John Kerry
Related: About this forumSec. Kerry's Boston College commencement address today
Haven't found archived video, but transcript is here:
I take personal pleasure in noting that Kerry took potshots at Harvard in both the Yale and BC addresses . Way to go, JK!
http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2014/05/226291.htm
This transcript is in the public domain, thus it is OK to include a longer-than-usual excerpt:
.
. . Many of you today might not even recognize the name of Father Robert Drinan. He was the dean of the Law School and he was running for Congress when I first visited him on the campus. And what impressed me most about Father Drinan whether on Chestnut Hill or Capitol Hill was that he made no apologies for his deep and abiding Catholic commitment to the weak, the helpless, the downtrodden. If a person is really a Christian, Father Drinan would say, they will be in anguish over global hunger, injustice, over the denial of educational opportunity.
. . .
And because of where Id been and what Id seen, I came to Boston College with a set of nagging questions. I had confronted my own mortality head-on during the war. . . as I became disillusioned with the war, my faith also was put to test.
Theres something theologians call the problem of evil. Its the difficulty of explaining how terrible and senseless events are, in fact, part of Gods plan. That was a very real test for me. Some of my closest friends were killed. You see things in war that haunt you for the rest of your life. So coming here to BC Law, reading St. Augustine on the problem of evil, or St. Thomas Aquinas on just war, the letters of St. Paul and thoughts about suffering this was not an abstract or academic exercise. It was a chance to dig in and really try to understand where and how everything fit, including trying to understand where I fit in. Im sure a lot of you ask those questions. It was the compassion, listening, and understanding that I experienced at BC that made me feel welcome, taught me literally how to think critically, how to ask the right questions, and reinforced in me a personal sense of direction.
. . The people I met here were putting into action the words of the Jesuit motto that youve heard already today: Men and women for others. Every institution has a mission or a motto thats the easy part. The hard part is ensuring that theyre not just words. We have to make sure that even as our world changes rapidly and in so many ways, we can still, each of us, give new meaning to our values. Today, I promise you that is one of the greatest challenges of Americas foreign policy: ensuring that even when its not popular, even when its not easy, America still lives up to our ideals and our responsibilities to lead. . . our citizenship is not just a privilege it is a profound responsibility.
And what we have done to turn back the armies of defeatism and indifference in the fight against AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and even polio this work should give every one of you confidence to confront another cross-border, cross-generational challenge, the challenge of a changing climate. If were going to live up to our values, this is a test that we have to meet.
Now look, I know this is hard, because I spent almost 30 years in the United States Senate pushing this issue, trying to get colleagues to move. We got up to maybe 55 votes, couldnt quite get to 60. And I know its hard to feel the urgency. As we sit here on an absolutely beautiful morning in Boston, you might not see climate change as an immediate threat to your job, your community, or your families. But let me tell you, it is.
Whats frustrating is that this challenge is not without a solution. In fact, not one problem I can think of today that we face in this country is without a solution. Its a question of capacity, willpower. The solution is actually staring us in the face. It is energy policy. Make the right energy policy choices and America can lead a $6 trillion market with 4 billion users today and growing to 9 billion users in the next 50 years.
. . .But if we do nothing, and it turns out that the critics and the naysayers and the members of the Flat Earth Society, if it turns out that theyre wrong, then we are risking nothing less than the future of the entire planet. This is not a hard choice, frankly. But still, let me tell you we need the help of every single one of you to make it.
In the end, all of these global challenges how to defend against extremism, how to eradicate disease, how to provide young people with opportunity, how to protect our planet all of these questions of whether men and women can live in dignity. What do I mean by dignity? I mean exactly the same thing that Father David Hollenbach taught on this campus and brought to the forefront of Catholic social teaching: That when families have access to clean water and clean power, they can live in dignity. When people have the freedom to choose their government on election day and to engage their fellow citizens every day, they can live in dignity. When all citizens can make their full contribution no matter their ethnicity; no matter who they love or what name they give to God, they can live in dignity. . . The diploma that you will receive today isnt just a certificate of accomplishment. Its a charge to keep. Its a powerful challenge to every single one of you, because you have already been blessed with a world-class education, and with it comes responsibility. Part of that responsibility is taking to heart the values that youve learned here and sharing them with the world beyond BC. That spirit of service is part of the fabric of this school, just as it is part of the fabric of our nation.
I often think of the words of our first Secretary of State, Thomas Jefferson, someone who also founded a prestigious university like yours. Jefferson spoke about the beauty of a simple image: using one candle to light another. And he said that when that happens, both candles gain light and neither candle loses any. He was talking about the contagious quality of shared knowledge. As heirs to the Jesuit tradition, this is an idea that you know well. Two centuries before Jefferson, St. Ignatius Loyola always closed his letters with a simple charge, and its one I pass on to you today. St. Ignatius wrote simply, Set the world aflame.
So graduates of 2014, pass on your light to others. Set the world aflame with your service. Welcome those who are lost; seek out those at the crossroads. That is how you can fulfill your responsibility as a graduate of this great institution. That is how you can answer the call to be a servant, leader, and that is how you can keep faith with and renew the idea of America, and that is how we all live up to our duty as citizens.
mylye2222
(2,992 posts)Yes, as you said in earlier posts, Kerry is in peace with inself, or at least more than others politician. I do believe , not in God for my part, but I join him in the fact that it is suffering, though challenges, pain, that teach us the best lessons in life. And that its whats defines us.And that even can be this that keeps us move forward. With love.
karynnj
(59,942 posts)Like the day before he became Secretary of State when he was all over MA speaking in places that had meaning to him ending at Fanueil Hall, this has been a weekend - even more intensively - returning to his past.
I actually like the BC speech even better - though both are very good. I saw the write up on BC site, but it does not seem to have video. (One nice bit - the ultra conservative Newman League (ie no relation to the centers) had pushed the Cardinal to boycott because Kerry - in their opinion - is a bad Catholic. from the BC write up Cardinal O'Malley did the benediction - http://www.bc.edu/content/bc/offices/pubaf/news/2014-may-jun/secretary-of-state-kerry-addresses-boston-college-class-of-2014.html
I hope video becomes available.
mylye2222
(2,992 posts)Here is it!!!!
http://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/blog/2014/05/19/john-kerry-boston-college-commencement-protest-catholic-action-league/
Really tired of all this sad heckes, bashing and so on....
And tommorow is the Benghazy nonscandal subpoe!
Ffffff. As we say in French: Marre marre marre!!!!!!
karynnj
(59,942 posts)They created an award in the name of their former Dean of the Law College, Drinan - and Kerry was the first person given it. Drinan was a Jesuit Priest who was a Congressman. They first met in 1970 when Kerry was first out of the Navy and looking into to running for Congress. He found out that the anti war candidates had agreed to have an informal election between themselves to select who would run against the incumbent who favored the war. Drinan started with a major lead and at the end it was just him vs Kerry. Kerry conceded and immediately joined his campaign along with his closest friends.
They remained friends until Drinan's death a few years after 2004. He was one of Kerry's advisers in 2004. He taught at Georgetown University. A niece who had him as a teacher around that time said he was an incredible teacher.
That group has attacked liberal Catholics for years - and as noted, the Cardinal, who very likely knows Kerry well, ignored their call that he not come. I doubt Kerry is easily phased by people protesting him -- I doubt they had much support.
The subpoena for tomorrow was lifted by Issa when it was clear Kerry had a commitment to be in Mexico. He then got mad at the State Department and set it for May 29. (It is actually just a publicity stunt to call Kerry. His goal is likely to posture and continue to defame the State Department - without asking many questions and demanding yes/no answers to questions that need more. The problem for him is there is a MAJOR gravitas gap and he is on the low end. Unfortunately for him, Kerry has one of the coolest tempers in the world and he will look like a jerk if Kerry responds (as he will) politely speaking of honoring the process.
If he REALLY thought something was wrong in providing the documents, he likely would have started by calling in the people who actually do the pull and the redactions. He would ask them what their directions were and who issued them. If he then found a way to have a problem with the procedures, he would call in the people who gave the directions and then try to work up the line. Kerry's own involvement is likely limited to assigning someone the responsibility to assign and monitor the tasks done by the people who do this. _ I would guess lawyers as I know in companies the lawyers lead the effort when they they get a subpoena.
The problem is that there was NOTHING on the talking points that was hidden. Every other document said pretty consistent things.
Like you, I hate the disrespect Kerry gets from some here. However, he is really not impacted by these immature Putin/Snowden/Paul fans. At this point, he really really is out of politics. These two invitations were honors and likely both very close to his heart. His response at Yale seemed very friendly and I assume that BC was even more so. (First of all, for many of the undergraduates, he was their Senator for their entire life until he became SoS. We visited BC and another Jesuit college on the Thursday/Friday of the week of the election in 2004 with a daughter looking at colleges. In both MA colleges, some kids were crying or near tears and the explanation was they were tremendously invested in the election.)
mylye2222
(2,992 posts)It lighted my spirit.
No, of course he is not perturbed by those kind of protests. The issue is that I just see to much heckle events at Kerry when on mediatic occasions, like speeches, travels etc.....
Of course I not include Code Pink one, witch its clear their action is far more on policies that on trashing the good Secretary. And I agree with quite of Code's opinions. I wasn't for example for going at war on Syria. Better for an action as the Lybian one. No Fly Zone. Catch Assad and put him on trial for genocide.
MBS
(9,688 posts)This is the whole ceremony, so you'll have to scroll through the video to find Kerry's talk, but it's in there
karynnj
(59,942 posts)This would make more sense in the Onion!
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCsQqQIwAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fbostonherald.com%2Fnews_opinion%2Flocal_coverage%2F2014%2F05%2Fjohn_kerry_bashes_crimson_at_bc&ei=8gF-U_b0EuapsQS6o4GABA&usg=AFQjCNEVPNktFbyhGxWMH3c8tq5Ea9tJZA&sig2=KkadhcXVm-dqun8twUAQ4w&bvm=bv.67229260,d.cWc
Luftmensch067
(2,411 posts)Because the Herald normally loves and champions Harvard at every opportunity (remember when they were bashing Elizabeth Warren for teaching there?)
Also, I just noticed that they can't even get it right that JK went to law school at BC -- they say he went to Boston University Law School. Imagine if he had made an error like that? Morons.
karynnj
(59,942 posts)- which shows they absolutely did not read or listen to ANY of what he said. Even more than his Pepperdine speech, he gave a very personal account of the profound impact the BC Jesuits had on him. (Perhaps this is good because they would not understand honest, deeply personal comments if they bit the BH writers in their noses!)
As to Harvard, yeah they really were looking for the BH to protect them from the slings and arrows of ...... a man they have warmly welcomed and who they would have voted for had he stayed Senator. ( I have been in NY/NJ audiences when he knocked the Yankees and praised the Red soxes --- absolutely no one would have expected him to feel otherwise. )
mylye2222
(2,992 posts)We would have laugh as a group to a weeklong MSM nonsense trasj on Jk. .. relember Kirzakstan.........
Back then they had just discivered Former USSR was complicated anyway.....
Ah.. MSM... your stupudity is even more infinite than Universe.....
Corey_Baker08
(2,157 posts)He is so eloquient in his speaking, so inspiring in his message, and his record of public service speaks for itself...
I Will Always Wonder, What If John Kerry was elected President in 2004?
mylye2222
(2,992 posts)Would have shown True leadership during Katrina disaster. He would have ended earlier the Iraq war. ...