First Lady Michelle Obama Celebrates the Success of Million PALA Challenge at Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play

First Lady at Day of Play 1

First Lady Michelle Obama congratulates kids on the Obstacle Course at Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play on the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011. The First Lady joined children and families at the event to celebrate the success of the Million PALA Challenge, a joint initiative of Let’s Move! and the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

Yesterday, First Lady Michelle Obama joined children and families at Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play to celebrate the success of the Million PALA Challenge, a joint initiative of Let’s Move! and the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition (PCFSN).

Launched in September 2010, the Million PALA Challenge was created to motivate one million Americans to get active and earn the Presidential Active Lifestyle Award (PALA) in a year.  Since the start of the challenge, more than 1.7 million Americans have gotten active and earned their PALA, far exceeding the initiative’s goal.

To celebrate this success, Mrs. Obama “turned off” Nickelodeon for three hours during Worldwide Day of Play to encourage kids to go outside and play. The First Lady made a surprise visit at the event, where she cheered kids on at the obstacle course and congratulated the 1.7 million Americans who achieved their PALA.

“I’m so proud of all the kids and families who rose to the challenge and got active this year,” said First Lady Michelle Obama, who earned her PALA last fall. “The Million PALA Challenge helped shine a spotlight on the childhood obesity epidemic and I know we can all keep up the momentum and keep moving to help our kids lead healthy, active lives.”

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Op-ed by First Lady Michelle Obama in The Fayetteville Observer: Military Families Deserve the Spotlight

The full text of an op-ed by First Lady Michelle Obama is printed below. The piece, published in The Fayetteville Observer, can be read online HERE.

Military families deserve the spotlight
The Fayetteville Observer
September 25, 2011
By First Lady Michelle Obama

A few years ago, as I began to travel around the country and talk to all sorts of people, one set of stories always tugged at my heart.  They took my breath away.  They inspired me.  And they motivated me to learn more.  They were stories of strength, courage, and patriotism that define our nation’s military families.  And I know that Fayetteville is filled with them. 
 
They’re your neighbors who raise children and manage households by themselves while their loved ones are deployed.  They’re military kids who have lived most of their young lives with our nation at war and Mom or Dad overseas.  They’re our wounded warriors or survivors of our fallen who continue to serve their community every day.  And they’re women like Barbara Marshall.

Like so many of our veterans, Barbara’s service to this country didn’t stop when her 15-year Navy career ended.  Through Steps N Stages Jubilee House, she is working to combat homelessness among female veterans in the Fayetteville area.  She’s doing it in an unconventional way: by welcoming these struggling women and their families into her own home.

The Marshalls – Barbara; her son, Bert; and her daughter, Maya – are perfect examples of how much our military families give to our country each and every day.  And this summer, a whole busload of people stepped up to give the Marshalls something back.
 
For one week in the sweltering heat, local volunteers and the Extreme Makeover: Home Edition cast and crew worked around the clock to transform Barbara’s home into a beautiful, state-of-the-art dream house and resource center.  I was thrilled to help out with some of the finishing touches, and I’ll never forget the look on Barbara’s face when the bus pulled away to reveal her new home. 
 
But what I remember most was the Fayetteville community’s warm embrace of this family and our homeless veterans.  I saw neighbors grabbing shovels and picking up scraps around the worksite.  I saw business owners and local organizations pitching in.  Even folks around the country got involved, donating logs online to help build the beautiful cabin.
 
Now, I know that not every community can build a home in a week, and not every veteran will end up in Disneyland or on national T.V.  But I also know that the compassion I felt in Fayetteville is alive and well in every community across this country. 
 
That’s what compelled Dr. Jill Biden and me to launch our Joining Forces initiative this spring.  This is a national initiative to address the unique needs of, and expand opportunities for, our remarkable military families. 
 
It’s about businesses, nonprofit organizations, schools, churches, and ordinary citizens doing what they can for these incredible men, women and children.  It’s about Americans uniting in service around these families.  And it’s about everyone – no matter where they come from or their station in life – stepping up to give something meaningful back. 
 
With one of our nation’s biggest media companies, local organizations, and folks from all over Fayetteville pitching in, this summer’s wild week was a perfect example of what we can accomplish when we work together for these families.
 
So Fayetteville, I hope you sit back and enjoy the spotlight tonight on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.  You deserve it.  And I hope that after the show, you’ll visit us at JoiningForces.gov to find out how you can keep showing your appreciation for our military families.  Together, we can serve our military families as well as they have served us.

First Lady Michelle Obama: Joining Forces Is About Everyone Stepping Up to Give Something Meaningful Back

First Lady Michelle Obama with the "Extreme Makeover Home Edition" Team

First Lady Michelle Obama, along with Ty Pennington and the "Extreme Makeover Home Edition" team, watch as Barbara Summey Marshall, center, a 15-year Navy veteran,and her family get the first look at their new house in Fayetteville, N.C., July 21, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

This op-ed from First Lady Michelle Obama was first published in the Fayetteville Observer

A few years ago, as I began to travel around the country and talk to all sorts of people, one set of stories always tugged at my heart. They took my breath away. They inspired me. And they motivated me to learn more. They were stories of strength, courage, and patriotism that define our nation’s military families. And I know that Fayetteville is filled with them.   

They’re your neighbors who raise children and manage households by themselves while their loved ones are deployed. They’re military kids who have lived most of their young lives with our nation at war and Mom or Dad overseas. They’re our wounded warriors or survivors of our fallen who continue to serve their community every day. And they’re women like Barbara Marshall.

Like so many of our veterans, Barbara’s service to this country didn’t stop when her 15-year Navy career ended.  Through Steps N Stages Jubilee House, she is working to combat homelessness among female veterans in the Fayetteville area.  She’s doing it in an unconventional way: by welcoming these struggling women and their families into her own home.

The Marshalls – Barbara; her son, Bert; and her daughter, Maya – are perfect examples of how much our military families give to our country each and every day. And this summer, a whole busload of people stepped up to give the Marshalls something back.  

For one week in the sweltering heat, local volunteers and the Extreme Makeover: Home Edition cast and crew worked around the clock to transform Barbara’s home into a beautiful, state-of-the-art dream house and resource center. I was thrilled to help out with some of the finishing touches, and I’ll never forget the look on Barbara’s face when the bus pulled away to reveal her new home.   

But what I remember most was the Fayetteville community’s warm embrace of this family and our homeless veterans. I saw neighbors grabbing shovels and picking up scraps around the worksite. I saw business owners and local organizations pitching in. Even folks around the country got involved, donating logs online to help build the beautiful cabin. 

Now, I know that not every community can build a home in a week, and not every veteran will end up in Disneyland or on national T.V. But I also know that the compassion I felt in Fayetteville is alive and well in every community across this country.   

That’s what compelled Dr. Jill Biden and me to launch our Joining Forces initiative this spring. This is a national initiative to address the unique needs of, and expand opportunities for, our remarkable military families.   

It’s about businesses, nonprofit organizations, schools, churches, and ordinary citizens doing what they can for these incredible men, women and children.  It’s about Americans uniting in service around these families. And it’s about everyone – no matter where they come from or their station in life – stepping up to give something meaningful back.   

With one of our nation’s biggest media companies, local organizations, and folks from all over Fayetteville pitching in, this summer’s wild week was a perfect example of what we can accomplish when we work together for these families. 

So Fayetteville, I hope you sit back and enjoy the spotlight tonight on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. You deserve it.  And I hope that after the show, you’ll visit us at JoiningForces.gov to find out how you can keep showing your appreciation for our military families. Together, we can serve our military families as well as they have served us.

The White House

Office of the First Lady

First Lady Celebrates Success of Million PALA Challenge at Nickelodeon's Worldwide Day of Play

WASHINGTON – First Lady Michelle Obama today joined children and families at Nickelodeon’s Worldwide Day of Play to celebrate the success of the Million PALA Challenge, a joint initiative of Let’s Move! and the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition (PCFSN). Launched in September 2010, the Million PALA Challenge was created to motivate one million Americans to get active and earn the Presidential Active Lifestyle Award (PALA) in a year.  Since the start of the challenge, more than 1.7 million Americans have gotten active and earned their PALA, far exceeding the initiative’s goal.

“I’m so proud of all the kids and families who rose to the challenge and got active this year,” said First Lady Michelle Obama, who earned her PALA last fall. “The Million PALA Challenge helped shine a spotlight on the childhood obesity epidemic and I know we can all keep up the momentum and keep moving to help our kids lead healthy, active lives.”

To celebrate this success, Mrs. Obama “turned off” Nickelodeon for three hours during Worldwide Day of Play to encourage kids to go outside and play. Additionally, the First Lady made a surprise visit at the event, where she cheered kids on at the obstacle course and congratulated the 1.7 million Americans who achieved their PALA.

“Congratulations to all of the PALA achievers, especially those who took that first step to jumpstart a healthy lifestyle,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.  “Not only did we meet our goal, we exceeded it and we are not finished yet.”

PALA is a long-standing PCFSN program that rewards youth who are active for 60 minutes a day and adults 30 minutes a day, five days a week for six out of eight weeks. Today, the First Lady also announced the launch of PALA+, a new and improved PALA that incorporates elements of MyPlate and is designed to motivate Americans to make physical activity and healthy eating part of their daily life. 

In addition to fulfilling the physical activity requirements of PALA, PALA+ participants must choose one nutrition goal per week from eight healthy eating options, and build upon each over the six-week period.  By the end of the program, participants will have learned how to incorporate six healthy eating habits into their everyday lives.  Participants can learn more about PALA+ or sign up at www.presidentschallenge.org.  After completing the program, participants will receive a free, downloadable certificate signed by PCFSN Co-Chairs, New Orleans Saints Quarterback Drew Brees and three-time U.S. Olympic Gymnast Dominique Dawes.  Participants can also order a certificate signed by the President.

Today, local kids representing community and faith-based organizations, sports leagues and health promotion groups that helped promote the Million PALA Challenge received their PALA certificates from PCFSN members on Worldwide Day of Play’s main stage. The following organizations each helped more than 100,000 people get active and achieve PALA through their programs over the past year:

General Mills Foundation
Miami-Dade County Public Schools
National Basketball Association (NBA)/Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) through NBA/WNBA Fit
National Football League (NFL) PLAY 60 Challenge & Fuel Up to Play 60
Nickelodeon
Professional Golfers’ Association of America (PGA) and The First Tee
Sharecare.com
United States Tennis Association (USTA)

Joining Forces with Extreme Makeover: Home Edition

Watch Joining Forces with Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, here.

Joining Forces is a national initiative that was established to address the unique needs of, and expand opportunities for, our remarkable military families. The town of Fayetteville, North Carolina and the crew of ABC's Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, set the bar for showing support when they spent a week in the sweltering heat of July building a brand new house for Barbara Marshall, a 15-year Navy veteran who has dedicated her life to combating homelessness among female veterans.

First Lady Michelle Obama was in town to lend a hand with the finishing touches, and welcome  the Marshalls into their dream home. Tune in this Sunday at 7 pm to see Mrs. Obama join the crowd chanting, "Bus driver, move this bus!"

First Lady Michelle Obama participates in an episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition"

First Lady Michelle Obama participates in an episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" featuring the Marshalls, a military family in Fayetteville, North Carolina, July 21, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

First Lady Michelle Obama in an episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition"

First Lady Michelle Obama participates in an episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" featuring the Marshalls, a military family in Fayetteville, North Carolina, July 21, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

The First Lady in an episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition"

First Lady Michelle Obama participates in an episode of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" featuring the Marshalls, a military family in Fayetteville, North Carolina, July 21, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

Joining Forces With Extreme Makeover: Home Edition

September 23, 2011 | 2:56

First Lady Michelle Obama travels to Fayetteville, North Carolina to join Extreme Makeover: Home Edition as they build a dream home for Barbara Marshall, a veteran, and her military family. This is what Joining Forces is all about, and because of everyone's hard work and her new home, Barbara Marshall is able to better serve her community but most of all inspire others to do the same.

Infographic:Rebuilding America's Transportation System through the American Jobs Act

America is the country that built the transcontinental railroad and the interstate highway system; the Hoover Dam and Grand Central Station but today, we have roads, bridges, airports and railway lines all across the country that are in need of repair and updating. This afternoon, President Obama was in Cincinnati, Ohio where the Brent Spence Bridge, located on one of the busiest trucking routes in North America, is in such poor condition that it has been labeled functionally obsolete.

The American Jobs Act, a set of ideas supported by both Democrats and Republicans, includes $50 billion for immediate investment in America's infrastructure. This investment not only improves Americans' daily lives by making commutes shorter and safer, but it puts construction workers across the country to work in much needed middle class jobs. 

To better understand how the American Jobs Act will improve our nation's infrastructure and put Americans back to work, take a look at the infographic below.

American Jobs Act Economy Infographic

Related Topics: Economy, Ohio

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President and the First Lady at a DNC Event

Gotham Hall
New York, New York
Tuesday, September 20, 2011

8:40 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi!  Thank you all so much.  Rest yourselves, because we need you rested because you’re going to have to work really hard.  (Laughter.)  I want to thank Mayor Booker for that very kind introduction and for his leadership.  He has worked closely with me on several of my initiatives.  He has been amazing -- energy, everything we need in this country. 

And thanks to all of you for such a warm welcome.  It is great to be in New York.  (Applause.)  Yay for New York!  And it’s great to be here with my husband, because the truth is we rarely get to travel together anymore.  They separate us.  It’s like you’re over there, you’re over there.  So this is sort of like our date night.  (Laughter.)  Yes.  And I would like to thank all of you for planning such a lovely, intimate evening for the two of us.  (Laughter.)  A little dinner, Alicia Keys.  Really nice touch.  (Laughter.)  Who knows what will happen?  (Laughter and applause.) 

In all seriousness, it is a pleasure to be here to introduce my husband tonight.  I am used to talking about him because when I go out on the road folks always ask me about him.  They want to know how is he doing, how is holding up, how is he different after two and a half years as President in the White House, how has he changed.  But the only difference that I can think of is that the salt is starting to catch up with the pepper in his hair.  (Laughter.)  I think it’s quite sexy, but it’s coming.

But other than that -- other than that, I have to tell you that so much is constant about my husband.  From the time that I first met him back at our law firm in Chicago -- we got some Sidley people here tonight I know.  (Applause.)  You might have heard about our story -- this skinny kid with the funny name, who had the audacity to ask his former mentor out on a date.  (Laughter.)  And then his idea of a date was taking me to a church basement.  (Laughter.)   

Well, that guy back then was pretty special.  And I saw it in him then in that church basement in Chicago, when he was a community organizer, talking with a group of South-Siders about the world as it is and the world as it should be.  That was the first thing that touched me about him.  I saw the way those folks’ lives mattered to him, all the way back then, and the way he connected with them.  That’s what I fell in love with. 

I saw it tore him up to see the laid-off workers, the single mothers, the senior citizens who had their communities turned upside down and didn’t know where to turn.  And I saw how those stories stuck with him, and how he dedicated his life to fighting for folks like them.

And I have to tell you that I still see that connection, that fire.  Every single day it is still there.  And I shared this with some of you this afternoon at our gathering.  We had a good gathering today, didn’t we, women?  (Applause.)  Fired up!  But I shared then, after a long day in the Oval Office, or after he's traveled throughout the country, and when the girls have gone to bed, Barack spends most night poring over stacks of letters from people he hears from -- from folks from all across the country, and he reads their stories word for word:  The woman dying of cancer because her health insurance wouldn’t cover her care.  The young person with so much promise and so few opportunities.  The man nearing retirement who just lost his job and is struggling to pay his family’s bills.

And I see the concern on Barack’s face, just like in that church basement.  And I hear that passion and determination.  He tells me, these folks are going through stuff you wouldn’t believe.  He says, we have to fix this.  We have so much more to do.  And when he gets up in the morning, those people’s stories are the first thing on his mind.  They’re with him in meetings in the Oval Office, and as he continues to travel throughout the country.  They’re with him when he’s fighting to put folks back to work; when he’s working to give our middle class a renewed sense of security; when he is out there pushing Congress to finally pass a jobs bill. 

I mean, that is the same connection that brought him back again and again to that church basement.  That’s the same man who won me over all those years ago.  And that is the same man who so many of you worked so hard to elect as President of the United States.

Now, I want you all to remember that when I first came out on the campaign trail I asked you all for one thing.  I personally asked you all -- many of you here -- I said, if I’m going to let my husband do this crazy this and give him up to the country and to the world, that I’m going to need you to have his back.  You promised me that.  I said, you have to have his back. Well, tonight, four years later, I’m going to say it again, because the truth is he can’t do this alone.  So I have to ask you again:  Do you have his back?  (Applause.)  Do you have his back?  Are you fired up?  Are you ready to go?

Well, if that’s the case, then I am proud to introduce my husband, the President of the United States of America, Barack Obama.  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody!  Hello, New York!  (Applause.)  I’m in a New York state of mind.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  What do you think about Michelle Obama?  (Applause.)  She’s not bad. 

Everybody please have a seat.  Have a seat.  Did you notice how she’s getting cuter?  (Laughter.)  She is remarkable, and it is the reason that I’ve got remarkable kids.  I have improved my gene pool.  (Laughter.)  And it is true, this is the closest we get to a date -- which I'm going to have to fix in about 14 months.  (Laughter.)

It is wonderful to see all of you.  Thank you, so much, for being here tonight in this spectacular setting.  There are a couple of people I want to make sure to acknowledge.  First of all, the remarkable Alicia Keys.  Thank you, so much, Alicia, for your performance.  (Applause.)  One of the finest public servants in the country, Mayor Cory Booker.  (Applause.)  The outstanding former Mayor of New York City, David Dinkins.  (Applause.)  The New York City public advocate Bill de Blasio.  (Applause.)  And my dear friend, the DNC Treasurer, Andy Tobias.  (Applause.)  We love Andy.

Now, the truth is, this is not my idea of a date night.  Normally, our dates don't end with me being before 400 of our closest friends.  But it is wonderful to be here.  And I’m here because I need your help.  I need your help, just like I needed your help in 2008.  In fact, I need your help to finish what we started in 2008.  (Applause.)

Back then, we started this campaign not because we thought it was a sure thing -- I just want to remind everybody of that.  The odds were not good.  This was not going to be a cakewalk.  My name was Barack Hussein Obama.  (Laughter.)  You didn’t need a poll to know that might be an issue.  (Laughter.)  But we forged ahead because we had an idea about what this country is, what it has been, and what it can be. 

Most of the people in this room, many of our parents, our grandparents -- we grew up with a faith in an America where hard work and responsibility paid off, and if you stepped up, and if you did your job, and if you were loyal to your company, that loyalty would be rewarded with a decent salary and good benefits -- you might get a raise.  And you had an assurance that life would be better for your kids and your grandkids. 

Over the last decade -- over the last couple of decades, that faith was shaken.  Seemed as if the world’s changed.  The deck kept getting stacked against middle-class Americans, and nobody in Washington seemed willing or able to do anything about it.  And in 2007, all of this culminated in a once in a lifetime economic crisis, a crisis that’s been much worse and much longer than your average recession -- something that most of us have never seen in our lifetimes.  And from the time I took office, we knew that because this crisis had been building for years, it was going to take us years to fully recover.

So the question now is not whether people are still hurting -- of course, people are still hurting.  As Michelle was saying, I read letters and emails every night.  I talk to people when I’m out on the road.  Their stories are heartbreaking -- men and women who’ve poured their lives into a small business, perhaps a business that’s been in their family for generations; suddenly closed.  Folks who have to cross off items from the grocery list so that they can pay for gas to get to the job -- if they’ve got a job.  Parents who postpone retirement so that their children don’t have to drop out of college.  Fathers who write to me and say, do you know what it’s like to have to come home and explain to your family that you’ve lost your job, and then spend month after month looking for a job, and those resumes go unanswered, and how you start losing confidence in yourself and you don't want to look your kids in the eye?

The question is not whether this country is going through hard times.  The question is where does this country go next?  We can go back to the ideas we tried in the last decade -- where corporations got to write their own rules and the most fortunate among us got all of our tax breaks, and jobs got shipped overseas, and incomes and wages flat-lined as the cost of everything went up, and this society became less equal, and opportunity was diminished for too many.  Or we can build the America we talked about in 2008 -- an America where everybody gets a fair shake, and everybody does their fair share.

And that is what this election is about.  That’s what we’ve spent the last two and a half years fighting for.  Every decision I’ve made, all the work that we’ve done, has been based on a simple idea.  And that is that everybody should have a shot, and burdens should be shared, and opportunities should be shared.  And even in the midst of crisis, those were the values that guided us.

So when we wanted to save the auto industry from bankruptcy, there were a lot of Republicans in Congress who fought us tooth and nail, said it was a waste of time and a waste of money.  But we did it anyway.  And we saved thousands of American jobs.  And we made sure taxpayers got their money back.  And, today, the American auto industry is stronger than ever, and they’re making fuel-efficient cars stamped with three proud words:  Made in America.  (Applause.)

When we wanted to pass Wall Street reform to make sure a crisis like this never happens again, lobbyists and special interests spent millions to make sure we didn't succeed.  And we did it anyway.  And we passed the toughest reform in history that prevents consumers from getting ripped off by mortgage lenders, or credit card companies -- which is why, today, there are no more hidden credit card fees, no more unfair rate hikes, and no more deception from banks.

And most of the Republicans voted against it.  (Applause.)  But we made it happen.  (Applause.)  And we were able to cut $60 billion in taxpayer subsidies to big banks, and use those savings to make college more affordable for millions of kids all across this country who want to go to college.  (Applause.)  And instead of giving more tax breaks to the biggest corporations, we cut taxes for small businesses and middle-class families.

The first law I signed was a bill to make sure that women earn equal pay for equal work -- because I’ve got daughters, and I want to make sure they’ve got the same chance as our sons.  (Applause.)  And, yes, we passed health care reform so that no one in America will go bankrupt because they get sick -- because this is the United States of America and we’re better than that. (Applause.)

One other thing we did that is worth mentioning tonight, in particular -- I just met backstage with young Americans who were discharged from the military because of "don't ask, don't tell." As of today, that will never happen again.  (Applause.)  As of today, no one needs to hide who they are to serve the country that they love.  As of today.  (Applause.) 

All of these were tough fights.  But they’re making a difference all across the country.  And we’ve got more fights that we’ve got to win.  We’ve got a long way to go to make sure that everybody in this country gets a fair shake, that the vision that mobilized us in 2008 is realized -- making sure that every American has a chance to get ahead.  And that’s where I need your help.

We’ve got a lot of work to do.  About a week ago, I sent to Congress a bill call the American Jobs Act.  Some of you might have heard about this.  (Applause.)  As I said before a joint session of Congress, every proposal in there has been supported by Democrats and Republicans in the past.  Everything in it will be paid for.  It will put people back to work.  It will put more money back in the pockets of working people.  And Congress should pass that jobs bill right away.  (Applause.)

We’ve got millions of constructions workers who don't have jobs right now.  This bill says, let’s put those men and women to work rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our highways and our schools.  I don't want the best airports and the fastest railroads being built in China.  I want them here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)  There’s work to be done, workers ready to do it.  We’ve got to tell Congress to pass this jobs bill.

Now, in places like South Korea they can’t hire teachers fast enough -- call teachers, nation-builders.  They know that educating their children is the key to competing in a global economy.  Here, we’re laying off teachers in droves.  It’s unfair to our kids.  It undermines their future.  And if we pass this jobs bill, thousands of teachers in every state will be back in the classroom where they belong.  That’s why we’ve got to tell Congress to pass this jobs bill.  (Applause.)

If we pass this bill, companies will get tax credits for hiring American veterans.  (Applause.)  We ask these men and women to suspend their careers, leave their families, risk their lives to protect this country.  They should not have to beg for a job when they come home.  (Applause.)

The jobs act will cut taxes for virtually every worker in America; cut taxes for every small business owner; give an extra tax cut to every small business who hires more workers or gives their workers an increase in wages. 

So don’t just talk about America’s job creators; do something for America’s job creators. (Applause.)  Don’t make a pledge that you’ll never raise taxes -- except when it comes to middle-class taxes, or when Obama proposes a tax cut.  Be consistent.  Pass this jobs bill.  (Applause.)

Now, a lot of folks in Congress have said we’re not going to support any new spending that’s not paid for.  I agree.  I think that’s important.  So yesterday I laid out a plan to pay for the American Jobs Act and that brings down our debt over time.  It adds to the $1 trillion in spending cuts that I already signed this summer, makes it one of the biggest spending cuts in history.  But it’s phased in so that it doesn’t hurt our recovery now.  It’s a plan that says if we want to close this deficit and we want to pay for this jobs plan, then we’ve got to ask the wealthiest Americans and the biggest corporations to pay their fair share.  (Applause.)

Now, the Republicans say they’re in favor of tax reform.  Let’s go.  Let’s reform this tax code.  And let’s reform it based on a very simple principle:  Warren Buffett’s secretary should not be paying a higher tax rate than Warren Buffett.  (Applause.) It’s a simple principle. 

In the United States of America a teacher or a nurse or a construction worker who makes $50,000 a year, they shouldn’t pay a higher tax rate than somebody pulling in $50 million.  It is not fair.  It is not right.  It has to change.  And the vast majority of Americans agree that it has to change.  (Applause.) 

Nobody wants to punish success -- that’s what you here when they try to respond to what should be some pretty obvious logic. Nobody wants to punish success in America.  That’s what’s great about America -- our belief that anybody can make if you try.  Anybody can open a business, have a great idea, go out there and make millions, make billions.  This is the land of opportunity.  It’s why people came to New York.  All I’m saying is that those who have done well, including the majority of people here tonight, we should pay our fair share in taxes.  (Applause.)  Contribute to the nation that made our success possible.  Pass it on -- pass on opportunity. 

And I think most wealthy Americans would agree if they knew that this would help us grow the economy and deal with the debt that threatens our future, and put people back to work.

See, I got some Amen's right here.

AUDIENCE:  Amen!

THE PRESIDENT:  This is a completely unbiased sampling.  (Laughter.) 

Now, you’re already hearing the Republicans in Congress dusting off the old talking points.  You can write their press releases.  “Class warfare,” they say.  You know what, if asking a billionaire to pay the same rate as a plumber or a teacher makes me a warrior for the middle class, I wear that charge as a badge of honor.  (Applause.)  I wear it as a badge of honor.  (Applause.)  Because the only class warfare I’ve seen is the battle that’s been waged against middle-class folks in this country for a decade now.  (Applause.)

Look, this is what it comes down to -- this is about priorities.  It’s always been about priorities.  It’s always been about choices.  If we want to pay for this jobs plan, and close the deficit, and invest in our future, the money has to come from somewhere.  Don’t tell me that you want good schools, don’t tell me that you want safe roads, don’t tell me that you believe in medical research, and then refuse to pay for it. 

We’ve got to make choices.  Would you rather keep tax loopholes for oil companies?  Or do you want to put construction workers and teachers back on the job?  Would you rather keep tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires?  Or do you want to invest in new schools, in medical research, in training more engineers?  Should we ask seniors to pay thousands of dollars more for Medicare?  Or should we ask the biggest corporations to pay their fair share?  That’s what this debate is about.  It’s what’s at stake right now.

This notion that the only thing that we can do to restore prosperity is to let corporations write their own rules, and give tax breaks to the wealthiest few, and tell everybody else that you’re on your own -- this idea that the only way we compete in a global economy in the 21st century is to make sure that we’ve got cheap labor and dirty air -- that’s not who we are.  We’re better than that.  That’s not the story of America.  We are rugged individualists.  We are self-reliant.  It’s been the drive and initiative of our workers and our entrepreneurs that has made this economy the engine and the envy of the world.  But there has always been another that says we’re in this together, we are connected.  (Applause.) 

There are some things we can only do together, as a nation. (Applause.)  And that is not a Democratic idea or a Republican idea; that’s been an American idea.  Lincoln believed in that idea, and Eisenhower believed in that idea, and FDR believed in that idea.  (Applause.)

That’s why this country gave millions of returning heroes, including my grandfather, the chance to go to college on the G.I. Bill.  That’s why a place like New York City has enjoyed the incredible vibrancy, because people thought 20, 30, 40 years ahead.  Let’s build a park in the middle of this metropolis.  It costs money, but it will make this city special.  Let’s invest in great universities.  It might cost a little bit, but think about all those young minds that are going to be shaped, what wonders they’re going to create.

It’s the reason Michelle and I had the chance to succeed beyond our wildest dreams.  Look at where we came from -- a little black girl on the South Side of Chicago; a little mixed kid in Honolulu.  (Laughter.)  A single mom -- (applause) -- we’re only here because somebody passed on this incredible notion, this exceptional American idea that it doesn’t matter where you come from; it doesn’t matter who you’re born to.  If you’re willing to put in the effort, if you’re willing to make sacrifices, you got a shot.  You got a chance.  (Applause.)

I was on a bus tour, through Iowa and Minnesota and my home state of Illinois, rural country -- corn everywhere, beans -- (laughter) -- small towns.  And we’d roll through on that bus, through these little towns, and everybody would be lining up along the road.  And these were rural communities, conservative  -- many of them I probably didn’t get a lot of votes.  But everybody was lined up -- little kids with the American flags, grandparents out in their lawn chairs, people waving, guys standing out in front of the auto shop, wiping their hands off, waving in their overalls.  And we stopped by a high school football game, talked to the coach, went by a public school, met with some of the kids.  And for all the venom and all the shouting in Washington, you’ve got this incredible sense of what the core of America is all about.  This incredible decency and optimism, and the belief that, no matter how tough things are sometimes, somehow, if we pull together, we’re going to get through it.

And in these little towns, by the way, all across the Midwest, suddenly you’ll see black faces and brown faces.  And in the country you can see new waves of immigrants, sort of filling in pockets of towns that previously had been aging, and whole new generations are starting all over again, building this incredible country.  And what’s amazing is you come here to Manhattan, and as you’re driving by and you look at the faces, you sense that same spirit, that same striving, hopeful energy.  Everybody just thinking, you know what, we’re going to make this happen.  We’ve got big dreams.  We’re not going to think small. 

Those things are connected.  This country, as divided as it seems sometimes, that core idea is there.  And that’s what we tapped into in 2008.  It wasn’t me; it was all of you.  It was the country insisting that we can do better than this.  And all that "hopey, changey stuff," as they say -- (laughter) -- that was real.  That wasn’t something worth being cynical about.  (Applause.)  That was real.  You could feel it.  You knew it. 

It’s still there, even in the midst of this hardship.  But it’s hard.  When I was in Grant Park that night I warned everybody, this is going to be hard.  This is not the end; this is the beginning.  And over the last two and a half years we’ve had some tough times.  And, understandably, over time, people sometimes, they get discouraged, and they lose sight of what launched us on this thing in the first place.  They start feeling discouraged, and the whole poster starts kind of fading.  (Laughter.)   

But I tell you what.  You travel around the country, you talk to the America people -- that spirit is still there.  It gets knocked around.  I get knocked around.  But it’s there and it’s worth fighting for.  It’s worth fighting for.  (Applause.)  And that’s why I need your help -- because I need everybody out here to be willing to fight for it.  I need everybody here to understand that America was not built by any single individual.  We built it together.  And we always have been one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.  And we have been a nation of responsibilities to ourselves, but also responsibilities to one another.  And we’ve got to meet those responsibilities right now.

So maybe some people in Congress would rather settle these differences at the ballot box.  I’m ready to settle them at the ballot box.  I intend to win this next election because we’ve got better ideas.  (Applause.)  We’ve got better ideas.  But in the meantime, that’s 14 months away, and the American people don’t have the luxury of waiting that long. 

So let’s get to work right now.  Let’s act right now.  Let’s pass that jobs bill.  Let’s reform the tax code.  Let’s fix some schools.  Let’s rebuild our roads.  Let’s put teachers back to work.  Let’s invest in our basic research.  Let’s invest in America.  Let’s rebuild America.  Let’s think big.  Let’s dream big.  Let’s shake off the discouragement and the depression.  Let’s get to work.  Let’s get busy.  (Applause.)  

I’m ready to fight.  I hope you are, too.  God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.  Thank you.  (Applause.) 

END
9:15 P.M. EDT 

Playing Tennis with First Lady Michelle Obama

Ed. Note: Cross-posted from the Let's Move! blog.

First Lady Michelle Obama plays Table Tennis

First Lady Michelle Obama plays table tennis with a young participant in a Let's Move! event at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, New York, Sept. 9, 2011. Other participants include Serena Williams, John McEnroe, James Blake and Billie Jean King. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

On the sunniest of sunny days earlier this month at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, Let's Move! was alive with action packed fun. The First Lady joined tennis greats Billie Jean King, John McEnroe, James Blake and Serena Williams in serving, lobbing and smashing tennis balls with children from the Harlem Junior Tennis and Education Program and the New York Junior Tennis League. The stars and First Lady kept up pretty well with the junior acers.

The occasion for the mini-tournament was to highlight the importance of physical activity and celebrate the US Tennis Association's (USTA) successful implementation of their commitments to build or refurbish thousands of tennis courts in cities all over the United States so that children and youth can have access to the "sport of a lifetime". The USTA was also demonstrating the new Ten-and-Under tennis courts that are making tennis accessible to more and more younger children. No longer will a seven-year-old get discouraged when the racquet is too heavy or the net is almost as tall as she is. Scaled down to child size, the new Ten-and-Under courts keep children in the center of the picture...right on center court.

First Lady Michelle Obama: Support our Military Families

President Barack Obama And First Lady Visit Site Of Flight 93 Crash

President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama visit the site where Flight 93 crashed, following a ceremony at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., on the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks against the United States, Sunday, Sept. 11, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

The full text of an op-ed by First Lady Michelle Obama is printed below. The piece, published in USA Today, can be read online HERE.

Last weekend, Americans across the country joined together to remember that September morning from 10 years ago, honoring the memory of those we lost with service and reflection. And my husband and I were humbled to stand with the families and survivors on the same hallowed grounds where tragedy struck.

Yet what shines most brightly from last weekend is not memories of horror, but images of heroes; not the echoes of evil that sought to divide, but the compassion that compelled us to unite. What lasts from this anniversary is the true spirit of America that was laid bare that day and remains alive today: the courage of those who lost loved ones; the strength of those who survived; the bravery of those who ran not away from but into danger.

Those are the same qualities that live on every day among a generation of American troops and their families whose service has been defined by 9/11 and its aftermath. This anniversary also gives us the opportunity to reflect on all that these families have endured and our obligations to them now and in the years ahead.

Selfless service

They're the 9/11 Generation — the more than 5 million servicemembers who have worn the uniform this past decade and their families. They've rightfully earned not only the admiration of a grateful nation, but also a place in history alongside our greatest generations. More than 2 million men and women have served in the war zones, including an unprecedented number of deployments by our National Guardsmen and Reservists. We've never asked so much of our all-volunteer force.

And we've never asked this much of our military families, either. Found in nearly every community in this country, these brave family members serve right alongside their loved ones. They just don't wear uniforms. They're spouses who balance a career and a household all alone while their loved ones are deployed. They're young children who have known only life in a nation at war. They're teenagers who are all too familiar with Dad or Mom being gone for months at a time.

Yet even with all that they shoulder, these military family members are some of the most extraordinary individuals I've ever met: the moms who always seem to pick up the extra carpool shift, the kids who take on extra chores around the house, the survivors of our fallen who step up every day to serve our communities, and the veterans and wounded warriors who have served our country heroically on the battlefield and continue to contribute here at home.

It's our turn

No matter what the situation or how many directions they're being pulled in, our military families always stand ready to serve their loved ones, their communities and our country.

After 10 years of war, it's our turn to return their service and sacrifice with honor and appreciation of our own — and not just in word, but in deed.

That's why last spring, Jill Biden and I launched Joining Forces, a national initiative to address the unique needs and expand the opportunities of these remarkable men, women and children. Businesses can work to employ veterans and help military spouses build careers. Schools can make sure they're properly supporting military kids. Citizens can reach out to organizations who serve military families right in their communities. Every single person, group or community can do something, and we've already seen countless individuals, organizations and businesses step up to answer this call. To see what others are up to, and to join forces yourself, please visit us at www.joiningforces.gov .

I hope you do.

As we reaffirm our commitment to hold dear the heroism, strength and compassion we saw on Sept. 11, let's also pledge to keep our military families in our hearts long after this anniversary has passed. These men, women and children have served valiantly in the decade since that fateful day.

Now it's up to us to serve them as well.