Canceled.LTroll.8
Banned
It is outstanding to be here, and I’m not going to take a long time.
You are helping to fight our way through a vicious recession and you are building the economy of America’s future.
Now, it’s not easy.
We’ve gone through as bad a economic situation as we’ve had since the Great Depression, and this recession was a culmination of a decade of irresponsibility, a decade that felt like a sledgehammer hitting middle-class families.
For the better part of 10 years, people have faced stagnant incomes, skyrocketing health care costs, skyrocketing tuition costs, and declining economic security, and this all came to a head in a massive financial crisis that sent our economy into a freefall and cost 8 million American jobs, including many in this community.
So it was in the middle of this crisis that my administration walked through the door, and we had to make some difficult decisions at a moment of maximum peril, to avoid a Great Depression, to make sure that we didn’t have a complete meltdown in our financial system.
It was a moment when the markets were in turmoil and we were losing 750,000 jobs every month.
Some of the decisions we made weren’t popular at the time and some of them may still be unpopular today, but we made those decisions because we had to stop that freefall, and because we made those hard choices, our economy is in a different place today than it was just a year ago.
We were guided by a simple idea.
Government doesn’t have all the answers.
Ultimately, government doesn’t create all the jobs.
Government can’t guarantee growth by itself, but what government can do is lay the foundation for small businesses to expand and to thrive, for entrepreneurs to open up shop and test out new products, for workers to get the training that they need, and for families to achieve some measure of economic security, and that role is especially important in tough economic times, and that’s why, when my administration began, we immediately cut taxes.
That’s right.
You wouldn’t know it from listening to folks, but we cut taxes for working families and for small business owners all across American to help them weather the storm.
Through our small business loans, and our focus on research and development, and our investment in high-tech, fast-growing sectors like clean energy, we’re helping to speed our recovery by harnessing the talent and the drive and the innovative spirit of the American people.
So, our goal has never been to create another government program, our goal has been to spur growth in the private sector.
So, just give you a couple examples, just last week, Abound Manufacturing in Colorado received backing for two plants to produce solar panels.
This is going to create 2,000 construction jobs and 1,500 permanent jobs.
One of the plants is actually taking over what’s now an empty Chrysler supplier factory.
Another company, called Abengoa Solar, is now planning to build one of the world’s largest solar plants right here in the United States, and when it’s finished, this facility will be the first large-scale solar plant in the United States that can actually store energy that it creates for later use, even at night.
All told, we expect energy investments alone to generate 700,000 jobs over the next few years, and this is not just going to boost our economy in the short term.
This is going to lay a platform for the future.
It’s going to create opportunities year after year after year, decade after decade after decade.
We could have as much as 40 percent of the world’s market by 2015 -- five years.
That means jobs, but that also means we’re going to have an expertise in a sector that’s just going to keep on growing all around the world for years to come, so all these efforts taken together are making a difference.
A year and a half ago, our economy was shrinking at 6 percent a year.
Now it’s growing.
The economy was bleeding jobs.
We’ve now created private sector jobs, added private sector jobs, for six consecutive months.
Now, obviously the progress we’ve made isn’t nearly enough to undo all the damage that was done as a consequence of the economic crisis.
There are still five unemployed workers for every vacancy.
There’s still too many empty storefronts on Main Street all across America, and I’ve said since I took office that my administration will not rest until every American who is able and ready and willing to work can find a job, and a job that pays a decent wage and has decent benefits to support a family.
We’re not there yet.
We’ve got a long way to go, but what is absolutely clear is we’re moving in the right direction.
We are headed in the right direction, and the surest way out of this storm is to go forward, not to go backwards.
There are some people who argue that we should abandon some of these efforts, some people who make the political calculation that it’s better to just say no to everything than to lend a hand to clean up the mess that we’ve been in.
But, my answer to those who don’t have confidence in our future, who want to stop, for the naysayers, they ought to travel all across America and meet the people that I’ve met at places like Navistar in Indiana, where folks are being hired to build new electric trucks, or Siemens Wind Power in Iowa, where they’re making wind turbines in a factory that used to be empty, or Celgard, which is a battery technology company in North Carolina that hired more than 50 people because of the investments we made, or Poet Biorefinery in Missouri that’s putting people to work harvesting homegrown energy.
While they’re at it, they ought to talk to all the small business owners who’ve gotten tax breaks to pay for their health plans and new SBA loans to expand or keep their doors open.
Or they ought to talk to the crews that are rebuilding all the highways and laying tracks for new rail lines.
They ought to talk to the scientists who are toiling day and night to develop the technologies and the cures with the potential to improve our economy and our health and our well-being.
And they might want to talk to the teachers who didn’t get laid off because of the budget help that we gave, who are then going to be teaching our kids and they’re being incentivized to reform how they do business so we’ve got the best education system in the world and we’ve got the highest number of folks who are going to community colleges or four-year colleges than anyplace in the world.
That’s how we’re going to take charge of our destiny.
That’s how we create jobs and create lasting growth.
That’s how we ensure that America doesn’t just limp along, maybe recover to where we were before, but instead that we’re prospering, that this nation leads the industries of the future.
I mean, this has been a difficult time for America right now, two years of brutal recession, a decade of economic insecurity, and there are going to be some hard days ahead.
That’s the truth.
It’s going to take a while for us to dig ourselves out of this hole.
If we hold fast to that spirit of entrepreneurship and innovation that’s always defined America, we’re not just going to emerge from this period of turmoil, we’re going to emerge stronger than we were before.
You’re proving that as long as we keep on moving forward, nobody can stop us, and for that I want to thank you.
You are setting a model for what we need to be doing all across the country.
So, congratulations.
Thank you very much.
You are helping to fight our way through a vicious recession and you are building the economy of America’s future.
Now, it’s not easy.
We’ve gone through as bad a economic situation as we’ve had since the Great Depression, and this recession was a culmination of a decade of irresponsibility, a decade that felt like a sledgehammer hitting middle-class families.
For the better part of 10 years, people have faced stagnant incomes, skyrocketing health care costs, skyrocketing tuition costs, and declining economic security, and this all came to a head in a massive financial crisis that sent our economy into a freefall and cost 8 million American jobs, including many in this community.
So it was in the middle of this crisis that my administration walked through the door, and we had to make some difficult decisions at a moment of maximum peril, to avoid a Great Depression, to make sure that we didn’t have a complete meltdown in our financial system.
It was a moment when the markets were in turmoil and we were losing 750,000 jobs every month.
Some of the decisions we made weren’t popular at the time and some of them may still be unpopular today, but we made those decisions because we had to stop that freefall, and because we made those hard choices, our economy is in a different place today than it was just a year ago.
We were guided by a simple idea.
Government doesn’t have all the answers.
Ultimately, government doesn’t create all the jobs.
Government can’t guarantee growth by itself, but what government can do is lay the foundation for small businesses to expand and to thrive, for entrepreneurs to open up shop and test out new products, for workers to get the training that they need, and for families to achieve some measure of economic security, and that role is especially important in tough economic times, and that’s why, when my administration began, we immediately cut taxes.
That’s right.
You wouldn’t know it from listening to folks, but we cut taxes for working families and for small business owners all across American to help them weather the storm.
Through our small business loans, and our focus on research and development, and our investment in high-tech, fast-growing sectors like clean energy, we’re helping to speed our recovery by harnessing the talent and the drive and the innovative spirit of the American people.
So, our goal has never been to create another government program, our goal has been to spur growth in the private sector.
So, just give you a couple examples, just last week, Abound Manufacturing in Colorado received backing for two plants to produce solar panels.
This is going to create 2,000 construction jobs and 1,500 permanent jobs.
One of the plants is actually taking over what’s now an empty Chrysler supplier factory.
Another company, called Abengoa Solar, is now planning to build one of the world’s largest solar plants right here in the United States, and when it’s finished, this facility will be the first large-scale solar plant in the United States that can actually store energy that it creates for later use, even at night.
All told, we expect energy investments alone to generate 700,000 jobs over the next few years, and this is not just going to boost our economy in the short term.
This is going to lay a platform for the future.
It’s going to create opportunities year after year after year, decade after decade after decade.
We could have as much as 40 percent of the world’s market by 2015 -- five years.
That means jobs, but that also means we’re going to have an expertise in a sector that’s just going to keep on growing all around the world for years to come, so all these efforts taken together are making a difference.
A year and a half ago, our economy was shrinking at 6 percent a year.
Now it’s growing.
The economy was bleeding jobs.
We’ve now created private sector jobs, added private sector jobs, for six consecutive months.
Now, obviously the progress we’ve made isn’t nearly enough to undo all the damage that was done as a consequence of the economic crisis.
There are still five unemployed workers for every vacancy.
There’s still too many empty storefronts on Main Street all across America, and I’ve said since I took office that my administration will not rest until every American who is able and ready and willing to work can find a job, and a job that pays a decent wage and has decent benefits to support a family.
We’re not there yet.
We’ve got a long way to go, but what is absolutely clear is we’re moving in the right direction.
We are headed in the right direction, and the surest way out of this storm is to go forward, not to go backwards.
There are some people who argue that we should abandon some of these efforts, some people who make the political calculation that it’s better to just say no to everything than to lend a hand to clean up the mess that we’ve been in.
But, my answer to those who don’t have confidence in our future, who want to stop, for the naysayers, they ought to travel all across America and meet the people that I’ve met at places like Navistar in Indiana, where folks are being hired to build new electric trucks, or Siemens Wind Power in Iowa, where they’re making wind turbines in a factory that used to be empty, or Celgard, which is a battery technology company in North Carolina that hired more than 50 people because of the investments we made, or Poet Biorefinery in Missouri that’s putting people to work harvesting homegrown energy.
While they’re at it, they ought to talk to all the small business owners who’ve gotten tax breaks to pay for their health plans and new SBA loans to expand or keep their doors open.
Or they ought to talk to the crews that are rebuilding all the highways and laying tracks for new rail lines.
They ought to talk to the scientists who are toiling day and night to develop the technologies and the cures with the potential to improve our economy and our health and our well-being.
And they might want to talk to the teachers who didn’t get laid off because of the budget help that we gave, who are then going to be teaching our kids and they’re being incentivized to reform how they do business so we’ve got the best education system in the world and we’ve got the highest number of folks who are going to community colleges or four-year colleges than anyplace in the world.
That’s how we’re going to take charge of our destiny.
That’s how we create jobs and create lasting growth.
That’s how we ensure that America doesn’t just limp along, maybe recover to where we were before, but instead that we’re prospering, that this nation leads the industries of the future.
I mean, this has been a difficult time for America right now, two years of brutal recession, a decade of economic insecurity, and there are going to be some hard days ahead.
That’s the truth.
It’s going to take a while for us to dig ourselves out of this hole.
If we hold fast to that spirit of entrepreneurship and innovation that’s always defined America, we’re not just going to emerge from this period of turmoil, we’re going to emerge stronger than we were before.
You’re proving that as long as we keep on moving forward, nobody can stop us, and for that I want to thank you.
You are setting a model for what we need to be doing all across the country.
So, congratulations.
Thank you very much.