希拉里·克林顿在2022年美国市长会议英语演讲稿
Thank you! Thank you all so much.
It's great to be here with all of you. I'm looking out at the audience and eing so many familiarfaces, as well as tho here up on the dais.
I want to thank Kevin for his introduction and his leadership of this organization.
加强意识形态工作 Mayor Lee, thanks for having us in your beautiful city.
风英语怎么说
It is for me a great treat to come back to address a group that, as you just heard, I spent a lotof time as nator working with – in great measure becau of the need for buttressingHomeland Security, as well as other challenges within our cities during the eight years I rvedin the Senate.
韩雯雯
And it was always refreshing to come here becau despite whatever was going on in Congressor Washington with respect to partisanship, a conference of mayors was truly like
an oasis inthe dert. I could come here and be reminded of what Mayor LaGuardia said, "There's noRepublican or Democratic way to pick up the garbage. You pick it up, or you don't pick it up."And I loved being with people who understood that.
I've learned over the years how important it is to work with city hall, to try to make sure we areconnected up as partners and to get whatever the priorities of your people happen to beaccomplished.
So it pays. It pays to work with you, and I am grateful to have this opportunity to come backand e you.
When I was Senator from New York, I not only worked with the mayor of New York City, ofcour, I worked with creative and committed mayors from Buffalo to Rochester to Syracuto Albany and so many other places.
And I was particularly happy to do so becau they were always full of ideas and eager to worktogether to attract more high-paying jobs, to revitalize downtowns, to support our firstresponders, to try to clo that skills gap.
And I want you to be sure of this, whether you are a Democrat, a Republican or anIndependent: If I am president, America's mayors will always have a friend in the White Hou.
Now, as I was preparing to come here, I couldn't help but think of some of tho who aren'twith us today.
Tom Menino was a dear friend to me, and to many in this room, and I certainly feel his loss.
Today, our thoughts are also with our friend Joe Riley and the people of Charleston. Joe's a goodman and a great mayor, and his leadership has been a bright light during such a dark time.
You know, the passing of days has not dulled the pain or the shock of this crime. Indeed, as wehave gotten to know the faces and names and stories of the victims, the pain has onlydeepened.
好看的台剧
Nine faithful women and men, with families and passions and so much left to do.
As a mother, a grandmother, a fellow human being, my heart is bursting for them. For thevictims and their families. For a wounded community and a wounded church. For our countrystruggling once again to make n of violence that is fundamentally nless, and historywe desperately want to leave behind.
Yesterday was Juneteenth, a day of liberation and deliverance. One-hundred and fifty years ago,as news of President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation spread from town to town across theSouth, free men and women lifted their voices in song and prayer.
Congregations long forced to worship underground, like the first Christians, joyfullyresurrected their churches.
In Charleston, the African Methodist Episcopal Church took a new name: Emanuel. "God is withus."
诠释的近义词 Faith has always en this community through, and I know it will again.
海娃
宽广的意思 Just as earlier generations threw off the chains of slavery and then gregation and Jim Crow,this generation will not be shackled by fear and hate.
On Friday, one by one, grieving parents and siblings stood up in court and looked at that youngman, who had taken so much from them, and said: "I forgive you."
脚注格式 In its way, their act of mercy was more stunning than his act of cruelty.
It reminded me of watching Nelson Mandela embrace his former jailers becau, he said, hedidn't want to be imprisoned twice, once by steel and concrete, once by anger and bitterness.
In the moments of tragedy, many of us struggle with how to process the rush of emotions.
I'd been in Charleston that day. I'd gone to a technical school, Trident Tech. I had en thejoy, the confidence and optimism of young people who were now rving apprenticeships withlocal business, Black, white, Hispanic, Asian, every background. I l
istened to their stories, Ishook their hands, I saw the hope and the pride.
And then by the time I got to Las Vegas, I read the news.
Like many of you, I was so overcome: How to turn grief, confusion into purpo and action?But that's what we have to do.