English subtitles for clip: File:President Obama Speaks on Civil Rights.webm
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1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,430 The President: What a singular honor 2 00:00:02,433 --> 00:00:05,263 it is for me to be here today. 3 00:00:05,266 --> 00:00:08,996 I want to thank, first and foremost, the Johnson 4 00:00:09,000 --> 00:00:13,930 family for giving us this opportunity and the 5 00:00:13,934 --> 00:00:15,934 graciousness with which Michelle 6 00:00:15,934 --> 00:00:19,504 and I have been received. 7 00:00:19,500 --> 00:00:21,170 We came down a little bit late because 8 00:00:21,166 --> 00:00:26,166 we were upstairs looking at some of the exhibits and some 9 00:00:26,166 --> 00:00:30,396 of the private offices that were used 10 00:00:30,400 --> 00:00:33,100 by President Johnson and Mrs. Johnson. 11 00:00:33,100 --> 00:00:36,930 And Michelle was in particular interested 12 00:00:36,934 --> 00:00:42,104 to -- of a recording in which Lady Bird is critiquing 13 00:00:42,100 --> 00:00:44,900 President Johnson's performance. 14 00:00:44,900 --> 00:00:45,900 (laughter) 15 00:00:45,900 --> 00:00:47,770 And she said, come, come, you need 16 00:00:47,767 --> 00:00:49,297 to listen to this. 17 00:00:49,300 --> 00:00:50,300 (laughter) 18 00:00:50,300 --> 00:00:52,300 And she pressed the button 19 00:00:52,300 --> 00:00:53,600 and nodded her head. 20 00:00:56,133 --> 00:00:58,933 Some things do not change -- (laughter) -- 21 00:00:58,934 --> 00:01:01,964 even 50 years later. 22 00:01:01,967 --> 00:01:07,037 To all the members of Congress, the warriors 23 00:01:07,033 --> 00:01:11,363 for justice, the elected officials and community 24 00:01:11,367 --> 00:01:16,737 leaders who are here today -- I want to thank you. 25 00:01:16,734 --> 00:01:23,864 Four days into his sudden presidency -- and the 26 00:01:23,867 --> 00:01:28,267 night before he would address a joint session 27 00:01:28,266 --> 00:01:32,996 of the Congress in which he once served -- 28 00:01:33,000 --> 00:01:36,670 Lyndon Johnson sat around a table with his closest advisors, 29 00:01:36,667 --> 00:01:38,637 preparing his remarks 30 00:01:38,633 --> 00:01:40,803 to a shattered and grieving nation. 31 00:01:43,133 --> 00:01:45,403 He wanted to call on senators and 32 00:01:45,400 --> 00:01:51,100 representatives to pass a civil rights bill -- 33 00:01:51,100 --> 00:01:53,570 the most sweeping since Reconstruction. 34 00:01:53,567 --> 00:01:59,567 And most of his staff counseled him against it. 35 00:02:02,233 --> 00:02:06,133 They said it was hopeless; that it would anger 36 00:02:06,133 --> 00:02:09,203 powerful Southern Democrats and committee 37 00:02:09,200 --> 00:02:13,600 chairmen; that it risked derailing 38 00:02:13,600 --> 00:02:15,230 the rest of his domestic agenda. 39 00:02:15,233 --> 00:02:20,403 And one particularly bold aide said 40 00:02:20,400 --> 00:02:24,200 he did not believe a President should spend his time and power 41 00:02:24,200 --> 00:02:27,130 on lost causes, however worthy they might be. 42 00:02:30,467 --> 00:02:34,537 To which, it is said, President Johnson replied, 43 00:02:34,533 --> 00:02:36,703 "Well, what the hell's the presidency for?" 44 00:02:36,700 --> 00:02:37,700 (laughter 45 00:02:37,700 --> 00:02:43,670 and applause) What the hell's the 46 00:02:50,033 --> 00:02:54,303 presidency for if not to fight 47 00:02:54,300 --> 00:02:57,800 for causes you believe in? 48 00:02:57,800 --> 00:03:01,100 Today, as we commemorate the 50th anniversary 49 00:03:01,100 --> 00:03:06,270 of the Civil Rights Act, we honor the men and women 50 00:03:06,266 --> 00:03:08,896 who made it possible. 51 00:03:08,900 --> 00:03:12,400 Some of them are here today. 52 00:03:12,400 --> 00:03:16,070 We celebrate giants like John Lewis and 53 00:03:16,066 --> 00:03:18,536 Andrew Young and Julian Bond. 54 00:03:20,600 --> 00:03:23,930 We recall the countless unheralded Americans, 55 00:03:23,934 --> 00:03:28,634 black and white, students and scholars, 56 00:03:28,633 --> 00:03:34,303 preachers and housekeepers -- whose names are etched 57 00:03:34,300 --> 00:03:37,600 not on monuments, but in the hearts of their loved 58 00:03:37,600 --> 00:03:42,330 ones, and in the fabric of the country 59 00:03:42,333 --> 00:03:43,403 they helped to change. 60 00:03:46,500 --> 00:03:50,030 But we also gather here, deep in the heart 61 00:03:50,033 --> 00:03:55,403 of the state that shaped him, to recall one giant man's 62 00:03:55,400 --> 00:03:59,400 remarkable efforts to make real the promise 63 00:03:59,400 --> 00:04:05,130 of our founding: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, 64 00:04:08,000 --> 00:04:14,730 that all men are created equal." 65 00:04:14,734 --> 00:04:19,104 Those of us who have had the singular privilege 66 00:04:19,100 --> 00:04:23,170 to hold the office of the Presidency know well that 67 00:04:23,166 --> 00:04:25,296 progress in this country can be hard 68 00:04:25,300 --> 00:04:31,170 and it can be slow, frustrating and sometimes you're stymied. 69 00:04:33,567 --> 00:04:34,567 The office humbles you. 70 00:04:36,967 --> 00:04:39,537 You're reminded daily that in this great democracy, 71 00:04:39,533 --> 00:04:42,533 you are but a relay swimmer in the currents 72 00:04:42,533 --> 00:04:46,503 of history, bound by decisions made by those 73 00:04:46,500 --> 00:04:50,370 who came before, reliant on the efforts 74 00:04:50,367 --> 00:04:55,437 of those who will follow to fully vindicate your vision. 75 00:04:58,367 --> 00:04:59,867 But the presidency also affords 76 00:04:59,867 --> 00:05:04,497 a unique opportunity to bend those currents -- 77 00:05:04,500 --> 00:05:11,100 by shaping our laws and by shaping our debates; by working 78 00:05:11,100 --> 00:05:14,300 within the confines of the world as it is, but also 79 00:05:14,300 --> 00:05:17,530 by reimagining the world as it should be. 80 00:05:21,200 --> 00:05:23,500 This was President Johnson's genius. 81 00:05:25,867 --> 00:05:28,397 As a master of politics and the legislative 82 00:05:28,400 --> 00:05:33,300 process, he grasped like few others the power 83 00:05:33,300 --> 00:05:35,100 of government to bring about change. 84 00:05:38,100 --> 00:05:39,930 LBJ was nothing if not a realist. 85 00:05:39,934 --> 00:05:43,734 He was well aware that the law alone isn't enough 86 00:05:43,734 --> 00:05:45,404 to change hearts and minds. 87 00:05:47,900 --> 00:05:50,330 A full century after Lincoln's time, he said, 88 00:05:50,333 --> 00:05:53,403 "Until justice is blind to color, until education 89 00:05:53,400 --> 00:05:57,370 is unaware of race, until opportunity is unconcerned 90 00:05:57,367 --> 00:05:58,967 with the color of men's skins, 91 00:05:58,967 --> 00:06:02,437 emancipation will be a proclamation but not a fact." 92 00:06:05,300 --> 00:06:08,430 He understood laws 93 00:06:08,433 --> 00:06:11,103 couldn't accomplish everything. 94 00:06:11,100 --> 00:06:14,930 But he also knew that only the law could anchor 95 00:06:14,934 --> 00:06:17,664 change, and set hearts and minds 96 00:06:17,667 --> 00:06:18,667 on a different course. 97 00:06:18,667 --> 00:06:23,337 And a lot of Americans needed 98 00:06:23,333 --> 00:06:27,103 the law's most basic protections at that time. 99 00:06:29,767 --> 00:06:31,497 As Dr. King said at the time, 100 00:06:31,500 --> 00:06:36,370 "It may be true that the law can't make a man love me but 101 00:06:36,367 --> 00:06:38,697 it can keep him from lynching me, 102 00:06:38,700 --> 00:06:44,400 and I think that's pretty important." 103 00:06:44,400 --> 00:06:50,400 (applause) And passing laws was what 104 00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:54,800 LBJ knew how to do. 105 00:06:57,033 --> 00:07:03,503 No one knew politics and no one loved legislating 106 00:07:03,500 --> 00:07:04,630 more than President Johnson. 107 00:07:07,300 --> 00:07:10,430 He was charming when he needed to be, 108 00:07:10,433 --> 00:07:11,503 ruthless when required. 109 00:07:11,500 --> 00:07:14,770 (laughter) 110 00:07:14,767 --> 00:07:16,537 He could wear you down with logic 111 00:07:16,533 --> 00:07:19,063 and argument. 112 00:07:19,066 --> 00:07:22,466 He could horse trade, and he could flatter. 113 00:07:24,934 --> 00:07:27,964 "You come with me on this bill," he would reportedly 114 00:07:27,967 --> 00:07:31,067 tell a key Republican leader from my home state 115 00:07:31,066 --> 00:07:34,496 during the fight for the Civil Rights Bill, 116 00:07:34,500 --> 00:07:37,170 "and 200 years from now, schoolchildren will know 117 00:07:37,166 --> 00:07:43,166 only two names: Abraham Lincoln and Everett Dirksen!" 118 00:07:46,433 --> 00:07:49,963 (laughter) 119 00:07:49,967 --> 00:07:51,097 And he knew that senators would 120 00:07:51,100 --> 00:07:55,070 believe things like that. 121 00:07:55,066 --> 00:08:03,066 (laughter and applause) 122 00:08:03,066 --> 00:08:06,496 President Johnson liked power. 123 00:08:06,500 --> 00:08:12,600 He liked the feel of it, the wielding of it. 124 00:08:12,600 --> 00:08:19,330 But that hunger was harnessed and redeemed 125 00:08:19,333 --> 00:08:21,303 by a deeper understanding of the human condition; 126 00:08:24,734 --> 00:08:29,264 by a sympathy for the underdog, for the downtrodden, 127 00:08:29,266 --> 00:08:32,166 for the outcast. 128 00:08:32,166 --> 00:08:33,366 And it was a sympathy rooted 129 00:08:33,367 --> 00:08:34,537 in his own experience. 130 00:08:37,300 --> 00:08:41,370 As a young boy growing up in the Texas Hill Country, 131 00:08:41,367 --> 00:08:44,367 Johnson knew what being poor felt like. 132 00:08:47,600 --> 00:08:50,100 "Poverty was so common," he would later say, 133 00:08:50,100 --> 00:08:51,570 "we didn't even know it had a name." 134 00:08:51,567 --> 00:08:55,267 (laughter) 135 00:08:55,266 --> 00:08:56,296 The family home didn't have 136 00:08:56,300 --> 00:08:59,100 electricity or indoor plumbing. 137 00:09:01,200 --> 00:09:05,630 Everybody worked hard, including the children. 138 00:09:05,633 --> 00:09:09,363 President Johnson had known the metallic 139 00:09:09,367 --> 00:09:15,967 taste of hunger; the feel of a mother's calloused hands, 140 00:09:15,967 --> 00:09:19,437 rubbed raw from washing and cleaning and holding 141 00:09:19,433 --> 00:09:20,433 a household together. 142 00:09:23,533 --> 00:09:26,763 His cousin Ava remembered sweltering days spent 143 00:09:26,767 --> 00:09:29,597 on her hands and knees in the cotton fields, 144 00:09:29,600 --> 00:09:34,430 with Lyndon whispering beside her, "Boy, there's got 145 00:09:34,433 --> 00:09:36,333 to be a better way to make a living than this. 146 00:09:36,333 --> 00:09:38,963 There's got to be a better way." 147 00:09:42,266 --> 00:09:45,136 It wasn't until years later when he was teaching 148 00:09:45,133 --> 00:09:49,263 at a so-called Mexican school in a tiny town 149 00:09:49,266 --> 00:09:55,066 in Texas that he came to understand how much worse 150 00:09:55,066 --> 00:09:58,266 the persistent pain of poverty could be for other 151 00:09:58,266 --> 00:10:01,596 races in a Jim Crow South. 152 00:10:03,800 --> 00:10:06,200 Oftentimes his students would show 153 00:10:06,200 --> 00:10:09,100 up to class hungry. 154 00:10:09,100 --> 00:10:11,930 And when he'd visit their homes, he'd meet fathers 155 00:10:11,934 --> 00:10:14,134 who were paid slave wages by the farmers 156 00:10:14,133 --> 00:10:15,133 they worked for. 157 00:10:18,433 --> 00:10:20,303 Those children were taught, he would later 158 00:10:20,300 --> 00:10:25,230 say, "that the end of life is in a beet row, 159 00:10:25,233 --> 00:10:27,963 a spinach field, or a cotton patch." 160 00:10:31,734 --> 00:10:34,164 Deprivation and discrimination -- 161 00:10:34,166 --> 00:10:38,696 these were not abstractions to Lyndon Baines Johnson. 162 00:10:41,166 --> 00:10:43,266 He knew that poverty and injustice are 163 00:10:43,266 --> 00:10:46,596 as inseparable as opportunity and justice are joined. 164 00:10:50,133 --> 00:10:55,403 So that was in him from an early age. 165 00:10:58,467 --> 00:11:00,467 Now, like any of us, he was not a perfect man. 166 00:11:03,166 --> 00:11:06,396 His experiences in rural Texas may have stretched 167 00:11:06,400 --> 00:11:11,570 his moral imagination, but he was ambitious, 168 00:11:11,567 --> 00:11:15,867 very ambitious, a young man in a hurry to plot 169 00:11:15,867 --> 00:11:19,537 his own escape from poverty and to chart 170 00:11:19,533 --> 00:11:20,863 his own political career. 171 00:11:23,033 --> 00:11:24,603 And in the Jim Crow South, that meant 172 00:11:24,600 --> 00:11:25,870 not challenging convention. 173 00:11:29,266 --> 00:11:31,266 During his first 20 years in Congress, 174 00:11:31,266 --> 00:11:34,866 he opposed every civil rights bill that came up for a vote, 175 00:11:34,867 --> 00:11:37,067 once calling the push for federal legislation 176 00:11:37,066 --> 00:11:38,066 "a farce and a sham." 177 00:11:41,100 --> 00:11:43,570 He was chosen as a vice Presidential nominee 178 00:11:43,567 --> 00:11:45,597 in part because of his affinity with, 179 00:11:45,600 --> 00:11:50,630 and ability to deliver, that Southern white vote. 180 00:11:50,633 --> 00:11:52,233 And at the beginning of the Kennedy 181 00:11:52,233 --> 00:11:55,603 administration, he shared with President Kennedy 182 00:11:55,600 --> 00:11:58,270 a caution towards racial controversy. 183 00:11:58,266 --> 00:11:59,266 But marchers kept marching. 184 00:11:59,266 --> 00:12:05,336 Four little girls were killed in a church. 185 00:12:11,100 --> 00:12:12,100 Bloody Sunday happened. 186 00:12:14,934 --> 00:12:16,364 The winds of change blew. 187 00:12:19,567 --> 00:12:25,637 And when the time came, when LBJ stood in the Oval 188 00:12:25,633 --> 00:12:28,203 Office -- I picture him standing there, 189 00:12:28,200 --> 00:12:32,630 taking up the entire doorframe, looking out over the South 190 00:12:32,633 --> 00:12:38,303 Lawn in a quiet moment -- and asked himself what 191 00:12:38,300 --> 00:12:44,300 the true purpose of his office was for, what was the 192 00:12:47,133 --> 00:12:54,233 endpoint of his ambitions, he would reach back 193 00:12:54,233 --> 00:12:59,133 in his own memory and he'd remember his own 194 00:12:59,133 --> 00:13:00,533 experience with want. 195 00:13:04,066 --> 00:13:06,336 And he knew that he had a unique capacity, 196 00:13:06,333 --> 00:13:12,333 as the most powerful white politician from the South, 197 00:13:15,433 --> 00:13:19,833 to not merely challenge the convention that had 198 00:13:19,834 --> 00:13:24,004 crushed the dreams of so many, but to ultimately 199 00:13:24,000 --> 00:13:27,430 dismantle for good the structures 200 00:13:27,433 --> 00:13:28,763 of legal segregation. 201 00:13:32,133 --> 00:13:36,733 He's the only guy who could do it -- 202 00:13:36,734 --> 00:13:41,604 and he knew there would be a cost, famously saying 203 00:13:41,600 --> 00:13:46,630 the Democratic Party may "have lost the South 204 00:13:46,633 --> 00:13:47,633 for a generation." 205 00:13:53,133 --> 00:13:54,733 That's what his presidency was for. 206 00:13:57,367 --> 00:13:59,697 That's where he meets his moment. 207 00:14:02,533 --> 00:14:07,533 And possessed with an iron will, possessed with 208 00:14:07,533 --> 00:14:13,663 those skills that he had honed so many years in Congress, 209 00:14:13,667 --> 00:14:17,237 pushed and supported by a movement of those 210 00:14:17,233 --> 00:14:20,503 willing to sacrifice everything for their own liberation, 211 00:14:23,133 --> 00:14:28,233 President Johnson fought for and argued and horse 212 00:14:28,233 --> 00:14:35,863 traded and bullied and persuaded until 213 00:14:35,867 --> 00:14:39,197 ultimately he signed the Civil Rights Act into law. 214 00:14:43,000 --> 00:14:46,930 And he didn't stop there -- even though his 215 00:14:46,934 --> 00:14:51,964 advisors again told him to wait, again told him 216 00:14:51,967 --> 00:14:56,197 let the dust settle, let the country 217 00:14:56,200 --> 00:14:59,800 absorb this momentous decision. 218 00:15:02,166 --> 00:15:03,166 He shook them off. 219 00:15:05,633 --> 00:15:08,333 "The meat in the coconut," as President Johnson would 220 00:15:08,333 --> 00:15:14,763 put it, was the Voting Rights Act, so he fought 221 00:15:14,767 --> 00:15:16,237 for and passed that as well. 222 00:15:19,000 --> 00:15:22,400 Immigration reform came shortly after. 223 00:15:22,400 --> 00:15:24,070 And then, a Fair Housing Act. 224 00:15:26,834 --> 00:15:28,464 And then, a health care law that opponents 225 00:15:28,467 --> 00:15:30,697 described as "socialized medicine" that would 226 00:15:30,700 --> 00:15:33,770 curtail America's freedom, but ultimately freed 227 00:15:33,767 --> 00:15:36,437 millions of seniors from the fear that illness 228 00:15:36,433 --> 00:15:38,203 could rob them of dignity and security in their 229 00:15:38,200 --> 00:15:40,900 golden years, which we now know today as Medicare. 230 00:15:40,900 --> 00:15:46,900 (applause) What President Johnson understood was 231 00:15:56,233 --> 00:15:57,933 that equality required more than 232 00:15:57,934 --> 00:15:59,334 the absence of oppression. 233 00:16:02,233 --> 00:16:05,163 It required the presence of economic opportunity. 234 00:16:10,934 --> 00:16:13,034 He wouldn't be as eloquent as Dr. King would 235 00:16:13,033 --> 00:16:19,933 be in describing that linkage, as Dr. King moved into 236 00:16:19,934 --> 00:16:23,204 mobilizing sanitation workers and a poor 237 00:16:23,200 --> 00:16:25,200 people's movement, but he understood that 238 00:16:25,200 --> 00:16:26,200 connection because he had lived it. 239 00:16:29,300 --> 00:16:36,730 A decent job, decent wages, health care -- 240 00:16:36,734 --> 00:16:39,364 those, too, were civil rights worth fighting for. 241 00:16:41,934 --> 00:16:44,134 An economy where hard work is rewarded and 242 00:16:44,133 --> 00:16:46,863 success is shared, that was his goal. 243 00:16:46,867 --> 00:16:52,967 And he knew, as someone who had seen the New Deal 244 00:16:52,967 --> 00:16:57,797 transform the landscape of his Texas childhood, 245 00:16:57,800 --> 00:17:00,900 who had seen the difference electricity had made 246 00:17:00,900 --> 00:17:03,030 because of the Tennessee Valley Authority, 247 00:17:05,533 --> 00:17:08,903 the transformation concretely day in and day out in the 248 00:17:08,900 --> 00:17:13,900 life of his own family, he understood that government 249 00:17:13,900 --> 00:17:17,200 had a role to play in broadening prosperity 250 00:17:17,200 --> 00:17:22,570 to all those who would strive for it. 251 00:17:22,567 --> 00:17:25,437 "We want to open the gates to opportunity," 252 00:17:25,433 --> 00:17:29,663 President Johnson said, "But we are also going to give all our 253 00:17:29,667 --> 00:17:34,237 people, black and white, the help they need 254 00:17:34,233 --> 00:17:35,463 to walk through those gates." 255 00:17:35,467 --> 00:17:41,467 Now, if some of this sounds familiar, 256 00:17:44,967 --> 00:17:48,437 it's because today we remain locked in this same great 257 00:17:48,433 --> 00:17:53,163 debate about equality and opportunity, 258 00:17:53,166 --> 00:17:57,896 and the role of government in ensuring each. 259 00:18:00,767 --> 00:18:04,337 As was true 50 years ago, there are those who 260 00:18:04,333 --> 00:18:08,363 dismiss the Great Society as a failed experiment 261 00:18:08,367 --> 00:18:12,567 and an encroachment on liberty; who argue that 262 00:18:12,567 --> 00:18:14,737 government has become the true source of all that 263 00:18:14,734 --> 00:18:16,904 ails us, and that poverty is due to the moral 264 00:18:16,900 --> 00:18:20,970 failings of those who suffer from it. 265 00:18:20,967 --> 00:18:26,797 There are also those who argue, John, that nothing 266 00:18:26,800 --> 00:18:32,800 has changed; that racism is so embedded in our 267 00:18:36,834 --> 00:18:43,564 DNA that there is no use trying politics -- 268 00:18:43,567 --> 00:18:44,567 the game is rigged. 269 00:18:49,200 --> 00:18:51,100 But such theories ignore history. 270 00:18:55,767 --> 00:18:57,897 Yes, it's true that, despite laws like 271 00:18:57,900 --> 00:19:01,070 the Civil Rights Act, and the Voting Rights Act and 272 00:19:01,066 --> 00:19:03,636 Medicare, our society is still 273 00:19:03,633 --> 00:19:05,703 racked with division and poverty. 274 00:19:08,967 --> 00:19:12,997 Yes, race still colors our political debates, 275 00:19:13,000 --> 00:19:14,770 and there have been government programs 276 00:19:14,767 --> 00:19:15,767 that have fallen short. 277 00:19:19,467 --> 00:19:22,137 In a time when cynicism is too often passed off 278 00:19:22,133 --> 00:19:26,833 as wisdom, it's perhaps easy to conclude that there 279 00:19:26,834 --> 00:19:30,404 are limits to change; that we are trapped 280 00:19:30,400 --> 00:19:35,230 by our own history; and politics is a fool's errand, and we'd 281 00:19:35,233 --> 00:19:39,063 be better off if we roll back big chunks of LBJ's 282 00:19:39,066 --> 00:19:44,136 legacy, or at least if we don't put too much 283 00:19:44,133 --> 00:19:48,403 of our hope, invest too much of our hope 284 00:19:51,467 --> 00:19:52,467 in our government. 285 00:19:55,533 --> 00:19:56,903 I reject such thinking. 286 00:19:56,900 --> 00:20:02,900 (applause) Not just because Medicare and 287 00:20:10,166 --> 00:20:13,596 Medicaid have lifted millions from suffering; 288 00:20:13,600 --> 00:20:15,170 not just because the poverty rate 289 00:20:15,166 --> 00:20:17,936 in this nation would be far worse without food stamps and 290 00:20:17,934 --> 00:20:20,334 Head Start and all the Great Society programs 291 00:20:20,333 --> 00:20:21,563 that survive to this day. 292 00:20:24,934 --> 00:20:27,464 I reject such cynicism because I have lived 293 00:20:27,467 --> 00:20:30,437 out the promise of LBJ's efforts. 294 00:20:30,433 --> 00:20:34,333 Because Michelle has lived out the legacy 295 00:20:34,333 --> 00:20:35,333 of those efforts. 296 00:20:35,333 --> 00:20:37,933 Because my daughters have lived out the legacy 297 00:20:37,934 --> 00:20:38,934 of those efforts. 298 00:20:38,934 --> 00:20:41,004 Because I and millions of my generation were 299 00:20:41,000 --> 00:20:44,200 in a position to take the baton that he handed to us. 300 00:20:44,200 --> 00:20:50,200 (applause) 301 00:20:56,800 --> 00:20:58,830 Because of the Civil Rights movement, 302 00:20:58,834 --> 00:21:02,604 because of the laws President Johnson signed, 303 00:21:02,600 --> 00:21:05,530 new doors of opportunity and education swung open 304 00:21:05,533 --> 00:21:09,203 for everybody -- not all at once, 305 00:21:09,200 --> 00:21:11,170 but they swung open. 306 00:21:13,467 --> 00:21:16,567 Not just blacks and whites, but also women 307 00:21:16,567 --> 00:21:20,337 and Latinos; and Asians and Native Americans; 308 00:21:20,333 --> 00:21:25,363 and gay Americans and Americans with a disability. 309 00:21:25,367 --> 00:21:27,337 They swung open for you, and they swung 310 00:21:27,333 --> 00:21:28,333 open for me. 311 00:21:28,333 --> 00:21:32,103 And that's why I'm standing here today -- 312 00:21:32,100 --> 00:21:38,100 because of those efforts, because of that legacy. 313 00:21:43,100 --> 00:21:45,530 (applause) 314 00:21:45,533 --> 00:21:47,863 And that means we've got a debt to pay. 315 00:21:51,133 --> 00:21:52,803 That means we can't afford to be cynical. 316 00:21:58,033 --> 00:22:02,263 Half a century later, the laws LBJ passed are now 317 00:22:02,266 --> 00:22:04,766 as fundamental to our conception of ourselves 318 00:22:04,767 --> 00:22:08,297 and our democracy as the Constitution 319 00:22:08,300 --> 00:22:09,300 and the Bill of Rights. 320 00:22:11,467 --> 00:22:15,997 They are foundational; an essential piece 321 00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:17,000 of the American character. 322 00:22:20,500 --> 00:22:22,370 But we are here today because we know 323 00:22:22,367 --> 00:22:23,637 we cannot be complacent. 324 00:22:25,667 --> 00:22:27,997 For history travels not only forwards; 325 00:22:28,000 --> 00:22:32,070 history can travel backwards, history can travel sideways. 326 00:22:34,100 --> 00:22:36,230 And securing the gains this country 327 00:22:36,233 --> 00:22:40,063 has made requires the vigilance of its citizens. 328 00:22:43,367 --> 00:22:47,997 Our rights, our freedoms -- they are not given. 329 00:22:48,000 --> 00:22:49,370 They must be won. 330 00:22:49,367 --> 00:22:51,467 They must be nurtured through struggle 331 00:22:51,467 --> 00:22:54,137 and discipline, and persistence and faith. 332 00:22:58,200 --> 00:23:01,700 And one concern I have sometimes during these 333 00:23:01,700 --> 00:23:06,670 moments, the celebration of the signing 334 00:23:06,667 --> 00:23:13,767 of the Civil Rights Act, the March on Washington -- 335 00:23:13,767 --> 00:23:14,997 from a distance, sometimes these 336 00:23:15,000 --> 00:23:19,100 commemorations seem inevitable, they seem easy. 337 00:23:21,667 --> 00:23:23,897 All the pain and difficulty 338 00:23:23,900 --> 00:23:29,230 and struggle and doubt -- all that is rubbed away. 339 00:23:31,533 --> 00:23:33,133 And we look at ourselves and we say, oh, 340 00:23:33,133 --> 00:23:36,403 things are just too different now; we couldn't possibly 341 00:23:36,400 --> 00:23:39,430 do what was done then -- these giants, 342 00:23:39,433 --> 00:23:40,433 what they accomplished. 343 00:23:40,433 --> 00:23:44,733 And yet, they were men and women, too. 344 00:23:44,734 --> 00:23:47,334 It wasn't easy then. 345 00:23:47,333 --> 00:23:48,663 It wasn't certain then. 346 00:23:56,166 --> 00:23:59,596 Still, the story of America 347 00:23:59,600 --> 00:24:04,170 is a story of progress. 348 00:24:04,166 --> 00:24:09,166 However slow, however incomplete, however 349 00:24:09,166 --> 00:24:14,536 harshly challenged at each point on our journey, 350 00:24:14,533 --> 00:24:20,503 however flawed our leaders, however many 351 00:24:20,500 --> 00:24:22,470 times we have to take a quarter of a loaf 352 00:24:22,467 --> 00:24:27,597 or half a loaf -- the story of America 353 00:24:27,600 --> 00:24:28,870 is a story of progress. 354 00:24:32,767 --> 00:24:35,167 And that's true because of men like 355 00:24:35,166 --> 00:24:37,566 President Lyndon Baines Johnson. 356 00:24:37,567 --> 00:24:48,167 (applause) 357 00:24:48,166 --> 00:24:50,236 In so many ways, he embodied America, 358 00:24:52,400 --> 00:24:56,030 with all our gifts and all our flaws, 359 00:24:56,033 --> 00:24:59,003 in all our restlessness and all our big dreams. 360 00:25:01,800 --> 00:25:09,530 This man -- born into poverty, weaned 361 00:25:09,533 --> 00:25:14,933 in a world full of racial hatred -- somehow found within 362 00:25:14,934 --> 00:25:20,764 himself the ability to connect his experience 363 00:25:20,767 --> 00:25:24,237 with the brown child in a small Texas town; 364 00:25:26,367 --> 00:25:32,367 the white child in Appalachia; the black child in Watts. 365 00:25:35,800 --> 00:25:40,500 As powerful as he became in that Oval Office, 366 00:25:42,867 --> 00:25:43,867 he understood them. 367 00:25:47,700 --> 00:25:49,200 He understood what it meant 368 00:25:49,200 --> 00:25:51,630 to be on the outside. 369 00:25:51,633 --> 00:25:56,333 And he believed that their plight was his plight too; 370 00:25:56,333 --> 00:25:58,403 that his freedom ultimately was wrapped 371 00:25:58,400 --> 00:26:02,630 up in theirs; and that making their lives better 372 00:26:02,633 --> 00:26:05,003 was what the hell the presidency was for. 373 00:26:05,000 --> 00:26:11,000 (applause) 374 00:26:20,033 --> 00:26:21,463 And those children were on his mind 375 00:26:21,467 --> 00:26:23,767 when he strode to the podium that night 376 00:26:23,767 --> 00:26:27,667 in the House Chamber, when he called for the vote 377 00:26:27,667 --> 00:26:28,667 on the Civil Rights law. 378 00:26:31,533 --> 00:26:34,303 "It never occurred to me," he said, "in my fondest 379 00:26:34,300 --> 00:26:37,630 dreams that I might have the chance to help 380 00:26:37,633 --> 00:26:40,233 the sons and daughters of those students" 381 00:26:40,233 --> 00:26:43,963 that he had taught so many years ago, "and to help people 382 00:26:43,967 --> 00:26:47,567 like them all over this country. 383 00:26:47,567 --> 00:26:51,737 But now I do have that chance. 384 00:26:51,734 --> 00:26:54,934 And I'll let you in on a secret -- 385 00:26:54,934 --> 00:26:56,964 I mean to use it. 386 00:26:56,967 --> 00:27:00,297 And I hope that you will use it with me." 387 00:27:00,300 --> 00:27:06,270 (applause) 388 00:27:10,200 --> 00:27:12,230 That was LBJ's greatness. 389 00:27:14,367 --> 00:27:17,997 That's why we remember him. 390 00:27:18,000 --> 00:27:20,030 And if there is one thing that he and this year's 391 00:27:20,033 --> 00:27:22,703 anniversary should teach us, if there's one lesson 392 00:27:22,700 --> 00:27:26,130 I hope that Malia and Sasha and young people 393 00:27:26,133 --> 00:27:30,403 everywhere learn from this day, it's that with enough 394 00:27:30,400 --> 00:27:33,330 effort, and enough empathy, and enough 395 00:27:33,333 --> 00:27:35,363 perseverance, and enough courage, 396 00:27:37,533 --> 00:27:39,133 people who love their country can change it. 397 00:27:42,767 --> 00:27:46,197 In his final year, President Johnson stood on 398 00:27:46,200 --> 00:27:53,570 this stage, racked with pain, battered 399 00:27:53,567 --> 00:27:59,697 by the controversies of Vietnam, looking far older than his 400 00:27:59,700 --> 00:28:03,470 64 years, and he delivered what would 401 00:28:03,467 --> 00:28:04,937 be his final public speech. 402 00:28:08,500 --> 00:28:10,830 "We have proved that great progress 403 00:28:10,834 --> 00:28:13,764 is possible," he said. 404 00:28:13,767 --> 00:28:16,167 "We know how much still remains to be done. 405 00:28:18,233 --> 00:28:19,503 And if our efforts continue, 406 00:28:19,500 --> 00:28:25,430 and if our will is strong, and if our hearts are right, 407 00:28:25,433 --> 00:28:29,533 and if courage remains our constant companion, 408 00:28:29,533 --> 00:28:32,333 then, my fellow Americans, I am confident, 409 00:28:32,333 --> 00:28:33,363 we shall overcome." 410 00:28:33,367 --> 00:28:39,337 (applause) 411 00:28:47,200 --> 00:28:49,670 We shall overcome. 412 00:28:52,266 --> 00:28:56,936 We, the citizens of the United States. 413 00:28:59,800 --> 00:29:04,070 Like Dr. King, like Abraham Lincoln, 414 00:29:04,066 --> 00:29:06,596 like countless citizens who have driven this country 415 00:29:06,600 --> 00:29:10,100 inexorably forward, President Johnson knew 416 00:29:10,100 --> 00:29:14,830 that ours in the end is a story of optimism, 417 00:29:14,834 --> 00:29:17,334 a story of achievement and constant striving 418 00:29:17,333 --> 00:29:18,903 that is unique upon this Earth. 419 00:29:21,133 --> 00:29:25,133 He knew because he had lived that story. 420 00:29:25,133 --> 00:29:27,303 He believed that together we can build an America 421 00:29:27,300 --> 00:29:33,070 that is more fair, more equal, and more free 422 00:29:33,066 --> 00:29:36,066 than the one we inherited. 423 00:29:36,066 --> 00:29:38,566 He believed we make our own destiny. 424 00:29:40,967 --> 00:29:44,537 And in part because of him, we must believe 425 00:29:44,533 --> 00:29:46,603 it as well. 426 00:29:46,600 --> 00:29:47,600 Thank you. 427 00:29:47,600 --> 00:29:48,600 God bless you. 428 00:29:48,600 --> 00:29:50,330 God bless the United States of America. 429 00:29:50,333 --> 00:29:51,933 (applause)