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		<title>Obama The Choice is clear!</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>President Obama delivered his speech to the Democratic National Convention today. Here is the transcript of the speech and after my reasons why the choice is clear! OBAMA: Michelle, I love you. (APPLAUSE) OBAMA: A few night nights ago, everyone was reminded just what a lucky man I am. (APPLAUSE) Malia and Sasha, we are [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://malcolmr.com/obama-the-choice-is-clear/">Obama The Choice is clear!</a> appeared first on <a href="https://malcolmr.com">www.MalcolmR.com</a>.</p>
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<p>President Obama delivered his speech to the Democratic National Convention today. Here is the transcript of the speech and after my reasons why the choice is clear!</p>
<blockquote>
<p>OBAMA:  Michelle, I love you.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   OBAMA:  A few night nights ago, everyone was reminded just<br />
what a lucky man I am.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Malia and Sasha, we are so proud of you.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And yes, you do have to go to school in the morning.<br />
   (LAUGHTER)<br />
   And Joe Biden, thank you for being the best Vice President<br />
I could have ever hope for, and being a strong and loyal friend.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Madam Chairwoman, delegates, I accept your nomination for<br />
President of the United States.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   (AUDIENCE MEMBERS):  Four more years, four more years, four<br />
more years.<br />
Now, the first time I addressed this convention in<br />
2004, I was a younger man; a Senate candidate from Illinois who<br />
spoke about hope, not blind optimism or wishful thinking, but<br />
hope in the face of difficulty; hope in the face of uncertainty;<br />
that dogged faith in the future which has pushed this nation<br />
forward, even when the odds are great; even when the road is<br />
long.<br />
   Eight years later, that hope has been tested, by the cost<br />
of war; by one of the worst economic crises in history; and by<br />
political gridlock that&#8217;s left us wondering whether it&#8217;s still<br />
even possible to tackle the challenges of our time.<br />
   I know campaigns can seem small, and even silly sometimes.<br />
Trivial things become big distractions.  Serious issues become<br />
sound bites.  The truth gets buried under an avalanche of money<br />
and advertising.  If you&#8217;re sick of hearing me approve this<br />
message, believe me, so am I.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   But when all is said and done, when you pick up that ballot<br />
to vote, you will face the clearest choice of any time in a<br />
generation. Over the next few years, big decisions will be made<br />
in Washington, on jobs, the economy; taxes and deficits; energy,<br />
education; war and peace, decisions that will have a huge impact<br />
on our lives and our children&#8217;s lives for decades to come.<br />
   And on every issue, the choice you face won&#8217;t be just<br />
between two candidates or two parties.<br />
   It will be a choice between two different paths for<br />
America.<br />
   A choice between two fundamentally different visions for<br />
the future.<br />
   Ours is a fight to restore the values that built the<br />
largest middle class and the strongest economy the world has<br />
ever known.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   The values my grandfather defended as a soldier in Patton&#8217;s<br />
Army; the values that drove my grandmother to work on a bomber<br />
assembly line while he was gone.<br />
   They knew they were part of something larger, a nation that<br />
triumphed over fascism and depression; a nation where the most<br />
innovative businesses turned out the world&#8217;s best products, and<br />
everyone shared in that pride and success, from the corner<br />
office to the factory floor.<br />
My grandparents were given the chance to go to<br />
college, buy their own &#8212; their &#8212; their own home, and fulfill<br />
the basic bargain at the heart of America&#8217;s story:  the promise<br />
that hard work will pay off; that responsibility will be<br />
rewarded; that everyone gets a fair shot, and everyone does<br />
their fair share, and everyone plays by the same rules, from<br />
Main Street to Wall Street to Washington, D.C.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And I ran for President because I saw that basic bargain<br />
slipping away.  I began my career helping people in the shadow<br />
of a shuttered steel mill, at a time when too many good jobs<br />
were starting to move overseas.  And by 2008, we had seen nearly<br />
a decade in which families struggled with costs that kept<br />
rising, but paychecks that didn&#8217;t; folks racking up more and<br />
more debt just to make the mortgage or pay tuition; put gas in<br />
the car or food on the table.<br />
   And when the house of cards collapsed in the Great<br />
Recession, millions of innocent Americans lost their jobs, their<br />
homes, their life savings, a tragedy from which we are still<br />
fighting to recover.<br />
   Now, our friends down in Tampa, at the Republican<br />
convention, were more than happy to talk about everything they<br />
think is wrong with America, but they didn&#8217;t have much to say<br />
about how they&#8217;d make it right.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   They want your vote, but they don&#8217;t want you to know their<br />
plan. And that&#8217;s because all they had to offer is the same<br />
prescription they&#8217;ve had for the last thirty years:<br />
   &#8220;Have a surplus?  Try a tax cut.&#8221;<br />
   &#8220;Deficit too high?  Try another.&#8221;<br />
   (LAUGHTER)<br />
   &#8220;Feel a cold coming on?  Take two tax cuts, roll back some<br />
regulations, and call us in the morning.&#8221;<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Now, I&#8217;ve cut taxes for those who need it, middle-class<br />
families, small businesses.  But I don&#8217;t believe that another<br />
round of tax breaks for millionaires will bring good jobs to our<br />
shores, or pay down our deficit.  I don&#8217;t believe that firing<br />
teachers or kicking students off financial aid will grow the<br />
economy, or help us compete with the scientists and engineers<br />
coming out of China.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   After all that we&#8217;ve been through, I don&#8217;t believe that<br />
rolling back regulations on Wall Street will help the small<br />
businesswoman expand, or the laid-off construction worker keep<br />
his home.  We have been there, we&#8217;ve tried that, and we&#8217;re not<br />
going back.<br />
   We are moving forward, America.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I won&#8217;t pretend the path I&#8217;m offering is quick or easy.  I<br />
never have.  You didn&#8217;t elect me to tell you what you wanted to<br />
hear.<br />
You elected me to tell you the truth.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And the truth is, it will take more than a few years for us<br />
to<br />
solve challenges that have built up over decades.  It&#8217;ll require<br />
common effort, shared responsibility, and the kind of bold,<br />
persistent<br />
experimentation that Franklin Roosevelt pursued during the only<br />
crisis<br />
worse than this one.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And by the way, those of us who carry on his party&#8217;s legacy<br />
should remember that not every problem can be remedied with<br />
another<br />
government program or dictate from Washington.<br />
   But know this, America:  Our problems can be solved.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Our challenges can be met.  The path we offer may be<br />
harder, but<br />
it leads to a better place. And I&#8217;m asking you to choose that<br />
future.<br />
I&#8217;m asking you to rally around a set of goals for your country,<br />
goals<br />
in manufacturing, energy, education, national security, and the<br />
deficit; real, achievable plans that will lead to new jobs, more<br />
opportunity, and rebuild this economy on a stronger foundation.<br />
That&#8217;s what we can do in the next four years, and that&#8217;s why I&#8217;m<br />
running for a second term as President of the United States.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   We can choose a future<br />
   XXX<br />
   where we export more products and outsource fewer jobs.<br />
After a decade that was defined by what we bought and borrowed,<br />
we&#8217;re getting back to basics, and doing what America has always<br />
done best:<br />
   We&#8217;re making things again.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I&#8217;ve met workers in Detroit and Toledo who feared they&#8217;d<br />
never build another American car.  And today, they can&#8217;t build<br />
them fast enough, because we reinvented a dying auto industry<br />
that&#8217;s back on top of the world.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I&#8217;ve worked with business leaders who are bringing jobs<br />
back to America, not because our workers make less pay, but<br />
because we make better products.  Because we work harder and<br />
smarter than anyone else.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I&#8217;ve signed trade agreements that are helping our companies<br />
sell more goods to millions of new customers, goods that are<br />
stamped with three proud words:  Made in America.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   After a decade of decline, this country created over half a<br />
million manufacturing jobs in the last two and a half years.<br />
And now you have a choice:  we can give more tax breaks to<br />
corporations that ship jobs overseas, or we can start rewarding<br />
companies that open new plants and train new workers and create<br />
new jobs here, in the United States of America.  We can help big<br />
factories and small businesses double their exports, and if we<br />
choose this path, we can create a million new manufacturing jobs<br />
in the next four years.  You can make that happen.  You can<br />
choose that future.<br />
And now more than ever, it is the gateway to a<br />
middle- class life.<br />
   For the first time in a generation, nearly every state has<br />
answered our call to raise their standards for teaching and<br />
learning.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Some of the worst schools in the country have made real<br />
gains in math and reading.  Millions of students are paying less<br />
for college today because we finally took on a system that<br />
wasted billions of taxpayer dollars on banks and lenders.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And now you have a choice.  We can gut education, or we can<br />
decide that in the United States of America, no child should<br />
have her dreams deferred because of a crowded classroom or a<br />
crumbling school. No family should have to set aside a college<br />
acceptance letter because they don&#8217;t have the money.  No company<br />
should have to look for workers overseas because they couldn&#8217;t<br />
find any with the right skills here at home.  That&#8217;s not our<br />
future.  That is not our future.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   A government has a role in this.  But teachers must<br />
inspire; principals must lead; parents must instill a thirst for<br />
learning, and students, you&#8217;ve gotta do the work.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And together, I promise you, we can out-educate and<br />
out-compete any nation on Earth.  Help me recruit 100,000 math<br />
and science teachers within ten years, and improve early<br />
childhood education.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Help give two million workers the chance to learn skills at<br />
their community college that will lead directly to a job.  Help<br />
us work with colleges and universities to cut in half the growth<br />
of tuition costs over the next ten years.  We can meet that goal<br />
together.<br />
You can choose that future for America.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   That&#8217;s our future.<br />
   You know, in a world of new threats and new challenges, you<br />
can choose leadership that has been tested and proven.  Four<br />
years ago, I promised to end the war in Iraq.  We did.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I promised to refocus on the terrorists who actually<br />
attacked us on 9/11.  And we have.  We&#8217;ve blunted the Taliban&#8217;s<br />
momentum in Afghanistan, and in 2014, our longest war will be<br />
over.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   A new tower rises above the New York skyline, Al Qaeda is<br />
on the path to defeat, and Osama Bin Laden is dead.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And tonight, we pay tribute to the Americans who still<br />
serve in harm&#8217;s way.  We are forever in debt to a generation<br />
whose sacrifice has made this country safer and more respected.<br />
We will never forget you.  And so long as I&#8217;m<br />
Commander-in-Chief, we will sustain the strongest military the<br />
world has ever known.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   When you take off the uniform, we will serve you as well as<br />
you&#8217;ve served us because no one who fights for this country<br />
should have to fight for a job, or a roof over their head, or<br />
the care that they need when they come home.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Around the world, we&#8217;ve strengthened old alliances and<br />
forged new coalitions to stop the spread of nuclear weapons.<br />
We&#8217;ve reasserted our power across the Pacific, and stood up to<br />
China on behalf of our workers.  From Burma to Libya to South<br />
Sudan, we have advanced the rights and dignity of all human<br />
beings, men and women; Christians and Muslims and Jews.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   But for all the progress we&#8217;ve made, challenges remain.<br />
Terrorist plots must be disrupted.  Europe&#8217;s crisis must be<br />
contained.<br />
Our commitment to Israel&#8217;s security must not waver,<br />
and neither must our pursuit of peace.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   The Iranian government must face a world that stays united<br />
against its nuclear ambitions.  The historic change sweeping<br />
across the Arab World must be defined not by the iron fist of a<br />
dictator or the hate of extremists, but by the hopes and<br />
aspirations of ordinary people who are reaching for the same<br />
rights that we celebrate here today.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   So now we face a choice.  My opponent and his running mate<br />
are new to foreign policy,<br />
   (LAUGHTER)<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   but from all that we&#8217;ve seen and heard, they want to take<br />
us back to an era of blustering and blundering that cost America<br />
so dearly.<br />
   After all, you don&#8217;t call Russia our number one enemy, not<br />
Al Qaeda, Russia, unless you&#8217;re still stuck in a Cold War mind<br />
warp.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   You might not be ready for diplomacy with Beijing if you<br />
can&#8217;t visit the Olympics without insulting our closest ally.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   My opponent &#8212; my opponent said it was &#8220;tragic&#8221; to end the<br />
war in Iraq, and he won&#8217;t tell us how he&#8217;ll end the war in<br />
Afghanistan.  Well I have, and I will.  And while my opponent<br />
would spend more money on military hardware that our Joint<br />
Chiefs don&#8217;t even want, I will use the money we&#8217;re no longer<br />
spending on war to pay down our debt and put more people back to<br />
work rebuilding roads and bridges and schools and runways.<br />
Because after two wars that have cost us thousands<br />
of lives and over a trillion dollars, it&#8217;s time to do some<br />
nation- building right here at home.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   You can choose a future where we reduce our deficit without<br />
sticking it to the middle class.  Independent experts say that<br />
my plan would cut our deficits by $4 trillion.  And last summer,<br />
I worked with Republicans in Congress to cut billion in spending<br />
because those of us who believe government can be a force for<br />
good should work harder than anyone to reform it, so that it&#8217;s<br />
leaner, and more efficient, and more responsive to the American<br />
people.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I want to reform the tax code so that it&#8217;s simple, fair,<br />
and asks the wealthiest households to pay higher taxes on<br />
incomes over $250,000, the same rate we had when Bill Clinton<br />
was president; the same rate we had when our economy created<br />
nearly 23 million new jobs, the biggest surplus in history, and<br />
a whole lot of millionaires to boot.<br />
   Now, I&#8217;m still eager to reach an agreement based on the<br />
principles of my bipartisan debt commission.  No party has a<br />
monopoly on wisdom.  No democracy works without compromise.  I<br />
want to get this done, and we can get it done.  But when<br />
Governor Romney and his friends in Congress tell us we can<br />
somehow lower our deficits by spending trillions more on new tax<br />
breaks for the wealthy, well, what&#8217;d Bill Clinton call it?  You<br />
do the arithmetic, you do the math.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I refuse to go along with that.  And as long as I&#8217;m<br />
President, I never will.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I refuse to ask middle class families to give up their<br />
deductions for owning a home or raising their kids just to pay<br />
for another millionaire&#8217;s tax cut.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I refuse to ask students to pay more for college; or kick<br />
children out of Head Start programs, to eliminate health<br />
insurance for millions of Americans who are poor, and elderly,<br />
or disabled, all so those with the most can pay less.<br />
I&#8217;m not going along with that.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And I will &#8212; I will never turn Medicare into a voucher.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   No American should ever have to spend their golden years at<br />
the mercy of insurance companies.  They should retire with the<br />
care and the dignity they have earned.  Yes, we will reform and<br />
strengthen Medicare for the long haul, but we&#8217;ll do it by<br />
reducing the cost of health care, not by asking seniors to pay<br />
thousands of dollars more. And we will keep the promise of<br />
Social Security by taking the responsible steps to strengthen<br />
it, not by turning it over to Wall Street.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   This is the choice we now face.  This is what the election<br />
comes down to.  Over and over, we have been told by our<br />
opponents that bigger tax cuts and fewer regulations are the<br />
only way; that since government can&#8217;t do everything, it should<br />
do almost nothing.<br />
   If you can&#8217;t afford health insurance, hope that you don&#8217;t<br />
get sick.<br />
   (LAUGHTER)<br />
   If a company releases toxic pollution into the air your<br />
children breathe, well, that&#8217;s just the price of progress.  If<br />
you can&#8217;t afford to start a business or go to college, take my<br />
opponent&#8217;s advice and &#8220;borrow money from your parents.&#8221;<br />
   (LAUGHTER)<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   You know what?  That&#8217;s not who we are.  That&#8217;s not what<br />
this country&#8217;s about.  As Americans, we believe we are endowed<br />
by our Creator with certain inalienable rights, rights that no<br />
man or government can take away.  We insist on personal<br />
responsibility, and we celebrate individual initiative.  We&#8217;re<br />
not entitled to success. We have to earn it.  We honor the<br />
strivers, the dreamers, the risk- takers, the entrepreneurs who<br />
have always been the driving force behind our free enterprise<br />
system, the greatest engine of growth and prosperity the world<br />
has ever known.<br />
But we also believe in something called citizenship<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   a word at the very heart of our founding, at the very<br />
essence of our democracy; the idea that this country only works<br />
when we accept certain obligations to one another, and to future<br />
generations.<br />
   We believe that when a CEO pays his autoworkers enough to<br />
buy the cars that they build, the whole company does better.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   We believe that when a family can no longer be tricked into<br />
signing a mortgage they can&#8217;t afford, that family is protected,<br />
but so is the value of other people&#8217;s homes, and so is the<br />
entire economy.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   We believe the little girl who&#8217;s offered an escape from<br />
poverty by a great teacher or a grant for college could become<br />
the next Steve Jobs, or the scientist who cures cancer, or the<br />
President of the United States, and it&#8217;s in our power to give<br />
her that chance.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   We know that churches and charities can often make more of<br />
a difference than a poverty program alone.  We don&#8217;t want<br />
handouts for people who refuse to help themselves, and we<br />
certainly don&#8217;t want bailouts for banks that break the rules.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   We don&#8217;t think the government can solve all our problems.<br />
But we don&#8217;t think that the government is the source of all our<br />
problems, any more than are welfare recipients, or corporations,<br />
or unions, or immigrants, or gays, or any other group we&#8217;re told<br />
to blame for our troubles.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Because &#8212; because America, we understand that this<br />
democracy is ours.<br />
   We, the People, recognize that we have responsibilities as<br />
well as rights; that our destinies are bound together; that a<br />
freedom which asks only what&#8217;s in it for me, a freedom without a<br />
commitment to others, a freedom without love or charity or duty<br />
or patriotism, is unworthy of our founding ideals, and those who<br />
died in their defense.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   As citizens, we understand that America is not about what<br />
can be done for us.  It&#8217;s about what can be done by us,<br />
together, through the hard and frustrating but necessary work of<br />
self-government.  That&#8217;s what we believe.<br />
   So you see, the election four years ago wasn&#8217;t about me.<br />
It was about you.  My fellow citizens, you were the<br />
change.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   You&#8217;re the reason there&#8217;s a little girl with a heart<br />
disorder in Phoenix who&#8217;ll get the surgery she needs because an<br />
insurance company can&#8217;t limit her coverage.<br />
   You did that.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   You&#8217;re the reason a young man in Colorado who never thought<br />
he&#8217;d be able to afford his dream of earning a medical degree is<br />
about to get that chance.<br />
   You made that possible.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   You&#8217;re the reason a young immigrant who grew up here and<br />
went to school here and pledged allegiance to our flag will no<br />
longer be deported from the only country she&#8217;s ever called home,<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   why selfless soldiers won&#8217;t be kicked out of the military<br />
because of who they are or who they love; why thousands of<br />
families have finally been able to say to the loved ones who<br />
served us so bravely: &#8220;Welcome home, welcome home.&#8221;<br />
You did that.  You did that.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   If you turn away now &#8212; if you turn away now, if you buy<br />
into the cynicism that the change we fought for isn&#8217;t possible,<br />
well, change will not happen.  If you give up on the idea that<br />
your voice can make a difference, then other voices will fill<br />
the void: the lobbyists and special interests; the people with<br />
the $10 million checks who are trying to buy this election, and<br />
those who are making it harder for you to vote; Washington<br />
politicians who want to decide who you can marry, or control<br />
health care choices that women should be making for themselves.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Only you can make sure that doesn&#8217;t happen.  Only you have<br />
the power to move us forward.<br />
   You know, I recognize that times have changed since I first<br />
spoke to this convention.  The times have changed, and so have<br />
I.<br />
   I&#8217;m no longer just a candidate.  I&#8217;m the President.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   And &#8212; and that &#8212; and that &#8212; and that means I know what<br />
it means to send young Americans into battle, for I have held in<br />
my arms the mothers and fathers of those who didn&#8217;t return.<br />
I&#8217;ve shared the pain of families who&#8217;ve lost their homes, and<br />
the frustration of workers who&#8217;ve lost their jobs.  If the<br />
critics are right that I&#8217;ve made all my decisions based on<br />
polls, then I must not be very good at reading them.<br />
   (LAUGHTER)<br />
   And while I&#8217;m very proud of what we&#8217;ve achieved together,<br />
I&#8217;m far more mindful of my own failings, knowing exactly what<br />
Lincoln meant when he said, &#8221;I have been driven to my knees many<br />
times by the overwhelming conviction that I had no place else to<br />
go.&#8220;<br />
But as I stand here tonight, I have never been more<br />
hopeful about America.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Not because I think I have all the answers.  Not because<br />
I&#8217;m<br />
naive about the magnitude of our challenges.<br />
   I&#8217;m hopeful because of you.<br />
   The young woman I met at a science fair who won national<br />
recognition for her biology research while living with her<br />
family at a<br />
homeless shelter, she gives me hope.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   The auto worker who won the lottery after his plant almost<br />
closed, but kept coming to work every day, and bought flags for<br />
his<br />
whole town and one of the cars that he built to surprise his<br />
wife, he<br />
gives me hope.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   The family business in Warroad,<br />
   XXX<br />
   Minnesota that didn&#8217;t lay off a single one of their 4,000<br />
employees during this recession, even when their competitors<br />
shut down dozens of plants, even when it meant the owners gave<br />
up some perks and some pay, because they understood their<br />
biggest asset was the community and the workers who helped build<br />
that business, they give me hope.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I think about the young sailor I met at Walter Reed<br />
hospital, still recovering from a grenade attack that would<br />
cause him to have his leg amputated above the knee.  Six months<br />
ago, We would watch him walk into a White House dinner honoring<br />
those who served in Iraq, tall and 20 pounds heavier, dashing in<br />
his uniform, with a big grin on his face; sturdy on his new leg.<br />
   And I remember how a few months after that I would watch<br />
him on a bicycle, racing with his fellow wounded warriors on a<br />
sparkling spring day, inspiring other heroes who had just begun<br />
the hard path he had traveled.<br />
   He gives me hope.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   I don&#8217;t know what party these men and women belong to.  I<br />
don&#8217;t know if they&#8217;ll vote for me.  But I know that their spirit<br />
defines us. They remind me, in the words of Scripture, that ours<br />
is a &#8221;future filled with hope.&#8220;<br />
   And if you share that faith with me, if you share that hope<br />
with me, I ask you tonight for your vote.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   If you reject the notion that this nation&#8217;s promise is<br />
reserved for the few, your voice must be heard in this election.<br />
   If you reject the notion that our government is forever<br />
beholden to the highest bidder, you need to stand up in this<br />
election.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   If you believe that new plants and factories can dot our<br />
landscape; that new energy can power our future; that new<br />
schools can provide ladders of opportunity to this nation of<br />
dreamers; if you believe in a country where everyone gets a fair<br />
shot, and everyone does their fair share, and everyone plays by<br />
the same rules, then I need you to vote this November.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   America, I never said this journey would be easy, and I<br />
won&#8217;t promise that now.  Yes, our path is harder, but it leads<br />
to a better place.  Yes our road is longer, but we travel it<br />
together.  We don&#8217;t turn back.  We leave no one behind.  We pull<br />
each other up.  We draw strength from our victories, and we<br />
learn from our mistakes, but we keep our eyes fixed on that<br />
distant horizon, knowing that Providence is with us, and that we<br />
are surely blessed to be citizens of the greatest nation on<br />
Earth.<br />
   (APPLAUSE)<br />
   Thank you, God bless you, and may God bless these United<br />
States.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The post <a href="https://malcolmr.com/obama-the-choice-is-clear/">Obama The Choice is clear!</a> appeared first on <a href="https://malcolmr.com">www.MalcolmR.com</a>.</p>
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