inauguration address name是什么是什么意思?

second-level address
['s?k?nd 'l?v?l ?'dr?s]
大家都在背:
1. He delivered his second inaugural address.
他发表了第二次就职演说.
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2. Donald Tsang will make a new term of office, the second policy address.
曾荫权15日会发表新一个任期内的第二份施政报告.
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3. The second option is to address the issue now.
第二个选择是现在就着手解决问题.
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4. The second argument is the address of the PDO.
第二个意见是PDO的地址.
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5. Lincoln's Gettysburg address and his second inauguration speech also marble wall.
林肯的葛底斯堡演说和他第二次就职演讲词也刻在大理石墙上.
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1. 二级地址
second generation computer 第二代计算机second level address 二级地址second normal form 第二范式
- 基于104个网页
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second-level address
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方便的话,请您留下一种联系方式,便于问题的解决:Emory Magazine: Inauguration: Address
To Prize and To Sustain a Life of the Mind
William M. Chace
After traveling among you now for some eight months, I have begun to learn our
common language. I have successfully memorized one of the sentences holding the
Emory community together. It is, "I can't find a parking space."
I would like to spend a little time with that sentence, explaining it and
unraveling it. Lest you think that mention of parking is an odd way to start an
inaugural address, believe me that while I know that parking is real, all too
real for many of you, parking is also metaphor.
Let me clear out of the way the material and physical issues involved. There
are too the parking structures we have built will not
solve all our problems, nor will higher parking fees. We must keep more cars
out o we must make more of the camp
we must have more dista we must become more reliant on
bicycles, shuttle buses, and shoe leather.
And I am tempted to say that we must have a reduction in the rate at which new
buildings arise on campus. We have built well, and we h we
have built handsomely where handsome building has been warranted. But, amid all
the new and the old, we feel crowded. We know we must protect the green and
open spaces we sti we must remember that building too must
have its limits and that someday we must be able to say: "This is Emory. This
is what we have wanted in buildings. Now let us teach and learn in them." Our
building tasks are not quite finished. The cost of exc the
price of quality is growth. But le let us be frugal with
that growth. Chemistry and Physics have made their case for an expanded
structure. The medical sciences, too, must be given some more room to flourish.
we must build a center for its absence has to be remedied,
and remedied well.
Now back, if I may, to parking, not as a material and
physical reality, but as a metaphor of where Emory is and where it must go. To
say, "I can't find a parking space," is to declare one's marginality. It is to
remark on one's absence from power. It is to say: there is a feast, but I am
far from the table. This, of course, is a complaint that many in America can
air. We all feel, now and again, mysteriously powerless. We sense that we are
alone. We say to ourselves that a community, once open to all and protective of
all, has fled from our midst.
A generation ago, Jane Jacobs, writing The Death and Life of Great American
Cities, focused on what she called "social capital"--that necessary and
wonderful reservoir of human trust, coordination, cooperation, and mutual
benefit that, simply put, makes life easier. An ample supply of social capital
tells people how to pool resources, communicate directly, negotiate
effectively, define incentives, and collectively celebrate rewards. From it we
learn the pleasures of seeing the pronoun "I" flower into the pronoun "we."
In Atlanta today, we are witnessing a very happy result of the employment of
such social capital. That is the great cooperative effort bringing the Olympics
to Atlanta. This city has achieved greatness precisely because it has never
forgotten the ties that bind citizen to citizen, business to business, neighbor
to neighbor.
But elsewhere in the United States, we sense that such precious social capital
is at risk. As we Americans trust less in successful civic engagement at many
levels in our lives, we sense a turning back in upon ourselves, there to find,
as Alexis de Tocqueville long ago predicted we would find, only our solitary
I can think of no more appropriate place than Emory to think about ways to
accumulate greater social capital. What shall we do here to arrest a movement
that could lead us into social and personal isolation? What can our deep
spiritual foundations do to help us avoid a withdrawal inward and lead us out
to a collective progress forward? What can we do to pool our magnificent
resources and, by pooling them, multiply them?
Since what I now say will define the administration it is my honor and pleasure
to lead, I offer the following proposals. I pledge myself to their success. I
ask you to join me in assuring they succeed. In the first place, everyone must
feel that he or she does have a "parking space." I mean, of course, that we
must guarantee to everyone on this campus full equity of treatment and equality
of opportunity. To that end, I will establish a presidential commission to
pursue equity--equity of treatment for all those here.
But by the possession of a "parking space," I mean, of course, much more than
such a commission. I mean that each of us must have a place in Emory's life,
must have a sense of ownership, must feel strongly that one is a stakeholder in
the future of this institution. There is a all of you
should feel welcome at it. But you must also feel that the feast is there
because of the labors of your heart and mind. Be reminded of our shared good
fortune: we at Emory are strong, we still are young, we are not poor. The
quality of our students increases year by passing year. We live securely on
we are not rigid we have not become stultified
by pretentiousness. We are a good neighbor in a thriving city. We live in a
region of the nation that, JoAn and I have so pleasurably discovered, delights
in hospitality. Our prospects are, all in all, golden bright. And they are our
prospects, in part by way of gift from many others, in part fruit of our own
labors. This is our stakeholding.
But stakeholders, we know, have duties. As my colleague Billy Frye has lately
reminded all of us in his document Choices and Responsibility, with the rights
we possess come obligations we must honor. Let me name immediately the one
responsibility that I deem more important than any other: to prize and to
sustain a life of the mind that will draw students closer to each other,
students and teachers into more powerful associations, and the faculty into a
more energetic and enterprising union of intellectual pioneers. Any place so
good as this thrives or perishes by how strong its thinking is. That thinking
becomes visible in the research we generate and give to the world and the
teaching we perfect and extend to our students. At the end of all our labors
it be said of the people of Emory that they dedicated themselves to the
creation of thought, and that they combined their resources to make mind
prevail, to make thinking prevail, to make discovery prevail. If we can do well
there, we will have had a triumph never to be forfeited.
But we have other obligations. This nation is watching everything that we and
our sister academic institutions now do. We are admired by many, but viewed
with suspicion by some. Our c our public champions are
few. Some believe
others believe we contribute too little
to the common good. Some think our research is strange, others
think we teach with insufficient passion. In the eyes of some, we have
misplaced our sense of collective purpose. Some of thi
it is distressing. Some nevertheless it is burdensome.
Here is our problem in a nutshell: will people continue to pay for what we
provide in this culture, pay in financial terms, pay in terms of praise and
tribute, pay in deference, pay in honor? Are we, as stakeholders, all doing a
job so good that we need not worry about preserving the respect that higher
education has for so long earned?
On this question, the jury of national judgment is still out. Therefore I want
us now to take on the job of reporting on ourselves, accurately, before others
do so, inaccurately. We must engage much more energetically, steadfastly, in
the painful process of self-evaluation. What do we now do well, and what badly?
And where are we only good when we could be excellent?
We owe it to ourselves (I speak now to all my faculty colleagues) to do the
impossible: to pursue scholarship and research very well and, at the same time,
to teach very well. We fear that these two cannot be united, yet they are
united every day on this campus by the best among us, by colleagues who have
mastered the fusion of skills that can lead students onward and can also
produce new learning. Those colleagues show our students that the mind
generating new knowledge can also transmit that knowledge. Let us create
systems of recognition that will reward such men and women. We owe it to
ourselves (I speak now to my fellow administrators) to create not only those
systems of reward giving due praise to those who teach so well, but also to
give birth to those material and physical resources that will bring to Emory a
more stimulating and more charged intellectual atmosphere. The administration
of this university is not responsible for the thinking of this campus. The
faculty is. The administration is responsible for making good thinking
We owe it to ourselves (I speak now to everyone not a student) to be reminded
that once we were students. To be young as a student is to have the glorious
impunity to make almost as many mistakes as victories and to have every
experience, good or bad, chalked up as educational. So let us remind the
students that they should be free to be erroneous, just as they should be free
to be brilliantly innovative. Undergraduate education at its best is
impractical, rich with wonder, psychologically daring and spiritually
rewarding. Now is the time to be open to the special bedazzlement that a
college education is meant to invoke. And let us pledge to those students that
we will do everything we can to protect the special investment this nation has
made in their education and their future. That investment is represented by the
heroic and wise program of financial aid. It simply must be sustained.
We owe it to ourselves to recognize just how hard the staff of this institution
works. Without the dedication those thousands of people daily bring to the life
of Emory, Emory would have no life at all. Principled, professional, loyal, and
perceptive, the staff of this university give of themselves to our collective
enterprise. I seize this occasion to thank them, on behalf of all of us, for
all they have done and will do.
We also owe it to ourselves to understand how a university becomes great. It
has little it has everything to do with merit. It has
li it has everything to do with action. If we do what we
know we should do, then deserving recognition will come. If we pursue
recognition alone, nothing will come.
Here are some simple rules we can follow:
Do not permit centrifugal forces to thrust us narrowly into our respective
drive back to the center and to the network of associations that
bind all thinking people together. Let us build more bridges, and fewer silos,
of learning. Intellectual life can be lonely, but it need not be utterly
If you ask for examples of how such joint action can be accomplished, let me
remind you that there are several stunning experiments now proceeding at Emory.
One has to do with whether Emory physicians can provide a high level of patient
care, sustain a high level of research activity, and educate some of this
country's best future doctors. For this experiment to succeed, everyone
involved in the medical sciences at Emory must work together, must resolve
differences, must learn the hard rules of selflessness, and must surrender old
habits to learn new paradigms.
Another experiment invites all members of this community, as well as members of
the public, to deepen their understanding of the "moral imagination." That
experiment is called the Center for Ethics in Public Policy and the
Professions. At once interdisciplinary and interprofessional, driven by
research and fortified by specific case studies, it exists to help us all make
more sense of the ethical complexities now giving weight and texture to our
A third and most commendable example is now emerging from the new federation
that the University has forged with The Carter Center. President Carter has
nobly demonstrated how intellect can be fused with mission, ideas with
projects, conception with delivery. Now we must discover new ways to link more
powerfully the agencies of thought with the agencies of enactment. In that
linking, we will find ways to strengthen our international understanding, and
we will bring to our students, as well as more of our faculty, a recognition of
the global citizenship to which we are all entitled.
And here is another simple rule: keep in mind that being a stakeholder means
protecting what has kept you strong. While you bear in mind the phalanx of
brutal challenges that higher education is now facing, learn to protect the
great investment that has made education so strong in this country. Higher
education is now short on revenues but long on attracting criticism. So defend
it and champion it. Where it is inward, teach it to be
where it has not been tough enough on itself, teach it to train its critical
powers on its own traditional manners and customs.
Most importantly, remind all American citizens just how magnificent an
experiment higher education has been in this country. It has educated millions
very well and is a triumph of brains and ingenuity. The world watches it,
admires it, and comes to fill its classrooms. The finest young people in this
country spend some of the best years of their lives on its campuses. Families
are strengthened by it, no less than industries and cities and businesses.
And here is another rule for the future: I urge us not to dwell excessively on
the vague and billowy challenges of the next century. Much foolish talk, even
talk at inaugural addresses, is given over to how we should all be prepared for
the future. The future, my friends, is an untrustworthy and fickle guide, and
with it we shall always have an unrequited love affair. Who could have foretold
the computer revolution or the revolution in molecular biology? No one, but
somehow the best mathematicians and electrical engineers were ready for what
computers can do. The best biologists and chemists and physicists were ready
for DNA. We should do all we can now, in this time and this place, with every
tool we have and with all the energy we can command.
As Louis Pasteur said at his inaugural address in 1854 at the University of
Lille, "In the fields of observation chance favors only the ready mind." If we
have pushed our minds to readiness, if we have thought now as rigorously as we
can, and if we have never settled for second-best, we will wind up facing the
future with as much capital as anyone ever acquires. We have a present duty to
be smart, to be careful with our resources, and to be vigilant about new
possibilities. We have no present duty to be prophetic.
We are a thriving and bo take heart every day from that
fact. We possess hope and we possess optimism and we possess resolve. Our
alumni have our trustees have George
and Robert Woodruff brought our distinguished faculty have
believed i our students have plac the
United Methodist Church has watched us grow and has gloried in our presence in
the world. We are the beneficiaries of many and the pride of many more.
Whatever we have given to the world, out of that wellspring of the spirit that
my superb predecessor Jim Laney called "the education of the heart," the world
has given us back many times over. Our legacy, one of hope and optimism, now
drives us onward.
So now I say that I want to work with all of you, every one of you, to do what
we all know we have to do. With the strength we have individually, with the
strength we have collectively, and with the strength that our deeply embedded
spiritual foundation can give us, let us fasten upon the joy of being at this
place. Let everyone have a place amid this bounty. Let us get to work, and be
grateful for all the good work we have.
to return to main story.
to return to Summer 1995 contents page.
to return to Emory University Home Page.PRESIDENT.MN
The office of the President of Mongolia, Public Relations & Communications DivisionInauguration Address to the NationMy fellow countrymen Mongolians,
State officials, the faithful servants to the people
Dear Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen,
The people of Mongolia have been able to make a responsible choice at the time of historical importance. It has been proven that a citizen of Mongolia, whoever he or she is, is committed to partaking in making a decision on an issue of pivotal value for his or her country. My people have proven with their historic choice that Mongolia is a democracy. I thank my people.
All the powers of the State originate from the people. Government’s budget, whatever assets and capital the state has – all are created by the people. The statehood is a structure by people for people. The Presidential election has shown that this very principle of democracy is a reality in Mongolia.
Mongolia is a country which does not need a self-proclaimed “beloved” leader. This is a place where an honest servant and helper to the country and people is needed. Having been elected by the people of Mongolia and by swearing in to honestly serve my people as their President, I have just assumed the duty to serve and help my people. I will spare no efforts to fulfill this duty. I will justify the trust of those who supported me and will earn the faith of those who did not.
I thank thousands of my friends of common cause who have made tremendous efforts to make the Presidential election open and fair and to aspire success together. I am earnestly grateful to political parties, movements, organizations and my fellow citizens who have put the national interests above all and cooperated with me. I convey my profound gratitude to all those civil people who supported me, without being
held back by political ideologies.
I am grateful to my fellow Mongolians living and working in foreign countries for their sincere support regardless of miles longs distances parting them from their native shores. On behalf of my people who have made a just choice, I extend my deepest gratitude to all those who worked at all levels of electoral institution for their civil efforts to ensure that the people of Mongolia enjoyed their right to elect. For his service as the President of Mongolia, I convey all my best wishes to my Presidential race contender Nambaryn Enkhbayar and his family.
State Officials,
Mongolians met the dawn of May 25,2009, the first day of a new moon - a day of a white horse, with joy and happiness. That morning the historical Mongol soil, the people of Mongolia awoke anew, afresh. Fear and apprehension, lies and falsehood, depression and distress that inhabited the society and people’s minds vanished and faded away like gloomy shadows in the bright rays of the sun of the new morning. Every Mongolian was filled with a heartfelt joy of realizing that the life will be dignified and prosperous. This is the pride and delight made real by the Mongolians themselves.
This historic choice has brought a new order to the Mongolian society. Mongolians have proven once again that we are the owners of our fates. People have shown that they want justice and changes. People have stated that they will be the owners of their freedom, of their wealth. They have entrusted us, the state officials, to embody their wills, wishes and aspirations when we discharge our service.
I will be reminding myself every single day of the behest my people conveyed to me when they elected me their President, that we desperately needed justice in our society. History knows more of states which eroded and decayed from inside rather than from external attacks. We may not let our independence, sovereignty and freedom be threatened by forces inside the government house. A corrupt state is weak, a corrupt society is poor. Corruption erodes Mongolia’s competitiveness. Therefore, I call the state officials and my people to work together to establish justice.
I strictly warn that from this moment on any attempt to discriminate people and to abuse official position is to cease to exist at all levels of public service. I state again that bribery is a crime, and that whoever he is - a Mongolian or a foreigner, he, who engages in bribery shall not succeed in Mongolia. There are many organizations in Mongolia where public service is turned into somebody’s private office. Today we put an end to this amorality. Period.
Members of Parliament, State officials ought to bear in mind constantly that without complying the law-making, debating and ratification processes with the interests and benefits of the people we shall not be able to establish justice in the society. A law is not and should not be an extension of a state power, instead it is a manifestation of the freedom and desires of the people.
State laws and decisions are to take effect basing upon the needs and requirements of a citizen and not to accommodate any privileges or exclusive rights of state dignitaries, and this is consistent with the ideals and spirit of the civil society we are building together. Therefore, as President, I shall accord special attention to ensuring that law and decision making and debating processes are held openly and transparently and that the stakeholders do partake in these processes.
Legal and Law Enforcement Officers,
I am well aware of what risks your lives are exposed to when combating corruption and serving to establish justice. As the President of the country I shall render every support to any officer and worker of law and law enforcement organizations striving to advance this very sacred mission which our people dearly expect us to deliver. I shall accord my protection and all-around incentives to this cause. I shall not tolerate any practice, any expression of pleasing a government official for any material or non-material benefits, any unjust and prejudiced treatment of a common citizen, of poor and weak.
Everyone is keen about the unwavering role the judiciary and prosecution offices assume in establishing justice for all in this country. Every person urged me of the necessity of a reform in judiciary and prosecution. I am determined to engage in consistent and persistent reforms in this field.
I assert that the Mongolian State has no room to accommodate those who failed to deliver our people’s order to enforce justice, those who do not have any moral right to discharge this mandate. I, as your President, affirm that I shall fully mobilize my lawful powers to enable just and independent functioning of the public service, especially of judiciary, and shall cooperate with all just and honest public servants.
Dear electors,
I do very well understand that I am assuming the high and responsible title of the President of Mongolia at a crucial and critical juncture for Mongolia’s development and prosperity. I do also realize that my people have high expectations.
Clearly, I will need time to achieve my people’s expectations and deliver my promises that I made when running for Presidency, and certainly I will encounter new challenges, tests and difficulties. Yet, I shall never step back from my life-long cause to establish and safeguard justice, improve my people’s life and secure equality and freedom. I shall never forget the mandate charged to me by my people shoulder to shoulder with who we have aspired prosperity for Mongolia.
Mongolian people did survive pains and hardships as we struggled for our freedom and the new choice. Today new opportunities are being opened for Mongolians to aspire development and prosperity. New challenges emerge as well.
We spent many years talking about corruption, poverty, unemployment and did undertake a lot to address them, yet, we haven’t made the fundamental changes of groundbreaking nature to resolve these issues. The situation has been exacerbated by global financial crisis, and no signs of improvement and recovery have been observed yet. Nonetheless, there is no need for us to plead for grants and aid to establish justice. Should we manage to establish justice, wealth distribution will be corrected and we will do away with crisis situation. This is to be done by ourselves.
It is a great achievement that Mongols became able to discuss and resolve our issues by ourselves, independently, inside our government house, inside our country. However, we still miss, and for quite a long, to deliver the real power, the real authority to every individual citizen of Mongolia, to every grassroot, district, province, town and city. Mongolian State is upset and troubled not because of lack of power, but because of too much of it. The progress and prosperity of a civil society is defined not by centralization of power, but with transfer of rights, effective exercise of the rights by people.
In the face of realities Mongolia remains in today, it’s worth repeating that democracy is about empowering the people and not bestowing power to someone. The time has come for the Mongolian State to return by law the seized by law
power back to the people. It may even be a belated statement to pronounce that the time has come to transfer to the discretion of the people, to the business and professional communities especially in the countryside the power to make decisions for themselves and to engage in businesses and services they are naturally entitled to.
My fellow countrymen Mongolians,
Mongolia shall attain development and prosperity provided every individual citizen, every household, every village and town is enabled to resolve their challenges, is able to be a creative and constructive participant in resolving the development challenges. Mongolia’s development and prosperity is not determined by the plans and programs of the State, instead, our progress is a function of aims and goals, plans and purposes of each of us, the Mongolians. Every poor person, every poor household should have a plan to graduate from poverty. Unemployed should aim to become employed, those employed should aim at further enhancing productivity. Only then, will we make Mongolia’s development integral, only then will we be able to achieve social harmony and accord.
Participation and attendance by every citizen is instrumental in achieving social justice. Redressing injustice is not only a civil right, it is a mandatory duty of every citizen especially in a society where unfairness and bias are prevalent. This is a burden and responsibility for my every single contemporary. The reason is simple – we all assume duties and responsibilities for our future generations.
We cannot afford to let Mongolia’s future be tortured by corrupt officials for another year, another decade, and then another. We must put an end to this. Therefore, my fellow Mongolians, we should not agree to having some work life-long, endlessly and tirelessly, whereas others sit idle as in waiting rooms. All have to work, and hard. All have to participate. The environment to work and participate should be created by the state.
As the Head of State of Mongolia, I shall persistently support those who creatively participate in transforming his own and our country’s life, and not the ones who lazily absent themselves from development efforts. An order will prevail in the society whereby those who work and those who create the national wealth earn larger shares of these assets and not the ones who are loyal and close to decision-making. I shall accord special attention to ensuring and safeguarding the rights and liberties of every single person. On the other hand, I shall strictly uphold the rule of law.
I state to my people again and again that Mongolians have to live not for the Mongolian State and Government, but for themselves, for your children and for our future generations. I ask every Mongolian citizen to think of him or herself, of improving his or her own life in the most active and constructive manner, all for his own sake and not for the sake of the state. It will be my prime task as of the President to render every support in these efforts of my people. I reiterate my firm commitment to safeguarding the interests and benefits of my people.
Dear Guests, Heads of Diplomatic Missions and Representatives of International Organizations,
On behalf of the people of Mongolia and my personal name I extend our sincere gratitude for your participation in the Ceremony of Inauguration of the President of Mongolia and wish you to further expand and foster fruitful and efficient cooperation with my country.
The Mongolian people have made a historic choice and have demonstrated our commitment to democracy and justice, and that we remain a proud member of the international community aspiring development and prosperity. I have received heartfelt congratulations and best wishes for success to me as the newly elected President of Mongolia from heads of states and leaders of numerous countries and organizations. I earnestly hope that you would kindly convey my gratitude and greetings to your heads of state and to your people.
Mongolia shall consistently continue her traditional foreign policies enriched with new content and dimensions. Mongolia shall aspire further expanding the traditionally friendly relations with our two neighbors. We shall also foster and expand cooperation with our third neighbors with who we have been maintaining friendly relations and cooperation. Taking this opportunity, I extend my sincere gratitude to all countries, foreign and international organizations who have been rendering generous support and assistance to Mongolia’s development endeavors.
As we are all aware, the world today is challenged with a multitude of pressing issues and problems, which a single country is not able to resolve single-handedly. These challenges indeed are common to the entire humankind – environmental degradation, outbreak of pandemic diseases, natural disasters, terrorism, nuclear weapons threats, transnational crimes, money laundry, violation of human rights, economic crisis, global warming. The emergence of these issues necessitate countries to mobilize collective efforts for the common interests and benefits of the entire humankind. Mongolia shall remain an active member of the international community and shall actively cooperate in addressing regional and global challenges.
Dear friends,
The people of Mongolia, the Mongolian Statehood own long and glorious history. I shall do my level best to not to deprive my statehood, given birth to by Great Bogdo Chinggis, of its innate sanctity and wisdom. In the years to come we shall celebrate the millennium-old anniversary of the establishment of statehood on the Mongolian soil and centennial anniversary of the proclamation of Mongolia’s independence. We shall also mark the 20th anniversary of Mongolia’s Democratic Revolution. As it has done to-date, the Mongolian State shall celebrate these historic dates in the most creative and constructive manners and enriching them with new values and principles. The time has come for the Mongolian people to fully enjoy the fruits of our great history and freedom we have cherished so dearly.
I do believe that the years to come shall bring to the Mongolian society a tide of political and legal reforms which will elevate Mongolia to an entirely new level of development. Large-scale megaprojects with tremendous developmental effects shall be implemented in Mongolia. Mongolia’s mining and infrastructure sectors remain in the core of attention of business circles. The projects are associated with issues of pivotal importance for Mongolian people’s fundamental rights and benefits, our national security, our social harmony and sustainable development. I do fully comprehend that respecting the supreme benefits of Mongolian people, we ought to engage in mutually beneficial and effective cooperation.
We, the Mongolians, being the true owners of our lands and of our destinies as well, ought to pass this country, free and happy, bold and unshatterred, on to our children and their children’s children. We, the state officials, are charged with the task to bring prosperity and development to our people, and we must do it today, while our elders in their faded deel are still with us, and while our youngsters, winged with inspiration and dreams, are watching us with eyes and minds full of hope and trust. Let us carry on and prevail altogether faithful to the ideals of our common cause.
Let my Mongolia dwell eternally.
Thank you.}

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