 Thank you very much. How are you doing? Thank you. It's pronounced Mar, but I'm still really thrilled to be here. This is your first graduation. This is my first commencement speech, so I'm as excited as you are. Anybody here a college graduate? Is that just a rumor? Is anybody graduating college today? Oh, I see. Okay. Well, you're both very fortunate and very deserving because I know this is a school that demands academic excellence. And in a way, you know, we all start life twice. Once when we're born and once when we leave school. Now, I found the first years of my life after graduating college to be the hardest of my life. Because in that second life that you're now starting, you are now the infants in the adult world. You're the youngest ones, the ones with the least experience, the least power, the least control, unless your father is Bill Gates or somebody like that, in which case you may not need this speech. But if not, I have been given the privilege of talking to you for the first 15 minutes of the second of your second life. It's like you just came out of the womb and I'm the doctor who is slapping you now. So I'd like to take my first, your first 15 minutes with the phones off, maybe the last time in your life all the phones will be off, to try to save you anguish by passing on to you the important lessons that I learned in my life. To do anything else is really not to understand why we're here today, after all the hard work that you put in in those buildings out there. This institution is all about passing on knowledge. You know, humans have gotten as far as we have because we're selfish about a lot of things, but not about knowledge. When humans learn something good, they tend to pass it on. The guy who discovered how to make fire gave that shit away for free. I mean, at least until he figured out how to sell ad time on it. So the first thing you have to know is it goes fast, your life. I'm going to be 59 next month, and I know what I thought of 59 when I was your age. I didn't know much about it, but I knew it was something that was never going to happen to me. There was just too big of an ocean of time out there before I got there. No, it's actually the blink of an eye. And because of that, people often say, make each second count. Don't. Don't do that. That's too much pressure. That sounds like one of those vacations where there's something scheduled every minute. No, actually some of the greatest times of your life are going to be just idly goofing around. Like I have to tell you a bunch of college kids. However, the other side of that is don't goof around too much. Taking time off to travel or to find yourself, that's cool. But if you do it till you're 30, you'll probably find it harder to elbow your way into the rat race. Now, you may not want to be in the rat race. That's cool. But it's also cool if you want to be in the rat race. It doesn't make you a rat. This is America. There's nothing wrong with competitive people wanting to win. Just do it. Yes, there's nothing wrong with that. Just do it with compassion and perspective. Not like a Republican. I'm kidding, of course. Now, keeping perspective is maybe the most important way to stay sane throughout your life. And losing it, losing perspective is a great way to sabotage what otherwise could have been a really good life. Do you know that opinion polls this year in America were very bleak? People thought that this country and the world in general were going to hell in a hand cart. They saw a passenger plane just disappear. They saw black hooded ISIS fighters behead innocent people on YouTube. They learned that Ebola can get across the globe in less than 24 hours. Unless it's un-united. Just a joke. My point is, we all lost perspective. The world seemed scarier than ever, but the fact, the truth is, is that the world, although still very troubled, is actually less violent, less engaged in war, and more prosperous than it's ever been. As a species, we do seem to be advancing. And when I think about my own life, I feel very lucky that I was born in what proved to be a real sweet spot in history. I was born after electricity, after antibiotics, and thank you Jesus, especially after indoor toilets. I was born after those things, but I was born before climate change and environmental destruction could make life on earth a living hell, which could happen in your lifetime. You know, I've had my fun with the planet, but you needed to be around and in good shape for another 50 years. So I hope all of you here today consider the environment to be paramount among the many challenges we face, because unless we solve that issue, there are no other issues. It's true. We need a place to live. We're humans. We need a crib. And the world desperately needs a generation, your generation, to make this a priority, the way the Vietnam generation on this very campus made stopping that war a priority. Now, some people would say, well, the Vietnam kids, they had skin in the game. They didn't want to get drafted. You have skin in the game. You don't want to get roasted. All over the world, we see the devastation that pollution is causing. Heat waves, oceans that are dying and rising, glaciers melting, species disappearing, droughts, wildfires, Frankenstorms. This is an awful lot for Pat Robertson to blame on gay sex. We have no more time for dithering on this. Here's a lesson I learned. No politician is perfect, but in every election in your life, there will be one choice that is better than the others. Go out and vote for that one. Make a difference. That's what you owe everyone who came before you and died so you could live free. And that's what you owe everyone who sacrificed for you, like your parents. And it's also what you owe yourself because you'll feel a whole lot better if you do make a difference. And also, making a difference, making a difference is why I'm a liberal. Now, you don't have to be a liberal, although, come on, it's Berkeley. I think I can speak freely here. I mean, I hope I can. But let me say something about liberals. I think most liberals would agree that their liberalism springs from one thing above all, compassion. Mine does because that's how I was brought up by two liberal parents. In my family, we were always on the side of the underdog and those who were being treated unfairly. I grew up in an all-white town in the 1960s, but my parents made sure that even as a little kid, I understood whose side we were on in the civil rights battles that were going on. We were with Kennedy and against Southern governors who wanted to stop certain people from merely going to school. Now, there are people in the world today who have the goal of stopping people from going to school. We see it on the news all the time. But what my parents taught me about Southern governors standing in doorways has stayed with me my whole life, no matter who was getting the shaft. Black people, the poor, immigrants, gays, women, people who were bullied, people getting raped in the military, veterans, victims of police brutality. People getting poisoned by greedy corporations. You name it, in my house, the only thing we did not have tolerance for was intolerance. You don't have to be a liberal, but if you call yourself a liberal, you have to fight oppression from wherever oppression comes from, especially of women, gays, minorities, and free thinkers. That's what makes you a liberal. And that's the last thing I'm going to suggest to you. Be a free thinker. One reason our politics is so screwed up is because everyone has become so tribal. As you go down the path of life, ask what's true, not who else believes it. Be unique. Stay vigilant for busting yourself for falling into groupthink. You know, everything good and smart started out mocked by the mainstream. Stephen Hawking once said, the thing about smart people is that they seem to be crazy people to dumb people. Don't be afraid to be a crazy person. You know, I had a funny moment recently. I was sitting in a promo meeting in my office, you know, in television at the beginning of every new season, networks buy billboards and TV ads for their shows, and they put on the billboard some short, punchy advertising slogan like, he's a robot, she's a lesbian, you know. But for my show and for what I do, over the years we've had slogans like enter at your own risk or, you know, with this bill you get change, you know, some of them are lame, it's true. But this year the promo department was showing us the new slogans for the new season and I could tell they were a little afraid to show me the last one and I said, come on, let me see it, how bad could it be? It was a picture of half my face, no smile, and it said, he's not in it for the likes. I said, I love it, it's so badass, it's the best one ever, it's exactly what I wanted to grow up to be. Don't be afraid to be a crazy person and understand that the truth is not always popular. I recognize that this university, on the 50th anniversary of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement, made a statement by choosing me for this speech and I would like to say I appreciate that and I'd also like to say I think you made the right statement. Never forget that we are lucky to live in a country that has a First Amendment and liberals should want to own it the way conservatives own the Seconds. Thank you so much for having me. You're going to have great lives. Go out there and live them with joy and purpose. It was an honor to see you all. Thank you very much. Congratulations.