STATE OF
THE
UNION
ADDRESS
BY THE
PRESIDENT
United
States
Capitol
Washington,
D.C.
9:12
P.M. EST
THE
PRESIDENT:
Thank
you all.
Mr.
Speaker,
Vice
President
Cheney,
members
of
Congress,
members
of the
Supreme
Court
and
diplomatic
corps,
distinguished
guests,
and
fellow
citizens:
Today
our
nation
lost a
beloved,
graceful,
courageous
woman
who
called
America
to its
founding
ideals
and
carried
on a
noble
dream.
Tonight
we are
comforted
by the
hope of
a glad
reunion
with the
husband
who was
taken so
long
ago, and
we are
grateful
for the
good
life of
Coretta
Scott
King.
(Applause.)
Every
time I'm
invited
to this
rostrum,
I'm
humbled
by the
privilege,
and
mindful
of the
history
we've
seen
together.
We have
gathered
under
this
Capitol
dome in
moments
of
national
mourning
and
national
achievement.
We have
served
America
through
one of
the most
consequential
periods
of our
history
-- and
it has
been my
honor to
serve
with
you.
In a
system
of two
parties,
two
chambers,
and two
elected
branches,
there
will
always
be
differences
and
debate.
But even
tough
debates
can be
conducted
in a
civil
tone,
and our
differences
cannot
be
allowed
to
harden
into
anger.
To
confront
the
great
issues
before
us, we
must act
in a
spirit
of
goodwill
and
respect
for one
another
-- and I
will do
my part.
Tonight
the
state of
our
Union is
strong
-- and
together
we will
make it
stronger.
(Applause.)
In
this
decisive
year,
you and
I will
make
choices
that
determine
both the
future
and the
character
of our
country.
We will
choose
to act
confidently
in
pursuing
the
enemies
of
freedom
-- or
retreat
from our
duties
in the
hope of
an
easier
life. We
will
choose
to build
our
prosperity
by
leading
the
world
economy
-- or
shut
ourselves
off from
trade
and
opportunity.
In a
complex
and
challenging
time,
the road
of
isolationism
and
protectionism
may seem
broad
and
inviting
-- yet
it ends
in
danger
and
decline.
The only
way to
protect
our
people,
the only
way to
secure
the
peace,
the only
way to
control
our
destiny
is by
our
leadership
-- so
the
United
States
of
America
will
continue
to lead.
(Applause.)
Abroad,
our
nation
is
committed
to an
historic,
long-term
goal --
we seek
the end
of
tyranny
in our
world.
Some
dismiss
that
goal as
misguided
idealism.
In
reality,
the
future
security
of
America
depends
on it.
On
September
the
11th,
2001, we
found
that
problems
originating
in a
failed
and
oppressive
state
7,000
miles
away
could
bring
murder
and
destruction
to our
country.
Dictatorships
shelter
terrorists,
and feed
resentment
and
radicalism,
and seek
weapons
of mass
destruction.
Democracies
replace
resentment
with
hope,
respect
the
rights
of their
citizens
and
their
neighbors,
and join
the
fight
against
terror.
Every
step
toward
freedom
in the
world
makes
our
country
safer --
so we
will act
boldly
in
freedom's
cause.
(Applause.)
Far
from
being a
hopeless
dream,
the
advance
of
freedom
is the
great
story of
our
time. In
1945,
there
were
about
two
dozen
lonely
democracies
in the
world.
Today,
there
are 122.
And
we're
writing
a new
chapter
in the
story of
self-government
-- with
women
lining
up to
vote in
Afghanistan,
and
millions
of
Iraqis
marking
their
liberty
with
purple
ink, and
men and
women
from
Lebanon
to Egypt
debating
the
rights
of
individuals
and the
necessity
of
freedom.
At the
start of
2006,
more
than
half the
people
of our
world
live in
democratic
nations.
And we
do not
forget
the
other
half --
in
places
like
Syria
and
Burma,
Zimbabwe,
North
Korea,
and Iran
--
because
the
demands
of
justice,
and the
peace of
this
world,
require
their
freedom,
as well.
(Applause.)
No
one can
deny the
success
of
freedom,
but some
men rage
and
fight
against
it. And
one of
the main
sources
of
reaction
and
opposition
is
radical
Islam --
the
perversion
by a few
of a
noble
faith
into an
ideology
of
terror
and
death.
Terrorists
like bin
Laden
are
serious
about
mass
murder
-- and
all of
us must
take
their
declared
intentions
seriously.
They
seek to
impose a
heartless
system
of
totalitarian
control
throughout
the
Middle
East,
and arm
themselves
with
weapons
of mass
murder.
Their
aim is
to seize
power in
Iraq,
and use
it as a
safe
haven to
launch
attacks
against
America
and the
world.
Lacking
the
military
strength
to
challenge
us
directly,
the
terrorists
have
chosen
the
weapon
of fear.
When
they
murder
children
at a
school
in
Beslan,
or blow
up
commuters
in
London,
or
behead a
bound
captive,
the
terrorists
hope
these
horrors
will
break
our
will,
allowing
the
violent
to
inherit
the
Earth.
But they
have
miscalculated:
We love
our
freedom,
and we
will
fight to
keep it.
(Applause.)
In a
time of
testing,
we
cannot
find
security
by
abandoning
our
commitments
and
retreating
within
our
borders.
If we
were to
leave
these
vicious
attackers
alone,
they
would
not
leave us
alone.
They
would
simply
move the
battlefield
to our
own
shores.
There is
no peace
in
retreat.
And
there is
no honor
in
retreat.
By
allowing
radical
Islam to
work its
will --
by
leaving
an
assaulted
world to
fend for
itself
-- we
would
signal
to all
that we
no
longer
believe
in our
own
ideals,
or even
in our
own
courage.
But our
enemies
and our
friends
can be
certain:
The
United
States
will not
retreat
from the
world,
and we
will
never
surrender
to evil.
(Applause.)
America
rejects
the
false
comfort
of
isolationism.
We are
the
nation
that
saved
liberty
in
Europe,
and
liberated
death
camps,
and
helped
raise up
democracies,
and
faced
down an
evil
empire.
Once
again,
we
accept
the call
of
history
to
deliver
the
oppressed
and move
this
world
toward
peace.
We
remain
on the
offensive
against
terror
networks.
We have
killed
or
captured
many of
their
leaders
-- and
for the
others,
their
day will
come.
We
remain
on the
offensive
in
Afghanistan,
where a
fine
President
and a
National
Assembly
are
fighting
terror
while
building
the
institutions
of a new
democracy.
We're on
the
offensive
in Iraq,
with a
clear
plan for
victory.
First,
we're
helping
Iraqis
build an
inclusive
government,
so that
old
resentments
will be
eased
and the
insurgency
will be
marginalized.
Second,
we're
continuing
reconstruction
efforts,
and
helping
the
Iraqi
government
to fight
corruption
and
build a
modern
economy,
so all
Iraqis
can
experience
the
benefits
of
freedom.
And,
third,
we're
striking
terrorist
targets
while we
train
Iraqi
forces
that are
increasingly
capable
of
defeating
the
enemy.
Iraqis
are
showing
their
courage
every
day, and
we are
proud to
be their
allies
in the
cause of
freedom.
(Applause.)
Our
work in
Iraq is
difficult
because
our
enemy is
brutal.
But that
brutality
has not
stopped
the
dramatic
progress
of a new
democracy.
In less
than
three
years,
the
nation
has gone
from
dictatorship
to
liberation,
to
sovereignty,
to a
constitution,
to
national
elections.
At the
same
time,
our
coalition
has been
relentless
in
shutting
off
terrorist
infiltration,
clearing
out
insurgent
strongholds,
and
turning
over
territory
to Iraqi
security
forces.
I am
confident
in our
plan for
victory;
I am
confident
in the
will of
the
Iraqi
people;
I am
confident
in the
skill
and
spirit
of our
military.
Fellow
citizens,
we are
in this
fight to
win, and
we are
winning.
(Applause.)
The
road of
victory
is the
road
that
will
take our
troops
home. As
we make
progress
on the
ground,
and
Iraqi
forces
increasingly
take the
lead, we
should
be able
to
further
decrease
our
troop
levels
-- but
those
decisions
will be
made by
our
military
commanders,
not by
politicians
in
Washington,
D.C.
(Applause.)
Our
coalition
has
learned
from our
experience
in Iraq.
We've
adjusted
our
military
tactics
and
changed
our
approach
to
reconstruction.
Along
the way,
we have
benefitted
from
responsible
criticism
and
counsel
offered
by
members
of
Congress
of both
parties.
In the
coming
year, I
will
continue
to reach
out and
seek
your
good
advice.
Yet,
there is
a
difference
between
responsible
criticism
that
aims for
success,
and
defeatism
that
refuses
to
acknowledge
anything
but
failure.
(Applause.)
Hindsight
alone is
not
wisdom,
and
second-guessing
is not a
strategy.
(Applause.)
With
so much
in the
balance,
those of
us in
public
office
have a
duty to
speak
with
candor.
A sudden
withdrawal
of our
forces
from
Iraq
would
abandon
our
Iraqi
allies
to death
and
prison,
would
put men
like bin
Laden
and
Zarqawi
in
charge
of a
strategic
country,
and show
that a
pledge
from
America
means
little.
Members
of
Congress,
however
we feel
about
the
decisions
and
debates
of the
past,
our
nation
has only
one
option:
We must
keep our
word,
defeat
our
enemies,
and
stand
behind
the
American
military
in this
vital
mission.
(Applause.)
Our
men and
women in
uniform
are
making
sacrifices
-- and
showing
a sense
of duty
stronger
than all
fear.
They
know
what
it's
like to
fight
house to
house in
a maze
of
streets,
to wear
heavy
gear in
the
desert
heat, to
see a
comrade
killed
by a
roadside
bomb.
And
those
who know
the
costs
also
know the
stakes.
Marine
Staff
Sergeant
Dan Clay
was
killed
last
month
fighting
in
Fallujah.
He left
behind a
letter
to his
family,
but his
words
could
just as
well be
addressed
to every
American.
Here is
what Dan
wrote:
"I know
what
honor
is. … It
has been
an honor
to
protect
and
serve
all of
you. I
faced
death
with the
secure
knowledge
that you
would
not have
to….
Never
falter!
Don't
hesitate
to honor
and
support
those of
us who
have the
honor of
protecting
that
which is
worth
protecting."
Staff
Sergeant
Dan
Clay's
wife,
Lisa,
and his
mom and
dad,
Sara Jo
and Bud,
are with
us this
evening.
Welcome.
(Applause.)
Our
nation
is
grateful
to the
fallen,
who live
in the
memory
of our
country.
We're
grateful
to all
who
volunteer
to wear
our
nation's
uniform
-- and
as we
honor
our
brave
troops,
let us
never
forget
the
sacrifices
of
America's
military
families.
(Applause.)
Our
offensive
against
terror
involves
more
than
military
action.
Ultimately,
the only
way to
defeat
the
terrorists
is to
defeat
their
dark
vision
of
hatred
and fear
by
offering
the
hopeful
alternative
of
political
freedom
and
peaceful
change.
So the
United
States
of
America
supports
democratic
reform
across
the
broader
Middle
East.
Elections
are
vital,
but they
are only
the
beginning.
Raising
up a
democracy
requires
the rule
of law,
and
protection
of
minorities,
and
strong,
accountable
institutions
that
last
longer
than a
single
vote.
The
great
people
of Egypt
have
voted in
a
multi-party
presidential
election
-- and
now
their
government
should
open
paths of
peaceful
opposition
that
will
reduce
the
appeal
of
radicalism.
The
Palestinian
people
have
voted in
elections.
And now
the
leaders
of Hamas
must
recognize
Israel,
disarm,
reject
terrorism,
and work
for
lasting
peace.
(Applause.)
Saudi
Arabia
has
taken
the
first
steps of
reform
-- now
it can
offer
its
people a
better
future
by
pressing
forward
with
those
efforts.
Democracies
in the
Middle
East
will not
look
like our
own,
because
they
will
reflect
the
traditions
of their
own
citizens.
Yet
liberty
is the
future
of every
nation
in the
Middle
East,
because
liberty
is the
right
and hope
of all
humanity.
(Applause.)
The
same is
true of
Iran, a
nation
now held
hostage
by a
small
clerical
elite
that is
isolating
and
repressing
its
people.
The
regime
in that
country
sponsors
terrorists
in the
Palestinian
territories
and in
Lebanon
-- and
that
must
come to
an end.
(Applause.)
The
Iranian
government
is
defying
the
world
with its
nuclear
ambitions,
and the
nations
of the
world
must not
permit
the
Iranian
regime
to gain
nuclear
weapons.
(Applause.)
America
will
continue
to rally
the
world to
confront
these
threats.
Tonight,
let me
speak
directly
to the
citizens
of Iran:
America
respects
you, and
we
respect
your
country.
We
respect
your
right to
choose
your own
future
and win
your own
freedom.
And our
nation
hopes
one day
to be
the
closest
of
friends
with a
free and
democratic
Iran.
(Applause.)
To
overcome
dangers
in our
world,
we must
also
take the
offensive
by
encouraging
economic
progress,
and
fighting
disease,
and
spreading
hope in
hopeless
lands.
Isolationism
would
not only
tie our
hands in
fighting
enemies,
it would
keep us
from
helping
our
friends
in
desperate
need. We
show
compassion
abroad
because
Americans
believe
in the
God-given
dignity
and
worth of
a
villager
with
HIV/AIDS,
or an
infant
with
malaria,
or a
refugee
fleeing
genocide,
or a
young
girl
sold
into
slavery.
We also
show
compassion
abroad
because
regions
overwhelmed
by
poverty,
corruption,
and
despair
are
sources
of
terrorism,
and
organized
crime,
and
human
trafficking,
and the
drug
trade.
In
recent
years,
you and
I have
taken
unprecedented
action
to fight
AIDS and
malaria,
expand
the
education
of
girls,
and
reward
developing
nations
that are
moving
forward
with
economic
and
political
reform.
For
people
everywhere,
the
United
States
is a
partner
for a
better
life.
Short-changing
these
efforts
would
increase
the
suffering
and
chaos of
our
world,
undercut
our
long-term
security,
and dull
the
conscience
of our
country.
I urge
members
of
Congress
to serve
the
interests
of
America
by
showing
the
compassion
of
America.
Our
country
must
also
remain
on the
offensive
against
terrorism
here at
home.
The
enemy
has not
lost the
desire
or
capability
to
attack
us.
Fortunately,
this
nation
has
superb
professionals
in law
enforcement,
intelligence,
the
military,
and
homeland
security.
These
men and
women
are
dedicating
their
lives,
protecting
us all,
and they
deserve
our
support
and our
thanks.
(Applause.)
They
also
deserve
the same
tools
they
already
use to
fight
drug
trafficking
and
organized
crime --
so I ask
you to
reauthorize
the
Patriot
Act.
(Applause.)
It is
said
that
prior to
the
attacks
of
September
the
11th,
our
government
failed
to
connect
the dots
of the
conspiracy.
We now
know
that two
of the
hijackers
in the
United
States
placed
telephone
calls to
al Qaeda
operatives
overseas.
But we
did not
know
about
their
plans
until it
was too
late. So
to
prevent
another
attack
–- based
on
authority
given to
me by
the
Constitution
and by
statute
-- I
have
authorized
a
terrorist
surveillance
program
to
aggressively
pursue
the
international
communications
of
suspected
al Qaeda
operatives
and
affiliates
to and
from
America.
Previous
Presidents
have
used the
same
constitutional
authority
I have,
and
federal
courts
have
approved
the use
of that
authority.
Appropriate
members
of
Congress
have
been
kept
informed.
The
terrorist
surveillance
program
has
helped
prevent
terrorist
attacks.
It
remains
essential
to the
security
of
America.
If there
are
people
inside
our
country
who are
talking
with al
Qaeda,
we want
to know
about
it,
because
we will
not sit
back and
wait to
be hit
again.
(Applause.)
In
all
these
areas --
from the
disruption
of
terror
networks,
to
victory
in Iraq,
to the
spread
of
freedom
and hope
in
troubled
regions
-- we
need the
support
of our
friends
and
allies.
To draw
that
support,
we must
always
be clear
in our
principles
and
willing
to act.
The only
alternative
to
American
leadership
is a
dramatically
more
dangerous
and
anxious
world.
Yet we
also
choose
to lead
because
it is a
privilege
to serve
the
values
that
gave us
birth.
American
leaders
-- from
Roosevelt
to
Truman
to
Kennedy
to
Reagan
--
rejected
isolation
and
retreat,
because
they
knew
that
America
is
always
more
secure
when
freedom
is on
the
march.
Our
own
generation
is in a
long war
against
a
determined
enemy --
a war
that
will be
fought
by
Presidents
of both
parties,
who will
need
steady
bipartisan
support
from the
Congress.
And
tonight
I ask
for
yours.
Together,
let us
protect
our
country,
support
the men
and
women
who
defend
us, and
lead
this
world
toward
freedom.
(Applause.)
Here
at home,
America
also has
a great
opportunity:
We will
build
the
prosperity
of our
country
by
strengthening
our
economic
leadership
in the
world.
Our
economy
is
healthy
and
vigorous,
and
growing
faster
than
other
major
industrialized
nations.
In the
last
two-and-a-half
years,
America
has
created
4.6
million
new jobs
-- more
than
Japan
and the
European
Union
combined.
(Applause.)
Even in
the face
of
higher
energy
prices
and
natural
disasters,
the
American
people
have
turned
in an
economic
performance
that is
the envy
of the
world.
The
American
economy
is
preeminent,
but we
cannot
afford
to be
complacent.
In a
dynamic
world
economy,
we are
seeing
new
competitors,
like
China
and
India,
and this
creates
uncertainty,
which
makes it
easier
to feed
people's
fears.
So we're
seeing
some old
temptations
return.
Protectionists
want to
escape
competition,
pretending
that we
can keep
our high
standard
of
living
while
walling
off our
economy.
Others
say that
the
government
needs to
take a
larger
role in
directing
the
economy,
centralizing
more
power in
Washington
and
increasing
taxes.
We hear
claims
that
immigrants
are
somehow
bad for
the
economy
-- even
though
this
economy
could
not
function
without
them.
(Applause.)
All
these
are
forms of
economic
retreat,
and they
lead in
the same
direction
--
toward a
stagnant
and
second-rate
economy.
Tonight
I will
set out
a better
path: an
agenda
for a
nation
that
competes
with
confidence;
an
agenda
that
will
raise
standards
of
living
and
generate
new
jobs.
Americans
should
not fear
our
economic
future,
because
we
intend
to shape
it.
Keeping
America
competitive
begins
with
keeping
our
economy
growing.
And our
economy
grows
when
Americans
have
more of
their
own
money to
spend,
save,
and
invest.
In the
last
five
years,
the tax
relief
you
passed
has left
$880
billion
in the
hands of
American
workers,
investors,
small
businesses,
and
families
-- and
they
have
used it
to help
produce
more
than
four
years of
uninterrupted
economic
growth.
(Applause.)
Yet the
tax
relief
is set
to
expire
in the
next few
years.
If we do
nothing,
American
families
will
face a
massive
tax
increase
they do
not
expect
and will
not
welcome.
Because
America
needs
more
than a
temporary
expansion,
we need
more
than
temporary
tax
relief.
I urge
the
Congress
to act
responsibly,
and make
the tax
cuts
permanent.
(Applause.)
Keeping
America
competitive
requires
us to be
good
stewards
of tax
dollars.
Every
year of
my
presidency,
we've
reduced
the
growth
of
non-security
discretionary
spending,
and last
year you
passed
bills
that cut
this
spending.
This
year my
budget
will cut
it
again,
and
reduce
or
eliminate
more
than 140
programs
that are
performing
poorly
or not
fulfilling
essential
priorities.
By
passing
these
reforms,
we will
save the
American
taxpayer
another
$14
billion
next
year,
and stay
on track
to cut
the
deficit
in half
by 2009.
(Applause.)
I am
pleased
that
members
of
Congress
are
working
on
earmark
reform,
because
the
federal
budget
has too
many
special
interest
projects.
(Applause.)
And we
can
tackle
this
problem
together,
if you
pass the
line-item
veto.
(Applause.)
We
must
also
confront
the
larger
challenge
of
mandatory
spending,
or
entitlements.
This
year,
the
first of
about 78
million
baby
boomers
turn 60,
including
two of
my Dad's
favorite
people
-- me
and
President
Clinton.
(Laughter.)
This
milestone
is more
than a
personal
crisis
--
(laughter)
-- it is
a
national
challenge.
The
retirement
of the
baby
boom
generation
will put
unprecedented
strains
on the
federal
government.
By 2030,
spending
for
Social
Security,
Medicare
and
Medicaid
alone
will be
almost
60
percent
of the
entire
federal
budget.
And that
will
present
future
Congresses
with
impossible
choices
--
staggering
tax
increases,
immense
deficits,
or deep
cuts in
every
category
of
spending.
Congress
did not
act last
year on
my
proposal
to save
Social
Security
--
(applause)
-- yet
the
rising
cost of
entitlements
is a
problem
that is
not
going
away.
(Applause.)
And
every
year we
fail to
act, the
situation
gets
worse.
So
tonight,
I ask
you to
join me
in
creating
a
commission
to
examine
the full
impact
of baby
boom
retirements
on
Social
Security,
Medicare,
and
Medicaid.
This
commission
should
include
members
of
Congress
of both
parties,
and
offer
bipartisan
solutions.
We need
to put
aside
partisan
politics
and work
together
and get
this
problem
solved.
(Applause.)
Keeping
America
competitive
requires
us to
open
more
markets
for all
that
Americans
make and
grow.
One out
of every
five
factory
jobs in
America
is
related
to
global
trade,
and we
want
people
everywhere
to buy
American.
With
open
markets
and a
level
playing
field,
no one
can
out-produce
or
out-compete
the
American
worker.
(Applause.)
Keeping
America
competitive
requires
an
immigration
system
that
upholds
our
laws,
reflects
our
values,
and
serves
the
interests
of our
economy.
Our
nation
needs
orderly
and
secure
borders.
(Applause.)
To meet
this
goal, we
must
have
stronger
immigration
enforcement
and
border
protection.
(Applause.)
And we
must
have a
rational,
humane
guest
worker
program
that
rejects
amnesty,
allows
temporary
jobs for
people
who seek
them
legally,
and
reduces
smuggling
and
crime at
the
border.
(Applause.)
Keeping
America
competitive
requires
affordable
health
care.
(Applause.)
Our
government
has a
responsibility
to
provide
health
care for
the poor
and the
elderly,
and we
are
meeting
that
responsibility.
(Applause.)
For all
Americans
-- for
all
Americans,
we must
confront
the
rising
cost of
care,
strengthen
the
doctor-patient
relationship,
and help
people
afford
the
insurance
coverage
they
need.
(Applause.)
We
will
make
wider
use of
electronic
records
and
other
health
information
technology,
to help
control
costs
and
reduce
dangerous
medical
errors.
We will
strengthen
health
savings
accounts
--
making
sure
individuals
and
small
business
employees
can buy
insurance
with the
same
advantages
that
people
working
for big
businesses
now get.
(Applause.)
We will
do more
to make
this
coverage
portable,
so
workers
can
switch
jobs
without
having
to worry
about
losing
their
health
insurance.
(Applause.)
And
because
lawsuits
are
driving
many
good
doctors
out of
practice
--
leaving
women in
nearly
1,500
American
counties
without
a single
OB/GYN
-- I ask
the
Congress
to pass
medical
liability
reform
this
year.
(Applause.)
Keeping
America
competitive
requires
affordable
energy.
And here
we have
a
serious
problem:
America
is
addicted
to oil,
which is
often
imported
from
unstable
parts of
the
world.
The best
way to
break
this
addiction
is
through
technology.
Since
2001, we
have
spent
nearly
$10
billion
to
develop
cleaner,
cheaper,
and more
reliable
alternative
energy
sources
-- and
we are
on the
threshold
of
incredible
advances.
So
tonight,
I
announce
the
Advanced
Energy
Initiative
-- a
22-percent
increase
in
clean-energy
research
-- at
the
Department
of
Energy,
to push
for
breakthroughs
in two
vital
areas.
To
change
how we
power
our
homes
and
offices,
we will
invest
more in
zero-emission
coal-fired
plants,
revolutionary
solar
and wind
technologies,
and
clean,
safe
nuclear
energy.
(Applause.)
We
must
also
change
how we
power
our
automobiles.
We will
increase
our
research
in
better
batteries
for
hybrid
and
electric
cars,
and in
pollution-free
cars
that run
on
hydrogen.
We'll
also
fund
additional
research
in
cutting-edge
methods
of
producing
ethanol,
not just
from
corn,
but from
wood
chips
and
stalks,
or
switch
grass.
Our goal
is to
make
this new
kind of
ethanol
practical
and
competitive
within
six
years.
(Applause.)
Breakthroughs
on this
and
other
new
technologies
will
help us
reach
another
great
goal: to
replace
more
than 75
percent
of our
oil
imports
from the
Middle
East by
2025.
(Applause.)
By
applying
the
talent
and
technology
of
America,
this
country
can
dramatically
improve
our
environment,
move
beyond a
petroleum-based
economy,
and make
our
dependence
on
Middle
Eastern
oil a
thing of
the
past.
(Applause.)
And
to keep
America
competitive,
one
commitment
is
necessary
above
all: We
must
continue
to lead
the
world in
human
talent
and
creativity.
Our
greatest
advantage
in the
world
has
always
been our
educated,
hardworking,
ambitious
people
-- and
we're
going to
keep
that
edge.
Tonight
I
announce
an
American
Competitiveness
Initiative,
to
encourage
innovation
throughout
our
economy,
and to
give our
nation's
children
a firm
grounding
in math
and
science.
(Applause.)
First, I
propose
to
double
the
federal
commitment
to the
most
critical
basic
research
programs
in the
physical
sciences
over the
next 10
years.
This
funding
will
support
the work
of
America's
most
creative
minds as
they
explore
promising
areas
such as
nanotechnology,
supercomputing,
and
alternative
energy
sources.
Second,
I
propose
to make
permanent
the
research
and
development
tax
credit
--
(applause)
-- to
encourage
bolder
private-sector
initiatives
in
technology.
With
more
research
in both
the
public
and
private
sectors,
we will
improve
our
quality
of life
-- and
ensure
that
America
will
lead the
world in
opportunity
and
innovation
for
decades
to come.
(Applause.)
Third,
we need
to
encourage
children
to take
more
math and
science,
and to
make
sure
those
courses
are
rigorous
enough
to
compete
with
other
nations.
We've
made a
good
start in
the
early
grades
with the
No Child
Left
Behind
Act,
which is
raising
standards
and
lifting
test
scores
across
our
country.
Tonight
I
propose
to train
70,000
high
school
teachers
to lead
advanced-placement
courses
in math
and
science,
bring
30,000
math and
science
professionals
to teach
in
classrooms,
and give
early
help to
students
who
struggle
with
math, so
they
have a
better
chance
at good,
high-wage
jobs. If
we
ensure
that
America's
children
succeed
in life,
they
will
ensure
that
America
succeeds
in the
world.
(Applause.)
Preparing
our
nation
to
compete
in the
world is
a goal
that all
of us
can
share. I
urge you
to
support
the
American
Competitiveness
Initiative,
and
together
we will
show the
world
what the
American
people
can
achieve.
America
is a
great
force
for
freedom
and
prosperity.
Yet our
greatness
is not
measured
in power
or
luxuries,
but by
who we
are and
how we
treat
one
another.
So we
strive
to be a
compassionate,
decent,
hopeful
society.
In
recent
years,
America
has
become a
more
hopeful
nation.
Violent
crime
rates
have
fallen
to their
lowest
levels
since
the
1970s.
Welfare
cases
have
dropped
by more
than
half
over the
past
decade.
Drug use
among
youth is
down 19
percent
since
2001.
There
are
fewer
abortions
in
America
than at
any
point in
the last
three
decades,
and the
number
of
children
born to
teenage
mothers
has been
falling
for a
dozen
years in
a row.
(Applause.)
These
gains
are
evidence
of a
quiet
transformation
-- a
revolution
of
conscience,
in which
a rising
generation
is
finding
that a
life of
personal
responsibility
is a
life of
fulfillment.
Government
has
played a
role.
Wise
policies,
such as
welfare
reform
and drug
education
and
support
for
abstinence
and
adoption
have
made a
difference
in the
character
of our
country.
And
everyone
here
tonight,
Democrat
and
Republican,
has a
right to
be proud
of this
record.
(Applause.)
Yet
many
Americans,
especially
parents,
still
have
deep
concerns
about
the
direction
of our
culture,
and the
health
of our
most
basic
institutions.
They're
concerned
about
unethical
conduct
by
public
officials,
and
discouraged
by
activist
courts
that try
to
redefine
marriage.
They
worry
about
children
in our
society
who need
direction
and
love,
and
about
fellow
citizens
still
displaced
by
natural
disaster,
and
about
suffering
caused
by
treatable
diseases.
As we
look at
these
challenges,
we must
never
give in
to the
belief
that
America
is in
decline,
or that
our
culture
is
doomed
to
unravel.
The
American
people
know
better
than
that. We
have
proven
the
pessimists
wrong
before
-- and
we will
do it
again.
(Applause.)
A
hopeful
society
depends
on
courts
that
deliver
equal
justice
under
the law.
The
Supreme
Court
now has
two
superb
new
members
-- new
members
on its
bench:
Chief
Justice
John
Roberts
and
Justice
Sam
Alito.
(Applause.)
I thank
the
Senate
for
confirming
both of
them. I
will
continue
to
nominate
men and
women
who
understand
that
judges
must be
servants
of the
law, and
not
legislate
from the
bench.
(Applause.)
Today
marks
the
official
retirement
of a
very
special
American.
For 24
years of
faithful
service
to our
nation,
the
United
States
is
grateful
to
Justice
Sandra
Day
O'Connor.
(Applause.)
A
hopeful
society
has
institutions
of
science
and
medicine
that do
not cut
ethical
corners,
and that
recognize
the
matchless
value of
every
life.
Tonight
I ask
you to
pass
legislation
to
prohibit
the most
egregious
abuses
of
medical
research:
human
cloning
in all
its
forms,
creating
or
implanting
embryos
for
experiments,
creating
human-animal
hybrids,
and
buying,
selling,
or
patenting
human
embryos.
Human
life is
a gift
from our
Creator
-- and
that
gift
should
never be
discarded,
devalued
or put
up for
sale.
(Applause.)
A
hopeful
society
expects
elected
officials
to
uphold
the
public
trust.
(Applause.)
Honorable
people
in both
parties
are
working
on
reforms
to
strengthen
the
ethical
standards
of
Washington
-- I
support
your
efforts.
Each of
us has
made a
pledge
to be
worthy
of
public
responsibility
-- and
that is
a pledge
we must
never
forget,
never
dismiss,
and
never
betray.
(Applause.)
As we
renew
the
promise
of our
institutions,
let us
also
show the
character
of
America
in our
compassion
and care
for one
another.
A
hopeful
society
gives
special
attention
to
children
who lack
direction
and
love.
Through
the
Helping
America's
Youth
Initiative,
we are
encouraging
caring
adults
to get
involved
in the
life of
a child
-- and
this
good
work is
being
led by
our
First
Lady,
Laura
Bush.
(Applause.)
This
year we
will add
resources
to
encourage
young
people
to stay
in
school,
so more
of
America's
youth
can
raise
their
sights
and
achieve
their
dreams.
A
hopeful
society
comes to
the aid
of
fellow
citizens
in times
of
suffering
and
emergency
-- and
stays at
it until
they're
back on
their
feet. So
far the
federal
government
has
committed
$85
billion
to the
people
of the
Gulf
Coast
and New
Orleans.
We're
removing
debris
and
repairing
highways
and
rebuilding
stronger
levees.
We're
providing
business
loans
and
housing
ass |