Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
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Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
It happened just now. I've never heard a better statement of our ideals as a nation. Obama's language can make flowers grow. When the transcript becomes available, I will post it.
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Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
[quote="Bellelettres"]
Obama's language can make flowers grow.
Horse manure does have that effect.
Obama's language can make flowers grow.
Horse manure does have that effect.
Cyril Ignatius
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Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
Thanks Belle. I was under the impression Holder was already on the job, and I look forward to seeing the text....also the FOX take on what kind of teleprompter he was using at the time. Hannity in particular appears obsessed with the fact Obama lacks the Bush flair for extemporaneous eloquence. Chances are I can check out the video on C-Span this evening also!
It's good to be back among friends from the past.
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Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
I never thought Bush had such a flair. Reagan sure did. And Clinton as well. Bush was often inarticulate. However, I have heard it said that back in Texas, among people who speak "Texan", Bush is seen as quite a good speaker, and that when he is in Washington, he goes into a mode of speech (Washingtonian?) that he is not comfortable with, and is less effective with.Dennis Spath wrote:Thanks Belle. I was under the impression Holder was already on the job, and I look forward to seeing the text....also the FOX take on what kind of teleprompter he was using at the time. Hannity in particular appears obsessed with the fact Obama lacks the Bush flair for extemporaneous eloquence. Chances are I can check out the video on C-Span this evening also!
Cyril Ignatius
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Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
This is remarkable . . . how? The guy speaks at the drop of an invitation. It's campaigning to him. I think he would seize an opportunity to campaign at the installation of a Port-a-Potty. Holder was sworn in weeks ago. What's this "installation" business? Holder settled in after redecorating his office?Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
Omagod! Get a life, Belle. Spare us the idolatry.Bellelettres wrote: Obama's language can make flowers grow. When the transcript becomes available, I will post it.
We haven't had one of those since John Mitchell. We know how well that worked out: Mitchell was instrumental in "shaking down" prosecution targets for large contributions to the party and Nixon's operations. I expect the same behaviors from Holder; however, they will not be reported by the MSM, because such revelations would reflect badly on Obama. Well, they won. God help us! If the Republicans had still been in charge, he never would have been nominated, never mind confirmed.The new attorney general had served as a co-chairman of the Obama presidential campaign
Corlyss
Contessa d'EM, a carbon-based life form
Contessa d'EM, a carbon-based life form
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Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
Spare me the sneering, Corlyss. (That's a forlorn request if I ever made one!)
Here are Obama's remarks.
*********************
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE INSTALLATION OF ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC HOLDER
George Washington University
Washington, D.C.
10:23 A.M.
THE PRESIDENT: I am proud to be here today for the installation of my friend, Eric Holder, as the 82nd Attorney General of the United States. (Applause.)...
There are few more important jobs in our nation's government than that of Attorney General. As President, I swore an oath to preserve, protect and defend our Constitution. And as Eric himself has said, it is the Attorney General who serves as "the guardian of that revered document" that is the basis of our laws and the driving force of our democracy.
And that's what's always distinguished this nation -- that we are bound together not by a shared bloodline or allegiance to any one leader or faith or creed, but by an adherence to a set of ideals. That's the core notion of our founding -- that ours is a "government of laws, and not men." It is the motto inscribed on the library of my law school alma mater: "Not under man but under God and law."
But today, as we install the man charged with upholding our laws, we are reminded that the work of translating law into justice -- of ensuring that those words put to paper more than two centuries ago mean something for all of our people -- that is a fundamentally human process.
It is what so many of you -- the men and women of our Justice Department -- do every single day: keeping us safe from terrorist attacks; bringing to justice those who would do us harm; rooting out corruption and fighting violent crime; protecting our markets from manipulation and our environment from pollution; and upholding our most fundamental civil rights.
That's why I sought to appoint an Attorney General who understands that justice isn't about some abstract legal theory, or footnote in a casebook -- it's about how our laws affect the daily realities of people's lives: whether they can make a living and care for their families; whether they feel safe in their own homes and welcome in their own nation.
I sought someone who recognizes the very real threats we face, but has the wisdom, in those hard-to-call cases, to find that fine balance between ensuring our security and preserving our liberty. And most of all, I was looking for someone who believes deeply enough in the American people's cause to serve as the American people's lawyer.
And taken together, I think that's a pretty good description of our new Attorney General. It's a reflection of how he was raised, and of the choices he's made throughout his life. Eric's father came to this country as a boy and served in the Army during the second World War. And even though he couldn't get served at a lunch counter in the nation he defended, he never stopped believing in its promise. He and Eric's mother worked hard to seize that promise for their sons and give them every opportunity to succeed.
But Eric was never content to achieve just for himself. Each time he rose, he worked to pull others up with him: mentoring young people in college; working for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund in law school; distinguishing himself as a prosecutor, a judge, and a leader in this department. All along, working tirelessly to right the balance of power so ordinary people could get a fair shake; all along, showing the independence of mind that justice requires -- never hesitating to take on members of his own party, including those to whom he owed his job. In fact, several months ago, Eric even had the audacity to comment to a reporter on my basketball skills. (Laughter.) He said, and I quote -- (laughter) -- here's what he said -- he said, "I'm not sure he's ready for my New York game." (Laughter.) We will see about that, Mr. Attorney General. (Laughter and applause.)
Now, I can't vouch for Eric's skills on the basketball court -- (laughter) -- but I can confirm that he is thoroughly prepared to take on the law enforcement challenges of this new century. As a student of history, he also knows history's lessons about what happens when we let politics and ideology cloud our judgment -- and let fear and anger, rather than reason, dictate our policy. These are mistakes he will not repeat. Because in the end, Eric comes to this job with only one agenda: to do what is right under the law.
It's no easy task. And it is one that falls to every member of this department, because our laws are only as effective, only as compassionate, only as fair as those who enforce them. In the end, our union is only as perfect as we are willing to work for. It endures only to the extent that we are willing to fight for the ideals on which it is based -- to do our part, as generations before us, to breathe new life into them with the more enlightened understandings of our time.
That has always been the core mission of this department. It is the story told by the murals that adorn the walls of your headquarters, installed years ago to illustrate the power of law to improve our lives.
Now I haven't yet seen it yet myself, but I'm told that one of these murals, painted back in the 1930s, depicts black children and white children attending school together, sitting side by side in the same classroom. This was years before Brown vs. Board of Education, at a time when Washington, D.C., was still a segregated city.
It is, to this day, a moving reminder that sometimes, law lags behind justice -- and it is up to us to bridge that distance. That's been the work of Eric Holder's life and so many of yours. I thank you for answering the call to serve this nation, and I look forward to working with you in the months and years ahead to meet the urgent challenges of our time.
So thank you, God bless you. Keep up the great work, and let's install our outstanding Attorney General. (Applause.)
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_off ... ic-Holder/
Here are Obama's remarks.
*********************
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE INSTALLATION OF ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC HOLDER
George Washington University
Washington, D.C.
10:23 A.M.
THE PRESIDENT: I am proud to be here today for the installation of my friend, Eric Holder, as the 82nd Attorney General of the United States. (Applause.)...
There are few more important jobs in our nation's government than that of Attorney General. As President, I swore an oath to preserve, protect and defend our Constitution. And as Eric himself has said, it is the Attorney General who serves as "the guardian of that revered document" that is the basis of our laws and the driving force of our democracy.
And that's what's always distinguished this nation -- that we are bound together not by a shared bloodline or allegiance to any one leader or faith or creed, but by an adherence to a set of ideals. That's the core notion of our founding -- that ours is a "government of laws, and not men." It is the motto inscribed on the library of my law school alma mater: "Not under man but under God and law."
But today, as we install the man charged with upholding our laws, we are reminded that the work of translating law into justice -- of ensuring that those words put to paper more than two centuries ago mean something for all of our people -- that is a fundamentally human process.
It is what so many of you -- the men and women of our Justice Department -- do every single day: keeping us safe from terrorist attacks; bringing to justice those who would do us harm; rooting out corruption and fighting violent crime; protecting our markets from manipulation and our environment from pollution; and upholding our most fundamental civil rights.
That's why I sought to appoint an Attorney General who understands that justice isn't about some abstract legal theory, or footnote in a casebook -- it's about how our laws affect the daily realities of people's lives: whether they can make a living and care for their families; whether they feel safe in their own homes and welcome in their own nation.
I sought someone who recognizes the very real threats we face, but has the wisdom, in those hard-to-call cases, to find that fine balance between ensuring our security and preserving our liberty. And most of all, I was looking for someone who believes deeply enough in the American people's cause to serve as the American people's lawyer.
And taken together, I think that's a pretty good description of our new Attorney General. It's a reflection of how he was raised, and of the choices he's made throughout his life. Eric's father came to this country as a boy and served in the Army during the second World War. And even though he couldn't get served at a lunch counter in the nation he defended, he never stopped believing in its promise. He and Eric's mother worked hard to seize that promise for their sons and give them every opportunity to succeed.
But Eric was never content to achieve just for himself. Each time he rose, he worked to pull others up with him: mentoring young people in college; working for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund in law school; distinguishing himself as a prosecutor, a judge, and a leader in this department. All along, working tirelessly to right the balance of power so ordinary people could get a fair shake; all along, showing the independence of mind that justice requires -- never hesitating to take on members of his own party, including those to whom he owed his job. In fact, several months ago, Eric even had the audacity to comment to a reporter on my basketball skills. (Laughter.) He said, and I quote -- (laughter) -- here's what he said -- he said, "I'm not sure he's ready for my New York game." (Laughter.) We will see about that, Mr. Attorney General. (Laughter and applause.)
Now, I can't vouch for Eric's skills on the basketball court -- (laughter) -- but I can confirm that he is thoroughly prepared to take on the law enforcement challenges of this new century. As a student of history, he also knows history's lessons about what happens when we let politics and ideology cloud our judgment -- and let fear and anger, rather than reason, dictate our policy. These are mistakes he will not repeat. Because in the end, Eric comes to this job with only one agenda: to do what is right under the law.
It's no easy task. And it is one that falls to every member of this department, because our laws are only as effective, only as compassionate, only as fair as those who enforce them. In the end, our union is only as perfect as we are willing to work for. It endures only to the extent that we are willing to fight for the ideals on which it is based -- to do our part, as generations before us, to breathe new life into them with the more enlightened understandings of our time.
That has always been the core mission of this department. It is the story told by the murals that adorn the walls of your headquarters, installed years ago to illustrate the power of law to improve our lives.
Now I haven't yet seen it yet myself, but I'm told that one of these murals, painted back in the 1930s, depicts black children and white children attending school together, sitting side by side in the same classroom. This was years before Brown vs. Board of Education, at a time when Washington, D.C., was still a segregated city.
It is, to this day, a moving reminder that sometimes, law lags behind justice -- and it is up to us to bridge that distance. That's been the work of Eric Holder's life and so many of yours. I thank you for answering the call to serve this nation, and I look forward to working with you in the months and years ahead to meet the urgent challenges of our time.
So thank you, God bless you. Keep up the great work, and let's install our outstanding Attorney General. (Applause.)
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_off ... ic-Holder/
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Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
You really are having a bad time, aren't you, Corlyss, because Obama won? It couldn't happen to a more deserving person.
Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
The problem is the American people want jobs to grow.Bellelettres wrote:It happened just now. I've never heard a better statement of our ideals as a nation. Obama's language can make flowers grow. When the transcript becomes available, I will post it.
"I guess we're all, or most of us, the wards of the nineteenth-century sciences which denied existence of anything it could not reason or explain. The things we couldn't explain went right on but not with our blessing... So many old and lovely things are stored in the world's attic, because we don't want them around us and we don't dare throw them out."
— John Steinbeck, The Winter of Our Discontent
"He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the LORD require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God."
- Micah 6:8
— John Steinbeck, The Winter of Our Discontent
"He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the LORD require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God."
- Micah 6:8
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- Location: Australia
Re: Obama speaks at Eric Holder installation
Bellelettres wrote:Spare me the sneering, Corlyss. (That's a forlorn request if I ever made one!)
Here are Obama's remarks.
*********************
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE INSTALLATION OF ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC HOLDER
George Washington University
Washington, D.C.
10:23 A.M.
THE PRESIDENT: I am proud to be here today for the installation of my friend, Eric Holder, as the 82nd Attorney General of the United States. (Applause.)...
There are few more important jobs in our nation's government than that of Attorney General. As President, I swore an oath to preserve, protect and defend our Constitution. And as Eric himself has said, it is the Attorney General who serves as "the guardian of that revered document" that is the basis of our laws and the driving force of our democracy.
And that's what's always distinguished this nation -- that we are bound together not by a shared bloodline or allegiance to any one leader or faith or creed, but by an adherence to a set of ideals. That's the core notion of our founding -- that ours is a "government of laws, and not men." It is the motto inscribed on the library of my law school alma mater: "Not under man but under God and law."
But today, as we install the man charged with upholding our laws, we are reminded that the work of translating law into justice -- of ensuring that those words put to paper more than two centuries ago mean something for all of our people -- that is a fundamentally human process.
It is what so many of you -- the men and women of our Justice Department -- do every single day: keeping us safe from terrorist attacks; bringing to justice those who would do us harm; rooting out corruption and fighting violent crime; protecting our markets from manipulation and our environment from pollution; and upholding our most fundamental civil rights.
That's why I sought to appoint an Attorney General who understands that justice isn't about some abstract legal theory, or footnote in a casebook -- it's about how our laws affect the daily realities of people's lives: whether they can make a living and care for their families; whether they feel safe in their own homes and welcome in their own nation.
I sought someone who recognizes the very real threats we face, but has the wisdom, in those hard-to-call cases, to find that fine balance between ensuring our security and preserving our liberty. And most of all, I was looking for someone who believes deeply enough in the American people's cause to serve as the American people's lawyer.
And taken together, I think that's a pretty good description of our new Attorney General. It's a reflection of how he was raised, and of the choices he's made throughout his life. Eric's father came to this country as a boy and served in the Army during the second World War. And even though he couldn't get served at a lunch counter in the nation he defended, he never stopped believing in its promise. He and Eric's mother worked hard to seize that promise for their sons and give them every opportunity to succeed.
But Eric was never content to achieve just for himself. Each time he rose, he worked to pull others up with him: mentoring young people in college; working for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund in law school; distinguishing himself as a prosecutor, a judge, and a leader in this department. All along, working tirelessly to right the balance of power so ordinary people could get a fair shake; all along, showing the independence of mind that justice requires -- never hesitating to take on members of his own party, including those to whom he owed his job. In fact, several months ago, Eric even had the audacity to comment to a reporter on my basketball skills. (Laughter.) He said, and I quote -- (laughter) -- here's what he said -- he said, "I'm not sure he's ready for my New York game." (Laughter.) We will see about that, Mr. Attorney General. (Laughter and applause.)
Now, I can't vouch for Eric's skills on the basketball court -- (laughter) -- but I can confirm that he is thoroughly prepared to take on the law enforcement challenges of this new century. As a student of history, he also knows history's lessons about what happens when we let politics and ideology cloud our judgment -- and let fear and anger, rather than reason, dictate our policy. These are mistakes he will not repeat. Because in the end, Eric comes to this job with only one agenda: to do what is right under the law.
It's no easy task. And it is one that falls to every member of this department, because our laws are only as effective, only as compassionate, only as fair as those who enforce them. In the end, our union is only as perfect as we are willing to work for. It endures only to the extent that we are willing to fight for the ideals on which it is based -- to do our part, as generations before us, to breathe new life into them with the more enlightened understandings of our time.
That has always been the core mission of this department. It is the story told by the murals that adorn the walls of your headquarters, installed years ago to illustrate the power of law to improve our lives.
Now I haven't yet seen it yet myself, but I'm told that one of these murals, painted back in the 1930s, depicts black children and white children attending school together, sitting side by side in the same classroom. This was years before Brown vs. Board of Education, at a time when Washington, D.C., was still a segregated city.
It is, to this day, a moving reminder that sometimes, law lags behind justice -- and it is up to us to bridge that distance. That's been the work of Eric Holder's life and so many of yours. I thank you for answering the call to serve this nation, and I look forward to working with you in the months and years ahead to meet the urgent challenges of our time.
So thank you, God bless you. Keep up the great work, and let's install our outstanding Attorney General. (Applause.)
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_off ... ic-Holder/
KUDOS TO THE SPEECHWRITER!!!!
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