The
following
is the
full
text of
President
George
W.
Bush's
Inaugural
Address:
This
peaceful
transfer
of
authority
is rare
in
history,
yet
common
in our
country.
With a
simple
oath, we
affirm
old
traditions,
and make
new
beginnings.
As I
begin, I
thank
President
Clinton
for his
service
to our
nation.
And I
thank
Vice
President
Gore for
a
contest
conducted
with
spirit,
and
ended
with
grace.
I am
honored
and
humbled
to stand
here,
where so
many of
America's
leaders
have
come
before
me, and
so many
will
follow.
We
have a
place,
all of
us, in a
long
story; a
story we
continue,
but
whose
end we
will not
see. It
is the
story of
a new
world
that
became a
friend
and
liberator
of the
old. The
story of
a
slave-holding
society
that
became a
servant
of
freedom.
The
story of
a power
that
went
into
world to
protect
but not
possess,
to
defend
but not
to
conquer.
It is
the
American
story; a
story of
flawed
and
fallible
people,
united
across
the
generations
by grand
and
enduring
ideals.
The
grandest
of these
ideals
is an
unfolding
American
promise:
that
everyone
belongs,
that
everyone
deserves
a
chance,
that no
insignificant
person
was ever
born.
Americans
are
called
to enact
this
promise
in our
lives
and in
our
laws.
And
though
our
nation
has
sometimes
halted,
and
sometimes
delayed,
we must
follow
no other
course.
Through
much of
the last
century,
America's
faith in
freedom
and
democracy
was a
rock in
a raging
sea. Now
it is a
seed
upon the
wind,
taking
root in
many
nations.
Our
democratic
faith is
more
than the
creed of
our
country,
it is
the
inborn
hope of
our
humanity;
an ideal
we carry
but do
not own,
a trust
we bear
and pass
along.
And even
after
nearly
225
years,
we have
a long
way yet
to
travel.
While
many of
our
citizens
prosper,
others
doubt
the
promise
-- even
the
justice
-- of
our own
country.
The
ambitions
of some
Americans
are
limited
by
failing
schools,
and
hidden
prejudice,
and the
circumstances
of their
birth.
And
sometimes
our
differences
run so
deep, it
seems we
share a
continent,
but not
a
country.
We do
not
accept
this,
and will
not
allow
it. Our
unity,
our
union,
is the
serious
work of
leaders
and
citizens
in every
generation.
And this
is my
solemn
pledge:
I will
work to
build a
single
nation
of
justice
and
opportunity.
I
know
this is
within
our
reach,
because
we are
guided
by a
power
larger
than
ourselves,
Who
creates
us equal
in His
image.
And
we are
confident
in
principles
that
unite
and lead
us
onward.
America
has
never
been
united
by blood
or birth
or soil.
We are
bound by
ideals
that
move us
beyond
our
backgrounds,
lift us
above
our
interests,
and
teach us
what it
means to
be
citizens.
Every
child
must be
taught
these
principles.
Every
citizen
must
uphold
them.
And
every
immigrant,
by
embracing
these
ideals,
makes
our
country
more,
not
less,
American.
Today
we
affirm a
new
commitment
to live
out our
nation's
promise
through
civility,
courage,
compassion
and
character.
America,
at its
best,
matches
a
commitment
to
principle
with a
concern
for
civility.
A civil
society
demands
from
each of
us good
will and
respect,
fair
dealing
and
forgiveness.
Some
seem to
believe
that our
politics
can
afford
to be
petty
because,
in a
time of
peace,
the
stakes
of our
debates
appear
small.
But the
stakes,
for
America,
are
never
small.
If our
country
does not
lead the
cause of
freedom,
it will
not be
led. If
we do
not turn
the
hearts
of
children
toward
knowledge
and
character,
we will
lose
their
gifts
and
undermine
their
idealism.
If we
permit
our
economy
to drift
and
decline,
the
vulnerable
will
suffer
most.
We
must
live up
to the
calling
we
share.
Civility
is not a
tactic
or a
sentiment.
It is
the
determined
choice
of trust
over
cynicism,
of
community
over
chaos.
And this
commitment,
if we
keep it,
is a way
to
shared
accomplishment.
America,
at its
best, is
also
courageous.
Our
national
courage
has been
clear in
times of
depression
and war,
when
defeating
common
dangers
defined
our
common
good.
Now we
must
choose
if the
example
of our
fathers
and
mothers
will
inspire
us or
condemn
us. We
must
show
courage
in a
time of
blessing,
by
confronting
problems
instead
of
passing
them on
to
future
generations.
Together
we will
reclaim
America's
schools,
before
ignorance
and
apathy
claim
more
young
lives.
We will
reform
Social
Security
and
Medicare,
sparing
our
children
from
struggles
we have
the
power to
prevent.
We will
reduce
taxes,
to
recover
the
momentum
of our
economy
and
reward
the
effort
and
enterprise
of
working
Americans.
We will
build
our
defenses
beyond
challenge,
lest
weakness
invite
challenge.
We will
confront
weapons
of mass
destruction,
so that
a new
century
is
spared
new
horrors.
The
enemies
of
liberty
and our
country
should
make no
mistake.
America
remains
engaged
in the
world,
by
history
and by
choice,
shaping
a
balance
of power
that
favors
freedom.
We will
defend
our
allies
and our
interests.
We will
show
purpose
without
arrogance.
We will
meet
aggression
and bad
faith
with
resolve
and
strength.
And to
all
nations,
we will
speak
for the
values
that
gave our
nation
birth.
America,
at its
best, is
compassionate.
In
the
quiet of
American
conscience,
we know
that
deep,
persistent
poverty
is
unworthy
of our
nation's
promise.
And
whatever
our
views of
its
cause,
we can
agree
that
children
at risk
are not
at
fault.
Abandonment
and
abuse
are not
acts of
God,
they are
failures
of love.
And the
proliferation
of
prisons,
however
necessary,
is no
substitute
for hope
and
order in
our
souls.
Where
there is
suffering,
there is
duty.
Americans
in need
are not
strangers,
they are
citizens;
not
problems,
but
priorities;
and all
of us
are
diminished
when any
are
hopeless.
Government
has
great
responsibilities,
for
public
safety
and
public
health,
for
civil
rights
and
common
schools.
Yet
compassion
is the
work of
a
nation,
not just
a
government.
And some
needs
and
hurts
are so
deep
they
will
only
respond
to a
mentor's
touch or
a
pastor's
prayer.
Church
and
charity,
synagogue
and
mosque,
lend our
communities
their
humanity,
and they
will
have an
honored
place in
our
plans
and
laws.
Many
in our
country
do not
know the
pain of
poverty.
But we
can
listen
to those
who do.
And I
can
pledge
our
nation
to a
goal:
When we
see that
wounded
traveler
on the
road to
Jericho,
we will
not pass
to the
other
side.
America,
at its
best, is
a place
where
personal
responsibility
is
valued
and
expected.
Encouraging
responsibility
is not a
search
for
scapegoats,
it is a
call to
conscience.
And
though
it
requires
sacrifice,
it
brings a
deeper
fulfillment.
We find
the
fullness
of life,
not only
in
options,
but in
commitments.
And we
find
that
children
and
community
are the
commitments
that set
us free.
Our
public
interest
depends
on
private
character;
on civic
duty and
family
bonds
and
basic
fairness;
on
uncounted,
unhonored
acts of
decency
which
give
direction
to our
freedom.
Sometimes
in life
we are
called
to do
great
things.
But as a
saint of
our
times
has
said,
every
day we
are
called
to do
small
things
with
great
love.
The most
important
tasks of
a
democracy
are done
by
everyone.
I
will
live and
lead by
these
principles:
to
advance
my
convictions
with
civility;
to
pursue
the
public
interest
with
courage;
to speak
for
greater
justice
and
compassion;
to call
for
reponsibility,
and try
to live
it as
well. In
all
these
ways, I
will
bring
the
values
of our
history
to the
care of
our
times.
What
you do
is as
important
as
anything
government
does. I
ask you
to seek
a common
good
beyond
your
comfort;
to
defend
needed
reforms
against
easy
attacks;
to serve
your
nation,
beginning
with
your
neighbor.
I ask
you to
be
citizens.
Citizens,
not
spectators.
Citizens,
not
subjects.
Responsible
citizens,
building
communities
of
service
and a
nation
of
character.
Americans
are
generous
and
strong
and
decent,
not
because
we
believe
in
ourselves,
but
because
we hold
beliefs
beyond
ourselves.
When
this
spirit
of
citizenship
is
missing,
no
government
program
can
replace
it. When
this
spirit
is
present,
no wrong
can
stand
against
it.
After
the
Declaration
of
Independence
was
signed,
Virginia
statesman
John
Page
wrote to
Thomas
Jefferson:
"We know
the Race
is not
to the
swift
nor the
Battle
to the
Strong.
Do you
not
think an
Angel
rides in
the
Whirlwind
and
directs
this
Storm?"
Much
time has
passed
since
Jefferson
arrived
for his
inaugural.
The
years
and
changes
accumulate.
But the
themes
of this
day he
would
know:
our
nation's
grand
story of
courage,
and its
simple
dream of
dignity.
We
are not
this
story's
Author,
Who
fills
time and
eternity
with His
purpose.
Yet His
purpose
is
achieved
in our
duty;
and duty
is
fulfilled
in
service
to one
another.
Never
tiring,
never
yielding,
never
finishing,
we renew
that
purpose
today:
to make
our
country
more
just and
generous;
to
affirm
the
dignity
of our
lives
and
every
life.
This
work
continues.
This
story
goes on.
And an
angel
still
rides in
the
whirlwind
and
directs
this
storm.
God
bless
you, and
God
bless
our
country.
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