Faced with this violence, we wonder if the divides of race in America can ever be bridged. We wonder if an African-American community that feels unfairly targeted by police, and police departments that feel unfairly maligned for doing their jobs, can ever understand each other’s experience. We turn on the TV or surf the Internet, and we can watch positions harden and lines drawn, and people retreat to their respective corners, and politicians calculate how to grab attention or avoid the fallout. We see all this, and it’s hard not to think sometimes that the center won't hold and that things might get worse.
He concludes and I agree that we are not as divided as we seem. Yes, he offers, there is a lot to overcome, but the good, perseverance and hope that pervades us—despite the darkness that threatens to envelope—is a testament to the power of the goodness and good will that we should never lose sight of. Way to go, President Obama! Exactly the words that we all needed to hear.
Angela Valenzuela
c/s
Full Transcript of President Obama's Speech at Dallas Police Memorial
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By Noah Fitzgerel
President Obama delivered a speech today in Dallas mourning the death of the five police officers killed in action while protecting peaceful protests in the city.
The remarks came days after the shooting in Dallas, where police said a
gunman was targeting whites, and the deaths of two black men during
police-involved shootings -- events that have left the nation on edge.
Here's a transcript of President Obama's remarks from the White House:
THE PRESIDENT: Mr. President and Mrs. Bush; my friend, the Vice
President, and Dr. Biden; Mayor Rawlings; Chief Spiller; clergy; members
of Congress; Chief Brown -- I’m so glad I met Michelle first, because
she loves Stevie Wonder -- (laughter and applause) -- but most of all,
to the families and friends and colleagues and fellow officers:
Scripture tells us that in our sufferings there is glory, because we
know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and
character, hope. Sometimes the truths of these words are hard to see.
Right now, those words test us. Because the people of Dallas, people
across the country, are suffering.
We’re here to honor the memory, and mourn the loss, of five fellow
Americans -- to grieve with their loved ones, to support this community,
to pray for the wounded, and to try and find some meaning amidst our
sorrow.
For the men and women who protect and serve the people of Dallas, last
Thursday began like any other day. Like most Americans each day, you get
up, probably have too quick a breakfast, kiss your family goodbye, and
you head to work. But your work, and the work of police officers across
the country, is like no other. For the moment you put on that uniform,
you have answered a call that at any moment, even in the briefest
interaction, may put your life in harm’s way.
Lorne Ahrens, he answered that call. So did his wife, Katrina -- not
only because she was the spouse of a police officer, but because she’s a
detective on the force. They have two kids. And Lorne took them
fishing, and used to proudly go to their school in uniform. And the
night before he died, he bought dinner for a homeless man. And the next
night, Katrina had to tell their children that their dad was gone. “They
don’t get it yet,” their grandma said. “They don’t know what to do
quite yet.”
Michael Krol answered that call. His mother said, “He knew the dangers
of the job, but he never shied away from his duty.” He came a thousand
miles from his home state of Michigan to be a cop in Dallas, telling his
family, “This is something I wanted to do.” Last year, he brought his
girlfriend back to Detroit for Thanksgiving, and it was the last time
he’d see his family.
Michael Smith answered that call -- in the Army, and over almost 30
years working for the Dallas Police Association, which gave him the
appropriately named “Cops Cop” award. A man of deep faith, when he was
off duty, he could be found at church or playing softball with his two
girls. Today, his girls have lost their dad, for God has called Michael
home.
Patrick Zamarripa, he answered that call. Just 32, a former altar boy
who served in the Navy and dreamed of being a cop. He liked to post
videos of himself and his kids on social media. And on Thursday night,
while Patrick went to work, his partner Kristy posted a photo of her and
their daughter at a Texas Rangers game, and tagged her partner so that
he could see it while on duty.
Brent Thompson answered that call. He served his country as a Marine.
And years later, as a contractor, he spent time in some of the most
dangerous parts of Iraq and Afghanistan. And then a few years ago, he
settled down here in Dallas for a new life of service as a transit cop.
And just about two weeks ago, he married a fellow officer, their whole
life together waiting before them.
Like police officers across the country, these men and their families
shared a commitment to something larger than themselves. They weren’t
looking for their names to be up in lights. They’d tell you the pay was
decent but wouldn’t make you rich. They could have told you about the
stress and long shifts, and they’d probably agree with Chief Brown when
he said that cops don’t expect to hear the words "thank you" very often,
especially from those who need them the most.
No, the reward comes in knowing that our entire way of life in America
depends on the rule of law; that the maintenance of that law is a hard
and daily labor; that in this country, we don’t have soldiers in the
streets or militias setting the rules. Instead, we have public servants
-- police officers -- like the men who were taken away from us.
And that’s what these five were doing last Thursday when they were
assigned to protect and keep orderly a peaceful protest in response to
the killing of Alton Sterling of Baton Rouge and Philando Castile of
Minnesota. They were upholding the constitutional rights of this
country.
For a while, the protest went on without incident. And despite the fact
that police conduct was the subject of the protest, despite the fact
that there must have been signs or slogans or chants with which they
profoundly disagreed, these men and this department did their jobs like
the professionals that they were. In fact, the police had been part of
the protest’s planning. Dallas PD even posted photos on their Twitter
feeds of their own officers standing among the protesters. Two officers,
black and white, smiled next to a man with a sign that read, “No
Justice, No Peace.”
And then, around nine o’clock, the gunfire came. Another community torn
apart. More hearts broken. More questions about what caused, and what
might prevent, another such tragedy.
I know that Americans are struggling right now with what we’ve witnessed
over the past week. First, the shootings in Minnesota and Baton Rouge,
and the protests, then the targeting of police by the shooter here -- an
act not just of demented violence but of racial hatred. All of it has
left us wounded, and angry, and hurt. It’s as if the deepest fault lines
of our democracy have suddenly been exposed, perhaps even widened. And
although we know that such divisions are not new -- though they have
surely been worse in even the recent past -- that offers us little
comfort.
Faced with this violence, we wonder if the divides of race in America
can ever be bridged. We wonder if an African-American community that
feels unfairly targeted by police, and police departments that feel
unfairly maligned for doing their jobs, can ever understand each other’s
experience. We turn on the TV or surf the Internet, and we can watch
positions harden and lines drawn, and people retreat to their respective
corners, and politicians calculate how to grab attention or avoid the
fallout. We see all this, and it’s hard not to think sometimes that the
center won't hold and that things might get worse.
I understand. I understand how Americans are feeling. But, Dallas, I’m
here to say we must reject such despair. I’m here to insist that we are
not as divided as we seem. And I know that because I know America. I
know how far we’ve come against impossible odds. (Applause.) I know
we’ll make it because of what I’ve experienced in my own life, what I’ve
seen of this country and its people -- their goodness and decency --as
President of the United States. And I know it because of what we’ve seen
here in Dallas -- how all of you, out of great suffering, have shown us
the meaning of perseverance and character, and hope.
When the bullets started flying, the men and women of the Dallas police,
they did not flinch and they did not react recklessly. They showed
incredible restraint. Helped in some cases by protesters, they evacuated
the injured, isolated the shooter, and saved more lives than we will
ever know. (Applause.) We mourn fewer people today because of your brave
actions. (Applause.) “Everyone was helping each other,” one witness
said. “It wasn’t about black or white. Everyone was picking each other
up and moving them away.” See, that’s the America I know.
The police helped Shetamia Taylor as she was shot trying to shield her
four sons. She said she wanted her boys to join her to protest the
incidents of black men being killed. She also said to the Dallas PD,
“Thank you for being heroes.” And today, her 12-year old son wants to be
a cop when he grows up. That’s the America I know. (Applause.)
In the aftermath of the shooting, we’ve seen Mayor Rawlings and Chief
Brown, a white man and a black man with different backgrounds, working
not just to restore order and support a shaken city, a shaken
department, but working together to unify a city with strength and grace
and wisdom. (Applause.) And in the process, we've been reminded that
the Dallas Police Department has been at the forefront of improving
relations between police and the community. (Applause.) The murder rate
here has fallen. Complaints of excessive force have been cut by 64
percent. The Dallas Police Department has been doing it the right way.
(Applause.) And so, Mayor Rawlings and Chief Brown, on behalf of the
American people, thank you for your steady leadership, thank you for
your powerful example. We could not be prouder of you. (Applause.)
These men, this department -- this is the America I know. And today, in
this audience, I see people who have protested on behalf of criminal
justice reform grieving alongside police officers. I see people who
mourn for the five officers we lost but also weep for the families of
Alton Sterling and Philando Castile. In this audience, I see what’s
possible -- (applause) -- I see what's possible when we recognize that
we are one American family, all deserving of equal treatment, all
deserving of equal respect, all children of God. That’s the America that
I know.
Now, I'm not naïve. I have spoken at too many memorials during the
course of this presidency. I’ve hugged too many families who have lost a
loved one to senseless violence. And I've seen how a spirit of unity,
born of tragedy, can gradually dissipate, overtaken by the return to
business as usual, by inertia and old habits and expediency. I see how
easily we slip back into our old notions, because they’re comfortable,
we’re used to them. I’ve seen how inadequate words can be in bringing
about lasting change. I’ve seen how inadequate my own words have been.
And so I’m reminded of a passage in *John’s Gospel [First John]: Let us
love not with words or speech, but with actions and in truth. If we’re
to sustain the unity we need to get through these difficult times, if we
are to honor these five outstanding officers who we’ve lost, then we
will need to act on the truths that we know. And that’s not easy. It
makes us uncomfortable. But we’re going to have to be honest with each
other and ourselves.
We know that the overwhelming majority of police officers do an
incredibly hard and dangerous job fairly and professionally. They are
deserving of our respect and not our scorn. (Applause.) And when anyone,
no matter how good their intentions may be, paints all police as biased
or bigoted, we undermine those officers we depend on for our safety.
And as for those who use rhetoric suggesting harm to police, even if
they don’t act on it themselves -- well, they not only make the jobs of
police officers even more dangerous, but they do a disservice to the
very cause of justice that they claim to promote. (Applause.)
We also know that centuries of racial discrimination -- of slavery, and
subjugation, and Jim Crow -- they didn’t simply vanish with the end of
lawful segregation. They didn’t just stop when Dr. King made a speech,
or the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights Act were signed. Race
relations have improved dramatically in my lifetime. Those who deny it
are dishonoring the struggles that helped us achieve that progress.
(Applause.)
But we know -- but, America, we know that bias remains. We know it.
Whether you are black or white or Hispanic or Asian or Native American
or of Middle Eastern descent, we have all seen this bigotry in our own
lives at some point. We’ve heard it at times in our own homes. If we’re
honest, perhaps we’ve heard prejudice in our own heads and felt it in
our own hearts. We know that. And while some suffer far more under
racism’s burden, some feel to a far greater extent discrimination’s
sting. Although most of us do our best to guard against it and teach our
children better, none of us is entirely innocent. No institution is
entirely immune. And that includes our police departments. We know this.
And so when African Americans from all walks of life, from different
communities across the country, voice a growing despair over what they
perceive to be unequal treatment; when study after study shows that
whites and people of color experience the criminal justice system
differently, so that if you’re black you’re more likely to be pulled
over or searched or arrested, more likely to get longer sentences, more
likely to get the death penalty for the same crime; when mothers and
fathers raise their kids right and have “the talk” about how to respond
if stopped by a police officer -- “yes, sir,” “no, sir” -- but still
fear that something terrible may happen when their child walks out the
door, still fear that kids being stupid and not quite doing things right
might end in tragedy -- when all this takes place more than 50 years
after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, we cannot simply turn away
and dismiss those in peaceful protest as troublemakers or paranoid.
(Applause.) We can’t simply dismiss it as a symptom of political
correctness or reverse racism. To have your experience denied like that,
dismissed by those in authority, dismissed perhaps even by your white
friends and coworkers and fellow church members again and again and
again -- it hurts. Surely we can see that, all of us.
We also know what Chief Brown has said is true: That so much of the
tensions between police departments and minority communities that they
serve is because we ask the police to do too much and we ask too little
of ourselves. (Applause.) As a society, we choose to underinvest in
decent schools. We allow poverty to fester so that entire neighborhoods
offer no prospect for gainful employment. (Applause.) We refuse to fund
drug treatment and mental health programs. (Applause.) We flood
communities with so many guns that it is easier for a teenager to buy a
Glock than get his hands on a computer or even a book -- (applause) --
and then we tell the police “you’re a social worker, you’re the parent,
you’re the teacher, you’re the drug counselor.” We tell them to keep
those neighborhoods in check at all costs, and do so without causing any
political blowback or inconvenience. Don’t make a mistake that might
disturb our own peace of mind. And then we feign surprise when,
periodically, the tensions boil over.
We know these things to be true. They’ve been true for a long time. We
know it. Police, you know it. Protestors, you know it. You know how
dangerous some of the communities where these police officers serve are,
and you pretend as if there’s no context. These things we know to be
true. And if we cannot even talk about these things -- if we cannot talk
honestly and openly not just in the comfort of our own circles, but
with those who look different than us or bring a different perspective,
then we will never break this dangerous cycle.
In the end, it's not about finding policies that work; it’s about
forging consensus, and fighting cynicism, and finding the will to make
change.
Can we do this? Can we find the character, as Americans, to open our
hearts to each other? Can we see in each other a common humanity and a
shared dignity, and recognize how our different experiences have shaped
us? And it doesn’t make anybody perfectly good or perfectly bad, it just
makes us human. I don’t know. I confess that sometimes I, too,
experience doubt. I've been to too many of these things. I've seen too
many families go through this. But then I am reminded of what the Lord
tells Ezekiel: I will give you a new heart, the Lord says, and put a new
spirit in you. I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a
heart of flesh.
That’s what we must pray for, each of us: a new heart. Not a heart of
stone, but a heart open to the fears and hopes and challenges of our
fellow citizens. That’s what we’ve seen in Dallas these past few days.
That’s what we must sustain.
Because with an open heart, we can learn to stand in each other’s shoes
and look at the world through each other’s eyes, so that maybe the
police officer sees his own son in that teenager with a hoodie who's
kind of goofing off but not dangerous -- (applause) -- and the teenager
-- maybe the teenager will see in the police officer the same words and
values and authority of his parents. (Applause.)
With an open heart, we can abandon the overheated rhetoric and the
oversimplification that reduces whole categories of our fellow Americans
not just to opponents, but to enemies.
With an open heart, those protesting for change will guard against
reckless language going forward, look at the model set by the five
officers we mourn today, acknowledge the progress brought about by the
sincere efforts of police departments like this one in Dallas, and
embark on the hard but necessary work of negotiation, the pursuit of
reconciliation.
With an open heart, police departments will acknowledge that, just like
the rest of us, they are not perfect; that insisting we do better to
root out racial bias is not an attack on cops, but an effort to live up
to our highest ideals. (Applause.) And I understand these protests -- I
see them, they can be messy. Sometimes they can be hijacked by an
irresponsible few. Police can get hurt. Protestors can get hurt. They
can be frustrating.
But even those who dislike the phrase “Black Lives Matter,” surely we
should be able to hear the pain of Alton Sterling’s family. (Applause.)
We should -- when we hear a friend describe him by saying that “Whatever
he cooked, he cooked enough for everybody,” that should sound familiar
to us, that maybe he wasn’t so different than us, so that we can, yes,
insist that his life matters. Just as we should hear the students and
coworkers describe their affection for Philando Castile as a gentle soul
-- “Mr. Rogers with dreadlocks,” they called him -- and know that his
life mattered to a whole lot of people of all races, of all ages, and
that we have to do what we can, without putting officers' lives at risk,
but do better to prevent another life like his from being lost.
With an open heart, we can worry less about which side has been wronged,
and worry more about joining sides to do right. (Applause.) Because the
vicious killer of these police officers, they won’t be the last person
who tries to make us turn on one other. The killer in Orlando wasn’t,
nor was the killer in Charleston. We know there is evil in this world.
That's why we need police departments. (Applause.) But as Americans, we
can decide that people like this killer will ultimately fail. They will
not drive us apart. We can decide to come together and make our country
reflect the good inside us, the hopes and simple dreams we share.
“We also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering
produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”
For all of us, life presents challenges and suffering -- accidents,
illnesses, the loss of loved ones. There are times when we are
overwhelmed by sudden calamity, natural or manmade. All of us, we make
mistakes. And at times we are lost. And as we get older, we learn we
don’t always have control of things -- not even a President does. But we
do have control over how we respond to the world. We do have control
over how we treat one another.
America does not ask us to be perfect. Precisely because of our
individual imperfections, our founders gave us institutions to guard
against tyranny and ensure no one is above the law; a democracy that
gives us the space to work through our differences and debate them
peacefully, to make things better, even if it doesn’t always happen as
fast as we’d like. America gives us the capacity to change.
But as the men we mourn today -- these five heroes -- knew better than
most, we cannot take the blessings of this nation for granted. Only by
working together can we preserve those institutions of family and
community, rights and responsibilities, law and self-government that is
the hallmark of this nation. For, it turns out, we do not persevere
alone. Our character is not found in isolation. Hope does not arise by
putting our fellow man down; it is found by lifting others up.
(Applause.)
And that’s what I take away from the lives of these outstanding men. The
pain we feel may not soon pass, but my faith tells me that they did not
die in vain. I believe our sorrow can make us a better country. I
believe our righteous anger can be transformed into more justice and
more peace. Weeping may endure for a night, but I’m convinced joy comes
in the morning. (Applause.) We cannot match the sacrifices made by
Officers Zamarripa and Ahrens, Krol, Smith, and Thompson, but surely we
can try to match their sense of service. We cannot match their courage,
but we can strive to match their devotion.
May God bless their memory. May God bless this country that we love. (Applause.)
END
ABC News' Serena Marshall, Jorge Sanchez, and Sunny Choo contributed to this report.
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