I'm calling you out on this one. Here is the president's entire speech to the IOC. What is unAmerican about it? (BTW this is from your favorite FOX News.)
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October 2, 2009
President Obama remarks at IOC meeting
http://whitehouse.blogs.foxnews.com/2009/10/02/president-obama-remarks-at-ioc-meeting/
Remarks of President Barack Obama – As Prepared for Delivery To the International Olympic Committee
President Rogge, ladies and gentlemen of the International Olympic Committee:
I come here today as a passionate supporter of the Olympic and Paralympic Games; as a strong believer in the movement they represent
(laughing inside enough that I can't read the tele-prompter); and a proud Chicagoan
('Nuff said). But above all, I come as a faithful representative of the American people
(you wish), and we look forward to welcoming the world to the shores of Lake Michigan and the heartland of our nation in 2016.
(I want to release terrosts into the US from Guantanamo.)
To host athletes and visitors
(from the terrorist jails), from every corner of the globe is a high honor and a great responsibility
(To my muslim brethren). And America is ready and eager to assume that sacred trust.
(Hehheh) (Of course only here, if you are having a problem with despots in the country you are living in, you are on your own.)We are a nation that has always opened its arms to the citizens of the world – including my own father
(which one?)– who have sought something better; who have dreamed of something bigger.
I know you face a difficult choice among several great cities and nations with impressive bids of their own. So I’ve come here today to urge you to choose Chicago for the same reasons I chose Chicago nearly twenty-five years ago
(the graft?)– the reasons I fell in love with the city I still call home
(as opposed to your real home?). And it’s not only because it’s where I met the woman you just heard from – though after getting to know her this week,
(his wife) I’m sure you’d all agree that she’s a pretty big selling point.
You see, growing up, my family moved around a lot.
(No kidding, that's why people think you were born someplace else.) And I never really had roots in any one place or culture or ethnic group.
(See above.) Then I came to Chicago.
(From where is what they are asking.)And on those Chicago streets, I worked
(I call BS. You have never 'worked' a day in your life.)alongside men and women who were black and white; Latino and Asian; people of every class and nationality and religion
(Again, I call BS). I came to discover that Chicago is that most American of American cities, but one where citizens from more than 130 nations inhabit a rich tapestry of distinctive neighborhoods.
(Sounds like typical political road dumplings to me.)
Each one of those neighborhoods – from Greektown to the Ukrainian Village; from Devon to Pilsen to Washington Park
(Now, how would you know?)– has its own unique character, history, song, and sometimes language. But each is also a part of our city – one city – a city where I finally found a home.
(In 2005)
Chicago is a place where we strive to celebrate what makes us different just as we celebrate what we have in common.
(Um....I have friends and family there. That's not the way they look at it.)It’s a place where our unity is on colorful display at so many festivals, parades, and especially sporting events, where perfect strangers become fast friends at the sight of the same jersey. It’s a city that works – from its first World’s Fair more than a century ago to the World Cup we hosted in the nineties, we know how to put on big events. And scores of visitors and spectators will tell you that we do it well.
(Uh, how do you know, neither you, nor your family was there, unless you have some new-fangeled time displacement machine that allowed your family to be there while you were born in Hawaii.)
Chicago is a city where the practical and the inspirational exist in harmony; where visionaries who made no small plans rebuilt after a great fire and taught the world to reach new heights. It’s a bustling metropolis with the warmth of a small town; where the world already comes together every day to live and work and reach for a dream – a dream that no matter who we are or where we’re from; no matter what we look like or what hand life has dealt us, with hard work, and discipline, and dedication, we can make it if we try.
(Sounds good, but if you are going to talk the talk, you might try to walk the walk.)
That’s not just the American Dream. That is the Olympic spirit. That’s why we see so much of ourselves in these Games. And that’s why we want them in Chicago. That’s why we want them in America.
We stand at a moment in history when the fate of each nation is inextricably linked to the fate of all nations – a time of common challenges that require a common effort.
( Now that is just funny, coming from an administration that believes terrorism is a 'world adjustment'.And I ran for President because I believed deeply that at this defining moment, the United States of America has a responsibility to help lead that effort,
(Of relenquishing (SP?)all our freedoms as a free nation) and to forge new partnerships with the nations and peoples of the world.
(Especially my muslim brothers.)
No one expects the Games to solve our collective challenges. But we do believe that in a world where we have too often witnessed the darker aspects of our humanity, peaceful competition between nations represents what is best about our humanity.
(Like Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, Ho Chi Mehn, Breschev, and the other commies and socialists whose names I've mis-spelled.) brings us together, if only for a few weeks, face to face. It helps us understand one another just a little better. It reminds us that no matter how or where we differ, we all seek our own measure of happiness, and fulfillment, and pride in what we do. And that is a very powerful starting point for progress.
(As soon as I can get some money from someone who earned it, because God knows, I've never had a job.)
Nearly one year ago, on a clear November night, people from every corner of the world gathered in the city of Chicago or in front of their televisions to watch the results of the U.S. Presidential election. Their interest wasn’t about me as an individual.
(Yes it was. I'll say it since everyone else is too chicken. America tried voting for a black man just to show that it was not prejudiced, in spite of the fact that you were an enemy of the U.S.)Rather, it was rooted in the belief that America’s experiment in democracy still speaks to a set of universal aspirations and ideals. It sprung from the hope that in this ever-shrinking world, our diversity
(diversity?...anyone remember when we were united?)could be a source of strength and cause for celebration; and that with sustained work and determination, we could learn to live and prosper together during the fleeting moment we share on this Earth.
(Fantastic, just don't give my hard-earned money to those that will not work.)
That work is far from over,
(we know) but it has begun in earnest.
(no kidding.) And while we do not know what the next few years will bring,
sure we do, more government confiscation.)there is nothing I would like more than to step just a few blocks from my family’s home and welcome the world back to our neighborhood.
(The 'world' was never 'at' your neighborhood. America was. You just chose to ignore it and chose the communistic way of taking what is not yours and giving it to others.)
At the beginning of this new century, the nation that has been shaped by people from around the world wants a chance to inspire it once more; to ignite the spirit of possibility at the heart of the Olympic and Paralympic movement in a new generation; to offer a stage worthy of the extraordinary talent and dynamism offered by nations joined together – to host games that unite us in noble competition
(Noble competition....you mean when the Olympics was 'supposed to be amateur' and not professional? When the USSR did not use the transgendered? When the 'sport' was to be about the best of the best out of each country and not about what each country could produce?)and shared celebration of our limitless potential as a people.
And so I urge you to choose Chicago. I urge you to choose America. And if you do; if we walk this path together; then I promise you this: the city of Chicago and the United States of America will make the world proud. Thank you.