Can't stand Obama's voice the text of his last presidential UN Speech

PRESIDENT OBAMA: Mr. President; Mr. Secretary General; fellow
delegates; ladies and gentlemen: As I address this hall as President for the
final time, let me recount the progress that we’ve made these last eight years.
From the depths of the
greatest financial crisis of our time, we coordinated our response to avoid
further catastrophe and return the global economy to growth. We’ve taken away
terrorist safe havens, strengthened the nonproliferation regime, resolved the
Iranian nuclear issue through diplomacy. We opened relations with Cuba, helped
Colombia end Latin America’s longest warm, and we welcome a democratically
elected leader of Myanmar to this Assembly. Our assistance is helping people
feed themselves, care for the sick, power communities across Africa, and
promote models of development rather than dependence. And we have made international
institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund more
representative, while establishing a framework to protect our planet from the
ravages of climate change.
This is important work. It
has made a real difference in the lives of our people. And it could not have
happened had we not worked together. And yet, around the globe we are seeing
the same forces of global integration that have made us interdependent also
expose deep fault lines in the existing international order.
We see it in the headlines
every day. Around the world, refugees flow across borders in flight from brutal
conflict. Financial disruptions continue to weigh upon our workers and entire
communities. Across vast swaths of the Middle East, basic security, basic order
has broken down. We see too many governments muzzling journalists, and quashing
dissent, and censoring the flow of information. Terrorist networks use social
media to prey upon the minds of our youth, endangering open societies and
spurring anger against innocent immigrants and Muslims. Powerful nations
contest the constraints placed on them by international law.
This is the paradox that
defines our world today. A quarter century after the end of the Cold War, the
world is by many measures less violent and more prosperous than ever before,
and yet our societies are filled with uncertainty, and unease, and strife.
Despite enormous progress, as people lose trust in institutions, governing
becomes more difficult and tensions between nations become more quick to surface.
And so I believe that at this
moment we all face a choice. We can choose to press forward with a better model
of cooperation and integration. Or we can retreat into a world sharply divided,
and ultimately in conflict, along age-old lines of nation and tribe and race
and religion.
I want to suggest to you
today that we must go forward, and not backward. I believe that as imperfect as
they are, the principles of open markets and accountable governance, of
democracy and human rights and international law that we have forged remain the
firmest foundation for human progress in this century. I make this argument not
based on theory or ideology, but on facts — facts that all too often, we forget
in the immediacy of current events.
Here’s the most important fact:
The integration of our global economy has made life better for billions of men,
women and children. Over the last 25 years, the number of people living in
extreme poverty has been cut from nearly 40 percent of humanity to under 10
percent. That’s unprecedented. And it’s not an abstraction. It means children
have enough to eat; mothers don’t die in childbirth.
Meanwhile, cracking the
genetic code promises to cure diseases that have plagued us for centuries. The
Internet can deliver the entirety of human knowledge to a young girl in a
remote village on a single hand-held device. In medicine and in manufacturing,
in education and communications, we’re experiencing a transformation of how
human beings live on a scale that recalls the revolutions in agriculture and
industry. And as a result, a person born today is more likely to be healthy, to
live longer, and to have access to opportunity than at any time in human
history.
Moreover, the collapse of
colonialism and communism has allowed more people than ever before to live with
the freedom to choose their leaders. Despite the real and troubling areas where
freedom appears in retreat, the fact remains that the number of democracies
around the world has nearly doubled in the last 25 years.
In remote corners of the
world, citizens are demanding respect for the dignity of all people no matter
their gender, or race, or religion, or disability, or sexual orientation, and
those who deny others dignity are subject to public reproach. An explosion of
social media has given ordinary people more ways to express themselves, and has
raised people’s expectations for those of us in power. Indeed, our
international order has been so successful that we take it as a given that
great powers no longer fight world wars; that the end of the Cold War lifted
the shadow of nuclear Armageddon; that the battlefields of Europe have been
replaced by peaceful union; that China and India remain on a path of remarkable
growth.
I say all this not to
whitewash the challenges we face, or to suggest complacency. Rather, I believe
that we need to acknowledge these achievements in order to summon the
confidence to carry this progress forward and to make sure that we do not
abandon those very things that have delivered this progress.
In order to move forward,
though, we do have to acknowledge that the existing path to global integration
requires a course correction. As too often, those trumpeting the benefits of
globalization have ignored inequality within and among nations; have ignored
the enduring appeal of ethnic and sectarian identities; have left international
institutions ill-equipped, underfunded, under-resourced, in order to handle
transnational challenges.
And as these real problems
have been neglected, alternative visions of the world have pressed forward both
in the wealthiest countries and in the poorest: Religious fundamentalism; the
politics of ethnicity, or tribe, or sect; aggressive nationalism; a crude
populism — sometimes from the far left, but more often from the far right —
which seeks to restore what they believe was a better, simpler age free of
outside contamination.
We cannot dismiss these
visions. They are powerful. They reflect dissatisfaction among too many of our
citizens. I do not believe those visions can deliver security or prosperity
over the long term, but I do believe that these visions fail to recognize, at a
very basic level, our common humanity. Moreover, I believe that the
acceleration of travel and technology and telecommunications — together with a
global economy that depends on a global supply chain — makes it self-defeating
ultimately for those who seek to reverse this progress. Today, a nation ringed
by walls would only imprison itself.
So the answer cannot be a
simple rejection of global integration. Instead, we must work together to make
sure the benefits of such integration are broadly shared, and that the
disruptions — economic, political, and cultural — that are caused by
integration are squarely addressed. This is not the place for a detailed policy
blueprint, but let me offer in broad strokes those areas where I believe we
must do better together.
It starts with making the
global economy work better for all people and not just for those at the top.
While open markets, capitalism have raised standards of living around the
globe, globalization combined with rapid progress and technology has also
weakened the position of workers and their ability to secure a decent wage. In
advanced economies like my own, unions have been undermined, and many
manufacturing jobs have disappeared. Often, those who benefit most from
globalization have used their political power to further undermine the position
of workers.
In developing countries,
labor organizations have often been suppressed, and the growth of the middle
class has been held back by corruption and underinvestment. Mercantilist
policies pursued by governments with export-driven models threaten to undermine
the consensus that underpins global trade. And meanwhile, global capital is too
often unaccountable — nearly $8 trillion stashed away in tax havens, a shadow
banking system that grows beyond the reach of effective oversight.
A world in which one percent
of humanity controls as much wealth as the other 99 percent will never be
stable. I understand that the gaps between rich and poor are not new, but just
as the child in a slum today can see the skyscraper nearby, technology now
allows any person with a smartphone to see how the most privileged among us
live and the contrast between their own lives and others. Expectations rise,
then, faster than governments can deliver, and a pervasive sense of injustice
undermine people’s faith in the system.
So how do we fix this
imbalance? We cannot unwind integration any more than we can stuff technology
back into a box. Nor can we look to failed models of the past. If we start
resorting to trade wars, market distorting subsidies, beggar thy neighbor
policies, an overreliance on natural resources instead of innovation — these
approaches will make us poorer, collectively, and they are more like to lead to
conflict. And the stark contrast between, say, the success of the Republic of
Korea and the wasteland of North Korea shows that central, planned control of the
economy is a dead end.
But I do believe there’s
another path — one that fuels growth and innovation, and offers the clearest
route to individual opportunity and national success. It does not require
succumbing to a soulless capitalism that benefits only the few, but rather
recognizes that economies are more successful when we close the gap between
rich and poor, and growth is broadly based. And that means respecting the
rights of workers so they can organize into independent unions and earn a
living wage. It means investing in our people — their skills, their education,
their capacity to take an idea and turn it into a business. It means
strengthening the safety net that protects our people from hardship and allows
them to take more risks — to look for a new job, or start a new venture.
These are the policies that
I’ve pursued here in the United States, and with clear results. American
businesses have created now 15 million new jobs. After the recession, the top
one percent of Americans were capturing more than 90 percent of income growth.
But today, that’s down to about half. Last year, poverty in this country fell
at the fastest rate in nearly 50 years. And with further investment in
infrastructure and early childhood education and basic research, I’m confident
that such progress will continue.
So just as I’ve pursued these
measures here at home, so has the United States worked with many nations to
curb the excesses of capitalism — not to punish wealth, but to prevent repeated
crises that can destroy it. That’s why we’ve worked with other nations to
create higher and clearer standards for banking and taxation — because a
society that asks less of oligarchs than ordinary citizens will rot from
within. That’s why we’ve pushed for transparency and cooperation in rooting out
corruption, and tracking illicit dollars, because markets create more jobs when
they’re fueled by hard work, and not the capacity to extort a bribe. That’s why
we’ve worked to reach trade agreements that raise labor standards and raise
environmental standards, as we’ve done with the Trans-Pacific Partnership, so
that the benefits are more broadly shared.
And just as we benefit by
combatting inequality within our countries, I believe advanced economies still
need to do more to close the gap between rich and poor nations around the
globe. This is difficult politically. It’s difficult to spend on foreign
assistance. But I do not believe this is charity. For the small fraction of
what we spent at war in Iraq we could support institutions so that fragile
states don’t collapse in the first place, and invest in emerging economies that
become markets for our goods. It’s not just the right thing to do, it’s the
smart thing to do.
And that’s why we need to
follow through on our efforts to combat climate change. If we don’t act boldly,
the bill that could come due will be mass migrations, and cities submerged and
nations displaced, and food supplies decimated, and conflicts born of despair.
The Paris Agreement gives us a framework to act, but only if we scale up our
ambition. And there must be a sense of urgency about bringing the agreement
into force, and helping poorer countries leapfrog destructive forms of energy.
So, for the wealthiest
countries, a Green Climate Fund should only be the beginning. We need to invest
in research and provide market incentives to develop new technologies, and then
make these technologies accessible and affordable for poorer countries. And
only then can we continue lifting all people up from poverty without condemning
our children to a planet beyond their capacity to repair.
So we need new models for the
global marketplace, models that are inclusive and sustainable. And in the same
way, we need models of governance that are inclusive and accountable to
ordinary people.
I recognize not every country
in this hall is going to follow the same model of governance. I do not think
that America can — or should — impose our system of government on other
countries. But there appears to be growing contest between authoritarianism and
liberalism right now. And I want everybody to understand, I am not neutral in
that contest. I believe in a liberal political order — an order built not just
through elections and representative government, but also through respect for
human rights and civil society, and independent judiciaries and the rule of law.
I know that some countries,
which now recognize the power of free markets, still reject the model of free
societies. And perhaps those of us who have been promoting democracy feel
somewhat discouraged since the end of the Cold War, because we’ve learned that
liberal democracy will not just wash across the globe in a single wave. It
turns out building accountable institutions is hard work — the work of
generations. The gains are often fragile. Sometimes we take one step forward
and then two steps back. In countries held together by borders drawn by
colonial powers, with ethnic enclaves and tribal divisions, politics and
elections can sometimes appear to be a zero-sum game. And so, given the
difficulty in forging true democracy in the face of these pressures, it’s no
surprise that some argue the future favors the strongman, a top-down model,
rather than strong, democratic institutions.
But I believe this thinking
is wrong. I believe the road of true democracy remains the better path. I
believe that in the 21st century, economies can only grow to a certain point
until they need to open up — because entrepreneurs need to access information
in order to invent; young people need a global education in order to thrive;
independent media needs to check the abuses of power. Without this evolution,
ultimately expectations of people will not be met; suppression and stagnation will
set in. And history shows that strongmen are then left with two paths —
permanent crackdown, which sparks strife at home, or scapegoating enemies
abroad, which can lead to war.
Now, I will admit, my belief
that governments serve the individual, and not the other way around, is shaped
by America’s story. Our nation began with a promise of freedom that applied
only to the few. But because of our democratic Constitution, because of our
Bill of Rights, because of our ideals, ordinary people were able to organize,
and march, and protest, and ultimately, those ideals won out — opened doors for
women and minorities and workers in ways that made our economy more productive
and turned our diversity into a strength; that gave innovators the chance to
transform every area of human endeavor; that made it possible for someone like
me to be elected President of the United States.
So, yes, my views are shaped
by the specific experiences of America, but I do not think this story is unique
to America. Look at the transformation that’s taken place in countries as
different as Japan and Chile, Indonesia, Botswana. The countries that have
succeeded are ones in which people feel they have a stake.
In Europe, the progress of
those countries in the former Soviet bloc that embraced democracy stand in
clear contrast to those that did not. After all, the people of Ukraine did not
take to the streets because of some plot imposed from abroad. They took to the
streets because their leadership was for sale and they had no recourse. They demanded
change because they saw life get better for people in the Baltics and in
Poland, societies that were more liberal, and democratic, and open than their
own.
So those of us who believe in
democracy, we need to speak out forcefully, because both the facts and history,
I believe, are on our side. That doesn’t mean democracies are without flaws. It
does mean that the cure for what ails our democracies is greater engagement by
our citizens — not less.
Yes, in America, there is too
much money in politics; too much entrenched partisanship; too little
participation by citizens, in part because of a patchwork of laws that makes it
harder to vote. In Europe, a well-intentioned Brussels often became too
isolated from the normal push and pull of national politics. Too often, in
capitals, decision-makers have forgotten that democracy needs to be driven by
civic engagement from the bottom up, not governance by experts from the top
down. And so these are real problems, and as leaders of democratic governments
make the case for democracy abroad, we better strive harder to set a better
example at home.
Moreover, every country will
organize its government informed by centuries of history, and the circumstances
of geography, and the deeply held beliefs of its people. So I recognize a
traditional society may value unity and cohesion more than a diverse country
like my own, which was founded upon what, at the time, was a radical idea — the
idea of the liberty of individual human beings endowed with certain God-given
rights. But that does not mean that ordinary people in Asia, or Africa, or the
Middle East somehow prefer arbitrary rule that denies them a voice in the
decisions that can shape their lives. I believe that spirit is universal. And
if any of you doubt the universality of that desire, listen to the voices of
young people everywhere who call out for freedom, and dignity, and the
opportunity to control their own lives.
This leads me to the third
thing we need to do: We must reject any forms of fundamentalism, or racism, or
a belief in ethnic superiority that makes our traditional identities
irreconcilable with modernity. Instead we need to embrace the tolerance that
results from respect of all human beings.
It’s a truism that global
integration has led to a collision of cultures; trade, migration, the Internet,
all these things can challenge and unsettle our most cherished identities. We
see liberal societies express opposition when women choose to cover themselves.
We see protests responding to Western newspaper cartoons that caricature the
Prophet Muhammad. In a world that left the age of empire behind, we see Russia
attempting to recover lost glory through force. Asian powers debate competing
claims of history. And in Europe and the United States, you see people wrestle
with concerns about immigration and changing demographics, and suggesting that
somehow people who look different are corrupting the character of our countries.
Now, there’s no easy answer
for resolving all these social forces, and we must respect the meaning that
people draw from their own traditions — from their religion, from their
ethnicity, from their sense of nationhood. But I do not believe progress is
possible if our desire to preserve our identities gives way to an impulse to
dehumanize or dominate another group. If our religion leads us to persecute
those of another faith, if we jail or beat people who are gay, if our
traditions lead us to prevent girls from going to school, if we discriminate on
the basis of race or tribe or ethnicity, then the fragile bonds of civilization
will fray. The world is too small, we are too packed together, for us to be
able to resort to those old ways of thinking.
We see this mindset in too
many parts of the Middle East. There, so much of the collapse in order has been
fueled because leaders sought legitimacy not because of policies or programs
but by resorting to persecuting political opposition, or demonizing other
religious sects, by narrowing the public space to the mosque, where in too many
places perversions of a great faith were tolerated. These forces built up for
years, and are now at work helping to fuel both Syria’s tragic civil war and
the mindless, medieval menace of ISIL.
The mindset of sectarianism,
and extremism, and bloodletting, and retribution that has been taking place
will not be quickly reversed. And if we are honest, we understand that no
external power is going to be able to force different religious communities or
ethnic communities to co-exist for long. But I do believe we have to be honest
about the nature of these conflicts, and our international community must
continue to work with those who seek to build rather than to destroy.
And there is a military
component to that. It means being united and relentless in destroying networks
like ISIL, which show no respect for human life. But it also means that in a
place like Syria, where there’s no ultimate military victory to be won, we’re
going to have to pursue the hard work of diplomacy that aims to stop the
violence, and deliver aid to those in need, and support those who pursue a
political settlement and can see those who are not like themselves as worthy of
dignity and respect.
Across the region’s
conflicts, we have to insist that all parties recognize a common humanity and
that nations end proxy wars that fuel disorder. Because until basic questions
are answered about how communities co-exist, the embers of extremism will continue
to burn, countless human beings will suffer — most of all in that region — but
extremism will continue to be exported overseas. And the world is too small for
us to simply be able to build a wall and prevent it from affecting our own
societies.
And what is true in the
Middle East is true for all of us. Surely, religious traditions can be honored
and upheld while teaching young people science and math, rather than
intolerance. Surely, we can sustain our unique traditions while giving women
their full and rightful role in the politics and economics of a nation. Surely,
we can rally our nations to solidarity while recognizing equal treatment for
all communities — whether it’s a religious minority in Myanmar, or an ethnic
minority in Burundi, or a racial minority right here in the United States. And
surely, Israelis and Palestinians will be better off if Palestinians reject
incitement and recognize the legitimacy of Israel, but Israel recognizes that
it cannot permanently occupy and settle Palestinian land. We all have to do
better as leaders in tamping down, rather than encouraging, a notion of
identity that leads us to diminish others.
And this leads me to the
fourth and final thing we need to do, and that is sustain our commitment to
international cooperation rooted in the rights and responsibilities of nations.
As President of the United
States, I know that for most of human history, power has not been unipolar. The
end of the Cold War may have led too many to forget this truth. I’ve noticed as
President that at times, both America’s adversaries and some of our allies
believe that all problems were either caused by Washington or could be solved
by Washington — and perhaps too many in Washington believed that as well.
(Laughter.) But I believe America has been a rare superpower in human history
insofar as it has been willing to think beyond narrow self-interest; that while
we’ve made our share of mistakes over these last 25 years — and I’ve
acknowledged some — we have strived, sometimes at great sacrifice, to align
better our actions with our ideals. And as a consequence, I believe we have
been a force for good.
We have secured allies. We’ve
acted to protect the vulnerable. We supported human rights and welcomed
scrutiny of our own actions. We’ve bound our power to international laws and
institutions. When we’ve made mistakes, we’ve tried to acknowledge them. We
have worked to roll back poverty and hunger and disease beyond our borders, not
just within our borders.
I’m proud of that. But I also
know that we can’t do this alone. And I believe that if we’re to meet the
challenges of this century, we are all going to have to do more to build up
international capacity. We cannot escape the prospect of nuclear war unless we
all commit to stopping the spread of nuclear weapons and pursuing a world
without them.
When Iran agrees to accept
constraints on its nuclear program that enhances global security and enhances
Iran’s ability to work with other nations. On the other hand, when North Korea
tests a bomb that endangers all of us. And any country that breaks this basic
bargain must face consequences. And those nations with these weapons, like the
United States, have a unique responsibility to pursue the path of reducing our
stockpiles, and reaffirming basic norms like the commitment to never test them
again.
We can’t combat a disease
like Zika that recognizes no borders — mosquitos don’t respect walls — unless
we make permanent the same urgency that we brought to bear against Ebola — by
strengthening our own systems of public health, by investing in cures and
rolling back the root causes of disease, and helping poorer countries develop a
public health infrastructure.
We can only eliminate extreme
poverty if the sustainable development goals that we have set are more than words
on paper. Human ingenuity now gives us the capacity to feed the hungry and give
all of our children — including our girls — the education that is the
foundation for opportunity in our world. But we have to put our money where our
mouths are.
And we can only realize the
promise of this institution’s founding — to replace the ravages of war with
cooperation — if powerful nations like my own accept constraints. Sometimes I’m
criticized in my own country for professing a belief in international norms and
multilateral institutions. But I am convinced that in the long run, giving up
some freedom of action — not giving up our ability to protect ourselves or
pursue our core interests, but binding ourselves to international rules over
the long term — enhances our security. And I think that’s not just true for us.
If Russia continues to
interfere in the affairs of its neighbors, it may be popular at home, it may
fuel nationalist fervor for a time, but over time it is also going to diminish
its stature and make its borders less secure. In the South China Sea, a
peaceful resolution of disputes offered by law will mean far greater stability
than the militarization of a few rocks and reefs.
We are all stakeholders in
this international system, and it calls upon all of us to invest in the success
of institutions to which we belong. And the good news is, is that many nations
have shown what kind of progress is possible when we make those commitments.
Consider what we’ve accomplished here over the past few years.
Together, we mobilized some
50,000 additional troops for U.N. peacekeeping, making them nimble, better
equipped, better prepared to deal with emergencies. Together, we established an
Open Government Partnership so that, increasingly, transparency empowers more
and more people around the globe. And together, now, we have to open our hearts
and do more to help refugees who are desperate for a home.
We should all welcome the
pledges of increased assistance that have been made at this General Assembly
gathering. I’ll be discussing that more this afternoon. But we have to follow
through, even when the politics are hard. Because in the eyes of innocent men
and women and children who, through no fault of their own, have had to flee
everything that they know, everything that they love, we have to have the
empathy to see ourselves. We have to imagine what it would be like for our
family, for our children, if the unspeakable happened to us. And we should all
understand that, ultimately, our world will be more secure if we are prepared
to help those in need and the nations who are carrying the largest burden with
respect to accommodating these refugees.
There are a lot of nations
right now that are doing the right thing. But many nations — particularly those
blessed with wealth and the benefits of geography — that can do more to offer a
hand, even if they also insist that refugees who come to our countries have to
do more to adapt to the customs and conventions of the communities that are now
providing them a home.
Let me conclude by saying
that I recognize history tells a different story than the one that I’ve talked
about here today. There’s a much darker and more cynical view of history that
we can adopt. Human beings are too often motivated by greed and by power. Big
countries for most of history have pushed smaller ones around. Tribes and
ethnic groups and nation states have very often found it most convenient to
define themselves by what they hate and not just those ideas that bind them
together.
Time and again, human beings
have believed that they finally arrived at a period of enlightenment only to
repeat, then, cycles of conflict and suffering. Perhaps that’s our fate. We
have to remember that the choices of individual human beings led to repeated
world war. But we also have to remember that the choices of individual human
beings created a United Nations, so that a war like that would never happen
again. Each of us as leaders, each nation can choose to reject those who appeal
to our worst impulses and embrace those who appeal to our best. For we have
shown that we can choose a better history.
Sitting in a prison cell, a
young Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote that, “Human progress never rolls on the
wheels of inevitability; it comes through the tireless efforts of men willing
to be co-workers with God.” And during the course of these eight years, as I’ve
traveled to many of your nations, I have seen that spirit in our young people,
who are more educated and more tolerant, and more inclusive and more diverse,
and more creative than our generation; who are more empathetic and
compassionate towards their fellow human beings than previous generations. And,
yes, some of that comes with the idealism of youth. But it also comes with
young people’s access to information about other peoples and places — an
understanding unique in human history that their future is bound with the fates
of other human beings on the other side of the world.
I think of the thousands of
health care workers from around the world who volunteered to fight Ebola. I
remember the young entrepreneurs I met who are now starting new businesses in
Cuba, the parliamentarians who used to be just a few years ago political
prisoners in Myanmar. I think of the girls who have braved taunts or violence
just to go to school in Afghanistan, and the university students who started
programs online to reject the extremism of organizations like ISIL. I draw
strength from the young Americans — entrepreneurs, activists, soldiers, new
citizens — who are remaking our nation once again, who are unconstrained by old
habits and old conventions, and unencumbered by what is, but are instead ready
to seize what ought to be.
My own family is a made up of
the flesh and blood and traditions and cultures and faiths from a lot of
different parts of the world — just as America has been built by immigrants
from every shore. And in my own life, in this country, and as President, I have
learned that our identities do not have to be defined by putting someone else
down, but can be enhanced by lifting somebody else up. They don’t have to be
defined in opposition to others, but rather by a belief in liberty and equality
and justice and fairness.
And the embrace of these
principles as universal doesn’t weaken my particular pride, my particular love
for America — it strengthens it. My belief that these ideals apply everywhere
doesn’t lessen my commitment to help those who look like me, or pray as I do,
or pledge allegiance to my flag. But my faith in those principles does force me
to expand my moral imagination and to recognize that I can best serve my own
people, I can best look after my own daughters, by making sure that my actions
seek what is right for all people and all children, and your daughters and your
sons.
This is what I believe: that
all of us can be co-workers with God. And our leadership, and our governments,
and this United Nations should reflect this irreducible truth.
Thank you very much.
(Applause.)