tv Charlie Rose Bloomberg September 21, 2016 7:00pm-8:01pm EDT
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he visited with refugees. he is in new york for the united nations general assembly and i am pleased to have him back at this table. you are a traveling man. i am a travel that, that is it. i guess i signed up when i joined a rock and roll band at age 16. nice andtell me about how close that was. bono: when you talk about these things, it is easy to forget your drama is such a tiny shard of the dramas going on around you. it was best you might. bastille night. we were looking at the fireworks. we first realized something was wrong when a police car reversed
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down a one-way street. stampede, was a tables and chairs thrown everywhere. huddled.n and her son, we brought this woman and her son. coming her down, he was like a 10-year-old. san, mama, it is ok. she was having a panic attack. we weren't panicked. growing up in ireland, it is probably just the fireworks. thinking,rse we were and you have these awful thoughts. you look at a blood knife, you think, is there a gunman coming through. the services, they were amazing.
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the french did it right. made sure everyone was safe. i have tried to pay respect to the families. that is really all that matters. charlie: people were concerned about you because of what happened to so many innocent souls. bono: the second time in france for us. we were in paris at the night, we were a mile away when all of that went off. it keeps happening. to be thehat was final venue for the tour. bono: the band that had been through the ordeal, we brought them on stage at the end of our show. that was a big moment. ♪ power ♪ple have the
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charlie: -- is a thing about these terrorist groups. they love the phenomena of the gray zone, which is where people get on. christians and muslims. the gray zone where people mingle. he want to divide us. back, it, when we went wasn't about the melody, it was about harmony. about our song, it was it backe crowd seeing to us. it is powerful. rock 'n roll. as an act of defiance. that is what i think of when i think about rock 'n roll. bono: there is nothing more rock and -- romance. the ultimate act of
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defiance. if you think of music, the beatles or mozart or beethoven, irish people, we can surrender to nolan cawley any day of the week. of was formed on that idea your joy as an act of charlie: defiance. -- an act of defiance. the music continues. bono: on music was always wrapped around social justice. that is where you and i met. that is how i got in the door. i wouldn't expecting leave. when i would be in capitol hill, people would take the meeting just to sort of have a look at this exotic creature or whatever, a rock 'n roll person. but then i didn't leave. charlie: with all the passion
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for social activism, doesn't diminish the music -- does it diminish the music? a source of been pride for the band, but i know i have embarrassed them a lot. there are people i have met they wouldn't want me to meet. i remember bringing jesse helms to the show. edge was upset about that. it is odd. i see all the stuff i do as the same thing. as amight see it personality disorder. and ideas ass being the same thing. even little businesses. start ups. ideaat melody, a great
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have a lot in common. there's something unique, present. a beautiful arc, arc. an inevitability. is feel you know where it going, even though you have never seen one before. i feel that about the one campaign. or red or anything i do. charlie: do you feel because of the accident in the park, the guitar is not there. bono: some would say it is never there. charlie: you wouldn't say that or your band-- would not. bono: they would, actually. charlie: now that you can't play the guitar like you did, does it mean the idea is swimming alone? bono: that is interesting.
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well, i am sure you have had these moments where suddenly you are very mortal. i have had a few of them. my head was not as hard as everything i tried to but it up against, not as hard is humbling to me. i have always been on top of things. mybody, edge says i look at body like an inconvenience. i have never thought about that. i had time to think about things. i had time to let the music come through me. we have written some incredible songs, i think. it is not about some stupid bike
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accident. it is about realizing there is an elastic limit in your life. you as an artist don't feel it, but you as a person are now part of that. i'm not sure i like that very much. charlie: you went back in the last album, "innocence." it was about your mother, dublin. musical influences. sense that you both go forward and you come back. that is go back, maybe that is what that is about. i never listen to our music. the band doesn't. we are always think about where we are going. decidedast all them, i -- although him, i decided to m, ium on the last
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decided i needed to know. what is this rage? why i my in a band? i got to these ordinary situations people have had, where they go, my mother died when i was 14. the way i got over it was of course, i went into music. i lost myself in music. i went to the crowds. that became that sort of love i was missing in my life. living in a house in the north side of dublin with two men with arch i was -- which i was fighting with. music is alchemy. we turn our -- into gold. you want said, if we are close to music, we are close to each other. the language of
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the spirit purity you as a jazzman conversationalist, you are pretty musical to the way you move around the table with words. actually, it is when we set up up that another kind of talking goes on. music, i think i'm a kenexa us -- connects us with our spirit. i think all music is worship, actually. if it is not god, it can be a lot of things. it can be bad things. it is always worship. >> ♪ i don't dream ♪
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charlie: beyond the money, promoting the album, does it speak to you in terms of how the audience the songs? k from themdbac about the lyrics? bono: we fight with our audience. like a lover's quarrel. audience,ap into the wrestle with them. there was a concert in the 1980's, i was in my early 20's. i went into the audience with a white flag. charlie: i remember that. bono: the los angeles times said, the most irresponsible thing they had ever seen. wholes me making this sort of nonviolent protest.
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that relationship with our audience is everything to this band. our albums, our recordings are good. we have done some good stuff. great, because it is lie. it is present, it is different. it changes, even if we are not improvising, it is always different. you are right. the audience changes the song and changes every night. you pick up their feelings in the room. a song can mean something different in paris and in new york. it means something different. ♪ ♪
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charlie: do you like rehearsals? no, i'm not good at rehearsals. which is why i am here, by the way. they don't know i am here. this is the story of my life. i don't like it. i cannot connect. getting into the songs for me his commitment. know it is coming. i have to step inside the songs. when it is going great, the songs are singing you. it is a transcendent thing. ♪
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than my head. i did not learn to play but i remember putting my foot on the pedal and finding out where the reverb was an making a sound, and then finding another note that felt good with that as a child. so i had that. i don't know what it is. charlie: it is a gift. bono: i guess it is. i guess that is why we shouldn't be arrogant. it is like an inherited wealth. talented, be humble. you didn't work for this. this is a gift. we are given gifts. to have such beauty and talent, how did that happen? [laughter] charlie: take songs of experience. how many have you written? bono: 16 songs on the cooker.
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we have to boil it down to 10 or 12. it will probably be 12. charlie: what is the question you are asking this time? poet, were is a great were discussing him before we came on. charlie: a great irish poet. poem,the last called kite. another poet advised me once he said, to write as if you are dead. is to be free of ego. you are gone. you are out of here. charlie: to please nobody but yourself. bono: i have taken that position and i have written personal songs to people. to my kids, our kids. to friends.
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to our audience. and then i caught myself writing to myself, but i did not know it was me. there is one called, the little things that give you away. who is that about? me. charlie: there is one called the morning after innocence. that is on. i told you about that. i shouldn't have. that song, the morning after innocence turned into little things that give you a way which i just told you about. charlie: i was calling it compromise. it is personal. what was the compromise? think that thees younger me, he was very black
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charlie: we talked about terrorism and how it is all around us. paris and the united states. brussels and everywhere. today inalso politics which some people are very worried about forms of populism. they see it in europe, a move to the right. even in france. they worry about it here. when you look at donald trump, and his candidacy, and you have said wonderful things about america. america was more than a nation, an idea. come to u.s. somebody
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who is a change agent? because people are so unhappy about the status quo? or does he come to u.s. of the house -- come to you as something else? idea america is the best up, butd ever came donald trump is potentially the worst thing that ever happened to america. potentially. because of what we are saying. america is not just a country. ireland is a nice country. idea -- is an idea. that idea is bounded up in equality and justice for all. i think of those lines, give me yourtired, your poor, huddled masses, yearning to
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breathe free. this is america. trump'snot from donald playbook. i have spent 20 years, nearly 20 years now, fiercely bipartisan. i am going to stay that way. for thenormous respect party of abraham lincoln. workers,he greatest republicans are close friends of mine. i don't think he is a republican. i think he has hijacked the party. he is trying to hijack the idea of america and i think it is bigger than all of us. this is really dangerous. wise people of conscience should let this man turn your
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country into a casino. against aunning united states senator, the first lady, and the race is about even. trumpi would not diminish supporters, underestimate their angst. i feel in a way, they have the centerssessed parties have not yet become clear. saying theu are angst is real and genuine. i worry about my country and where it is. there are very real problems facing not just america,, facing europe. it was in the white house? i am irish. i can't tell people how to vote
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and don't want to. who sits in that office really affects everyone in this world. you seem to be saying this is an absence of -- i worry he will put the country at risk. i worry about his instincts. i worry on every single front. the lack of civility. common decency. things have been bad enough in congress. do we really want this kind of -- in the oval office? office.a sacred this is an incredible country. the people will wake up out of this dream. they shouldn't make a protest vote with him. and ie: some will argue, know her well and respect her greatly, part of the issue of
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his rise has to do with her. she is not a popular candidate. people want to see change and they do not think they will get it with her so they are prepared to take a chance with him. because she is not a show woman? she is not simplistic ? residenti talked to clinton last week. there is this issue of trust. of all the mad things, think about it. your psychological profile. pure psychological profile. if i'm going in, i know her. it is tough love with her. she is very proper. it is so mad that people would
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think there is something the farias. -- nefarious. she is the opposite. maybe this predeceasing -- privacy thing, she has gone overboard. i don't want to try to tell people how to vote. i can't do that. and i'm really alarmed ready to speak in a way i haven't spoken for 20 years. charlie: this is not comfortable for you, but you are doing it because you feel like what? bono: because i feel like this country is in real danger. this is a dangerous moment. there is climate change. there is nuclear weapon proliferation. there is terrorism. stuff.s all kinds of' the biggest danger might be right here.
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fear of the other. i am irish, when he talks about illegal aliens? people -- half probably people have overstayed their visas. mexican people are some of the most extraordinary people you have met in your life. they are doing incredible jobs. i am irish. i am very offended. we were refugees, economic refugees to read we got off the boat snowing up -- -- smelling bad. we have made a contribution to america. i think most americans will agree, the irish are part of your story. the country is built on this principle. the promised land belongs to
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those who need it most, surely. charlie: where you campaign? can't do that. i feel like we have to stand up and be counted. i will figure out a way. let me talk about the 10th anniversary, red. a new push to electrify a laugh electrify africa. i remove or you talking about debt forgiveness. you came here, selling the idea of that forgiveness. how long ago was that? bono: a long time ago. 16 years ago. charlie: we've got countries that cannot get on with their development because they have an overwhelming debt. the only way to deal with it is
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to find a way to forgive them so they can use those resources. later, and 46lion million africans going to school. that is where the money saved was spent. charlie: what is electrified africa? the: what is going on now, narrative of development has changed. the world is getting excited about the continent. by 2050, twice the population of china. charlie: i think it will be a third of the-year-old -- a third will beorld's youth african. people are saying, how can we be part of this rising africa narrative? president obama has been keen on know,ring with, you
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bringing power to africa. mark zuckerberg is trying to bring connectivity -- charlie: the internet. lot of people. a i think, actually, there is about to emerge a new security and development of narrative. started in africa but partnered in europe and america that is going to change the game with regards to africa. certainly north africa. the middle east. with the refugee crisis, people are looking, what can we do here? there is a phenomena, the three extremes. have extreme poverty, extreme climate, and extreme ideology. trinity is where
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all the problems are. mali, northern nigeria, across isudan, all somalia and you could argue all the way to afghanistan to read people scrambling to make a living. a hard life. we need to understand this. we need to be there. leaders, the president of nigeria, entrepreneurs, saying we have to deal with this. in northern nigeria, i have been to a spot. there are 2 million people displaced there. the boko haram has torched their villages and towns. even though the nigerian military are making progress, they cannot return to their homes because they are not there. 2 million people displaced in
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northern nigeria. the stated objective is a boko haram -- ebola boko haram is the destabilization -- the stated haram is thatoko the stabilization of nigeria. appellationes the of syria. you see with the refugee crisis did to europe. it probably resulted in brexit. that is a population of 20 million people. nigeria is 209 people. it is very important it succeeds. nigeria fails, africa fails. if africa fails, europe fails. if europe fails, america is indeed -- -- is in deep -- me how you see this in terms of this great rock star.
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what skills he has, what is it? that motivates him? rallys it he uses to these points of power to make a difference? you, i want to say back to it is the same thing that has this table become the stuff of legend. it is an old-fashioned, ancient idea. to mention. that greek idea of the whole society, is it not? it should not be unusual to have scientists, artists, poets.ticians, comedians, philosophers. contributing. that is how ireland was formed. everyone was welcome. the world of ideas. you are interested in it, i am
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interested in it. that is what motivates me. how could you, for instance, the development agenda used to be a thing of the left. a creature of the left. if they are hammering on about poverty. that was underestimating people on the right. one we tried in the campaign, let's unite people. we have twice the support for dying unnecessarily. commerce is always left out. the engines of commerce, the creative departments of coca-cola. they are great advertisers. can we use their advertising? charlie: they have trucks in africa that could be used to deliver edison. bono: we worked to get those trucks to get drugs to people. refrigeration was the key.
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i will tell you something else. i went to a meeting in coke. tablea can of coke on the , in atlanta for the ceo looked. i said, that can, we can put it on the cover of time magazine. it is going to change the world. you are going to get into some trouble if we do what we ask you, but it will be the most incredible riot of interest in your brand you haven't seen for 20 years. i said, picked it up. he picked it up. i'm not following you. i said, look underneath. vederneath, in the conch space, we had a condom. to put thisng you in supermarkets.
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people will be upset. you are conservative company. the argument, wake up, people. bono: the -- charlie: the battle against aids. what did they say? bono: it was too hot to handle, that particular thing. became a red partner. they have been great. like apple, like starbucks. we have so many extraordinary companies. we are trying to use, to answer your question, trying to use everything. everyone. of this.ve anyone out this is the most important project ever. a project of human dignity. a project of bringing people out of despair.
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about giving and the essentials of life. shelter, food. bono: it is about partnering with people. harlkie: providing the opportunity. bono: poverty and despair is not a natural condition. it is man-made and it can be famousby man, said a african, nelson mandela. charlie: some would ask, why you? bono: i am not sure. i would say the irishness is part of it. even across generations, it is probably that. wherever you go in africa, there are people, irish nuns and priests jumping out from behind
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bushes. irish people are very affronted by injustice. think maybe, but i we are just very vocal about it and we get organized. charlie: in the end, you are saying it is your irishness. bono: it is part of that. because my faith is subbing i don't feel talking about, i to serve it. yes, service is important. it is an old-fashioned, slightly boring word. i'm not somebody that can wear that badge. i'm not a highest person -- a very pious person but i believe in those values, service. i think in the scriptures, there
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are over 2000 versus referring to poverty. charlie: i think that is what christ's mission is about. bono: aside from redemption, the second theme of the scriptures is poverty. that is the only time christ speaks in judgment, how you treat the poor. how you treat the least of these is how you treat me. think, sexual, a moral behavior every they have stolen something from work or whatever. christ did not speak about anything like that. speakt spoke how we the poor -- about the poor. ism, it isf judgmental as him important to get our priorities right. ♪
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is there going to come a time more aboutnk of bono good deeds then good music? bono: i hope not. i will tell you what i'm hoping. one has now, 7 million members. one campaign. 3 million of them are in africa. i think in the next few years, membership south of the equator is going to work membership south of the equator. their voices are going to drown out theirs and mine and i look forward to the day. who are they? bono: they are the young, the next new africans. civil society people. university students who know their potential is not being used. their world.ging
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we are just hopefully partnering with them. i will soon be out of a job as an activist who has to sit at your table. od?rlie: tiger would? bono: i asked. i wanted to know. are your mates, are they wholeheartedly with you? or did they say, in some cases,, did you have to get involved? bono: they are wholeheartedly behind us with caveats. -- of yourself. they don't say that. charlie: don't embarrass us. enormousy are computers, i think it is $15 million to read. is going to get to half $1
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billion by the end of this cycle. we just had the largest cycle in history because mr. trudeau worked his -- off. charlie: what do you think of the pope? i have not met francis. charlie: have you asked? i am due to meet him. we have corresponded. and whatemarkable man i think it's, debt cancellation, all those years ago, the catholic church made that cancellation a priority. jubilee 2000. take what it up in every church. my argument was, widened to tell people what was accomplished?
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they succeeded. $120 billion of debts were canceled. that money was spent largely on education. you are so alive, talking about this. it is a moving part, and energizing part of who you are, who you are being today. at the same time, the music is there. it is central to who you are. central to you, what defines you. those songs are answers to questions that you ask yourself about who you are and what you are about, and memory. you love music. you get it. become morehave indulgent in music.
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less -- about the music because in my other life, i get to do that. tohink it is ok for artists occasionally stare at their naval. it.lie: you like all of bono: you mentioned bill gates and microsoft. when people forget i am in you , i think it is all the same thing. l, talking to him about leaving microsoft, this is a guy that will change the world twice. who gets to change the world once? he gets to change the world twice. first with microsoft and then the foundation. people like find
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myself, shaking the tree, you will find bill gates and melinda gates are in there can't. -- their camp. we couldn't move without the bill and melinda gates foundation. i remember having my first conversation about the gates and he wasn't sure about advocacy. even the richest man in the world discovered, as deep as his pockets were, he had to work in partnership with governments to really shift the needle, which is what he has done. charlie: he will tell you that, he couldn't do what he did unless you got government involved. government is the own institution with the resources and power to do it. what you have done, what bill has done in his own way and others, they have tried to 90 toources of the -- tried ignite the resources of the
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private sector because there is so much talent. it is about technology, it is about mobilizing as someone once hed about winston churchill, mobilized the english language to defeat hitler's. -- hitler. mobilizing all of these tools to change the world. bono: is great. using profit. using, i suppose entrepreneurial coppola's him -- capitalism is part of the program. an activist who had no understanding or even regard for commerce. now i understand, commerce is essential. the most essential component of taking people out of extreme poverty. i learned from africans to take commerce seriously.
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telecom guy, he is probably the strongest voice. he said, invest in africa. if you believe in it, if you take it seriously, if it is an equal conversation, trade with us. i find myself in a plane. i am over dar es salaam. in finnegan's pub, in dublin. i'm flying over dar es salaam. i am seeing these quarries and railway yards. country of the tanzania is going to be great. he says, brother. we've got to go into the studio, okay?ch marked -- i could go to far.
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announcer: "big problems, big thinkers" is brought to you by cisco. there has never been a better time to change the world. ♪ terre: we asked some of the best minds in the world from business, government, the arts, and academia, what are the most urgent problems facing humanity, and how do we solve them? the result is "big problems, big thinkers." ♪ >> what is the number one major problem facing mankind? >> i think it is the lack of education. >> politics has been getting dumber and dumber. >> there is a balance of green spirit. >> if we don't have a more sustainable way -- >> everybody has the capability of making a difference.
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