Remarks to the Junior
Livestock Competition Participants at the
Thank
you all. Governor Thompson, Secretary [of Agriculture] Lyng,
and ladies and gentlemen: I look out on you 4H-ers and Future Farmers of
America, I see your proud faces, and I think of all you know about farming and
livestock. And, I look in particular at these prizewinners back here, and I
think to myself -- I could use some of you out on the ranch. [Laughter] But
there's nothing I enjoy more than getting out here in the homeland, and one of
the great things about being at this State fair is that maybe I can tell a joke
that they wouldn't understand so well in
It
has to do with an old fellow who had the piece of creek-bottom land, never had
done anything with it. Then he got ambitious and started in, and he got the
brush all cleared, and he hauled the rocks away, and then he started
fertilizing and cultivating and planting. And finally, he had really a
beautiful garden spot there. And one Sunday morning after the church service,
he was so proud that he asked the minister if he wouldn't stop by and see what
he'd done. Well, after church, the minister did come by and the first thing he
saw was the corn, and he said, ``I've never seen corn so tall. My, how the Lord has blessed this land.'' And then he saw
some melons, and he said, ``I've never seen melons that large.'' He said, ``Oh,
the Lord has just -- bless the Lord. This is just so wonderful.'' Well, he went
on that way through everything, squash and beans and everything else. The old
boy was getting pretty fidgety as the minister kept giving the Lord the credit.
And finally, he interrupted and said, ``Reverend, I wish you could have seen
this place when the Lord was doing it by Himself.'' [Laughter]
I've
always liked that story because it makes a good point. God gave us this great
and good land, but it's up to us to make it flourish -- to preserve its
freedom, to see it grow and become a nation of greatness. In a few minutes,
I'll be talking to those people out in the grandstand about the future of
American farming. I thought I'd talk to you for a moment about the future more
generally, because you've got more future than most of us have. And I thought I
might begin my remarks about the future by talking about the past, in
particular the part of the American story that I've witnessed in my own
lifetime.
When
I was about your age, if you can take your minds back that far,
But
here it is just a half a century later, the American people enjoying a standard
of living undreamed of during the thirties or even during the boom years of the
twenties before the Great Depression. And in these 50 years, employment in
Just
think of all we take for granted today that didn't even use to exist -- things
like television, computers, and space flights. You're looking at a fellow who
can actually remember what a thrill it was to hear that Charles Lindbergh had
landed in Paris, flying that little single-engine plane across the Atlantic all
by himself -- the first time it had been done. Well, this same fellow also
happens to remember what it was like to gather around the TV set and watch the
first Americans walk on the Moon. Imagine it -- from Charles Lindbergh to Moon
landings in a single lifetime. I can remember my first ride in an automobile --
and they wonder why I'm an optimist.
But what about your generation -- you wonderful
young people?
You stand on the verge of a new age. Today freedom is on the march throughout
the world. Just 10 years ago, for example, there were few democracies in
All
this awaits you. Of course, you will face challenges. Every generation has to
face challenges as it comes of age. But you need only to be true to the values
that made our nation great. I know when you're young -- and believe it or not,
your parents and the others that are older, they remember very clearly what it
was like and how they felt, the same as you do. But there's a tendency to throw
aside old values as belonging to an earlier generation. Don't discard those
values that have proven, over the period of time, their value. Just believe in
those values that made our nation great and keep them: faith, family, hard
work, and, above all, freedom.
Well,
I know it's time for me to get ready to speak to that other audience outside.
But I want you to know that I've taken advantage of you because I appreciated
having this time with you, and I tried to stretch it out a little bit. But I
just want to, again, thank you -- all of you; and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at