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cal04

(41,505 posts)
Sat May 16, 2015, 07:50 AM May 2015

Weekly Address: Creating Opportunity for All

Source: White House

In this week’s address, the President highlighted the importance of expanding opportunity for all Americans -- a principle that has guided his work throughout the past six years. This past week, the President attended a summit at Georgetown University where he discussed issues like poverty and inequality, and what we can do to ensure everyone gets a fair shot.

We’ve seen real results in this area, but there is still more that can be done. And lack of opportunity is not the only barrier to success. That’s why, on Monday, the President will travel to Camden, New Jersey to visit with local law enforcement, meet with young people, and hear directly about efforts to build trust between the police and the community in a city that has faced one of the highest crime rates in America.




Read more: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/weekly-address



https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/05/15/weekly-address-creating-opportunity-all

Everything we’ve done over the past six years has been in pursuit of one overarching goal: creating opportunity for all.

What we’ve long understood, though, is that some communities have consistently had the odds stacked against them. That’s true of rural communities with chronic poverty. That’s true of some manufacturing communities that suffered after the plants they depended on closed their doors. It’s true of some suburbs and inner cities, where jobs can be hard to find and harder to get to.

That sense of unfairness and powerlessness has helped to fuel the kind of unrest that we’ve seen in places like Baltimore, Ferguson, and New York. It has many causes -- from a basic lack of opportunity to groups feeling unfairly targeted by police – which means there’s no single solution. But there are many that could make a different and could help. And we have to do everything in our power to make this country’s promise real for everyone willing to work for it.

That’s why last Tuesday, at a summit organized by Catholics and evangelicals, I sat down with a conservative scholar and a poverty expert for a discussion on what it takes to open more doors of opportunity. We know our efforts matter: since 1967, we’ve brought poverty down by about 40 percent, thanks in part to programs like Social Security and the Earned Income Tax Credit for working families. And we know that there are folks from all faiths, and across the ideological spectrum, who care deeply about “the least of these.” So I hope this conversation continues, not as a question of whether, but of how, we can work together to grow opportunity. Because it’s not words, but deeds, that make a difference. And from expanding tax cuts for working parents, to raising high school graduation rates, to helping millions of Americans secure health insurance when they didn’t have it just a few years ago -- our actions are making a difference.

Of course, lack of opportunity is not the only barrier between too many of our young people and the kind of future they deserve. On Monday, I’ll travel to Camden, New Jersey, a city that has faced one of the highest violent crime rates in America. I’ll highlight some of the innovative things they’ve done to help police do their jobs more safely and reduce crime in the process. And I’ll highlight steps all cities can take to maintain trust between the brave law enforcement officers who put their lives on the line, and the communities they’re sworn to serve and protect.

Whether we are Democrats, Republicans, or independents; whether we live in one of our poorest communities, one of our wealthiest, or anywhere in between, we all want our country to be one where hard work pays off and responsibility is rewarded. We want a place where you can make it if you try. That’s the promise we make to our young people. That’s the promise that makes us exceptional. And it’s the promise I’ll never stop fighting to keep, for my children and for yours.
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Weekly Address: Creating Opportunity for All (Original Post) cal04 May 2015 OP
What grade would he give himself? Geronimoe May 2015 #1
Yes MannyGoldstein May 2015 #3
oh yes 840high May 2015 #4
Thanks for posting! BumRushDaShow May 2015 #2
 

Geronimoe

(1,539 posts)
1. What grade would he give himself?
Sat May 16, 2015, 09:02 AM
May 2015

I'm sure he would give himself an A+, however since all the gain has gone to the 1% perhaps he deserve an F.

Obama may be the only one who thinks trickle down Reaganomics works after 34 years of evidence that it doesn't.

Show us the TPP!

BumRushDaShow

(129,806 posts)
2. Thanks for posting!
Sat May 16, 2015, 09:41 AM
May 2015


The comprehensive issue has nothing to do with some nonsensical link to "TPP", as the current problems existed even a century before "NAFTA".

The situation evolved from a number of sociological changes that occurred during a 50-year period often dubbed the "great migration", where during the period of Jim Crow, a large chunk of African Americans left the southeast to areas north of the Mason Dixon line along the east coast, and left the mid-south, northwards towards the upper midwest, or directly westward towards California (depending on what states they were congregated in post-slavery), The shift from rural to urban during two World Wars and the Korean War, is notable in terms of difficulties in adjustment by those who migrated and those who received the migrants.

My mother, born and raised here in Philly talks about how blacks were < 10% of the population back when she was growing up in the '30s and '40s, and noted the big change to where we are some 45% now. W.E.B. Dubois wrote a whole tome on it ("The Philadelphia Negro&quot from a period prior to that large migration (when blacks were 5% of the population), establishing the problems of isolation of blacks as a minority group here in this city, and the negative impacts of this. However on the distaff side, the black community here had all of its own businesses to serve the community, as they were often refused service at the white businesses.

So there are many issues that need to be addressed beyond "economic". It was a sea-change of demographics that many in the northern areas have yet to reconcile even today, no different from southerners still fighting the Civil War. And addressing those cross-cultural matters (that are wrapped in fear), beg for humankind to see all groups as having "value", and must be a first step to resolving the chronic pathos that has settled over many of the urban areas.
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