Thank you, President Garber – and thank you, former President Gay, who called me last year to extend this offer. 

It’s an incredible honor to address the distinguished Harvard faculty, the mysterious Harvard Corporation, and the loving friends and family who have traveled far and close to be here with you today. But wait, most of all, despite everything, because you worked really hard, I am so thrilled to congratulate the battle-tested graduates of the Class of 2024!

This was a harder speech to write than the Nobel lecture you know, because since 2021, the world has gotten so much worse. 

We live in a dystopian science fiction world, where everything can change in the blink of an eye, when you have been forced to turn crisis into opportunity.

No one knows this better than the Class of 2024. A pandemic meant no high school graduation; your first year here in lockdown, wearing masks, afraid of contact. You laid out all the existential problems we face today.

We were pushed online in the virtual world, and that made things worse because the accelerant to conflict and violence, to us against them, to wars that have killed tens of thousands, sparking historic campus protests. That accelerant is technology. It turned what once used to be our civilized Harvard thinking slow public discussions into what’s become a gladiator’s battle to the death. 

I know this first-hand. 

The Philippines, America’s former colony, 110 million people, was social media’s petri dish. For a crucial six years, Filipinos spent the most time online and on social media globally. And we became the testing ground for these American tech companies, their platforms’ designs exploited by power and money in information warfare. It became worse when TikTok joined the fray.

If the tactic worked on us, then it was deployed for you. That’s what happened in 2016, when 126 million Americans were targeted by Russian disinformation, and on January 6, in the violence on Capitol Hill when Silicon Valley’s sins came home to roost.

Because I accepted your invitation to be here today, I was attacked online and called anti-semitic. By power and money. Because they want power and money. While the other side was already attacking me because I had been onstage with Hillary Clinton. Hard to win, right?

None of these were true, but the end goal, please know this, is chaos. Break down trust. If you don’t have the right information, you can’t act. That’s partly the reason why journalists are on the frontlines. The meta-narrative disinformation networks seeded against us, and this is globally, was journalist equals criminal. Then the bottom up attacks in the Philippines against us began on social media, that was followed a year later by the weaponization of the law. 

In 2019, I was arrested twice in about a month,  posted bail eight times in about three months. I thought I was gonna have to do a workflow for arrest. But before it all ended, I had 10 arrest warrants. Rappler and I paid more in bail and bonds than our dictator’s wife Imelda Marcos – you remember her shoes – she was convicted for corruption.  

But I did nothing wrong. Except to do my job. To report the facts. To hold power to account. For this, I had to be okay with spending the rest of my life in jail – at one point, it was more than a century in jail that I faced. To be here today, I had to ask for permission to travel from our Supreme Court. Anyone else out here on bail? Just me?

It taught me a valuable lesson. I love the speeches of the students today, they were incredible. These times will hopefully teach you the same lesson I learned. You don’t know who you are until you’re tested, until you fight for what you believe in because that defines who you are. But you’re Harvard. You better get your facts right. 

Because now, you are being tested. The chilling effect means that many are choosing to stay silent because there are consequences to speaking out. I’m shocked at the fear and anger, the paranoia splitting open the major fracture lines of society. The inability to listen.

What happened to us in the Philippines, it’s here. 

The campus protests are testing everyone in America. Protests are healthy; they shouldn’t be violent. Protests give voice; they shouldn’t be silenced. But you live in complicated, complex times where I think administrators and students also faced an unacknowledged danger: technology, making everything faster, meaner, more polarized. With insidious information operations online that are dividing generations.

Rappler will be documenting this and publishing in the next couple of weeks. Maybe Rappler’s experience can help you. After all, we were in hell, and dow we’re in purgatory. It can get better, and here are 3 ways we’ve learned: 

  1. Choose your best self. 
  2. Turn crisis into opportunity.
  3. Be vulnerable. 

One, choose your best self. 

Set and stay focused on your goals, but know the values you live by. How important is power? How much money will make you happy? 

Because the only thing you can control in the world is you. Too often, we let ourselves off the hook, refusing to look at our own difficult or ugly truths. We rationalize bad behavior.

Remember that character is created in the sum of all the little choices we make. If you’re not clear about your values, you may wake up one day and realize you don’t like the person you’ve become.

So choose your best self. 

You’re standing on the rubble of the world that was, recognize it. I said this in the Nobel lecture: an atom bomb exploded in our information ecosystem because social media turned our world upside down, spreading lies, faster than facts, while amplifying fear and anger, fueling hatred. By design. For profit. 

Whether it’s the AI of social media or generative AI, we don’t have integrity of information, we don’t have integrity of facts.