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This Presidents Day, we honor the vision of those who came before us the best way we know how — by following their example to form a more perfect union. I am absolutely floored by the deluge of thoughtful answers to our call to Reset America. Hundreds of you, including a few celebrities, shared your thoughts on how to rethink our nation in a time of strife. Please don’t stop! Tell us how to #ResetAmerica through social media or by emailing me directly. We will continue sharing your thoughts with the world in this weekly newsletter. From “vaccinating” American children with free K-through-college education to saving America by rebuilding Africa, you are offering bold ideas for meaningful change. And I am immensely grateful. | Email me |
| | Carlos Watson Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief |
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| IDEA 01 John Legend 42 | Singer | West Hollywood, California | | John Legend 42 | Singer | West Hollywood, California |
| Born John Roger Stephens, Legend has more than lived up to his stage name — not just making Black history but also helping shape the future of America. The unapologetically political pop singer’s vision includes rethinking power structures, top to bottom. “Anytime there’s an opposing legislature in office, it’s nearly impossible for the president to enact their agenda,” Legend laments on The Carlos Watson Show. His solution? Follow nations such as Canada and Australia that use a parliamentary system, one in which the winning party takes both the executive and legislative branches in national elections — making it easier to quickly pass meaningful laws with less obstruction from the opposing party. “When we go to other countries and we try to help them form a democracy, help them write their constitution,” Legend says, “we never tell them to get a president.” |
| IDEA 02 | Maya Penn 21 | Entrepreneur | Atlanta |
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| Generation Z, the emerging cohort born between 1996 and the mid-2010s is shaking up our politics and workplaces. And Penn, who started her sustainable fashion brand, Maya’s Ideas, at age 8, says her generation has the power to reset corporate America. Appearing on a recent episode of the OZY/BBC podcast When Katty Met Carlos, Penn pointed to how 40 percent of Gen Z members say they have boycotted a company “because those brands did not align with their values, whether it be around diversity and inclusion, sustainability, ethical treatment of workers.” Penn adds: “We’re voting with our dollars.” |
| IDEA 03 Madison Cawthorn 25 | Congressman | Hendersonville, North Carolina | | Madison Cawthorn 25 | Congressman | Hendersonville, North Carolina |
| The North Carolina Republican, who recently took office as the youngest member of Congress and is already making waves with his embrace of Donald Trump, declared on The Carlos Watson Show that this was “one of the coolest questions I’ve ever been asked.” His response was one that we also heard from a bunch of you: term limits. “On both sides of the aisle, you see these entrenched politicians, this entrenched political class who have a very narrow viewpoint of how the world should act,” Cawthorn says. “And because of that, you see very little change happening in our government. And so I think that if we could get term limits on Congress, we could get more fresh faces, more fresh ideas. And I’m not just saying younger people: I want a diverse representation inside of Congress.” |
| IDEA 04 | Ginny L. 72 | Utah |
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| How do you Reset America? You start by building, this OZY reader says. “Help build a house for Habitat for Humanity. Volunteer at a school to help kids learn to read. Start a program — peacefully — that brings concerns about neighborhood policing out in the open,” says the Utah grandmother, who points to a moment in her high school years when a member of the football team who had Surinamese heritage was refused a ticket to the local movie theater and the entire team demanded a refund and boycotted the theater. Really, though, Ginny believes it’s the premise itself that might be wrong: “We don’t need to reset AMERICA,” she writes, “we need to each reset ourselves and our attitudes.” That means addressing the hatred in hearts and working from there. “You can’t legislate prejudice. You can only be a great example for good.” |
| IDEA 05 Ashleigh Shanti 31 | Chef | Asheville, North Carolina | | Ashleigh Shanti 31 | Chef | Asheville, North Carolina |
| A seat at the table? Please. Shanti wants to knock over the table — which certainly makes for some interesting cooking. Her pioneering cuisine, dubbed “Afro-lachian,” connects her Appalachian roots with her love for African American food traditions. Each dish celebrates overlooked aspects of Black history, pushing fellow Southerners to contend with their assumptions. “The future of restaurants can’t look anything like what it has looked like,” she says. By building a new table, one that can reach across generations and ethnicities, Shanti is already paving the way. |
| | real talk, real change | | It’s time for #RealTalk. What does the American Dream mean, and how can we positively reset it? OZY and Chevrolet are teaming up for an innovative discussion, taking on the toughest questions in our society today. Hosted by OZY co-founder and Emmy Award–winning journalist Carlos Watson, who is joined by key leaders from across the country, we’re having pointed conversations to identify problems and equip you with solutions. Put aside the shouting matches and talking heads, and be an ally: Join us now on YouTube for a real conversation you won’t want to miss. Learn more |
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| | As we prepare for the next edition of Real Talk, Real Change, where we will dive into disparities in health care, here's a quick quiz: What percentage of American doctors do you think are Black? Tell us here, and we’ll reveal the answer next time. |
| IDEA 06 Glenn Cantave 27 | Nonprofit Founder | New York City | | Glenn Cantave 27 | Nonprofit Founder | New York City |
| Tearing down statues is one thing. But what if we made them better and more accessible? The founder of Movers and Shakers NYC, Cantave is developing a platform to rewrite Black and brown history in school curricula. His app, which is scheduled to launch widely this month, has a catalog of “heroes you never learn about in school” — women, people of color, members of the LGBTQ community and more. Students use the app to select an underrepresented icon and then advance to doing assignments on them, with the ability to create augmented reality “monuments.” They can take selfies with their chosen icon, download the selfies and share. “If children get nuanced education while growing up, it helps them form informed decisions and choices when they grow up,” Cantave says. |
| IDEA 07 | Eric L. 69 | Retired Teacher | Pahrump, Nevada |
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| This OZY reader was one of several to suggest that America should reinstate some form of military or civilian service draft. Community service offers many benefits, exposing young people to their communities and the empathy — not to mention dopamine — boost that comes from helping others. As Eric puts it: “If this would be universally applied without deferments, young people from every region and social class would be introduced to each other, and much opportunity for bonding and understanding through service would occur.” |
| IDEA 08 Padma Lakshmi 50 | Author, TV Host and Activist | Long Island, New York | | Padma Lakshmi 50 | Author, TV Host and Activist | Long Island, New York |
| Rip off the Band-Aid. Seriously, just do it, Lakshmi insists. That may seem like an all-too-easy prescription, yet many resist the idea of fully reckoning with America’s complicated history. “As our society contends with all of the atrocities and sins involved in forming this country, we will never really, truly heal the wound,” she says on The Carlos Watson Show. Not until the wound gets some oxygen, and doctors can apply the medicine and perform the surgeries necessary for healing. That may take some cutting and, yes, maybe even an injection of some new blood. But civil society is “an organic thing,” Lakshmi argues. “It has to be maintained. It’s not one and done. It's not like, ‘OK, we fixed that. Now we’re going to go over here.’” Adjusting to that reality means creating space for difficult discussions and accepting the need for change. |
| IDEA 09 | Debra Hastings 59 | Business Owner | London |
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| There can be no healing of the type Lakshmi spoke of without some form of reparations, says Hastings. And that means it “is necessary to rebuild Africa,” she says, taking the call to Reset America global. “There can be no reset without a fundamental redistribution of wealth to those of African descent.” One of the most aggressive forms of that could be reassigning land and redistributing property from white people to Black people in those formerly colonized countries around the world … and in the Americas, at the very least making good on that already-insufficient promise of 40 acres and a mule. |
| IDEA 10 Aaron Katz 68 | Health Policy Academic and Activist | Anacortes, Washington | | Aaron Katz 68 | Health Policy Academic and Activist | Anacortes, Washington |
| It may take an entire generation, this OZY reader admits, but he thinks it is necessary: America must treat education, from kindergarten through college, “like we treat childhood vaccines, as a requirement of being part of our society.” It’s an interesting suggestion, and not just because there is currently a significant contingent of young Americans who might not even agree that vaccines should be mandatory. While most parts of the country have truancy laws requiring kids to show up to some form of school, there are plenty of loopholes and too many students still slip through the cracks. Perhaps if education were considered a civic duty — and intelligence promoted as a force for social good — resetting America wouldn’t be so difficult. |
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