The Inauguration Speech Barack Obama Did Not Make.
I was really excited for Barack Obama's re-election and inauguration and excited to see the prosperity and growth of the next four years. Still, I felt his speech lacked some luster. The following is the speech I would helped him right.
....
The
underlying foreign policy of the United States of America rests on a belief
that by spreading democracy, opening markets and increasing complex
interdependence, prosperity and peace will increase while wars and poverty end. America cannot go at it alone, it
has to have strong, unbreakable alliances with like-minded nations and
professional cooperation with regional powers.
America must prioritize its economic dominance by at times forcing its
corporations to protect and tend to the national interest, maintaining its
manufacturing base, its dominance of aero-space industries and technological
innovation while encouraging and celebrating the spirit of entrepreneurship and
innovation. It should
prioritize trade with like-minded nations and allies practicing fair trade,
caring for citizen needs, cooperating with the American government and
advancing human rights.
America needs to lead with noble
virtue; tough, but just, magnanimous and honest in its guidance of the world
towards a better tomorrow. America needs to continue its fight
against Al-Qaeda in a cost effective, humane way that is sufficiently vicious
to defeat and destroy our enemies; particularly the nexus of terror groups,
rogue leaders and wmds while rewarding and protecting the humanitarian
aspirations and success of allied nations.
I have outlined our new
strategy to combat Al-Qaeda and believe that routing out Al-Qaeda must persist
to be a priority for the American Government. I believe its even more important, however, that America
maintains its economic edge over China and increases its support and
collaboration with regional allies such as South Korea, Japan, Taiwan and
India, but also nations such as Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam.
America must check the influence
of Iran and harshly curtail its support of terrorist groups such as Hamas and
Hezbollah and aggressively prevent its acquisition of a nuclear weapon. Still, America must recognize the
powerful traditions of the Persian people and continue to search for common
ground, prevent armed conflict and allow for its more benevolent investments in
the region.
America and Russia must get
over recent set backs over Syria and build upon the motivation of the New Start
treaties, find common ground on the mutual threat of Islamist terror groups
and the prospective usage of WMDS by such groups while continuing improve trade and security relations.
In the collapse of Assad’s regime in
Syria, America cannot sit back on the sidelines allowing for biological and
chemical weapons to be moved a short two hours drive to Hezbollah controlled
Lebanon or to the Al-Qaeda aligned elements of Jihadist fighters in the region
to dictate the new Syria that emerges in the aftermath.
America must grow its CIA assets, but discipline their tactics away from
torture, towards the effective management of intelligence cells and development
of assets within the highest levels of rival groups. Fighting Al-Qaeda across North Africa is going to
demand better coordination between the State Department, the CIA and Special
Forces to locate and execute enemy targets with guile and precision. Understanding traditional Arab trade
routes will allow us to identify the flow of arms, money and information, imbed
assets within it to break up illicit supply chains and capture Al-Qaeda aligned
terrorists with increasing focus on Libya, Nigeria, Algeria and Mali to
complement ongoing efforts in Yemen, Sudan, Somalia and Afghanistan. In the process, America's efforts to improve security will comfort investor security and allowing for growth in these fragile nations that can help eradicate the conditions which breed terrorism.
Even in a
high-tech, tightly interconnected globalized world, America cannot neglect traditional
Industry and needs to maintain its edge in Energy, Steel, Manufacturing and
Farming while continuing to innovate new technologies and provide for the world’s greatest universities.
America is inexcusably behind when it
comes to elementary and high-school education. It cannot afford to see children left behind. America may need to lengthen school
hours and the school year, but before doing so must also improve the quality of
the education and usage of time in the classroom. Multiculturalism has always posed an obstacle when it
should be a cosmopolitan blessing, in a globalized economy America needs to
graduate a higher percentage of bilingual students than any other nation in the
world and in doing so cannot only guarantee its future global dominance, but
also reduce internal wealth disparities along ethnic lines. Education needs to cover more real world subjects and
activities while improving athletics, music and arts programs to complement
science, math, history and literature.
There is so much talk about healthcare, but in truth, health can best be achieved by the individual taking care of their health. Every individual consciously has the ability to exercise and eat healthy or not. From a young age we must instill an ethic of health consciousness that lowers the costs of health care in the future. Making Health Care Affordable reforms were a step in the right direction, but more legislation is needed to help curtail the inflation of health care costs and improve compliance. Cost should not be a prohibitive or determining factor in health treatment.
America needs to shift away from consumer culture and become
an entrepreneur and creator culture. We should not be wondering what to buy next, we should
be wondering what to build, invent and create next.
We should be conscientious in how we spend and how we expect companies to
treat their employs, control quality, care for the environment and protect
national interests.
If America wants to be the wealthy country it has been since
WWI, it needs to get back to what made it wealthy, importing raw materials,
exporting finished products with workers paid generous compensations to help
bolster a strong and flourishing middle class. America's economic success depends on these simple notions, and nobody can get around this
obvious economic truth.
For too long, the efforts of corporations to cut costs has
driven production oversees causing unsustainable gaps in the economic
ecosystem that effect the entire economic system and so as jaw bridge economics
comes to an end, a return to traditional post World War II style economics is
eminent.
Anti-government sentiment and political campaigns funded by
corporations to elect officials into government legislative positions to
sabotage the functionality of government will never win popular elections ever
again and patience with their obstinate behavior is growing thin. The actions of certain Republicans in
Congress and leaders of multi-national corporations walk a thin line between
organized crime and treason. Legitimate
businesses and business people should not be forced to compete with lawless
enemies of our Republic. America
needs to remember that its market economic system is not the end all of its
existence, that it also has a democratic political system and a legal system
based on notions of common law.
We need to separate theological questions of why from the scientific
questions of how and boldly embrace leadership roles within our communities and
businesses to build upon the foundation laid by previous generations and create an exceptional nation of unrivaled greatness. God Bless America!
1 Comments:
I thought Barack Obama's State of the Union Address was phenomenal and point to the 91% of his audience who reported a positive response to the speech to suggest that his doubling down on progressive values is what America wants, needs and deserves. Bad bosses, incredulous companies, conservatives and racists be where, the labor board, fbi and homeland security are coming.
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