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The Inauguration Speech of
Barack Obama, 44th President of the
United States
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Barack Obama was sworn in as the
44th president of the United
States and the nation's first
African-American president on
January 20, 2009. |
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My fellow citizens:
I stand here today humbled by the task
before us, grateful for the trust you
have bestowed, mindful of the sacrifices
borne by our ancestors. I thank
President Bush for his service to our
nation, as well as the generosity and
cooperation he has shown throughout this
transition.
Forty-four Americans have now taken the
presidential oath. The words have been
spoken during rising tides of prosperity
and the still waters of peace. Yet,
every so often, the oath is taken amidst
gathering clouds and raging storms. At
these moments, America has carried on
not simply because of the skill or
vision of those in high office, but
because We the People have remained
faithful to the ideals of our
fore-bearers, and true to our founding
documents.
So it has been. So it must be with this
generation of Americans.
That we are in the midst of crisis is
now well understood. Our nation is at
war, against a far-reaching network of
violence and hatred. Our economy is
badly weakened, a consequence of greed
and irresponsibility on the part of
some, but also our collective failure to
make hard choices and prepare the nation
for a new age. Homes have been lost;
jobs shed; businesses shuttered. Our
health care is too costly; our schools
fail too many; and each day brings
further evidence that the ways we use
energy strengthen our adversaries and
threaten our planet.
These are the indicators of crisis,
subject to data and statistics. Less
measurable but no less profound is a
sapping of confidence across our land —
a nagging fear that America's decline is
inevitable, and that the next generation
must lower its sights.
Today I say to you the challenges we
face are real. They are serious and they
are many. They will not be met easily or
in a short span of time. But know this,
America: They will be met.
On this day, we gather because we have
chosen hope over fear, unity of purpose
over conflict and discord.
On this day, we come to proclaim an end
to the petty grievances and false
promises, the recriminations and
worn-out dogmas, that for far too long
have strangled our politics.
We remain a young nation, but in the
words of Scripture, the time has come to
set aside childish things. The time has
come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to
choose our better history; to carry
forward that precious gift, that noble
idea, passed on from generation to
generation: the God-given promise that
all are equal, all are free, and all
deserve a chance to pursue their full
measure of happiness.
In reaffirming the greatness of our
nation, we understand greatness is never
a given. It must be earned. Our journey
has never been one of shortcuts or
settling for less. It has not been the
path for the fainthearted — for those
who prefer leisure over work, or seek
only the pleasures of riches and fame.
Rather, it has been the risk-takers, the
doers, the makers of things — some
celebrated, but more often men and women
obscure in their labor — who have
carried us up the long, rugged path
toward prosperity and freedom.
For us, they packed up their few worldly
possessions and traveled across oceans
in search of a new life.
For us, they toiled in sweatshops and
settled the West; endured the lash of
the whip and plowed the hard earth.
For us, they fought and died, in places
like Concord and Gettysburg; Normandy
and Khe Sahn.
Time and again, these men and women
struggled and sacrificed and worked till
their hands were raw so we might live a
better life. They saw America as bigger
than the sum of our individual
ambitions; greater than all the
differences of birth or wealth or
faction.
This is the journey we continue today.
We remain the most prosperous, powerful
nation on Earth. Our workers are no less
productive than when this crisis began.
Our minds are no less inventive, our
goods and services no less needed than
they were last week or last month or
last year. Our capacity remains
undiminished. But our time of standing
pat, of protecting narrow interests and
putting off unpleasant decisions — that
time has surely passed. Starting today,
we must pick ourselves up, dust
ourselves off, and begin again the work
of remaking America.
For everywhere we look, there is work to
be done. The state of the economy calls
for action, bold and swift, and we will
act — not only to create new jobs, but
to lay a new foundation for growth. We
will build the roads and bridges, the
electric grids and digital lines that
feed our commerce and bind us together.
We will restore science to its rightful
place, and wield technology's wonders to
raise health care's quality and lower
its cost. We will harness the sun and
the winds and the soil to fuel our cars
and run our factories. And we will
transform our schools and colleges and
universities to meet the demands of a
new age. All this we can do. And all
this we will do.
Now, there are some who question the
scale of our ambitions — who suggest our
system cannot tolerate too many big
plans. Their memories are short. For
they have forgotten what this country
has already done; what free men and
women can achieve when imagination is
joined to common purpose, and necessity
to courage.
What the cynics fail to understand is
the ground has shifted beneath them —
that the stale political arguments that
have consumed us for so long no longer
apply. The question we ask today is not
whether our government is too big or too
small, but whether it works — whether it
helps families find jobs at a decent
wage, care they can afford, a retirement
that is dignified. Where the answer is
yes, we intend to move forward. Where
the answer is no, programs will end. And
those of us who manage the public's
dollars will be held to account — to
spend wisely, reform bad habits, and do
our business in the light of day —
because only then can we restore the
vital trust between a people and their
government.
Nor is the question before us whether
the market is a force for good or ill.
Its power to generate wealth and expand
freedom is unmatched, but this crisis
has reminded us without a watchful eye,
the market can spin out of control — and
a nation cannot prosper long when it
favors only the prosperous. The success
of our economy has always depended not
just on the size of our gross domestic
product, but on the reach of our
prosperity; on our ability to extend
opportunity to every willing heart — not
out of charity, but because it is the
surest route to our common good.
As for our common defense, we reject as
false the choice between our safety and
our ideals. Our Founding Fathers, faced
with perils we can scarcely imagine,
drafted a charter to assure the rule of
law and the rights of man, a charter
expanded by the blood of generations.
Those ideals still light the world, and
we will not give them up for
expedience's sake. And so to all other
peoples and governments who are watching
today, from the grandest capitals to the
small village where my father was born:
Know America is a friend of each nation
and every man, woman and child who seeks
a future of peace and dignity, and we
are ready to lead once more.
Recall that earlier generations faced
down fascism and communism not just with
missiles and tanks, but with sturdy
alliances and enduring convictions. They
understood that our power alone cannot
protect us, nor does it entitle us to do
as we please. Instead, they knew our
power grows through its prudent use; our
security emanates from the justness of
our cause, the force of our example, the
tempering qualities of humility and
restraint.
We are the keepers of this legacy.
Guided by these principles once more, we
can meet those new threats that demand
even greater effort — even greater
cooperation and understanding between
nations. We will begin to responsibly
leave Iraq to its people, and forge a
hard-earned peace in Afghanistan. With
old friends and former foes, we will
work tirelessly to lessen the nuclear
threat, and roll back the specter of a
warming planet. We will not apologize
for our way of life, nor will we waver
in its defense, and for those who seek
to advance their aims by inducing terror
and slaughtering innocents, we say to
you now that our spirit is stronger and
cannot be broken; you cannot outlast us,
and we will defeat you.
For we know that our patchwork heritage
is a strength, not a weakness. We are a
nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews
and Hindus and nonbelievers. We are
shaped by every language and culture,
drawn from every end of this Earth; and
because we have tasted the bitter swill
of civil war and segregation, and
emerged from that dark chapter stronger
and more united, we cannot help but
believe the old hatreds shall someday
pass; the lines of tribe shall soon
dissolve; as the world grows smaller,
our common humanity shall reveal itself;
and America must play its role in
ushering in a new era of peace.
To the Muslim world, we seek a new way
forward, based on mutual interest and
mutual respect. To those leaders around
the globe who seek to sow conflict, or
blame their society's ills on the West:
Know that your people will judge you on
what you can build, not what you
destroy. To those who cling to power
through corruption and deceit and the
silencing of dissent, know you are on
the wrong side of history; but we will
extend a hand if you are willing to
unclench your fist.
To the people of poor nations, we pledge
to work alongside you to make your farms
flourish and let clean waters flow; to
nourish starved bodies and feed hungry
minds. And to those nations like ours
that enjoy relative plenty, we say we
can no longer afford indifference to
suffering outside our borders; nor can
we consume the world's resources without
regard to effect. For the world has
changed, and we must change with it.
As we consider the road that unfolds
before us, we remember with humble
gratitude those brave Americans who, at
this very hour, patrol far-off deserts
and distant mountains. They have
something to tell us today, just as the
fallen heroes who lie in Arlington
whisper through the ages. We honor them
not only because they are guardians of
our liberty, but because they embody the
spirit of service; a willingness to find
meaning in something greater than
themselves. And yet, at this moment — a
moment that will define a generation —
it is precisely this spirit that must
inhabit us all.
For as much as government can do and
must do, it is ultimately the faith and
determination of the American people
upon which this nation relies. It is the
kindness to take in a stranger when the
levees break, the selflessness of
workers who would rather cut their hours
than see a friend lose their job which
sees us through our darkest hours. It is
the firefighter's courage to storm a
stairway filled with smoke, but also a
parent's willingness to nurture a child,
that finally decides our fate.
Our challenges may be new. The
instruments with which we meet them may
be new but those values upon which our
success depends — hard work and honesty,
courage and fair play, tolerance and
curiosity, loyalty and patriotism —
these things are old. These things are
true. They have been the quiet force of
progress throughout our history. What is
demanded then is a return to these
truths. What is required of us now is a
new era of responsibility — a
recognition, on the part of every
American, we have duties to ourselves,
our nation and the world; duties we do
not grudgingly accept but rather seize
gladly, firm in the knowledge there is
nothing so satisfying to the spirit, so
defining of our character, than giving
our all to a difficult task.
This is the price and the promise of
citizenship.
This is the source of our confidence —
the knowledge God calls on us to shape
an uncertain destiny.
This is the meaning of our liberty and
our creed — why men and women and
children of every race and every faith
can join in celebration across this
magnificent Mall, and why a man whose
father less than 60 years ago might not
have been served at a local restaurant
can now stand before you to take a most
sacred oath.
So let us mark this day with
remembrance, of who we are and how far
we have traveled. In the year of
America's birth, in the coldest of
months, a small band of patriots huddled
by dying campfires on the shores of an
icy river. The capital was abandoned.
The enemy was advancing. The snow was
stained with blood. At a moment when the
outcome of our revolution was most in
doubt, the father of our nation ordered
these words be read to the people:
Let it be told to the future world ...
that in the depth of winter, when
nothing but hope and virtue could
survive... the city and the country,
alarmed at one common danger, came forth
to meet it.
America, in the face of America's common
dangers, in this winter of our hardship,
let us remember these timeless words:
With hope and virtue, let us brave once
more the icy currents, and endure what
storms may come. Let it be said by our
children's children when we were tested,
we refused to let this journey end, we
did not turn back, nor did we falter;
and with eyes fixed on the horizon and
God's grace upon us, we carried forth
that great gift of freedom and delivered
it safely to future generations.
Thank you. God bless you.
And God bless the United States of
America.
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