Statement by the President of the United States
- January 22, 2001
Good afternoon, friends and fellow citizens. Two days ago, Americans
gathered on the Washington Mall to celebrate our Nations
ideals. Today, you are gathered to remind our country that one
of those ideals is the infinite value of every life.
I deeply appreciate your message and your work. You see the weak
and the defenseless, and you try to help them. You see the hardship
of many young mothers and their unborn children, and you care
for them both. In so many ways, you make our society more compassionate
and welcoming. We share a great goal: to work toward a day when
every child is welcomed in life and protected in law. We know
this will not come easily, or all at once. But the goal leads
us onward: to build a culture of life, affirming that every person,
at every stage and season of life, is created equal in Gods
image.
The promises of our Declaration of Independence are not just
for the strong, the independent, or the healthy. They are for
everyone including unborn children. We are a society with
enough compassion and wealth and love to care for both mothers
and their children, to seek the promise and potential in every
human life. I believe that we are making progress toward that
goal. I trust in the good hearts of Americans. I trust in the
unfolding promise of our country an expanding circle of
inclusion and protection. And I trust in the civility and good
sense of our citizens a willingness to engage our differences
in a spirit of tolerance and good will.
All of you marching today have never tired in a good cause. Thank
you for your conviction, your idealism, and your courage. May
God bless you all.
GEORGE W. BUSH
Back to Table of Contents
|