State of the Union Address (1790-2001) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 5,523 pages of information about State of the Union Address (1790-2001).

State of the Union Address (1790-2001) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 5,523 pages of information about State of the Union Address (1790-2001).

There has been no challenge like this in the history of our Republic.  We are called upon to rise to the occasion, as no people before us.

What is required of us is not easy.  The way we must learn to live, the world we have to live in, cannot be so pleasant, safe or simple as most of us have known before, or confidently hoped to know.

Already we have had to sacrifice a number of accustomed ways of working and of living, much nervous energy, material resources, even human life.  Yet if one thing is certain in our future, it is that more sacrifice still lies ahead.

Were we to grow discouraged now, were we to weaken and slack off, the whole structure we have built, these past eight years, would come apart and fall away.  Never then, no matter by what stringent means, could our free world regain the ground, the time, the sheer momentum, lost by such a move.  There can and should be changes and improvements in our programs, to meet new situations, serve new needs.  But to desert the spirit of our basic policies, to step back from them now, would surely start the free world’s slide toward the darkness that the communists have prophesied-toward the moment for which they watch and wait.

If we value our freedom and our way of life and want to see them safe, we must meet the challenge and accept its implications, stick to our guns and carry out our policies.

I have set out the basic conditions, as I see them, under which we have been working in the world, and the nature of our basic policies.  What, then, of the future?  The answer, I believe, is this:  As we continue to confound Soviet expectations, as our world grows stronger, more united, more attractive to men on both sides of the iron curtain, then inevitably there will come a time of change within the communist world.  We do not know how that change will come about, whether by deliberate decision in the Kremlin, by coup d’etat, by revolution, by defection of satellites, or perhaps by some unforeseen combination of factors such as these.

But if the communist rulers understand they cannot win by war, and if we frustrate their attempts to win by subversion, it is not too much to expect their world to change its character, moderate its aims, become more realistic and less implacable, and recede from the cold war they began.

Do not be deceived by the strong face, the look of monolithic power that the communist dictators wear before the outside world.  Remember their power has no basis in consent.  Remember they are so afraid of the free world’s ideas and ways of life, they do not dare to let their people know about them.  Think of the massive effort they put forth to try to stop our Campaign of Truth from reaching their people with its message of freedom.

The masters of the Kremlin live in fear their power and position would collapse were their own people to acquire knowledge, information, comprehension about our free society.  Their world has many elements of strength, but this one fatal flaw:  the weakness represented by their iron curtain and their police state.  Surely, a social order at once so insecure and so fearful, must ultimately lose its competition with our free society.

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State of the Union Address (1790-2001) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.