The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at DC-CAP Graduation Celebration

Wardman Park Mariott
Washington, D.C.

6:15 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, hello!  (Applause.)  How is everybody doing?  You all rest yourselves.

Well, I am beyond thrilled to be here tonight because we are celebrating these outstanding DC-CAP graduates from the class of 2014.  I told you all this when we took -- I am so proud of you all.  I am so proud.

And I want to start by thanking Jonathan -- yes -- (applause) -- for that wonderful introduction.  And thank you for your service to our country.  I’m proud of you.  (Applause.)  Yes, indeed. 

I also want to recognize the CEO of DC-CAP, Argelia Rodriguez.  (Applause.)  And I know her mom is here, so I’m going to recognize Mom, as well.  She told me she’s keeping an eye on her.  (Applause.)  Yes, indeed.  I told her I have one of these at home too -- (laughter) -- keeping an eye on me.  I also want to recognize the Board Chairman, Donald Graham.  (Applause.)  Yes, indeed.  And I want to thank them both, as well as the staff and the entire board for all of your outstanding leadership, the wonderful work that you have done to help these young people thrive and succeed.  You all are an amazing group of people.

And of course, I want to give a huge shoutout to all of the families here tonight.  (Applause.)  Yes, the folks who pushed you, who prayed for you, who believed in you every step of the way.  Tonight is your night too.  Right, graduates?  (Applause.)  Yes, indeed.

And finally, to our graduates.  

(Baby cries.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Oh, yes.  (Laughter.)  That's soon to be.  Soon to be.  (Laughter.)  But congratulations to you all.  I know you all have worked so hard.  You have journeyed so far and overcome so much to earn your degrees.

Remember how you first felt when you first left home and set foot on that college campus?  I know for many of you, being the first from your family or maybe even from your whole neighborhood to attend college must have been pretty unsettling at times.

Maybe there were times when you were overwhelmed in some of your classes, or felt uneasy around your new classmates.  Maybe there were months when you ran low on cash and worried about paying for those books or food even -- you can give me an Amen!  (Applause.)  Maybe you were homesick and desperately missed your family and friends.  And maybe there were nights when you lay awake wondering whether you really belonged, or if they had made some terrible mistake by letting you in.   (Laughter.)

But here’s the thing, graduates:  You didn’t give in to your panic.  You didn’t give in to your doubt or despair.  Instead, you swallowed your pride and you asked for help.  You opened your heart and you made new friends.  You patched together scholarships and jobs to make ends meet.  And you studied like your life depended on it, because you knew that it did. 

And after pushing yourself so hard for so long, you made it.  You achieved the dream that has driven you for so many years -- you all are now college graduates.  Yes, indeed.  (Applause.)  And today, you are the pride of your families and communities.  And let me tell you something, you are the pride of your President and your First Lady too.   (Applause.)

More importantly, you all are role models for young people across this country, especially the DC-CAP high school graduates who are here tonight who are going to follow in your footsteps.  So I hope that you all will truly savor this moment.  Take a second to sit back and relax.  Celebrate a little bit with your friends.  Sleep late -- (laughter) -- because you’ve earned it.

I want you to enjoy these moments of calm and satisfaction because, as you will learn, they are rare.  For just as you close one chapter, you realize that it’s time to start another.  And figuring out your next steps can stir up all those old feelings of anxiety and doubt.

Some of you may not know what’s next.  Maybe you don’t have a job yet; maybe you’re worried about finding one.  And if you do have a job, maybe you’re wondering whether you’ll succeed at that job.  Maybe you’re thinking about graduate school, but you don’t know how you’re ever going to pay for it. 

So just when you thought you had it all figured out, you are now faced with a whole new set of challenges.  And you’re once again wondering how you’re ever going to make it.  Sound familiar?

AUDIENCE:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, I’m here today, graduates, just to assure you that you are going to be just fine, because you have everything you need right here and right now to succeed beyond your wildest dreams. 

You see, during your time in college, you weren’t just learning business or biology or sociology, you were learning how to survive and thrive no matter what life throws your way.  And that’s what I want to talk with you about today.  I want to talk about how the lessons you’ve learned in college have prepared you to succeed out here in the real world.  And I want to start with a lesson that you all have been learning your entire lives, and that is to never, ever stop struggling -- because that’s how you got to college in the first place.  You struggled for it.  And when you got there, you struggled even more.

Maybe you failed your first test.  Maybe you got a bad grade on your first paper.  But you didn’t just throw up your hands and say, well, I must be stupid, I quit.  No, no, you buckled down.  You went to those professor’s office hours.  You stayed up late solving those problems, writing and rewriting those papers, right?  And soon, you mastered that material.  Soon, your grades started to improve. 

And believe it or not, that all happened because the sheer act of struggling made you smarter.  No, I’m serious.  This is really important, because there are there are scientific studies that prove this.  Science actually shows that when you’re struggling to solve a problem or to understand a concept, you’re forming new pathways and connections in your brain. 

So struggling isn’t a bad thing.  It is not a sign of weakness -- in fact, it’s a sign of growth.  It’s a sign that you’re expanding your capacity to handle the hard challenges that you will inevitably face throughout your entire life.  So don’t ever, ever shy away from a good struggle.  Instead, I want you to seek it out and dive in head first, because that’s what truly successful people do.

Take my husband, for example.  You know the guy.  (Laughter.)  Barack Obama wasn’t born as President of the United States.  He struggled for years to make it to the White House.  And then, once he got there, he struggled even harder -- (laughter and applause) -- to create jobs, to get people health care, to help young people like you go to college.  See, and here’s the thing -- in a few years, when it’s his time to leave office, he’s going to start all over again with a whole new set of challenges. 

See, graduates, that’s what life is.  It is an endless process of struggle and success, struggle and success.  And in the coming months, as you’re out there looking for a job, you might have to do five or 10 or 20 interviews before you finally get an offer.  You might get rejected from dozens of graduate schools before you finally get accepted to one.
 
But remember, just like in college, that struggle is making you stronger and smarter and more resilient.  So no matter how tough it gets, no matter how frustrated you are, I want you all to just keep moving forward.  And here’s the thing -- don’t ever let your doubts, or anyone else’s doubts about you, distract you from your path. 

And that brings me to the second lesson that I want to discuss today, which is to never, ever listen to the doubters, no matter how convincing they might sound.  (Applause.)  Indeed.  And I know that at some point in college, all of you faced a doubter or two.  Maybe it was that professor who took one look at you and made a snap judgment that you wouldn’t succeed.  Maybe it was the classmate who heard about where you came from and gave you that look of pity that made you feel like you didn’t belong.  Trust me, I know what that’s like.  You see, as Jonathan said, I grew up just like many of you.  My family didn’t have a lot of money.  My parents never went to college.  And there were plenty of folks who doubted whether a kid like me had what it took to reach my goals. 

I remember one of those doubters in particular.  He was a wonderful professor whose class I took at Princeton.  Now, let me say this, I aced his class.  I blew it out of the water.  (Applause.)  So at the end of the semester, I asked the professor if I could work with him on a research project and he said yes.  Now, I did this in part because I knew that I’d be applying to law school, and between the A that I’d gotten in the class and the research we’d be doing together, I was confident that this man would write me an excellent letter of recommendation.

So we’re working together over a course of months, and eventually I asked him if he would write me that letter.  And he said, “Sure, I’ll do it.  But really, you’re not the hottest thing I’ve seen coming out of the gate.”  Oh, yes.  (Laughter.)  I was stunned.  Now, in hindsight, I appreciated the honesty, but it really felt like he punched me right in my stomach. 

But in that moment, I made a decision.  I decided that I was going to do everything in my power to make that man regret those words.  (Applause.)  And at a point, I didn’t even care about the letter anymore.  I knew that it was my responsibility to show my professor how wrong he was about me. 

So for the rest of my time with him, I worked my butt off for this man.  I was in his office every day.  I was sitting side by side with him, analyzing data like no one had analyzed it before.  And I didn’t say a word about the letter.  And then, one day, the professor asked me, well, what are your plans for next year?  And I told him -- I said, I applied to law school.  And, he said, oh, did I write you a letter for that?  And I said, yes, as a matter of fact, you did.  He then got very quiet.  And, he said, well, how are things going?  And I told him that I’d gotten accepted everywhere I’d applied except for Harvard Law, where I’d been waitlisted.  He paused for a moment, and then he said, I’m going to write you another letter.

See, at that point, I knew I had won.  Whether or not I got into Harvard didn’t even matter.  I had shown not just my professor, but myself what I was capable of achieving. 

So graduates, when you encounter those doubters -- that boss who doesn’t think you deserve a promotion, that grad school advisor who thinks you’re nothing special -- don’t get angry.  Don’t get anxious or insecure.  Get better.  Work harder.  Let your light shine so bright that it blinds the doubters.  Because trust me, in the end, success is always your best revenge.  And not just because it feels so good -- (laughter) -- because even if you never change those doubters’ minds, at least you’ll have improved yourself while you’re working to prove them wrong.  And that’s an investment in yourself that no one can ever take away from you.

Which brings me to the final lesson I want to discuss today:  Investing in yourself, no matter what else is going on in your life.  So here is what I mean -- I know that for many of you, going away to college meant leaving behind important responsibilities at home.  In some of your families, you were the rock.  You were the shoulder to cry on, the one who took care of your brothers and sisters when your mom was working, or maybe you worked a job yourself to help pay the bills.

And when you went away to school, some of you may have felt guilty, constantly torn between the needs of your family and your dreams for yourself.  And graduates, the truth is, the tug of home won’t go away now that you have that degree.  In fact, as you start your career and start earning a paycheck, you might get even more of those late-night phone calls about how someone is sick or someone needs money, can you come home and help.

Now, there is nothing, nothing more important than family.  And there will be plenty of times when you need to answer those calls and take care of the people you love.  But I can tell you that, ultimately, the best way for you to help your family is to keep investing in yourself.  And that’s a hard thing for you to swallow.  I know that.  (Applause.)  I know that’s a tough one.  But I’ve dealt with this myself. 

You see, back when I was getting my education and starting my career, my parents were no strangers to struggle.  They were facing health challenges and any number of other problems.  But here is the thing -- no matter what was happening at home, whenever I called to see how my parents were doing, I always got the same answer:  Everything is fine, baby, just take care of yourself.

You see, my parents couldn’t offer me a lot in the way of tangible support.  They couldn’t give me advice about what classes to take or what jobs to apply for.  They didn’t have networks.  But what they could do was keep me from getting sucked into their problems.  They knew -- amen, and I want the families to hear this as well.  (Applause.)  They knew that I had enough stress in my life on my own, and they were determined not to add any more stress from their lives.  And because my parents gave me the space I needed to succeed, I was able to focus on getting good grades and a good job and earning some money.  And before long, I was able to start helping my parents out.  And today, my mother never has to worry about money again because my brother and I can afford to take care of her for the rest of our lives.  (Applause.)

So graduates, by continuing to focus on your own success, you will ensure that you can keep giving back -- not just to the people you love, but to the communities you come from.  And by the way, that last part isn’t a suggestion; it’s an obligation that folks like us share.  (Applause.)  The obligation to reach back and give others the same chances we’ve had to succeed.  And I know that some of you might be thinking to yourselves, well, I’ve dealt with so much on my own, how could I possibly have the time or energy to worry about anyone else?  Or maybe you don’t ever want to think about where you came from again.  Maybe you just want to walk away and never look back.

But, graduates, you all are here today because a lot of people chose not to walk away from you.  And there are so many kids just like you in communities across this country, kids like the DC-CAP high school grads here today, kids who need to meet you.  They need to see that your story can be their story. 

They need to hear the story of DC-CAP graduates like Rhia Hardman.  Rhia’s father and stepmother were both crack addicts, and she spent her teenage years breaking up fights in her own home.  She sometimes even had to survive without water or electricity.  But Rhia decided to build a different life for herself.  And as she wrote in a recent essay, she said, “Every time I wanted to quit, I pushed, knowing someone had the same dream but didn’t get the opportunity.”  And today, Rhia is a proud graduate –- with honors –- from Virginia State University.  (Applause.)

And then there’s Rashema Melson.  Rashema’s family has been homeless for years, and there were times when she didn’t even have clean clothes to wear to school.  But Rashema worked hard in her classes at Anacostia, and she ran track.  She worked hard, and after four years of struggle, Rashema graduated as valedictorian of her class.  And she will be attending Georgetown University on a full scholarship this fall.  (Applause.) 

I could go on and on, because so many of you have stories just like these –- stories of families who couldn’t support you, of communities where you weren’t safe, schools that maybe didn’t always live up to your promise.  But ultimately, despite it all, you chose to succeed.  And that is the thread that connects every single one of you.  It is your mindset, your fierce belief in your own potential, your unwavering conviction that you deserve something better from life.

And if you all can graduate from college despite such overwhelming odds, then there is no reason why every child in this country can’t follow in your footsteps.  (Applause.)  Your shining success -- your success -- it’s a powerful message to every young person in America that you don’t have to wait for your neighborhood to improve, or for your school to turn around, or for your family to solve all its problems.  Instead, no matter what’s going on in your life, you can find a way to make it to school every day, to go to class, to listen to those teachers, to get the education you deserve.

So, graduates, we need you out there as mentors and role models in our communities.  We need you as leaders in your companies, urging them to support programs like DC-CAP.  We need you working in our government, pushing our leaders to help every child get a college education no matter where they’re from or how they grew up.  (Applause.)  Because you know it is not enough just to help a small number of young people like you beat the odds.  We need to change the odds for all young people across this country.  Because this country, we need you.  We really do.  We need your passion, your determination, your brilliance, your drive.  That’s one of the reasons why I started Reach Higher -- to help all our young people complete their education beyond high school. 

So here’s the thing -- I want you all to know that I’m going to be fighting for you, and I am rooting for you and kids like you across this country.  I will be doing this work not just for the rest of my time as First Lady, but for the rest of my life.  (Applause.)  Because, graduates, I believe in you.  I really do.  I’m so proud of you.  I am inspired by you.  And I can’t wait to see what you all achieve in the years ahead.  So go out there and do some great things.

Thank you all.  God bless.  (Applause.)

END  
6:37 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks to the Press by the Vice President and Dominican President Medina

The Presidential Palace
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

2:30 P.M. EDT

PRESIDENT MEDINA:  (As interpreted.)  Ladies and gentlemen, I am pleased to welcome Vice President Joe Biden and his delegation in the name of the government and the people of the Dominican Republic, as well as in my own name. 

I would like also to take the opportunity of our distinguished guest to send a message of friendship and solidarity to President Barack Obama and to the people of the United States.

In his public, as well as his private life, Vice President Biden is an example of tenacity and strength before adversities, qualities that determine the leadership that he has in his country and the world.  His visit to our land, crib of the expansion of the Western world to the Americas comes to deepen our relations with the United States based in respect and mutual collaboration.

In the meeting that we just concluded, we have overviewed the bilateral relation and touched on points of mutual interest, amongst which security in the area of the Caribbean and Central America, the fight against the scourge of illegal drug trafficking, the topic of energy and trade may be underscored. 

The Dominican Republic and the United States work hand in hand to guarantee security in the area of the Caribbean and Central America.  The joint efforts are crucial to combat illegal drug trafficking, but also trafficking in persons, and containment of illegal immigration.  In this respect we thank you for your support that is now manifested also through the initiatives promoted by the United States in favor of regional security in the actions of the Central American Integration System. 

As you all know, the United States is our main trade partner.  And since the signing of the free trade agreement, DR-CAFTA, exports to that market have grown by 24 percent, from $3 billion in 2007 to $4.2 billion just last year.  Trade between our nations amounted $12 billion in 2012.  And the Dominican Republic is the ninth place for U.S. exports to the Western Hemisphere. 

We are aware, however, of the fact that DR-CAFTA also presents challenges.  As a product of the great asymmetries between our economies, we trust to have the collaboration of the United States so that our trade be undertaken always under conditions of fairness that are sustainable for our producers.  Our concern -- sustainable for our producers.  In this respect, I must indicate that we are very pleased with the answer that President Obama gave to the letter that we sent related to the dangers that the Trans Pacific Partnership represents for the Dominican economy.  We trust that the United States will take into consideration our concern, and that we will not be forced to compete at a disadvantage in the U.S. market.

Another fundamental aspect of our agenda has been energy security, a topic of vital importance for this government because of its profound repercussions in our national budget, and of course in the development of our nation.  The Dominican Republic has launched an ambitious transformation agenda in energy, an integral project that should take us to overcome the energy deficit once and for all.

Amongst our objective, we have diversification of the energy matrix, with emphasis in use of renewable sources of energy, strategy in which we are receiving the technical support of the United States.  And I take this opportunity to thank you for it. 

We attach great value to the interest of the United States to support our energy self-sufficiency.  As a country with limited resources, we must explore the different sources of energy to find a balance between clean energy and generation cost.  In this respect, aware of the fact that the United States very soon will be exporting natural gas, we want to underscore our wish to be included as one of the priority markets for gas exportation.  This will help us notably reduce energy costs, one of the crucial strategic objectives for competitiveness and development in our country.

I must underscore, however, that beyond trade relations, the United States and the Dominican Republic are brought together by brotherhood ties, by living together of thousands -- of hundreds of thousands of families, more than 1.5 million Dominicans that live currently in the United States, and approximately the same number of U.S. tourists that visit our country, in addition to the 250,000 U.S. citizens that live in the Dominican Republic.  That is a tie that cannot be broken, that makes both countries responsible to create better conditions for our citizens within and outside our own borders. 

In this regard, I would like to once again express our gratitude to the government and the people of the United States for the support offered to put into operation of what is already an initiative without precedence in our country for protection of our citizens.  And I am referring to the 911 Security and Emergency System.  Into its third week of operations, we can now say that it is already transforming attention and services to the public for always.  This good result promotes that we work with enthusiasm in its expansion into other zones of the country.  And we count on the support of the United States. 

Our relations with the United States are and will continue to be excellent.  Our purpose, our objective has been that they reflect the maturity of both democracies manifested as a partnership with a common purpose of moving forward for the development of our people.  As in all partnerships, mutual respect must be an inviolable rule.  Understanding that always amongst partners, we can have disagreements.  What is important, however, is to be able to discuss them through dialogue and convince that the dignity of one country transcends beyond its borders.

In summary, our conversation has been a frank, open, respectful dialogue, as it should be among friends.  To the United States, we are brought to by geography, democratic values and love of freedom, our interest is that today such close relationship may come even closer in the future.  I trust that that will be the case after this memorable visit. 

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Mr. President, thank you for your hospitality.  I think we worried our teams that we were going to stay down in your office and continue to talk we were getting on so well and leave them out of the discussion.  But we’re about to have lunch, and we’re going to pursue some of the things we’ve already discussed.

I want to thank you -- and I want to apologize to you, Mr. President, for having to postpone my trip.  I was due here a month or so ago, and events called me into an emergency, prevented me from being here.  And the only one more disappointed than me was my wife, Jill, who was scheduled to come with me at the time, and now is not able to be with me.  So I’m in a little bit of trouble for not having been able to keep the first date.

But I did bring along with me, Mr. President, because I wanted her to see your beautiful country and become more acquainted, I brought along my granddaughter.  My granddaughter is with me.  She is 13 years old.  And I brought along my nephew.  And so we came to the Dominican Republic.

As you pointed out to me, I’m the first Vice President to visit the Republic since 1980.  And I’m here for a simple reason, on behalf of the President of the United States, because as you do, Mr. President, we believe very, very deeply in the importance of the relationship.  And I said to you and I’ve said throughout the hemisphere that it is no longer the United States, this administration looking to the hemisphere, looking to the Dominican Republic and concluding what can we do for you.  It’s not about doing anything for anybody.  It’s about doing with you. 

We have an inordinate respect for your democracy, respect for you, and respect for the people.  And this is about equals -- equal sovereign nations dealing with one another.  And as you point out, we mostly agree on almost everything.  Where we disagree, we have an opportunity to tell each other where and when we disagree.  We’re not there yet so far.  But the truth of the matter is this is the relationship that is based on mutual respect.  And they're not just words.  That is what our policy is about.  It’s mutual respect.

We can see how close we are.  As you pointed out, we have a million and a half Dominicans, many of whom are my friends and constituents, who live in the United States of America.  And there are more than a million tourists that flock here.  And the only thing you didn't mention is baseball.  (Laughter.)  Baseball is the sinew that holds us together at the end of the day, as a baseball fan.  And so that is -- that should not be underestimated:  the consequence of our -- both of us having a national pastime called baseball.  And I know that's overshadowed in light of the World Cup going on right now.   But -- I’m a baseball fan.

But anyway, we have so much in common, Mr. President, that it’s only natural that our interests and our values overlap with one another. 

And today the President and I discussed all that he said, and I’m hopeful we’re going to be able to discuss more in our lunch.  But with regard to trade, we spoke about trade between our countries.  And since the Central American and Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement, it has grown to $11.5 billion.  And today the President and I discussed what the next steps are in fully implementing CAFTA-DR, including efforts to provide predictable business environment under the rule of law, as well as to put in place protections for intellectual property, labor and the environment.  They're essential elements of that agreement, and very, very important to the United States, and I’m sure to the Dominican Republic.

And these aren’t just the terms of the trade agreement, they're the ingredients for future growth.  They are the basis for future growth.  Where there is not labor protection, environmental protection and protection of intellectual property in this 21st century, there’s not likely to be growth consistent with capability.

And the other ingredient to growth is education.  My wife is a professor and teaches full-time while being Second Lady.  And she has an expression.  She says that, show me a country that out-educates you, and I will show you a country that out-competes you.  And it’s obvious you understand that.  That's part of your DNA, Mr. President.  Because I applaud you for your robust investment in education, including the constitutional mandate for a minimum share of the budget devoted to education.  That is remarkable.  That is notable, and we wish you every bit of luck in any way we can be of assistance in that regard.  And the Ambassador and I discussed last night ways in which we think we can.  But at up to you to decide whether we can be a value-added.

On security, the President and I also spoke about our countries’ shared efforts to protect our citizens from crime.  We’re working together to reduce illicit drug trafficking, increasing public safety and security, and to promote social justice, human rights, and the rule of law because security depends on much more than arrest and confiscation of contraband.

As you know, Mr. President, I spent the bulk of my professional life on the security side of this arrangement when I was Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, which has control over our criminal justice system.  And I know we share a common sense of what need be done, and we’re prepared to be of help.

And to give one small example, you’ve mentioned, Mr. President, that together we’ve now put in place 911 emergency response for Santo Domingo.  We see no reason why that cannot be -- if you decide that's what you want -- extend this to the whole country.  There is no reason why it has to be limited to Santo Domingo.  We’re prepared to work with you to expand the 911 system.   And we hope your government is -- shares our view that it should be expanded to your entire country.  But that's for you to decide, not for us to decide.

And, Mr. President, on energy, we also spoke about energy.  The central issue for the Caribbean economies that are the most dependent in the hemisphere on energy imports that affects the lives of families and drains government budgets.  It holds back economies, and people feel it.  People feel it.

Later today I’m going to travel to a local solar facility to speak to this issue in greater depth.  But we did have a chance to go into some detail on this, and I assume we’ll continue the conversation at lunch.

The President and I also talked about regional issues.  And we’ll talk more at lunch about this, at least I will ask to talk more about it, about Venezuela and our mutual interest in bringing greater political inclusion, stability, and protection of basic human rights beyond the issue of energy production and availability. 

And with regard to immigration, we discussed immigration downstairs at some length.  In my country, we’re working to bring about change for 11 million undocumented women, men, and children, and to bring them out of the shadows of American life and give them the dignity and the -- that they deserve.

We also are aware that it is also in our economic interest to do that.  Every independent study shows when we do that, our economy actually grows.  Our deficit shrinks.  Our security system -- our Social Security system gains additional leverage.  And so as I told the President, I personally think that one of the secrets to America’s ability to constantly renew itself is  a consistent flow of immigration and integration into our population.

And this is difficult.  This is difficult.  But we consider it a matter of economic self-interest, as well as a moral imperative.  And the Dominican Republic faces its own challenge of improving the conditions of Haitian migrants and descendants who were born here in the Dominican Republic.  I congratulated the President on the swift and decisive way and the overwhelming support he received in the legislature, in the Dominican Congress for the passage of a new naturalization law that is a serious piece of business.

And now it’s about implementation.  And we’re confident that it will be implemented, and I spent time telling the President how pleased and quite frankly how surprised I was that he was able to act so swiftly in dealing with your Supreme Court decision.  And it took a bold step that required bold leadership.  And you exercised and showed you have both, Mr. President.  And as I said, now implementation will be equally as important.

We had a wide ranging and full discussion reflecting the close ties between our people, and the wide range of issues that connect us.  So, Mr. President, I thank you for the discussions we’ve had so far.  I look forward to continuing those discussions at lunch.  And rest assured, rest assured, we -- the United States, our government values this relationship.  We value it very highly.  And make no mistake about it.  We view you with -- and your country with great respect, and view you as a sovereign nation that is equal in every discussion that takes place between us.  And notwithstanding the asymmetries you referred to, it is born out of genuine respect.  I look forward to continuing our conversation.

Thank the press for being here.  And if there’s any new fundamental breakthroughs, we find out how to establish peace in our time around the world, we’ll come back out and tell you.  (Applause.)

END
2:50 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Situation in Iraq

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:32 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  I just met with my national security team to discuss the situation in Iraq.  We’ve been meeting regularly to review the situation since ISIL, a terrorist organization that operates in Iraq and Syria, made advances inside of Iraq.  As I said last week, ISIL poses a threat to the Iraqi people, to the region, and to U.S. interests.  So today I wanted to provide you an update on how we’re responding to the situation.

First, we are working to secure our embassy and personnel operating inside of Iraq.  As President, I have no greater priority than the safety of our men and women serving overseas.  So I’ve taken some steps to relocate some of our embassy personnel, and we’ve sent reinforcements to better secure our facilities.

Second, at my direction, we have significantly increased our intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance assets so that we’ve got a better picture of what’s taking place inside of Iraq.  And this will give us a greater understanding of what ISIL is doing, where it’s located, and how we might support efforts to counter this threat. 

Third, the United States will continue to increase our support to Iraqi security forces.  We’re prepared to create joint operation centers in Baghdad and northern Iraq to share intelligence and coordinate planning to confront the terrorist threat of ISIL.  Through our new Counterterrorism Partnership Fund, we’re prepared to work with Congress to provide additional equipment.  We have had advisors in Iraq through our embassy, and we’re prepared to send a small number of additional American military advisors -- up to 300 -- to assess how we can best train, advise, and support Iraqi security forces going forward.

American forces will not be returning to combat in Iraq, but we will help Iraqis as they take the fight to terrorists who threaten the Iraqi people, the region, and American interests as well.

Fourth, in recent days, we’ve positioned additional U.S. military assets in the region.  Because of our increased intelligence resources, we’re developing more information about potential targets associated with ISIL.  And going forward, we will be prepared to take targeted and precise military action, if and when we determine that the situation on the ground requires it.  If we do, I will consult closely with Congress and leaders in Iraq and in the region.

I want to emphasize, though, that the best and most effective response to a threat like ISIL will ultimately involve partnerships where local forces, like Iraqis, take the lead. 

Finally, the United States will lead a diplomatic effort to work with Iraqi leaders and the countries in the region to support stability in Iraq.  At my direction, Secretary Kerry will depart this weekend for meetings in the Middle East and Europe, where he’ll be able to consult with our allies and partners.  And just as all Iraq’s neighbors must respect Iraq’s territorial integrity, all of Iraq’s neighbors have a vital interest in ensuring that Iraq does not descend into civil war or become a safe haven for terrorists.

Above all, Iraqi leaders must rise above their differences and come together around a political plan for Iraq’s future.  Shia, Sunni, Kurds -- all Iraqis -- must have confidence that they can advance their interests and aspirations through the political process rather than through violence.  National unity meetings have to go forward to build consensus across Iraq’s different communities.  Now that the results of Iraq’s recent election has been certified, a new parliament should convene as soon as possible.  The formation of a new government will be an opportunity to begin a genuine dialogue and forge a government that represents the legitimate interests of all Iraqis.

Now, it’s not the place for the United States to choose Iraq’s leaders.  It is clear, though, that only leaders that can govern with an inclusive agenda are going to be able to truly bring the Iraqi people together and help them through this crisis.  Meanwhile, the United States will not pursue military options that support one sect inside of Iraq at the expense of another.  There’s no military solution inside of Iraq, certainly not one that is led by the United States.  But there is an urgent need for an inclusive political process, a more capable Iraqi security force, and counterterrorism efforts that deny groups like ISIL a safe haven.

In closing, recent days have reminded us of the deep scars left by America’s war in Iraq.  Alongside the loss of nearly 4,500 American patriots, many veterans carry the wounds of that war, and will for the rest of their lives.  Here at home, Iraq sparked vigorous debates and intense emotions in the past, and we’ve seen some of those debates resurface. 

But what’s clear from the last decade is the need for the United States to ask hard questions before we take action abroad, particularly military action.  The most important question we should all be asking, the issue that we have to keep front and center -- the issue that I keep front and center -- is what is in the national security interests of the United States of America.  As Commander-in-Chief, that’s what I stay focused on.  As Americans, that’s what all of us should be focused on. 

And going forward, we will continue to consult closely with Congress.  We will keep the American people informed.  We will remain vigilant.  And we will continue to do everything in our power to protect the security of the United States and the safety of the American people. 

So with that, I’m going to take a couple of questions.  I’ll start with Colleen McCain Nelson of the Wall Street Journal.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  Do you have any confidence in Prime Minister Maliki at this point?  And can Maliki bring political stability to Iraq?

THE PRESIDENT:  As I said, it’s not our job to choose Iraq’s leaders.  Part of what our patriots fought for during many years in Iraq was the right and the opportunity for Iraqis to determine their own destiny and choose their own leaders.  But I don’t think there’s any secret that right now at least there is deep divisions between Sunni, Shia and Kurdish leaders.  And as long as those deep divisions continue or worsen, it’s going to be very hard for an Iraqi central government to direct an Iraqi military to deal with these threats.

And so we’ve consulted with Prime Minister Maliki, and we’ve said that to him privately.  We’ve said it publicly that whether he is prime minister, or any other leader aspires to lead the country, that it has to be an agenda in which Sunni, Shia and Kurd all feel that they have the opportunity to advance their interests through the political process.  And we’ve seen over the last two years, actually dating back to 2008, 2009 -- but I think worse over the last two years -- the sense among Sunnis that their interests were not being served, that legislation that had been promised around, for example, De-Ba’athification had been stalled. 

I think that you hear similar complaints that the government in Baghdad has not sufficiently reached out to some of the tribes and been able to bring them in to a process that gives them a sense of being part of a unity government or a single nation-state.  And that has to be worked through.

Part of the reason why we saw better-equipped Iraqi security forces with larger numbers not be able to hold contested territory against ISIL probably reflects that lack of a sense of commitment on the part of Sunni communities to work with Baghdad.  And that has to be fixed if we’re going to get through this crisis.

Jim Acosta.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  Americans may look at this decision that you’re making today as a sneak preview of coming attractions; that the number of advisors that you’re planning to send in may just be the beginning of a boots-on-the-ground scenario down the road.  Why is Iraq’s civil war in the national security interests of the United States?  And are you concerned about the potential for mission creep?

THE PRESIDENT:  I think we always have to guard against mission creep, so let me repeat what I’ve said in the past:  American combat troops are not going to be fighting in Iraq again. 

We do not have the ability to simply solve this problem by sending in tens of thousands of troops and committing the kinds of blood and treasure that has already been expended in Iraq.  Ultimately, this is something that is going to have to be solved by the Iraqis.

It is in our national security interests not to see an all-out civil war inside of Iraq, not just for humanitarian reasons, but because that ultimately can be destabilizing throughout the region.  And in addition to having strong allies there that we are committed to protecting, obviously issues like energy and global energy markets continues to be important. 

We also have an interest in making sure that we don’t have a safe haven that continues to grow for ISIL and other extremist jihadist groups who could use that as a base of operations for planning and targeting ourselves, our personnel overseas, and eventually the homeland.  And if they accumulate more money, they accumulate more ammunition, more military capability, larger numbers, that poses great dangers not just to allies of ours like Jordan, which is very close by, but it also poses a great danger potentially to Europe and ultimately the United States.

We have already seen inside of Syria that -- or groups like ISIL that right now are fighting with other extremist groups, or an Assad regime that was non-responsive to a Sunni majority there, that that has attracted more and more jihadists or would-be jihadists, some of them from Europe.  They then start traveling back to Europe, and that, over time, can create a cadre of terrorists that could harm us.

So we have humanitarian interests in preventing bloodshed.  We have strategic interests in stability in the region.  We have counterterrorism interests.  All those have to be addressed.

The initial effort for us to get situational awareness through the reconnaissance and surveillance that we’ve already done, coupled with some of our best people on the ground doing assessments of exactly what the situation is -- starting, by the way, with the perimeter around Baghdad and making sure that that's not overrun -- that's a good investment for us to make.  But that does not foreshadow a larger commitment of troops to actually fight in Iraq.  That would not be effective in meeting the core interests that we have.

Q    Just very quickly, do you wish you had left a residual force in Iraq?  Any regrets about that decision in 2011?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, keep in mind that wasn’t a decision made by me; that was a decision made by the Iraqi government.  We offered a modest residual force to help continue to train and advise Iraqi security forces.  We had a core requirement which we require in any situation where we have U.S. troops overseas, and that is, is that they're provided immunity since they're being invited by the sovereign government there, so that if, for example, they end up acting in self-defense if they are attacked and find themselves in a tough situation, that they're not somehow hauled before a foreign court.  That's a core requirement that we have for U.S. troop presence anywhere. 

The Iraqi government and Prime Minister Maliki declined to provide us that immunity.  And so I think it is important though to recognize that, despite that decision, that we have continued to provide them with very intensive advice and support and have continued throughout this process over the last five years to not only offer them our assistance militarily, but we’ve also continued to urge the kinds of political compromises that we think are ultimately necessary in order for them to have a functioning, multi-sectarian democracy inside the country.

Juliet Eilperin. 

Q    Mr. President, you just mentioned Syria a moment ago.  The United States has been slow to provide significant weapons and training directly to the Syrian opposition.  Has the expansion of the Syria war into Iraq changed your mind about the type of weapons and training we’re now willing to give the opposition there?  Is that what prompted Secretary Kerry to say of Syria, “We are augmenting our assistance in significant ways”?  And can you elaborate on what you are you doing now that you weren’t doing before?

THE PRESIDENT:  That assessment about the dangers of what was happening in Syria have existed since the very beginning of the Syrian civil war.  The question has never been whether we thought this was a serious problem.  The question has always been, is there the capacity of moderate opposition on the ground to absorb and counteract extremists that might have been pouring in, as well as an Assad regime supported by Iran and Russia that outmanned them and was ruthless.

And so we have consistently provided that opposition with support.  Oftentimes, the challenge is if you have former farmers or teachers or pharmacists who now are taking up opposition against a battle-hardened regime, with support from external actors that have a lot at stake, how quickly can you get them trained; how effective are you able to mobilize them.  And that continues to be a challenge.  And even before the situation that we saw with ISIL going into Iraq, we had already tried to maximize what we could do to support a moderate opposition that not only can counteract the brutality of Assad, but also can make sure that in the minds of Sunnis they don't think that their only alternative is either Mr. Assad or extremist groups like ISIL or al Nusra.
 
Q    And can you speak to what you might be doing differently, as the Secretary of State alluded to?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that the key to both Syria and Iraq is going to be a combination of what happens inside the country working with the moderate Syrian opposition, working with an Iraqi government that is inclusive, and us laying down a more effective counterterrorism platform that gets all the countries in the region pulling in the same direction.  And I alluded to this in the West Point speech.  I talked about it today with respect to the Counterterrorism Partnership Fund.

There is going to be a long-term problem in this region in which we have to build and partner with countries that are committed to our interests, our values.  And at the same time, we have immediate problems with terrorist organizations that may be advancing.  And rather than try to play Whac-a-Mole wherever these terrorist organizations may pop up, what we have to do is to be able to build effective partnerships, make sure that they have capacity.  Some of the assets that have been devoted solely to Afghanistan over the last decade we’ve got to shift to make sure that we have coverage in the Middle East and North Africa. 

You look at a country like Yemen -- a very impoverished country and one that has its own sectarian or ethnic divisions -- there, we do have a committed partner in President Hadi and his government.  And we have been able to help to develop their capacities without putting large numbers of U.S. troops on the ground at the same time as we’ve got enough CT, or counterterrorism capabilities that we’re able to go after folks that might try to hit our embassy or might be trying to export terrorism into Europe or the United States. 

And looking at how we can create more of those models is going to be part of the solution in dealing with both Syria and Iraq.  But in order for us to do that, we still need to have actual governments on the ground that we can partner with and that we’ve got some confidence are going to pursue the political policies of inclusiveness.  In Yemen, for example, a wide-ranging national dialogue that took a long time, but helped to give people a sense that there is a legitimate political outlet for grievances that they may have.

Peter Maer.

Q    Thank you, sir.  Going back to where you see Prime Minister al-Maliki playing a role at this point, you said that it’s a time to rise above differences, that there’s a need for more inclusive government.  Is he a unifier?  And how much clout does the United States ultimately have with any of the leadership in Iraq at this point really?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we still provide them significant assistance.  I think they recognize that, unlike some other players in the region, we don’t have territorial ambitions in their country.  We’re not looking to control their assets or their energy.  We want to make sure that we’re vindicating the enormous effort and sacrifice that was made by our troops in giving them an opportunity to build a stable, inclusive society that can prosper and deliver for the basic needs and aspirations of the Iraqi people.

And at the same time, they are a sovereign country.  They have their own politics.  And what we have tried to do is to give them our best advice about how they can solve their political problems.  Now that they are in crisis, we are indicating to them that there is not going to be a simple military solution to this issue.  If you start seeing the various groups inside of Iraq simply go to their respective corners, then it is almost certain that Baghdad and the central government will not be able to control huge chunks of their own country.  The only way they can do that is if there are credible Sunni leaders, both at the national level and at the local level, who have confidence that a Shia majority, that the Kurds, that all those folks are committed to a fair and just governance of the country.

Right now, that doesn’t exist.  There’s too much suspicion, there’s too much mistrust.  And the good news is that an election took place in which despite all this mistrust, despite all this frustration, despite all this anger, you still had millions of Iraqis turn out -- in some cases, in very dangerous circumstances.  You now have a court that has certified those elections, and you have a constitutional process to advance government formation.

So far, at least, the one bit of encouraging news that we’ve seen inside of Iraq is that all the parties have said they continue to be committed to choosing a leadership and a government through the existing constitutional order.

So what you’re seeing I think is, as the prospects of civil war heighten, many Iraq leaders stepping back and saying, let’s not plunge back into the abyss; let’s see if we can resolve this politically.  But they don’t have a lot of time.  And you have a group like ISIL that is doing everything that it can to descend the country back into chaos. 

And so one of the messages that we had for Prime Minister Maliki but also for the Speaker of the House and the other leadership inside of Iraq is, get going on this government formation.  It’ll make it a lot easier for them to shape a military strategy.  It’ll also make it possible for us to partner much more effectively than we can currently.

Q    Given the Prime Minister’s track record, is he a unifier?  Can he play that role after what we’ve seen play out over the last couple of weeks is brought into play?

THE PRESIDENT:  I think the test is before him and other Iraqi leaders as we speak.  Right now, they can make a series of decisions.  Regardless of what’s happened in the past, right now is a moment where the fate of Iraq hangs in the balance, and the test for all of them is going to be whether they can overcome the mistrust, the deep sectarian divisions, in some cases just political opportunism, and say this is bigger than any one of us and we’ve got to make sure that we do what’s right for the Iraqi people.  And that’s a challenge.

That’s not something that the United States can do for them.  That’s not something, by the way, that the United States Armed Forces can do for them.  We can provide them the space, we can provide them the tools.  But ultimately, they’re going to have to make those decisions.

In the meantime, my job is to make sure that American personnel there are safe; that we are consulting with the Iraqi security forces; that we’re getting a better assessment of what’s on the ground; and that we’re recognizing the dangers of ISIL over the long term, and developing the kinds of comprehensive counterterrorism strategies that we’re going to need to deal with this issue.  And that’s going to involve some short-term responses to make sure that ISIL is not obtaining capacity to endanger us directly or our allies and partners.  But it also is going to require some long-term strategies, as well. 

Because part of what we’ve with respect to ISIL is a broader trend that I talked about at West Point -- rather than a single network, a discreet network of terrorists, this fluid combination of hardened terrorists, disaffected local leadership.  And where there’s vacuums, they’re filling it and creating the potential for serious danger for all concerned.

Thank you very much.

Q    On Iran, Mr. President, any words on what you’re willing to do, and are you also willing to work with them?

THE PRESIDENT:  Our view is that Iran can play a constructive role if it is helping to send the same message to the Iraqi government that we’re sending, which is that Iraq only holds together if it’s inclusive and that if the interests of Sunni, Shia and Kurd are all respected.  If Iran is coming in solely as an armed force on behalf of the Shia, and if it is framed in that fashion, then that probably worsens the situation and the prospect for government formation that would actually be constructive over the long term.

Q    What’s your sense of that right now?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that just as Iraq’s leaders have to make decisions, I think Iran has heard from us.  We’ve indicated to them that it is important for them to avoid steps that might encourage the kind of sectarian splits that might lead to civil war. 

And the one thing that I think has to be emphasized -- we have deep differences with Iran across the board on a whole host of issues.  Obviously, what’s happened in Syria in part is the result of Iran coming in hot and heavy on one side.  And Iran obviously should consider the fact that if its view of the region is solely through sectarian frames, they could find themselves fighting in a whole lot of places.  And that’s probably not good for the Iranian economy or the Iranian people over the long term either.  I suspect there are folks in Iran who recognize that.  A Iraq in chaos on their borders is probably not in their interests.  But old habits die hard, and we’ll have to see whether they can take what I think would be a more promising path over the next several days. 

Thank you very much, everybody. 

END
2:01 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Presentation of The Medal of Honor to Corporal William Kyle Carpenter

East Room

2:33 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  Please be seated.  On behalf of Michelle and myself, welcome to the White House. 

The man you see before you today, Corporal William Kyle Carpenter, should not be alive today.  Hand grenades are one of the most awful weapons of war.  They only weigh about a pound, but they’re packed with TNT.  If one lands nearby, you have mere seconds to seek cover.  When it detonates, its fragments shoot out in every direction.  And even at a distance, that spray of shrapnel can inflict devastating injuries on the human body.  Up close, it’s almost certain death.   

But we are here because this man, this United States Marine, faced down that terrible explosive power, that unforgiving force, with his own body -- willingly and deliberately -- to protect a fellow Marine.  When that grenade exploded, Kyle Carpenter’s body took the brunt of the blast.  His injuries were called “catastrophic.”  It seemed as if he was going to die.  While being treated, he went into cardiac arrest, and three times, he flatlined.  Three times, doctors brought him back.

Along with his parents, who call Kyle’s survival “our miracle,” we thank God they did.  Because with that singular act of courage, Kyle, you not only saved your brother in arms, you displayed a heroism in the blink of an eye that will inspire for generations valor worthy of our nation’s highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor.

Now, Kyle and I have actually met before.  During his long recovery at Walter Reed, he and some of our other wounded warriors came to the White House to celebrate the World Series champion, the St. Louis Cardinals.  Some of you might be aware, I am a White Sox fan.  (Laughter.)  Kyle likes the Braves.  So it was a tough day for both of us.  (Laughter.)   

But after the ceremony, Michelle and I had the chance to meet Kyle.  And at the time, he was still undergoing surgeries.  But he was up and he was walking, and he was working his way toward being independent again, towards the man you see here today.  And, Kyle, the main message we want to send is, welcome back.  We are so proud to have you here. 

We just spent some time not just with Kyle, but also with his wonderful family.  And anybody who has had a chance to get to know this young man knows you’re not going to get a better example of what you want in an American or a Marine.  Despite all the attention, he’s still the same humble guy from Gilbert, South Carolina, population of about 600 -- I guess today it’s only population 590-something.  (Laughter.) 

These days he’s also at the University of South Carolina, “just a normal college student,” he says, cheering for the Gamecocks.  You’ll notice that Kyle doesn’t hide his scars; he’s proud of them, and the service that they represent.  And, now, he tells me this, and so I’m just quoting him -- he says, “the girls definitely like them.”  (Laughter.)  So he’s kind of -- he’s working an angle on this thing.  (Laughter.)  I wasn’t sure whether I was supposed to say that in front of mom.  (Laughter.)  But there’s a quote there.

In addition to our many distinguished guests, I want to welcome those who made this man the Marine that he is -- Kyle’s father, Jim; Kyle’s lovely mom, Robin; and his brothers, Price, and Peyton, one of whom is going to be joining Kyle at South Carolina, another Gamecock, and then we’ve got one who’s going to be at The Citadel.  We also have Kyle’s Marine brothers who served with him in Afghanistan and through his recovery.  And I also want to welcome the members of the Medal of Honor Society, whose ranks Kyle joins today.

Kyle and his fellow Marines served during the surge of forces that I ordered to Afghanistan early in my presidency.  Their mission was to drive the Taliban out of their strongholds, protect the Afghan people and give them a chance to reclaim their communities.
 
Kyle and his platoon were in Helmand province in Marja, pushing their way across open fields and muddy canals, bearing their heavy packs even as it could heat up to 115 degrees.  In one small village, they turned a dusty compound into their base.  The insurgents nearby gave their answer with sniper fire, and automatic weapon fire, and rocket-propelled grenades.

That morning, Kyle said, “our alarm clock was AK-47 fire.”  Some of the men were by their bunks, gearing up for another day.  Some were heating up their MREs.  Some were in makeshift ops centers -- a simple mud building -- planning the day’s patrols.  And up on the roof, behind a circle of sandbags, two Marines manned their posts -- Kyle, and Lance Corporal Nicholas Eufrazio. 
The compound started to take fire.  Seeking cover, Kyle and Nick laid down low on their backs behind those sandbags.  And then the grenade landed with a thud, its pin already pulled.  It was about to explode.

And Kyle has no memory of what happened next.  What we do know is that there on that rooftop he wasn’t just with a fellow Marine, he was with his best friend.  Kyle and Nick had met in training.  In Afghanistan they patrolled together, day and night, a friendship forged in fire.  Kyle says about Nick, “He was my point man, and I loved him like a brother.” 

When the grenade landed, other Marines in the compound looked up and saw it happen.  Kyle tried to stand.  He lunged forward toward that grenade, and then he disappeared into the blast.   Keep in mind, at the time, Kyle was just 21 years old.  But in that instant, he fulfilled those words of Scripture:  “Greater love hath no man than this; that a man lay down his life for his friends.” 

They found Kyle lying face down, directly over the blast area.  His helmet was riddled with holes.  His gear was melted.  Part of his Kevlar vest was blown away.  One of the doctors who treated him later said Kyle was “literally wounded from the top of his head to his feet.” 

And for a moment, Kyle was still conscious.  His eyes were open but he couldn’t see.  Kyle remember “everything went white.”  And yet, even then, his thoughts were not of himself.  One of the Marines who was there remembers how Kyle kept asking one question, and that was whether Nick was okay.  And then, as Kyle’s strength drained away, he sensed the end was coming.  So according to Kyle’s memories, “My last thought [was to] make peace with God.  I asked for forgiveness.  I was trying to make the best and most of my last few seconds here on Earth.”
  
The Medal of Honor is presented for gallantry on the battlefield.  But today, we also recognize Kyle Carpenter for his valor since in the hard fight for recovery.  Eventually, Kyle woke up after five weeks in a coma.  I want you to consider what Kyle has endured just to stand here today -- more than two and a half years in the hospital.  Grueling rehabilitation.  Brain surgery to remove shrapnel from his head.  Nearly 40 surgeries to repair a collapsed lung, fractured fingers, a shattered right arm broken in more than 30 places, multiple skin grafts.  He has a new prosthetic eye, a new jaw, new teeth -- and one hell of a smile.  (Laughter.)  

And Kyle is the first to give credit elsewhere.  His doctors at Bethesda, he says, “put me back together well.”  Today is also a reminder that in past wars, somebody with injuries as severe as Kyle’s probably wouldn’t have survived.  So many of our wounded warriors from today’s wars are alive not just because of remarkable advances in technology, but primarily because of the extraordinary dedication and skill of our military and our VA medical professionals. 

So we need to keep doing everything we can in our power to give our wounded warriors and those who treat them the support that they need.  And I think this is a wonderful opportunity to ask doctors Debra Malone and Lauren Greer, and the rest of Kyle’s medical team who are here to please stand.  I see their amazing work every time I visit Bethesda, every time I visited Walter Reed.  It’s pretty rare where you’ve got a job where you just know you’re doing God’s work every single day.  And they do an incredible job, so thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you for the miracles you work for our wounded troops and veterans. 

Now, Kyle says he’ll wear this medal for all who serve and for those who didn’t make it back, and for those who struggle still.  So today, we also honor two members of his team who made the ultimate sacrifice in that deployment:  Kyle’s friends Lance Corporal Timothy M. Jackson of Corbin, Kentucky, and Lance Corporal Dakota R. Huse of Greenwood, Louisiana. 

And our thoughts are also with the Marine who Kyle saved that day, his brother, Nick.  I had the opportunity to meet Nick as well nearly two years after the blast on one of my visits to Walter Reed.  Nick also suffered grievous wounds.  As a result of traumatic brain injury, he couldn’t speak for more than a year.  He also endured multiple surgeries.  Today, his recovery continues.  He lives at home with his family in Plymouth, Massachusetts, where he is watching this ceremony.  So, Nick, on behalf of all of us, I want you to know we honor your sacrifice as well.  Your perseverance is an inspiration.  And just as Kyle was there for you, our nation will be there for you and your family as you grow stronger in the years ahead.

If any of our wounded warriors seek an example -- let me amend that -- if any American seeks a model of the strength and resilience that define us as a people, including this newest 9/11 generation, I want you to consider Kyle.  After everything he’s been through, he skis, he snowboards, he’s jumped from a plane -- with a parachute, thankfully.  (Laughter.)  He trudged through a 6-mile Mud Run, completed the Marine Corps Marathon, says he wants to do a triathlon.  He’s a motivational speaker, an advocate for his fellow wounded warriors.  He’s thinking about majoring in psychology so he can use his own experiences to help others.  He got stellar grades.  And, by the way, he’s only 24 years old, and says, “I am just getting started.” 

In other words, Kyle is a shining example of what our nation needs to encourage -- these veterans who come home and then use their incredible skills and talents to keep our country strong.  And we can all learn from Kyle’s example. 

As we prepare for the reading of the citation, I’d like to close with his own words -- a message, I think, for every American. “It took a life-changing event to get me to truly appreciate the precious and amazing life I have been blessed with.  Please take it from me, enjoy every day to the fullest, don't take life too seriously, always try to make it count, appreciate the small and simple things, be kind and help others, let the ones you love always know you love them, and when things get hard trust there is a bigger plan and that you will be stronger for it.”  Pretty good message.

Corporal William Kyle Carpenter should not be alive today, but the fact that he is gives us reason to trust that there is indeed a bigger plan.  So God bless you, Kyle.  God bless all who serve and protect the precious and amazing life that we are blessed with.  May God continue to bless and keep strong the United States of America.  Semper Fi.  (Applause.)

MILITARY AIDE:  The President of the United States, in the name of the Congress, takes pleasure in presenting the Medal of Honor to Lance Corporal William Kyle Carpenter, United States Marine Corps, for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as an automatic rifleman with Company F, 2nd Battalion, 9th Marines, Regimental Combat Team One, 1st Marine Division (Forward), 1st Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward), in Helmand Province, Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom on 21 November, 2010.

Lance Corporal Carpenter was a member of a platoon-sized coalition force comprised of two reinforced Marine rifle squads, partnered with an Afghan National Army squad.  The platoon had established Patrol Base Dakota two days earlier in a small village in the Marja District in order to disrupt enemy activity and provide security for the local Afghan population.

Lance Corporal Carpenter and a fellow Marine were manning a rooftop security position on the perimeter of Patrol Base Dakota when the enemy initiated a daylight attack with hand grenades, one of which landed inside their sandbagged position.  Without hesitation and with complete disregard for his own safety, Lance Corporal Carpenter moved towards the grenade in an attempt to shield his fellow Marine from the deadly blast.  When the grenade detonated, his body absorbed the brunt of the blast, severely wounding him but saving the life of his fellow Marine.

By his undaunted courage, bold fighting spirit, and unwavering devotion to duty in the face of almost certain death, Lance Corporal Carpenter reflected great credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and the United States Naval Service. 

(The Medal of Honor is presented.) 

(Prayer is offered.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that brings us to the conclusion of this ceremony, but not the reception and party.  And so I want to thank everybody again for being here, especially Kyle’s wonderful family and his parents.  And I understand that the food here at the White House is pretty good -- (laughter) -- so I already told Kyle’s brothers that they should be chowing down.  But that goes for everybody else as well -- and I think the drinks are free.  I don’t know what -- although it’s still early in the afternoon.

Thank you very much, everybody.
   
END 
2:51 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by the Vice President and President Santos of Colombia in a Joint Press Statement

Presidential Palace
Bogotá, Colombia

PRESIDENT SANTOS:  (As interpreted.)  Well, good morning, all of you.  I would like to start off by extending the most cordial welcome to the Vice President of the United States, Mr. Joe Biden.  Vice President Biden has been a great friend of Colombia’s, not just now but for a long time -- ever since he was the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee at the Senate in the United States.

He was always fair.  In all the circumstances that regarded Colombia, he always supported us.  And I remember when he came and we launched the Colombia Plan in Cartagena.  Well, now he is visiting us for the second time as Vice President, because he was here in May of last year.  So welcome, Mr. Vice President.

I would like to start off congratulating you because of the soccer match in Brazil.  You won -- the United States won.  And I hope that your team goes on.  I think we’re also struggling, and tomorrow we are going to have to face another big team, the Ivory Coast, where we also hope to be winners. 

We’ve had a long meeting this morning, a very fruitful one, where we looked at the agenda, at the program that we have with the United States, ratifying the fact that Colombia is very proud to be a strategic partner with the United States.  The United States not only are our first trade partner, but we have many common denominators.  We’ve been working on all these common denominators, and our agenda with the United States has become larger and larger.

During my visit to Washington, when I saw President Obama, we introduced topics that unite us not only in bilateral relations, but with the rest of the region as well.  We analyzed and we went through all these topics -- the energy item, which we’ve been working on together, not only to develop our own technologies in order to be able to get the utmost out of these resources, but see how on a regional basis we can work with our energy in a more efficient and rational manner. 

I would like to thank Mr. Vice President and the American government, because only a week ago we started the process through which the constitution of a commission on what is called the visa waiver, so that we can get rid of visas for Colombian nationals.  This is a process that requires certain procedures that will require a certain amount of time.  But a week ago, we started this process, which for us is obviously a very important step.

I’d also like to point out that we spoke about the topic regarding security, and these are topics that have united us over a long period of time.  We keep on working on all this, not only a bilateral level, but in terms of third countries we have a number of programs where we have been working together to offer help, aid, cooperation in matters pertaining to security, the struggle against drug trafficking in various Central American countries, the Caribbean. 

And we also talked about technology.  We talked about education, which is something that I personally broached with President Obama when I was in Washington.  We, of course, are hugely interested of this.  And we also went through the evolution of the free trade agreement.  This agreement is advancing.  I think it is going in the right direction.  There are more and more Colombian companies that are exporting to the United States and vice versa.

So as we had forecasted, this is a so-called win-win situation for both our countries.  Both our countries are reaping the benefits of this trade agreement.

I would also like to thank Vice President Biden and the American government for their support for the peace process.  This has been reiterated.  It’s a very important step for us.  They know that we are in a very delicate phase, very delicate stage, and we consider all this an immensely important aspect.  And through institutions like the USAID, we are receiving help, aid in order to elaborate politics that will deal with the post-conflict period. 

I’d also like to welcome the Ambassador, who also presented the credentials last week, Mr. Kevin Whitaker.  We want to thank you, and we are willing to keep on working with your government. 

Mr. Vice President, I also want to tell you that this alliance, this friendship -- this friendship with the United States is something that is hugely important for me, personally it is.  And as always, in any relationship, there’s always a margin to strengthen it, and that’s what I wish to do.  Now that I have my new mandate, I want strengthen our relationship with the United States and allied country.  We consider the United States our friend, and we consider the United States a country that we can work with on many fronts, both with the American citizens, as well as for the Colombian citizens.

Thank you once again, Mr. Vice President.  And welcome to Colombia.

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Well, thank you, Mr. President.  We’ve been acquaintances for a long time.  And congratulations.  Congratulations to you personally on your re-election.  Congratulations to your security forces who made this one of Colombia’s safest elections in history.  And congratulations, maybe most importantly, to the Colombian people who kept faith through some difficult times to become the oldest uninterrupted democracy in South America -- no small feat.  And congratulations to you all.

And thank you for your congratulations for the United States team winning in Natal.  We’re in a pretty tough division.  And we’re not accustomed over the last 30 years to be expecting to do well like you always do well.  But we are very hopeful, and we’re looking forward to the rest of the games.

I came here just three days after your re-election and because the President, through me, wanted to send to you and to the people of Colombia an unmistakable message:  The United States of America always stands with Colombia.  And to your last comment about wanting to continue to build this relationship, which is already strong, it is a central element of our policy, and we strongly, strongly agree with your assertion.

And thanks to Colombia’s remarkable progress under the leadership of Presidents Santos and Obama, our relationship has broadened on many fronts -- trade and investment, which can even grow beyond what it has; energy and the environment; human rights, political and security cooperation -- all across the hemisphere.  And that’s what was reflected in my conversations with the President today.

Mr. President, your country has an absolutely genuine leadership position.  You founded the Pacific Alliance, which is taking a very ambitious approach, which we look at with admiration, on integrating the open-market economies in the region.  It’s a very important example to set not just in the hemisphere, but around the world.  And more progress can be made as Colombia continues to raise labor standards, environmental protections and human rights.  And greater opportunities will be open to connect the global economies, and particularly the growing markets in the Pacific.  So, Mr. President, we look forward to continuing to work with you on these issues, and your leadership is very much appreciated. 

And the President and I also spoke about events in the Western Hemisphere.  And as I’ve noted before, Colombia is a nation transformed through an awful lot of blood, sacrifice and genuine leadership.  And its role in the hemisphere has grown accordingly.  And from my perspective, I see no reason why it will not continue to grow to the benefit of the hemisphere.

Today, President Santos and I spoke about how our countries can work together -- together with the island nations of the Caribbean -- on energy and on security.  And I will be discussing these challenges when I leave here tonight, tomorrow in the Dominican Republic with President Medina.  Colombia’s efforts can benefit the entire region.  And I thank President Santos.  I thank him for his leadership, his reference to Panama, the ability to begin to make progress that everyone has envisioned for some time.

And President Santos and I also spoke about the dialogue in Venezuela, and I laid out the U.S. position.  And finally, we spoke of Colombia’s peace process.  As the President mentioned, I had the honor for many years in the United States Senate to help write and shepherd through Plan Colombia, through the United States Senate.  And nothing would make me happier, Mr. President, than to come back to Colombia for the signing of the final peace accord.  And I know there’s a lot left to do, but I have absolute confidence in your determination.  And I’m confident whatever is ultimately agreed to, God-willing, will be for the benefit of the Colombian people.

As I told you here in Bogota last spring, just as the United States has supported Colombia’s leaders on the battlefield over the years, we fully support you at the negotiating table to end the country’s 50-year conflict, to bring that to an end.  In war and peace, Mr. President, we stand with Colombia.  And as Colombians walk the last mile to the road of peace -- on the road of peace, as they define for themselves the terms and as they strike the right balance for peace and justice, the United States will stand with you to support you. 

Mr. President, I want to thank you for a terrific meeting.  I always learn something when I’m with you.  I think it deepens our personal relationship.  But also, we share the same passion for making sure that this relationship between Colombia and the United States continues to grow as Colombia’s influence in the hemisphere and also its overall influence continues to grow.

So I thank you for a terrific meeting.  I congratulate you and the Colombian people again on a well-run election and your victory.  And Godspeed carrying forward the dreams of the Colombian people.  So I again thank you, and I look forward to many more meetings. 

END

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at the White House Maker Faire

East Room

12:02 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you so much.  Everybody, have a seat.  Thank you.  Well, good morning.  And welcome to the first-ever White House Maker Faire -- which is pretty exciting.  (Applause.)  Let me start off by saying, the only thing that I asked my staff about is why is there an “E” at the end of “faire.”  (Laughter.)  I mean, I wasn’t sure -- is there jousting?  Do we all have to get dressed up, or what?  So I’m just warning you -- next year, the “E” may be gone.  I don’t know exactly who came up with that.  This is America -- we don’t have E’s at the end of “fair.”  (Laughter and applause.)  I’m just saying.  I’m just saying.  Whoever came up with that idea, you let me know. 

We’ve got three outstanding members of Congress who are here.  Bill Foster.  (Applause.)  Rush Holt.  (Applause.)  And Russ [sic] Takano.  We’ve got National Science Foundation Director France Cordova, who’s here.  France.  (Applause.)   Our NIH Director Francis Collins.  (Applause.)  My science advisor, John Holdren.  (Applause.)  We’ve got innovators like Dale Dougherty, who’s here, who helped launch the very first Maker Faire nearly a decade ago.  Dale, stand up.  (Applause.)  We have Intel’s youngest intern, who I know because he’s probably the only person who was ever allowed to fire a marshmallow in the White House.  (Laughter.)  Joey Hudy -- where’s Joey?  There he is.  (Applause.)  There’s still a stain -- (laughter) -- from where the marshmallow hit.  It was scary.  The thing just went out a little -- you don’t want to be at the receiving end of that marshmallow.  He also brought, by the way, his “3x3x3 LED Shield,” which is his. 

And we’ve got some wonderful folks like our Science Guy, Bill Nye, who’s here all the time.  (Applause.)  And Mr. Kamen, a great inventor.  So this is a smart group right here.  There are some innovative folks.
  
Before I begin, I have to ask:  What on Earth have you done to my house?  (Laughter.)  I mean, there’s a mobile factory on the South Lawn.  There’s a robotic giraffe.  There’s a giant red weather balloon in the Rose Garden.  There’s a paper-crafted dinosaur head in the hallway.  Over here is a 3D-printed sculpture of my State of the Union Address.  (Laughter.)  Clearly, there could have been some edits right there in the middle.  (Laughter.)  The sculpture clearly goes on too long.  (Laughter.)  So this is not your typical day at the White House. 

We invited you here because today is “D.I.Y.”  Today’s D.I.Y. is tomorrow’s “Made in America.”  Your projects are examples of a revolution that’s taking place in American manufacturing -- a revolution that can help us create new jobs and industries for decades to come. 

And five years after the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes, our businesses have created jobs for 51 straight months -- that’s 9.4 million new jobs in total.  But we know we’ve got to create more.  And one of the best ways to create more good jobs is by boosting American manufacturing.  

So we’ve seen an auto industry that’s come roaring back, and our manufacturing sector has been adding jobs for the first time since the 1990s; about 640,000 new manufacturing jobs since February of 2010.  And in the absence of much action from Congress, we’re doing what we can, I’m doing what I can on my own to keep that progress going.  So I’ve launched four new high-tech manufacturing hubs across the country, with more on the way.  Yesterday, I went to the TechShop in Pittsburgh, where you can use equipment like laser cutters and 3D printers for about the cost of a gym membership.  We announced new steps that we’re taking to help entrepreneurs turn their ideas into products.  More than 90 mayors made commitments to help entrepreneurs manufacture new things in their communities, and we’re proud to have some of those mayors here today.

So we’re going to do whatever we can to bring good manufacturing jobs back to our shores, because our parents and our grandparents created the world’s largest economy and strongest middle class not by buying stuff, but by building stuff -- by making stuff, by tinkering and inventing and building; by making and selling things first in a growing national market and then in an international market -- stuff “Made in America.”

And the good news is, is that new tools and technologies are making the building of things easier than ever.  There is a democratization of manufacturing that is potentially available because of technology.  Across our country, ordinary Americans are inventing incredible things, and then they’re able to bring them to these fairs like Makers Faires.  And you never know where this kind of enthusiasm and creativity and innovation could lead.  So in the 1970s, Steve Wozniak designed the Apple One to show off for the members of the “Homebrew Computer Club.”  And today, Apple is worth about $550 billion.  I wish I had been there.  (Laughter.)  I’d like to think that I would have said, that’s a good idea.  (Laughter.)  Here, take my $100.  (Laughter.)

And while I don’t know if the projects here today are the next Apple, I do know that by looking at some of these exhibits, it was just incredible what is being done. 

So you take the team from The Workshop School in West Philadelphia, and compared to most other schools there are a lot of advantages they don’t have.  This is a poor community.  They do have, however, Simon Hauger, a principal who is so talented, a student once said, “He could teach algebra to a guinea pig.”  (Laughter.)  And with Simon’s help, we’ve got Derrick Bell here, Taliya Carter, Joshua Pigford.  Their team built a biodiesel sports car that gets around a 100 miles per gallon, which is why the Secret Service didn’t let me drive it.  (Laughter.)  

But what’s happening is, is that the young people now are able to learn by doing.  So math, science all gets incorporated into the task of actually making something, which the students tell me makes the subject matter that much more interesting.  Or you’ve got Jen McCabe, who is setting up a space called Factorli, in Las Vegas, to provide custom, small-scale manufacturing -- kind of like a Kinko’s or a copy shop, but instead of printing flyers, they’re going to be able to print custom parts for American products. 

There’s Marc Roth, from San Francisco.  A few years ago, Marc found himself homeless.  And at a shelter, Marc heard about a local “TechShop” that teaches folks how to use new tools like laser cutters and 3D printers, and he signed up.  And within 16 months, he had started SF Laser, his own laser-cutting business. He just launched a program called “The Learning Shelter” to teach tech and manufacturing skills to other folks who are trying to get back on their feet.

As you were going through the exhibits, you saw young people who are students at places like MIT helping to design mobile factories that bring the tools for invention to communities that might have thought that kind of stuff was out of reach for them.  An incredible story of a young woman who figured out how to make a cheap incubator that’s already helping 60,000 newbies around the world who can’t afford the sort of expensive equipment that we have in our hospitals. 

It gives you a sense that we are at the dawn of something big.  And one of the professors who I had a chance to speak to as I was taking the tour described it as analogous to where we were with the Internet 25, 30 years ago.  In the same way that we were at that time reorganizing how we could use data and information, we are now at a point where we’re going to be able to reorganize how we think about making things and marrying the information revolution to what’s been an analogue manufacturing system.  And it’s incredibly exciting and we’re at the cutting edge of it, but we’ve got to make sure that we continue to be at the cutting edge of it.

So as a country, we ought to be doing what Simon, and Jen, and Marc are doing every day, and we’ve got to make sure that more Americans have the skills and opportunities to land a job in a growing industry, or to create entirely new industries.  So that’s why I’m declaring today a “National Day of Making” -- and it’s why I’m backing those words up with action. 

We’re helping schools take shop class into the 21st century, because one of the things I’m really interested in is how do we redesign high schools so that young people are able to do stuff as they are learning.  And that’s not just true for schools in inner-city Philadelphia, that’s true for schools generally, in part because it also then gives new opportunities for young people who may have different learning styles to thrive in ways that they might not if they’re just sitting there listening to a lecture.

We’re providing new support for startups that want to file for a patent.  From the Defense Department to the SBA, and from the National Science Foundation to NASA, we’re doing more to help entrepreneurs start new businesses that make things in America. 

And of course, this is not just a job for government.  Today, more than 150 colleges and universities are committing to giving young people more hands-on opportunities to make things.  So a few minutes ago, a young man named Partha Unnava showed me the letter announcing that commitment -- and of course, it was on some metal that was 3D-printed.  He couldn’t just give me a piece of paper.  (Laughter.)  It’s harder to file, by the way, but it looks cooler.  (Laughter.)

The private sector is stepping up, as well.  From Indiegogo and Etsy to Disney and Intel, companies have pledged to help unleash a new wave of innovation here in America.  And these companies do different things, they come from different industries, but they share the belief that when we tap the potential of every American, all of us are better off.  

Camille and Genevieve Beatty are here today from Asheville, North Carolina.  They’re 14 and 12 years old.  Where are they?  Raise your hands, guys.  There you are.  (Applause.)  They happen to be the co-founders of Beatty Robotics.  Genevieve does the wiring, Camille machines the metal.  As their website puts it, “Who needs a paper route when you can start a robotics company?”  (Laughter.)  That’s a pretty good motto.  That’s great, I love that.  (Laughter.)  

But the Beattys say one of the main things they’ve learned over the last few years isn’t about power tools or engineering or electronics.  What they’ve learned is that, “If you can imagine it, then you can do it -- whatever it is.”  And that’s a pretty good motto for America. 

This is a country that imagined a railroad connecting a continent, imagined electricity powering our cities and towns, imagined skyscrapers reaching into the heavens, and an Internet that brings us closer together.  So we imagined these things, then we did them.  And that’s in our DNA.  That’s who we are.  We’re not done yet.  And I hope every company, every college, every community, every citizen joins us as we lift up makers and builders and doers across the country.  If we do, I know we’re going to be able to create more good jobs in the years to come.  We’re going to create entire new industries that we can’t yet imagine, although I suspect Camille and Genevieve may have already figured it out.  (Laughter.)

And we’re going to rebuild our economy and restore our middle class, and give opportunities for people whose potential is not yet tapped.  There are kids out there, there are adults out there right now who have a great idea.  And they don’t have access to the capital they need.  They don’t have the tools they need to put together a prototype.  They don’t know how to link up with folks who could help refine those ideas.  And what the Maker movement does, what technology does, what the information revolution does is it allows all those folks to suddenly be a part of this creative process.  And what better place to do that than here in the United States of America? 

This is a place where we know how to invent and we know how to dream and we know how to take risks.  And this is a place where people who work hard have always been able to make it.  We want to make sure that continues.  So thanks for the great work you’re all doing.  It’s very inspiring. 

God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.  Thank you.  (Applause.) 

END  
12:17 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at a Naturalization Ceremony

The National Archives
Washington, D.C.

11:11 A.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, let me join Jeh by saying good morning, my fellow Americans.  Sounds pretty good, huh?  (Laughter.)  You like that, right?  All right, I’m going to loosen you up if it takes all morning.  You’re now citizens!  It’s very cool.  (Laughter.)  And I am honored to be here.  This is an exciting day, and it’s just wonderful that I can be among the first to congratulate you on becoming American citizens.

And I also want to welcome your family and friends who are here -- let’s see the family members who are here.  Where are they?  You guys are here, that’s good, that’s good.  Yes.  (Applause.)  I know how important these people are because I know that they’ve supported you every step of the way.  And I see that they are beaming with pride, so welcome.

I want to thank Secretary Johnson, Director Scialabba, for taking the time to be here today and for their tremendous work.  I also want to especially thank David and the incredible staff at the National Archives for making today’s event possible.  This is a beautiful setting. 

It’s amazing that just a few feet from here where I’m standing are the signatures of the 56 Founders who put their names on a Declaration that changed the course of history.  And like the 50 of you, none of them were born American -- they became American.

Just like you’re about to pledge allegiance to our flag, they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to this extraordinary idea that we now know as America -– the notion that we are all created equal, endowed with fundamental rights and freedoms that no one can ever take away from us.

People come from across the globe to see these documents, to read the names and signatures of the very first “Americans-by-choice,” because they know that this room holds the first chapter of our shared history.  And today, it holds the next chapter of our story, as well. 

As the newest “Americans-by-choice,” you, too, will play an important part in shaping our history.  Some of you were brought here as children.  Others came here to be with a loved one.  Some of you, like Parish Sapkota, have risked their lives for this country by serving overseas.  Others haven’t worn the uniform themselves, but have served America by supporting a spouse or a child who has. 

Take Blue Star Mom Zlatka Stefanova.  Her son Marian was wounded in an ambush in Iraq.  He spent 18 months at Walter Reed recovering from his injuries.  And today, with the love and support of his mother, Marian is a proud officer in the Fairfax Police Department. 

But no matter what your story, from this day forward, for the rest of your lives, you will always be able to say, “Yes, I am an American citizen.”  And I know this is an exciting, hopeful time for all of you, but it’s also an exciting, hopeful time for our country.  Because the fact is, America needs you. 

Immigration is at the heart of how we developed as a nation.  In every generation, immigrants have earned their place as part of “We the People.”  With the exception of just a few ethnicities, every person in this country can trace their history back to a parent, or a grandparent, or a great-grandparent, or an ancestor who made that choice to be part of this country. 

And today, much of our success is because we still very much are a nation of immigrants.  Immigrants start roughly one in four of our new businesses.  About 30,000 permanent residents serve in our military.  And according to one study, over the past 50 years, more than a quarter of our Nobel Laureates based in the U.S. have been foreign-born.

So in many ways, it is because of, not in spite of, our immigrant population that we grow stronger every single day.  Yet today, here in Washington, folks are still debating whether or not to fix our immigration system even though just about everyone agrees that it is broken.  But I want you all to know that my husband has made this his top legislative priority, and he refuses to give up the fight.  Because at the end of the day, this fight isn’t just about abstract principles, it’s about real people.  People like you.  People like us -- our fellow Americans.

That’s who you are.  You came here today as citizens of 44 different countries, and you’ll leave here as citizens of one great nation -– the United States of America.  And I hope that you never take that for granted, because I know how hard you worked for this.  You earned it.  And to be a citizen of this country is an incredible blessing. 

And what I hope you always remember is that, as citizens, we do not shut the doors of opportunity behind us.  We preserve the promise of America.  We renew it.  We extend it so that future generations of Americans -– Americans by birth and “Americans-by-choice” -– can do their part to form the more perfect union that our founders imagined so many years ago. 

So I want to once again congratulate you on this important honor, this extraordinary honor.  And I wish you the very best of luck on your journey ahead as citizens of this great country.

Thank you so much, and God bless.  (Applause.)

END
11:18 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a DNC LGBT Gala

Gotham Hall
New York, New York

7:36 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Edith, Robbie, thanks for the wonderfully brief introduction.  (Laughter.)  I mean that sincerely.  The day that the Supreme Court issued its ruling, United States v. Windsor, was a great day for America, a clear victory for human decency and equality and justice and freedom.  So we thank you for your courage and your inspiration.  Give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

I want to thank Debbie Wasserman-Schultz for the great job she’s doing as chair of the DNC.  (Applause.)  Andy Tobias, making sure the money goes to the right places.  (Applause.)  Yeah, Andy!  Henry Muñoz -- thank you, Henry.  (Applause.)  Thanks to Sia for the beautiful performance.  (Applause.)  Our MJ, Jesse Tyler Ferguson.  (Applause.)  Jesse, congratulations on both your weddings.  (Laughter.)  Mitch and Cam finally tied the knot.  Michelle and the girls were crying.  (Laughter.)

There are other newlyweds here -- Eric Johnson and Mark Parker were married a couple of hours ago.  (Applause.)  They decided to make this their after-party -- pretty cool.  If you’ve got a glass, raise it for Eric and Mark -- a lifetime of health and happiness to them.

So Pride Month is a time for celebration, and this year we’ve got a lot to celebrate.  If you think about everything that’s happened in the last 12 months, it is remarkable.  In nine more states you’re now free to marry the person you love -- that includes my two home states of Hawaii and Illinois.  (Applause.)  The NFL drafted its first openly gay player.  (Applause.)  The U.S. Postal Service made history by putting an openly gay person on a stamp -- the late, great Harvey Milk smiling from ear to ear.  (Applause.)

So now you flash back 10 years ago.  Maybe no single issue divided our country more than same-sex marriage.  In fact, the Republican Party built their entire strategy for 2004 around this issue.  You remember?  They calculated that if they put constitutional amendments banning same-sex marriage on state ballots, they’d turn out more voters, they’d win.  And they, frankly, were right.  People flocked to the polls.  Those amendments were on the ballots in 11 states.  They passed in every single one.   

Now, here’s a good bet.  They’re not going to try the same strategy in 2014.  (Applause.)  When I took office, only two states had marriage equality.  Today, 19 states and the District of Columbia do.  (Applause.)  There are court rulings pending in other states as well.  (Applause.)  And despite the great work of some incredibly talented and courageous lawyers, it is important to understand it’s not just the laws that are changing -- it’s hearts and minds. 

The conventional wisdom says that all this change is due to young people growing up with different attitudes than their parents and their grandparents had.  And anybody who has kids knows that there is some truth to that.  The basic attitude is, I’m sorry, what is it that you’re talking about here?  What’s the big deal?  But what’s been remarkable is the way Americans of all age groups are increasingly embracing marriage equality.  They understand love is love.  And for many people whose minds have changed, it was love that did it -- love for the child or the grandchild, or the friend or the coworker who sat down one day and held their hands and took a deep breath and said, I’m gay. 

Almost everybody in this room was that child or grandchild or friend or coworker at some point.  And you may not have known it at the time -- it may have seemed like an individual act -- but in those moments when you summoned that courage and reached out with that hopeful love, you were doing it for everybody. 

And that’s why I’m here tonight, to say thank you for helping make America more just and more compassionate.  (Applause.) 

And I want to thank all the incredible friends in the room for the support and guidance that so many of you have offered my administration over the past five and a half years.  Sometimes you guys were a little impatient.  (Laughter.)  Sometimes I had to say, will you just settle down for a second, we’ve got this.  But because of your help, we’ve been able to do more to protect the rights of lesbian, and gay, and bisexual and transgender Americans than any administration in history.  (Applause.)

We repealed “don’t ask, don’t tell,” because no one should have to hide who you love to serve the country we love.  (Applause.)  We reauthorized the Violence Against Women Act with new protections.  And I signed a hate crimes law bearing Matthew Shepard’s name, because hate-driven violence has taken the lives of too many in this country.  It has to end.  (Applause.) 

I lifted the 22-year ban on people with HIV traveling to the U.S. -- (applause) -- and prohibited discrimination in hospitals and housing that received federal funding, because stigma and fear have no place in our laws.  We’ve made it illegal for health insurers to deny coverage to people based on sexual orientation or gender identity.  (Applause.)  Starting next year, insurance companies that offer coverage to straight couples have to offer it to gay couples, too.  (Applause.) 

We’ve worked to address and prevent bullying, because it’s not enough to say it gets better.  We’ve got to make it better.  (Applause.)  And today, the Senate confirmed two openly gay judges in the same day.  (Applause.)  Before I took office, only one openly gay judge had been confirmed in history.  We have 10 more.  (Applause.)

And as I said in my second inaugural address, if we’re truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.  That’s why we stopped the defending the so-called Defense of Marriage Act in the courts and argued alongside Edie and Robbie before the highest court in the land.  That’s why we’re working to implement the Court’s ruling to extend benefits to married same-sex couples whenever possible.  People have been waiting a long time for justice, and we’re working to deliver on it as fast as we can.

So we’ve got some pretty good reasons to celebrate.  That doesn’t mean, though, that we can grow complacent.  Progress doesn’t just have to be fought for, it has to be defended.  Today, a lawmaker in Oklahoma is trying to ban all marriages rather than recognize same-sex marriage.  (Laughter.)  Now, that seems a little over the top, but that’s just my opinion.  (Laughter.)  The Texas Republican Party’s state platform endorses gay conversion therapy in 2014.  Fierce legal fights are underway to stop marriage equality from expanding any further or to prevent court rulings from taking effect.  And most of all, there are still Americans out there who are vulnerable and alone, and still need our support. 

So we can’t stop.  We’ve got to keep fighting.  We’ve got to keep fighting for the human rights of people around the world -- to those who face violence and intimidation every single day, and who live under governments that have made the existence of anybody who’s LGBT illegal.  We need to send a message to those folks.  I want them to hear from the President of the United States:  We believe in your dignity and your equality, and the United States stands with you.  (Applause.)

And we’ve got to keep fighting to protect the lives of our brothers and sisters here at home.  Last week, I got a chance to watch the film version of “The Normal Heart.”  And I actually called Ryan Murphy afterwards to tell him to how much I admired it.  It’s more than just a story from our past.  It’s a reminder that we have to stay vigilant in the fight against HIV/AIDS, which still claims the lives of too many Americans -- (applause) -- especially low-income Americans; especially the minority LGBT community that doesn’t have all the resources, doesn’t have all the information they need.  It still takes a toll.

Now, I know that many people in this room have photographs with smiling friends from days gone by, and a lot of those friends are gone, taken before their time -- both because of a diseases and because there was a government that failed to recognize that disease in time.  And that can happen again if we’re not careful.  (Applause.)

And that’s why my administration created the first comprehensive National HIV/AIDS Strategy.  That’s why we’re working toward an AIDS-free generation, so fewer people have to know the pain of this disease and so our country doesn’t lose any more of its sons and daughters.

We’ve got to keep fighting for equality in the workplace.  Right now there are more states that allow same-sex marriage than there are states that prohibit discrimination against LGBT workers.  Think about that. 

We have laws that say Americans can’t be fired from their jobs because of the color of their skin or for their religion or because of a disability.  But every day, millions of Americans go to work knowing that they could lose their job, not because of anything they did, but because of who they are.  That is not right.  It is wrong. 

Now, Congress has been considering legislation to protect LGBT workers for decades.  I want you to understand -- for decades.  Last November, it finally looked like we were getting somewhere.  The Senate passed ENDA, the Employment Non-Discrimination Act.  It had strong bipartisan support.  But shockingly enough, the House refused to act.  Meanwhile, millions of Americans are still waiting.  It’s been decades.  

The majority of Fortune 500 companies, small businesses already have nondiscrimination policies that protect their employees -- not just because it’s the right thing to do, but because it helps them attract and retain the best talent.  They’re right.  We don’t benefit as a country or an economy -- businesses don’t benefit if they’re leaving talent off the field. 

And that’s why I’ve directed my staff to prepare for my signature, an executive order prohibiting discrimination by federal contractors on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.  (Applause.)  Because in the United States of America, who you are and who you love shouldn’t be a fireable offense.  It would be better, by the way, if Congress passed a more comprehensive law that didn’t just cover federal contractors.  And we need to keep working on that, so don’t take the pressure off Congress. 

This seems to be a pattern these days.  Everybody has just given up so much on Congress that we end up doing something through executive order.  And that’s helpful, but it doesn’t reach everybody that needs to be reached.  Congress needs to start working again, so let’s make sure that we keep the pressure up there. 

This is a country where no matter who you are, or what you look like, or how you came up, or what your last name is, or who you love -- if you work hard and you take responsibility, you should be able to make it.  That’s the story of America.  That’s the story of this movement:  People who stand up and come out and march, and organize, and fight to expand the rights we enjoy and extend them to other people -- people who work against the odds to build a nation in which nobody is a second-class citizen, everybody is free to be who they are; and that you’re judged based on are you kind and competent and work hard, and treat each other with respect, and are a team player and look after your community, and care and love and cherish your kids.  That’s how we’re supposed to be judged. 

That’s the fight that brought all of us here today.  That’s what made it possible for me to stand up here as your President.  It’s what gave many people in this room the freedom to live their lives freely.  It’s what should inspire us to keep working to make sure all our children grow up in an America where differences are respected and even celebrated, and where love is love. 

And it is also why those of us who in the past might have not always enjoyed the full liberty that this amazing country of ours has to offer, that we’ve got to be thinking about others who are still struggling.  That’s why this community has to be just as concerned about poor kids, regardless of sexual orientation.  (Applause.) 

That’s why this community should be fighting for workers who aren’t getting paid a minimum wage that’s high enough. 

That’s why this community has to show compassion for the illegal immigrant who is contributing to our society and just wants a chance to move out of the shadows. 

That’s why this community should be concerned about equal pay for equal work, straight or gay. 

That’s why this community has to be concerned about the remaining vestiges of racial discrimination. 

If you’ve experienced being on the outside, you’ve got to be one to bring more folks in even once you are inside.  That’s our task.  That’s our job.  That’s why we’re here tonight. 

Thank you.  God bless you.  God bless America.  (Applause.)

END
7:53 P.M. EDT  

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by the Vice President to the Press at U.S. Embassy -- Brasilia, Brazil

Brasilia, Brazil

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  It’s good to be back in the embassy.  I am looking forward to meeting everyone in the embassy in a few moments.

Look, before I begin, on behalf of the United States, I’d like to extend my condolences for the loss of life and the destruction caused by the floods in Brazil.  I had a brief conversation with the President about that this morning, and our thoughts and prayers are with the Brazilian people and those who are in distress.

I want to thank -- I want to start off by thanking the President and the Vice President for the hospitality and warmth that they extended in welcoming me today.  It’s good to see them both again.  It’s not my first visit, and we’ve become friends and it was great to see them again.  And as you probably are aware, I always enjoy my time with President Rousseff.  We get along really well, and we enjoy each other’s company.  And I always learn something when I’m with her. 

But before I begin to speak about the conversations we had, I wanted you to know how much I look forward -- and I have my granddaughter with me, and my nephew.  This is my granddaughter’s second trip to the embassy and to Brazil.  But when she heard I was going to the World Cup, as a soccer player, she importuned me to say, Pop, I’m going with you, okay?  (Laughter.)  And it was a great -- it makes me a wonderful grandfather, I want you to know now.  (Laughter.)  I am the favorite grandfather in the family right now.

But we had -- the three of us had a wonderful, wonderful time last night.  First of all, all the talk about the stadium -- the stadium is beautiful, absolutely beautiful.  And it met every expectation.  But I must tell you, we were even more excited about what was happening on the field than what happened in the construction of the stadium.

Watching the United States win last night was a great thrill for us.  And we got to go down to the locker room afterwards and I got to renew acquaintances with some of the players, in particularly our goalie, who played an incredible game last night, because I had seen him in the World Cup down in South Africa just four years earlier.  And we committed to meeting at the next World Cup, as well.  He’ll probably have the same job; I’m not sure I’ll have the same one.  (Laughter.)  But we had a great, great, great time.

And with regard to the -- what we’ve seen so far, Brazil has done an incredible job in preparing for and getting these games underway.  And we also wanted -- the President would have liked to have traded spots with me, but we wanted to show our great support for Brazil and the people of Brazil in hosting these games.

The President and I, Dilma, we had a long private conversation.  We met alone, talking about the prospects of how to bring our nations even closer together and our people closer together.  There is already a great deal of mutual benefit that exists for our people in the existing relationship.  We already have $100 billion in a trade relationship; there’s no reason, over time, that can’t double.  There’s no reason why that can’t continue to grow. 

The United States invests roughly $80 billion in foreign direct investment in Brazil, and more than 25,000 Brazilian students are presently studying in 200 universities in America in 46 states.  Our scientists and engineers are collaborating with one another on a whole range of technical issues, including energy.  And our diplomats are working on regional and global problems together.

As evidence of how tightly connected we are, one of my staff members last night said -- when he ordered a Budweiser beer, to the host said, well, it’s nice of you to have an American beer here, and they smiled and said, no, no, Brazil owns Budweiser.  (Laughter.)  So there is a lot closer ties than we’re given credit for.

But as Dilma and I talked, there was -- we talked about a lot more we could do together.  We are two strong diverse democracies with a generous and entrepreneurial people.  The fact of the matter is -- I was telling her about one of the conversations I had with Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore and about how the nations of the future that will lead the world are those nations with diverse populations that are fully integrated and are open societies.  And on that score, we have a clear convergence of values with Brazil, and no obvious conflict of interest with Brazil.

And so there’s great, great potential for strengthening this partnership, and that was reflected in our conversation today.  And like any global partners, we began the conversation today with a fairly long discussion of the situation in Iraq.  We talked at length about our common interests in seeing a stable, united Iraq, a democratic Iraq, an Iraq that is continuing to make an even greater contribution to the world energy supply in order to stabilize markets around the world, and -- we had a long discussion about Iraq. 

And we also talked, as partners do, about Venezuela and our mutual interest in bringing greater political inclusion, stability, and, quite frankly, the protection of basic human rights.  We discussed the work that Brazil and other regional partners have already done to find a solution.  We discussed how she and I had spoke in Chile and -- the inauguration of the president, and how the notion was hatched that we would begin a process including the Vatican in the process.  We talked about how it has to move beyond where those talks are now so that we can deliver for the people of both our countries some progress in the area of Venezuela. 

We also talked about our relationship to be able to deliver to the people of both our countries on economic issues, energy issues and people-to-people ties.  We discussed the common effort we have to protect and secure the Internet.  That is not a tool of government repression; it is owned by the people of the world.  And there is -- this is an area where Brazil has shown important leadership, and we discussed how we can continue to cooperate.

Of course, we also -- and I’m sure this is what most of you are here to find out -- we discussed -- U.S. surveillance programs were disclosed last year.  I know the issue matters a lot to people here; quite frankly, it matters a lot to the people of the United States, as well.  And President Rousseff and I had a chance to have a candid conversation about it, and I told her what she already knew -- that President Obama ordered an immediate review after we learned of the disclosures.  And based on his instructions, we have made real changes in our process, and we are taking a new approach on these issues.

Last January, the United States announced important reforms, including applying many of the same privacy protections that are accorded under our Constitution to the people of our country to citizens of the world.  And we will keep consulting closely with our friends and partners like Brazil as things proceed.

And finally, I was pleased to announce that the United States is standing up a special project to declassify and share with Brazil’s National Truth Commission documents that shed light on Brazil’s 21-year military dictatorship, which is obviously of great interest to the President.  And we turned over an initial batch of those documents today to the Brazilian government.  And I hope that by taking steps to come to grip with the past, we can find a way to focus on the immense promise of the future.

Because when it comes to the United States and Brazil and our relationship, the sky is literally the limit of what we could achieve together.  And we can do it to the immense benefit of both of our people, and, quite frankly, the entire hemisphere and the world in the decades to come. 

Before I conclude, I would like to say a word about Iraq, as well.  We have been -- the United States government has been working to support the Iraqi government and all of Iraq’s communities in their common fight against this vicious threat of terror, so-called ISIL.  We are consulting closely -- and I’ve been on the phone with their leaders as well over the past week -- we’re consulting closely with a full range of Iraq’s leaders on an inclusive political path forward, even as we provide assistance to Iraq’s security forces. 

Urgent assistance is clearly required.  But we also need to help Iraq build the capacity to confront threats over the long term.  And that’s going to require setting aside sectarianism, dealing with legitimate grievances, building up an inclusive security force, and ensuring that all communities live together and have their voices heard.  This is particularly important now, and the opportunity exists in government formation after the Supreme Court of Iraq has certified the election results I believe yesterday.

The bottom line here is that Iraqis have to put together and pull together in order to defeat this enemy, and then move toward building a better future for Iraqi -- all Iraqi people.  And we will help them in that effort.

Thank you all very much, and I’m looking forward to seeing all the folks in the embassy.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in Q&A with TechShop Workers

TechShop
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

1:41 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Everybody, have a seat.  Have a seat.  It is great to be in TechShop.  And I am thankful to all of you for taking the time to hang out with me a little bit.

We are here mostly to highlight the incredible work that is not only being done by a lot of people in this room, but the incredible opportunities we have to continue to advance manufacturing all across America.  But before we do that, with the press here, I just want to make a quick comment on some news of the day that some of you may have heard.

We are all aware of the tragedy that happened in Benghazi, where four Americans, including our Ambassador there, Chris Stevens, was killed in an attack on a consulate office there.  I said at the time that my absolute commitment was to make sure that we brought to justice those who had been responsible.

And yesterday, our special forces, showing incredible courage and precision, were able to capture an individual -- Abu Khatallah -- who is alleged to have been one of the masterminds of the attack.  (Applause.)  And he is now being transported back to the United States.  I say that, first of all, because we continue to think about and pray for the families of those who were killed during that terrible attack.  But, more importantly, it’s important for us to send a message to the world that when Americans are attacked, no matter how long it takes, we will find those responsible and we will bring them to justice.  And that’s a message I sent the day after it happened.  And regardless of how long it takes -- we will find you. 

And I want to make sure that everybody around the world hears that message very clearly, because my first and most solemn duty as President and Commander-in-Chief is to keep the American people safe.  And there are a lot of dangers out there and a lot of challenges, and our diplomats serve with incredible courage and valor in some very difficult situations.  They need to know that this country has their back and will always go after anybody who goes after us.

Now, with that in mind, let me get to the point of this gathering here today.  I want to thank Mark and Jim for the great work that they’ve done in helping to set up TechShop.  And the reason we wanted to come out here was we’ve made enormous progress over the last several years in revitalizing American manufacturing.  There was a time when people felt as if no matter what we did, that companies were going to be moving overseas and jobs were going to be moving overseas, and American manufacturing’s days were behind us. 

And yet, what we’ve seen over the last several years is American manufacturing come roaring back.  We’ve got at this point 620,000 manufacturing jobs that have been created over the last several years, the most since the 1990s.  We actually have companies now saying that America is the number-one place to do business again, something that we haven’t seen in over 12 years. And companies, instead of outsourcing, are now thinking about insourcing once again.  We have seen entrepreneurship in manufacturing expand at the fastest pace that we’ve seen in 20 years. 

And so people are starting to realize, number one, America is a great place to do business; number two, manufacturing is critical to the health of our economy overall.  When we make stuff in America, then R&D is done here, the jobs in manufacturing typically pay better than jobs in other parts of the economy.  There are ripple effects -- if you make a product here, that means you’re hiring not just engineers, not just guys on the assembly line or gals on the assembly line, you’re also getting suppliers and advertisers, and there’s just a whole set of positive spinoffs that come out of manufacturing.

And part of what’s exciting is that, traditionally, manufacturing was viewed -- and we’re in a steel town here in Pittsburgh -- that manufacturing meant big factories, all kinds of smoke and fire, and a lot of heavy capital.  But because of advances in technology, part of the opportunity is now to make the tools that are needed for production and prototypes are now democratized.  They’re in the hands of anybody who’s got a good idea.

And what we’ve been trying to do is to encourage more and more entrepreneurs, inventors to not just take root here but also have access to the kinds of equipment and technology -- whether it’s 3D printers or laser cutters -- that allow them to design their own ideas, create prototypes, put them out to market, test them, tinker with them, refine them, and ultimately create brand new businesses.

And nobody has done a better job or is a better example of this new trend than what’s being done here at TechShop.  For the price of a gym membership, people can become members of TechShop, they’re able to have access to a bunch of cutting-edge technology, and folks are able to create products, ideas that in some cases they’re just doing as a hobby or for pleasure, but in some cases actually lead to businesses that end up thriving. 

Probably the best example is the Square, the little gizmo that people are putting into smartphones and are using for payment purposes and be able to swipe a credit card.  It’s now a $5 billion business.  The prototype was designed at a TechShop. 

I have another example that’s near and dear to my heart because I actually own one -- it’s a DODOcase.  Somebody have my DODOcase around here?  Let’s bring out my DODOcase.  (Laughter.)  This is -- first of all, this is a great product.  I love DODO.  See, this my iPad case.  That’s a picture of Malia and Sasha, and me giving them a hug.  (Laughter.)  I love this case, and the first prototype was made at a TechShop.  And now you’ve got a whole bunch of people who’ve got a business and who are employed there, and they’re manufacturing and selling all across the country.

So we have the opportunity to grow ideas here in the United States, create businesses, create opportunities.  And all of this is happening in part because state, local and federal governments are also taking an interest in how can we promote manufacturing more effectively.  And we’ve got some people here who have done a great job doing that.  You’ve got your own mayor, Bill Peduto, the mayor of Pittsburgh, who’s here.  (Applause.)  We’ve got county executive, Rich Fitzgerald, who’s here as well.  (Applause.)  And we’ve got one of your outstanding senators, Bob Casey, who’s here as well.  (Applause.)

All these guys are great champions for what we’re trying to do.  And a lot of my agenda for economic development in the next couple of years revolves around how do we spur more manufacturing, more homegrown ideas, more research and development.  Already, we’ve been able to get 80 cities to commit to working in a public-private partnership to generate more manufacturing efforts in their respective cities.  We’ve create four high-tech advanced manufacturing hubs, and we have budgeted to create a whole lot more around the country.  And some of it has to do with advanced materials, some of it has to do with 3D printing.  The idea is, we start building an ecosystem, a network of companies, universities, researchers, entrepreneurs, all of whom start really focusing and becoming experts on a particular facet of industries of the future.

That’s how we’re going to build more and more niches that allow us to dominate the market and sell more products made in America, not just here in the United States but overseas. 

So we’ve got a lot of possibilities, but we’re going to have to continue to make some important investments.  And I’m here to tell you that as long as I’m President, at least, one of my top priorities is going to be to continue to build up manufacturing, because I want to make sure that if you work hard in this country, if you’ve got a good idea, if you’re willing to put in some sweat equity, that you can make it here in America and live out your American Dream. 

Because when we have an economy that works not just from the top down but from the bottom up, and everybody has got a stake and everybody is doing well, everybody is pulling in the same direction, that’s when our economy grows best.  Our economy does not grow as well when it just works for a few at the very top and ordinary workers or small businesspeople get squeezed.  And I think this is an enormous opportunity for us to take advantage of. 

So that’s what I wanted to say at the top.  Now what I want to do is just hear from you -- questions, comments, ideas.  We’ve got about 45 minutes.  I’ll try to keep my answers short if your questions are short.  (Laughter.) 

And I’m going to start off with Mark (ph).

Q    Thank you, Mr. President, for the opportunity to host you here.  First, as a former Green Beret, thank you for going and getting that guy and letting our folks do their job.

THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.

Q    It’s a big deal.  You’re hosting the White House Maker Faire tomorrow, and so I want to bridge the advanced manufacturing to makers.  I’m just curious, kind of now that you’ve been through this phase and you’ve heard some of the stories, how do you see the maker movement playing into your objective of helping manufacturing in the U.S.?

THE PRESIDENT:  It’s a great question.  Tomorrow, I’m going to be hosting the first White House Maker Faire.  And for those of you who are less familiar, there is an entire movement across the country of people who are recognizing that with new technology, that the tinkerers, the people who are working in their garage who are coming up with an idea, that the barriers to entry, the capital they have to put in to work up those ideas are now drastically reduced.

So what we decided was, let’s invite a whole bunch of folks who come up with wonderful stuff -- some products that they’re selling; some that they’ve made for themselves -- students, entrepreneurs, established business leaders -- let’s bring them to the White House so that they can share ideas and network a little bit, and so that we can highlight some of the tremendous work that’s already being done out there.

And part of my goal has been to use the power of the presidency to highlight some great stuff that’s already going on out throughout the country.  We’ve now had several science fairs, because I’m trying to encourage young people to look at science, math, technology, engineering as a critical profession if we’re going to maintain our innovative edge in this global economy.  The Maker Faire is the next iteration of that. 

In order for us to stay ahead when it comes to innovation -- and we remain the most innovative economy in the world by far -- we’ve got to have basic research; we’ve got to have skills like math and science and engineering that are developed; but we also have to provide platforms for people once they have these ideas to go out there and actually make stuff.  And so the Maker Faire is an extension of this broader effort that we’ve been trying to make, including significant investments. 

We’ve seen an increase in federal funding of basic research around manufacturing -- for example, we’ve boosted by about 30 percent, because we want more people to remember what it is that made us an economic superpower in the first place.  It wasn’t just the financial sector and a lot of the parts of the economy that have become dominant today, it was folks like Thomas Edison. It was the guys at HP in their garage coming up with new ideas, willing to take risks, willing to experiment.

In the past, that kind of innovation and entrepreneurship has been a driver of our economy, but there are a lot of people with good ideas who have had difficulty getting started because getting the equipment they needed in order to get started was often cost-prohibitive.  Technology allows us to lower those coasts.  Now we’ve got to make sure that we are taking advantage of these new opportunities.

Who else?  Don’t be shy.  This looks like a pretty knowledgeable group here.  Yes, what’s your name?  Introduce yourself before you ask a question. 

Q    Thank you.  Thanassis Rikakis, Vice Provost for Design, Arts and Technology at Carnegie Mellon.  Welcome to Pittsburgh, glad to have you here to announce these important things.  I have an educational question for you.  All the maker paradigms that you’re mentioning, because they accommodate many different learning styles, they also have the ability to enhance and diversify the STEM pipeline.  How do you think we can go about increasing the access to learning through making in the K-12 pipeline, and especially in underserved areas?

THE PRESIDENT:  It is a great question.  And this is not a plant.  (Laughter.)  But part of what I’m working with Arne Duncan, our Secretary of Education, on is how do we start reforming and reimagining how the K-12 process works, but particularly high school. 

There are basic skills that our kids need.  They need to write, they need to read, they need basic numeracy.  But too often, what happens in high school is kids are just sitting in a classroom and they’re being lectured to.  Now, there are great teachers out there, and in some cases, a subject like organic chemistry, you just need to focus, you need to hit the books, and there aren’t a lot of shortcuts.  But young people have different learning styles.  And not everybody is going to necessarily go to a four-year college or university.  Not everybody is going to be interested in French literature.  There are some folks who, they just want to -- they’re going to learn by doing.

And so what we have been trying to encourage is are there ways for us to introduce apprenticeships, models for high school in which kids are working at the same time as they’re going to school.  So if you want to be a graphic designer, you’ve still got to take the basic classes, but are there ways of designing those classes around you also working with a graphic designer who is already on the job and you can get a concrete sense of what’s possible. 

I do usually three commencements a year.  One is a high school commencement.  I just did a commencement at Worcester Tech right outside of Boston, and the principal there is amazing -- young woman; she was voted the National Principal of the Year.  But they have boosted their math scores by 100 percent, their reading scores by 200 percent.  And they have in-house, in the university, by partnering with businesses, they’ve got a veterinary clinic; they’ve got a car detailing shop; they’ve got a computer design program.  So kids actually participate and are running businesses even as they are learning. 

And that kind of hands-on approach oftentimes is going to be a lot more effective and a lot more relevant to these young people.  A whole bunch of them are going to go on to community colleges.  Some of them are going to go four-year universities.  Some of them may work for a while, for five years, and then once they have a better sense of the skills they need in the occupation that they’re interested in, they’ll go back to school.  But giving kids a bunch of different pathways to suit their learning styles and their interests I think is going to end up producing better outcomes.

One last point I’ll say just in terms of STEM education -- we’re also trying to really focus on not only how do we get best practices spread among teachers to teach math and science so that it’s not just classroom learning and kids are less intimidated.  We’re really focusing on girls and minority students who are often underrepresented in STEM education.  And that’s been a major focus of our education reform efforts.

Q    On a similar note, my name is Ashley Cecil.

THE PRESIDENT:  Good to see you, Ashley.

Q    And I am a painter, and I print my fabric -- or my paintings on fabric, and I use TechShop here to sew that into textile products.  And I’m also a new mom; I have an 8-month-old at home.  And I’m curious, in your experience, are you finding that entrepreneurs, people that are members of the TechShop across the country, are you finding that this is becoming more conducive for women and for mothers?  Because it’s very hard for me to juggle childcare, and I find that oftentimes men frequently don’t struggle as much as I do with kind of balancing both of that.  I’m hoping that it’s changing in our favor.  And I know that you mentioned that you hope that you’re finding more girls are becoming interested in this as a career path, but it’s certainly -- I’m one of out of every ten that’s here in the TechShop.  But I hope that maybe you’re finding that’s changing?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I will tell you that the challenges of women in the workplace exist whether you’re an entrepreneur or you are taking a more conventional route -- which is part of the reason why next week we’ll be having an all-day summit on working families.  And part of our focus here is how do we make sure that families in general, but women in particular, are able to achieve and succeed in the marketplace without being penalized for also doing their most important job, which is making sure that our kids turn out well.

And that means equal pay for equal work.  That means increasing the minimum wage, because women are disproportionately represented in low-income occupations.  It means making sure that we’ve got a credible childcare network.  We probably have as bad a childcare safety net as any developed country, and we need to be doing a lot better on that front. 

And so the interesting thing is what we’re finding is a lot of companies are realizing that family-friendly policies end up being good business, not just the right thing to do.  People are more productive.  Michelle talks about how when she worked at the University of Chicago Hospital, her first interview she actually brought Sasha into the meeting with the CEO.  She just wanted to kind of see, all right, how is he going to respond.  Sasha was still in the bassinet, the car seat thing.  Because her point to her employer was:  This is who I am.  I think I can do a really good job, but it means that if I have to take her to a pediatrician, I don’t want to have to argue about whether or not I can do that.  And if you are supportive of my efforts with my family, then you’re going to get 110 percent out of me, but you’ve got to have some flexibility in terms of time and so forth.

A lot of employers I think are starting to realize that.  It’s harder for smaller businesses, because if you’ve only got four or five employees, sometimes trying to figure out how to build in that flexibility may be more challenging.  And that’s where federal policies, tax policies, childcare policies -- that can make a difference.  It’s not just to help the individual.  It’s also to help the small business who may not have the resources that a Google or a Ford Motor Company might have in terms of creating a more family-friendly workplace.

But this is an area that we’re going to have to spend more time on.  And, by the way, I just want to emphasize this -- this is not a women’s issue, this is a family issue.  Women now bring in close to half of all income, and there are a whole lot of families out there where the woman is the primary breadwinner.  And if Michelle is not being paid fairly, then that’s not helping me.  I want her to get what she rightfully deserves.  I want her being paid the same as a man doing the same job, because that is helping our family. 

I will say, the First Lady is kind of a bad example, because the First Lady doesn’t get paid.  And she works pretty hard.  Obviously, we’re okay.  (Laughter.) 

But the truth is, this is a family issue.  And also, by the way, more men, fathers -- we just had Father’s Day a couple of days ago -- more men want to be involved in their kids’ childhood as well.  And so flexibility, family leave -- those are all policies that are critically important to all of us.

Q    Hi, Mr. President.  My name is Jayon Wang.  I was a Sidwell Friends grad in 2009 and a Carnegie Mellon engineer, and now I lead our efforts at Lifeshel, a Pittsburgh startup that aims to use smartphone cases to prevent sexual assault. 

THE PRESIDENT:  That’s excellent.  And it’s good to know that Sidwell graduates are doing something with their life. 

Q    Absolutely.

THE PRESIDENT:  My kids go to Sidwell, so I want to -- (laughter) -- that’s good to know.

Q    So my question surrounds the various efforts at the White House and all the task forces that are being implemented -- what can young startups do to aid the White House in its task forces, and also, how can we participate in these movements and make sure that our efforts are best utilized?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we’d love to find out what you’re thinking about in terms of using technology more effectively.  Obviously, the issue of sexual assault is something that all of us should be alarmed by.  I think you’ve seen an increase in awareness, some increase in reporting, but it is still way too pervasive.  And recently, we have been taking on not only sexual assault on college campuses but also in our military, where -- as Commander-in-Chief, I’ve said to our top brass, you will be measured in part by your performance, in how well you do in changing a culture here in which sexual assault is still way too common.

So we’ve got an ongoing taskforce.  What we’ll do is get in contact with you and find out the kind of work that you’re doing.  I’m assuming, if you’re talking about smartphones, part of the tool here is the ability for people to alert, using a smartphone, friends, family, law enforcement quickly if they find themselves in a tough situation.  And they can press a button and they don’t have to be fumbling around and dialing, which I think is a great idea, and let’s see if we can highlight it and find out more about it.

I love, by the way, my -- have we got my tea somewhere?  I got a cup of tea.  I know it’s out there somewhere.  Have somebody bring it up for me.

Yes, right there.

Q    Hello, Mr. President.  I’m Jean Fry (ph).  I’m originally from Detroit; I’m living in Pittsburgh and have been here for 30 years.  So you obviously know the history of manufacturing and its demise and whatever, and I understand the situation with families and such.  I have a little bit of a unique situation.  I’m going to be 60 in February, and I have been a stay-at-home mom and now going through a divorce.  I’ve been placed in a job through TechShop, or through the MAKERSHiP program, and I’ve very grateful for that.  I’m just kind of wondering what’s going to happen in my life getting kind of a late start in the workforce again as far as am I ever going to be able to retire, things like that.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, there are a couple of questions involved there.  First of all, I don’t want to sugarcoat it -- it is tougher to lose your job when you’re in your 50s or early 60s, because employers oftentimes -- it may be unspoken and they may not even be conscious of the bias -- oftentimes they’re thinking, let me hire the 20-something or 30-something-year-old; if I’m going to make an investment in them, then they’ll be potentially working for a long time.

One thing that has helped, by the way, is the Affordable Care Act -- because in the past, a lot of employers thought to themselves, if I have an older worker that means that I may have higher health care costs.  We have seen over the last three years the slowest increase in health care costs in 50 years.  For small employers, oftentimes their employees may be able to get health care through the Affordable Care Act, where the employer, him or herself can’t provide health care.  So that’s helped.

So I would argue that oftentimes older workers are the best workers.  They’ve got experience.  They know how to work with others.  They’ve gone through a lot of the things that younger workers have to go through to settle down a little bit.  I won’t mention specifics, but they’re less likely to go out late at night after work, for example. 

So in terms of reliability, skill, conscientiousness, I think that older workers are a great investment, particularly because people are healthier now and they’re living longer and they’re taking care of themselves more. 

But older workers who lose their jobs have to recognize that they are probably going to have to adapt and retool in order to get an opportunity.  If you lose your job at 55, you may not be able to be in the same industry that you were in before.  And you may have to spend a little bit of time at school.  You may have to make a pitch to an employer -- give me a chance for a short time, and let me show you what I can do.  It’s not always fair, but that may be what’s required.

Q    I went to school, too, and now at my age I’m straddled with $30,000 in student debt in a field that I couldn’t get a job in, too.  So I mean, there’s that added to the problem, too.

THE PRESIDENT:  Right.  Look, the whole issue of student debt is something that all of us have to address in a serious way, and we’re spending a lot of time focusing on universities and colleges to keep their costs down.  And we’ve got legislation that got voted down by Republicans in Congress most recently to allow people to refinance their student debt.  That’s got to be a priority as well. 

But the good news is that the economy now has produced more than 9 million jobs over the last four and a half years.  And so although the economy is still healing, generally the employment outlook now is better than it’s been since the Great Recession, since I came into office.  That then means that, as there are more job openings, it’s a little bit more of -- applicants are going to have a little more leverage in terms of possibly getting hired, and that means that some folks who have been discouraged from getting into the workplace over the last several years are going to start finding that their skills are a little more appreciated than they were in the past.

Q    Hi, Mr. President.  My name is John Naples.  I’m a chairman -- union sheet metal worker, and I take part at the MAKERSHiP project here at TechShop, which helps people develop skills to place them in solid middle-class jobs.  And I run a volunteer welding focus group on Thursdays.  Anyway, my ultimate goal is to start my own business, and I’d prefer to use organized labor because I know the level of our training and the pride that we take in our work.  And I want to know how you think becoming a union contractor and using union labor can help an upstart business or an entrepreneur be successful, and how can we make it easier for people like me to make the transition from union worker to business owner.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, Pittsburgh historically has been a union town.  America was built by workers who over time, through a lot of struggle, got the right to bargain collectively.  I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say that our middle class was built in part because unions were able to negotiate weekends and overtime and benefits -- things that now non-union workers take for granted.  Well, you got those because unions were out there fighting for you for a very long time.

Now, it’s no secret that unions have been back on their heels a little bit over the last several decades.  Part of that has to do with the globalization of the economy.  Companies say to themselves, well, we can move anywhere -- now that supply chains are dictated more by technology, the cost of transportation has dropped.  And that has given unions less leverage.  And so only a small percentage of private sector jobs now are unionized. 

I would continue to argue that we should do everything we can to strengthen unions in this country.  Unions have to be flexible.  Unions have to recognize that if you’re working for a company, that that company has to have a bottom line; they’re competing against non-union labor as well.  The good news, though, is that typically union workers know how to do the job.  And so what you may lose incrementally because you’re paying slightly higher wages or higher benefits, you’re gaining in skills, reliability, productivity.  And if you can create a culture where employers and workers feel both invested, those are the companies that succeed over time and can thrive.

Now, if you’re an entrepreneur, if you’re starting off and you’re a skilled tradesman, I think the challenges in terms of that transition are the same as for everybody who wants to start a business.  Typically, the issue is, can you get capital to start it up, are you able to market what you do in a way that gets you customers, are you able to run your business efficiently enough that you actually get in the black at some point, are you willing to put in a whole lot of extra hours -- because if you’re used to getting paid overtime but you now own the business, it doesn’t really matter if you’re paying yourself overtime because it’s coming out of your pocket anyway.

And so sometimes that transition I think is going to be tough.  But I don’t think the transition is going to be any tougher for somebody coming out of a trade as anybody who’s starting a business.  It’s hard starting a small business, and the majority of small business startups fail.  The interesting this is the United States remains the place where people are most willing to try and start something up and take those risks, and part of what we should be doing is encouraging that culture.

When it comes to small businesses, for example, they were the hardest hit during the recession.  What we did was we significantly increased the amount of small business loans that we were willing to give, and we cut down some of the red tape to help people access that financing more quickly.  We cut taxes about 18 times for small businesses to incentivize them to hire new workers or invest in new plants and equipment.

And I’m constantly looking for ways that we can encourage small business formation.  But having said all that, if you’re the guy who is actually starting something up, it doesn’t matter whether it’s a restaurant, you’re trying to become a contractor, or you’re trying to start a high-tech manufacturing firm -- you’re going to be putting a lot of hours and your odds of success are still going to be challenging.  On the other hand, that’s what America is all about -- taking some risks.

Good luck. 

Q    Thank you for taking my question.  My name is Gordon Kirkwood, and I’m working out of TechShop here with a small startup called Whimsy Engineering.  I’ve previously been in graduate school and engineering and not felt the access that we have with places like TechShop here to operate cutting-edge equipment to cut metal, to cut plastics, to do really sophisticated things -- machines that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

And so personally, I found this to be a great enabler.  But I’m thinking about what could facilitate this sort of enabling for people in other cities.  And I can only imagine an incredible revival in American manufacturing and invention if more people had access to this sort of cheap -- I mean, for the cost of a smartphone or a gym membership, to be able to have access to lasers that will cut -- or water jets that will cut through plate steel and welding, and making anything. 

So in the context of other costs that other cities incur -- like roads, for instance -- and I understand that for a mile of highway road -- or for a city road, it’s a couple hundred thousand dollars for a mile of city road according to our guy here.  And highway construction I understand sometimes is up to a million or two for a mile.  When you start looking in terms of that cost, I wonder if we can promote this sort of access to take those risks at lower risk to your pocket better by promoting these in more cities and things like that.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, one of the things that we’re already doing as part of our overall effort is to find ways that we can make the resources of the federal government more available to the general public. 

So, for example, the Department of Energy -- which has some cutting-edge technology and laboratories -- if, in fact, they are not being utilized 100 percent, are there ways in which in a controlled way we can give more access to these assets for companies that are trying to start something up.  

One of the things that we’re looking at is NASA, which has incredible equipment -- are they able to work with companies in their areas so that there may be certain hours or certain periods of time where folks with proper training are able to use some of these assets. 

I mean, in some ways, part of what technology has enabled is the same thing that’s driving something like Uber or Airbnb, this concept of share economy.  Well, the federal government has a lot of assets; can we figure out ways in which, when those assets are being underutilized, somebody who might be able to utilize them could use them.  And so I think we’re thinking more creatively about that. 

Another example is, the federal government possesses incredible amounts of data.  And one of the things that we’ve been doing a lot with the high-tech community is thinking about, with proper restrictions to protect privacy and so forth, are there ways for us to generate some of this big data that then ends up being the platform by which we can come up with applications on a smartphone.

Essentially, all the weather apps that you have on your phone are all based on data that the government collected -- the National Weather Service.  Which is why, by the way, when there’s a government shutdown, people should remember the government does a lot of things you just don’t notice and that a lot of businesses rely on. 

But there are a whole host of other bits of data that are embedded.  Google Maps, in part, started with the fact that there's a whole bunch of maps out there that are already part of the public record, and data has already been collected.  And if you can make that accessible, that then suddenly becomes an opportunity for somebody creatively to look at that data in new ways and come up with new ways of creating useful services or products.

So this is an area I think that we’re going to continue to explore.  Obviously, we’ve got to -- I can’t have -- I can’t rent out the space shuttle to you, or whatever.  (Laughter.)  I mean, there’s going to be some particle collider that’s worth a billion dollars I don’t want you messing around with.  (Laughter.)  I want physicists in there doing the work.  But what we know is, is that there are areas where we can, in fact, enhance what’s already being done by companies like TechShop. 

Universities, by the way, are in the same situation.  Universities have a lot of access -- or generally have the capital to make large investments, particularly big research universities.  Obviously, their first and primary mission is to educate.  But the more we can encourage partnerships with universities and local businesses, the possibilities of collaboration and economies of scale, the possibilities of us saving money and creating more entrepreneurship opportunities are going to grow.

And, look, a city -- you mentioned earlier about moving from Detroit to Pittsburgh.  If you think about the contrast between Pittsburgh and Detroit -- and there are obviously a lot of reasons why some cities were able to bounce back when manufacturing started taking a beating -- part of it was Pittsburgh had these incredible anchor universities that created the ability to diversify their economies, your economy in a way that was a little tougher for Detroit to do. 

But every city that is succeeding today in this global marketplace has to have some mechanism where the private sector is collaborating with the public sector, with universities, because nobody can do it alone. 

Yes, right there.  Right in front of you.

Q    Hi.  I’m Anne Lopez, and I’m the founder and CEO of a company called Romeo Delivers. 

THE PRESIDENT:  I’m sorry, what’s it called?

Q    Romeo Delivers.

THE PRESIDENT:  Romeo Delivers.  Tell me about Romeo Delivers. 

Q    So we’re on a mission to help strengthen relationships.

THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, I see.  Okay.  (Laughter.)  So what exactly is Romeo delivering?  (Laughter.) 

Q    It’s G-rated. 

THE PRESIDENT:  This is a family-friendly show.  (Laughter.)

Q    It is.  We’re a family-friendly business as well.  And we just really believe that there are ways that couples can be communicating and interacting in a more fun and romantic way that, I think because of the digital age, that we think texting and things doesn’t really replace that physical interaction, and, like, writing notes to each other and doing things like that.

So we design and manufacture products that inspire that.  And I would love to ask you for some examples of things that you have found that are important in your relationship, and that maybe you do, as an example, for your kids that really show that you’re caring -- because you’re traveling so much, and you’re a great example of someone who’s busy.

THE PRESIDENT:  Without getting too personal -- (laughter) -- I will say this -- that some of this is generational, but I do find that Malia and Sasha’s generation, they live so much on their phones that it’s harder for them to create, maintain keepsakes and objects that show attachment, relationships, et cetera.  So I think it’s a great idea.

Now, to her credit, Malia, for example, wrote me a letter for Father’s Day, which obviously was a lot more important to me than if she had just texted a little emoji or whatever those things are.  (Laughter.)  And I’m a big believer in our kids making stuff, and when I think about the gifts that have been most precious to me and the things that I think have been most precious to them, it’s something that I did as opposed to something that I bought.

So I probably could have used your service, you could have given me some even better ideas.  My craftsmanship has not always been excellent.  But I do think that part of what is interesting in this moment in our economy is also what’s scary about it.  Very few people are going to live and work in one company for 30 years.  That model doesn’t exist.  There’s just too much disruption, because technology moves too quickly and globalization moves too quickly. 

And so the skill sets that we want to pass onto our kids are the basics, the foundations -- communications, numeracy, things like that.  But it’s also the ability to create, to adapt; to get an idea, execute that idea.  And what’s exciting is, is that people have more tools than they ever had in their hands to do that.  That’s true whether it’s manufacturing, that’s true whether it’s managing relationships, that’s true whether you want to start a business.

So individuals have been empowered.  That’s an exciting moment because it gives us an opportunity to tap into more creativity than ever before.  The flipside of it is that you are going to have to adapt and retool and get new skills and be able to understand new technologies much more rapidly than the previous generation did.  And so there’s that adaptability that has to be built into everything we do, and we have to be able to pass that onto our kids.

But I’ll look up on your website.  I’ll see if I can get some new ideas for Michelle.  (Laughter.)  Thanks. 

Last question.  Gentleman right here.  Go ahead.

Q    Thank you.  Good afternoon, sir.  My name is Larry Lesniak, and I have a small family business.  We do highly specialized woodworking.  We build weaving looms for fiber artists across the U.S.  We use TechShop as an extension of our manufacturing capability.  And in looking at some of the points that you’ve made about children being creative and people being able to access these technologies, one of the things we did -- when you hear about public-private partnerships, it’s normally construed to be a large-scale.  We donated a 3D printer to our local library, and it has been hugely successful. 

We’d like to continue that by adding additional technology -- small laser, small CNC.  But that idea of making it publicly available, we now have one of the smallest libraries in the country that has that type of technology available.  And really, this isn’t so much a question as a suggestion -- that’s another means of putting these tools in the hands of the public, and in fact, to people across all age spectrums.  We focus very appropriately on formal education up through community colleges and such, but having that just generally available to anybody who wants to take the small training course and then come in and create something that they’ve designed is a very powerful concept.  And we can leverage the local libraries to accomplish that.   

THE PRESIDENT:  I think that’s a great idea.  And, look, I’m a big library guy anyway.  I love librarians, so a shout-out to all librarians out there. 

But you’re absolutely right that what we’re seeing around the country is libraries having to adapt and retool.  I still love books and I still love the feel of turning a page, and going into a library.  But the truth of the matter is, is that the amount of space you need for storage in a library has changed.  Reading patterns have changed.  People are a lot more tech-savvy, visual than they used to be.  And what that means is, is that the library is a central repository for information.  That needs to be adapted to the 21st century.

And the idea of using libraries as a center point -- or a focal point along with universities, along with public schools, along with certain government agencies where people can access the tools to make things I think is a great idea.  And so hopefully some librarians are out there listening.

Generally, the federal government doesn’t manage libraries, so this would -- you talk to the mayor here, I’ll bet he’s got some pull maybe with the libraries here in Pittsburgh.  But I think it’s a wonderful idea.

Let me just close by saying this -- I want to repeat:  Manufacturing is doing better than it’s done in the last -- any time in the last 20 years.  We’re seeing more entrepreneurship in manufacturing than we’ve seen in the last 20 years, more manufacturing startups.  Large manufacturers who had moved overseas are starting to bring manufacturing back, in part because our workers are so productive.  We remain the largest and most prosperous market in the world, and because of things like energy costs that are a lot lower here in the United States than they are in a lot of other places in the country.

So we’ve got a lot of things going for us.  The one thing that’s inhibiting us is we are not maximizing policies that would give an extra boost to manufacturing.  You were mentioning roads earlier -- we’ve got $2 trillion worth of deferred maintenance -- roads, bridges, water systems, a smart grid that can transmit energy more efficiently, an air traffic control system that could cut airline emissions by 30 percent, their fuels by 30 percent, which would actually potentially lower airline ticket prices and reduce delays. 

All of that would be a huge boost to manufacturing, and those jobs can’t be exported, because they’ve got to be -- by definition, if you’re rebuilding infrastructure, it’s got to be done here.  The fact that Congress has not been willing to take me up so far on my proposal to aggressively fund infrastructure right now makes no sense.  We would reduce our unemployment rate, put hard hats back to work right now.  And the spinoffs would be enormous.

We know that if we changed our tax code so that instead of giving tax loopholes to things that aren’t producing economic value and instead are incentivizing and reducing the tax burden on small startups and folks who are doing manufacturing, that would give a boost to our economy right now. 

So there are just certain steps that we can be taking to accelerate the great work that’s already being done around the country, building off what the private sector does, but leveraging it.  Investing more in research and development -- that always has big payoffs.  Making sure that we’ve investing in our community colleges so that our workers are trained for the jobs that are actually created. 

This is a challenging and competitive time.  But as I told you before, if you ask companies where’s the best place to do business, they say the United States of America, that’s where we want to invest in.  That’s the first time they’ve said that in over a decade.  People think we’ve got the best cards, but we’ve got to use them.  And that requires Congress breaking out of this mentality that says, if I propose it, they’re opposed to it -- I’m talking, obviously, about the Republicans.

And we’re not going to agree on everything, but we can agree on some basic steps that historically weren’t partisan.  Infrastructure didn’t used to be partisan.  Eisenhower worked with Democrats to build an Interstate Highway System.  Research and development didn’t used to be partisan.  That was something everybody agreed was important to make, and government had to make those investments, in some cases, because the private sector just couldn’t justify the cost of true basic research. 

Making sure that we had the best university system in the world and that it was accessible.  When I went to school, the amount of debt that I took out for my entire undergraduate education -- and I got some grants, and I worked while I was there -- but I basically paid off my entire student debt my first year out of school.  I had to take a job I didn’t like that much to do it, but I knocked it out.  Kids these days are just as hardworking if not more hardworking and conscientious than I am, but they’re still coming out with $25,000, $30,000 worth of debt.  We can do something about that.

So I don’t -- I want everybody to feel optimistic and hopeful about the future of manufacturing and the future of entrepreneurship, and the future of the American economy and our huge advantage in innovation.  But I want also everybody to be paying attention to the debates that are taking place in Washington, and don’t just take for granted that somehow gridlock is inevitable, or that we don’t have good policies that we could be pursuing right now -- we do.  The reason we don’t pursue them is because of politics.  And we’ve got one party that just decides they want to say no to everything because they’re looking at the next election instead of what’s good for the next generation.

All of you inspire confidence in me.  And if that’s reflected in how we operate in Washington, I think we’re going to do just fine. 

Thanks, everybody.  (Applause.)

END
2:40 P.M. EDT