Ladies and gentlemen:
Somewhat belatedly I want to
welcome you all to the White House. I assume that you're all not only older
since we last met, but also wiser, and I hope that this summer's work has
been useful to you in whatever you do, and that some of you will be tempted
to come back to Washington and work with us.
I wonder if we could ask how
many have become interested in either becoming a politician or a civil
servant or a bureaucrat as a result of this summer? Perhaps you could hold
up your hand.
What about the rest of you?
In any case, I'm delighted to
welcome you to the White House.
This tree behind me was planted
by Andrew Jackson. The balcony was built by Harry Truman, and that tree
over there was planted by John Adams. So I think that just visiting this
historic house and these grounds does bring you in more intimate contact
with American history. You've heard a good many Americans who occupy positions
of responsibility this summer. There is some feeling, I know, by a good
many Americans, that the American Constitution, which Gladstone called
the most notable work ever struck off by the mind of man, gives us an automatic
light to the future, guides our way, and that all we have to do is follow
the very clear precepts it lays down for us.
Well, the American Constitution
is an extraordinary document and it is certainly the most extraordinary
written constitution in the history of the world, but it has required men
to make it work, and it still does today. After all, the Constitution was
written for an entirely different period in our Nation's history. It was
written under entirely different conditions. It was written during a period
of isolation. It was written at a time when there were 13 different units
which had to be joined together and which, of course, were extremely desirous
of limiting the central power of the Government.
That Constitution has served
us extremely well, but all of its clauses, the general welfare and due
process and all the rest, had to be interpreted by man and had to be made
to work by men. And it has to be made to work today in an entirely different
world from the days in which it was written, both at home and abroad.
I am always struck by the fact
that the United States, which has had so many gifted political leaders,
in the days before the war, beginning in 1860 and `61, that we had for
a period of 30 years in the Congress the most extraordinarily gifted figures
that we've had in our history - Calhoun, Clay, Douglas, Benton, and all
the rest; and yet they dealt in their whole life, and many of them stayed
in the Congress for a generation, with only three or four problems: tariffs,
States rights, and the new States coming in, slavery, currency, and two
or three others, and yet this extraordinarily gifted group of men failed,
and as a result, of course, we had this long and bloody war.
Now, perhaps, our political
leaders may not be so gifted and yet they deal with questions which are
far more complex than the questions which came across the desks of our
people a century ago.
We deal with questions of monetary
and fiscal policy. We deal with questions which are esoteric - balance
of payments, nuclear tests, the mix of our strategic weapons. We have obligations
stretching all around the globe, and yet this country must make not only
our society work, but all those societies which are dependent upon us.
This is an extraordinary obligation
which presses upon those who hold positions of responsibility in the National
Government today. And where these rather towering figures of a century
ago failed in dealing with the relatively few and, in a way, obvious questions
with which they had to deal, now the questions which come across our desks
and, therefore, really, in a sense, the desk of every citizen, every active
voter, dwarf in complexity and significance and importance all that went
then.
So that is why I urge those
of you who have touched the Government in one department or another to
think of coming back. I know perhaps a generation ago, or even 10 or 15
years ago, a Government career was regarded in a sense for those who wanted
the more secure and steady life. That isn't true, of course, today. Whether
you serve the Government abroad - and I can assure you it isn't a place
for those who prefer the gentle winds - I think whether you work for the
United States abroad, as did Major Bailey, who I saw yesterday, who served
us in Laos, or whether you work here in Washington or any place, this is
the most challenging career that could possibly be before any American.
And while the compensation may not be as great - the immediate financial
compensation - nevertheless the rewards are unlimited.
So I hope that those of you
who can will come back here. Those of you who cannot will choose some other
way of serving the general interest. For the next 10 or 20 years the burdens
will be placed completely upon our country for the preservation of freedom.
We stand in the center and we are associated with allies, we are associated
with those who are neutral but who are friendly to us, we are associated
with those who have a latent hostility to us, but all depends upon the
keystone which is the United States. And that is a sober responsibility
for a country which ao years ago prided itself on its long isolationist
and neutralist tradition.
So I hope you do come back.
Woodrow Wilson once said that every man sent out from a university should
be a man of his nation as well as a man of his time. Those of you who have
the advantage of college educations and work here I think can represent
the best kind of civil servant or politician. It is an attractive career,
I assure you, and I wouldn't want anyone to sit on the sidelines today
when so much goes on in the mainstream.
"Would you have counted him
a friend of ancient Greece," a great American educator asked a century
ago, at the time of the Kansas-Missouri struggle, "Would you have counted
him a friend of ancient Greece who quietly discussed the theory of patriotism
on that hot summer day through those hopeless and immortal hours Leonidas
and the 300 stood at Thermopylae for liberty? Would you count anyone a
friend of freedom who stands aside today?"
So I hope that you come in and
join us because the water is not too cold. I'm glad to see you.