Neighborhoods and communities are complex organisms that will be resilient only if they are healthy along a number of interrelated dimensions, much as a human body cannot be healthy without adequate air, water, rest, and food.
Unfortunately, we are finding the bureaucratic inefficiencies and red tape have a tendency to slow the efforts of individuals and communities working to rebuild.
All Western cities face significant challenges on social integration. Our populations are booming, but social integration is not keeping pace. Rapid growth is a sign of our success, but it also puts stress on housing, infrastructure - and on communities.
Our most polluted neighborhoods are disproportionately home to Latinos, African Americans, and other communities of color.
There are many, many communities, many ethnic minorities, many civilizations that have been brutalised by others and you have to move on. You cannot perpetually stay in that place of blame, otherwise it's just a downward spiral.
I am proud of our diversity, and when you attack the federal workforce, you are having significant impact on women - many of whom are single moms working to support their family - and you're having a significant impact on communities of color.
One of my messages to Republicans is very simple: One-third of your schedule should be listening to people in minority communities.
Non-profits must become deeply engaged in the ways that their donor communities are using social technology.
Our communities are being destroyed by racial tension - and we're too polite to talk about it.
People in minority religious communities, like Paganism, often feel isolated and even marginalized by others because of the lifestyle differences associated with their spiritual path.
The main reason I backed DeepMind was strategic: I see my role as bridging the AI research and AI safety communities.