President Bush Addresses March for Life
President George W. Bush spoke via telephone to the
participants in the 30th Annual March for Life in Washington, DC on
January 22, 2003. After being welcomed by Miss Nellie Gray, President of March
for Life, President Bush made the following remarks:
Well, thank you, Nellie. I want to thank you very much for including me
in the celebration of life. I want to thank the good folks there on the Mall
today. I’m calling you from St. Louis, Missouri.
I know there are some from Missouri there and, like many others, you’ve made
great sacrifices to come to Washington today. A lot of you have ridden buses all
night long and I know you’re braving the cold. And I admire your perseverance
and I admire your devotion to the cause of life.
You all are gathered today on the National Mall, which is not far from the
monument to Thomas Jefferson who, as you all know, is author of our Declaration
of Independence. And the March for Life upholds the self-evident truth of that
Declaration—that all are created equal, given the unalienable rights of life,
and liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And that principle of America needs
defenders in every place and every generation.
In our time, respect for the right to life calls us to defend the sick and
the dying, persons with disabilities and birth defects, and all who are weak and
vulnerable. And this self-evident truth calls us to value and to protect the
lives of innocent children waiting to be born.
You and I share a commitment to building a culture of life in America, and
we’re making progress. As the President, I have signed the Born Alive Infants
Protection Act, opposed the destruction of embryos for stem cell research, and
refused to spend taxpayer money on international programs that promote abortion
overseas.
My administration is challenging the Oregon law that permits
physician-assisted suicide.
We support abstinence education, and crisis pregnancy programs, and parental
notification laws. We offer compassionate alternatives to abortion by promoting
adoption and extending state health care coverage for unborn children.
My hope is that the United States Congress will pass a bill this year banning
partial-birth abortion, which I will sign. Partial-birth abortion is an
abhorrent procedure that offends human dignity. I also urge the Congress to ban
all human cloning. We must not create life to destroy life. Human beings are not
research material to be used in a cruel and reckless experiment.
For 30 years, the March for Life has been sustained by constant prayer and
abiding hope, that one day, every child will be born into a family that loves
that child and a nation that protects that child. And when that day arrives, you
will have the gratitude of millions—especially those who know the gift of life
because you cared and you kept faith. May God bless you all and may God continue
to bless America.
Well, thank you, Nellie. I want to thank you very much for
including me in the celebration of life. I want to thank the good folks there on
the Mall today. I’m calling you from St. Louis, Missouri.
I know there are some from Missouri there and, like many others, you’ve made
great sacrifices to come to Washington today. A lot of you have ridden buses all
night long and I know you’re braving the cold. And I admire your perseverance
and I admire your devotion to the cause of life.
You all are gathered today on the National Mall, which is not far from the
monument to Thomas Jefferson who, as you all know, is author of our Declaration
of Independence. And the March for Life upholds the self-evident truth of that
Declaration—that all are created equal, given the unalienable rights of life,
and liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And that principle of America needs
defenders in every place and every generation.
In our time, respect for the right to life calls us to defend the sick and
the dying, persons with disabilities and birth defects, and all who are weak and
vulnerable. And this self-evident truth calls us to value and to protect the
lives of innocent children waiting to be born.
You and I share a commitment to building a culture of life in America, and
we’re making progress. As the President, I have signed the Born Alive Infants
Protection Act, opposed the destruction of embryos for stem cell research, and
refused to spend taxpayer money on international programs that promote abortion
overseas.
My administration is challenging the Oregon law that permits
physician-assisted suicide.
We support abstinence education, and crisis pregnancy programs, and parental
notification laws. We offer compassionate alternatives to abortion by promoting
adoption and extending state health care coverage for unborn children.
My hope is that the United States Congress will pass a bill this year banning
partial-birth abortion, which I will sign. Partial-birth abortion is an
abhorrent procedure that offends human dignity. I also urge the Congress to ban
all human cloning. We must not create life to destroy life. Human beings are not
research material to be used in a cruel and reckless experiment.
For 30 years, the March for Life has been sustained by constant prayer and
abiding hope, that one day, every child will be born into a family that loves
that child and a nation that protects that child. And when that day arrives, you
will have the gratitude of millions—especially those who know the gift of life
because you cared and you kept faith. May God bless you all and may God continue
to bless America.