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
forebears,
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
that
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
that
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
faint-hearted
— 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
towards
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
Sanh.
Time
and
again
these
men
and
women
struggled
and
sacrificed
and
worked
till
their
hands
were
raw
so
that
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.
All
this
we
will
do.
Now,
there
are
some
who
question
the
scale
of
our
ambitions
— who
suggest
that
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
that
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.
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
that
without
a
watchful
eye,
the
market
can
spin
out
of
control
— and
that
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
...
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
the
other
peoples
and
governments
who
are
watching
today,
from
the
grandest
capitals
to
the
small
village
where
my
father
was
born:
know
that
America
is a
friend
of
each
nation
and
every
man,
woman,
and
child
who
seeks
a
future
of
peace
and
dignity,
and
that
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
that
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
non-believers.
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
that
the
old
hatreds
shall
someday
pass;
that
the
lines
of
tribe
shall
soon
dissolve;
that
as
the
world
grows
smaller,
our
common
humanity
shall
reveal
itself;
and
that
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
that
you
are
on
the
wrong
side
of
history;
but
that
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
the
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,
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,
that
we
have
duties
to
ourselves,
our
nation,
and
the
world,
duties
that
we do
not
grudgingly
accept
but
rather
seize
gladly,
firm
in
the
knowledge
that
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
that
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
sixty
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...that
the
city
and
the
country,
alarmed
at
one
common
danger,
came
forth
to
meet
(it)."
America,
in
the
face
of
our
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
that
when
we
were
tested
we
refused
to
let
this
journey
end,
that
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.