>>Ron Finley: Good morning.
>>> Good morning.
>>Ron Finley: I really don't smell enough
estrogen in this room.
[ Laughter ]
>>Ron Finley: I really think we need to do
something about that.
[ Cheers and applause ]
>>Ron Finley: And also, did anybody get this
Google swag bag for the speakers? Because
I know -- I just knew they were going to compensate
us with, you know, Google Glass and, you know,
Chrome Cast and, you know, the new wood phone,
but I swear the stuff I got looked like the
stuff that's in the bathroom. You know, the
toothpaste --
[ Laughter ]
>>Ron Finley: Anybody -- no, really. Anybody?
I guess it's just me.
[ Laughter ]
>>Ron Finley: I was raised in South Central,
so I'm going to give you guys just a little
glimpse, you know, of my life, you know, what's
happening there.
South Central is a place where it's easier
to find a dialysis center than a supermarket
that serves food that's not impregnated with
GMOs.
So it was some old dead white guy once said
--
[ Laughter ]
>>Ron Finley: -- "The land turns to gold in
the hands of the wise."
I'm here to say everything's connected. Everything.
The frogs, the trees, the butterflies, you,
me. Even that crazy-looking guy over there.
[ Laughter ]
>>Ron Finley: Everything.
We all breathe the same air. We drink the
same water. But yet we all share different
life experiences.
Some people have never had the opportunity
to experience life that wasn't dictated to
them by an unjust system. They live life with
limitations with invisible boundaries, unable
to see the full spectrum of their spirit due
to the lack of exposure. Basically, I call
these empty lots.
If a plant needs sunshine or water and it
doesn't get it, it ceases to exist.
If a child has no access to healthy food or
nourishing food, they cease to evolve.
We have to change this.
No matter -- you can't -- I don't care how
much technology you throw at these kids. No
amount of technology is going to ever fix
that, if they're hungry.
I don't care how many computers you give them.
If they're hungry, it's worthless, so technology
is going to do nothing.
These kids have no idea how their life is
being deprived. They attend schools that are
nothing less than incubators for the prison
system, the prison industrial complex. They're
fed food from the agro-industrial complex
that will guarantee them membership into the
medical industrial complex, and they will
get a pill for the rest of their lives.
Why are we allowing -- why are we sitting
around allowing this to happen? We have the
power to change that.
Maybe that convenient food that they're eating
is really not that convenient, because sooner
or later they're going to pay. Sooner or later
we're all going to pay.
Our inner cities and schools are under siege.
They're being occupied, terrorized by cheap
fast food.
Food is the problem and food is the solution.
I feel the school system needs to be demolished.
Children are not supposed to be in classrooms
all day. Most are Tactile. They learn by doing,
not by listening.
I was one of those -- I was -- I am one of
those kids. See, I'm dyslexic and I'm an artist,
which is -- that's a recipe for failure in
the education system as we know it today.
I couldn't read. Well, I -- I couldn't read
as well as, you know, most people. That made
it real hard for me in school.
There was -- but I found out there wasn't
nothing wrong with me. It was the way they
were teaching me with this spandex-pants,
one-size-fits-all education system that we
have.
Like I said, we all have different life experiences
but just like 26.5 million other Americans,
I live in a food desert. Well, let me change
that. I live in a food prison. Okay?
Because that's basically what it amounts to.
So what do I do? I grow food on the streets
of South Central Los Angeles, which that made
me a criminal. And what I wanted to do, I
wanted my neighborhood to -- I wanted people
to see, I wanted people to realize you can
grow your own food. Your health is your responsibility.
It's not your Momma's, it's not your doctor's,
not the chick down the street. Your health
is your responsibility.
So with this food growing on my parkway, somebody,
one of the neighbors, complained. So I wound
up -- the City came down on me and gave me
a warrant.
Does anybody know anything about what I do?
Raise your hand. I want to see the three people
in the room.
(laughing).
So with this warrant, it was some beautiful
things happened. So the moral of that story
is embrace your haters, because they make
you famous.
[ Laughter ]
[ Applause ]
>>Ron Finley: Fast forward. So the city council,
they vote 15 to zero to vote against to let
people plant on their parkways. This is a
vision of -- this is a version of my parkway.
This is a little girl from down the street,
just like the essence of life to me. I mean,
she's just beautiful, and she's like, "Where's
this? What is this? Where did this come from?
Who's your mother? Where's your mother?" And
it was like -- and her dad was like, "Shhh,
don't." And I said, "No, that's who she is."
I mean, this girl is gonna run a country,
you know, at one point. That's why we need
more estrogen in this room, dude.
[ Applause ]
And also, the city -- now I've got the city
council behind me, I've got the mayor behind
me. They want me to partner with them to bring
more green spaces to Los Angeles, and community
gardens.
So back in February, I did this Ted Talk which
was instrumental in spreading my gospel about
global gardening.
We now have children in Austin, Texas all
the way to India who are call themselves gangsta
gardeners, you know? And letting their shovels
be their weapons to change their life, their
communities. And that's what we want to happen.
Some empty lots, they don't start out like
that.
Some are created. I was an empty lot. Most
start out with everything they need to prosper.
You know, good water, good soil, and a gardener
to watch over it.
The best thing you can do for an empty lot
is to have the gardener's shadow on it.
I'm a gardener. Gardening is my graffiti.
I grow my art.
Just like a graffiti artist paints a canvas,
I use the soil as my canvas. And I give the
plants -- I cultivate the soil to give the
seed what it needs to grow. And it blossoms
into something beautiful that can inspire.
What I found is it took Alice Waters Foundation,
it took them $750,000 to figure out that if
kids grow kale, kids eat kale. Why didn't
they give me that damn money?
[ Laughter ]
I'm serious. Really?
Plants want to live, just like -- just like
kids, but they adapt to their environment.
Just like kids want to live also. But if you
place a kid in a dangerous, unhealthy environment,
devoid of green spaces or affirming stabilities,
where all they see from birth is violence
and despair, and then we have -- the magic
happens. Then at every turn they're assaulted
by these savvy food companies who hire these
brilliant marketing firms, who make up these
wonderful campaigns, that seduce them into
eating dead, processed, unhealthy, unfood
products that is delicious and addictive at
the same time, how the hell do you expect
these kids to go out and be something else
besides ADD? How do you expect them to -- then
you sit them in a room and expect them to
excel? It ain't gonna to happen. That's why
we have hypertension, Type II diabetes, lack
of opportunity. That's a disease where I'm
from.
I don't think so.
Gardening is a gateway. Gardening is a metaphor
for life. All of life happens in the garden.
I've seen people's perspective change from
being in the garden. I've seen -- my garden
has become a tool for the transformation,
a tool for the education, a tool for the emancipation
of my neighborhood.
I've seen the soil seduce men, women and children
alike.
And this thing about nature, where we have
this discord, where, oh, we're going to get
in a car and we're going to go see nature.
We're nature. Look in the mirror.
We need to realize that we decompose just
like soil. Nature is not something you get
in the car and go to see. There should be
gardens, there should be gardens with schools
in them, not schools with gardens in them.
The lesson happens in the garden. All of life
happens in the garden. So what are we doing
with the Ron Finley Project? We're changing
that. We want to bring a bounty of art, love,
education, and healthy food into these neighborhoods
around the world where we're turning shipping
containers and making them into places where
that have active, living gardens on-site.
I'm working with Alice Waters right now and
we're working on this diabolical plan to take
over the world.
[ Laughter ]
Huey P. Newton once said, "My fear was not
of death itself but of death without meaning."
My fear is a life without meaning, a life
without happiness, a life without art, a life
where I'm not able to express my spirit. People
need to be inspired to rise up, to stand up,
to lift up so they can live up to a higher
calling.
The same old white guy from earlier, he said
educate and inform the whole mass of people
for they are the sure reliance for the preservation
of our liberty. His name just happened to
be Thomas Jefferson.
So let us inspire. So let us be the inspiration
that lights the fire in their souls.
My message is simple. Just plant some shit.
[ Laughter ]
[ Applause ]
>>Ron Finley: I've run out of time so I've
got to conclude this, I'm sorry.
[ Laughter ]
It's time to be active, to leave your comfort
zone, change the game. Bring forth situations
and solutions that -- and systems that will
flip the paradigm on its ass. Our country
claims to be the greatest, the strongest,
the most developed in the world, so let's
make it this. Let's make this country what
it claims to be.
Let's make it the greatest. Let's not have
one of the sickest developed nations on the
planet. Let us not have babies dying in the
street. Let us not raise our kids to go to
prison, but to live engaging, inspiring lives.
Let us stop missing out on brilliance, no
matter what color it is, no matter where it
comes from.
We must give people a chance to blossom, to
shine, to give back to mother Earth.
We -- We are all connected. There are empty
lots all around you.
So ask yourself, how can I fill this empty
lot? How can I make it blossom?
How can I help Ron make this happen? This
is my passion. This is my mission. This is
what I'm here for.
I'm a catalyst for change on this planet,
but I need help, because this mother is heavy.
Peace!
[ Cheers and Applause ]
