| OBAMA WELCOMES NEW
G.I. BILL "We do this
not just to meet our moral obligation to those who've sacrificed
greatly on our behalf and on behalf of the country. We do it
because these men and women must now be prepared to lead our
nation..."
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Below is the text of President Barack Obama's address about
the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill. The speech was given on Monday,
August 3, 2009 at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.
You can find a VA press
release on the New G.I. Bill here. And, use our search
engine for
more about the Old and New G.I. Bills.
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PRESIDENT OBAMA: Hello. Thank
you. Thank you. Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
Please have a seat. Please have a seat.
Good morning, everybody.
AUDIENCE: Good morning.
OBAMA: It is wonderful to see all of you and wonderful to have one
of the best partners that anybody could have in elected office,
our vice president, Joe Biden. Thrilled to have him here.
(APPLAUSE)
I want to thank Staff Sergeant Miller (ph) for the gracious
introduction. I want to thank President Merten for his
hospitality.
There are a couple of people here who deserve all the credit,
because they got a very tough bill done. And part of the reason
they were able to get it done was just because of their
extraordinary personal credibility. These are -- one is new to the
Senate and one had been there a while, and yet together they
formed an incredibly formidable team. They're both class acts.
Please give a big round of applause to Virginia's own John Warner
and Jim Webb.
(APPLAUSE)
I know that we've got a number of member of Congress who are here,
and I want to thank them all for their outstanding work.
I want to point out that Senator Mark Warner could not be here,
but we appreciate him.
We've got the secretary of veterans affairs, a hero in his own
right, General Eric Shinseki. And I want everybody to please
acknowledge him.
(APPLAUSE)
And of the original bill sponsors who could not be here today,
we've got Senator Chuck Hagel, Senator Frank Lautenberg,
Representative Harry Mitchell, Representative Bobby Scott,
Representative Ginny Brown-Waite and Representative Peter King.
All of them worked hard, along with the delegation that is
present.
OBAMA: And so, we are very grateful to all of them.
I want to join all of today's speakers in thanking those of you
who worked so hard to make this occasion possible. But above all,
I want to pay tribute to the veterans who are now advancing their
dreams by pursuing an education.
Obviously,
I'm honored to be here and to renew our commitment to ensure that
the men and women who wear the uniform of the United States of
America get the opportunities that they have earned.
I was a proud cosponsor of the post-9/11 G.I. Bill as senator. I'm
committed to working with Secretary Shinseki to see that it is
successfully implemented as president.
And we do this not just to meet our moral obligation to those
who've sacrificed greatly on our behalf and on behalf of the
country. We do it because these men and women must now be prepared
to lead our nation in the peaceful pursuit of economic leadership
in the 21st century.
This generation of servicemen and -women has already earned a
place of honor in American history. Each of them signed up to
serve, many after they knew that they would be sent into harm's
way.
Over the last eight years, they have endured tour after tour of
duty in dangerous and distant places. They've experienced grueling
combat, from the streets of Fallujah to the harsh terrain of
Helmand province.
They've adapted to complex insurgencies, protected local
populations and trained foreign security forces.
So by any measure, they are the authors of one of the most
extraordinary chapters of military service in the history of our
nation. And I don't make that statement lightly, for we know that
anyone who puts on the uniform joins an unbroken line of selfless
patriots that stretches back to Lexington and Concord.
The freedom and prosperity that we enjoy would not exist without
the service of generations of Americans who were willing to bear
the heaviest and most dangerous burden.
OBAMA: But we also know this: The contributions that our
servicemen and -women can make to this nation do not end when they
take off that uniform.
We owe a debt to all who serve. And when we repay that debt to
those bravest Americans among us, then we are investing in our
future -- not just their future, but also the future of our own
country.
Now, this was the lesson that America was sometimes too slow to
learn. After the Civil War and World War I, we saw far too many
veterans who were denied the chance to live their dreams; men who
were unable to find in peace the hope that they had fought for in
war.
And FDR knew this. In 1943, before the beaches of Normandy were
stormed and the treacherous terrain of Iwo Jima was taken, he told
the nation that the veterans of World War II would be treated
differently.
He said that they must not be demobilized, and I quote, "to a
place on a bread line" -- "demobilized to a place on a bread line
or on a corner selling apples."
"Instead," Roosevelt said, "the American people will insist on
fulfilling this American obligation to the men and women in the
armed forces who are winning this war for us."
That is precisely what the American people did. The G.I. Bill was
approved just weeks after D-Day, and carried with it a simple
promise to all who had served: You pick the school, we'll help
pick up the bill.
And what followed was not simply an opportunity for our veterans.
It was a transformation for our country. By 1947, half of all
Americans enrolled in college were veterans.
OBAMA: Ultimately, this would lead to three presidents, three
Supreme Court justices, 14 Nobel Prize winners and two dozen
Pulitzer Prize winners.
But, more importantly, it produced hundreds of thousands of
scientists and engineers, doctors and nurses, the backbone of the
largest middle class in history.
All told, nearly 8 million Americans were educated under the
original G.I. Bill, including my grandfather.
No number can sum up this sea change in our society.
Reginald Wilson, a fighter pilot from Detroit, said, "I didn't
know anyone who went to college. I never would have gone to
college had it not been for the G.I. Bill."
H.G. Jones, a Navy man from North Carolina, said, "What happened
in my rural Caswell County community happened all over the
country. Going to college was no longer a novelty."
Indeed, one of the men who went to college on the G.I. Bill, as I
mentioned, was my grandfather. And I would not be standing here
today if that opportunity had not led him west in search of
opportunity.
So we owe the same obligations to this generation of service men
and women as was afforded that previous generation. That is the
promise of the post-1911 (sic) G.I. Bill. It's driven by the same
simple logic that drove the first G.I. Bill: You pick the school;
we'll help pick up the bill.
And looking out at the audience today, I'm proud to see so many
veterans who will be able to pursue their education with this new
support from the American people.
And this is even more important than it was in 1944. The first
G.I. Bill helped build a post-war economy that has been
transformed by revolutions in communication and technology. And
that's why the post- 1911 -- 9/11 G.I. Bill must give today's
veterans the skills and training they need to fill the jobs of
tomorrow.
Education is the currency that can purchase success in the 21st
century. And this is the opportunity that our troops have earned.
I'm also proud that all who have borne the burden of service these
last several years will have access to this opportunity.
OBAMA: We are including reservists and National Guard members
because they have carried out unprecedented deployments in
Afghanistan and Iraq. We are including the military families who
have sacrificed so much by allowing the transfer of unused
benefits to family members. And we are including those who pay the
ultimate price by making this benefit available to the children of
those who lost their life in service to their country.
This is not simply a debt that we are repaying to the remarkable
men and women who have served. It is an investment in our own
country. The first G.I. Bill paid for itself many times over
through the increased revenue that came from a generation of men
and women who received the skills and education that they needed
to create their own wealth.
The veterans who are here today, like the young post-9/11 veterans
around the country, can lead the way to a lasting economic
recovery and become the glue that holds our communities together.
They too can become the backbone of a growing American middle
class.
And even as we help our veterans learn the skills they need to
succeed, I know that all of us can learn something from the men
and women who serve our country.
We've lived through an age when many people and institutions acted
irresponsibly, when service often took a backseat to short-term
profits, when hard choices were put aside for somebody else, for
some other time. It is a time when easy distractions became the
norm and the trivial has been taken too seriously.
The men and women who have served since 9/11 tell us a different
story. While so many were reaching for the quick buck, they were
heading out on patrol. While our discourse often produced more
heat than light, especially here in Washington, they have put
their very lives on the line for America. They've have borne the
responsibility of war.
And now, with this policy, we are making it clear that the United
States of America must reward responsibility and not
irresponsibility. Now, with this policy, we are letting those who
have borne the heaviest burden lead us in to the 21st century.
And so today we honor the service of an extraordinary generation
and look to an America that they will help build tomorrow. With
the post-9/11 G.I. Bill, we can give our veterans the chance to
live their dreams, and we can help unleash their talents and tap
their creativity, and be guided by their sense of responsibility
to their fellow citizens and to this country that we all love so
much.
May God bless our troops and our veterans, and may God bless the
United States of America.
Thank you very much, everybody.
(APPLAUSE)
END
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Obama, New G.I. Bill |