美国国务卿克里在耶鲁大学毕业活动日上英语演讲稿.docx
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1、美国国务卿克里在耶鲁大学毕业活动日上英语演讲稿Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you very much. Thank you, thank you, thank you. I think Winston Churchill said the only reason people give a standing ovation is they desperately seek an excuse to shift their underwear. (Laughter.) So certainly before Ive opened my mouth, thats tr
2、ue. (Laughter.)Anyway, President Salovey and faculty members, parents, siblings who came here under thefalse impression there would be free food (laughter); Handsome Dan, wherever you are,probably at some fire hydrant somewhere (laughter); members of the 2023 NCAA championmens ice hockey team (cheer
3、s and applause); distinguished guests and graduates,graduates of the Class of 2023, I really am privileged to be able to be here and share thecelebration of this day with you, especially 48 years after standing up right here as a veryintimidated senior wondering what I was going to say.You are gradu
4、ating today as the most diverse class in Yales long history. Or as they call it inthe NBA, Donald Sterlings worst nightmare. (Laughter and applause.)Nia and Josh: Thank you for such a generous introduction. What Josh didnt mention is that heinterned for me at the State Department last summer. (Cheer
5、s and applause.) Well, hold on aminute now. (Laughter.) I learned that hes not afraid to talk truth to power, or semi-truth. (Laughter.) On his last day he walked up to me at the State Department and he was brutallyhonest. He said, “Mr. Secretary, JE sucks.” (Laughter and cheers.)No, actually, on th
6、e last day at the State Department, he asked if I would come here today anddeliver a message his classmates really needed to hear. So here it goes: Jarred Phillips, you stillowe Josh money from that road trip last fall. (Laughter and applause.)I have to tell you, it is really fun for me to be back h
7、ere on the Old Campus. Im accompaniedby a classmate of mine. We were on the soccer team together. We had a lot of fun. He served asambassador to Italy recently, David Thorne. And my daughter Vanessa graduated in the Classof 1999, so I know what a proud moment this is for your parents. But my friends
8、, the test willbe if they still feel this way next May if you live at home. (Laughter.)Now, Im really happy you made it back from Myrtle Beach. (Cheers and applause.) As if youhadnt already logged enough keg time at “Woads”. (Cheers.) Just remember, just remember: 4.0 is a really good GPA, but its a
9、 lousy blood-alcohol level. (Laughter.)I love the hats. We didnt have the hats when I was here. I love the hats. They are outrageous.Theyre spectacular. This may well be the only event that Pharrell could crash and gounnoticed. (Laughter and applause.)Ive been looking around. Ive seen a couple of Re
10、d Sox, a few Red Sox hats out there. (Cheers.)Ive also seen a few of those dreaded interlocking Ns and Ys. (Cheers.) But thats okay: I saiddiversity is important. (Laughter.) Its also an easy way for me to tell who roots for theYankees and whos graduating with distinction. (Laughter and cheers.)So h
11、eres the deal, heres the deal: I went online and I learned in the Yale Daily comments thatI wasnt everyones first choice to be up here. (Laughter.)When Yale announced that Id be speaking, someone actually wrote, “I hope they give outFive-Hour Energy to help everyone stay awake.” (Laughter.) Well don
12、t worry folks: I promisenot to be one minute over four hours. (Laughter.)Someone else wrote I havent “screwed up badly as Secretary of State . yet.” (Laughter.)Well, all I can say is, stay tuned. (Laughter.)But my favorite comment was this: “Im really proud that a Yalie is Secretary of State.” Ishou
13、ld have stopped reading right there because he or she went on to write, “but he is buttugly.” (Laughter.) So there go my dreams of being on “Yales 50 most beautiful” list. (Cheersand applause.)It really is a privilege for me to share this celebration with you, though Im forewarned that noone remembe
14、rs who delivers their graduation speech. All I really remember about our speakerin 1966 is that he was eloquent, insightful, really good looking. (Laughter.) Anyway, onething I promise you, one thing I promise you: I will stay away from the tired cliches ofcommencement, things like “be yourself,” “d
15、o what makes you happy,” “dont use the laundryroom in Saybrook”. (Cheers and applause.) Thats about all Ill say about that. (Laughter.)So right after we graduated, Time Magazine came out with its famous “Man of the Year” issue.But for 1966, Timedidnt pick one man or one woman. They picked our entire
16、 generation.And Time expressed a lot of high hopes for us. It not only predicted that wed cure thecommon cold, but that wed cure cancer, too. It predicted that wed build smog-free cities andthat wed end poverty and war once and for all. I know what youre thinking we reallycrushed it. (Laughter.)So f
17、air question: Did my generation get lost? Well, thats actually a conversation for anothertime. But let me put one theory to rest: Its not true that everyone in my generationexperimented with drugs. Although between Flomax, Lipitor and Viagra, now we do. (Laughterand applause.)Now, I did have some pr
18、etty creative classmates back then. One of my good friends, very closefriends in JE (cheers) Im going to set it right for you guys right now. (Laughter.) One of mygood friends in JE had at least two hair-brained ideas. The first was a little start-up built on thenotion that if people had a choice, t
19、heyd pay a little more to mail a package and have it arrivethe very next day. Crazy, right? Today that start-up is called FedEx. And by the way, it wascreated in JE, which therefore means JE rules. (Cheers and applause.)Now, his other nutty idea was to restart something called the Yale Flying Club.
20、And admittedly,this was more of a scheme to get us out of class and off the campus. So I basically spent mysenior year majoring in flying, practicing take-offs and landings out at Tweed Airport.Responsible? No. But I wouldnt have missed it.And one of the best lessons I learned here is that Mark Twai
21、n was absolutely right: Never letschool get in the way of an education.Now, I didnt know it at the time, but Yale also taught me to finish what you start. And thatsone thing that clearly separates us from Harvard. (Laughter.) After all, a lot of those guys donteven graduate. Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerb
22、erg, Matt Damon what the hell have they everamounted to? (Laughter.)For all I ever learned at Yale, I have to tell you truthfully the best piece of advice I ever got wasactually one word from my 89-year-old mother. Ill never forget sitting by her bedside andtelling her I had decided to run for Presi
23、dent. And she squeezed my hand and she said: “Integrity, John. Integrity. Just remember always, integrity.” And maybe that tells you a lotabout what she thought about politics.But you should know: In a complicated world full of complicated decisions and close calls thatcould go either way, what keep
24、s you awake at night isnt so much whether or not you got thedecision right or wrong. Its whether you made your decision for the right reasons: Integrity.And the single best piece of advice I ever received about diplomacy didnt come from myinternational relations class, but it came from my father, wh
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