| Ten days ago, president admitted that although some people in this country seem
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| to be doing well nowadays, others were unhappy, even worried.
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| About themselves, for their families and for their futures.
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| President said that he didn’t understand that fear.
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| He said:"
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| Why this country is a shining city on a hill!"
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| And the president is right.
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| In many ways we are a shining city on a hill.
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| The hard truth is that not everyone is sharing the new city’s splendour and
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| glory.
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| Shining city is perhaps all the president sees from the portica of the White
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| House, of the verandah of his ranch, where everyone seems to be doing well.
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| But there’s another city.
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| There’s another part to the shining city.
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| A part where some people can’t pay their mortages, and most young people can’t
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| afford …
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| Where students can’t afford the education they need and middle-class parents
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| watch the dreams they hold for their children vaporate.
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| In this part of the city there are more poor than ever.
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| More families in trouble, more and more people who need help but can’t find it.
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| Even worse, there are elderly people who tremble in the basements of the houses
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| they live.
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| And there are people who sleep in the city streets, in the gutter where the
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| glitter doesn’t show.
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| There are ghettos with thousands of young people without a job or an education.
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| Give their lives away to drug dealers every day.
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| There is despair.
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| There is despair, Mr President.
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| In the faces that you don’t see.
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| In the places that you don’t visit in your shining city.
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| Mr President you are denying that this nation is more a tale of two cities than
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| it is just a shining city on a hill.
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| Maybe, maybe Mr President if you visited some more places, if you went to
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| Appalachia where some people still live in sheds.
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| Maybe if you went to Lackawanna where thousands of unemployed steel-workers
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| wonder why we subsidize foreign steel.
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| Maybe, maybe Mr President if you stopped in at a shelter in Chicago and spoke
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| to the homeless there.
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| Maybe, Mr President if you asked a woman who had been denied the help she
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| needed to feed her children because you said you needed the money for a
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| tax-break for a millionaire or for a missile we couldn’t afford to use."
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| Not for honour,
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| not for glory,
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| not for profit,
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| but for love!
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| Not for honour,
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| not for pleasure,
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| not for profit,
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| but for love! |