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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!The president:
That last part didn't make the prepared remarks, though many heard those sentiments echoing throughout.
But what if Obama left Virginia's Wakefield High School, where he gave the speech, and graduated to another audience, say, the liberal arts college? How would he address the young men and women most loyal to his campaign? Would he, as conservatives fear, rally his zealots to socialism? Would his critics ease away from those fears due to the more mature audience?
I can envision such a speech. In fact, channeling my inner Obama, one of our nation's greatest speakers, I've already written it, below. A good venue would be Bowdoin, my college.
Ladies and gentlemen, the president of the United States:
But how would students react? Books in hand, would they crowd the library as they do Girl Talk concerts, or just shrug off the president's words and unpause their Xbox?Hello everybody. I'm here with the students of Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine.
(Raucous applause)
And we've got young men and women from all over America tuning in from dorm rooms and student centers. I'm glad you all could join us today.
It was not so long ago that I was a college student, too -- walking across the quad, cramming in the library, and letting loose on occasion. College was a really important time in my life, a point of inflection, when I began to confront the uncertainties of my life. When I grew up.
It was in my two years at Occidental, a liberal arts college in Los Angeles, that I found the inspiration of great professors, and experienced a diverse and active student body. It wasn't all fun and easy. There were moments I regret. Moral failures that stemmed from troubled teenage years and a struggle for identity and understanding. I turned to drugs to cope and to let go, and my story could have ended there.
But it was at college that I also took control. Instead of running away from the problems and uncertainties of my past I confronted them. It was in the self-reflection of my college years that I became the man I am today. That I went from young, confused Barry Obama to the still young, still confused, but hopeful and motivated Barack Obama. I buckled down. I have a great faith in the power of higher education -- as one who has studied or worked at four different colleges and universities I'd better! -- and it is with this enthusiasm for our system that I speak to you all today.
Back in July, I spoke about the need to reform our nation's community colleges. It was a call to reform an outdated model so that more people could graduate with degrees from institutions of higher education and skills to help them excel in their vocations.
The liberal arts college is not built on the vocational model. Your colleges favor a well-rounded education that in most cases does not incline you to one specific job. There are many that call that outdated. That in today's economy you need to be trained for a particular career or college is not worth the expense. And it is expensive. But I am here to tell you that my faith in the liberal arts college is unshakable.
Yes, there are some jobs that require specific training that some liberal arts colleges cannot provide. But as our economy becomes more dynamic and varied, liberal arts students will find they have the well-rounded background necessary to adapt and thrive in the face of tomorrow's challenges. We do not know what the landscape of our economy will look like in 20 years, but it will be those who are most adaptable that will succeed. The liberal arts inform some of our most important professions like business, law, medicine, and government. It is the strength and diversity of the liberal arts education that beats in the heart of American democracy. It was the education of the founders, it is the education of today's leaders, and will be the education of tomorrow's innovators.
But many of you are probably worried about what to do after graduation. Unemployment is high, even more so for young people like yourselves. As the economics majors among you will know, employment is slow to improve, so joblessness will probably remain high even as we see signs of our economy picking up.
This is not grounds to give up, it is a call to work harder. The government has the responsibility to strengthen the economy so you can get jobs, and we are continuing to work to promote enduring job creation in all economic sectors. But part of the responsibility lies with you folks. College should be fun but it should also be challenging. Challenge yourselves to become better writers; better scientists; better mathematicians. Take advantage of the knowledge and experience of your professors. Start clubs. Debate your classmates. Read.
College is what you make it. A college degree is not bestowed on you by virtue of your acceptance as a freshman. You must earn it. Breezing through on the winds of the easiest classes will leave you ill-prepared for the storms of later life. Take risks and go for the harder class, the tougher professor, the position in student government. You will become smarter, more mature, and also more employable. Hard work is rewarded.And in addition to your hard work, understand that once you graduate you will have two things on your side: power and youth. College-age citizens can lead, and those with a strong education and a will for change can have an amazing impact. When hope and education unite in a common purpose the impact is extraordinary. Things will turn around. You are young. You have time for self-discovery and you still have growing to do. And at your age you wield an optimism that is electric. It ran through the cheering crowds of my campaign. It carries you through these troubled times. Let it inspire you to lead by the strength of your convictions. You, even as an individual, have the means to define your generation.
So as I leave you to consider the responsibilities you have to yourselves, I ask that you also to consider your nation.
As you go off to careers in the far-flung sectors of our economy, be mindful of the public good. Embrace the jobs that will benefit your fellow citizens: teaching; public service; social service. It is not enough to hope for change. In the words of Ghandi that I have often quoted, "be the change you seek." This is about hard work, this is about optimism, and this is about courage. The courage to take your passion for the public good beyond the dorm room and to apply it in the real world. Yes, the country still needs investment bankers. But I have the feeling that as long as Goldman Sachs pays what it does, it will receive no shortage of applications. There are jobs in public service whose rewards extend far beyond the paycheck. Find them. God bless you and God bless the United States of America.
(Raucous applause)
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