El escritor Anthony DeCurtis ha entrevistado a Bono para la revista Rolling
Stone en su 40 aniversario. El cantante ha hablado sobre el futuro, el Buzzcocks
y poder del compromiso.
Te traemos un clip de audio extraido de Rolling
Stone, así como el texto original de la entrevista
LA ENTREVISTA
What is your most
cynical vision of the future?
That's a good one. I'm genuinely excited about the future, but it's clear that
there's jeopardy. I don't know if you've read Martin Amis' short-story
collection Einstein's Monsters. He's writing about the post-splitting-the-atom
universe. In an essay at the start, he writes about feeling sick in his stomach
because he can't escape the mathematical implications of there being all these
nuclear weapons around the world and the odds of them going wrong. He's putting
his kids to bed, and he just can't put that thought out of his head. He wrote
that in the late Eighties or early Nineties, when there were vaguely organized
control systems to hold back Einstein's monsters. What are the odds now?
What's changed?
We don't know where Einstein's monsters are. Are they moving around the world?
Are they coming to my city? If you talk about a demonic view of the world,
that's my first thought. Unless things calm down, it is clear that if you want
to take out the head of a nation, you probably can. Now that's always been true,
as we found out in the Sixties, but in the future, I can imagine a situation in
which heads of state no longer have a set residence. And it also might be true
that you can take a city out if you really want to.
It is absolutely the monster in the room. And you feel it here in Manhattan. You
must. But of course you don't talk about it. You don't think about it. But it
must change the way you walk. And it must change the shape of your day in some
tiny, tiny little increment. That thought is in the back of your head.
So we're in the era of asymmetrical war. The greatest army cannot protect you
from hatred that gets busy and organized and has enough of an audience to
protect it. There's a moment. Was that true of Caesar? Was that true of
Napoleon? No. Might was always right. Strangely, we have now entered a phase
where being powerful and having the biggest nuclear arsenal leaves you
completely defenseless.
Now let's flip that. That could be a positive. Because if for the first time in
history, military capacity doesn't protect you, what would? It would point us in
the direction of prevention, rather than protection. When I'm arguing for
increased aid to Africa, I always say, "Isn't it cheaper and smarter to make
friends out of potential enemies than to defend yourself against them later?"
We seem to be headed in exactly the opposite direction.
Maybe it was possible to think that way right after 9/11, but that opportunity
was squandered.
When the French have you on the cover of their most treasured newspaper with the
headline WE ARE ALL AMERICANS, something has been stirred! [Laughs]
But this administration destroyed that. I know that you
have to deal with a lot of these people. . .
There was a plan there, you know. I think the president genuinely felt that if
we could prove a model of democracy and broad prosperity in the Middle East, it
might defuse the situation. I don't believe that, and in the capacity I had, I
told them that.
You said that?
I told Paul Wolfowitz, all of them, to go ask the British army what it's like to
stand on street corners and get shot at. Remember that during the British army's
first years on the streets of Northern Ireland, they were applauded by the
Catholic minority. Go look at that, and ask yourself how that all got turned
around.
It was always going to go wrong. I remember in the first moments after "shock
and awe," I was watching it at home with [my wife] Ali and I said, "These people
have just hidden their guns in the basement, took off their uniforms and come
out waving American flags. And they've been told to. They knew this was coming,
and they know what they're doing."
So you mentioned this to Wolfowitz. Who else did you
say this to? Did you say it to Tony Blair?
I said it in all my conversations. To Condi. To Karl Rove. I did not discuss it
with President Bush. I try to stick to my pitch, and it's an abuse of my access
for me to switch subjects. But I'm a lippy Irish rock star, and I'm more used to
putting my foot in my mouth than my fist. So occasionally I'm just going to talk
about it.
I want to be very, very clear, however: I understand and agree with the analysis
of the problem. There is an imminent threat. It manifested itself on 9/11. It's
real and grave. It is as serious a threat as Stalinism and National Socialism
were. Let's not pretend it isn't.
I think people as reasoned as Tony Blair looked at the world and didn't want to
be Neville Chamberlain, who came back from meeting with Hitler with a piece of
paper saying "peace in our time," while Hitler was planning to cross the channel
from France.
So what needs to be done?
There's a word all of us have learned to undervalue: compromise. Bill Clinton
once rang us, because he was collecting opinions on whether he should give
Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams [of Sinn Féin, the political wing of the Irish
Republican Army] a visa into the United States. I thought, "These people have
put bombs in supermarkets, and many innocent people have lost their lives." So I
said, "No. Don't dignify them." And he said, "But shouldn't you always talk to
people?" And I said, "Yeah, but you dignify them."
I was wrong. Clinton did exactly the right thing in talking to the Provisional
IRA and other extremist elements. Now they have to do the same, in my opinion,
with Hamas, and they have to do the same with Al Qaeda. You have to involve them
in dialogue.
But then you've also got to try to cut off the oxygen supply of hatred, which is
false ideas about who you are as an American, who you are in the West. I know
that sounds like limp liberalism, but it's really not.
How would you describe it?
I'm arguing for a demonstration to the world of what we're capable of in the
West, with our technology, our innovations, our agriculture, our pharmacology.
We've developed this unimaginable prosperity. Let's show the world what we can
do with it. America, as I always say, is not just a country, it's an idea. The
world needs to see right now what that idea means. Because there's an oncoming
train on our track, and it's going to be met one way or another. It isn't going
away.
As a kid, did you have a particular vision of what the
future would look like?
When I was about sixteen, my head exploded. I had violent outbursts. I smashed
things up. I went into myself. And I had a kind of poetic reverie, a couple of
them, and one was a vision of the future. It was of a single, a 45. The grooves
were going round and round, like a spiral, and things started to repeat much
quicker.
I don't know whether this was just a bad pint - I'm not ruling that out. But I
remember staring at the ceiling and seeing a picture of the world speeding up,
things repeating quickly. So the Fifties were going to happen again, the Sixties
were going to happen again, and then they'd happen quicker. It was postmodern -
there are no new ideas out there, everything is just being repeated. But it was
this spiral thing I had. There was the first Buzzcocks EP, which is called
Spiral Scratch, and it's like the picture we had in "Vertigo" as well.
Now sometimes when I'm walking down the street, and I see a hippie, a punk and
so on, I think, "This is exactly this world I pictured when I was a kid." It's
like every age is present in this moment. I don't know what it means, exactly. I
don't think it's negative or positive. It's just, we do live in a fractional
present. No one mood predominates.
What would be easier for you at this point, giving
up U2 or your anti-poverty work?
I can't live without music. I don't think I physically could live without music,
because it's the thing that allows me to feel normal. It's like asking a
psychotic person to do without their lithium, OK? [Laughs]
But there are people out there whose lives are dependent on people like me who
have access to agents of change, and I would have to take a big, deep breath
before I gave that up. What I'm hoping is that the social movement that is
growing around our issues will be so strong that in the event of somebody like
me not being around they won't notice. In the end, social movements carry the
day, not rock stars.
Thirteen hundred campuses have signed on to our One Campaign - as part of our
Millennium Development Goals, getting the world's wealthiest nations to cut
extreme poverty in half by 2015. Those college kids are redefining their country
through the prism of the fight against poverty. Issues like that afford a chance
to America to redescribe itself to the world. But they also afford America a
chance to redescribe itself to its citizens. That's what's going on.
What do you mean?
People are nauseous about being perceived as the enemy. After Abu Ghraib,
reasonable, rational people were saying the most despicable things about
America. Imagine that. The country that not only liberated Europe but rebuilt
Europe with the Marshall Plan. The country of Omaha Beach. The heroism of people
who gave their lives for people like my dad. I mean, this is the United States
of America.
And, by the way, whoever fixes that problem gets elected. People say, "Oh, it's
all about the economy." This is the first time it's not. It's about turning that
idea around. We're the United States of America, and we do not like being seen
as the enemy.
And it's a wave. I think the next generation is going to roll right over us.
There's a new kind of hard-headed idealism out there, which is not about "Let's
hold hands and wish away the world's problems." People are ready to change the
world one brick at a time. I really believe that.
What can that idealism produce?
It is utterly accepted in the U.S. and Europe that you cannot live a life of
peace and prosperity if at the end of your avenue there are hungry people
without clean water, losing their children because they cannot access a
twenty-cent vaccine or dying for the lack of drugs we have falling out of our
medicine cabinets.
So, some optimistic thoughts: In the near future, distance will no longer decide
who your neighbor is. It will be accepted that the slums of Kibera, Kenya, the
rural poverty of Lalibela, Ethiopia, the refugee camps of Darfur, Sudan, are at
the end of our lane. In the not-too-distant future, the anopheles mosquito will
be all but chased off the planet, saving 3,000 children's lives that right now
are lost to malaria every day in Africa.
In the not-too-distant future, the rich world will invest in the education of
the poor world, because it is our best protection against young minds being
twisted by extremist ideologies - or growing up without any ideology at all,
which could be worse. Nature abhors a vacuum; terrorism loves one.
Has your activism affected how you think about being in
U2?
I've spent a lot of time in these two-dimensional worlds - numbers, values,
analysis of statistics. And when I get away from it, being with U2 is such a
playground. It's made me realize how sacred music is. It's a kind of sacrament -
like marriage, like friendship. I'm not sure the other three in the band know
this, because they - maybe sensibly - have avoided that other world. They just
think they're in U2, and that's great. But I really know how great it is to be
in U2.
Is it as great as what you dreamed it might
be like when you were young?
When I was a kid and I was at school, I worked at a gas station. And I would
just get wound up thinking about practice on Saturdays - or Wednesdays
sometimes. Just hearing the sound of a drum kit in a room, the silver of the
ride cymbal and the skin of a tom-tom. It meant a great deal to me. Then, as it
became my job to be in a band, you take for granted that you've got a few hours
with your mates in the studio.
I don't anymore. It is sanctuary and escape from the material world of
causalities, profit and loss, cynicism and hard-bitten victories over your own
indifference or somebody else's. You get into this fucking room and everything
seems possible, and I've never really appreciated it more than now. Really and
truly. It's this incredible thing. I treasure it. I treasure it now more than
ever. I'm terrified that I might lose my first love in the supermarket, in the
maw of so many choices of what you can do with your time.
But I also think I'm better for having my brain pummeled in so many different
areas.
Has your activism made you more or less idealistic
about government?
Just being in D.C., and meeting all the people I've met - I've now been going
there for nearly ten years. They let me in their rooms and they listen to my
rhetoric or invective or whatever it turns out to be. And I come away from that
city not with nausea but with admiration. These people work like dogs. These
lawmakers, they're trying to move between their families back home and
Washington. All of them could make much more money in the private sector. Not
all, but most of them are there for the right reasons. There's very little
glamour. And they're listening to me, who's completely over-rewarded for what I
do.
Yes, I have my moments and I lose patience. I'm in a rage sometimes. But my
overall feeling when I look at the body politic, which I know now very well, is
"God, these people can behave very badly, but they work very hard and they're
often motivated by much higher intentions than I thought when I came into the
process." I'm amazed by it.
So are you optimistic or pessimistic about the future?
It's a problem, because sometimes I don't see obstacles, and if I had, I might
not have set out on the course. It's a criticism of me that I've underestimated
obstacles.
Do you accept that?
Yeah. But I think I'm less like that now. Now I'm about "Describe Everest, then
climb it." Know what you're in for. I think you can achieve much more than you'd
ever imagined by getting busy and getting organized. And don't get too
interested in what's "possible." The impossible is made possible by a
combination of faith, gift and strategy. You need faith for sure - as Lou Reed
says, "A busload of faith to get by." You need some talents, and if you don't
have them, you better find people who do. And then: strategy. That's as true of
making U2's next album as it is with the One Campaign to make poverty history.
What's the next important challenge ahead?
The next presidential election will be a real moment for America. Talk about the
battle of ideas - I mean, this is it. You will get the country you deserve. You
have to ask hard questions of who will be your leader, because we fans of
America - annoying fans, maybe, but real fans - have a lot at stake. Even those
who are not fans - everybody who values freedom, progressive thinking,
innovation, has a stake in America. The country you may own. But not the idea.
Actually, I heard a great one. I was wandering through France, and I ended up in
this vineyard. They asked me to sign the visitors' book - it was a very posh
wine: Petrus - they said, "Do you want to see the other people who have signed
here?" I said, "Sure. Show me the first book." Thomas Jefferson. That makes me
laugh so much. Here's this guy dreaming up an idea called America, drinking some
fancy wine. My kind of guy.