President Bush underscores human value
It is good to know where a person stands on important issues.
President George W. Bush made it clear again that the value of
human life and not its destruction is a most important object
of government.
On January 20, 2002, President Bush proclaimed National Sanctity
of Human Life Day. The proclamation in its entirety is printed
to the right. Prolife people from across the nation praised President
Bush for his strong stand for life. President Bush stated in the
proclamation that "we should peacefully commit ourselves
to seeking a society that values life from its very beginnings
to its natural end. Unborn children should be welcomed in life
and protected in law."
On January 22, 2002, President Bush called the March for Life
leaders to encourage prolife people.
President Bush's phone call from West Virginia was broadcast
over loud speakers. He said, "We are a society with enough
compassion and wealth and love to care for both mothers and their
children, and to seek the promise and potential of every single
life. You're working and marching on behalf of a noble cause,
and affirming a culture of life. Thank you for your persistence,
for defending human dignity, and for caring for every member of
the human family.
This outspoken life leader from the highest office in our nation
is welcomed and appreciated by millions of Americans.
National Sanctity of Human Life Day, 2002
By The President of the United States of America
A Proclamation
This Nation was founded upon the belief that every human being
is endowed by our Creator with certain "unalienable rights." Chief among them is the right to life itself. The Signers of the
Declaration of Independence pledged their own lives, fortunes,
and honor to guarantee inalienable rights for all of the new country's
citizens. These visionaries recognized that an essential human
dignity attached to all persons by virtue of their very existence
and not just to the strong, the independent, or the healthy. That
value should apply to every American, including the elderly and
the unprotected, the weak and the infirm, and even to the unwanted.
Thomas Jefferson wrote that, "[t]he care of human life and
happiness and not their destruction is the first and only legitimate
object of good government." President Jefferson was right.
Life is an inalienable right, understood as given to each of us
by our Creator.
President Jefferson's timeless principle obligates us to pursue
a civil society that will democratically embrace its essential
moral duties, including defending the elderly, strengthening the
weak, protecting the defenseless, feeding the hungry, and caring
for children born and unborn. Mindful of these and other
obligations, we should join together in pursuit of a more compassionate
society, rejecting the notion that some lives are less worthy
of protection than others, whether because of age or illness,
social circumstance or economic condition. Consistent with the
core principles about which Thomas Jefferson wrote, and to which
the Founders subscribed, we should peacefully commit ourselves
to seeking a society that values life from its very beginnings
to its natural end. Unborn children should be welcomed in life
and protected in law.
On September 11, we saw clearly that evil exists in this world,
and that it does not value life. The terrible events of that fateful
day have given us, as a Nation, a greater understanding about
the value and wonder of life. Every innocent life taken that day
was the most important person on earth to somebody; and every
death extinguished a world. Now we are engaged in a fight against
evil and tyranny to preserve and protect life. In so doing, we
are standing again for those core principles upon which our Nation
was founded.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States
of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution
and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim Sunday,
January 20, 2002, as National Sanctity of Human Life Day. I call
upon all Americans to reflect upon the sanctity of human life.
Let us recognize the day with appropriate ceremonies in our homes
and places of worship, rededicate ourselves to compassionate service
on behalf of the weak and defenseless, and reaffirm our commitment
to respect the life and dignity of every human being.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this eighteenth
day of January, in the year of our Lord two thousand two, and
of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred
and twenty-sixth.
GEORGE W. BUSH
Back to Table of Contents