All About Change - Season 3, Episode 9: President of the Ford Foundation Darren Walker Talks Black Lives Matter Movement and Social Activism
Episode Date: July 30, 2020On the new episode of All Inclusive Jay speaks with special guest, Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation, one of the largest philanthropic organizations in the world. Jay and Darren discuss ...the lack of minority representation in corporate America, the Black Lives Matter movement and the importance of social activism in today’s world.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Philanthropy has been the ability to make a huge change for the better in society.
The Ford Foundation is one of the largest philanthropy organizations in the world,
one that has also made one of, innovation, and social justice with Jay Ruderman.
Hi, I'm Jay Ruderman, and this is All Inclusive. Our guest today is the president of the Ford Foundation
and a very outspoken advocate for social justice, Darren Walker. Darren, thank you for joining us
today. Thank you, Jay, for this wonderful invitation. How are you doing? I am doing very
well, all things considered. Great. I heard an interview that you recently did on CNN, where you talk about the privilege that
most white people in the country have, and that is a barrier to the advancement of African American
people to the executive levels of businesses and organizations. Can you talk about the change
we would see in America with more African American people in executive positions and on the boards of major American
companies? I think we would see a reflection of America and the talent that is distributed
across America within the highest ranks of corporate America, which we do not see today.
And I think the effect of that would be a more impactful, profitable, and inclusive corporate America,
which unfortunately we have not yet achieved. And do you feel that that is because of systematic
racism in corporate America, that we've not seen the advancement of more qualified African-American candidates into the sea office or onto boards of organizations?
I certainly believe, Jay, that we have an unfortunate and regrettable history in our
country. As someone who loves America and knows that my own personal journey would only be
possible in a country like America, I still understand that America has not
fulfilled its responsibilities and obligations to all of its citizens, most prominently the
indigenous Americans, the natives, and the enslaved Americans, the enslaved Africans. The legacy of that history remains with us today in our society,
and therefore it remains as part of our history in our corporate community and in the cultures
of our companies. And since you came out and very strongly took a leadership position and
made that statement, have you heard back from corporate America? Are they open to addressing the change within their culture that is obviously being
called for very loudly in America on the streets? Jay, I have been incredibly inspired by the
conversations I've had with CEOs. I have spoken to at least 20 Fortune 200 CEOs in the
last month, and everyone is deeply troubled by what they saw in Minneapolis. I think what is
most impactful with this group of leaders is what they are hearing from their African-American employees
and customers and suppliers, that the personal stories and narratives of things that are a part
of their everyday life that their white colleagues don't have to experience, and even troubling
experiences in the workplace. You know, Jay, when you look at the business roundtable,
which has traditionally not become involved in major social issues, under Doug McMillan's
leadership, the organization has established a set of working groups who are looking at everything
from policing and the justice system to education and employment and access to health care. This is a
pretty bold step by the BRT, and I hope that it's followed on with concrete action. You're running
the Ford Foundation, which is one of the most prestigious foundations in the world, and people
have the utmost respect for you. But life in general, you know, walking through your city, you know, is racism part of what
you experience in life?
Well, I don't think that I live the life of an average African-American man in America.
I live with a great amount of privilege.
I live in a city that is progressive.
So a black gay man, I do not feel that it has been an impairment
generally to my advancement to be president of the Ford Foundation. I certainly have experienced
inadvertently or with intent racism. I have economic security. I have a vast network. And so what I worry about is what is the experience of the average Black man living in the Bronx
or in Brooklyn who isn't the president of the Ford Foundation, but who has to navigate
systems that can feel like walls.
And so that's what I worry about.
like walls. And so that's what I worry about. With the murder of George Floyd, which was caught on video and obviously traumatized the country, we've seen protests and the national discussion
has changed in this country. The injustice has touched a deep cord in America. But do you feel
that these protests, which were massive, can lead to more racial equality in our country?
I do believe that the potential for this moment in American history, Jay, is transformational.
And what is so inspiring and gives me hope is, as you point out, the movement is far bigger than a one-time march on the mall as we saw in the 60s.
I am seeing and hearing about in small-town America, from Montana to Maine, organizations coming together to support the idea of Black Lives Matter.
matter. And I believe that for the first time in my lifetime, I can imagine true, genuine reconciliation because we are having a reckoning now. And I think we have to move from reckoning
to reconciliation because what I don't want is for this to become about recrimination.
We need to agree. And I think you're framing this
as a nation that is experiencing trauma and heartbreak
and grief over what Americans saw,
and especially white Americans saw,
because I believe that for many white Americans,
racism remained deniable.
There was always the benefit of the doubt given.
There was always the idea that, well, there's another side to this story.
And I think the murder of George Floyd was so craven and cruel and deprived him of any level of dignity, that Americans were just appalled. And so I think
deniability is no longer an option. And with that comes an opportunity for a collective
acknowledgement that it is real. And therefore, there needs to be concrete steps taken to reconcile
and to come together as a nation to heal from this horrific
history. I'm a little bit concerned, and I don't know how you feel, that a situation like this
in a political year, instead of everyone saying there's an injustice and we all need to react and
we need to understand and dive deep and make real changes in American society that there
is a politicalization of the issue.
And I see that as destructive.
I would agree with you that it is being politicized by some, and it is destructive.
We have always in America had a strain of racism, of anti-Semitism that has been with
our nation from its founding. And I don't think
we will ever be able to fully rid our nation of this phenomenon. But I do believe that most
Americans are people who deeply believe in the ideas of our founding documents. And while we may have individual identities,
there is an identity that binds our future.
And that is that we are Americans
and we have a responsibility to each other
to ensure that those ideals are actually fulfilled
and are fully a part of our culture and the idea of who we are.
Darren, I'm wondering if you could talk a little bit about the importance of the recent Supreme
Court ruling that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 also applies to discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity. It's a recent decision, but I'm sure you've looked into it.
And can you just talk about the impact that that is having on the United States? Well, I think it is a landmark case. I mean,
every legal scholar and civil libertarian argues that it is a landmark case, that the fact that we,
until this case, lived in a nation where if you were gay, you could be fired from your job for being gay.
And that is no longer a part of our society is a great thing. And I think for some people,
it feels like a crossing the finish line around the policy change that has been needed to ensure the full rights and engagement and participation of LGBTQ Americans in our society. marriage equality policy, the employment policy now as part of, and beyond, not just employment,
but having it included in the interpretation of the 64 Civil Rights Act is a huge win for
all Americans, not just LGBTQ Americans. So I'm very excited about the prospects that we can live in a society where
you can love who you want, marry, and enjoy the rights that all other citizens enjoy under our
laws and constitution. It's amazing how much America has changed from the time that you and I grew up regarding public attitudes towards people who are LBGTQ and how much more accepted that community is as part of our society, which is a major advancement.
And I just reflect on that often about how quickly society can change when activism works with government to really change
our society. Absolutely. And make no mistake about it. This was an effort that required
grassroots organizing by activists. It required big investments in what I call narrative change. The media is a primary way in which we understand
who we are. And when LGBTQ Americans are represented in the media as, quote, normal,
and the fact that we began to see narratives of LGBTQ people who were our neighbors, our friends, and even our children
and grandchildren. It started to change. And as we saw in the media, characters like Ellen,
someone who was beloved as the girl next door, for her to say, mom and dad, I'm gay, there was no way you could not accept
her in her fullness and marvel at her courage in doing that. And that was some time ago, Jay,
as you remember, but it had a huge impact and other media like that had a huge impact.
And of course, today we have seen, as you say, you know, when
you and I were growing up, the way gays were depicted would no longer be tolerated in the
media today. And that's how social change works over time, because ultimately, it's the hearts
and minds that change how people think about what they want their society to be.
And it's through reaching hearts and minds that we evolve.
We evolve in our thinking from, oh, this person is Black and I'm white.
And there must be something wrong or lower status because he's Black.
I mean, we evolve our thinking over time because we progress as a
society and we have people who are enlightened thinkers who help us through media, through what
we learn in college and in the continuing learning that we experience or just in our
own personal interactions. You're listening to All Inclusive with Jay Ruderman. You can learn more.
View the show notes and transcripts at rudermanfoundation.org
slash all inclusive. Please remember to subscribe, rate, and review us wherever you are listening.
During the pandemic that we're all living through, there's been much research done with regards to COVID-19 that shows that African-American communities and other minority communities have been affected at a much higher rate than the white community.
And I believe this further demonstrates racial inequalities in America.
What do you believe is the cause of this?
And how do we change our healthcare system
to address such large discrepancies? Well, I certainly believe that what the data shows is
disparities in health outcomes. The outcomes of individual Americans and Black and Latinx
especially is rooted in our history of exclusion, lack of access, and poverty. I think the
challenge for the country is to understand how these social determinants of health are informed
by things like geography. I mean, we know that your zip code is the primary indicator of your health status, your access to decent health care, education, jobs, etc.
And so I believe we are going to have to grapple with that issue.
I think your question about health care writ large is one of the great policy issues of our day. And I believe we're going to
have to craft some kind of healthcare scheme in America that makes it possible for some Americans
to have access to kind of a single payer system that is not required or compulsory, but that we are going to have to
grapple with the millions of Americans who do not have access to healthcare. I just remember,
Jay, growing up and visiting my cousins in rural Louisiana, and just the diets that we had were so absolutely terrible. I mean, I remember
once being at my great aunt's house and the kids, we'd all drink because we were poor and we had
bologna. We had a sandwich of bologna and bread, and then we would drink water with sugar in it.
So this was sort of a precursor to Kool-Aid, but without the cost
of Kool-Aid, it just had the sugar. And I remember thinking at the time, this tastes really good.
But what did I know? I was just a kid, but we all ate like that, our habits. And I remember
walking around this rural community and there were a lot of dirt roads and people sitting on shotgun houses or whatever. But the number of people who had limbs that had been amputated
was just shocking. It was just a disease, diabetes, that afflicted African Americans
for a very long time. And I just think that we have never fully grappled with the legacy of racism specifically as it relates to our health care. Huge issue. And I think, Jay, this is, you and I are both capitalists. This is one of the ways in which capitalism has failed, right? working there doing community development in a community that had a population larger than the
city of Atlanta without any access to healthy foods. There was no supermarket. There was no
farmer's market or any such thing. And the number of conversations we had with supermarket chains
who simply were unwilling to come to the quote unquote inner city. There was
data, but there was always an excuse. Why not? Because the view was, well, they're going to burn
the store down at some point, or we're going to have huge amounts of shrinkage. There was just
all kinds of reasons, none of which turned out to be true. In fact, the Pathmark in Harlem was one of
the most successful in its chain. And even in 2020, in America, we have food deserts.
So Darren, you are not just running a major philanthropic organization, but you're also
an advocate and you don't shy away from speaking out, we're seeing more and more philanthropists
who believe that it's not enough just to be donating to worthy causes, but they're also
involved as advocates. What do you attribute this trend to?
Well, I, in my own way, in my own journey on this has been, as you know, I wrote a book called
From Generosity to Justice, which
chronicles the legacy of philanthropy in the United States in the 20th century, actually
beginning in 1889 with Andrew Carnegie's seminal essay, The Gospel of Wealth, where he talked about
charity and generosity. And Carnegie accepted inequality and the kinds of injustice that we are troubled by today.
He accepted those as simply the natural phenomena that happen.
And the focus on inequality was not his interest.
His interest was saying, how do we give away this money in a way that ameliorates, that
helps our fellow citizens and immigrants and et cetera.
In 1968, Martin Luther King said the following, philanthropy is commendable, but it should not
allow the philanthropist to overlook the economic injustice which makes philanthropy necessary. And Dr. King's view of philanthropy was that you had to take on
the very injustice that often yields so much philanthropy. Why is it and how can it be in
a society that seeks equality and opportunity to have so much inequality and so little opportunity. And I think today,
philanthropists are heeding the words of Dr. King, I think, more than Carnegie. I think they are
questioning some of the systems, whether those systems are our justice system, our economic
system, our education system, that these systems actually produce the bad outcomes
that then philanthropy has to address. So you see people like Agnes Gund, the heiress and arts
philanthropist, who has traditionally been focused on the arts and education, coming to understand
how the justice system has a separate track for poor
Black and Brown and poor white men and women too, and how that manifests and driving her
philanthropy in a different way. And so we're seeing amongst particularly a group of younger
philanthropists, a deep concern about issues of social justice. And I know I had a foundation president say to
me recently, well, I know you talk about justice at Ford, but my board would never be comfortable
with a frame of social justice. We want to talk about opportunity. And I think that's fine,
but I don't think you're going to significantly advance your mission of solving poverty without taking on justice.
Darren, you're in the Ford Foundation is involved in so many different injustices in the United
States and around the world. Recently, you and I and other foundation heads co-founded the
President's Council on Disability Inclusion and Philanthropy. Can you talk about how your journey to understanding that
disability is part of social justice and part of our community that's generally been overlooked?
Well, Jay, I'm really happy you asked that question. And of course, I wouldn't know you,
but for the fact that you've been a mentor and a role model, as I sought to understand this issue of disability justice and how for a foundation
focused on inequality and solving the challenge of inequality, reducing inequality in America,
that experiences and status of people with disabilities, it's fundamental to understand
that if we are to address inequality in America and the world,
because people with disabilities are more likely to be in poverty, are more likely to be marginalized
from employment opportunities. And as we think about our fundamental mission at the Ford
Foundation, which is to ensure that every person lives with dignity.
There is nothing more undignified than arriving at the Ford Foundation headquarters,
not being able to access the building because you are in a wheelchair, which is what a person
in a wheelchair would have experienced if they came to the Ford Foundation seven or eight
years ago. And so how can we be a foundation with that mission written on the walls of our lobby
and have that kind of injustice manifest? So I learned as I started to talk about inequality when I wasn't including disability, how inadequate and insufficient
I was really taking on the larger issue of inequality because I wasn't taking on the
issue of disability inclusion and disability justice. And so with your help and the help of
many others who have been on the front lines of the fight for disability justice for years,
I really had my own awakening and reckoning and education. And that education has yielded for me
a commitment to prioritize this. And I think when you and I and the other philanthropy leaders came together to create the new initiative on disability inclusion in philanthropy, the President's Council served as a vehicle for leadership of foundations to come together and to compare notes, to talk about best practices, to understand the landscape of policy of the
nonprofits working in this space, and to more effectively plan and coordinate our grant making,
our strategies, our work around policy change, et cetera. And it's been, I believe, a very impactful
effort. And there is just huge hunger for it. As you know, Jay, the number of
foundations that have signed up since we've had that first meeting has been pretty remarkable.
We've got a long way to go. But when you think about, you know, three years ago, this thing
didn't exist. And today we've got a room full, a big room full of foundation leaders and our staffs who are all working. We have this amazing website
that has now seven or 800 members who have signed up and who all use it and have it intermediate
information. And it's just really exciting. And I can't thank you enough because without
the Rudiman Family Foundation, we absolutely would not have been able to have that kind of a liftoff. Well, thank you, Darren. And I want to thank you and others
for helping elevate the issue within the world of philanthropy. You recently mentioned in a New
York Times opinion piece that social mobility, the ability for a person to climb from poverty
to security as you did, all but disappeared. What do we need to do to make a
meaningful change in regards to income inequalities and social inequalities in general? I know that's
a big question, but how do you see us going forward? Absolutely. I believe we're going to
have to reconsider the ways in which our economy is organized. The kind of capitalism we are seeing today is producing far too much
inequality that people are working full time and still need public benefits. We have to reconsider
the allocation of capital and labor. We need to put to bed the ideology of Milton Friedman about the role of the firm as simply a vehicle to
maximize return for shareholders and think about a stakeholder paradigm that includes shareholders,
but employees, buyers, communities, customers all have a stake in firms. And we have to have a tax policy that seeks to promote
opportunity and to promote the chance to get on the mobility escalator, as I did. And so those
are just a few of the things I think we're going to have to do in order to have the kind of country
where opportunity is our signature feature, as I think we once had,
but unfortunately we have lost. Darren, what advice would you have for young people as they
start their careers and have an interest in being involved in social justice? I think there is no
more noble and valiant calling for a young person than to be engaged in social justice. Now, that does not mean necessarily
that you have to work for a social justice organization. I think it's very important if
you have a passion and a desire to commit yourself to a career of working on behalf of low-income
workers or low-income children around education. There are literally
thousands of organizations and career tracks that I think are exciting, promising, fulfilling,
and gratifying. I also think that one can do social justice from the private sector as well.
Even as a software engineer at a tech company, one can both do the work of designing
products and apps and also think about how those can be designed to advance justice. The important
thing is to be on the journey and to commit oneself from wherever you sit in society to
building a more just, fair, and equitable world.
Thank you so much, Darren, for joining us today.
It was a pleasure speaking to you.
I want to thank you for your leadership.
I want to wish you good health and safety as we move through COVID-19.
And I look forward to seeing you in person soon.
I do too, Jay.
You have a great day.
Thank you.
soon. I do too, Jay. You have a great day. Thank you. podcast, Google Play, Spotify, and Stitcher. To view the show notes, transcripts, or to learn more, go to rudermanfoundation.org slash all inclusive.
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