| So what are you going to do now, George? You've
seen it, and now what are you going to do?
Mr. GEORGE CLOONEY: Well, there's a couple of things we're going to do.
There's a thing at the National Press Club in Washington that we're going
to do and talk about it and try and keep it in the public eye. There's
a march this Sunday in Washington and San Francisco and several cities,
and people are going to get up and speak. And we're going to try to get
it out as much as we can. It is the first genocide of the 21st century,
and that's not something to be proud of and to brag about. So I think
that the first thing is to--for us, is to keep it as--as much in the public
eye as we possibly can, and to ask as much as we can of our public figures.
It's--look, this is a hard thing to do. There's no easy answers to this.
It's tough what the UN would have to do. It's tough what the United States
would have to do. But we need...
WINFREY: When you--but, George, can I interrupt? When you--when you were
saying earlier that--that they need political capital, does that mean
that everybody watching right now, the 10 million people around the United
States and the world, should call their congressmen, their senators, they
should go online?
Mr. GEORGE CLOONEY: Sure. There--there's a number you can call. There's
a--you could call--you could go online to savedarfur.org. Or there's a
number you can call, which is to the White House, which is an 800 number,
224-2084, and register your name with the White House. I think whatever
you can do to bring--to let people know that we're...
WINFREY: That switchboard operator is going to be very happy you gave
that number out today.
Mr. GEORGE CLOONEY: Yeah. Well, it seems like a good idea.
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