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Obama’s Commencement Address At Booker T. Washington High School

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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

May 16, 2011

Remarks of President Barack Obama

Booker T. Washington High School Commencement

Monday, May 16, 2011

Memphis, Tennessee

 

As Prepared for Delivery –

 

Thank you, Chris.  Hello, Memphis!  And congratulations to the Class of 2011!  You know, being President is a great job.  I get a cool plane.  I have a theme song.  But what I enjoy most is having a chance to come to a school like Booker T. Washington High School and share this day with its graduates.

 

I am so proud of each and every one of you.  You made it – and not just through high school.  You made it past Principal Kiner.  I can tell she is not messing around.  I’ve only been in Memphis a couple of hours, but I’m pretty sure I’d do whatever she told me to do.

 

I had the chance to meet her and her daughter, Amber a little while ago.  Amber actually goes to another high school.  Turns out, she was worried that the boys would be afraid to talk to her with her mom lurking in the hallways.  This is why my next job will be principal at Sasha and Malia’s high school.  And then president of their college.

 

Let me also say to Alexis and Vashti – I heard that you were a little nervous about speaking today, but now I’m nervous about following you.  You both did a terrific job.  And we’ve had some great performances by Shalonda, Tecia, Paula, and the jazz band.

 

Last but not least, I want to recognize all the people who helped you reach this milestone: the parents and grandparents, aunts and uncles, sisters and brothers, friends and neighbors who have loved you and stood behind you every step of the way.  And I want to acknowledge the devoted teachers and administrators of Booker T. Washington who believed in you, who kept the heat on you, and who have never treated teaching as a job – but as a calling.

 

Every commencement is a day of celebration.  But this one is especially hopeful.  That’s because some people say that schools like BTW just aren’t supposed to succeed in America.  You’ll hear them say, “The streets are too rough in those neighborhoods.”  Or “The schools are too broken.”  Or “Those kids can’t learn.”

 

Well, we are here today because every single one of you stood up and said, “Yes we can.”  Yes we can learn.  Yes we can succeed.  You decided that you weren’t going to be defined by where you came from, but by where you want to go – by what you want to achieve, by the dreams you hope to fulfill.

 

Just a couple of years ago, this was a school where only about half the students made it to graduation.  For a long time, just a handful headed to college each year.

 

But at BTW, you changed all that.  You created special academies for ninth graders, to start students off on the right track; you made it possible for kids to take AP classes and earn college credits; you even have a team that takes part in robotics competitions so students can learn with their hands by building and creating.  And you didn’t just create a new curriculum.  You created a new culture – a culture that prizes hard work and discipline; a culture that shows every student here that they matter, that their teachers believe in them.  As Principal Kiner says, the kids have to know that you care, before they care what you know.

 

Because you created this culture of caring and learning, today we are standing in a very different Booker T. Washington High.  Today, this is a place where more than four out of five students are earning a diploma – a place where 70 percent of the graduates will continue their education; where many will be the very first in their families to go to college.

 

Today, BTW is a place that has proven why we can’t accept any excuses when it comes to education; that in the United States of America, we should never accept anything less than the best our children have to offer.  As your teacher Steve McKinney, a.k.a. Big Mac, said in the local paper, “[W]e need everyone to broaden their ideas about what is possible. We need parents, politicians, and the media to see how success is possible, how success is happening every day…”

 

That’s why I came here today – because if success can happen here at Booker T. Washington, it can happen anywhere in Memphis.  It can happen throughout Tennessee.  And it can happen all across America.

 

Ever since I became President, my administration has been working hard to make sure that we build on the progress that’s taking place at schools like this.  We’ve got to encourage the kind of change that’s led not by Washington, D.C., but by teachers and principals and parents; by entire communities; by ordinary people standing up and demanding a better future for their children.  We have more work to do so that every child can fulfill his or her God-given potential.  And here Tennessee has been a leader, one of the first winners of the nationwide “Race to the Top” we’ve launched to reward the kind of results you’re getting at BTW.

 

This isn’t just an issue for me.  I’m standing here as President is because of the education I received.  My father left my family when I was two years old.  And I was raised by a single mom who struggled at times to provide for me and my sister.  But my mother and my grandparents pushed me to excel in school. And they kept pushing me, especially on those rare occasions where I’d slack off or get into trouble.  I’m sure no one here’s ever done something like that.

 

I’m lucky they kept pushing.  I’m lucky my teachers kept pushing.  Because education made all the difference in my life.  And it’s going to make an even greater difference in your lives – not just for your own success, but for our country’s success.  We live in a new world.  Believe or not, when you’re looking to get a job, you’re not just competing against people in Nashville or Atlanta, but in places like Beijing and Mumbai.  That’s some tough competition.  And you need to be prepared for it.  As a country, we need all of our young people to be ready – to earn those high school diplomas, to earn those college diplomas, to get certified in a trade or profession.

 

Through education, you can also better yourselves in other ways.  You learn how to learn – how to think critically and find solutions to unexpected challenges.   I remember we used to ask our teachers, “When am I going to need algebra?”  Well, you may not have to solve for x to get a good job or be a good parent.  That’s true.  But you will need to think through tough problems.  You will need to think on your feet.  So, math teachers, you can tell your students that the President says they need algebra.

 

Education also teaches you the value of discipline – that the greatest rewards come not from instant gratification, but from sustained effort and hard work.  It’s a lesson that’s especially important today, in a culture that prizes flash over substance, that tells us the goal in life is to be entertained, that says you can be famous just for being famous.

 

Finally, with the right education, both at home and at school, you can learn how to be a better human being.  For when you read a great story or learn about an important person in history, it helps you imagine what it would be like to walk in someone else’s shoes, to know their struggles.  The success of our economy will depend on your skills, but the success of our community will depend on your ability to follow the Golden Rule – to treat others as you would like to be treated.  We’ve seen how important this is even in the past few weeks, as communities in Memphis and across the South have banded together to deal with flood waters and to help each other in the aftermath of terrible tornadoes and storms.

 

All of these qualities – empathy, discipline, the capacity to solve problems and think critically – these skills don’t just change how the world sees us.  They change how we see ourselves.   They allow each of us to seek out new horizons and opportunities with confidence – with the knowledge that we’re ready, that we can face obstacles and challenges and unexpected setbacks.  That is the power of your education.  That is the power of the diploma you receive today.

 

It’s something that Booker T. Washington himself understood.  He entered this world a slave on a southern plantation.  But he would leave it as the leader of a growing civil rights moment and the President of the world-famous Tuskegee Institute.

 

You see, Booker T. Washington believed that change and equality would be won in the classroom.  So he convinced folks to help him buy farmland.  Once he had the land, he needed a school. So he assigned his first students to actually build the chairs and desks and even a couple of the classrooms.  And you thought your teachers were tough.

 

Booker T. Washington ran a tight ship.  He’d even ride the train to Tuskegee and scare some of the new students.  This was before YouTube and TMZ, so the kids didn’t recognize him right away.  He’d walk up to them and say, ‘Oh, you’re heading to Tuskegee.  I heard the work there is hard.  I heard they give the students too much to do.  I hear the food is terrible.  You probably won’t last three months.’  But the students would reply that they weren’t afraid of hard work.  They were going to complete their studies no matter what Booker T. Washington threw at them.

 

The truth is, not a single one of the graduates here today has had it easy.  Not a single one of you were handed anything on a silver platter.  You had to work for it.  You had to earn it.  But most of all, you had to believe in yourselves.

 

I think of Chris’s story, and what he’s faced in his life – losing his father to violence at such a young age, but knowing in his heart that he could take a different path.  I think of all the graduates here who had to leave their homes when their apartments were torn down, but who took two buses each morning to come back to BTW.

 

I think of Eron Jackon.  Eron has known a lot of setbacks in her young life.  There was a period when she lashed out.  She got into trouble.  She made mistakes.  And when she first came to Booker T. Washington, she struggled.

 

There are plenty of people out there who would have counted Eron out.  There are plenty of people who would have thought of her as another statistic.  But that’s not how the teachers at Booker T. Washington saw her.  And, more importantly, that’s not how Eron saw herself.  She kept coming back to school.  She didn’t give up.  She didn’t quit.  And in time, she became a great student.  She remembered what Principal Kiner told her.  “You can’t let the past get you down.  You have to let it motivate you.”

 

Now, Eron is graduating, and she’s going to keep studying to get her barber’s certificate so she can cut hair and save for college.  She’s working toward her dream of becoming a lawyer.  Eron’s got a bright future ahead of her.

 

Each of you has a unique story to tell; each of you knows what it took for you to get here. But in reaching this milestone, there is also a common lesson shared by every graduate in this hall today.  Chris said it himself in a recent interview.

 

“It’s not where you are or what you are,” he said. “It’s who you are.”

 

Yes, you’re from South Memphis.  Yes, you’ve always been underdogs.  No one has handed you a thing.  But that also means that whatever you accomplish in your lives, you’ll have earned it.  Whatever rewards and joys you reap, you’ll appreciate them that much more because they will have come through your sweat and tears; the product of your efforts and talents.  You’ve shown more grit and determination in your childhoods than a lot of adults ever will.

 

That’s who you are.

 

So, Class of 2011, the hard road doesn’t end here; your journeys have just begun.  And your diploma isn’t a free pass – it can’t protect you against every setback or challenge or mistake.  You’ve got to keep working hard.  You’ve got to keep pushing yourselves.  But if you do, I am confident about your futures.  I am hopeful and excited about all that you can achieve.  And I know that, armed with the skills and experiences you’ve gained at Booker T. Washington High School, you are ready to make your mark on the world.

 

Thank you.  God bless these graduates.  And may God bless the United States of America.

 

Now, let’s hand out some diplomas.

 

###

 

 

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Congressman Pummeled for Praising Students Mocking Black Protester With Monkey Sounds

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U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, Republican of Georgia, is under fire after praising University of Mississippi students, some wearing American flag outfits, mocking a Black woman protester by making monkey sounds and shouting, “lock her up.”

“Counter-protestors at the University of Mississippi made racist remarks — including monkey noises and comparisons to Lizzo — towards a Black woman who was part of a planned protest against the war in Gaza,” Los Angeles Magazine reported Friday.

Collins, who tried to defund Vice President Kamala Harris’ Office in November, declared his support for the counter-protesters at “Ole Miss,” as the University is called.

“Ole Miss taking care of business,” he wrote on social media, atop the video (below).

The counter-protesters, as evidenced in the video, appear to be mostly white.

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“When is the inevitable ‘I don’t have a racist bone in my body’ tweet coming,” wondered Rewire News Group editor-at-large Imani Gandy.

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Harvard Law Cyberlaw Clinic clinical instructor Alejandra Caraballo responded to the Georgia GOP congressman, “Thanks for confirming you’re a massive racist piece of sh*t.”

Mississippi Free Press news editor Ashton Pittman wrote: “Rep. Mike Collins, R-Georgia, praises a video showing a University of Mississippi frat boy dancing like a monkey and making monkey noises near a Black woman student who was protesting for Palestine while other frat boys chant ‘lock her up.'”

In a separate post describing a separate video taken of the same group Pittman wrote: “Frat bros at @OleMiss chant, ‘Lizzo! Lizzo!’ and shout, ‘F**k you fatass, f**k you b*tch’ at a Black woman who was protesting for Palestine. Do people really think these counterprotestors are doing it to support Jews?”

Journalist John Harwood did not mince words, writing, “Congressman proud of the racism.”

“Okay, Mike. We get it,” wrote podcast host, documentary director, and author W. Kamau Bell. “You want to be famous for being a racist. Fine. I’ll help you become a famous racist. You’re welcome.”

The original video is here.

See Rep. Collins’ post and the video below or at this link.

Caution: the video is disturbing.

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Amid more damning revelations from her soon-to-be released book, embattled South Dakota Republican Governor Kristi Noem will head to Mar-a-Lago this weekend as ex-president Donald Trump auditions potential vice presidential picks in front of high-dollar donors. Noem was also slated to attend a Republican fundraiser in Colorado this weekend but it was canceled over alleged safety concerns after news broke she had bragged about shooting her 14-month old dog.

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A spokesperson for Noem “seemed to concede that the Kim story was false Thursday night,” and notified her publisher, Politico’s Ryan Lizza reported in his exclusive.

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NBC News, which says Rep. Donalds is also under consideration, on Friday added there will be “a fundraising retreat that could serve as a screening session” for potential vice presidential running mates.

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Over the weekend independent 2024 presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. spoke at a fundraiser for a far-right anti-government group in Erie County, New York – a slice of the country that had a large proportion of residents arrested and charged for crimes related to the January 6 insurrection. Kennedy, a conspiracy theorist and vaccine denialist, increasingly is embracing the far-right.

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Watch WIVBTV’s report on Kennedy’s trip to New York below or at this link.

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