演讲稿

奠基仪式演讲稿

奠基仪式演讲稿 | 楼主 | 2017-08-15 06:38:40 共有3个回复 自我介绍 我要投稿
  1. 1奠基仪式演讲稿
  2. 2奠基仪式演讲稿
  3. 3奥巴马在塞萨尔·查韦斯国家纪念碑奠基仪式上发表的演讲稿

尊敬的书记市长各们领导各位来宾女士们先生们,奥巴马在塞萨尔查韦斯国家纪念碑奠基仪式上发表。

奠基仪式演讲稿2017-08-15 06:35:50 | #1楼回目录

新疆冀东专用车项目

奠基仪式致辞

尊敬的各位领导、各位嘉宾,女士们、先生们: 大家好!

在这洋溢着喜庆和欢乐的日子里,首先请允许我代表新疆冀东专用车有限公司全体员工,向参加我项目奠基仪式的各级领导、新商界的朋友和所有来宾,表示最诚挚的欢迎和衷心的感谢!

新疆冀东专用车有限公司,在昌吉市委、市政和高新区各级领导的关心和帮助下,已经顺利落户昌吉高新区。该项目是由唐山市冀东物贸集团有限责任公司和唐山冀东专用车有限公司共同投资兴办,占地417亩,投资人民币4亿元。

该项目全部投产后,年设计产能为8000辆专用车。该项目将会促使新疆工业的结构调整升级,全面推进新疆物流产业的新跨越,再上一个新台阶,满足新疆以及中亚市场对专用车产品的需求。

项目筹备过程中得到了昌吉州、市党委和政府的大力支持,在各方面均给与了热情的帮助,相关部门

提供了优良的服务,对此,我代表新疆冀东专用车有限公司表示衷心的感谢,我相信在昌吉州、市政委和政府及高新区的关怀之下,项目将会顺利实施,企业将会兴旺发达,将会为促进昌吉地区的经济发展做出贡献。

最后让我们携手共进,精诚合作,在这块充满生机,充满活力的土地上,共创美好明天。

谢谢大家

奠基仪式演讲稿2017-08-15 06:36:18 | #2楼回目录

尊敬的××书记、××市长,各们领导、各位来宾、女士们、先生们:

你们好!

首先,我代表××集团有限公司向光临今天××合资项目新厂房奠基仪式的领导和嘉宾表示热烈的欢迎和衷心的感谢!今天,我们迎来了××和××合资项目新厂房奠基仪式隆重奠基的喜庆时刻。在此,我谨代表××集团5000名员工向各级领导、各位嘉宾致以最诚挚的感谢!当前,在世界经济全球化形势的驱使下,区域经济结构正处于巨大的变革之中,中国经济已经融入经济一体化的大潮,并对制造业的发展产生着深远的影响。今后5-10年,是中国实施第三步战略部署的重要时期,要提高人民的生活水平,就必须迅速提高人民生存和生活质量的重要物质基础,那就必须加快制造业的发展。同时,在加入wto以来,世界制造业的重心正在向中国转移,这必将使中国成为制造业的产生和出口大国,从而,为我们制造业的发展带来难得的发展机遇。正是在这种良好的背景下,我们集团借助于20年发展积累下来的优势和经验,投资兴建××牌机电工程。我们集团有限公司创建于1998年,现拥有1家控股上市公司,11家子公司,总资产15亿元,主要经营电机及自动化、房地产、金融商贸投资等。当前,在集团下属的工业园已经顺利建成并全面投产。为实现集团更大的发展,积极打造我们品牌机电行业制造业的基地,在××市委、市府和各级领导的关心支持下,经过多次论证及深思熟虑,我们的品牌将在我们今天站立的这块地方,……

奥巴马在塞萨尔·查韦斯国家纪念碑奠基仪式上发表的演讲稿2017-08-15 06:36:11 | #3楼回目录

奥巴马在塞萨尔·查韦斯国家纪念碑奠基仪式上发表

的演讲 博雅源讲演(视频)网

Remarks by the President at the Dedication of the Cesar Chavez National Monument, Keene, CA

La Paz, Chavez National Monument

Keene, California

THE PRESIDENT:Good morning!Buenos dias!(Applause.)Si, se puede!(Applause.)Thank you.Thank you so much.

AUDIENCE:Four more years!Four more years!Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT:Thank you, everybody.Thank you so much.I am truly grateful to be here.It is such a great honor to be with you on this beautiful day, a day that has been a long time coming.

To the members of the Chavez family and those who knew and loved Cesar; to the men and women who've worked so hard for so long to preserve this place -- I want to say to all of you, thank you.Your dedication, your perseverance made this day possible.

I want to acknowledge the members of my administration who have championed this project from the very beginning -- Secretary Ken Salazar, Secretary Hilda Solis, Nancy Sutley.(Applause.)To Governor Brown, Mayor Villaraigosa -- (applause) -- Congressman Grijalva -- they are here.We are grateful for your presence.And I also want to recognize my dear friend, somebody we're so proud of -- Arturo Rodriguez, the current president of the UFW.(Applause.)

Most of all, I want to thank Helen Chavez.(Applause.)In the years to come, generations of Americans will stand where we stand and see a piece of history -- a tribute to a great man and a great movement.But to Helen, this will always be home.It’s where she fought alongside the man that she loved; where she raised eight children and spoiled 31 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.(Applause.)This is where she continues to live out the rest of her days.

So, Helen, today we are your guests.We appreciate your hospitality, and you should feel free to kick us out whenever you want.(Laughter.)

Today, La Paz joins a long line of national monuments -- stretching from the Statue of Liberty to the Grand Canyon -- monuments that tell the story of who we are as Americans.It's a story of natural wonders and modern marvels; of fierce battles and quiet progress.But it's also a story of people -- of determined, fearless, hopeful people who have always been willing to devote their lives to making this country a little more just and a little more free.

One of those people lies here, beneath a rose garden at the foot of a hill he used to climb to watch the sun rise.And so today we celebrate Cesar Chavez.(Applause.)Cesar would be the first to say that this is not a monument to one man.The movement he helped to lead was sustained by a generation of organizers who stood up and spoke out, and urged others to do the same -- including the great Dolores Huerta, who is here today.(Applause.)

It drew strength from Americans of every race and every background who marched and boycotted together on behalf of "La Causa."And it was always inspired by the farm workers themselves, some of whom are with us.This place belongs to you, too.But the truth is we would not be here if it weren’t for Cesar.Growing up as the son of migrant workers who had lost their home in the Great Depression, Cesar wasn’t easy on his parents.He described himself as "caprichoso" -- (laughter) --

capricious.His brother Richard had another word for him -- (applause) -- stubborn.By the time he reached 7th grade, Cesar estimated he had attended 65 elementary schools, following the crop cycles with his family, working odd jobs, sometimes living in roadside tents without electricity or plumbing.It wasn’t an easy childhood.But Caesar always was different.While other kids could identify all the hottest cars, he memorized the names of labor leaders and politicians.

After serving in the Navy during World War II, Cesar returned to the fields.And it was a time of great change in America, but too often that change was only framed in terms of war and peace, black and white, young and old.No one seemed to care about the invisible farm workers who picked the nation’s food -- bent down in the beating sun, living in poverty, cheated by growers, abandoned in old age, unable to demand even the most basic rights.

But Cesar cared.And in his own peaceful, eloquent way, he made other people care, too.A march that started in Delano with a handful of activists -- (applause) -- that march ended 300 miles away in Sacramento with a crowd 10,000 strong.

(Applause.)A boycott of table grapes that began in California eventually drew 17 million supporters acrothe country, forcing growers to agree to some of the first farm worker contracts in history.Where there had once been despair, Cesar gave workers a reason to hope."What [the growers] don't know," he said, "is that it's not bananas or grapes or lettuce.It's people."

It’s people.More than higher wages or better working conditions, that was Cesar’s gift to us -- a reminder that we are all God’s children, that every life has value, that, in the words of one of his heroes, Dr. King, "we are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny."

Cesar didn’t believe in helping those who refused to help themselves, but he did

believe that when someone who works 12 hours a day in the fields can earn enough to put food on the table and maybe save up enough to buy a home, that that makes our communities stronger, that lifts up our entire economy.

He believed that when a worker is treated fairly and humanely by their employer that adds meaning to the values this country was founded upon, and credence to the claim that out of many, we are one.And he believed that when a child anywhere in America can dream beyond her circumstances and work to realize that dream, it makes all our futures just a little bit brighter. (Applause.)

It was that vision, that belief in the power of opportunity that drove Cesar every day of his life.It’s a vision that says, maybe I never had a chance to get a good education, but I want my daughter to go to college.Maybe I started out working in the fields, but someday I’ll own my own business.Maybe I have to make sacrifices, but those sacrifices are worth it if it means a better life for my family.

That’s the story of my ancestors; that’s the story of your ancestors.It’s the promise that has attracted generations of immigrants to our shores from every corner of the globe, sometimes at great risk, drawn by the idea that no matter who you are, or what you look like, or where you come from, this is the place where you can make it if you try.(Applause.)

Today, we have more work to do to fulfill that promise.The recession we're fighting our way back from is still taking a toll, especially in Latino communities, which already faced higher unemployment and poverty rates.Even with the strides we’ve made, too many workers are still being denied basic rights and simple respect.But thanks to the strength and character of the American people, we are making progress.Our businesses are creating more jobs.More Americans are getting back to work. And even though we have a difficult road ahead, I know we can keep moving forward together.(Applause.)I know it because Cesar himself worked for 20 years as an organizer without a single major victory -- think about that -- but he refused to give up.He refused to scale back his dreams.He just kept fasting and marching and speaking out, confident that his day would come.

And when it finally did, he still wasn’t satisfied.After the struggle for higher wages, Cesar pushed for fresh drinking water and worker’s compensation, for pension plans and safety from pesticides -- always moving, always striving for the America he knew we could be.

More than anything, that’s what I hope our children and grandchildren will take away from this place.Every time somebody’s son or daughter comes and learns about the history of this movement, I want them to know that our journey is never hopeless, our work is never done.I want them to learn about a small man guided by enormous

faith -- in a righteous cause, a loving God, the dignity of every human being.I want them to remember that true courage is revealed when the night is darkest and the resistance is strongest and we somehow find it within ourselves to stand up for what we believe in.(Applause.)

Cesar once wrote a prayer for the farm workers that ends with these words:Let the Spirit flourish and grow,

So that we will never tire of the struggle.

Let us remember those who have died for justice,

For they have given us life.

Help us love even those who hate,

So we can change the world.(Applause.)

Our world is a better place because Cesar Chavez decided to change it.Let us honor his memory.But most importantly, let’s live up to his example.(Applause.)Thank you.God bleyou.(Applause.)God bleAmerica.Si, se puede!(Applause.)

AUDIENCE:Si, se puede!(Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:Si, se puede.(Applause.)

AUDIENCE:Si, se puede!(Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:Thank you, everybody.(Applause.)

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