Obama, Saying Goodbye, Warns of Threats to
National Unity
Here is the video>>> Obama's Speech
CHICAGO — President Obama, delivering a farewell address in the city that launched his
political career, declared on Tuesday his continued confidence in the American
experiment. But he warned, in the wake of a toxic presidential election, that
economic inequity, racism and closed-mindedness threatened to shred the
nation’s democratic fabric.
“We weaken those ties when we define some of us as more American
than others,” Mr. Obama said, “when we write off the whole system as inevitably
corrupt, and when we sit back and blame the leaders we elect without examining
our own role in electing them.”
Speaking to a rapturous crowd that recalled the excitement of
his path-breaking campaign in 2008, Mr. Obama said he believed even the deepest
ideological divides could be bridged. His words were nevertheless etched with
frustration — a blunt coda to a remarkable day that laid bare many of the
racial crosscurrents in the country.
On Capitol Hill, Senator Jeff Sessions of
Alabama presented himself as a
moderate in his confirmation hearing for attorney general, while his critics
denounced him as a racist. In Charleston, S.C., Dylann S. Roof, the white
supremacist who shot nine black churchgoers, was sentenced to death.
And here, in the cavernous convention hall where Mr. Obama
celebrated his re-election in 2012, the nation’s first black president — still
popular, still optimistic — bade America goodbye 10 days before turning over
his office to President-elect Donald J. Trump, who ran what his critics labeled
a racist campaign.
Mr. Obama pledged again to support his successor. But his speech
was a thinly veiled rebuke of several of the positions Mr. Trump staked out
during the campaign, from climate change and barring Muslims from entering the
country to repealing his landmark health care law.
“If every economic issue is framed as a struggle between a
hardworking white middle class and undeserving minorities,” Mr. Obama said,
“then workers of all shades will be left fighting for scraps while the wealthy
withdraw further into their private enclave.”
“If we decline to invest in the children of immigrants, just
because they don’t look like us, we diminish the prospects of our own children
— because those brown kids will represent a larger share of America’s work
force,” he added.
In giving a farewell address, Mr. Obama invoked a privilege of
presidents going back to George Washington. He staked his claim as the leader
who steered the nation through the storms of the Great Recession to a growing
economy and job market. He claimed credit for reducing the rate of uninsured
Americans to record lows, while keeping a cap on health care costs.
Collected from>> The New york Times
Collected from>> The New york Times
0 Komentar