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George W.
Bush's 2003 State of the Union Address -Tuesday, January
28, 2003 |
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Mr. Speaker, Vice President Cheney, Members of Congress,
distinguished guests, fellow citizens:
Every year, by law and by custom, we meet here to consider the
state of the union. This year, we gather in this chamber deeply
aware of decisive days that lie ahead.
You and I serve our country in a time of great consequence.
During this session of Congress, we have the duty to reform
domestic programs vital to our country ... and we have the
opportunity to save millions of lives abroad from a terrible
disease. We will work for a prosperity that is
broadly shared ... and we will answer every danger and every
enemy that threatens the American people.
In all these days of promise and days of reckoning, we can be
confident. In a whirlwind of change, and hope, and peril, our
faith is sure, our resolve is firm, and our union is strong.
This country has many challenges. We will not deny, we will not
ignore, we will not pass along our problems to other Congresses,
other presidents, and other generations. We will confront them
with focus, and clarity, and courage.
During the last two years, we have seen what can be accomplished
when we work together. To lift the standards of our public
schools, we achieved historic education reform - which must now
be carried out in every school, and every classroom, so that
every child in America can read, and
learn, and succeed in life. To protect our country, we
reorganized our government and created the Department of
Homeland Security - which is mobilizing against the threats of a
new era. To bring our economy out of recession, we delivered the
largest tax relief in a generation. To insist on integrity in
American business, we passed tough reforms, and we are holding
corporate criminals to account.
Some might call this a good record. I call it a good start.
Tonight I ask the House and Senate to join me in the next bold
steps to serve our fellow citizens.
Our first goal is clear: We must have an economy that grows fast
enough to employ every man and woman who seeks a job.
After recession, terrorist attacks, corporate scandals, and
stock market declines, our economy is recovering - yet it is not
growing fast enough, or strongly enough. With unemployment
rising, our Nation needs more small businesses to open, more
companies to invest and expand, more employers to put up the
sign that says, "Help Wanted."
Jobs are created when the economy grows; the economy grows when
Americans have more money to spend and invest; and the best,
fairest way to make sure Americans have that money is not to tax
it away in the first place.
I am proposing that all the income tax reductions set for 2004
and 2006 be made permanent and effective this year. And under my
plan, as soon as I have signed the bill, this extra money will
start showing up in workers’ paychecks. Instead of gradually
reducing the marriage penalty, we should do it now. Instead of
slowly raising the child credit to a thousand dollars, we should
send the checks to American families now.
This tax relief is for everyone who pays income taxes - and it
will help our economy immediately. Ninety-two million Americans
will keep - this year - an average of almost 1,100 dollars more
of their own money. A family of four with an income of 40,000
dollars would see their federal income taxes fall from 1,178
dollars to 45 dollars per year. And our plan will improve the
bottom line for more than 23 million small businesses.
You, the Congress, have already passed all these reductions, and
promised them for future years. If this tax relief is good for
Americans three, or five, or seven years from now, it is even
better for Americans today.
We also strengthen the economy by treating investors equally in
our tax laws. It is fair to tax a company's profits. It is not
fair to again tax the shareholder on the same profits. To boost
investor confidence, and to help the nearly 10 million seniors
who receive dividend income, I ask you to end the unfair double
taxation of dividends.
Lower taxes and greater investment will help this economy
expand. More jobs mean more taxpayers - and higher revenues to
our government. The best way to address the deficit and move
toward a balanced budget is to encourage economic growth - and
to show some spending discipline in Washington, D.C. We must
work together to fund only our most important priorities. I will
send you a budget that increases discretionary spending by four
percent next year - about as much as the average family’s income
is expected to grow. And that is a good benchmark for us:
Federal spending should not rise any faster than the paychecks
of American families.
A growing economy, and a focus on essential priorities, will
also be crucial to the future of Social Security. As we continue
to work together to keep Social Security sound and reliable, we
must offer
younger workers a chance to invest in retirement accounts that
they will control and they will own.
Our second goal is high quality, affordable health care for all
Americans.
The American system of medicine is a model of skill and
innovation - with a pace of discovery that is adding good years
to our lives. Yet for many people, medical care costs too much -
and many have no coverage at all. These problems will not be
solved with a nationalized health care system that dictates
coverage and rations care. Instead, we must work toward a system
in which all Americans have a good insurance policy ... choose
their own doctors ... and seniors and low-income Americans
receive the help they need. Instead of bureaucrats, and trial
lawyers, and HMOs, we must put doctors, and nurses, and patients
back in charge of American medicine.
Health care reform must begin with Medicare, because Medicare is
the binding commitment of a caring society. We must renew that
commitment by giving seniors access to the preventive medicine
and new drugs that are transforming health care in America.
Seniors happy with the current Medicare system should be able to
keep their coverage just the way it is. And just like you, the
members of Congress, members of your staffs, and other federal
employees, all seniors should have the choice of a health care
plan that provides prescription drugs. My budget will commit an
additional 400 billion dollars over the next decade to reform
and strengthen Medicare. Leaders of both political parties have
talked for years about strengthening Medicare - I urge the
members of this new Congress to act this year.
To improve our health care system, we must address one of the
prime causes of higher costs - the constant threat that
physicians and hospitals will be unfairly sued. Because of
excessive litigation, everybody pays more for health care - and
many parts of America are losing fine doctors. No one has ever
been healed by a frivolous lawsuit - and I urge the Congress to
pass medical liability reform.
Our third goal is to promote energy independence for our
country, while dramatically improving the environment.
I have sent you a comprehensive energy plan to promote energy
efficiency and conservation, to develop cleaner technology, and
to produce more energy at home. I have sent you Clear Skies
legislation that mandates a 70 percent cut in air pollution from
power plants over the next 15 years.
I have sent you a Healthy Forests Initiative, to help prevent
the catastrophic fires that devastate communities, kill
wildlife, and burn away millions of acres of treasured forest.
I urge you to pass these measures, for the good of both our
environment and our economy. Even more, I ask you to take a
crucial step, and protect our environment in ways that
generations before us could not have imagined. In this century,
the greatest environmental progress will come about, not through
endless lawsuits or command and control regulations, but through
technology and innovation. Tonight I am proposing 1.2 billion
dollars in research funding so that America can lead the world
in developing clean, hydrogen-powered automobiles.
A simple chemical reaction between hydrogen and oxygen generates
energy, which can be used to power a car - producing only water,
not exhaust fumes. With a new national commitment, our
scientists and engineers will overcome obstacles to taking these
cars from laboratory to showroom - so that the first car driven
by a child born today could be powered by hydrogen, and
pollution-free. Join me in this important innovation - to make
our air significantly cleaner, and our country much less
dependent on foreign sources of energy.
Our fourth goal is to apply the compassion of America to the
deepest problems of America. For so many in our country - the
homeless, the fatherless, the addicted - the need is great. Yet
there is power - wonder-working power - in the goodness, and
idealism, and faith of the American people.
Americans are doing the work of compassion every day - visiting
prisoners, providing shelter to battered women, bringing
companionship to lonely seniors. These good works deserve our
praise ... they deserve our personal support ... and, when
appropriate, they deserve the assistance of our government. I
urge you to pass both my faith-based initiative and the Citizen
Service Act - to encourage acts of compassion that can transform
America, one heart and one soul at a time.
Last year, I called on my fellow citizens to participate in USA
Freedom Corps, which is enlisting tens of thousands of new
volunteers across America. Tonight I ask Congress and the
American people to focus the spirit of service and the resources
of government on the needs of some of our most vulnerable
citizens - boys and girls trying to grow up without guidance and
attention ... and children who have to go through a prison gate
to be hugged by their mom or dad. I propose a 450 million dollar
initiative to bring mentors to more than a million disadvantaged
junior high students and children of prisoners. Government will
support the training and recruiting of mentors, yet it is the
men and women of America who will fill the need. One mentor, one
person, can change a life forever - and I urge you to be that
one person.
Another cause of hopelessness is addiction to drugs. Addiction
crowds out friendship, ambition, moral conviction, and reduces
all the richness of life to a single destructive desire. As a
government, we are fighting illegal drugs by cutting off
supplies, and reducing demand through anti-drug education
programs. Yet for those already addicted, the fight against
drugs is a fight for their own lives.
Too many Americans in search of treatment cannot get it. So
tonight I propose a new 600 million dollar program to help an
additional 300,000 Americans receive treatment over the next
three years.
Our Nation is blessed with recovery programs that do amazing
work. One of them is found at the Healing Place Church in Baton
Rouge, Louisiana. A man in the program said, "God does miracles
in people’s lives, and you never think it could be you."
Tonight, let us bring to all Americans who struggle with drug
addiction this message of hope: The miracle of recovery is
possible, and it could be you.
By caring for children who need mentors, and for addicted men
and women who need treatment, we are building a more welcoming
society - a culture that values every life. And in this work we
must not overlook the weakest among us. I ask you to protect
infants at the very hour of birth, and end the practice of
partial-birth abortion. And because no human life should be
started or ended as the object of an experiment, I ask you to
set a high standard for humanity and pass a law against all
human cloning.
The qualities of courage and compassion that we strive for in
America also determine our conduct abroad. The American flag
stands for more than our power and our interests. Our Founders
dedicated this country to the cause of human dignity - the
rights of every person and the possibilities of every life. This
conviction leads us into the world to help the afflicted, and
defend the peace, and confound the designs of evil men. In
Afghanistan, we helped to liberate an oppressed people ... and
we will continue helping them secure their country, rebuild
their society, and educate all their children - boys and girls.
In the Middle East, we will continue to seek peace between a
secure Israel and a democratic Palestine. Across the earth,
America is feeding the hungry; more than 60 percent of
international food aid comes as a gift from the people of the
United States.
As our Nation moves troops and builds alliances to make our
world safer, we must also remember our calling, as a blessed
country, to make this world better. Today, on the continent of
Africa, nearly 30 million people have the AIDS virus - including
three million children under the age of 15. There are whole
countries in Africa where more than one-third of the adult
population carries the infection. More than four million require
immediate drug treatment. Yet across that continent, only 50,000
AIDS victims - only 50,000 - are receiving the medicine they
need.
Because the AIDS diagnosis is considered a death sentence, many
do not seek treatment. Almost all who do are turned away. A
doctor in rural South Africa describes his frustration. He says,
"We have no medicines ... many hospitals tell [people], ‘You’ve
got AIDS. We can’t help you. Go home and die.’"
In an age of miraculous medicines, no person should have to hear
those words. AIDS can be prevented. Anti-retroviral drugs can
extend life for many years. And the cost of those drugs has
dropped from 12,000 dollars a year to under 300 dollars a year -
which places a tremendous possibility within our grasp.
Ladies and gentlemen, seldom has history offered a greater
opportunity to do so much for so many. We have confronted, and
will continue to confront, HIV/AIDS in our own country. And to
meet a severe and urgent crisis abroad, tonight I propose the
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief - a work of mercy beyond all
current international efforts to help the people of Africa. This
comprehensive plan will prevent seven million new AIDS
infections ... treat at least two million people with
life-extending
drugs ... and provide humane care for millions of people
suffering from AIDS, and for children orphaned by AIDS. I ask
the Congress to commit 15 billion dollars over the next five
years, including nearly ten billion dollars in new money, to
turn the tide against AIDS in the most afflicted
nations of Africa and the Caribbean.
This Nation can lead the world in sparing innocent people from a
plague of nature. And this Nation is leading the world in
confronting and defeating the man-made evil of international
terrorism.
There are days when the American people do not hear news about
the war on terror. There is never a day when I do not learn of
another threat, or receive reports of operations in progress, or
give an order in this global war against a scattered network of
killers. The war goes on, and we are winning.
To date we have arrested, or otherwise dealt with, many key
commanders of Al-Qaida. They include a man who directed
logistics and funding for the September 11th attacks ... the
chief of al-Qaida operations in the Persian Gulf who planned the
bombings of our embassies in East Africa and the USS Cole ... an
al-Qaida operations chief from Southeast Asia ... a former
director of al-Qaida’s training camps in Afghanistan ... a key
al-Qaida operative in Europe ... and a major al-Qaida leader in
Yemen. All told, more than 3,000 suspected terrorists have been
arrested in many countries. And many others have met a different
fate. They are no longer a problem for the United States and our
friends and allies.
We are working closely with other nations to prevent further
attacks. America and coalition countries have uncovered and
stopped terrorist conspiracies targeting the American embassy in
Yemen ... the American embassy in Singapore ... a Saudi military
base ... and ships in the straits of Hormuz, and the straits of
Gibraltar. We have broken al-Qaida cells in Hamburg, and Milan,
and Madrid, and London, and Paris - as well as Buffalo, New
York.
We have the terrorists on the run, and we are keeping them on
the run. One by one, the terrorists are learning the meaning of
American justice.
As we fight this war, we will remember where it began - here, in
our own country. This government is taking unprecedented
measures to protect our people and defend our homeland. We have
intensified security at the borders and ports of entry ...
posted more than 50,000 newly trained federal screeners in
airports ... begun inoculating troops and first responders
against smallpox ... and are deploying the Nation’s first early
warning network of sensors to detect biological attack. And this
year, for the first time, we are beginning to field a defense to
protect this Nation against ballistic missiles.
I thank the Congress for supporting these measures. I ask you
tonight to add to our future security with a major research and
production effort to guard our people against bio-terrorism,
called Project Bioshield. The budget I send you will propose
almost six billion dollars to quickly make available effective
vaccines and treatments against agents like anthrax, botulinum
toxin, Ebola, and plague. We must assume that our enemies would
use these diseases as weapons, and we must act before the
dangers are upon us.
Since September 11th, our intelligence and law enforcement
agencies have worked more closely than ever to track and disrupt
the terrorists. The FBI is improving its ability to analyze
intelligence, and transforming itself to meet new threats. And
tonight, I am instructing the leaders of the FBI, Central
Intelligence, Homeland Security, and the Department of Defense
to develop a Terrorist Threat Integration Center, to merge and
analyze all threat information in a single location. Our
government must have the very best information possible, and we
will use it to make sure the right people are in the right
places to protect our citizens.
Our war against terror is a contest of will, in which
perseverance is power. In the ruins of two towers, at the
western wall of the Pentagon, on a field in Pennsylvania, this
Nation made a pledge, and we renew that pledge tonight: Whatever
the duration of this struggle, and whatever the difficulties, we
will not permit the triumph of violence in the affairs of men -
free people will set the course of history.
Today, the gravest danger in the war on terror ... the gravest
danger facing America and the world ... is outlaw regimes that
seek and possess nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.
These regimes could use such weapons for blackmail, terror, and
mass murder. They could also give or sell those weapons to their
terrorist allies, who would use them without the least
hesitation.
This threat is new; America’s duty is familiar. Throughout the
20th century, small groups of men seized control of great
nations ... built armies and arsenals ... and set out to
dominate the weak and intimidate the world. In each case, their
ambitions of cruelty and murder had no limit. In each case, the
ambitions of Hitlerism, militarism, and communism were defeated
by the will of free peoples, by the strength of great alliances,
and by the might of the United States of America. Now, in this
century, the ideology of power and domination has appeared
again, and seeks to gain the ultimate weapons of terror. Once
again, this Nation and our friends are all that stand between a
world at peace, and a world of chaos and constant alarm. Once
again, we are called to defend the safety of our people, and the
hopes of all mankind. And we accept this responsibility.
America is making a broad and determined effort to confront
these dangers. We have called on the United Nations to fulfill
its charter, and stand by its demand that Iraq disarm. We are
strongly supporting the International Atomic Energy Agency in
its mission to track and control nuclear materials around the
world. We are working with other governments to secure nuclear
materials in the former Soviet Union, and to strengthen global
treaties banning the production and shipment of missile
technologies and weapons of mass destruction.
In all of these efforts, however, America’s purpose is more than
to follow a process - it is to achieve a result: the end of
terrible threats to the civilized world. All free nations have a
stake in preventing sudden and catastrophic attack. We are
asking them to join us, and many are doing so. Yet the course of
this Nation does not depend on the decisions of others. Whatever
action is required, whenever action is necessary, I will defend
the freedom and security of the American people.
Different threats require different strategies. In Iran, we
continue to see a government that represses its people, pursues
weapons of mass destruction, and supports terror. We also see
Iranian citizens risking intimidation and death as they speak
out for liberty, human rights, and democracy. Iranians, like all
people, have a right to choose their own government, and
determine their own destiny - and the United States supports
their aspirations to live in freedom.
On the Korean peninsula, an oppressive regime rules a people
living in fear and starvation. Throughout the 1990s, the United
States relied on a negotiated framework to keep North Korea from
gaining nuclear weapons. We now know that the regime was
deceiving the world, and developing those weapons all along. And
today the North Korean regime is using its nuclear program to
incite fear and seek concessions. America and the world will not
be blackmailed. America is working with the countries of the
region - South Korea, Japan, China, and Russia - to find a
peaceful solution, and to show the North Korean government that
nuclear weapons will bring only isolation, economic stagnation,
and continued hardship. The North Korean regime will find
respect in the world, and revival for its people, only when it
turns away from its nuclear ambitions.
Our Nation and the world must learn the lessons of the Korean
peninsula, and not allow an even greater threat to rise up in
Iraq. A brutal dictator, with a history of reckless aggression
... with ties to terrorism ... with great potential wealth ...
will not be permitted to dominate a vital region and threaten
the United States.
Twelve years ago, Saddam Hussein faced the prospect of being the
last casualty in a war he had started and lost. To spare
himself, he agreed to disarm of all weapons of mass destruction.
For the next 12 years, he systematically violated that
agreement. He pursued chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons
even while inspectors were in his country. Nothing to date has
restrained him from his pursuit of these weapons - not economic
sanctions, not isolation from the civilized world, not even
cruise missile strikes on his military facilities. Almost three
months ago, the United Nations Security Council gave Saddam
Hussein his final chance to disarm. He has shown instead his
utter contempt for the United Nations, and for the opinion of
the world.
The 108 UN weapons inspectors were not sent to conduct a
scavenger hunt for hidden materials across a country the size of
California. The job of the inspectors is to verify that Iraq’s
regime is disarming. It is up to Iraq to show exactly where it
is hiding its banned weapons ... lay those weapons out for the
world to see ... and destroy them as directed. Nothing like this
has happened.
The United Nations concluded in 1999 that Saddam Hussein had
biological weapons materials sufficient to produce over 25,000
liters of anthrax - enough doses to kill several million people.
He has not accounted for that material. He has given no evidence
that he has destroyed it.
The United Nations concluded that Saddam Hussein had materials
sufficient to produce more than 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin
- enough to subject millions of people to death by respiratory
failure. He has not accounted for that material. He has given no
evidence that he has destroyed it.
Our intelligence officials estimate that Saddam Hussein had the
materials to produce as much as 500 tons of sarin, mustard, and
VX nerve agent. In such quantities, these chemical agents also
could kill untold thousands. He has not accounted for these
materials. He has given no evidence that he has destroyed them.
U.S. intelligence indicates that Saddam Hussein had upwards of
30,000 munitions capable of delivering chemical agents.
Inspectors recently turned up 16 of them, despite Iraq’s recent
declaration denying their existence. Saddam Hussein has not
accounted for the remaining 29,984 of these prohibited
munitions. He has given no evidence that he has destroyed them.
From three Iraqi defectors we know that Iraq, in the late 1990s,
had several mobile biological weapons labs. These are designed
to produce germ warfare agents, and can be moved from place to
place to evade inspectors. Saddam Hussein has not disclosed
these facilities. He has given no evidence that he has destroyed
them.
The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed in the 1990s
that Saddam Hussein had an advanced nuclear weapons development
program, had a design for a nuclear weapon, and was working on
five different methods of enriching uranium for a bomb. The
British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently
sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa. Our
intelligence sources tell us that he has attempted to purchase
high strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons
production. Saddam Hussein has not credibly explained these
activities. He clearly has much to hide.
The dictator of Iraq is not disarming. To the contrary, he is
deceiving. From intelligence sources, we know, for instance,
that thousands of Iraqi security personnel are at work hiding
documents and materials from the UN inspectors - sanitizing
inspection sites, and monitoring the inspectors themselves.
Iraqi officials accompany the inspectors in order to intimidate
witnesses. Iraq is blocking U-2 surveillance flights requested
by the United Nations. Iraqi intelligence officers are posing as
the scientists inspectors are supposed to interview. Real
scientists have been coached by Iraqi officials on what to say.
And intelligence sources indicate that Saddam Hussein has
ordered that scientists who cooperate with UN inspectors in
disarming Iraq will be killed, along with their families.
Year after year, Saddam Hussein has gone to elaborate lengths,
spent enormous sums, taken great risks, to build and keep
weapons of mass destruction - but why? The only possible
explanation, the only possible use he could have for those
weapons, is to dominate, intimidate, or attack. With nuclear
arms or a full arsenal of chemical and biological weapons,
Saddam Hussein could resume his ambitions of conquest in the
Middle East, and create deadly havoc in the region. And this
Congress and the American people must recognize another threat.
Evidence from intelligence sources, secret communications, and
statements by people now in custody, reveal that Saddam Hussein
aids and protects terrorists, including members of al-Qaida.
Secretly, and without fingerprints, he could provide one of his
hidden weapons to terrorists, or help them develop their own.
Before September 11, 2001, many in the world believed that
Saddam Hussein could be contained. But chemical agents and
lethal viruses and shadowy terrorist networks are not easily
contained. Imagine those 19 hijackers with other weapons, and
other plans - this time armed by Saddam Hussein. It would take
just one vial, one canister, one crate slipped into this country
to bring a day of horror like none we have ever known. We will
do everything in our power to make sure that day never comes.
Some have said we must not act until the threat is imminent.
Since when have terrorists and tyrants announced their
intentions, politely putting us on notice before they strike? If
this threat is permitted to fully and suddenly emerge, all
actions, all words, and all recriminations would come too late.
Trusting in the sanity and restraint of Saddam Hussein is not a
strategy, and it is not an option.
This dictator, who is assembling the world’s most dangerous
weapons, has already used them on whole villages - leaving
thousands of his own citizens dead, blind, or disfigured. Iraqi
refugees tell us how forced confessions are obtained - by
torturing children while their parents are made to watch.
International human rights groups have catalogued other methods
used in the torture chambers of Iraq: electric shock, burning
with hot irons, dripping acid on the skin, mutilation with
electric drills, cutting out tongues, and rape.
If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning. And tonight I
have a message for the brave and oppressed people of Iraq: Your
enemy is not surrounding your country - your enemy is ruling
your country. And the day he and his regime are removed from
power will be the day of your liberation.
The world has waited 12 years for Iraq to disarm. America will
not accept a serious and mounting threat to our country, our
friends, and our allies. The United States will ask the UN
Security Council to convene on February 5th to consider the
facts of Iraq’s ongoing defiance of the world. Secretary of
State Powell will present information and intelligence about
Iraq’s illegal weapons programs; its attempts to hide those
weapons from inspectors; and its links to terrorist groups. We
will consult, but let there be no misunderstanding: If Saddam
Hussein does not fully disarm, for the safety of our people, and
for the peace of the world, we will lead a coalition to disarm
him.
Tonight I also have a message for the men and women who will
keep the peace, members of the American Armed Forces: Many of
you are assembling in and near the Middle East, and some crucial
hours may lie ahead. In those hours, the success of our cause
will depend on you. Your training has prepared you. Your honor
will guide you. You believe in America, and America believes in
you.
Sending Americans into battle is the most profound decision a
president can make. The technologies of war have changed. The
risks and suffering of war have not. For the brave Americans who
bear the risk, no victory is free from sorrow. This Nation
fights reluctantly, because we know the cost, and we dread the
days of mourning that always come.
We seek peace. We strive for peace. And sometimes peace must be
defended. A future lived at the mercy of terrible threats is no
peace at all. If war is forced upon us, we will fight in a just
cause and by just means - sparing, in every way we can, the
innocent. And if war is forced upon us, we will fight with the
full force and might of the United States military - and we will
prevail. And as we and our coalition partners are doing in
Afghanistan, we will bring to the Iraqi people food, and
medicines, and supplies ... and freedom.
Many challenges, abroad and at home, have arrived in a single
season. In two years, America has gone from a sense of
invulnerability to an awareness of peril ... from bitter
division in small matters to calm unity in great causes. And we
go forward with confidence, because this call of history has
come to the right country.
Americans are a resolute people, who have risen to every test of
our time. Adversity has revealed the character of our country,
to the world, and to ourselves.
America is a strong Nation, and honorable in the use of our
strength. We exercise power without conquest, and sacrifice for
the liberty of strangers.
Americans are a free people, who know that freedom is the right
of every person and the future of every nation. The liberty we
prize is not America’s gift to the world, it is God’s gift to
humanity.
We Americans have faith in ourselves - but not in ourselves
alone. We do not claim to know all the ways of Providence, yet
we can trust in them, placing our confidence in the loving God
behind all of life, and all of history.
May He guide us now, and may God continue to bless the United
States of America.
Thank you. |
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