? You are right here. You're right here with us in this community in George Mason.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:02</a>):</p> <p>Well, it's interesting because when I was here, when I arrived in 1981, I moved into the first dormitory ever built. It opened on October 25th, 1981. Prior to that, there were no dormitories. There were the old student apartments, but there was no dormitories. And so that was one of the reasons I chose to come to George Mason. That and the fact that it was in a suburb of Washington DC. I grew up in rural southwest Virginia.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:25</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, I know you took one of my questions. This is fantastic. Well, let me, let's talk a little bit about things. You have a really interesting background. You have said that you're not a politician, and I can tell by your background why you would say that, but talk a little bit more about what you mean by that.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:42</a>):</p> <p>Well, being mayor was not really in my life plan. I mean, I do have a degree in government and politics and, and people have asked why I changed from being a theater major at Emerson College to being a government and politics major at AV. I had an interest in both. I mean, I was very politically aware in fifth grade. During the Nixon McGovern race, I asked my fifth grade teacher if I could do a bulletin board about the presidential race. And he was like, as long as you cover both candidates equally in fifth grade, I was politically aware. I watched the Watergate hearings, the summer of the Watergate hearings I can remember most clearly as yesterday. So even though I had a love for theater and thought that's what I wanted to do as a career, I've always had an interest in politics. But not necessarily as I got older, seeing myself in a political role. As I started out doing nonprofit advocacy work, I became aware that we did not have enough women in the rooms where decisions were being made.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">03:39</a>):</p> <p>There were not enough women around the table for good public policy. A lot of the problems and the issues that exist and still exist are because women are not in a position to create policies around like universal pre-K or affordable quality childcare. Or paid family leave. There's not even paid parental leave, maternity leave that doesn't exist in this country. And you have to ask yourself, why? And it's because women have not been at the table to make policies that benefit women and families. And so I became an advocate working with nonprofits, but also electing more women to public office. So I know a lot of women in this region who sit in positions of power like Phyllis Randall out Loudoun County. I knew Phyllis before she was running for the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors, Katie Cristol. She and I sat on panels before she was ever on the Arlington County Board. All of these women that I've worked with for over 15 years trying to figure out how we get women in the room where it happens. So I always saw myself in that role, not in the elected role, but being the person who helps women who see themselves in the elected role get into those seats.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:52</a>):</p> <p>Well, we are dealing with a time in the US House where, what is it? I think it's up to 29% women now. So 128 out of the 440 members. You know, it's a high watermark, but not where we need to be.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">05:11</a>):</p> <p>No. In 2013, I remember working for women candidates in 2013. We were 47th in the United States for the percentage of women in our legislature. Virginia was very low. And that year, 24 women ran for office. In the journal assembly. 12 were incumbents, including Charniele Herring, who's also a Mason alumna. That is true. Charnel was an incumbent in 2013, and there were 12 challengers and all 12 incumbents won, and all 12 challengers lost. When you look back and you think, well, 2013, that's just 11 years ago. Look how far we've come in 11 years from that to where we are now. You look in the House, you look in the Senate, you see women, you see women with babies. You see women who have given birth in office. You see women with school aged children. And that didn't exist a decade ago. It just didn't.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:06</a>):</p> <p>So when you were elected in 2022, you became the first alum, as I said, and first woman to be mayor of Fairfax. Did that dawn on you? Were you thinking, look, I wanna be a trailblazer here?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:17</a>):</p> <p>You know, it was funny because somebody from the Washington Post said, are you running on being the first woman mayor? And I'm like, are you kidding me? Did you see how that worked out for Hillary? No. <laugh>, no. I don't talk about it at all because it's a double-edged sword. Right? People don't wanna hear about gender, even if it's a factual statement. People don't wanna hear about gender. They want you to make a case for why I should be elected based on my vision, my commitment, my background, my skillset. And same with being a George Mason alumna. I mean, I did not talk about that, but I talk about it all the time now that I'm in office.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:51</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, look, I see here what the City of Fairfax Women's History Month proclamation stated that there have been only 15 women elected to Fairfax City Council since 1961 and only two women ever elected to Virginia statewide office in the Commonwealth's 500-year history. Right? Yeah. We have a history of government here longer than, literally longer than the country's age. By a wide margin. mean, it's not even close. And we still have not had</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:23</a>):</p> <p>Well, so we don't, we haven't had a</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:24</a>):</p> <p>Woman governor. Two elected officers, one of them is sitting in her seat right now.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:29</a>):</p> <p>Right now. So, there was a long time between Mary Sue Terry, who was attorney general in the late 1980s, and Winsome Earle-Sears, who's the current 42nd lieutenant governor, those are the only two in the 405 year history. It's been five centuries. We have the longest, continuously operating legislative body in the Western Hemisphere. And the fact that we as the Commonwealth of Virginia have not been able to elect a woman governor in five centuries, people should be asking themselves, it's not about the candidates. There are plenty of qualified women. So if it's not about the candidates, then we have to ask ourselves, is it about the voters? So I had an interesting conversation At a political event</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:09</a>):</p> <p>Okay, this is getting really interesting. Let's go</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:12</a>):</p> <p>At a political event hosted by Gerry Connolly, which he does every St Patrick's Day, the holiest day of the year, according to Congressman Connolly. And he has a big event where, and it's all Democrats. And you know, I was talking about a potential ticket in 2025 of candidate for governor, lieutenant governor, and Commonwealth attorney, and a longtime friend of mine, someone who I just love and respect. She goes, well, we can't do that. I'm like, why? She goes, well, it's three women. I'm like, Judy, you did not just say that. Did you just say the Commonwealth of Virginia could not, would not, will not elect three women to the top offices 'cause that's what I just heard you say. She goes, well, yeah, I don't think that they could get elected. I'm like, wow. Wow. And wow. This is 2024. And you're telling me, I said, do you remember what Ruth Bader Ginsburg said when somebody asked how many women Supreme Court justices will be enough? And she said, when there are nine, because no one ever questioned the fact that we've had nine male Supreme Court justices. Why should anyone question if there are nine women? But I just had a long-time feminist activist woman say to me, oh, three women on a ticket. Oh, that won't work.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">09:25</a>):</p> <p>You know, that's interesting that you bring that up. Not only is it commonplace for there to be only men on the ticket, it is clear that even some, I assume you're talking about a Democratic ticket. Yes, yes. That even some of the Democratic party would be uncomfortable with a ticket of all women. We have a saying, I'm an engineer. We have an old saying. Every system is designed to get the results it gets. If the system's giving you a certain result, that's because that's the way it was designed. Those are those results it was designed to give you, well, this is a primary example of that. This is exactly an outcome, that's a part of a system of which all of us are included that we produce even when we're not thinking about it. Those kinds of things have to be disrupted. They have to be changed. It's people like you that change 'em. So this is fantastic. I did not think we were gonna go in this direction. These questions are not on my card.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:23</a>):</p> <p>Well, that's okay. Because I under, I understand that you kind of a are freethinking, freewheeling, and I love that about you. It's kind of like that is true. Go where the conversation takes you. And you're right about disrupting systems. And it's kind of like, how was I the first woman mayor in 2022? Because it was the first time municipal elections were held in November instead of May. Historically, and this is part of the Virginia Constitution, and it's part of the Byrd Machine.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:47</a>):</p> <p>Preach. Teach on this one. Go ahead.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:48</a>):</p> <p>Right. So every other year in May, 20% of registered voters voted. 20% of a hundred percent chose the mayor and city council since 1961. And I call that voter suppression. That's when I call it. When you have a system, to your point about what the system produces, when you have a system that consistently produces 20% or less over 60 years, then the system is working the way it was designed to work. So we had 15 women who were elected to city council over that period of 60 years. And there were many, many years where it was an all male city council and a male mayor. And that's what May elections produced. It produced a consistent constituency who decided that that is what they wanted their government to look like. So in 2022, when we moved to November, 59% of registered voters came out to vote, which meant two thirds of those voters had never voted for mayor and city council before.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:46</a>):</p> <p>And you got a different outcome,</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:47</a>):</p> <p>Different electorate, different outcome.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:49</a>):</p> <p>Exactly. A different system.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read (</strong><a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:52</a>):</p> <p>Different system. <laugh>.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:55</a>):</p> <p>Amazing. Amazing. So when did you feel as if you were making history?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">11:59</a>):</p> <p>You know, I didn't really. I do now, because it matters to young women who want representation. Like you can't be what you can't see. I have a Girl Scout troop that's coming to City Hall. This is interesting too, because Deepak Madala, who I worked with at Virginia Poverty Law Center, and he just reached out to me and said, my daughter's Girl Scout troop would like to come to city council and meet with you and take a tour of the City Hall. And I said, well, that would be wonderful. And then it's occurred to me, I've never seen Girl Scouts in City Hall. Boy Scouts come to do the Pledge of Allegiance. We got lots of Boy Scout troops that come to the meetings and they have for years. But to my memory, I've never seen a Girl Scout troop in City Hall. So I'm like, yes, absolutely. Bring them. And I said, and I will ask the women on staff to come down. It's gonna be late in the afternoon to come down so that these girls can see the different kinds of people, the different women who have jobs in government besides the mayor. We have a deputy city manager, the city registrar, uh, Asian American woman. We have so many women. And these girls need to see.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:03</a>):</p> <p>That's exactly right. That's how you change the vision of the future. This is Women's History Month. Who are the women you look up to?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:11</a>):</p> <p>Greta Thunberg.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:12</a>):</p> <p>That's interesting.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:13</a>):</p> <p>It is because I tell you, young people at a certain point in their lives don't understand that things aren't possible. Kids come into this world curious and they learn all the time. And they ask questions and they have bold ideas. But a lot of times our educational system doesn't always reward that. And so as time goes on, you start to realize that what gets rewarded is hitting benchmarks and achievements and checking off boxes. That is what is rewarded. And all your big bold ideas somehow are not something you start to believe in. But Greta Thunberg does. Greta Thunberg is like, I can change the world. There are young women out there that I think will go forward boldly without considering the fact that they could fail or consider the fact that it could be wasted effort, because it, that's not what is driving them.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:07</a>):</p> <p>What is driving her and what is driving a lot of young women is the fact that they see a problem that needs to be solved, like climate change. They feel an urgency that it needs to be solved now. And they don't doubt their ability to move the needle forward. And a lot of times you take criticism, I look at Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, or even Nancy Pelosi, right? Two different generations. And those two women are not on really on the same page. But each of them has taken their fair share of criticism over what they have committed themselves to do in moving the needle forward in a way that they think serves the greater good.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:45</a>):</p> <p>That's exactly right. And when time came to support one another, they did. Do you get what I'm saying?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:51</a>):</p> <p>Yes I do. And I think, and you know, and I heard Liz Cheney speak at the, uh, Richmond Forum like, uh, last month. And listening to Liz Cheney speak too, she was on the Rachel Maddow Show. That's another example of how two women who will tell you they don't agree on most things. RAnd yet Liz Cheney was on Rachel Maddow's show because what they do agree on is our country and our democracy comes first above partisanship, above politics. Because if we can't maintain democracy, if we can't preserve our country's rule of law, then all of these other things make zero difference.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:27</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, I really like Liz Cheney. I saw her maybe about a year ago when she came, right before she was ousted. She came to DC to give a speech. And I happened to be able to meet her then. She's phenomenal.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:41</a>):</p> <p>She is. And, again, this is a woman who took a stand and got kicked out of her own party. But you have to admire women like that, right?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:49</a>):</p> <p>She got kicked out of Congress.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:51</a>):</p> <p><laugh> True. She got kicked outta Congress.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:54</a>):</p> <p>She got kicked outta Congress. I don't think she got kicked outta her party.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:58</a>):</p> <p>Well, it'll be interesting to see what she does. I don't know what a path forward is for her, but she hasn't given up and she's using her influence in her platform to speak her truth.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:07</a>):</p> <p>That's right. I love principled people who stand on right. And fight for what they believe in.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:13</a>):</p> <p>Me too.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:14</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, so you've been in this job now, how long?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:17</a>):</p> <p>15 months. And I'm already running for reelection.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:19</a>):</p> <p>Okay, well look, that's the nature of the beast, right?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:22</a>):</p> <p>Uh, every, every other year. Yes.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:23</a>):</p> <p>That’s right. So 15 months, is the job what you thought it would be?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:27</a>):</p> <p>Some of it, but no. First of all, people are like, well, it's a part-time job, right? I'm like, no, it's 365 days a year, 24/7. And a lot of that is because of email, social media and smartphones. Sometimes I think about former mayor John Mason, who was the longest serving mayor from 1990 to 2002. He recently passed away. And I'm thinking John Mason probably got up when he was mayor on a Sunday and read The Washington Post. I get up every single morning and look at my work email. I look at my smartphone and I see what text messages and what emails have come in. And</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:01</a>):</p> <p>From the night before,</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:02</a>):</p> <p>From the night before and overnight.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:04</a>):</p> <p>While you were sleeping.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:04</a>):</p> <p>Well, yeah. And I sit on regional committees too, so I really didn't understand that part of it. I sit on the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, which meets once a month. The national, I mean the Northern Virginia Transportation Commission, the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority, and the Northern Virginia Regional Commission. That is four monthly meetings a month. Right. But it's important because we are a region. And I'm committed to doing that work. But again, there is so much to this, it's not a part-time job. A podcast I really like a lot is Pod Virginia, Michael Pope and Lauren Burke do a twice a week podcast. And they, it is all Virginia politics. But one of the things on Tuesday's episode that they were talking about is what the House of Delegates gets paid.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:48</a>):</p> <p>Oh, that's ridiculous.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:49</a>):</p> <p>Well, $18,000 a year. But they're a part-time legislature, right?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:53</a>):</p> <p>Yeah. But it's not true.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:54</a>):</p> <p>It's not. And so they were talking about the fact that, again, we were talking about is it the candidate or is it the voters? But in this particular case, is it the fact that these people don't deserve to be paid a living wage or a fair wage? Or is it the fact that people just believe that this is some sort of volunteer job and we're just honored to do it, but it's an equity issue. I can do this job. I don't do, people are like, do you have a day job? I'm like, well, I used to do many things that I don't do anymore. I do the mayor job every day, every week. That's right. I'm on all the time. And I said, so this is not a part-time job, but it pays $13,000 a year. So if I had to pay my mortgage with what I make as mayor, it wouldn't work.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:36</a>):</p> <p>That's exactly right. And that's why you have people of substantial means being the ones that run for office, because they are the ones who can afford to.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:45</a>):</p> <p>And it's not representative government. So we need to care about that.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:49</a>):</p> <p>We are getting deep.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:49</a>):</p> <p>Well, we have to. You know, I got a great education. I got a great education at AV.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:54</a>):</p> <p>You know what? I was about to say the same thing. Boy, those George Mason professors have indoctrinated you well.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:01</a>):</p> <p>They taught me to question everything and to look deeply into government <laugh>. But I do think</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:05</a>):</p> <p>This is amazing. I gotta pinch myself a little bit. So let me back up and see if I could get us back on track here. I was asking you about role models is how we got on this one, right? Let me ask you one more question in, in, in this segment and then move on. If you could sit down with any woman in history, any woman, who would it be and what would you wanna know from her?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:25</a>):</p> <p>It would be Eleanor Roosevelt. It would be Eleanor Roosevelt. You know, the more I learn about history, the more I admire that woman. And just when you think you know everything about somebody, you find out something else.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:38</a>):</p> <p>Nice.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:39</a>):</p> <p>Like the Golden 13, I asked an American Legion full of veterans if they knew who the Golden 13 had ever heard of the Golden 13. And no one had. It is the first 13 Black naval officers that were trained during World War II in 1943. And they were called the Golden 13. And they didn't even know why they were selected. They went through a three-month training program in 10 weeks. They did so well that they were accused of cheating and had to take some of those tests over again, which they passed. But this was because of Eleanor Roosevelt. Eleanor Roosevelt is the one who pushed for training Black naval officers. The USS Mason, which is over there fighting off Somali pirates, when I heard something about the USS Mason, I remembered from the book the Golden 13, that that ship was built in commissioned during World War II because it was going to have an all Black crew. And they called the USS Mason Eleanor’s Folly. This is why, no matter how much we think we know about history, there is so much more to know. And I would love to know what Eleanor knew and all the things that she was behind that no one knows</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:47</a>):</p> <p><laugh>. Catherine, can I ask you a question? Can I, can I <laugh> You are hitting me with zingers, man. Wow. This is fantastic. Okay, look, let's back up a little bit and talk about your time as a student at Mason. You said earlier from Southwest Virginia came to Mason from Emerson College where you were a theater major. So how do you make that flip? How do you go from being a theater major in Boston to a government and politics major at Mason? That's a flip</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">21:18</a>):</p> <p>It is. It is. But like I said, I'd always had a deep interest in both. And when I realized theater was probably not a good career choice. And I have to tell you, I'd never been off the farm when I went to Emerson. I went to Emerson College in 1980 on a Greyhound bus with a steamer trunk and electric typewriter and $20 in cash and a work study job and a Pell Grant and a lot of scholarship. I had the International Thespian Society Scholarship, the Elizabeth Taylor Warner Scholarship for the Dramatic Arts had all this one-time money and a grant from the school. But I'd never been to Boston. I'd never seen the school. So I get on this Greyhound bus leaving Roanoke. 15 hours changed buses at Port Authority in New York. I loved every single second of my time in Boston. Loved it.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:02</a>):</p> <p>Boston is a great university town.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:06</a>):</p> <p>It is. Oh, it's oh, every, yes. Every so many schools we used go to them.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:08</a>):</p> <p>Don't let, don't let anybody fool you.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:10</a>):</p> <p>Yeah. $1 movies at MIT and we prayed they didn't check student IDs. So we would go over there and watch first run movies at MIT. But I realized that the kids who were there, it was a small school because it had about 1500 undergraduates. And George Mason was the same size.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:26</a>):</p> <p>We're not the same size now.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:27</a>):</p> <p>Not anymore, right? <laugh>. And so in 1980, Mason literally had the number one debate team in the nation. Their forensics team just knocked everyone out. And I had never heard of George Mason, even though I lived in Virginia my entire life. I'd never heard of this school. And so when I decided I couldn't afford to stay at Emerson and that theater was not a good career choice by which to have an independent life, I started looking at George Mason strictly because of my interaction with the Mason forensics team. And so I ended up applying to Mason.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:57</a>):</p> <p>Did you tell them that? That is something that they should know, by the way. Fantastic. Fantastic.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:02</a>):</p> <p>Yeah. I mean, I was on the forensics team in high school, but the funny thing is, once I got here, I had a work study job. I had a series of work study jobs here on campus and I ended up not joining the forensics team. Like I didn't do forensics at Mason, even though that's what brought me here. But I did get a great education working my on campus jobs. And I will tell you this, I learned as much working jobs at Mason as I did in the classroom. Absolutely. I mean, you interact with staff and faculty in a different way. I was doing data entry for the chair of the American Studies Department, and we are still friends all this time later, Hans Bergman and I are still friends, still talk to each other over LinkedIn. And I worked in the copy center at Thompson Hall binding reports and hot gluing things.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:47</a>):</p> <p>And that was one of my work study jobs. I was a desk receptionist at the dorm. That was one of my work study jobs. And you know, I worked my way through school. And I will tell you Mason at that time was attractive for a lot of reasons. But I could afford to go here. I could afford to work my way through school. I had student loans, but it didn't take me 20 years to pay off my student loans. It took me probably five years to pay off my student loans. And I think the cost of public education is so prohibitive now. Young people are discouraged from even considering a four-year college degree because they don't want to start out life with a degree and $20,000, $40,000 in student loans and no guarantee that that degree is gonna get them a job to even pay off their loans. You know, young people really have very tough choices to make. But Mason is still a school and it's got many accolades. It's a research school, it's world renowned, but it's still a school where more students can afford to go and get a world class education, not for world class tuition. That is the legacy.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">24:52</a>):</p> <p>That's my tagline right there. I'm gonna take it. I am going to use it. That is fantastic. That's exactly what we are and who we are. And not only that, we find you, no matter where you are. We're that place of opportunity. We are that place of access. We are that place where if you want to become a success, we'll provide a pathway for you. We will work with you to figure it out. And that is probably the most attractive thing about this place. So at some point in time, something had to flip in your mind to say, I wanna do politics, right?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:28</a>):</p> <p>Well, okay, I'll tell you what that was. I reinvent myself every seven years. So I had a career.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:32</a>):</p> <p>Is this on purpose or it just happens every seven years? It's like it happens. It’s like the itch thing?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">25:37</a>):</p> <p>It just happens. It’s an itch thing. So my first job out of George Mason was actually, I got a job as a software tester on a Navy payroll personnel project for the Navy through a government contractor. And it's 'cause I had computer experience. Computers were very new in the early eighties. And so if you had computer experience, you could get a job. It wasn't in my major, but it, it was a job that paid decent money. I worked in the data processing industry and then I decided to take a job in human resources. So I was in human resource for seven and a half years for Long and Foster local real estate company. And then I was a small business owner with my second husband. We opened a fax company back. Remember fax machines? There's some kids who couldn't even tell you what one does, but yeah, it was back with</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:20</a>):</p> <p>No you, you still see them around on desk desk and many offices around here. When they come on, people are like, well, well what is that?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:27</a>):</p> <p>But it, but back when, when fax was new in law firms and hospitals relied on fax machines. That was a going business. So Fax World was a business I co-owned. I did the bookkeeping, I ran the service techs, I did all the things in a small business. And then I ran a program called Home Service Connections for Long and Foster. And that was in the early 2000s. And then I had a business mentor who suggested to me in 2007 that these 18,000 real estate agents didn't know how to market themselves online. So think about 2005, 2006, there was no social media. It was called online marketing. Social media wasn't even a term. And so you've got 18,000 independent contractors who still use business cards and telephone to market themselves. And so he suggested to me, he goes, you should start your own business teaching professional people how to use these online tools. And so I did, in 2007, I started Creative Read and I started teaching people how to use Facebook and Twitter, which, you know, people are like. And this is political people too. This is one of the, how, one of the doorways I walked into politics and I know so many people in politics. I got Mark Keam on Twitter. He's like, Catherine,</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">27:39</a>):</p> <p>Mark Keam?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">27:39</a>):</p> <p>Mark Keam. I got him on Twitter. He's like, Catherine, it's so stupid. I'm like, mark, you have to be where the people are having a conversation. They're trying to talk to you and they're definitely talking about you. And so got Mark Keam on Twitter back when he first ran in 2009. So I started teaching people how to use social media, how to use online tools. I was doing that as my own business starting in 2007. But then that led me to nonprofits. Then all of a sudden, word of mouth, the Virginia Autism Project, how can we use social media to get autism insurance reform? Then I got Virginians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. How can we social media to abolish the death penalty in Virginia?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:19</a>):</p> <p>Oh, okay. I see what's happening.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:20</a>):</p> <p>So this is how I pivoted to that. So this every seven years thing is just, this is just where life led me, I guess. I see opportunity and I'm like, there's an opportunity there. And I take it.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:31</a>):</p> <p>Ain't nothing wrong with that. So one of your goals, one of your major goals since taking office has been to expand the partnership between Fairfax and Georgia Mason University. And one thing you've done to do that, to personify that, is hosting the first ever Fairfax Pride event, which was a collaboration, which is a collaboration between your office and Mason's LGBTQ+ Resource Center. And so can you talk a little bit about what was your vision for that event? How it got started?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">29:03</a>):</p> <p>So Josh Kinchen invited me to the Mason Pride event, which I came to last April. And I'm coming to on March the 30th this year is, is the pride event here. And they were very generous. I mean, they introduced me not only as the first woman mayor of Fairfax City and the fact that I was a Mason alumni. Lots of applause, lots of applause. But the night of my election, we had our thank you party. I didn't call it a victory party 'cause I didn't know if I was gonna win, right? But we had it at what was then the Earp’s Ordinary Popup on the plaza in Fairfax City. It's now McKenzie's Tonics and Tunes. And I said to Josh, I'd like to have all of my volunteers and my campaign workers come for an event. And he goes, well, what time would that be?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">29:44</a>):</p> <p>Because we have a drag show that's gonna be Tuesday night. And I'm like, really? What time's the drag show starting? And he goes, it starts about nine. And I said, well, I'd still like to have my event. Is there any way that we can just stay for the drag show? And he goes, well, there's a cover charge. And I said, well, can I cover the cover charge? He goes, well, lemme talk to Alan. So long story short, not only am I the first woman mayor, first Mason alumni, first mayor who's never served on city council. I'm the first mayor who had a drag show at my election night party. Okay. So I think that pretty much says it all. So all this is</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:15</a>):</p> <p>You Trailblazin’.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:16</a>):</p> <p>So this was relayed at the Pride event last year at Mason. And so recognizing, and again, I I was on the, the Board of Equality Virginia for seven years too. Recognizing we have to celebrate, recognize, celebrate, uplift, support, protect every single person in our community. And that means the LGBTQ community too.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:37</a>):</p> <p>Without question, without question. So you clearly know how to build partnerships. You've been doing it your whole career, you've done it with us. What are some ways in which students can get involved with the city, can help the city, can engage the city.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:52</a>):</p> <p>Your, your students are already there. A lot of them are already there. The women's basketball team and the men's baseball team are volunteers at our Providence Elementary School. And I think we have athletes who volunteer at Daniels Run Elementary School. There's a lot of students, Mason students who live in the city. They live in the city and not just at the Flats at University. They rent houses that are in our neighborhoods. And so they're very much a, a part of the fabric of the city. But we have park cleanups that they come to. We have all kinds of events downtown, like the Fall Festival. And I just wanna mention this too, about partnerships Fall for the Book is a super important partnership that we have with AV. Ollie, the OSHA Lifelong Learning Institute, which is in the city. Very much a partnership and, um, Spotlight on the Arts, uh, a partnership between the city and the university.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">31:40</a>):</p> <p>These are longstanding partnerships that bring our residents together with students, faculty, and bring visitors in from outside of the city to take advantage of these things that we produce together as a collaboration. But, uh, as far as students, we have reached out to the Climate Center, which is, we are very excited that the Virginia Climate Center is located here. You know, we have environmental issues in the city. Kate Doyle Feingold, who sits on our city council, her dissertation advisor, Kate contacted her and she's working with our police department to help us to analyze data, public safety data. Um, I've just reached out to Dean Perry of your College of Public Health.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:21</a>):</p> <p>She's fantastic.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:22</a>):</p> <p>Well, I, because we have a homelessness task force.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:24</a>):</p> <p>She is fantastic.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:26</a>):</p> <p>And one of the things we have not included is part of our homelessness task force is public health issues and how we address public health issues as part of what we're trying to do for people who are unhoused in the city. So I just reached out to Dean Perry to see, you know, how can we work? So there are so many opportunities for students to get involved. Using our city is basically a way to get clinical experience. Again, I'll bring up Mason's Community Mental Health Center, which is also in the city, Behavioral Health Center. You've got students getting their clinical hours right here in our city providing mental health services to our residents. And the school of business. I can't even, how could I forget? The Costello Business School is, we've got one of your faculty members that sits on the Economic Development Authority for the city of Fairfax, Patrick Soleymani. And we are glad to have him.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:14</a>):</p> <p>He’s a good guy.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:15</a>):</p> <p>But we've got students who are working on a, a retail assessment for a parcel of land that's being redeveloped in the city. And we've got students who are working on what that could look like through the business school. We welcome partnerships like that where students get real experience and we benefit from the faculty members in the programs and the disciplines here at the university.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">33:38</a>):</p> <p>So for 10 years before you became mayor, your focus was on legislative advocacy work. If you, you just highlighted mostly with nonprofits and you had some big victories, right? Uh, the Virginia Autism Project lobby for autism insurance reform that when it passed in 2011, required insurance companies to provide medically necessary behavioral therapy. They, they were not doing it before then. You also helped the Virginia Alliance for Breastfeeding successfully push for a new 2015 law that allows mothers to breastfeed their children anywhere the mother is lawfully present. So talk to us a little bit about focusing your efforts on Fairfax relative to focusing your efforts on the larger picture items.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:29</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, well, you know, there's a lot of crossover. I think one of the things we're waiting for right now is when you talk about advocacy and how state issues can impact local issues, we have to renovate our schools soon. It's been 20 years. And so we're gonna have a bond referendum on our ballot in November. But there's a 1% sales tax that both chambers passed that would allow locality, every locality to have a 1% sales tax specifically for education. Yeah. But will the governor sign it?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:59</a>):</p> <p>Is it K-12?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:00</a>):</p> <p>It’s K-12. I know I would, I wish it was for you too. I wish it was for you too, but it's a 1% sales tax for K through 12. And, but we don't know if the governor's gonna sign it. But those are the kinds of things where it matters. And we advocate as a local government, as a municipal government. And a lot of that advocacy is done through the Virginia Municipal League too. Because getting that ability to have a 1% tax in addition to a bond referendum, to fund this major school innovation really makes a difference for us. And again, we're a Dillon Rule state, and people don't understand that too. There's a lot of things we can't do as a locality without asking permission from the General Assembly. We can't change our charter. Almost everything we do is a locality. It has to be approved by the General Assembly and then signed off on by the governor because we're a Dillon Rule state, and not every state operates that way. A lot of states have home rule, and we don't.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:49</a>):</p> <p>I'm gonna have to look up this Dillon Rule.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:50</a>):</p> <p>Well, I tell you, I got a good education, Mason. Did I mention that?</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:53</a>):</p> <p>You got a great education at Mason.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:54</a>):</p> <p>I learned all the things.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:55</a>):</p> <p>And we are seeing the evidence right now. Among the many roles that you've had, you've hosted this Fairfax Public Access, these shows Inside Scoop, Your Need to Know and Making Change Radio. What's the genesis for these shows?</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:11</a>):</p> <p>So I fell into it as somebody else had been hosting Inside Scoop, and she had family issues. Her sister and mother were ill in upstate New York. And so I started filling in for her. And I didn't have any broadcast experience. I might've been a theater major, but no broadcast journalism experience whatsoever. And this is live television. This was a one-hour live television show. Yeah. I'm in the host seat and I'm just learning as I go. I will tell you this, I am good at learning as I go. Like I learn on the job and it's fine. So I started being in the host seat. And what I found is that people were trying to do important things, policy-wise, like decoding dyslexia, parents who were trying to get resources for their dyslexic children in the public school system. I mean, at that time, back in 2015, Fairfax County didn't even have a reading specialist in an administrative role to test kids for dyslexia.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">37:00</a>):</p> <p>A lot of parents felt like they were setting kids up to fail before they got help. So having a show where you could get these parents on air to talk about what the challenges were, what they were asking for, it presented it in a different way. And not only were the shows broadcast on television, but they go out on YouTube. Which means that all of these groups could send it out by email. They could embed it on their website and it would present what they were trying to do in a different way. So for me, the shows were just an extension of this nonprofit advocacy work. How do we help people understand the problems you're trying to solve with your nonprofit? And doing it in a interview format was just helpful. It's better than trying to read an assessment. It's like somebody hand you a brochure or a one pager about what they're doing. It's not the same thing as talking to somebody who has some basis of knowledge and who's really interested in what you're doing. So people would say to me, I've never been on television before. I'm so nervous. I'm like, all you have to do is look at me. We are having a conversation. And the reason these shows work is because I am interested and you are passionate.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:05</a>):</p> <p>You talked a little bit about the new voter turnout, right? And how that new voter turnout changed the election in your case. I surmise for years of just 20% of the population showing up for these elections, there were probably some things that were undone or some opportunities missed. Really core kinds of things that we were not able to do as a community. Have you thought about what happens to a community when constituents really don't take part in elections, right? Because we had that over a period of time.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:40</a>):</p> <p>Well, this is sort of my assessment of the 20%, the 20% who tend to turn out were a demographic, older, educated White property owners.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:51</a>):</p> <p>Okay. And I know what the outcome of that was.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:54</a>):</p> <p>Right? And so you have a government that reflects the electorate, but you also have a government then who recognizes that the constituency to whom you feel you are answerable are the 20% who come out reliably every other May. So when people look at Fairfax City, and we are a bit on the conservative side to be in such a progressive region, and our citizens tend to be progressive. I have a member on my city council right now, Jeff Greenfield, and I forget, but he served for 22 years. He took four years off, but he's been on there for 22 years on the city council. And so there was basically a lot of consistency. There was not a lot of turnover. Generally, you stayed in your seat and got reelected every time until you decided to step down or retire. And that might have led to some stability in the government, which is good.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">39:46</a>):</p> <p>But it also led to sort of this mindset about what the community valued. And so I was in a meeting with Fairfax County not too long ago, and somebody said, I'm a 2012 graduate of AV, and I lived on the campus. And he said, and I didn't feel like the city really welcomed us being there. And I said, well, that is not your imagination. I said, one of my good friends pointed out that until recently, there were not streetlights on the sidewalk from the downtown to the campus, right? So subtle things that make you feel not welcome.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:25</a>):</p> <p>You know, every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets. And so you don't want those folk in your establishments and in the downtown you develop systems to keep those kind of things from happening. You, you develop covenants so that you can only have a certain number of people in an apartment, right? That would discourage students from getting apartments together, right? You have all of these kinds of things.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:54</a>):</p> <p>I like your systems thinking. If you think about the, the fact the university is like 52 years old and the city gave land to the state for the university, but it was a commuter school. So people were like, we should have a university. A university is a good idea. Yeah. A university that would be a good idea. But then suddenly it's like, but we don't wanna be a college town. We don't wanna be Charlottesville. Like, that's not what we had in mind. So you go do your university over here, but we want Mayberry over here. And Mayberry did not have college students in it. We're at an inflection point. I'm a different kind of mayor, you know, I have a different vision. I do. And I think that the relationships between the university and the city benefit both. And it's not like we don't have a say in how that looks or how it feels. We can build parameters. I don't necessarily want a hundred tipsy college students in the middle of downtown on a Tuesday night. But honestly, we don't have that. And I don't even see that that will ever be a thing. When the Flats at University was proposed, people just, it's gonna be like a frat house. People really believed it was just gonna be noise and kids and cars, and you know something, none of that has happened.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:07</a>):</p> <p>Right.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:08</a>):</p> <p>They brought energy feet on the street. It is great to be in the downtown with people.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:13</a>):</p> <p>It's helping. And it's helping business</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:14</a>):</p> <p>A hundred percent.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:15</a>):</p> <p>And businesses are now coming back and that helps the tax base. Which helps the resource base, which provides more amenities. Right. It's a virtuous cycle.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:25</a>):</p> <p>It is. It is, and I love it.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:25</a>):</p> <p>You hit the nail right on the head and we're seeing some pushback from some members about cricket. And I believe it's the same thing about our cricket baseball stadium, right? No one pushes back against the baseball side of that, but the cricket side of that, what is cricket, what does it mean? I know it's gonna bring a whole new community of people to this area and the ultimate beneficiary will be the city of Fairfax.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:54</a>):</p> <p>I agree. You know, and I think people don't understand cricket. And even though people are like, no, that's not it. That's not it. I'm like, but it is it. It's kind of like if there's nothing in it for you; you can see yourself going to a baseball game at Mason. But it's like cricket, what is it? Who plays it? I don't know anything about it. So why would I go there? And so when there was a,</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:14</a>):</p> <p>Until you actually wind up going and saying, huh, this is actually pretty cool.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:18</a>):</p> <p>Pretty interesting, right? And it's family friendly. And I think that's the other thing that the owner of the Washington Freedom, he did a good job on the town hall meeting explaining the fact that it's a family friendly game. They've modified it so it doesn't take three days to play a match anymore. <laugh>, it's a T20 three-to-four-hour model. And it's early in the evening. Yeah, it's early in the evening, the afternoon. So it, it doesn't go till 11 or 12 o'clock at night like a Nationals baseball game.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:42</a>):</p> <p>Exactly.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Read</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:43</a>):</p> <p>Again, people just don't like change and they don't like things that are unfamiliar. But to me, the Cricket Stadium is a reflection of the diversity of this university in this region. I know so many people who play cricket and when you travel the world, you run into people. When we were Warsaw, Poland, which is where our grandchildren are. There was an Uber driver who's married to a Polish national, he's from India, and he was showing us pictures on his phone of the cricket pitches in Warsaw, Poland. This is a beloved international sport and we have an opportunity and I think it's an amazing opportunity here.</p> <p><strong>Gregory Washington</strong> (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">44:16</a>):</p> <p>Well, you know what, I really appreciate it 'cause hearing this is energizing in terms of what we've been dealing with today with cricket. So it's really interesting. This is fantastic. You have <laugh>, you have put it down, and I really, really appreciate you for it. And so we're gonna have to leave it there. Mayor Catherine Read, thank you for your time and most importantly for your leadership. I will tell you right now today that your George Mason degree, has never been worth more than it is today. I am Mason President Gregory Washington saying, until next time, stay safe, Mason Nation.</p> <p><strong>Narrator </strong>(<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/7CFEQh_kVVRH_Tkro5ShMX_YKnpDHFIWmyqQxAKS7rCxJWcTLsJBvtHWGNWpWYSVuMv27NFtSdR42CqTr-44vZHwS3s?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">45:04</a>):</p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="c28e1422-5231-49a6-94ed-01035a638e0c" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="" srcset="768w, 1024w, 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="" /></div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="b6dc9db0-559b-4f36-bfa5-b26073ebb971" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/president" hreflang="und">Gregory Washington</a></div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="e3a03c13-026b-479f-9212-d4c25fd98e9f" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=i7iiKAdz" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=gPwpqoNE 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=i7iiKAdz 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=jNMZzKgm 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="" "" /></div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="befe64ea-4496-42b0-8932-5628702dbfb8" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Access to Excellence Podcast Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-0d261c12625bfa519a781fa06b9e18f5be196c23ee9ddfd1be70ac51cb5e389d"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/4021" hreflang="en">Politics</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/3151" hreflang="en">affordable higher education</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/556" hreflang="en">Schar School of Policy and Government</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18821" hreflang="en">Schar School Student Spotlight</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/19236" hreflang="en">Schar School News for March 2024</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18801" hreflang="en">Schar School Featured Stories</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Mon, 25 Mar 2024 15:10:13 +0000 Damian Cristodero 111226 at Podcast - Ep 56: A view from the pulpit /news/2024-02/podcast-ep-56-view-pulpit <span>Podcast - Ep 56: A view from the pulpit</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/266" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Damian Cristodero</span></span> <span>Fri, 02/16/2024 - 14:06</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="85596b5d-9c2a-4ca0-bc18-e977751080fd" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-02/ATE%20EP56%20Torres%2016x9%20240207904_0.jpg?itok=0o4mkXb_" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2024-02/ATE%20EP56%20Torres%2016x9%20240207904_0.jpg?itok=ZQxnE4cJ 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-02/ATE%20EP56%20Torres%2016x9%20240207904_0.jpg?itok=0o4mkXb_ 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2024-02/ATE%20EP56%20Torres%2016x9%20240207904_0.jpg?itok=7fmpYJiW 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="Rev. Jeffrey Johnson (left) has led Mount Calvary Baptist Church in Fairfax, Va., since 2004. Dr. Vernon Walton has led First Baptist Church in Vienna, Va., since 2014." /></div> <div class="headline-text"> <div class="feature-image-headline"> <div class="field field--name-field-feature-image-headline field--type-string field--label-hidden field__item">A view from the pulpit</div> </div> </div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p>Rev. Jeffery Johnson, pastor at Mount Calvary Baptist Church in Fairfax, Virginia, and Dr. Vernon Walton, pastor at First Baptist Church in Vienna, Virginia, guide us through some of the history and aspirations of the Black community using the lens of Black and African American History Month. The pastors, both of whom have AV students and alumni in their congregations, also examine with Mason President Gregory Washington the unique, but intertwined, roles the university and churches can play to confront issues such as affordable housing, food insecurity and equitable healthcare.</p> <div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p><sup><span class="intro-text">  I believe wholeheartedly in scripture, where it says to whom much is given much is required. And our responsibility is not just to sit on our stools of do-nothingness and enjoy our own success, because, if that is the case, then we are guilty as well of just relishing in our own privilege. But our responsibility is to reach out to those who are marginalized, to reach out to those who have not had the benefit of the same level of access, for whatever the reasons are. And to help lift the tide.” ~ </span></sup><sup><span class="intro-text">Dr. Vernon Walton, </span></sup><sup><span class="intro-text">Pastor, First Baptist Church, Vienna, Virginia</span></sup></p> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="2597d79f-e74e-4324-812a-fca28919a221" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <h2>Listen to this episode</h2> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p> </p> <p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?from=embed&i=ekw4g-1583af9-pb&share=1&download=1&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=auto&rtl=0&logo_link=episode_page&btn-skin=7&size=150" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="A view from the pulpit" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="5bf79086-3f37-463c-9128-5a0d386a7e1d" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript | A View from the Pulpit</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p>Narrator (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:04</a>):</p> <p>Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology, and those who simply have a good story. All make up the fabric that is AV, where taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates, and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">00:27</a>):</p> <p>Mount Calvary Baptist Church in Fairfax, Virginia was established on May 15th, 1870 by former slaves who settled around the area of the Fairfax Courthouse after the Civil War. It is the first and only Black-founded church in the city. It is located less than a half mile from the AV campus. The First Baptist Church of Vienna, Virginia was established in 1867 and was also organized by former slaves. It is the first and oldest church of any kind in Vienna. It's located six miles away from the campus. I am honored to have the leaders of those congregations here with me today. They serve our students, our faculty, our staff, and they serve them incredibly well. And so on this early stage of Black History Month, I just felt fantastic that they were able to engage with us and speak with us today. Reverend Jeffery Johnson has led Mount Calvary since 2004. Dr. Vernon Walton has led First Baptist of Vienna since 2014. Both have put their stamps on their communities and have relationships with Mason that go beyond their church's proximity to our campus. Rev. Johnson. Dr. Walton, it is good to see both of you and welcome to the show.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:01</a>):</p> <p>Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you for having us. (Jeffery Johnson) Yes, indeed.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:05</a>):</p> <p>Well, Rev. Johnson, I know your son Jeffery has a degree from AV in graphic design, so I hope that it served him well. And Dr. Walton, you have had the Mason Chorale sing at your church and have Mason graduates on your staff. So both of you, how does the legacy of your churches, both of which are founded by former slaves, inform your work and the mission of your churches?</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:36</a>):</p> <p>Let me defer to Dr. Walton.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">02:38</a>):</p> <p>Well, thank you. Thank you brother, brother Pastor again. Dr. Washington, thank you for having us. I'm honored to be here, talk about our work and our mission and our legacy, and certainly the celebration of Black and African American History Month. We really recognize that as a church, we stand on the shoulders of those who've gone before us. We celebrate really the strength and the capacity of those, those slaves who literally built out churches from the ground. And when I say built our churches from the ground, I'm not just specifically talking about the brick and mortar, but I'm talking about those who really worked and labored hard to build a community, to build a sense of belonging. And we recognize their intent. Years ago, 156 years ago, specifically for First Baptist, their intent in building a congregation was to inform people about their faith as well as to educate our children and community in a academic manner. And so we recognize those shoulders that we stand on and we continue that work and that mission today</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">03:42</a>):</p> <p>Yes. As well, the Mount Calvary Baptist Church, being that it was established May of 1870 by individuals, just like with First Baptist Vienna, we are known as the historical church with the biblical mandate. That biblical mandate comes from Ephesians chapter four, verse 12, that we are about the perfecting of the saints, the work of ministry, and the edifying, which is an old word that means to build up of the body of Christ. We're proud to be in this community with AV. Not only has Jeffery Junior graduated with honors from this school, he went on, uh, Dr. Washington to enroll in the Howard University Law School and is now a civil rights attorney, and he's currently working for the Veterans Administration.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:35</a>):</p> <p>Okay. That's all right. How well do your congregations know each other? Like is there a rivalry? Is there any type of, you know, you're not that far apart and I know how churches go. What is the engagement like between the two congregations?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">04:52</a>):</p> <p>Well, I wouldn't call it rivalry President Washington, but I, I would say that if you go into most of the black churches within Fairfax County, there is certainly an interconnectedness between the congregations. There are relatives throughout each of these congregations. The pastors enjoy great relationships and fellowship, and whenever possible, we attempt to collaborate together to work for the betterment of people.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">05:18</a>):</p> <p>Yes. And many years ago, I was one of the youngest assistant pastors in Northern Virginia at the Peace Baptist Church and Peace Baptist, Mount Calvary and other congregations like Mount Olive for Centerville, had very close relationships. As a 22-year-old Baptist preacher, I used to cruise throughout Northern Virginia in a 1965 Dodge Dart convertible. And I used to worship at the old, uh, sanctuary, not only of Mount Calvary, but of First Baptist Vienna. And we are very proud of the work that Dr. Walton is doing in the city of Vienna. We are trying to do the same type of work in the city of Fairfax.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:07</a>):</p> <p>I'll just also add President Washington, that one of the founding pastors of First Baptist is also listed as a founding pastor of at least three or four other congregations in Fairfax County. So the river runs deep.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">06:23</a>):</p> <p>Outstanding. Outstanding. So, uh, Reverend Johnson, Mount Calvary, when it was founded, was known as the Colored Baptist Church. And prior to its founding, slaves attended churches of their masters. In addition, both of your communities, both Fairfax and Vienna, were segregated at one time. And I believe the last black enclave in Fairfax City on School Street really actually sat right next to Mason. And so what effect did the, the dissolution and the, the breakup of the strictly black communities have on the churches themselves. Did that impact you all significantly?</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">07:04</a>):</p> <p>It definitely affected us at the Mount Calvary Baptist Church, still driving that classic automobile throughout Northern Virginia. I used to come to School Street and I actually saw visually young black children and sometimes with their parents walking to the Mount Calvary Baptist Church. You could actually drive up and down School Street, and there was a series of houses, not all, but there was a series of houses that you could just park in front of the house or in the, the residential yard of that homeowner. And the front door was never locked. You could just walk right in. And there was a very gentle, yet powerful Christian woman by the name of Mabel Colbert, and she had quite a few children and grandchildren, and it was her personal ministry to make sure that they were involved in the various ministries and activities of the Mount Calvary Baptist Church.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:03</a>):</p> <p>So Dr. Walton, I don't know if you've heard this quote from the actor Morgan Freeman, who recently on, uh, no, not too recently, but not too long ago, on 60 Minutes in which he says Black History Month keeps racism alive. And in that interview he says, you're going to relegate my history to a month. Black history is American history. I definitely agree with the last part of that statement. How do you, how do you react to that?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">08:28</a>):</p> <p>Before I react to that, can I just go back to your last question? Just for a minute, because First Baptist, like Mount Calvary has experienced some of the same thing, but I think it's also safe to say that wherever there is a African American church in Fairfax County, you could make the assumption that there was an African American community. Clearly, as you peruse through the county today, things have changed. My question is perhaps why the disruption of these communities and what led to the disruption of these communities? You know, in some places today, we call it gentrification. But very similarly, First Baptist was very much a community church, was very much a rural community church and enjoyed its membership living and occupying space in that community. Whereas at one time, there was 80% Vienna, 20% commuting.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">09:23</a>):</p> <p>We are probably just the opposite today. 80% commuting and 20% in the community within miles from the local church. And I think that's significant for us to mention because where the church existed, there was a Black community, there was Black home ownership, and there was Black economics. And so there's been a real disruption in that system. (Gregory Washington) So were there Black businesses in those communities and the like? (Vernon Walton) Absolutely. Absolutely. There were, there were plenty of Black businesses. Many, um, as I said, were farmers, and they sold their goods and their products, and they, the communities itself enjoyed a plethora of African American entrepreneurship. And today we are very hard pressed to experience the same thing. So to your point, you make about Morgan Freeman and his quote, I would agree with the latter part as well. I have not seen the exact interview, but I have heard conversation about Brother Freeman's comments. But I would just add that African American history is American history, and you cannot talk about American history without talking about the contributions that Black people have made to our nation, to our country, to our world. I personally am not sure that Black History Month keeps racism alive as much as those who seek to eliminate the contributions of Blacks and those who attempt to rewrite our history. And of course, I'm sure there's spirited conversation on this campus about those who even attempt to ban books that share our story.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">10:57</a>):</p> <p>And Dr. Washington as well look at the fact that when you speak of, like, I, I believe one preacher spoke of 11 o'clock on Sunday morning as being the most segregated hour in America. That is one sided. We, and I'm sure Dr. Walton would agree with this, we have never rejected Whites from our membership, nor have we rejected White people from attending our services. It's only been on the other side of that scenario. Even right now, I'm part of a group called the Racial Unity Group, and we have a wonderful time fellowshipping together. And this thing based upon Morgan Freeman, uh, let me bring to your attention, he was one of the key actors in the movie called Glory. (Gregory Washington) Sure was. (Jeffery Johnson) He portrayed a character that they referred to as Sergeant John Rawlins. If you do a Google search on Sergeant John Rawlins, it will speak of the fact that the main character of the movie was real. But this was a character that was invented for that movie. The truth of the matter is, if you do another Google and you put in the name of Lewis Henry Douglass, who was the oldest son of Frederick Douglass, that sergeant from the 54th Regiment of Boston was actually Louis Henry Douglass. If you read his bio on the computer, it runs parallel with the screenplay of who they called John Rawlins. Why would they leave out such a significant fact?</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">12:33</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, that's interesting.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">12:34</a>):</p> <p>But I see as Black History Month as a time that brings much pride and inspiration to the African American community. You may also remember that there was a congressional representative, I cannot think of his first name right now, but it was Congressman King from Iowa, and he actually stated that all of the major contributions to the world from Western civilization came from the White race. And that other people groups were merely observers of their contributions. And he was actually, uh, punished for making that statement. But because of our lack of knowledge of the contributions, not only of African Americans, but Asians and Hispanics and other people groups, we are really very ignorant of the contributions made by other people other than those of European descent.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">13:30</a>):</p> <p>I understand that. Well, I can tell you, Black Baptists in particular played an undeniable role in the Civil Rights movement. We don't have to talk about Martin Luther King and, but the church was the rallying point for the community. And in a large sense, still very much is, uh, it provided social communication networks. It provided facilities, leadership and money, all of that. So do these roots still shape the current mission of the Baptist Church, in your opinion?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">14:03</a>):</p> <p>Absolutely. We are still very much continuing in that same tradition. We are still very much continuing in the tradition of Dr. King and Vernon Johns and a host of others, even before some of the more famed individuals, we continue to work toward the liberation of not just African American people, but especially African American people, but all people, we are on the front, at the forefront of issues of justice. Churches were a big part of the movement for George Floyd right here in Fairfax County. The church galvanized around the injustice against Timothy Johnson. One of the other issues here in Fairfax County, as we talk about the shifts that have taken place within our communities, Fairfax County has a policy that is entitled One Fairfax, which is an equity policy. An equity plan. The church is at the forefront of making sure that people of color, Black people in particular, are included in this One Fairfax plan, and that it becomes a reality. So the church, from its roots has been very engaged, and the church is still engaged today.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:13</a>):</p> <p>Mount Calvary actually worked with Dr. Walton with the Timothy Johnson case, and we were very proud of his leadership there. We have been very involved with City Hall here in the city of Fairfax with the previous mayor, Mayor Meyer. And we are currently working with Mayor Reed, but Mount Calvary used to have a group that would meet once a month at the Mount Calvary Baptist Church called the Fairfax County Colored Citizens Association. And very briefly, they were trying to bring forth more equity and education, home ownership, voter rights, as well as with economic opportunities.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">15:57</a>):</p> <p>Oh, that's fantastic. So if I were to shift gears and say, okay, at that point in time, back in the, the 1960s, right? In the height of the Civil Rights movement, the real emphasis there was getting rid of segregation, getting rid of separate but unequal and getting our folk on a level playing field, right? And Mason was a part of that. There is a lot of that history that, from what I've read, is an integral part of this campus. What would you both say are the issues today? What are the things that are the galvanizing rallying points right now? Where are our efforts best focused?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">16:36</a>):</p> <p>Can I just lift as a recent example of the work that the Black church specifically did on behalf of Black people and people of color? COVID-19 people were dying. People of color were dying at disproportionate numbers, and we literally felt as clergy persons that we needed to address this issue. And because we did not have access to shots, we did not have access to vaccines at the same rate as others. And so we really petitioned and worked hard to get equity clinics within the churches. Uh, and there were some who initially told us that this would not happen. That this was not a possibility, but we looked at the numbers, we looked at the data. We saw what a small population that we represented in this particular community, but that we were dying at a much larger and faster rate. And so we did not rest until these clinics were up and running in African American churches.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">17:36</a>):</p> <p>And that's important because, and not only did it speak to the needs of African American people, but those in our Hispanic and Latina community took advantage of this because they were not trusting of some of the government sites that were up and running. And they took great delight and great comfort in coming to the churches to get the shot. So that's just one example of how we've used our voice recently and, and what some of the issues. Obviously in Fairfax County, affordable housing is a real issue. Many of our congregants, they have children who they put through college and school, and they do well, they get jobs, but they still cannot afford to purchase homes and raise their families here in Fairfax County. And so they are looking at other opportunities, and that's something that is a very pressing issue today, because we believe in the importance of education and that education should pay off, but they can't afford to live. And in some instances, they are remaining in their parents' home or they're moving away. And that impacts our churches directly when people move because of housing.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">18:46</a>):</p> <p>Yes. We've had countless numbers of members that upon retirement, they have moved further south, either to North Carolina, Georgia, or Florida, to have much more affordable living. And we can understand that. The problem is, is that those, as Dr. Walton has spoken of, those who have matriculated through school and are making a pretty good salaries are still priced out and taxed out and placed out of the availability of housing. I myself was born in the city of Alexandria. I cannot afford to live in the city of Alexandria, which is the city of my birth. I also cannot afford to live in the city of Fairfax, which is the city where I work. And so I actually have to drive just about 20 or more miles to Mount Calvary. And even when I was at the Antioch Baptist Church, there was no housing of available near the Antioch Baptist Church, which is in Fairfax Station. So there definitely needs to be something. I'm not intimidated and I'm not jealous or envious of estate homes. And in our community, they have what they call luxury town homes. That's wonderful. That's great.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">19:59</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, I saw those. They just built, they just built a new set of them right there.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:03</a>):</p> <p>Yes. Yes.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:04</a>):</p> <p>They went right on 123.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:05</a>):</p> <p>We're talking about they start at around 600,000, and shot up to 900,000.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:11</a>):</p> <p>They, they must use the same builders in Vienna <laugh>.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:14</a>):</p> <p>But the problem is, there should be somewhere nearby where there's a housing community, which is for the middle class or lower middle class. And, uh, I do see other housing projects that are connected with George Mason, and we look forward to servicing the spiritual needs of those who will be moving into those communities. But it would be nice, we may not be the heart of the city or downtown Fairfax, but there should be somewhere nearby that could accommodate our young professionals.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:45</a>):</p> <p>Look, I hear you. You all are hit the nail right on the head with the housing piece.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">20:49</a>):</p> <p>You know, President Washington, it broke my heart at least a year and a half ago, to learn that there are people just a few miles away from our churches here in Fairfax County, not in Washington DC but in Fairfax County that are living tent communities. And when I share that story with individuals, they automatically make the assumption that these individuals are living in tents by choice. But I've had the privilege to walk the tent community to share with many of these individuals. And if you go to, to these tent communities during the day, they're empty. And not because people are just hanging out on the street, but these individuals are at work, they're working individuals, many of them, but for a number of consequences and decisions and unfortunate realities, they just cannot afford to have a roof over their head without some specific assistance with affordable housing here in Fairfax County.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">21:50</a>):</p> <p>And to add onto that, the first Tuesday of each month, I actually speak at the chapel service at the Central Union Mission in Washington DC, and there are people who work in Virginia who have to bed down at night at the Central Union Mission. They have transportation, they have a job, but there is nowhere for them currently to live.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:15</a>):</p> <p>You know, the cost of housing is a significant issue, one which we are trying to address here ourselves. You know, the reality is, is that if you look at where George Mason sits, many of the people we hire, and we pay decent salaries, right? For our faculty and our staff, many of the people we hire can't afford to buy a home in this community. They have to go 15, 20, 30, 45 miles out in order to find something. And that issue is a real issue.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">22:44</a>):</p> <p>And that same reality is true for brand new elementary school teachers in the Fairfax County public school systems. You know, if you're just graduating, trying to get into the system, and we've been particularly trying to recruit African American students from our local colleges and HBCUs. But again, the cost of living is cost prohibitive as well as in some instances for those going into our police departments. The first year or two is difficult on the starting salaries.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:13</a>):</p> <p>Man, I didn't know I was gonna get this today. This is fantastic. Reverend Johnson, I know that you can recite Martin Luther King Jr's speech, I have a dream, by heart. Is that right?</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:25</a>):</p> <p>Yes, sir, uh.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:26</a>):</p> <p>And I heard you do part of that. He outlined some basic tenets in that speech. But how far would both of you say we've come since that speech?</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">23:36</a>):</p> <p>I actually believe we've come a long way. The only thing is, there are some people who see the realities of some of the things that we've spoken about this afternoon, and they would actually be, uh, somewhat pessimistic. And when I run across those people, whether it's in the street or the barbershop or so forth, I say, wow, I gotta tell you the truth. I was born in 1962, and I would prefer that to 1862. There's a lot to be done, but we have also accomplished so much more than is being spoken about today. And there again, it goes back to one of our earlier topics, because there is not an adequate inclusion of African American contributions in our history, uh, in our public schools and even some of our private schools, that that's the reason why there is such a hopelessness today. But when you look at the King speech, I have to admit Dr. Washington, there are relevant issues that as much as I love that speech, I wish that it was irrelevant today.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">24:43</a>):</p> <p>Oh, that's deep.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">24:45</a>):</p> <p>Yeah, that's a great way to put it, rev, great way to put it. I would agree, President Washington, that we've made some tremendous strides. And let me just stop and say we should not overlook, and we should celebrate the fact that we are sitting here at George Mason with you, a trailblazer. And I think you are an example of some of the strides that we've made as a people, the fact that you are leading this institution as an African American male. We celebrate the ascension of President Barack Obama into the White House, and more recently, the ascension of our Vice President Kamala Harris, and we celebrate the ascension of our first African American female justice. I think those are signs, those are signals that we are heading and moving in the right direction. But we should continue to keep moving. And sometimes we pause to celebrate. And in our pausing to celebrate, we forget that there's still more ground to cover. And so, yes, there are some strides, but unfortunately there are some realities from that speech and likewise from Dr. King's letter, from the Birmingham jail, uh, that are still unrealized parts of his dream, particularly when we talk about the economics of African American people, as we just alluded to talking about the housing crisis. And I believe that it was Dr. King's real focus on economics that ultimately led to his assassination.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:11</a>):</p> <p>I heard a couple of lines from that final speech that he was putting together. That was an economic empowerment speech If you, if you've ever heard one.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:21</a>):</p> <p>Yes, sir.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">26:22</a>):</p> <p>So how do we balance what has happened in the past and our hopes for the future? So, Dr. Walton, you gave a talk in which you spoke of a sermon you heard from Reverend William Augustus Jones of the Brooklyn Bethany Baptist Church, who said, and, and I'm paraphrasing here, our past isn't allowed to become the past because we keep it alive in our minds instead of letting it be bygone. We become stuck in that moment. You can't have the present because you have no clear vision for the future. Is that a personal statement or can you make a connection to what we're basically talking about in some of the struggles for equality and equity that are happening today?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">27:08</a>):</p> <p>I think Dr. William Augustus Jones, who has gone on to be with the Lord now, was one of our premier voices in the pulpit, particularly the Black pulpit. But he was a world-renowned preacher and a voice and force to be reckoned with. Those words. Dr. Washington come from a sermon he preached, called The Problem of the Present Past. And in that sermon, he quoted the psalmist David, and he's, I believe it was Psalm 51. And he said, my sin is forever before me. And the point that he makes in this particular sermon is simply that there's some things that have occurred in our lives that we cannot go back and change. That sermon spoke volumes to me when I first heard it in person, when I've read it in print. And, uh, it's one that I will remember to share with you. One of the reasons why it speaks to me, because it's still relevant today in terms of my personal life, in terms of our collective witness.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">28:03</a>):</p> <p>And certainly for us as people of color. What do we do? I think it's important for us to confront our past. I think it's important for us to move on from our past. But before moving on, we have to learn. Because if we don't learn anything, then we are bound to repeat the past, right? And we have to make amends for our past. We have to recognize, yes, there's some things that we cannot change. There's some things that we can apologize for, come to grips with, make restitution for, offer apologies for. So what do we do? How does it speak to us today? I think it speaks to us personally. It speaks to us as a county, as we talk about why all of these communities have shifted around these Black churches. And it also speaks to us as a country, how are we going to confront our past and make amends for our past, and then ultimately move on from our past? At the end of the day, we cannot hide. And whatever we don't confront, we are bound to repeat. And unfortunately, there are many people in our nation that don't want to have the real conversation about America and the real conversation about how African Americans were treated in America. And that, of course, goes back to this whole rewriting of history and the banning of books. But we will never be the real people that we can be until we confront some of those issues.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">29:30</a>):</p> <p>Oh, yes. And Dr. William Augustus Jones, along with preachers like Dr. E.K. Bailey, A. Loui Patterson, and, uh, even, uh, Dr. Smith, I cannot think of his first name for some reason, it just left my mind, but he was from New York City. B.W. Smith. They used to speak in Washington DC where I pastored for 10 years. And Dr. Jones would empower his listeners with taking biblical facts and shaping them around African American experiences. He had one sermon entitled, he, he did a, he flipped the script somewhat, and he said the lion’s in Daniel’s den. So in other words,</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:15</a>):</p> <p>Instead of Daniel in the lion’s den.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">30:17</a>):</p> <p>Right, right. And he was showing us, we are troubled on every side, yet not distressed. We are perplexed, but not in despair. Persecuted but not forsaken. Cast down, but not destroyed. And when you hear of the horrific things that have happened to our communities, it is a miracle that we are still alive and thriving with a $1.3 trillion budget in the African American community. I think this is another reason why our history is often overlooked, because there is a strong spiritual presence in our journey. And it's not politically correct to share things with spirituality when it comes to something like history. But it is the only reason I think we are still doing well and thriving. You look at Moses and the children of Israel, they had an exodus. We had an emancipation. The exodus means that they left, they came out of, we are still living in the footprint of the Civil War. We are still living near plantations. We are still living near trees where folks were lynched. We are still in Egypt even though we've been emancipated.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">31:38</a>):</p> <p>Can we stay there for a second? I wanna unpack that a little bit and ask you all some questions about it. You know, the reality is that the way I see it, the shackles that hold us down today are mental, as much as they are economic, social, and physical. We have a large percentage of our community who are striving and doing extraordinary things, and they are setting the bar. Everybody knew that we would do great things in entertainment and athletics. We've done that throughout our history. But now you're seeing it in business. You're seeing it in science and engineering, you're seeing it in areas in which historically we just haven't had a modern, strong legacy, but we still have a cohort of our people who haven't gotten that memo, so to speak, and thereby are not reaching their potential. How do you speak to that?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:42</a>):</p> <p>Dr. Washington, I think that's where the hard work is. That is the work of our church. And quite frankly, honestly, that is also the work of institutions like George Mason.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:53</a>):</p> <p>Oh, I agree with that a hundred percent.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">32:54</a>):</p> <p>If we are honest, there are many in Fairfax County that enjoy a great deal of privilege. And those who live here, those who work here, as it has already been suggested, you have to have reached and or, or obtained a certain level of success, and I place success in quotations that you can afford to do this. But to your point, there are others who have not received that memo. And I believe wholeheartedly in scripture where it says, to whom much is given, much is required. And our responsibility is not just to sit on our stools of do nothingness and enjoy our own success. Because if that is the case, then we are guilty as well of just relishing in our own privilege. But our responsibility is to reach out to those who are marginalized, to reach out to those who have not had the benefit of the same level of access for whatever the reasons are, and to help lift the tide. And that's the work of our church that remains, and that's the work of our institution that remains.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">34:03</a>):</p> <p>I wholeheartedly agree. Sometimes Dr. Washington, other people groups look at the African-American community, and this happened during the time of Dr. King and they’re still doing it today. They're saying, why don't you just get over it? And the thing is, we would've been over it if it wasn't for the malfeasance of government that ended reconstruction, we would've been over it. If it wasn't for Plessy v. Ferguson or the Dred Scott decision, we would have been over it. If it wasn't for Jim Crow and the physical, or the, I guess you could say the character assassinations of Marcus Garvey and Medgar Evers and Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X. We could have been over it if it wasn't for the fact of what happened in not only Tulsa, Oklahoma, but Colfax, Louisiana. And I even read recently about a insurrection that was successful in, uh, Wilmington, North Carolina back in 1898.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">35:05</a>):</p> <p>We would've been over it if we didn't have people like Congressman King trying to tell the American society that Blacks have not contributed anything of note worthiness to the world or to the country. Because the thing about it, when you look at the reality, a civilization began in Kemet, in Egypt, in Africa. And then the Greeks came and borrowed, very politely, borrowed from what they had gained from Egypt. And then naturally, the Romans borrowed from the Greeks. We don't want to be seen as a Afrocentric superiority. We want to cooperate. There were Black explorers leaving the African continent, which actually at one time, the entire continent was called Ethiopia. And the Atlantic Ocean was referred to as the Ethiopian Sea. And you had African explorers actually coming down to the Americas. And you can see their contributions in architecture and technology.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">36:09</a>):</p> <p>and even the exchange of the culture and so forth. So we don't want to dominate, we want to participate. And that is something that is missing today. That is something that we still would like to do. There were two elderly white ladies who looked like charming characters on the Andy Griffith Show. And when Barack Obama's second term was coming to an end, they were embarrassed because they were against his election in the first place because they thought that if there was a Black president, he would come and reap retribution against the White community. That has not been the case. Over the many years that we have been in this country, the centuries of our suffering, there are very few opportunities that our race took to have any type of retribution. And I like to tell people during Black History Month and the Martin Luther King services that I speak on, is that the African American community has had an August the 28th, but not a January the 6th.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">37:19</a>):</p> <p>Hmm. Yeah. That's deep. That is really, really deep. Man, I don't even know what to say about that. You got me at a loss for words.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">37:29</a>):</p> <p>Yeah. You're walking heavy.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">37:32</a>):</p> <p>Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Dr. Walton, on the wall in the lobby outside of your office, you have a photo with a quote from Booker T. Washington who was born into slavery, but became the most influential African American speaker of his time and the principal developer of what is now known as Tuskegee University. And that quote says, success waits patiently for anyone who has the determination to seize it. Why that quote?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">38:01</a>):</p> <p>Well, Dr. Washington, that particular quote speaks to me, but I think it's also important to note that Booker T. Washington, yes, hangs outside in the lobby of my office, but he doesn't hang there by himself. He hangs there along with a picture of Dr. King from the Birmingham Jail. He hangs there with a picture of the Little Rock Nine. He hangs there with some individuals who are participants of the 1969 March of Selma to Montgomery, and he hangs there with a picture of Rosa Parks. And so, while I love and appreciate the work of Booker T. Washington and support that quote wholeheartedly, and it speaks to me, the real intent of that quote and the others that hang in that lobby is to demonstrate to those who walk in our office and those who leave our office, is to demonstrate that we are not monolithic as a people, and that all voices matter. All voices are impactful, and that we can learn from everyone's experiences.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">39:12</a>):</p> <p>Oh, that's fantastic.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">39:13</a>):</p> <p>And Dr. Walton lives that every week. I was saddened that I was in Tampa, Florida, and could not attend his MLK service where he actually had Dr. Robert E. Lee as one of the speakers for that service. And, uh, we don't have time to talk about all of the great things that this descendant of General Lee has done to speak of a united America rather than a separated America. As well as the fact I was able to meet at First Baptist Vienna, I was able to meet the actual secretary of Dr. King, who actually composed the notes that King wrote in the Birmingham jail. So these are some very rich experiences, and we have an opportunity, as Dr. King would say, that we can either learn to live together as brothers or perish as fools. We are the greatest demonstration of the equity of democracy for a nation throughout the world, and some of the petty differences that are currently in our Congress, which I will not go into, but, uh</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:28</a>):</p> <p>Do we have enough time for that?</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">40:30</a>):</p> <p>Dr. Walton, they say, if you keep electing clowns, you are bound to have a circus. And that is what has been happening. These men are not realizing that not only are they giving a black eye to democracy, they're giving a black eye to Christianity throughout the world, because Jesus told us to love our enemies. Bless them that curse you. Pray for those who despitefully use you and persecute you. These citizens that this particular party is fighting, they're taxpayers, and whether you agree with their lifestyle or not, they work hard. They contribute to their communities and they pay their taxes. Allow the churches and the synagogues and the mosques to deal with the other issues. But you cannot relegate in legality how people should live. They have to make that decision because even God himself gave everyone a free will. And if we do our job and they do their job, we could have something close to a utopia.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">41:31</a>):</p> <p>That's fantastic. So let me back up one second and let's break down where we go from here. You know, one of Mason's pillars is that education is a great equalizer. You know, and that's why we partnered with community college to create smoother pathways to four-year degree. We put in place the Mason Virginia Promise to help you either get a degree or start your own business. All of the small business development centers throughout all of Virginia are led by George Mason, so we can help folks start a business. So we put these foundational bricks in place. But what I want to ask you is, what else can we do? How can we help you deal with some of the problems that are still afflicting our communities?</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">42:21</a>):</p> <p>Well, Dr. Washington, you are creating here at Mason thought leaders. You are developing practitioners. You are creating the new economist and sociologist. And the work that you do here helps to better inform the work that we do in our local churches. The work that you do here helps us to translate the social norms and the customs. It helps us to make sense out of what is actually happening in our society. So I would dare say that these kinds of partnerships, to continue these kinds of conversations that we're having today. Many of our churches are creating feeding programs. We are creating tutoring programs. We have senior programs that are running on a regular consistent basis, but it's the thought leaders and the practitioners that you are developing here at Mason that help us to challenge the structures that create the need for these feeding programs and tutoring programs.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">43:22</a>):</p> <p>And so I want to encourage you and faculty and staff here at Mason to keep developing the thought leaders, but to use our spaces and places as platforms so that the leaders that you are building have actual stages to put their work into practice. Whether they are helping us to translate the dynamics of our society, whether they are helping us to tutor the kids that are in our possession, whatever the case may be. I believe, yes, education helps greatly to equalize, but let's not forget the roadblocks that exist and that are challenging the opportunity to education, that we have, the rollbacks as it relates to affirmative actions, set asides, and, and the need for DEI. So continue to create those thought leaders, those practitioners. We are gonna continue to do our work on the ground, but your work informs what we do, and we have space for your practitioners.</p> <p>Jeffery Johnson (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">44:22</a>):</p> <p>Oh, yes. I, I, I greatly agreed. I saw the humble beginnings of George Mason, and there were some people who said, well, I would go to school, but I have to support my family and work here in Northern Virginia. But then they thought of Mason, and those educational dreams and aspirations became real. It is amazing. I would ask anyone to just take a slow casual drive through this campus. It is a small city of intelligentsia. It is a oasis of academics, and you have produced so many people. Not only did my son Jeffery Jr. attend here, we have other members of the Mount Calvary Baptist Church who either took classes or actually graduated from George Mason. And what I like about George Mason is that out of all the things that Reverend Dr., uh Walton has mentioned, you also have maintained a stream of conversation that is relevant to this community. Sometimes colleges become so academically involved that they no longer have connection with the community. Your connection, Dr. Washington, with the community, is making a great impact. And when this is done, not only will you affect the graduates of George Mason, you will also make a great impact on the city of Fairfax, not only its citizens, but its government and its visitors.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">45:59</a>):</p> <p>We got a ways to go, and we want to continue to be the institution that the community needs to be here. Not the one that it tolerates, or the one that it wants to be here, but the, that the community needs. And that means that we're gonna have to continue to provide really great outcomes for the students in and around this community, quite frankly, for the companies and the institutions, churches included, around this community. We're actually here for you also, and there's a whole host of things that we can provide you in addition to, in addition to, parishioners.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">46:41</a>):</p> <p>Let, let me, let me just give you a, a shout out, Dr. Washington. I know you may not be intimately aware, but your staff was incredible. Just recently for us, a few months ago, we hosted a African American male summit for high school young men. And we had nearly a hundred young men from as far south as Richmond, from DC and all over Fairfax County. I'm a firm believer that experience and exposure goes a long way, and there's no substitute for both. As a part of that particular day, the young men had a presentation about college acceptance and preparation for college from your staff here at Mason. It for many, opened up the eyes of young men, some of which for the first time was having a conversation with someone about their future potential. And so I want to acknowledge that in this moment.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">47:38</a>):</p> <p>No, I love that. I love that. And it's great that we could be a part of that. And it's fantastic that our faculty and staff can be helpful. We don't want to just stop there. We want to do more. It's part of my reason for engaging you brothers, because I wanna make sure the institution is pretty much part of the family here in Northern Virginia. So I want to thank you all for giving me, for giving us, that chance to be that, and for being a, a willing partner going forward in our futures together.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:09</a>):</p> <p>Thank you for the offer, and we are here to receive it. And we're, and we're together. We're together.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:14</a>):</p> <p>Outstanding, outstanding. I love it. Well, we're gonna have to leave it there, Reverend Jeffery Johnson, pastor at Mount Calvary Baptist Church in Fairfax, Virginia, and Dr. Vernon Walton, pastor at First Baptist Church in Vienna. Thank you both for your time and for a really fantastic conversation.</p> <p>Vernon Walton (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:39</a>):</p> <p>Thank you, Dr. Washington.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:41</a>):</p> <p>I'm Mason, president Gregory Washington saying, until next time, stay safe, Mason Nation.</p> <p>Narrator (<a href="https://www.temi.com/editor/t/fedsJMZ12ACCD7gWgX_JS4mobNpo5WB0OZLXTmnH6_Xq-GcBQHrbZ85K_U_EQNxpCtNXxAGsZxZ2GMkQGMdDA4nqg7c?loadFrom=DocumentDeeplink">48:49</a>):</p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/president" hreflang="und">Gregory Washington</a></div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="4eda5eb8-d32c-4cdf-96c8-1410367382ba" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=i7iiKAdz" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=gPwpqoNE 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=i7iiKAdz 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=jNMZzKgm 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="" "" /></div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="1c6d74a3-1424-4234-ad37-e121a23ce275" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Access to Excellence Podcast Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-8abca034497cbbbb32dd4ac4aa0d953576f28c9606e341af7dd5506b214621d4"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="2bd30ef3-9209-4675-aa8d-20ec8a3e286b" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=i7iiKAdz" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=gPwpqoNE 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=i7iiKAdz 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2023-07/1.png?itok=jNMZzKgm 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="" "" /></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18966" hreflang="en">Black History Month</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/15116" hreflang="en">Black Lives Next Door</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/3561" hreflang="en">Enslaved People</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/13511" hreflang="en">diversity equity and inclusion DEI</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Fri, 16 Feb 2024 19:06:45 +0000 Damian Cristodero 110696 at Podcast - Ep 55: Where the bodies are buried /news/2024-01/podcast-ep-55-where-bodies-are-buried <span>Podcast - Ep 55: Where the bodies are buried</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/266" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Damian Cristodero</span></span> <span>Thu, 01/11/2024 - 09:53</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="8adf7b83-2f37-484a-87f8-59d207fb1f54" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-01/ATE%20MaryEllen%20O%27Toole_slider_cristian_231207902.jpg?itok=9vK0fwR9" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2024-01/ATE%20MaryEllen%20O%27Toole_slider_cristian_231207902.jpg?itok=eTIpkMv2 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2024-01/ATE%20MaryEllen%20O%27Toole_slider_cristian_231207902.jpg?itok=9vK0fwR9 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2024-01/ATE%20MaryEllen%20O%27Toole_slider_cristian_231207902.jpg?itok=XqoBnDqn 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="Mary Ellen O'Toole looks at the camera as she speaks with President Washington" /></div> <div class="headline-text"> <div class="feature-image-headline"> <div class="field field--name-field-feature-image-headline field--type-string field--label-hidden field__item">Where the bodies are buried</div> </div> </div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p>Forensic research on human donors is not for the faint of heart, Mary Ellen O’Toole, director of the Forensic Science Program in AV’s College of Science, admitted to Mason President Gregory Washington. But the university’s new outdoor research and training laboratory—or “body farm,” as O’Toole, a former FBI profiler, calls it—is a valuable addition to the study of human decomposition in various environmental conditions for the purpose of solving crimes. It also positions O’Toole’s program as a national leader in forensic science and forensic anthropology.</p> <div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p><sup><span class="intro-text">And I love the term audacity because being audacious is to stand up and say, ‘We've got thousands of unidentified remains in medical examiner's offices throughout the United States. What can we do to reunite those individuals with their family members?’ We know that we've got unsolved cases out there of marginalized victims throughout the United States. Audacious means what can we do to solve those crimes? And so if my students can be as audacious as is humanly possible, they're gonna be magnificent forensic scientists.”</span></sup></p> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="121f4188-8d69-4d2f-ad86-25c66e0fbc9f" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <h2>Listen to this episode</h2> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?from=embed&i=c6dg2-1548b97-pb&share=1&download=1&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=&rtl=0&logo_link=&btn-skin=7&size=150" title="Where the bodies are buried" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="78389776-ff6b-4366-b0ea-b07b90de9c5b" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><hr /></div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="40828097-5c7c-4cf1-b25c-a690aaa23ea1" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="c5f2a2c6-a157-4db1-93a2-6357007c919d" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Access to Excellence Podcast Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-69a1f989a261fc5d4ff13ea6dcc5cdb0cfba089e7022494712537d59ae8388ca"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - EP 61: Can dirty coffee grounds be the key to clean water?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">October 21, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-08/podcast-ep-60-marking-decade-success-mason-korea" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 60 - Marking a decade of success at Mason Korea</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">August 6, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-07/podcast-ep-59-cybersecurity-and-global-threats-tomorrow" hreflang="en">Podcast Ep 59 - Cybersecurity and the global threats of tomorrow</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">July 5, 2024</div></div></li> </ul></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/president" hreflang="und">Gregory Washington</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7311" hreflang="en">Access to Excellence podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/326" hreflang="en">Podcast Episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/226" hreflang="en">podcast</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/18266" hreflang="en">Featured podcast episode</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/291" hreflang="en">College of Science</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/3956" hreflang="en">Forensic Science Program</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/6981" hreflang="en">Forensic Science Research and Training Laboratory</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Thu, 11 Jan 2024 14:53:56 +0000 Damian Cristodero 110206 at Podcast - Ep 54: Are we headed for an internet apocalypse? /news/2023-12/podcast-ep-54-are-we-headed-internet-apocalypse <span>Podcast - Ep 54: Are we headed for an internet apocalypse?</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/266" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Damian Cristodero</span></span> <span>Fri, 12/01/2023 - 09:40</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--70-30"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p><span class="intro-text">Peter Becker, a professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy in AV’s College of Science, talks with Mason President Gregory Washington about how a predicted major increase in solar storm activity could be a prelude to an “internet apocalypse.”</span></p> <p>Can we prepare? What could be the consequences? What are the economic implications? A $14 million federal study Becker is leading with the Navy could provide better predictive capabilities and help us better understand exactly what’s at stake. </p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:feature_image" data-inline-block-uuid="4a8700ed-6006-45f3-a06f-5e5e3f67bbf8" class="block block-feature-image block-layout-builder block-inline-blockfeature-image caption-below"> <div class="feature-image"> <div class="narrow-overlaid-image"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-12/ATE%20Becker%20feature%20Torres%205x4%20231116907.jpg?itok=XGBiOndR" srcset="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_small/public/2023-12/ATE%20Becker%20feature%20Torres%205x4%20231116907.jpg?itok=Pu5369VY 768w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_medium/public/2023-12/ATE%20Becker%20feature%20Torres%205x4%20231116907.jpg?itok=XGBiOndR 1024w, /sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/feature_image_large/public/2023-12/ATE%20Becker%20feature%20Torres%205x4%20231116907.jpg?itok=yGBzixrC 1280w, " sizes="(min-width: 1024px) 80vw,100vw" alt="Dr. Peter Becker wears headphones and speaks into the microphone during Access to Excellence podcast recording" /></div> </div> <div class="feature-image-caption"> <div class="field field--name-field-feature-image-caption field--type-text-long field--label-hidden field__item"><p>Professor Peter Becker joins Mason president Gregory Washington in the studio to discuss how an increase in solar storms could be a prelude to an “internet apocalypse” on this episode of the Acess to Excellence podcast.</p></div> </div> <div class="feature-image-caption feature-image-photo-credit">Photo credit: <div class="field field--name-field-photo-credit field--type-string field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Photo credit</div> <div class="field__item">Cristian Torres/AV</div> </div> </div> </div><div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="31001e77-80a4-4bb1-9b26-7aa435ff7003" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><div style="background-image:url(https://content.sitemasonry.gmu.edu/sites/g/files/yyqcgq336/files/2022-10/img-quote-BGgraphic.png); background-size:60%; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding: 3% 3% 3% 6%;"> <p><sup><span class="intro-text">   A very large event could take the internet out for as long as a month, and there’s additional damage to the power grid, too. So if you lose the internet, the economic damage in the U.S. alone is considered to be on the order of about $10 billion per day. And so if that escalates, you pretty rapidly run into an economic disruption that’s larger than COVID, let’s say, as an example."</span></sup></p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="c1aa2df2-34d4-49fa-b742-d592e54e1909" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <h2>Listen to this episode</h2> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p><iframe allowtransparency="true" data-name="pb-iframe-player" height="150" loading="lazy" scrolling="no" src="https://www.podbean.com/player-v2/?from=embed&i=q7uxg-15137a1-pb&share=1&download=1&fonts=Arial&skin=f6f6f6&font-color=&rtl=0&logo_link=&btn-skin=7&size=150" style="border: none; min-width: min(100%, 430px);height:150px;" title="Are we headed for an internet apocalypse?" width="100%"></iframe></p> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="acc2e047-487c-40c2-8a36-46c4500fec0f" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><hr /></div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:mason_accordion" data-inline-block-uuid="103a9fa1-3fd9-47d5-93af-27edab3c40d9" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blockmason-accordion"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field field--name-field-accordion-rows field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field__item"> <section class="accordion"><header class="accordion__label"><span class="ui-accordion-header-icon ui-icon ui-icon-triangle-1-e"></span> <p>Read the Transcript</p> <div class="accordion__states"> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--more"><i class="fas fa-plus-circle"></i></span> <span class="accordion__state accordion__state--less"><i class="fas fa-minus-circle"></i></span> </div> </header><div class="accordion__content"> <p>Narrator (00:04):</p> <p>Trailblazers in research, innovators in technology and those who simply have a good story. All make up the fabric that is AV, where taking on the grand challenges that face our students, graduates and higher education is our mission and our passion. Hosted by Mason President Gregory Washington, this is the Access to Excellence podcast.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (00:26):</p> <p>A team of AV scientists has received an almost $14 million federal grant to work with the Department of the Navy to study and better understand increased solar activity that could potentially ‘cause what is being called an internet apocalypse. Such an event would disrupt all of Earth's communications, including satellite communications. My guest, Peter Becker, a professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy in Mason's College of Science, is the principal investigator of the research. Dr. Becker has a PhD in astrophysics from the University of Colorado, and his research focuses on topics in high energy astrophysical theory. His model for studying accretion flows onto rotating neutron stars has become the standard for researchers studying these extreme objects. Now though, he's part of an effort to protect the earth from the effects of what many predict will be an increase in solar storms and their potential consequences. Peter, welcome to the show.</p> <p>Peter Becker (01:40):</p> <p>Thank you so much, President Washington. It's a pleasure to be here with you.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (01:44):</p> <p>Well, look, this is, uh, quite a scary topic and depending on how you look at it, but this is one that we need to talk about. Yeah, look, if you go on your Facebook page, your cover photo though is not a picture of stars or a planet of solar flares disrupting the, our communication system and burning up satellites, but it's of you playing a guitar in a band at a local bar. Now, is that your rock and roll alter ego?</p> <p>Peter Becker (02:10):</p> <p>Yeah, that's basically the, I just hit the nail on the head there. Yeah. My other passion in my life is my music, my music hobby. But science is the primary focus. I, I did figure out early in life that I didn't want to be a full-time musician. I realized I was born to be a scientist. I've never second-guessed that decision because my scientific career has been the source of really all the inspiration and motivation and my main creative output in my life. So, uh, the music thing is a lot of fun as a release. It's, it's a little bit, sort of more of an emotional thing, I guess, versus the very sort of clinical quantitative work that I do as a scientist. So it's a, it creates a nice balance in my life.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (02:48):</p> <p>Oh, that's outstanding. So from the photos, you seem pretty proud of your two Les Paul guitars. What's so special about 'em?</p> <p>Peter Becker (02:58):</p> <p>Right. Well, if you play a lot and if you play on stage, you tend to get connected to certain instruments. So it's actually a little bit of a Covid story there because I used to play a Fender Stratocaster mainly on stage, but I had about 30 years on that particular instrument, and the frets were worn out, so I needed to have it re fretted. Well, I gave it to a luthier over in Manassas and it disappeared for a couple years because of Covid <laugh>. So I had no choice but to, to bring up My Les Pauls. And then with those on stage, it's just a different sort of experience. They're a little more solid, a little meatier you might say. And then it was tough to go back to the Stratocaster after that. So I started sort of collecting Les Pauls a little bit. I don't have too many, I have about four, I guess. Nice. But the ones that you saw are my favorites. Uh, there's a Sunburst and then there's a, a Blueberry Burst it's called. And those are dialed in quite nicely now. So those are my main instruments on stage at the moment.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (03:48):</p> <p><laugh>, that, that is really, really interesting because you have this phenomenal career in astrophysics, and yet you have this strong, strong connection to music. So what got you started in music and then what got you started in astrophysics?</p> <p>Peter Becker (04:03):</p> <p>Okay, yeah, those are interesting questions. So I guess music would be my sister's record collection, I guess, which I wasn't really into that much when I was a young teen. And she would be playing certain things that were great, like, uh, Elton John and, uh, the Beatles and Cat Stevens and some other stuff. But I actually wasn't really into it at the time, but it's a funny thing 'cause it sinks in kind of subliminally. And then when I was an older teenager, I got really into her record collection and started listening to the radio. And I was a teenager in the seventies. So they're all, all these great bands that were doing some amazing stuff called Progressive Rock at the time. So bands like Boston and, uh, rush and even Pink Floyd, you could put in that group. And REO Speedwagon, they had virtuoso guitar players.</p> <p>Peter Becker (04:45):</p> <p>And when I heard that guitar screaming at me through the speakers, as they say the old cliche, it spoke to me and I got very interested in that. So I was an undergraduate in college at the time, but as I said, I, I knew early on that I wanted to be a scientist because I was also into the original Star Trek shows and Mr. Spock and all that good stuff. And the Apollo program, I was nine years old when the lunar landing occurred. So that had a huge impact on me, and that was stronger actually than music. And so I got interested in astronomy. And then when I was a freshman in high school, I actually wasn't doing too well because I hadn't discovered astronomy yet. I remember halfway through my freshman year, I suddenly just got interested in astronomy. My mother had been, of course, bugging me to do my homework and this and that.</p> <p>Peter Becker (05:27):</p> <p>And I told her I made a deal with her. Tell you what, just stop bugging me and I'll make sure I get all my homework done on time. And that was the deal we had. And it was a win-win situation for both of us. And I excelled after that and graduated, did quite well in high school and college and ended up going to graduate school in Boulder, Colorado, which was fantastic for five years. And then I've been here at Mason since ‘92 and couldn't be happier. Didn't really expect to spend my whole career here, but I've been here over, over 30 years now. And I've loved it, been treated very well here and it's been a wonderful environment for me to keep doing my science and working with my graduate students.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (06:02):</p> <p>Oh, it's outstanding. So this, so-called Internet Apocalypse. Is that just a marketing slogan to get people's attention? Or are we really talking about, you know, I, in preparation for this, I tried to ask myself the fundamental question, what would life be like? What would we lose if for whatever reason we'd lost the internet?</p> <p>Peter Becker (06:25):</p> <p>So, yeah, it is a thing. It's not just type, it's a real concern. And it's basically because of course the internet is growing and the internet share of the world economy is growing. It's like pushing 20% and at the same time the sun is ramping up its activity in a way that hasn't occurred in the last 20 years or so, in other words, since before the internet. So the concern is that solar flare is an event where there's a huge explosion on the sun. And we can tell that because we see a huge flash of light. And that flash of light is kind of like the muzzle flash, and then there's gas that is ejected from the sun, that's called a Coronal Mass Ejection or CME. And that basically can go in a random direction in space. But when it comes towards Earth, then all these particles can arrive at Earth and do things to our magnetic field.</p> <p>Peter Becker (07:12):</p> <p>And we can actually tell what's going to happen when we see that first flash of light. Because if it forms a halo around the sun, that's a signature that we're basically looking down the barrel of this cannon. The flare is the muzzle flash, and then the bullet is the CME, the Coronal Mass Ejection. And if it comes towards earth, we see that halo. And we have about 18 to 36 hours of warning. Now, this has happened many, many times before, and I can talk about a couple of specific examples, but we haven't had a severe solar storm and a large CME strike Earth's magnetic field directly since pretty much before the internet era. So the internet is not really built to have a robust enough infrastructure to actually survive that kind of disruption. And we can talk about exactly what I mean by the disruption and how it happens. So, you know, it's like anything else that it was built as strong as it needed to be built based on the economic bottom line at the time. And so it's not engineered at the level that you're required to handle severe disruption. The power grid is somewhat in the same boat, but it's a little bit more robust.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (08:15):</p> <p>Oh, man.</p> <p>Peter Becker (08:15):</p> <p>But, uh, if we talk about DOD communications, the original intranet was called the ARPANET. And that's actually relatively hardened, could, might even survive. But the way I look at it is if you build the internet harder, it's sort of an insurance policy against a large disruptive event, which may or may not happen. And some people buy insurance and some people don't buy insurance. And if you buy it, it can be expensive, but you're protected. And if you don't buy it, you're vulnerable. And the way it is right now is the internet really doesn't have that insurance policy behind it 'cause it wasn't engineered up to that kind of a level of hardness to be able to handle this kind of disruption.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (08:50):</p> <p>So just for our audience, and let me make sure I get this right. Solar storms will become much more active over the next 10 years, is what you're predicting. And you even said that the peak time will be <laugh> between 2024 and 2028. Oh boy. And during that time, the entire internet could conceivably be knocked out for a period of weeks to months in the event of an extreme solar flare. Is that right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (09:21):</p> <p>Right. So I could sketch that out for you if you like.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (09:23):</p> <p>Yeah, please do.</p> <p>Peter Becker (09:24):</p> <p>Okay, so let's look at a historical precedent. So the last large flare in CME that directly struck Earth with this event called the Carrington event, which was in 1859. And that was actually recorded and reported by an astronomer in England named Richard Carrington. And he noticed a tremendous brightening of the sun. He could actually see with his eyes. And he went outside and it was, the sun itself had actually gotten brighter. They didn't know about CMEs back in those days in 1859, but about a week or so later, there was a tremendous disruption of the telegraph system. So the telegraph system was the internet back then, right? And we had all kinds of currents running up and down the cables, the telegraph wires, and there were reports that some operators may have even been electrocuted from touching the equipment. And the whole system was brought down for weeks to months.</p> <p>Peter Becker (10:14):</p> <p>So as I said, that was, that was the internet back in 1859. And if you think about a telegraph system, it's got pretty robust wires. It's kind of like the home wiring for a lamp or something like that. It's pretty large gauge wiring. And it was taken out. And then if you think about modern electronics, we have hair-width circuits, wires running all over the place, and optical fibers and things much, much more delicate. So in an event of that magnitude happened now, it would cause a lot of circuits to actually get fried. If you think about all the, uh, utility closets, the relay rooms and the, the office buildings and on campus here, there's mysterious closets all over the place that are chock full of electronic equipment that's extremely vulnerable to this type of interference. So if you have a large enough event, you're talking about hardware actually getting fried and people having to go out into the field to make hardware replacements.</p> <p>Peter Becker (11:03):</p> <p>And that's going to take a long time if it's widespread enough. So a very large event could actually take the internet out for as long as a month. And there's additional damage to the power grid, too, that we're not really focusing on today. But that's part of this as well. So if you lose the internet, the economic damage in the U.S. alone is considered to be on the order about $10 billion per day. And so if that escalates, you know, you pretty rapidly run into an economic disruption that's larger than Covid, let's say, as an example. Now the 1859 event isn't even the largest that we're aware of. There's evidence of much larger events in the distant past, which are scarier because if you have an even larger event, you're talking about a larger amount of disruption and longer time to make repairs. But there was an event about 14,000 years ago that was probably about a hundred times stronger than this Carrington event I was just referring to.</p> <p>Peter Becker (11:55):</p> <p>Now 14,000 years ago, humans were around on the planet, but there's no recorded history from that time. So the way that we know about it is actually from evidence in tree rings and ice cores. And this is actually kind of interesting 'cause you've probably heard about how Carbon-14 is used to date things that were alive to determine when they were alive. Things like that. So the way that Carbon-14 actually gets formed is it's actually produced in the upper atmosphere when cosmic rays and also particles from the sun strike nitrogen atoms up there and convert them into carbon atoms, which are radioactive Carbon-14 atoms. And this happens all the time. So we're in a bath of radioactive Carbon-14 in the atmosphere, constantly filtering down. It's not dangerous, but it gets absorbed by living things and metabolized into their bodies.</p> <p>Peter Becker (12:40):</p> <p>And then when they die, they stop metabolizing it. So a clock starts running and you can tell from how long it takes the Carbon-14 to naturally decay, which is a few thousand years, you can tell how old that sample is, right? It's, so what happened at 14,000 years ago was there was a tremendous increase in the production, a big spike in the production of this radioactive Carbon-14 in the upper atmosphere, which filtered down and was absorbed in all sorts of living things, including these trees that were discovered in France that actually fossilized trees, which have ancient tree rings that show a big spike in Carbon-14. So this amazing indirect evidence was used to deduce that there was a huge solar flare at that time and a huge CME that did strike Earth. And we also see evidence for this enhancement in ice cores from Greenland that correlate with the same time.</p> <p>Peter Becker (13:27):</p> <p>So it turns out that events that large, once we found out about that one, we started looking through the geological record. And it turns out they seem to have it about every thousand years or so. So we're overdue for one <laugh>. It's been about a thousand years since the last one that's kind of comparable to the one I was just speaking about occurred. And it's also been about 150 years since the Carrington event occurred. And that one's estimated to occur every hundred years roughly. So if you think about it, we're on the clock here, and if you just look at the probability of things happening, we're in a sweet spot right now for something large to happen for some large event.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (14:02):</p> <p>No, I hear you. But, but you know, you, you, you become, in terms of your analysis, you highlight 2024 to 2028. Why those particular years? Is it because we're just close to that time period now? Or is there something in the mathematical or physical record that points you to that, you know, that time period?</p> <p>Peter Becker (14:25):</p> <p>That's a good question. So if you look at the cycles of solar activity, we haven't talked about that, but the sun goes through about a 20 year cycle where its magnetic poles can reverse. And that cycle's also associated with the increase in decrease in sunspot number. And when you have a lot of sun spots, you get a lot of flares and CMEs, because the sunspots are the points where the magnetic field comes out and forms loops, which can sometimes burst releasing particles into space. So we're just entering a period of enhanced solar activity, which is called Solar Cycle 25 right now. And it's the sun, of course, that's had millions of solar cycles, but we've only been keeping track o over a period of 25 of these cycles that we call it Solar Cycle 25. But then on top of that, there's also a longer-term cycle in the sun called the Gleissberg cycle.</p> <p>Peter Becker (15:13):</p> <p>That's about a hundred-year cycle of overall increase in decrease. So you have another way of sitting on top of these 20 year bumps. You have a general increase that's happening right now on a hundred-year cycle, and that's lined up roughly with the time period that we're talking about 2024, 2025 through 2028. So the concern is that there's definitely an increased risk of a very large CME launching towards Earth. Now, you know, again, they're basically gonna go in random directions in space, but as a small chance they're gonna head towards Earth. But that's already been included in the statistics <laugh>. So we're basically due for something large heading in our direction, unless we get very lucky and we have gotten lucky, um, for quite a long time.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (15:56):</p> <p>And that's the whole planet, right? I presume given the distances travel in the way in which these waves will expand, it's not like part of the planet will be affected and another part will not. Is that accurate?</p> <p>Peter Becker (16:12):</p> <p>That's exactly right. Yeah. So, so just say a little bit more about what actually happens physically. So we have this, we have the flare, as I mentioned, and if we see a halo, we know the CMEs coming towards Earth, it'll take 18 to 36 hours to get here. And then when the particles get here, it's not like they're gonna sweep down to the surface of the earth and incinerate life as we know it. The magnetic field will protect us. But what happens is the magnetic field sort of gets hit by a hammer of these particles and that causes waves to move through Earth’s magnetic field. And physicists know that when you have a changing magnetic field, it actually gives rise to changing electric field. And an electric field can accelerate charged particles because as you know, electrons are gonna flow from the negative to positive terminal on a battery, for example.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (16:55):</p> <p>And that's how you fry circuits.</p> <p>Peter Becker (16:57):</p> <p>Exactly. You get that current going. And then there's a kind of a little bit of an insidious thing that people don't necessarily think about, but you could actually also get currents induced in the surface of the earth itself. So if you think, oh, my computer's grounded, let's say, well, grounding actually can bite you in a case like this 'cause you can get currents actually coming up through the ground that are induced by these magnetic waves I'm talking about. But there is a way to deal with it. First of all, again, we have warning, if we see the flash, we have 18 to 36 hours of warning <laugh>.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (17:28):</p> <p>Okay, wait a minute. Wait a minute. Okay, let's talk about that. It's America, <laugh>, there's a warning goes out. Okay, in 18 to 36 hours, highly likely your electronics are gonna be fried. Things are just not going to work.</p> <p>Peter Becker (17:44):</p> <p>You basically start unplugging stuff</p> <p>Gregory Washington (17:46):</p> <p>Because the reality is we have very little control over what the sun does.</p> <p>Peter Becker (17:51):</p> <p><laugh> Like, like none <laugh>.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (17:53):</p> <p>So the real research is a) giving us predictive capability, right? So that's more in alignment of the physics side of it, right? You're looking at it being able to predict these, understanding the magnitude of what's going to hit us from the perspective of fields, right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (18:16):</p> <p>Yep, exactly.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (18:17):</p> <p>Quantifying that.</p> <p>Peter Becker (18:19):</p> <p>That's exactly right. So as you said, we, we can't control the sun. The sun's gonna do whatever it wants to do at any time. So for us, it's all about two things, predictive capability. The earlier warning, the better every hour of warning you have is gold because you could maybe put another satellite in a safe mode or disconnect another transformer from the power grid. So you can save millions and millions of dollars if you have more warning. So our research is about trying to amplify that time period, trying to extend that time period so that we can make predictions over a longer timeframe, uh, which I can talk about some more. That's actually the whole basis for the research program that I'm, I'm PI on that you mentioned.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (18:58):</p> <p>Yeah. When, but that's one thing. It's a second piece here. What you do, what kinds of things should people do in order to function? What kinds of things could we do now, right? What's the mitigating strategies that you put in place so that we can actually continue some semblance of operations until you get all of the stuff right? Because what'll happen is it'll go down for a period of time, right? But you'll bring systems back online slowly. And then it'll take a period of time, but we'll start to function again, right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (19:32):</p> <p>Right. The actual timescale for the event itself would be, again, about 24 to 48 hours. That's how much time the matter be hanging around Earth causing problems. Then it would slip past Earth and go into the outer solar system. So we get hit by that hammer for 24 to 48 hours. But after that, you can start using radio equipment again, for example, as long as it's not damaged.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (19:51):</p> <p>As long as it's not damaged,</p> <p>Peter Becker (19:52):</p> <p>As long as it's not damaged.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (19:52):</p> <p>But most of it will be damaged.</p> <p>Peter Becker (19:54):</p> <p>Well, not necessarily because if it's unplugged, if it's just sitting there, it won't necessarily be fried. But this does depend on the magnitude of the event that we're talking about. Right? It does, there's mitigation measures there too. Actually, if you shroud electronic equipment in metal, like if you wrap a phone in aluminum foil, that's actually not crackpot that actually would work. It creates what we call a Faraday cage, which runs currents around, so fields don't penetrate that electronic device. So you can do things like that to protect your electronic equipment, small items, but once the plasma passes by, the interference will die down and we'll actually be able to use radios again.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (20:33):</p> <p>Okay. So then that's the strategy, right? How do you structure yourself such that you can create a Faraday cage around as much of the stuff that you want to protect as possible? Right? Faraday cages aren't hard to build. I've been in buildings <laugh> that are essentially Faraday cages, right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (20:51):</p> <p>Yep. A lot of secure places that</p> <p>Gregory Washington (20:53):</p> <p>Yeah, a lot of secure places. Nothing gets in, nothing gets out. And so maybe that is part of a, in the 18 to 24 hours or 36 hours that you have, gonna have a hard time building those kind of things. So if you had a mechanism in place where you can protect as much as possible, that would allow you to get back and get up and going quickly.</p> <p>Pete Becker (21:15):</p> <p>That's right. Yeah. And as, like I was discussing the kind of analogy of an insurance policy before. So I think what's gonna happen is that there's going to have to be a moderate scale event to really get people's attention, and not just in terms of individuals protecting their devices, but in terms of society, doing things like maybe shielding hospitals and places like that where we don't want electronic equipment to malfunction because it's life sustaining equipment. Or maybe parts of the network are gonna have to be shielded better. But that kind of investment probably isn't gonna happen until there's a moderate scale event. So my hope is it's not a massive event that causes a huge problem, but just a large enough event to get society's attention and make them realize that we're entering sort of deeper water in terms of the solar activity, and we need to invest in hardening certain aspects of the infrastructure.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (22:05):</p> <p>Now let me ask you this. Who's listening to you? I know you got research from that's fund, looks like it's funded from the Navy, and so maybe they're listening, although interestingly enough, if they're out to sea, they might be at the safest position of all <laugh> <laugh>. They're not grounded to anything <laugh>. But, but who's listening?</p> <p>Peter Becker (22:27):</p> <p>DOD is certainly paying a lot of attention to this. So this is, this is a, the $14 million grant that the Navy's providing because they're very concerned about maintaining communications. There's some connections with concerns about an electromagnetic pulse that could be associated with a nuclear detonation. So there's, there's a little bit of a crossover there in terms of maintaining communications across the board in terms of any kind of electromagnetic disruption that could take place. But the Navy's particularly concerned about the sun because of the potential. The sun is such a huge dominant object in the solar system. We really need to understand it better than we do right now for lots of different reasons. I mean, there's, there's even issues with possible changes in the level of solar output that could change climate on earth, for example. There's historical evidence that that's happened. So it all comes under the umbrella of security, at least in the United States. When the Department of Defense is looking at a lot more than just rockets and missiles and defense systems.</p> <p>Peter Becker (23:21):</p> <p>They're actually thinking about all aspects of national security, which includes a lot of fundamental science research of this type. So the Navy's very interested in some, and Mason students are involved in doing simulations with the sun. We're running advanced simulations to try to connect subtle changes in the sun's behavior with the possibility that we're seeing the onset of a large event that might not happen for a while, for weeks, let's say. That would be a tremendous amount of additional early warning that we would have. So we're interested in doing that. We're also heavily involved in sun observation. We're helping to run a satellite system called Stereo, which is actually two satellites in orbit around the same distance from the sun that the Earth is. But they're on the other side of the sun, giving us sort of an early warning system on the backside of the sun.</p> <p>Peter Becker (24:11):</p> <p>The sun rotates in about 30 days. So if a flare is developing on the backside, in a week or so, it could be on the front side and could actually burst, shoot that cannon a matter towards Earth. So being able to see the far side of the sun gives us a much more comprehensive capability to this kind of early warning. So we're involved in data acquisition and analysis from Stereo and other satellites, and also running enhanced sophisticated simulation codes to try to improve our predictive capability of what's gonna happen in the atmosphere of the sun.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (24:43):</p> <p>Okay, so for those folk who may not know, explain the concept of a solar storm and solar flares.</p> <p>Peter Becker (24:50):</p> <p>Sure. So, well, we know the earth has a magnetic field, for example, right? And we have a magnetic north pole magnetic south pole. And the north magnetic pole is pretty close to the geographical north pole, which is where the Earth’s spin axis comes through. The sun is very similar, but the field is much stronger, and the field actually pervades the whole sun down to the core where the nuclear reactions are taking place in the sun. So the magnetic field really controls a lot of the dynamics in the sun. It controls how the matter boils on the surface of the sun, where we see convection, hot matter coming up and cold matter going down. And we also see the magnetic field sticking out of the sun into space. And so I mentioned sun spots before. They always come in a pair, north and south polarity, sunspots, and there's magnetic field that connects those two.</p> <p>Peter Becker (25:39):</p> <p>And that magnetic field helps to confine some of this hot matter that's boiling up on the surface of the sun. But when the pressure becomes too much, the magnetic field can't necessarily hold it anymore. And it goes through what's called a reconnection event. And that loop kind of, uh, severs itself. And then you get a closed loop that goes off into space and a smaller loop that's still connecting the two sunspots on the sun. So that's how we're generating all this high temperature, high energy matter. So it's interesting to note that in some cases, these extreme solar flares and explosions could even produce gamma rays, which are the highest energy form of radiation that we can observe in the universe. And what's surprising about that is that if you look at the temperature of the surface of the sun, it's about 6,000 Kelvins. And that's basically yellow hot.</p> <p>Peter Becker (26:28):</p> <p>If you have a yellow hot match head or something like that, it actually has a temperature of about 6,000 Kelvins, like the surface of the sun. But that's way too cold to produce gamma rays. So the fact that we see gamma rays sometimes indicates that there's particles that are actually being accelerated by strong fields. Getting back to what you were saying before, strong electric fields are accelerating electrons and protons to such high energies that we can produce these gamma rays. And that's actually my personal area of research where my research intersects with the solar physics is in trying to understand how those particles are accelerated during these flares to such high energies that they can even produce gamma rays. So we have a model for that. It's an interesting challenge because the particles that get accelerated don't come from nowhere. They're actually members of the population particles on the surface of the sun every day, protons and electrons and things.</p> <p>Peter Becker (27:20):</p> <p>So how do they get up to such high energies? They, they sort of start as members of this thermal population of 6,000 Kelvins or so, but then they end up with such a high energy, they're basically what we call relativistic particles, which means that their kinetic energy of motion is equal to or larger than their rest mass energy, which is what you get from Einstein's famous formula E=mc(squared). That's the rest mass energy. But when these particles, uh, get to what we call relativistic energies or speeds very close to the speed of light, their kinetic energy is actually even greater than that rest mass energy. And that's how they can produce this higher energy gamma radiation. So that's a puzzle that we're helping to contribute to the solution of working with my students at Mason. That's, as I said, one component of this larger solar physics research projects that's going on.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (28:08):</p> <p>That is interesting. Why are we not hearing a lot about this in a mainstream media? Do you think people just say, this is just too science fiction for us? Or it's, I got bigger fish to fry or, or worry about right now and to worry about something that I don't know when it's gonna happen?</p> <p>Peter Becker (28:26):</p> <p>Yeah. Well, I mean, it's true that your average person is not gonna worry about a solar flare because they have much more bread and butter kitchen table issues to deal with on a daily basis. But on the other hand, the, the profile of the possible internet apocalypse is definitely going up in the media. I, I've actually been doing a whole bunch of interviews <laugh> over the last couple of weeks on the subject. And, and it is in the popular press. There's an article in the Washington Post just a few weeks ago, the Wall Street Journal's done a series. Forbes has done a series.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (29:00):</p> <p>What was the catalyst? What prompted people to start paying attention.</p> <p>Peter Becker (29:03):</p> <p>It's really the idea that we're seeing a, an increase in solar activity, which is documented. And we also are seeing a large cross section for disruption of global commerce. So I think it has caught the attention of certain people, and that's filtering into the mainstream media. And I think this is probably gonna get amplified over time, because as the activity increases, we're going to see reports of, for example, much more extensive Northern Lights phenomenon, which we just saw a week or two ago. As a matter of fact, two medium-sized CMEs actually did reach Earth just about 10 days ago and created very spectacular aurora, uh, a couple of weekends ago that were noted in the popular media. But that's, again, kind of the tip of the iceberg. We may see more of that, but then that's going to transition into blackouts here and there, not necessarily major blackouts, but significant ones.</p> <p>Peter Becker (29:59):</p> <p>The last time we saw a really major blackout was, I think in the late nineties, the whole province of Quebec, Canada lost power for about 24 hours. So, you know, events like that are going to start to become more common and it's going to get people's attention and hopefully will cause us to reconsider what we need to do in order to harden the infrastructure. Because, again, we can't control the events themselves. The sun's gonna do whatever it needs to do. And the sun's been around for billions of years and, and you know, our modern industrial economy's only been around for a couple hundred years, so it's completely meaningless amount of time compared to the lifetime of the sun. So if the sun is entering a phase where its activity is gonna change, we just have to deal with that. And if that may be something that has never occurred before in human history, because we haven't been around that long, but we are living with a star and 93 million miles away, as you said.</p> <p>Peter Becker (30:49):</p> <p>So for the most part, it's extremely beneficial. It's given us life on earth and all the wonderful things, the photosynthesis and the warmth and the liquid water that we have at, in this Goldilocks zone where we are 93 million miles from the sun. But there can also be an alter ego there. And the sun is definitely capable of unleashing tremendous firestorms or particles that can have very serious consequences on Earth. Again, I mean, there's even worries about events that could be even a thousand times larger than the Carrington event in 1859. Very unlikely to occur, much like large earthquakes. These large solar disruptions are impossible to predict. But we know that the large ones are very infrequent and very widely spaced. But if you get a large enough event, then you're talking about much more severe disruption that's difficult to really extrapolate from anything that we've seen before in human history.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (31:41):</p> <p>So let's talk about that for one second. So that storm that you just highlighted, the one that was significantly more potent and substantial than the Carrington event, my understanding is that occurred about 14,300 years ago, something around that time period, right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (31:56):</p> <p>That's the one I was talking about. Yes.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (31:59):</p> <p>And so the thought is the research is that there've been nine such extreme solar events. One every 1200 some-odd years. I'm trying to get you to handicap this for me so, so I can place internet bets, so that when it happens, you can't collect your money, right? <laugh>,</p> <p>Peter Becker (32:18):</p> <p>There you go. Always scheming. Money for Mason.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (32:22):</p> <p>Exactly. You know,</p> <p>Peter Becker (32:24):</p> <p>The ultimate donor. But anyway, well, it's difficult to put a precise number. I would say that for an event as large as this one from 14,000 years ago, it's probably more like a, it's probably more like a percent per hundred years for an event that large. But if you go back to the Carrington event, then you're talking definitely about a percent per year for an event that large. Because that's gotta scale about a hundred years. So it's about a percent per year of chance overall. It's probably only a 10th of a percent or so of this 14,000 year ago event.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (32:56):</p> <p>Well then that means we're long overdue.</p> <p>Peter Becker (32:58):</p> <p>Yes. That's exactly the concern that the sun is entering, again, not only solar cycle 25, but also this Gleissberg cycle, which is a hundred-year cycle. It's beefing up to a level pretty similar to what it was back in the Carrington time, because that was 150 years ago. So the Gleissberg cycle would've been more active at that time too.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (33:18):</p> <p>So there is a cycle that actually is prompting this. There is a precursor events that are happening that really give you alarm. Is that right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (33:28):</p> <p>Yeah, that's a great analogy. Because it's much like earthquakes again, where you can see some precursors, small earthquakes. And in fact, we're just seeing this right now in Iceland where they're super concerned because they're having like a thousand earthquakes in 24 hours, if you can imagine, right? And they're evacuating villages because that definitely could indicate that there's a large eruption coming. And yes, there's that kind of correlation of solar activity as well. But having said that, nobody's running around ringing alarm bells yet. It's not as if we're, I mean, the analogy with what's happening in Iceland breaks down because we're not seeing that level of activity yet with in the sun, where we're really anticipating a huge event, you know, next week or in the next month. But there is a trend in that direction. And at a certain point in a year or so, it's a possibility that alarm bells will be ringing and we'll actually be much more worried about this. So the level of consciousness is definitely going up. And again, it's also because of the vulnerability of economically of the world. It's not just communication and sending email, it's global e-commerce that's sort of pushing a 20% level now. If you disrupt that communication, it's a lot more than just email. It's basically gonna bring the world economy almost grinding to a halt, except for local economies that can go on in the absence of communication. So, yeah. It's, it's a worry.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (34:46):</p> <p>It is a worry. So it seems like there should be some development of backup systems and backup processes to help some functions continue.</p> <p>Peter Becker (34:58):</p> <p>For one thing, it's a good idea to shield data centers. We were talking about shielding before. It's a good idea to shield data centers and also to have redundant backup data centers. You know, we have these things on computers called RAIDS systems. R-A-I-D-S with multiple hard drives that clone off each other and have backups. So if you lose one hard drive, you don't lose your whole data archive, right?</p> <p>Gregory Washington (35:18):</p> <p>Exactly right.</p> <p>Peter Becker (35:19):</p> <p>We kind of need to do that with larger data centers too, because the effects of these storms can be localized. So you might lose one in the U.S. but another one in Australia, let's say, could survive. And the loss of data itself is of course a big deal. Data is value these days. Data is money. So if data's literally lost, that's just as bad as losing real time communication.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (35:40):</p> <p>Oh yeah. Without question. Without question. So where's the playbook? Who's put that together? So you, you've highlighted a number of strategies. Is somebody putting that framework together? It's almost like an insurance policy we're talking about when, not if. And we're probably talking about our lifetime.</p> <p>Peter Becker (36:00):</p> <p>Yeah, I think that's probably true. And so, I mean, the U.S. government and DOD are definitely working on mitigation strategies for their own equipment and their own satellites. And the large communications companies are working on mitigation strategies for their networks and their communication satellites. My concern is mostly with the healthcare system because I do feel that there's a lot of vulnerability there and civilian infrastructure associated with healthcare, keeping people alive, which often relies on data transmission as well as maintaining power. So I think there's a sort of a soft spot there. It's not clear to me that there's any government entity that's looking at that particular aspect of this problem.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (36:36):</p> <p>I see. I see. You know, we had another astrophysicist on, Hakeem Oluseyi, who has also taught here at Mason, and he talked a lot about space exploration. If there is an event like this, what does it do for space exploration? Does it make people a little more concerned?</p> <p>Peter Becker (36:54):</p> <p>Yeah, that's a good question. So space exploration, the ramifications of all the solar activity kind of depends on your altitude off of Earth. So we have the space station in, so-called low Earth orbit about 300 miles above the surface of the Earth. That's low enough that it's somewhat protected by Earth’s magnetic field. But you wouldn't wanna leave astronauts up there if you knew that a huge CME was coming by because they would definitely receive harmful amounts of radiation. But they have a Soyuz capsule hanging around up there, which is sort of their lifeboat. And you do have 18 to 36 hours of warning. So you could bail out and you could get back to the relative safety of Earth. And again, Earth's fields are gonna protect you from the particles directly. You'll only have to deal with the secondary effects of the magnetic waves and electric currents, but you're not gonna actually get fried by the particles.</p> <p>Peter Becker (37:41):</p> <p>In orbit’s another story. Now, if you go farther out into space and you're talking about a lunar colony, well, on the surface of the Moon, you're totally vulnerable 'cause there's no magnetic field protection at all. The Moon has no magnetic field and it's outside Earth's magnetic field. So the idea would be to build underground shelters on the Moon. And I actually, I just read an article a few months ago about how they found a likely spot where there's apparently a cave on the Moon that they may land near. Because if it's already dug out as a cave, you can go in there; hopefully, there's no weird lunar creatures or anything <laugh> waiting for you. <laugh>. You can go first, right?</p> <p>Gregory Washington (38:16):</p> <p><laugh>, Hey, no worries, <laugh>.</p> <p>Peter Becker (38:18):</p> <p>But that would actually provide natural shelter from harmful particles that we're talking about. Now, when you go and you start talking about Mars exploration, that's when things get really dicey because it takes years to get to Mars and you're in deep space, way outside Earth’s magnetic field. You can't lead shield a spacecraft like that because if you use lead, you're not gonna get it off the ground. It's not gonna launch. So you've gotta find another way to protect astronauts on the way to Mars. Once they get there again, they would probably dig underground shelters.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (38:50):</p> <p>And they might actually be better off than earth, right? Because it'll hit Earth first and then, right?</p> <p>Peter Becker (38:55):</p> <p>Yeah. And, and for that matter, it might hit Earth and not hit these astronauts on the way to Mars because the path you take to Mars would actually be a curved path through space. So a CME that hits Earth, you might actually be outta the line of fire if you're floating around in space. But the worry is that you wouldn't be, and then that's a big concern as to how we would actually protect astronauts. They'd have a certain amount of maneuvering capability. But the problem is, is the cloud of gas we're talking about is so large, you couldn't actually manually reorient a spacecraft in a direction that would get you out of that, because then you're not gonna reach Mars at all. You're gonna end up floating around in deep space forever. So they've gotta develop ways of maybe using electromagnetic fields to create an artificial magnetic field around the spacecraft. Kind of a magnetic cocoon or something might be strong enough to do that, or other types of shielding. Again, you can't lead shield the spacecraft, but you can use layers of foil, might be effective unless you're dealing with very high energy particles like those relativistic ones I was talking about, which can actually plow through thin sheets of metal.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (39:58):</p> <p>So as we wrap up, over the next five years, what is your handicap on a Carrington like event happening?</p> <p>Pete Becker (40:05):</p> <p>I think the odds are about 50-50 because, and the reason I say that,</p> <p>Gregory Washington (40:09):</p> <p>Those are amazing odds.</p> <p>Peter Becker (40:10):</p> <p>Well, the reason I say that is because after Carrington, one might ask when was the last time there was an event that was close to that, and that was actually in 2003. And it happened to be the Halloweens solar storm of 2003, almost exactly 20 years ago. And that one was just as large an event and it almost struck Earth head on, but it was kind of a glancing blow across Earth. So we had a lot of spectacular aurora and Northern Lights and some localized power blackouts, but we weren't hit directly by that. And so that was about 20 years. So my guess is that an event like that, that directly strikes Earth isn't really that unlikely to happen in the next five to 10 years.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (40:51):</p> <p>Wow. That's scary.</p> <p>Peter Becker (40:53):</p> <p>But again, an event that large, we would definitely survive.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (40:56):</p> <p>We would survive as humans. The question is, what is mankind state after that period? I'm getting on another tangent here, but this is great. It's almost like you should be having conversations now with humanist. Because the real issue is not just what happens once the solar storm hits. The real issue is what happens to society afterward and how do you manage and mitigate the aftermath? Is it gonna be a month? Is it going to be two months, right? Do you remember what happened in this society when we could not get toilet paper <laugh>? Do you remember during, during the pandemic? Do you remember what ensued for something as as mundane as that?</p> <p>Peter Becker (41:43):</p> <p>Right. Yeah. You're absolutely right. And you kind of alluded to this earlier too, in our conversation when you're talking about radio communication, loss of communication, what could happen to society. And I think we're at an especially delicate time now because of the rise of conspiracy theories in general right now. And the kind of the breakdown of rational human thought or American thought anyway,</p> <p>Gregory Washington (42:02):</p> <p>Without question. The breakdown of rational thought and the breakdown of understanding and belief in science.</p> <p>Peter Becker (42:08):</p> <p>Yes. Yes. Right. Exactly. So if you think about it, a communications internet blackout in a context like that, again, with the country awash in more guns than there are people in this country.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (42:20):</p> <p>And imagine what would people do if they couldn't get ahold of their social media for a month. This will be catastrophic for some folk.</p> <p>Peter Becker (42:26):</p> <p>Yeah. I have to agree. We can only hope that maybe a better spirit will actually prevail if they're not able to read the conspiracy theories on social media during the blackout. Who knows? It might actually be returned to a simpler time when we spoke more directly to our neighbors and actually understood each other eye to eye.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (42:45):</p> <p>It would definitely put you in a more localized setting for communication and engagement.</p> <p>Peter Becker (42:50):</p> <p>So that could be good. Maybe. I guess that's a good way to end on a bright note at least.</p> <p>Gregory Washington (42:55):</p> <p>Yeah, end on a bright note, <laugh>. Well, thank you. That is going to wrap things up for our Access to Excellence. Thank you, Peter. Peter Becker is a professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at AV's College of Science. I am Mason President Gregory Washington saying, until next time, stay safe, Mason Nation.</p> <p>Narrator (43:20):</p> <p>If you like what you heard on this podcast, go to podcast.gmu.edu for more of Gregory Washington's conversations with the thought leaders, experts, and educators who take on the grand challenges facing our students, graduates, and higher education. That's podcast.gmu.edu.</p> </div> </section></div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="91698d96-9210-44b5-8494-752e3b36888d" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:call_to_action" data-inline-block-uuid="d263ceca-afaa-434c-bc27-fc40a893a465"> <div class="cta"> <a class="cta__link" href="/podcast"> <h4 class="cta__title">Learn more about the Access to Excellence Podcast <i class="fas fa-arrow-circle-right"></i> </h4> <span class="cta__icon"></span> </a> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:text" data-inline-block-uuid="5bb6b1b6-f774-44b5-8993-0fc793c796a8" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocktext"> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="inline_block:news_list" data-inline-block-uuid="3813e8d4-0bc8-4e45-aad7-ff9493d223aa" class="block block-layout-builder block-inline-blocknews-list"> <h2>Access to Excellence Podcast Episodes</h2> <div class="views-element-container"><div class="view view-news view-id-news view-display-id-block_1 js-view-dom-id-724ed538b0041b73c7d578a123bd5090f9b2bd351f076816dec7e744a3db87eb"> <div class="view-content"> <div class="news-list-wrapper"> <ul class="news-list"><li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-12/podcast-ep-63-economic-perceptions-driving-us-politics" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 63: The economic perceptions driving U.S. politics</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">December 11, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-11/podcast-ep-62-what-are-chances-intelligent-life-beyond-earth" hreflang="en">Podcast — EP 62: What are the chances of intelligent life beyond Earth?</a></span></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-publish-date"><div class="field-content">November 18, 2024</div></div></li> <li class="news-item"><div class="views-field views-field-title"><span class="field-content"><a href="/news/2024-10/podcast-ep-61-can-dirty-coffee-grounds-be-key-clean-water" hreflang="en">Podcast - 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