20210120 Mục tiêu với thành quả trong bài diễn văn của Tổng Thống Trump khi chia tay với quốc dân.
***
Qua 4 năm nhiệm kỳ của Tổng Thống Trump đã cho chúng ta thấy gì?
Với 4 năm xuyên suốt hạch sách lần đầu mà không có chứng cứ của đảng Dân Chủ.
Sự gian lận trong bầu cử lần hai củng của đảng Dân Chủ có sự nhúng tay can thiệp của ngoại bang.
Cùng sự phản bội của những nghị viên đảng Cộng Hòa.
Qua sự hạch sách lần hai do đảng Dân Chủ khởi xướng trong những ngày cuối nhiệm kỳ của Tổng Thống Trump.
Nó cho chúng tôi thấy rằng tất cả những lủng củng, xáo trộn, náo loạn đều bắt nguồn từ quan niệm sai lầm vì phe phái và nguồn lợi tức quyền thế.
Điều nầy khác với mục tiêu của Tổng Thống Trump là ích nước lợi dân: "MAGA".
Mọi người có thể thấy rỏ điều đó vì chỉ trong 4 năm thôi mà Tổng Thống Trump đã thực hiện hầu hết những lời đã hứa.
So với 8 năm dưới thời của Tổng
thống Obama chỉ có hứa mà chẳng thấy bao nhiêu hiệu quả, còn nửa,
trong những ngày cuối cùng nhiệm kỳ của Obama đã phải xuống “Air
Force One” bằng cửa hậu, mà không có thảm đỏ củng không có cầu thang
để xuống phi cơ khi đến Beijing.
Đây là nổi nhục cho đất nước Hoa Kỳ.
Những tài
liệu được bạch hóa mới đây đã cho chúng tôi thấy Trung Cộng đã lũng
đoạn, tha hóa hầu hết những chính khách trong chính quyền Hoa Kỳ.
Biden, Harris sẽ là hai con rối của Trung Cộng trong những ngày tháng
tới.
Với Tổng Thống Trump, Pence là Tổ Quốc và Dân
Tộc.
Với Biden, Harris là lợi tức cá nhân và sự dối
trá.
***
LIVE: PRESIDENT TRUMP FAREWELL ADDRESS TO THE NATION
1/19/21
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/01/watch-president-trumps-farewell-speech-nation/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIbLtumN__U&feature=emb_logo
Trump farewell speech: Read in full
‘Now more than ever, we must unify around our shared
values,’ he says
As President Donald
Trump prepares to leave office ahead of the inauguration of President-elect Joe
Biden, read his final address to the nation following four years in power:
My fellow Americans:
Four years ago, we launched a great national effort to rebuild our country, to
renew its spirit, and to restore the allegiance of this government to its
citizens. In short, we embarked on a mission to make America great again
-- for all Americans.
As I conclude my term
as the 45th President of the United States, I stand before you truly proud of
what we have achieved together. We did what we came here to do -- and so
much more.
This week, we
inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping America
safe and prosperous. We extend our best wishes, and we also want them to
have luck -- a very important word.
I’d like to begin by
thanking just a few of the amazing people who made our remarkable journey
possible.
First, let me express
my overwhelming gratitude for the love and support of our spectacular First
Lady, Melania. Let me also share my deepest appreciation to my daughter
Ivanka, my son-in-law Jared, and to Barron, Don, Eric, Tiffany, and Lara.
You fill my world with light and with joy.
I also want to thank
Vice President Mike Pence, his wonderful wife Karen, and the entire Pence
family.
Thank you as well to my
Chief of Staff, Mark Meadows; the dedicated members of the White House Staff
and the Cabinet; and all the incredible people across our administration who
poured out their heart and soul to fight for America.
I also want to take a
moment to thank a truly exceptional group of people: the United States Secret
Service. My family and I will forever be in your debt. My profound
gratitude as well to everyone in the White House Military Office, the teams of
Marine One and Air Force One, every member of the Armed Forces, and state and
local law enforcement all across our country.
Most of all, I want to
thank the American people. To serve as your President has been an honour
beyond description. Thank you for this extraordinary privilege. And
that’s what it is -- a great privilege and a great honour.
We must never forget
that while Americans will always have our disagreements, we are a nation of
incredible, decent, faithful, and peace-loving citizens who all want our country
to thrive and flourish and be very, very successful and good. We are a
truly magnificent nation.
All Americans were
horrified by the assault on our Capitol. Political violence is an attack
on everything we cherish as Americans. It can never be tolerated.
Now more than ever, we
must unify around our shared values and rise above the partisan rancour, and
forge our common destiny.
Four years ago, I came
to Washington as the only true outsider ever to win the presidency. I had
not spent my career as a politician, but as a builder looking at open skylines
and imagining infinite possibilities. I ran for President because I knew
there were towering new summits for America just waiting to be scaled. I
knew the potential for our nation was boundless as long as we put America
first.
So I left behind my
former life and stepped into a very difficult arena, but an arena nevertheless,
with all sorts of potential if properly done. America had given me so
much, and I wanted to give something back.
Together with millions
of hardworking patriots across this land, we built the greatest political
movement in the history of our country. We also built the greatest
economy in the history of the world. It was about “America First” because
we all wanted to make America great again. We restored the principle that
a nation exists to serve its citizens. Our agenda was not about right or
left, it wasn’t about Republican or Democrat, but about the good of a nation,
and that means the whole nation.
With the support and
prayers of the American people, we achieved more than anyone thought possible.
Nobody thought we could even come close.
We passed the largest
package of tax cuts and reforms in American history. We slashed more
job-killing regulations than any administration had ever done before. We
fixed our broken trade deals, withdrew from the horrible Trans-Pacific
Partnership and the impossible Paris Climate Accord, renegotiated the one-sided
South Korea deal, and we replaced NAFTA with the groundbreaking USMCA -- that’s
Mexico and Canada -- a deal that’s worked out very, very well.
Also, and very
importantly, we imposed historic and monumental tariffs on China; made a great
new deal with China. But before the ink was even dry, we and the whole
world got hit with the China virus. Our trade relationship was rapidly
changing, billions and billions of dollars were pouring into the U.S., but the
virus forced us to go in a different direction.
The whole world
suffered, but America outperformed other countries economically because of our
incredible economy and the economy that we built. Without the foundations
and footings, it wouldn’t have worked out this way. We wouldn’t have some
of the best numbers we’ve ever had.
We also unlocked our
energy resources and became the world’s number-one producer of oil and natural
gas by far. Powered by these policies, we built the greatest economy in
the history of the world. We reignited America’s job creation and
achieved record-low unemployment for African Americans, Hispanic Americans,
Asian Americans, women -- almost everyone.
Incomes soared, wages
boomed, the American Dream was restored, and millions were lifted from poverty
in just a few short years. It was a miracle. The stock market set
one record after another, with 148 stock market highs during this short period
of time, and boosted the retirements and pensions of hardworking citizens all
across our nation. 401(k)s are at a level they’ve never been at before.
We’ve never seen numbers like we’ve seen, and that’s before the pandemic
and after the pandemic.
We rebuilt the American
manufacturing base, opened up thousands of new factories, and brought back the
beautiful phrase: "Made in the USA.”
To make life better for
working families, we doubled the child tax credit and signed the largest-ever
expansion of funding for childcare and development. We joined with the
private sector to secure commitments to train more than 16 million American
workers for the jobs of tomorrow.
When our nation was hit
with the terrible pandemic, we produced not one, but two vaccines with record-breaking
speed, and more will quickly follow. They said it couldn’t be done but we
did it. They call it a “medical miracle,” and that’s what they’re calling
it right now: a “medical miracle.”
Another administration
would have taken 3, 4, 5, maybe even up to 10 years to develop a vaccine.
We did in nine months.
We grieve for every
life lost, and we pledge in their memory to wipe out this horrible pandemic
once and for all.
When the virus took its
brutal toll on the world’s economy, we launched the fastest economic recovery
our country has ever seen. We passed nearly $4 trillion in economic
relief, saved or supported over 50 million jobs, and slashed the unemployment
rate in half. These are numbers that our country has never seen before.
We created choice and
transparency in healthcare, stood up to big pharma in so many ways, but
especially in our effort to get favoured-nations clauses added, which will give
us the lowest prescription drug prices anywhere in the world.
We passed VA Choice, VA
Accountability, Right to Try, and landmark criminal justice reform.
We confirmed three new
justices of the United States Supreme Court. We appointed nearly 300
federal judges to interpret our Constitution as written.
For years, the American
people pleaded with Washington to finally secure the nation’s borders. I
am pleased to say we answered that plea and achieved the most secure border in
U.S. history. We have given our brave border agents and heroic ICE
officers the tools they need to do their jobs better than they have ever done
before, and to enforce our laws and keep America safe.
We proudly leave the
next administration with the strongest and most robust border security measures
ever put into place. This includes historic agreements with Mexico, Guatemala,
Honduras, and El Salvador, along with more than 450 miles of powerful new wall.
We restored American
strength at home and American leadership abroad. The world respects us
again. Please don’t lose that respect.
We reclaimed our
sovereignty by standing up for America at the United Nations and withdrawing
from the one-sided global deals that never served our interests. And NATO
countries are now paying hundreds of billions of dollars more than when I
arrived just a few years ago. It was very unfair. We were paying
the cost for the world. Now the world is helping us.
And perhaps most
importantly of all, with nearly $3 trillion, we fully rebuilt the American
military -- all made in the USA. We launched the first new branch of the
United States Armed Forces in 75 years: the Space Force. And last spring,
I stood at Kennedy Space Center in Florida and watched as American astronauts
returned to space on American rockets for the first time in many, many years.
We revitalised our
alliances and rallied the nations of the world to stand up to China like never
before.
We obliterated the ISIS
caliphate and ended the wretched life of its founder and leader, al Baghdadi.
We stood up to the oppressive Iranian regime and killed the world’s top
terrorist, Iranian butcher Qasem Soleimani.
We recognised Jerusalem
as the capital of Israel and recognised Israeli sovereignty over the Golan
Heights.
As a result of our bold
diplomacy and principled realism, we achieved a series of historic peace deals
in the Middle East. Nobody believed it could happen. The Abraham
Accords opened the doors to a future of peace and harmony, not violence and
bloodshed. It is the dawn of a new Middle East, and we are bringing our
soldiers home.
I am especially proud
to be the first President in decades who has started no new wars.
Above all, we have
reasserted the sacred idea that, in America, the government answers to the
people. Our guiding light, our North Star, our unwavering conviction has
been that we are here to serve the noble everyday citizens of America.
Our allegiance is not to the special interests, corporations, or global
entities; it’s to our children, our citizens, and to our nation itself.
As President, my top
priority, my constant concern, has always been the best interests of American
workers and American families. I did not seek the easiest course; by far,
it was actually the most difficult. I did not seek the path that would
get the least criticism. I took on the tough battles, the hardest fights,
the most difficult choices because that’s what you elected me to do. Your
needs were my first and last unyielding focus.
This, I hope, will be
our greatest legacy: Together, we put the American people back in charge of our
country. We restored self-government. We restored the idea that in
America no one is forgotten, because everyone matters and everyone has a voice.
We fought for the principle that every citizen is entitled to equal
dignity, equal treatment, and equal rights because we are all made equal by
God. Everyone is entitled to be treated with respect, to have their voice
heard, and to have their government listen. You are loyal to your
country, and my administration was always loyal to you.
We worked to build a
country in which every citizen could find a great job and support their
wonderful families. We fought for the communities where every American
could be safe and schools where every child could learn. We promoted a
culture where our laws would be upheld, our heroes honoured, our history
preserved, and law-abiding citizens are never taken for granted.
Americans should take tremendous satisfaction in all that we have
achieved together. It’s incredible.
Now, as I leave the
White House, I have been reflecting on the dangers that threaten the priceless
inheritance we all share. As the world’s most powerful nation, America
faces constant threats and challenges from abroad. But the greatest
danger we face is a loss of confidence in ourselves, a loss of confidence in
our national greatness. A nation is only as strong as its spirit.
We are only as dynamic as our pride. We are only as vibrant as the
faith that beats in the hearts of our people.
No nation can long
thrive that loses faith in its own values, history, and heroes, for these are
the very sources of our unity and our vitality.
What has always allowed
America to prevail and triumph over the great challenges of the past has been
an unyielding and unashamed conviction in the nobility of our country and its
unique purpose in history. We must never lose this conviction. We
must never forsake our belief in America.
The key to national greatness
lies in sustaining and instilling our shared national identity. That
means focusing on what we have in common: the heritage that we all share.
At the centre of this
heritage is also a robust belief in free expression, free speech, and open
debate. Only if we forget who we are, and how we got here, could we ever
allow political censorship and blacklisting to take place in America.
It’s not even thinkable. Shutting down free and open debate
violates our core values and most enduring traditions.
In America, we don’t
insist on absolute conformity or enforce rigid orthodoxies and punitive speech
codes. We just don’t do that. America is not a timid nation of tame
souls who need to be sheltered and protected from those with whom we disagree.
That’s not who we are. It will never be who we are.
For nearly 250
years, in the face of every challenge, Americans have always summoned our
unmatched courage, confidence, and fierce independence. These are the
miraculous traits that once led millions of everyday citizens to set out across
a wild continent and carve out a new life in the great West. It was the
same profound love of our God-given freedom that willed our soldiers into
battle and our astronauts into space.
As I think back on the
past four years, one image rises in my mind above all others. Whenever I
traveled all along the motorcade route, there were thousands and thousands of
people. They came out with their families so that they could stand as we
passed, and proudly wave our great American flag. It never failed to
deeply move me. I knew that they did not just come out to show their
support of me; they came out to show me their support and love for our country.
This is a republic of
proud citizens who are united by our common conviction that America is the
greatest nation in all of history. We are, and must always be, a land of
hope, of light, and of glory to all the world. This is the precious
inheritance that we must safeguard at every single turn.
For the past four
years, I have worked to do just that. From a great hall of Muslim leaders
in Riyadh to a great square of Polish people in Warsaw; from the floor of the
Korean Assembly to the podium at the United Nations General Assembly; and from
the Forbidden City in Beijing to the shadow of Mount Rushmore, I fought for
you, I fought for your family, I fought for our country. Above all, I
fought for America and all it stands for -- and that is safe, strong, proud,
and free.
Now, as I prepare to
hand power over to a new administration at noon on Wednesday, I want you to
know that the movement we started is only just beginning. There’s never
been anything like it. The belief that a nation must serve its citizens will
not dwindle but instead only grow stronger by the day.
As long as the American
people hold in their hearts deep and devoted love of country, then there is
nothing that this nation cannot achieve. Our communities will flourish.
Our people will be prosperous. Our traditions will be cherished.
Our faith will be strong. And our future will be brighter than ever
before.I go from this majestic place with a loyal and joyful heart, an
optimistic spirit, and a supreme confidence that for our country and for our
children, the best is yet to come.
Thank you, and
farewell. God bless you. God bless the United States of America.
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