ENGLISH SPEECH HILLARY CLINTON Be Resilient English Subtitles

Being here with you brings back a flood of
memories.

I remember the first time I arrived on campus
as an incoming law student in the fall of

1969 wearing my bell-bottoms, driving a beat
up old car with a mattress tied to the roof.

I had no idea what to expect.

Now to be honest, I had had some trouble making
up my mind between Yale and Harvard Law Schools.

Then one day while we were still in that period
of decision making, I was invited to a cocktail

party at Harvard for potentially incoming
law students where I met a famous law professor.

A friend of mine, a male law student, introduced
me to this famous law professor.

I mean truly, big three piece suit, watch
chain, and my friend said, “Professor, this

is Hillary Rodham.

She’s trying to decide whether to come here
next year or sign up with our closest competitor.”

Now the great man gave me a cool dismissive
look and said, “Well, first of all, we don’t

have any close competitors.

And secondly, we don’t need any more women
at Harvard.”

Now I was leaning toward Yale anyway but that
pretty much sealed the deal, and when I came

to Yale I was one of 27 women out of 235 law
students.

It was the first year women were admitted
to the college, and as that first class of

women prepared to graduate four years later,
The New York Times reported on Yale’s foray

into co-education, noting that the women “worked
harder and got somewhat better grades than

the 940 men graduating with them.

A fact,” they went on to say, “that some of
the men apparently found threatening.”

Well, I was shocked.

But over the years Yale has been a home away
from home for me, a place I’ve returned to

time and again.

I spoke to class day back in 2001 on the 300th
anniversary of the university, and I hope

that that will be the case for many of you
as well.

This school has been responsible for some
of my most treasured friends and colleagues,

people like Jake Sullivan and Harold Koh,
and I’ve watched some of you grow up, like

Rebecca Shaw, who’s graduating today and you’ll
hear from shortly.

And I’ve been honoured to serve over the last
year or two, working with some of the Yale

Law School faculty including the new Dean,
Heather Gerkin.

Now Yale grads, many of whom are also here
today, have worked for me in the United States

Senate, the State Department, on my presidential
campaigns, and I have been so well-served.

I have a very dedicated campaign intern here
graduating, David Shimer, the class of 2018.

But I have to confess, of all the formative
experiences I had at Yale, perhaps none was

more significant than the day during my second
year when I was cutting through what was then

the student lounge with some friends, and
I saw this tall, handsome guy with a beard

who looked like a viking.

I said to my friend, “Well, who is that?”

And she said, “Well, that’s Bill Clinton.

He’s from Arkansas and that’s all he ever
talks about.”

And then as if on cue, I hear him saying,
“And not only that, we grow the biggest watermelons

in the world.”

And I was like, “Who is this person?”

But he kept looking at me and I kept looking
back.

So we were in the Law Library one night, I
was studying but I couldn’t help but see occasionally

as I lifted my head up that he was, again,
looking at me.

So finally I thought, “This is ridiculous,”
so I got up, went over to him, and I said,

“If you’re going to keep looking at me and
I’m going to keep looking back, we at least

ought to be introduced.

I’m Hillary Rodham.

Who are you?”

And that started a conversation that continues
to this day.

Now it was also here at Yale that I saw a
flyer in the Law School on a bulletin board

that changed my life.

Now some of your parents and grandparents
may remember flyers and bulletin boards.

For the rest of you, suffice it to say, that
was how we got information.

It was like Facebook but the bulletin board
didn’t steal your personal information.

So one day I saw a note about a woman named
Marian Wright Edelman, a Yale Law School graduate,

civil rights activist who would go on to found
The Children’s Defence Fund.

Marian was coming back to campus to give a
lecture.

I went, I was captivated to hear her talk
about using her Yale education to create a

Head Start programme in rural Mississippi.

And I wound up working for her that summer,
and the experience opened my eyes to the ways

that the law can protect children or come
up short.

Because like many of you, I learned just as
much outside the four walls of the classroom

as I did sitting in a lecture hall, and I
discovered a passion that has animated my

life and my work ever since.

Now a lot has changed since I was here.

In 2019 Yale will celebrate the 50th anniversary
of the matriculation of women at the college,

and the 150th anniversary of the first women
graduate students at Yale.

And I heard that Yale officially changed the
term freshman to first year.

I also heard, amazingly, that The Duke’s Men
and the Whiffenpoofs have started welcoming

women.

Now as for my long lost Whiffs audition tape,
I have buried it so deep not even Wikileaks

will be able to find it, because if you thought
my emails were scandalous you should hear

my singing voice.

I find it very exciting that today’s graduates
hail from all 50 states, the District of Columbia,

Puerto Rico, Guam, and 56 other countries.

And in your four years on campus, you’ve survived
late nights in the Bass cubicles and early

mornings in the Sterling stacks, you’ve trekked
up Science Hill, maybe you’ve even found love

at The Last Chance Dance, and now you’re ready
to take on your next adventure.

But maybe some of you are reluctant to leave.

I understand that.

It’s possible to feel both because the class
of 2018 is graduating at one of the most tumultuous

times int he history of our country, and I
say that as someone who graduated in the sixties.

I recently went back and looked up those famous
lines from Charles Dickens in A Tale of two

Cities because I usually end after saying,
“It was the best of times, it was the worst

of times.”

But it goes on, “It was the age of wisdom,
it was the age of foolishness, it was the

epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity,
it was the season of Light, it was the season

of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it
was the winter of despair.”

Now Dickens was writing about the years leading
up to the French Revolution, but he could

have been describing the ricocheting highs
and lows of this moment in America.

We’re living through a time when fundamental
rights, civic virtue, freedom of the press,

even facts and reason are under assault like
never before.

But we are also witnessing an era of new moral
conviction, civic engagement, and a sense

of devotion to our democracy and country.

So here’s the good news.

If any group were ever prepared to rise to
the occasion, it is you, the class of 2018.

You’ve already demonstrated the character
and courage that will help you navigate this

tumultuous moment, and most of all, you’ve
demonstrated resilience.

Now that’s a word that’s been on my mind a
lot recently.

One of my personal heroes, Eleanor Roosevelt
said, “You gain strength, courage, and confidence

by every experience in which you really stop
to look fear in the face.

You are able to say to yourself I have lived
through this horror, I can take the next thing

that comes along.”

Well, that’s resilience and it’s so important
because everyone, everyone gets knocked down.

What matters is whether you get back up and
keep going.

This may be hard for a group of Yale soon-to-be
graduates to accept, but yes, you will make

mistakes in life.

You will even fail.

It happens to all of us, no matter how qualified
or capable we are.

Take it from me.

I remember those first months after that 2016
election were not easy.

We all had our own methods of coping.

I went for long walks in the woods, Yale students
went for long walks in East Rock Park.

I spent hours going down a Twitter rabbit
hole, you spend hours in the Yale Memes Group.

I had my fair share of Chardonnay, you had
penny drinks at Woads.

I practised yoga and alternate nostril breathing,
you took Psych and the Good Life.

And let me just get this out of the way, no,
I’m not over it.

I still think about the 2016 election.

I still regret the mistakes I made.

I still think though, that understanding what
happened in such a weird and wild election

in American history will help us defend our
democracy in the future.

Whether you’re right, left, centre, Republican,
Democrat, independent, vegetarian, whatever,

we all have stake in that.

So today as a person, I’m okay.

But as an American, I’m concerned.

Personal resilience is important but it’s
not the only form of resilience we need right

now.

We also need community resilience.

That’s something that this class has embodied
during your time on campus.

Literally, at times, like in the March of
Resilience your sophomore year.

It was the biggest demonstration

in the history of the school.

That’s 300+ years.

Led by women of colour, supported by students
and faculty determined to make Yale a more

just, equitable, and safe place for everyone.

Many of you have said that march was a defining
moment in your college experience, and that

says something about this class and your values.

Because the truth is, our country is more
polarised than ever.

We have sorted ourselves into opposing camps
and that divides how we see the world.

The data backs this up.

There are more Liberals and Conservatives
than there used to be and fewer Centrists.

Our political parties are more ideologically
and geographically consistent, which means

there are fewer northern Republicans and fewer
southern Democrats.

And the divides on race and religion are starker
than ever before.

And as the middle shrank, partisan animosity
grew.

Now I’m not going to get political here, but
this isn’t simply a both sides problem.

The radicalization of American politics hasn’t
been symmetrical.

There are leaders in our country who blatantly
incite people with hateful rhetoric, who fear

change, who see the world in zero sum terms,
so that if others are gaining, well, they

must be losing.

That’s a recipe for polarisation and conflict.

Our social fabric is fraying and the bonds
of community that hold us together are fractured.

This isn’t just a problem because it leads
to unpleasant conversations over the Thanksgiving

dinner table, it’s a problem because it undermines
the civic spirit that makes democracy possible.

The habits of the heart that de Tocqueville
found so unique in the American character.

I believe healing our country is going to
take what I call radical empathy.

As hard as it is, this is a moment to reach
across divide of race, class, and politics,

to try to see the world through the eyes of
people very different from ourselves and to

return to rational debate.

To find a way to disagree without being disagreeable,
to try to recapture a sense of community and

common humanity.

When we think about politics and judge our
leaders, we can’t just ask, “Am I better off

than I was two years or four years ago?”

We have to ask, “Are we all better off?

Are we as a country better, stronger, and
fairer?”

That’s something you’ve done here at Yale.

You’ve learned that you don’t need to be an
immigrant to be outraged when a classmate’s

father, a human being who contributes to his
family and his country is unjustly deported.

You don’t need to be a person of colour to
understand that when black students feel singled

out and targeted, we still have work to do.

And you don’t need to experience gun violence
to know that when a teenager in Texas who

just survived a mass shooting says she’s not
surprised by what happened at her school because,

and I quote, “I’ve always felt like eventually
it was going to happen here too.”

We are failing our children.

So enough is enough, we need to come together
and we certainly need common sense gun safety

legislation as soon as we can get it.

Now empathy should not only be at the centre
of our individual lives, our families, and

our communities, it should be at the centre
of our public life, our policies, and our

politics.

I know we don’t always think of politics and
empathy as going hand in hand, but they can,

and more than that, they must.

As former secretary Madeleine Albright writes
in her terrific new book, Fascism: A Warning,

she says, “This generosity of spirit, this
caring about others and about the proposition

that we are created equal is the single most
effective antidote to the self-centred moral

numbness that allows fascism to thrive.”

And of course, Madeleine had personal experience
fleeing the Nazis in Czechoslovakia as a baby,

returning after the war, feeling the communists
as a young girl.

Now that brings me to one more form of resilience
that’s been on my mind over the last year,

democratic resilience.

In 1787, after the Constitutional Convention
in Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin, who by

the way received an honorary degree from Yale,
was asked by a woman in the street outside

Independence Hall, “Well doctor, what have
we got?

A republic or a monarchy?

And Franklin answered, “A republic, if you
can keep it.”

Right now we’re living through a full-fledged
crisis in our democracy.

Now there are not tanks in the streets, but
what’s happening right now goes to the heart

of who we are as a nation.

And I say this not as a democrat who lost
an election, but as an American afraid of

losing a country.

There are certain things that are so essential,
they should transcend politics.

Waging a war on the rule of law and a free
press, delegitimizing elections, perpetrating

shameless corruption, and rejecting the idea
that our leaders should be public servants

undermines our national unity.

And attacking truth and reason, evidence and
facts should alarm us all.

You and your parents have just paid for a
first class, world class education, and as

Yale History Professor Timothy Snyder writes
in his book, On Tyranny, “To abandon facts

is to abandon freedom.

If nothing is true, then no one can criticise
power because there is no basis upon which

to do so.

If nothing is true, then all is spectacle.”

I think Professor Snyder, both in that book
and in his new one, The Road to Unfreedom,

is sounding the alarm as loudly as he can.

Because attempting to erase the line between
fact and fiction, truth and reality is a core

feature of authoritarianism.

The goal is to make us question logic and
reason and to sow mistrust toward exactly

the people we need to rely on, our leaders,
the press, experts who seek to guide public

policy based on evidence, even ourselves.

Just this week, former Secretary of State,
Rex Tillerson said, “If our leaders seek to

conceal the truth, or we as people become
accepting of alternative realities that are

no longer grounded in facts, then we as American
citizens are on a pathway to relinquishing

our freedom.

Perhaps a tad late, but he’s absolutely right.

So how do we build democratic resilience?

I think it starts with standing up for truth,
facts, and reason, not just in the classroom

and on campus but every day in our lives.

It means speaking out about the vital role
of higher education in our society, to create

opportunity and equality.

It means calling out actual fake news when
we see it and supporting brave journalists

and their reporting, maybe even by subscribing
to a newspaper.

Now most of all, as obvious as it seems, it
means voting.

In every election, not just the presidential
ones.

So yes, these are challenging times for America
but we’ve come through challenging times before.

I think back to the night Barrack Obama was
elected president.

Many of us, so many of us were jubilant.

Even I, who had once hoped to beat him, was
ecstatic.

It was such a hopeful moment, and yet in some
ways this moment feels even more hopeful,

because this is a battle-hardened hope, tempered
by loss, and clear-eyed about the stakes.

We are standing up to policies that hurt people.

We are standing up for all people being treated
with dignity.

We are doing the work to translate those feelings
into action.

And the fact that some days it is really hard
to keep at it just makes it that much more

remarkable that so many of us are, in fact,
keeping at it.

It’s not easy to wade back into the fight
every day, but we’re doing it.

And that’s why I am optimistic, because of
how unbelievably tough Americans are proving

to be.

I’ve encountered lots of people in recent
months who give me hope.

The Parkland students who endured unthinkable
tragedy and have responded with courage and

resolve.

The leaders and groups I’ve gotten to know
through Onward Together, an organisation I

started after the election to encourage the
outpouring of grassroots engagement that we’re

seeing.

Everyone who is marching, registering voters,
and diving into the issues facing us like

never before, some for the very first time
in their lives.

And I find hope in the wave of women running
for office, and winning.

And hope in the women and men who are dismantling
the notion that women should have to endure

harassment and violence as a part of our lives.

So we have a long way to go.

There are many fights to fight and more seem
to arise every day.

It will take work to keep up the pressure,
to stay vigilant, to neither close our eyes,

nor numb our hearts, or throw up our hands
and say, “Someone else take over from here.”

Because at this moment in our history our
country depends on every citizen believing

in the power of their actions, even when that
power is invisible and their efforts feel

like an uphill battle.

Of every citizen voting in every election,
even when your side loses.

It is a matter of infinite faith, this faith
we have in the ability to govern ourselves,

to come together to make honourable, practical
compromise in the pursuit of ends that will

lift us all up and move us forward.

So yes, we need to pace ourselves but also
lean on each other.

Look for the good wherever we can.

Celebrate heroes, encourage children, find
ways to disagree respectfully.

We need to be ready to lose some fights, because
we will.

As John McCain recently reminded us, “No just
cause is futile, even if it’s lost.”

What matters is to keep going no matter what,
keep going.

The Yale you’re graduating from is very different
from the Yale I graduated from.

It’s different even from the Yale that welcomed
you four years ago.

Four years ago, not one of Yale’s colleges
was named after a woman.

Today students are carrying on the legacy
of a trailblazing LGBT civil rights activist

at Pauli Murray College and celebrating one
of Yale’s own hidden figures at Grace Hopper

College, named after the naval officer who
happened to be one of the first computer programmers

in America.

Those changes didn’t happen on their own,
you made them possible.

You kept fighting, you kept the faith.

And because of that, in the end, you changed
Yale as much as Yale changed you.

And now it’s time for you to make your mark
on the world.

I know the best.

The best for you, for Yale, and for America
is yet to come, and you each will have a role

to play and a contribution to make.

Thank you and congratulations to the class
of 2018.

和你在一起会带回大量的
回忆。

我记得 1969
年秋天,我第一次以法学院学生的身份来到校园,当时

我穿着喇叭裤,开着一辆
破旧的汽车,车顶上绑着一张床垫。

我不知道会发生什么。

现在说实话,
我在耶鲁和哈佛法学院之间下定决心有些困难。

然后有一天,当我们还在
做决定的时候,我被邀请

参加哈佛的鸡尾酒会,为潜在的法学院学生举办鸡尾酒会,在
那里我遇到了一位著名的法学教授。

我的一个朋友,一位男性法律学生,向
我介绍了这位著名的法学教授。

我是说真的,大三件套西装,
表链,我的朋友说,“教授,这

是希拉里罗德姆。

她正在努力决定是明年来这里
还是与我们最接近的竞争对手签约。”

现在这位伟人冷冷地不屑地看了我
一眼,说:“嗯,首先,我们

没有任何紧密的竞争对手

。其次,我们在哈佛不需要更多的女性
。”

现在我无论如何都倾向于耶鲁,但这
几乎达成了交易,当我

来到耶鲁时,我是 235 名法学院学生中的 27 名女性之一

那是女性被
大学录取的第一年,随着第一批

女性准备在四年后毕业,
《纽约时报》报道了耶鲁大学

涉足男女同校的情况,并指出女性“
更加努力地工作并且变得更好了” “他们的成绩比

与他们一起毕业的 940 名男性要高

。事实上,”他们接着说,“
有些人显然发现了威胁。”

嗯,我很震惊。

但多年来,耶鲁一直是我的家外
之家,我一次又一次地回到这个地方

早在 2001 年大学成立 300 周年之际,我在课堂上发表了讲话
,我

希望你们中的许多人
也是如此。

这所学校
为我最珍视的一些朋友和同事负责

,比如 Jake Sullivan 和 Harold Koh
,我见证了你们中的一些人的成长,比如

今天即将毕业的 Rebecca Shaw,你们很快就会
收到消息。

在过去的一两年里,我很荣幸能够
与耶鲁法学院的一些教职员工一起工作,

包括新任院长
希瑟·格金。

现在耶鲁大学毕业生,其中许多人今天也在这里
,在美国

参议院、国务院为我工作,参与我的总统
竞选活动,我得到了很好的服务。

我有一个非常敬业的竞选实习生
,2018 届毕业生 David Shimer。

但我必须承认,在
我在耶鲁的所有成长经历中,也许没有

比我第二年剪纸的那一天更重要的了

和一些朋友穿过当时的学生休息室,
我看到了这个长着胡子的高大帅哥

,看起来像个维京人。

我对我的朋友说:“好吧,那是谁?”

她说,“嗯,那是比尔克林顿。

他来自阿肯色州,这就是他所说的
一切。”

然后好像在暗示,我听到他说,
“不仅如此,我们种植

了世界上最大的西瓜。”

我想,“这个人是谁?”

但他一直看着我,我也一直回头看

所以有一天晚上,我们在法律图书馆,我
正在学习,但当

我抬起头时,我忍不住偶尔看到他又
在看着我。

所以最后我想,“这太荒谬了,”
所以我站起来,走到他身边,我说,

“如果你一直看着我,
我会一直回头看,我们至少

应该 介绍一下。

我是希拉里罗德姆。

你是谁?

这开始了一场一直持续
到今天的对话。

现在也是在耶鲁,我
在法学院的公告板上

看到了一张改变了我生活的传单。

现在,您的一些父母和祖父母
可能还记得传单和公告板。

对于你们其他人,我只想说,这
就是我们获取信息的方式。

它就像 Facebook,但公告板
并没有窃取您的个人信息。

所以有一天,我看到一张纸条,上面
写着一位名叫玛丽安·赖特·埃德尔曼的女性,她是耶鲁大学法学院毕业生、

民权活动家,后来成立
了儿童保护基金会。

玛丽安要回校园
讲课了。

我去了,听到她
谈论利用她的耶鲁教育

在密西西比州农村创建一个启蒙计划,我很着迷。

那年夏天我结束了为她工作
,这段经历让我

看到了法律可以保护儿童
或做空的方式。

因为和你们中的许多人一样,我
在教室的四面墙外学到的东西和

坐在演讲厅里学到的一样多,而且我
发现了一种激情,

从那时起我的生活和工作就充满了活力。

自从我来到这里以来,现在发生了很多变化。

2019年耶鲁大学将庆祝
该学院女性入学50周年,

以及耶鲁大学首批女研究生150周年

而且听说耶鲁正式把
新生这个词改成了一年级。

令人惊讶的是,我还听说公爵的男人
和惠芬普夫夫妇已经开始欢迎

女性了。

现在,至于我丢失已久的 Whiffs 试听磁带,
我已经把它埋得很深,连维基

解密都找不到,因为如果你认为
我的电子邮件是可耻的,你应该听听

我的歌声。

我发现今天的毕业生
来自所有 50 个州、哥伦比亚特区、

波多黎各、关岛和其他 56 个国家,这让我感到非常兴奋。

在校园里的四年里,你
在 Bass 隔间里熬过深夜

,在 Sterling stack 里熬过清晨,你
爬上科学山,也许你甚至

在 The Last Chance Dance 中找到了爱情,现在你 ‘准备
好迎接你的下一次冒险。

但也许你们中的一些人不愿意离开。

我明白那个。

两种感觉都是可能的,
因为 2018 届毕业生正值我国历史上最动荡的

时期之一,而我
说的是 60 年代毕业的人。

我最近回过头来查阅
查尔斯狄更斯在两个城市的故事中的那些著名台词,

因为我通常在结束时说,
“这是最好的时代,这是最坏

的时代。”

但它继续说:“那是智慧的时代
,那是愚蠢的

时代,那是信仰的时代,那是怀疑的时代,
那是光明的季节,那是黑暗的季节

,那是 希望的春天
,绝望的冬天。”

现在狄更斯写的
是法国大革命前的岁月,但他本

可以描述
美国这一刻的高低起伏。

我们生活在一个基本
权利、公民美德、新闻自由,

甚至事实和理性都受到前所未有的攻击的时代

但我们也正在见证一个新的道德
信念、公民参与以及

对我们的民主和国家的奉献精神的时代。

所以这是个好消息。

如果有任何团体准备好迎接
这一时刻,那就是你,2018 届的学生。

你已经展示了
可以帮助你度过这个

动荡时刻的性格和勇气,最重要的是,你
表现出了韧性。

现在这是我最近经常想到的一个
词。

我的个人英雄之一埃莉诺·罗斯福
说:“

每次真正停下来直面恐惧的经历,你都会获得力量、勇气和信心

你可以对自己说,我已经度过
了这种恐怖,我可以 接受接下来发生的

事情。”

嗯,这就是韧性,它是如此重要,
因为每个人,每个人都会被击倒。

重要的是你是否能站起来
继续前进。

这对于一群即将毕业的耶鲁大学
毕业生来说可能很难接受,但是是的,你会

在生活中犯错。

你甚至会失败。

它发生在我们所有人身上,无论我们多么有资格
或有能力。

从我这拿走。

我记得 2016 年大选后的头几个月
并不容易。

我们都有自己的应对方法。

我在树林里散步,耶鲁学生
在东岩公园散步。

我在 Twitter 的兔子
洞里花了几个小时,你在耶鲁模因组呆了几个小时。

我喝了相当多的霞多丽,你
在 Woads 喝了一分钱。

我练习了瑜伽和交替鼻孔呼吸,
你学习了心理和美好生活。

让我解决这个问题,不,
我还没结束。

我仍然在想 2016 年的大选。

我仍然为我所犯的错误感到后悔。

尽管如此,我仍然认为,了解美国历史上
如此怪异而疯狂的选举中发生的事情

将有助于我们在未来捍卫我们的
民主。

无论你是右派、左派、中间派、共和党人、
民主党人、独立派、素食主义者,等等,

我们都参与其中。

所以今天作为一个人,我很好。

但作为一个美国人,我很担心。

个人复原力很重要,但它
并不是我们现在需要的唯一复原力形式

我们还需要社区复原力。

这就是这门课
在你在校期间所体现的。

从字面上看,有时,就像在
你大二的韧性三月一样。

这是学校历史上最大规模的示威活动

那是300多年。

由有色人种女性领导,并得到学生
和教职员工的支持,他们决心使耶鲁成为一个

对每个人都更加公正、公平和安全的地方。

你们中的许多人都说过,游行
是你大学经历中的一个决定性时刻,这

说明了这门课和你的价值观。

因为事实是,我们的国家
比以往任何时候都更加两极分化。

我们已经将自己分成了对立的阵营
,这分裂了我们看待世界的方式。

数据支持了这一点。

自由党和保守党
比过去多,中间派少了。

我们的政党在意识形态
和地域上更加一致,这

意味着北方共和党人更少,
南方民主党人更少。

种族和宗教的分歧
比以往任何时候都更加明显。

随着中间派的萎缩,党派仇恨
也在增长。

现在我不会在这里谈政治,
但这不仅仅是双方的问题。

美国政治的激进化
并不是对称的。

我们国家的一些领导人公然
用仇恨的言辞煽动人们,他们害怕

改变,他们以零和的方式看待世界,
所以如果其他人在获得,那么他们

一定是在失败。

这是两极分化和冲突的秘诀。

我们的社会结构正在磨损
,将我们团结在一起的社区纽带断裂。

这不仅仅是一个问题,因为它会
导致感恩节餐桌上的不愉快谈话

,它是一个问题,因为它破坏
了使民主成为可能的公民精神。

德·托克维尔
在美国人的性格中发现了如此独特的内心习惯。

我相信治愈我们的国家将
采取我所说的激进同理心。

尽管这很困难,但现在是
跨越种族、阶级和政治分歧的时刻,

尝试通过与我们截然不同的人的眼光看待世界
,并

回归理性辩论。

找到一种在不令人不快的情况下不同意的方法,
尝试重新获得社区意识和

共同的人性。

当我们思考政治和评判我们的
领导人时,我们不能只问“

我比两年或四年前更好吗?”

我们必须问:“我们都过得更好了吗

?作为一个国家,我们是不是更好、更强大、
更公平?”

这就是你在耶鲁所做的事情。

你已经了解到,
当一个同学的

父亲,一个为家庭和国家做出贡献的人
被不公正地驱逐出境时,你不需要成为移民就感到愤怒。

您无需成为有色人种就可以
理解,当黑人学生感到被

孤立和有针对性时,我们还有工作要做。

你不需要经历枪支暴力
就知道当德克萨斯州一名

刚刚在大规模枪击事件中幸存下来的青少年说她对
学校发生的事情并不感到惊讶时

,我引用,“我一直觉得
最终是 也会在这里发生。”

我们辜负了我们的孩子。

所以够了,我们需要团结起来
,我们当然需要尽快制定常识性枪支安全

立法。

现在,同理心不仅应该
成为我们个人生活、家庭

和社区的中心,还应该
成为我们公共生活、政策和

政治的中心。

我知道我们并不总是认为政治和
同理心是齐头并进的,但他们可以,

而且更重要的是,他们必须。

正如前任秘书马德琳·奥尔布赖特
在她出色的新书《法西斯主义:一个警告

》中所写,她说:“这种慷慨的精神,这种
对他人的关心以及对

我们生来平等的主张,是对
以自我为中心的唯一最有效的解毒剂。

让法西斯主义蓬勃发展的道德麻木。”

当然,玛德琳小时候有过
在捷克斯洛伐克逃离纳粹的亲身经历,

战后回国,小时候感受过
共产主义者。

现在,这让我想到了去年我一直在想的另一种形式的复原力
,即

民主复原力。

1787 年,在费城制宪会议之后

,顺便从耶鲁大学获得荣誉学位的本杰明·富兰克林
在独立厅外的街道上被一个女人问:

“好吧,医生,
我们得到了什么

?共和国还是君主制

? 富兰克林回答说:“一个共和国,如果你
能保住它。”

现在我们正经历着
民主制度的全面危机。

现在街上没有坦克,但
现在正在发生的事情让人心痛

关于我们作为一个国家的身份。

我不是作为一个
在选举中失败的民主党人,而是作为一个害怕

失去一个国家的美国人。

有些事情是如此重要,
它们应该

超越政治。 法治和
新闻自由,使选举合法化,进行

无耻的腐败,拒绝
我们的领导人应该是公务员的想法,

破坏了我们的国家团结

。攻击真理和理性,证据和
事实应该引起我们所有人的警觉。

你和你的父母有 刚付了钱
一流的世界级教育,正如

耶鲁大学历史教授蒂莫西·斯奈德
在他的《论暴政》一书中所写的那样,“放弃事实

就是放弃自由。

如果没有什么是真实的,那么没有人可以批评
权力,因为没有

这样做的依据。

如果没有什么是真的,那么一切都是奇观。”

我认为斯奈德教授在那本书
和他的新书《通往不自由之路》中

都在尽可能大声地拉响警报。

因为试图消除
事实与 虚构、真实和现实是威权主义的核心

特征。

其目标是让我们质疑逻辑和
理性,

并对我们需要依赖的人、我们的领导人
、媒体、寻求指导公共政策的专家播下不信任的种子。

就在

本周,前国务卿
雷克斯·蒂勒森 (Rex Tillerson) 说:“如果我们的领导人试图

隐瞒真相,或者我们作为人们开始
接受

不再以事实为基础的替代现实,那么我们作为美国人
公民正在放弃

我们的自由。

也许有点晚了,但他是绝对正确的。

那么,我们如何建立民主韧性呢?

我认为首先要坚持真理、
事实和理性,不仅在教室

和校园里,而且在我们生活中的每一天。

这意味着要说出
高等教育在我们社会中的重要作用,以创造

机会和平等。

这意味着当我们看到真实的假新闻
并支持勇敢的记者

和他们的报道时,甚至可能通过
订阅报纸来支持它。

现在最重要的是,看起来很明显,这
意味着投票。

在每次选举中,不仅仅是总统
选举。

所以,是的,这对美国来说是充满挑战的时代,
但我们之前也经历过充满挑战的时代。

I think back to the night Barrack Obama was
elected president.

我们中的许多人,我们中的许多人都兴高采烈。

就连曾经希望打败他的我,也
欣喜若狂。

这是一个充满希望的时刻,但在某些
方面,这一刻感觉更加充满希望,

因为这是一个久经沙场的希望,
经过失败的磨练,对赌注保持清醒。

我们坚持反对伤害人民的政策。

我们为所有受到尊严对待的人
挺身而出。

我们正在努力将这些感受
转化为行动。

事实上,有些日子真的很难
坚持下去,这让我们如此多的人事实上坚持下去变得更加

了不起

每天重新投入战斗并不容易
,但我们正在这样做。

这就是我乐观的原因,因为事实
证明,美国人的强硬程度令人难以置信

最近几个月,我遇到了很多
给我希望的人。

帕克兰学生们经历了不可想象的
悲剧,并以勇气和决心做出了回应

我通过 Onward Together 认识的领导人和团体
,这是我

在选举后成立的一个组织,旨在鼓励
我们所看到的基层参与的大量涌现

每个正在游行、登记选民
并以前所未有的方式深入研究我们面临的问题的人

,有些人
是他们一生中第一次。

我在女性竞选公职和获胜的浪潮中找到了希望

并希望那些正在
消除女性应该不得不忍受

骚扰和暴力作为我们生活的一部分的观念的女性和男性。

所以我们还有很长的路要走。

有很多战斗要打,而且
似乎每天都会出现更多。

保持压力
,保持警惕,既不闭上眼睛,

也不麻痹我们的心,或者举起
双手说:“其他人从这里接手”,都需要付出努力。

因为在我们历史的这个时刻,我们的
国家依赖于每个公民都相信

他们的行动的力量,即使这种
力量是无形的,他们的努力

就像一场艰苦的战斗。

在每次选举中投票的每个公民,
即使你的一方输了。

这是一个无限信念的问题,这种信念是
我们对自我管理能力的信念

,团结起来,在追求目标的过程中做出光荣的、实际的
妥协,这

将使我们所有人都振作起来,推动我们前进。

所以,是的,我们需要调整自己的节奏,但也需要
相互依靠。

尽可能地寻找好处。

庆祝英雄,鼓励孩子,找到
尊重不同意见的方法。

我们需要准备好输掉一些战斗,因为
我们会的。

正如约翰麦凯恩最近提醒我们的那样,“没有正义的
事业是徒劳的,即使它已经失去了。”

重要的是,不管怎样,继续前进,
继续前进。


毕业的耶鲁和我毕业的耶鲁很不一样。

甚至与四年前欢迎你的耶鲁大学也不同

四年前,耶鲁大学没有一所学院
以女性的名字命名。

今天,学生们正在保利默里
学院继承开创性的 LGBT 民权活动家的遗产,

并在格雷斯霍珀学院
庆祝耶鲁大学自己隐藏的人物之一,该人物以

海军军官的名字命名,他
恰好是美国最早的计算机

程序员之一。

这些变化不是自己发生的,是
你让它们成为可能。

你坚持战斗,坚持信念。

正因为如此,最终,你改变了
耶鲁,就像耶鲁改变了你一样。

现在是时候让您在世界上留下自己的印记
了。

我最了解。

对你们、对耶鲁和对美国
来说最好的还没有到来,你们每个人都可以发挥作用

,做出贡献。

感谢并
祝贺 2018 届毕业生。