布莱尔演讲稿
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布莱尔演讲:珍惜现在把握未来青春,是美好的代言词,青春无悔,我们要珍惜青春,更要把握美好的未来!本文是由第一范文网为大家提供的布莱尔演讲:珍惜现在把握未来,欢迎阅读:布莱尔演讲《珍惜现在,把握未来》It is an honor to be here and say to the Yale College Class of 20xx: you did it; you came through; from all of us to you: congratulations.The issues you must wrestle with-the threat of climate change, food scarcity, and population growth, worldwide terror based on religion, the interdependence of world economy-my student generation would barely recognize. But the difference today is they are essentially global in nature.Your understand this. Yale has beEach new generation finds the world they enter. But they fasion the world they leave. So: what do you inherit and what do you pass on?The history of humankind is marked by great events but written by great people.People like you.珍惜现在,把握未来Given Yale’s record of achievement, perhaps by you.So to you as individuals, what wisdom, if any, have I learnt?First, in fact, keep learning. Always to be alive to the possibilities of the next experience, of thinking, doing and being.When Buddha was asked, near the end of his life, to describe his secret, he answered bluntly: “I’m awake”.So be awake.Understand conventional wisdom, but be prepared to change it.Feel as well as analyze; use you instinct alongside your reason. Calculate too much and you will miscalculate.Be prepared to fail as well as to succeed, realist it is failure not success that defines character.I spent years trying to be a politician failing at every attempt and nearly gave up.I know you’re thinking: I should have.Sir Paul McCartney reminded me that the first recordBe good to people on your way up because you never know if you will meet them again on your way down.Judge someone by how they treat those below them not those above them.。
布莱尔演讲:珍惜现在把握未来_演讲稿It is an honor to be here and say to the Yale College Class of 20xx: you did it; you came through; from all of us to you: congratulations.The issues you must wrestle with-the threat of climate change, food scarcity, and population growth, worldwide terror based on religion, the interdependence of world economy-my student generation would barely recognize. But the difference today is they are essentially global in nature.Your understand this. Yale has become a melting pot of culture, language and civilization. You are the global generation. So be global citizens.Each new generation finds the world they enter. But they fasion the world they leave. So: what do you inherit and what do you pass on?The history of humankind is marked by great events but written by great people.People like you.Given Yale’s record of achievement, perhaps by you.So to you as individuals, what wisdom, if any, have I learnt?First, in fact, keep learning. Always to be alive to the possibilities of the next experience, of thinking, doing and being.When Buddha was asked, near the end of his life, to describe his secret, he answered bluntly: “I’m awake”.So be awake.Understand conventional wisdom, but be prepared to change it.Feel as well as analyze; use you instinct alongside your reason. Calculate too much and you will miscalculate.Be prepared to fail as well as to succeed, realist it is failure not success that defines character.I spent years trying to be a politician failing at every attempt and nearly gave up. I know you’re thinking: I should have.Sir Paul McCartney reminded me that the first record company the Beatles approached rejected them as a band no-one would want to listen to.Be good to people on your way up because you never know if you will meet them again on your way down.Judge someone by how they treat those below them not those above them.Be a firm friend not a fair-weather friend. It is your friendships, including those friends you made here at Yale, at this time, that sustain and enrich the human spirit.A good test of a person is who turns up at their funeral and with what sincerity. Try not to sit the test too early, of course.Recently, I attended a funeral and the speaker said he would like to begin by reading a list of all those whose funerals he would rather have been attending, but the list was too long. It was a sweet compliment to our friend.Alternatively there was Spike Milligan, the quintessential English comic who when he was asked what he would like as the epitaph on his tombstone replied : “They should write: I told you l was ill.”There was a colleague of mine in the British Parliament who once asked another:” why do people take such an instant dislike to m e?” and got the reply:” Because it saves time.”So, when others think of you, let them think not with their lips but their hearts of a good friend and a gracious acquaintance.Above all, however, have a purpose in life. Life is not aboutliving but about striving. When you get up, get up motivated. Live with a perpetual sense of urgency. And make at least part of that purpose about something bigger than you.There are great careers. There are also great causes.Ht least let some of them into your Lives. Giving hefts the heart in a way that getting never can. Maybe it really was Oscar Wilde who said: “No one ever died, saying if only l had one more day at the office.”One small but shocking sentence: each year three million children die in Africa from preventable disease or conflict.The key word? Preventable.When all is said and done, there is usually more said than done.Be a doer not a commentator. Seek responsibility rather than shirk it. People often ask me about leadership, l say: leadership is about wanting the responsibility to be on your shoulders, not ignoring its weight but knowing someone has to carry it and, reaching out for that person to be you. Leaders are heat-seekers not heat-deflectors.And luck?You have all the luck you need. You are here, at Yale, and what-apart from the hats-could be better?You have something else: your parents.When you are your age, you can never imagine being our age. But believe me, when you’re our age we remember clearly being your age. That’s why I am so careful ab out young men and my daughter, “Don’t tell me what you’re thinking. I know what you’re thinking.”But as a parent let me tell you something about parents. Despite all rational impulses, despite all evidence to the contrary,despite what we think you do to us and what you think we do to you-and yes, it is often hell on both sides-the plain, unvarnished truth is we love you. Simply, profoundly, utterly.I remember, back in the mists of time, my Dad greeting me off the train at Durham railway station. I was a student at Oxford. Oxford and Cambridge are for Britain kind of like Yale and Harvard, only more so. It was a big deal. I had been away for my first year and was coming home.I stepped off the train. My hair was roughly the length of Rumpelstiltskin’s and unwashed. I had no shoes and no shirt. My jeans were torn-and this was in the days before this became a fashion item. Worst of all, we had just moved house. Mum had thrown out the sitting room drapes. I had retrieved them and made a sleeveless long coat with them.My Dad greeted me. There were all his friends at the station. Beside me, their kids looked paragons of responsibility.He saw the drapes, and visibly winced. They did kind of stand out. I took pity on him.“Dad”, I said. “There is good news. I don’t do drugs.”He looked me in the eye and said: “Son, the bad news is if you’re looking like this and you’re not doing drugs we’ve got a real problem.”Your parents look at you today with love. They know how hard it is to make the grade and they respect you for making it.And tomorrow as I know, as a parent of one of this class, as you receive your graduation, their hearts will beat with the nature rhythm of pride. Pride in what you have achieved. Pride in who you are.They will be nervous for you, as you stand on the threshold of a new adventure for they know the many obstacles that lieahead.But they will be confident that you can surmount them, for they know also the strength of character and of spirit that has taken you thus far.To my fellow parents: I say, let us rejoice and be glad together.To the Yale College Class of 20xx, I say: well done; and may blessings and good fortune be yours in the years to come.。
布莱尔三次蝉联首相职务的获胜英语演讲稿布莱尔三次蝉联首相职务的获胜英语演讲稿Tony Blairs speech on returning to Downing StreetIve just come from Buckingham Palace where the Queen has asked me to form a new government which I will do.Its a tremendous honour and privilege to be elected for a third term and Im acutely conscious of that honour and that privilege.When I stood here first eight years ago I was a lot younger but also a lot less experienced.Today as well as having in our minds the priorities that people want, we, I, the government, has the knowledge, as well as the determination and commitment, to deliver them.The great thing about the election is that you go out and talk to people for week upon week.And Ive listened and Ive learned, and I think Ive a very clear idea what the people now expect from the government in a third term.And I want to say to them very directly that I, we, the government, are going to focus relentlessly now on the priorities that people have set for us.What are those priorities? First they like the strong economy, but life is still a real struggle for many people and many families in this country and they know there are new issues: help for first time buyers to get their feet on the first rungs of the housing ladder; families trying to cope with balancing work and family life; many people struggling to make ends meet; many families on low incomes who desperately need help and support to increase their living standards; businesses who whilst they like theeconomic stability, want us also to focus on stimulating enterprise on investing in science and skills and technology for the future.Its very clear what people want us to do and we will do it.Second in relation to the public services, health and education, again people like the investment that has gone into public services, they welcome it. I have found absolutely no support for any suggestion we cut back that investment.The people want that money to work better for them, they want higher standards, both of care and of education for the investment we are putting in.And so we will focus on delivering not just the investment but the reform and change of those public services and I will do so with passion, because I want to keep universal public services that know that the only way of keeping the consent for them is by making the changes necessary for the twenty-first century.。
布莱尔演讲稿:《I Did What I Thought Was Right我问心无愧》中英I Did What I Thought Was RightResignation Speech (May 10, 2007)Thank you very much, indeed.It’s a great privilege to be with you here again today and to thank all of you, too, for such a wonderful and warm welcome, especially Maureen and her friends, who gave me such a wonderful welcome. The only thing is theywhen I was coming in"Four more years,I was saying, "Maureen, that’s not our message for today."I’d just like to say, also, if I might, just a special word of thanks to John Burton. John has been my agent here for many years now. He’s still the best political adviser that I’ve got. He’sall the years I’ve known him, he’s been steadfast in his loyalty to me, to the Labour Party, and to the Sunderland Football Club, not necessarilyin that order. We won’t get into that.But, you know, it’s been my great good fortune at certain points in my life to meet exceptional people, and he is one very exceptional person.And also, if I may refer to another exceptional person, who’s my wife, friend and partner Cherie.And the children, of course, Euan and Nicky and Kathryn and Leo, who make me never forget my failings... but give me great love and support.So I’ve come back here to Sedgefield to my constituency, where my political journey began and where it’s fitting that it should end.Today I announce my decision to stand down from the leadership of the Labour Party. The party will now select a new leader. On the 27th of June, I will tender my resignation from the office of prime minister to the queen.I’ve been prime minister of this country for just over 10 years. In this job in the world of today, I think that’s long enough for me, but more especially for the country. And sometimes, the only way you conquer the pull of power is to set it down.It’s difficult in a way to know how to make this speech. There are obviously judgments to be made on my premiership, and in the end, that is for you the people to make.I can only describe what I think has been done over these last10 years and, perhaps more important, why I tried to do it. And I’ve never quite put it in this way before.I was born almost a decade after the Second World War. I wasa young man in the social revolution of the ‘60s and ‘70s. I reached political maturity as the Cold War was ending, and the world was going through a political and economic and technological revolution.And I looked at my own country: a great country, wonderful history, magnificent traditions, proud of its past, but strangely uncertain of its future, uncertain about the future, almostold-fashioned.And all that was curiously symbolized, you know, in the politics of the time. You had choices. You stood for individual aspiration and getting on in life or social compassion and helping others. You were liberal in your values or conservative. You believed in the power of the state or the efforts of the individual. Spending more money on the public realm was the answer or it was the problem.And none of it made sense to me. It was 20th-century ideology in a world approaching the new millennium.Of course, people want the best for themselves, and their families, but in an age where human capital is the nation’s greatest asset, they also know it’s just and sensible to extend opportunities to develop the potential to succeed for all our people, not just the elite at the top. And people today are open-minded about race and sexuality, they’re averse to prejudice, and yet deeply, rightly, conservative with a small c when it comes to good manners, respect for others, treating people courteously. They acknowledge the need for the state and the responsibility ofthe individual. And they know spending money on our public services matters. And they know it’s not enough: How they are run and organized matters, too.So 1997 was a moment for a new beginning, the sweeping away of all the detritus of the past. And expectations were so high. Too high, probably. Too high in a way for either of us.And now, in 2007, you could easily point to the challenges or the things that are wrong or the grievances that fester. But go back to 1997. Think backno, really think back.Think about your own living standards then in May 1997 and now. Visit your local school, any of them around here or anywhere in modern Britain. Ask when you last had to wait a year or more on a hospital waiting list or heard of pensioners freezing to death in the winter, unable to heat their homes.There is only one government since 1945 that can say all of the following: more jobs, fewer unemployed, better health and education results, lower crime, and economic growth in every quarter. Only one government: This one.But we don’t need statistics. There’s something bigger than what can be measured in waiting lists or GSCE results or the latest crime or jobs figures.Look at the British economy, at ease with globalization; London, the world’s financial center; visit our great cities in this country and compare them with 10 years ago. No country attracts overseas investment like we do.And think about the culture in Britain in the year 2007. I don’t just mean our arts that are thriving. I mean our values: the minimum wage, paid holidays as a right, amongst the best maternity leave and pay in Europe, equality for gay people.Or look at the debates that reverberate around the world today: the global movement to support Africa in its struggle against poverty, climate change, the fight against terrorism. Britain is not a follower today. Britain is a leader. It gets the essential characteristic of today’s world: It’s interdependence.This is a country that today for all its faults, for all the myriadof unresolved problems and fresh challenges, it is a country comfortable in the 21st century, at home in its own skin, able not just to be proud of its past, but also confident of its future.And I don’t think Northern Ireland would have been changed unless Britain had changed, or the Olympics won if we were still the Britain of 1997.And as for my own leadership, throughout these 10 years, where the predictable has competed with the utterly unpredicted, right at the outset, one thing was clear to me: Without the Labour Party allowing me to lead it, nothing could have ever been done.But I also knew my duty was to put the country first. That much was obvious to me when, just under 13 years ago, I became Labour’s leader.What I had to learn, however, as prime minister, was what putting the country first really meant.Decision-making is hard. You know, everyone always says in politics,"Listen to the people,and the trouble is, you find,they don’t always agree.And when you’re in opposition, you meet this group and they say,"Why can’t you do thisand you say, "It’s a really good question, thank you,and they go away and say, "It’s great; he really listened."And then you meet that other group, and they say, "Why can’t you do that and you say, "It’s a really good question, thank you,and they go away happy that you listened.In government, you have to give the answer; not an answer, the answer.And in time, you realize that putting the country first doesn’t mean doing the right thing according to conventional wisdom or the prevailing consensus or the latest snapshot of opinion. It means doing what you genuinely believe to be right; that your duty as prime minister is to act according to your conviction.And all of that can get contorted so that people think that you act according to some messianic zeal.Doubt, hesitation, reflection, consideration, reconsideration: These are all the good companions of proper decision-making. But the ultimate obligation is to decide.And sometimes the decisions are accepted quite quickly. Bank of England independence was one which, gave us our economic stability.Sometimes, like tuition fees or trying to break up old monolithic services, the changes are deeply controversial, hellish hard to do, but you can see you’re moving with the grain of change around the world.And sometimes, like with Europe, where I believe Britain should keep its position strong, you know you are fighting opinion, but you’re kind of content with doing so.And sometimes, as with the completely unexpected, you are alone with your own instinct.In Sierra Leone and to stop ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, I tookthe decision to make our country one that intervened, that did not pass by or keep out of the thick of it.And then came the utterly unanticipated and dramatic September the 11th, 2001, and the death of 3,000 or more on the streets of New York. And I decided we should stand shoulder to shoulder with our oldest ally, and I did so out of belief. And so Afghanistan, and then Iraq, the latter, bitterly controversial.And removing Saddam and his sons from power, as with removing the Taliban, was over with relative ease, but the blowback since from global terrorism and those elements that support it has been fierce and unrelenting and costly. And for many, it simply isn’t and can’t be worth it.For me, I think we must see it through. They, the terrorists who threaten us here and around the world, will never give up if we give up. It is a test of will and belief, and we can’t fail it.So some things I knew I would be dealing with. Some I thought I might be, some never occurred to meor to youon that morning of the 2nd of May 1997 when I came into Downing Streetfor the first time.Great expectations, not fulfilled in every part for sure.Occasionally, people say, as I said earlier, "The expectations were too high. You should have lowered them.But to be frank, I would not have wanted it any other way. I was and remain, as a person and as a prime minister, an optimist. Politics may be the art of the possible, but at least in life give the impossible a go.So, of course, divisions are painted in the colors of the rainbow and the reality sketched in the duller tones of black and white and gray. But I ask you to accept one thing: Hand on heart, I did what I thought was right. I may... I may have been wrong. That’s your call. But believe one thing, if nothing else: I did what I thought was right for our country.And I came into office with high hopes for Britain’s future, and you know, I leave it with even higher hopes for Britain’s future. This is a country that can today be excited by the opportunities, not constantly fretful of the dangers.And people say to me, "It’s a tough job.Not really. A tough life is the life led by the young severely disabled children and their parents who visited me in Parliament the other week. Tough is the life my dad had, his whole career cut short at the age of 40 by a stroke.Actually, I’ve been very lucky and very blessed.And this country is a blessed nation. The British are special. The world knows it. In our innermost thoughts, we know it. This is the greatest nation on Earth.So it has been an honor to serve it.I give my thanks to you, the British people, for the times that I’ve succeed, and my apologies to you for the times I’ve fallen short. But good luck.我问心无愧[1]辞职演说(2007年5月10日)非常感谢诸位。
布莱尔首相演讲篇一:布莱尔首相演讲 InvestmentTranscript of the Prime Minister's broadcast on investmentWherever you look in our country, you can see the result of decades of under-investment.Children still being taught in cramped or prefab classrooms. Patients treated in wards built long before penicillin was discovered.Our railways and roads fall short of the standards we need. And that's not just bad for travellers but bad for our economy.And it's not just the fabric of our country which reveals the signs of this failure to invest.There was a chronic shortage of people, of teachers, doctors, nurses when we came into Government three years ago.Even worse, we found that training places and recruitment had often been cut back.Now I don't go along with those who claim, for example, that we have a third world health service.That's an insult to the dedicated doctors and nurses who work in the NHS. And it also ignores the fact that thousands of people every day get superb treatment and care.But we are now the fourth biggest economy in the world. And few people would claim we have the fourth best public services. I certainly don't. That's because for far too long - we haven't invested. We haven't looked to the long-term. We haven't invested for our future.And that's largely because of the cycle of boom and bust which has gripped our economy for so long.It meant sudden increases of investment followed by panic cut-backs which made it impossible to plan sensibly for the future.We were so determined to restore stability to the economy - even if it meant hard decisions and some unpopularity.We didn't ignore investment in our early years. Indeed we launched the biggest hospital building programme in the history of the health service. The first of these is already open in Carlisle. We invested to make surethat infant class sizes have fallen. Over 10,000 schools have been re-furbished or repaired. Wherever you live, there'll be a school near you which has benefited.But there is a great deal more to do. And with inflation and interest rates low, billions saved in debt repayments and a record number of people in work, the country can now afford the sustained investment needed in our health service, schools, police and transport systems.It means a 150% increase in investment in public transport investment desperately needed for our roads and railways.Then there's a £1.4 billion increase in health spending on hospitals, clinics and equipment.And extra investment, too, for urgent repairs for 7,000 more schools. But there's little point in having wonderful new schools or hospitals if you don't have the trained staff to go into them.So we're working hard to tackle the shortage of nurses, doctors and teachers.We've reversed, for example, the short-sighted cuts in nurse training places. We've expanded medical schools and places.We are having some success, too - an increase of nearly 5,000 doctors in the health service in the last three years in the health service. An increase of 10,000 qualified nurses too.And this week we learnt that for the first time in eight years the number of teachers in training has risen.That is vital because it is the dedicated teachers who are delivering the real progress we're seeing in our schools.Good teachers can and do make a massive difference to the lives of the children they teach.Every day, in schools the length and breadth of our country, the hard-work of dedicated teachers give our children the help and encouragement they need to realise their potential. For far too long however, teachers have felt under-valued andunder-rewarded. And that's wrong when you think that there can be few jobsmore fulfilling, more challenging or more important to our society's future than being a teacher.So this welcome increase in the numbers of teachers in training is a sign that we are beginning to get things right.But there's a lot more that we need to do. I want to see the best and the brightest sign up in their tens of thousands to become teachers, to join that education crusade.We need more teachers just as we need more doctors, more nurses, more modern schools and hospitals.It can't be done overnight. It takes years to build a new hospital or train new doctors.But our hard-won economic stability means we now have the chance at least to plan and invest for the long-term.A chance to end the years of neglect of our public services and deliver the world-class education, health and transport system that this country needs and deserves. It's a chance that we should all take.篇二:布莱尔为最贵演讲者每分钟近赚万美元布莱尔为最贵演讲者每分钟近赚万美元就在各国领导人四处筹钱为拯救经济而殚精竭虑的同时,一些卸任的首脑虽然过日子不差钱,但也闲不住,英国前首相布莱尔就是其中一个表现最突出的一个。
大家好!今天,我站在这里,深感荣幸与激动。
在此,我要向大家发表一篇关于爱国的演讲。
爱国,是中华民族的传统美德,是每个公民应尽的责任和义务。
在这个伟大时代,我们更应该弘扬爱国主义精神,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦而努力奋斗。
一、爱国之心,源于血脉自古以来,中华民族就是一个热爱祖国的民族。
我们的祖先,用自己的智慧和勇气,在这片土地上创造了灿烂的文明。
从炎黄子孙到华夏儿女,我们始终把祖国视为生命,把爱国之情深植于血脉之中。
回顾历史,我们可以看到无数爱国志士的英勇事迹。
从屈原投江自尽,表达对国家的忠诚;到岳飞精忠报国,誓死捍卫国家尊严;再到林则徐虎门销烟,坚决抵制外敌入侵。
这些英雄人物,用自己的行动诠释了爱国主义的真谛。
二、爱国之情,源于民族精神中华民族拥有悠久的历史和灿烂的文化,这是我们民族的骄傲。
在漫长的历史进程中,中华民族形成了独特的民族精神,其中最为核心的就是爱国主义。
爱国主义是中华民族精神的重要组成部分。
它激励着我们不断奋发向前,为祖国的繁荣富强而努力拼搏。
在中华民族的精神谱系中,爱国主义是永恒的主题。
三、爱国之行,源于实际行动爱国主义不仅仅是口头上的表达,更需要我们用实际行动去践行。
在新时代,我们要把爱国之情转化为报国之行,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦而努力奋斗。
1. 坚定理想信念。
我们要始终坚定中国特色社会主义道路自信、理论自信、制度自信、文化自信,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦而努力奋斗。
2. 弘扬民族精神。
我们要传承和发扬中华民族优秀传统文化,弘扬民族精神,增强民族凝聚力,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦提供强大的精神动力。
3. 勇于担当责任。
我们要关心国家大事,积极参与国家建设,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦贡献自己的力量。
4. 发扬奋斗精神。
我们要勇于创新,敢于拼搏,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦而努力奋斗。
四、爱国之路,源于团结奋斗实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦,需要全体中华儿女的共同努力。
标题英国首相布莱尔的演讲(1)Being Prime Minister is a difficult job but nothing's more difficult than being a parent.And there are fewer bigger worries when you are a parent than drugs. No matter how hard you try to bring your children up well, no matter how sensible and decent they are, we all of us worry.What if they fall in with wrong crowd? What if my kids get offered ecstasy at a party or a club? What if someone even offers them drugs at school?Heroin. Ecstasy. Crack. Cocaine.Lethal drugs with lethal consequences. Hard drugs that lead to addiction. Often after starting from so called softer drugs. These drugs ruin lives. They replace hope with despair, they tear families apart. They shatter communities.And they fuel, of course, we all know that, so much of our crime. It is estimated that at least half of all the property crime in this countryis linked in some way to drugs.And it isn't just inner-city housing estates which are prey to drugs.There's not a community, from here in the centre of London to the most remote parts of our countryside, which is free from it. Not a parent - rich or poor - that doesn't worry. Not a family that is immune to the threat.So not just as a Prime Minister, as a parent too, we want to support hard working families and make sure that we engage in a real battle to combat the scourge of drugs in our society.We all know there's no single, simple solution. What's needed is a raft of co-ordinated measures to tackle this modern menace.Choking off the supply of drugs. Catching and punishing drug dealers. Breaking the link between drugs and crime. Treating properly those hooked on drugs. Educating our children about the dangers.Giving families every possible support.New laws are the crucial first step.We're taking new powers to test criminals for drugs.Mandatory testing of all prisoners.New powers to ensure convicted drug offenders are referred for treatment.New seven year minimum sentences for drug dealers.But we have to do more. Because no matter how effectively the police, or courts or customs operate, they can't win this war on their own. We've all got to play our part.That's what's behind the successful Metropolitan Police Rat on a Rat phone-line here in London and the other Crime Stoppers campaigns that are engaging members of the public in this battle too.Just to give you a couple of examples, in one case a grandmother got suspicious about the people next door. From her call to the confidential number, the police were able to bust a。
布莱尔的北大演讲推荐文章比尔盖茨的北大演讲热度:国旗下讲话的国庆节演讲稿15篇热度: 2022国庆节演讲稿最新热度:国庆节爱国国旗下演讲稿范文热度: 2022国庆节学生演讲稿7篇热度:教育是国家给予人民的最好的礼物。
接下来由店铺为大家推荐布莱尔的北大演讲,希望对你有所帮助!布莱尔在演讲中主张,要从传统的经典中学习一些理念,借鉴一些智慧,“这教导我们不要流于自大,教导我们认识我们的信仰和文化的传承。
”他说信仰不是静态的,而是在不断地发展演变中的,对过去的学习和认识会指导我们的未来。
布莱尔借用孔子的“己所不欲勿施于人”来说明,信仰更多的是让人们相互友爱与合作。
他借用“爱邻如己”和“推人及己”来解释说,宗教的本质是表现出的悲天悯人的情怀和勇气,是缔造价值观,而不是引发意识形态的斗争。
他说,上世纪世界上经历了强烈的意识形态斗争,21世纪不会重蹈覆辙。
布莱尔认为,让宗教走出神学与社会融合是发挥宗教应有作用的关键,“只有这样才能让不同信仰的人实现合作”,“有正确的价值观和精神力量去驱动,才能推动实现世界和平与共同繁荣”。
布莱尔想起自己小时候在英国东部小城长大,还记得第一次看到和他不同肤色人时的那种惊诧;现在他十岁的孩子已经开始学中文,在游乐场中和周围信仰印度教、伊斯兰教、____的孩子一块玩耍,他对这一切都习以为常。
由此可见,在全球化的趋势中,人们变得更开放、团结。
“人们常常因为一无所知而心生恐惧,又因为自以为是而固步自封,所以人会变得无知。
” 布莱尔表示,以他的名字命名的托尼·布莱尔信仰基金会此番与北大合作,将推动相关学术研究,今后还要将中东和亚洲的更多大学纳入进来。
您此刻正在无忧演讲稿阅读文章《英国前首相布莱尔北大演讲:跨信仰和谐是全球化和谐的关键。
大家好!今天,我站在这里,非常荣幸能够与大家共同探讨一个至关重要的议题——教育。
我相信,教育是国家繁荣、民族复兴的基石,也是我们每个人实现梦想的阶梯。
在此,我想以“教育的力量”为题,与大家分享我的观点和思考。
首先,我想谈谈教育的力量。
教育不仅仅是知识的传授,更是一种价值观的塑造,一种人格的培育。
它可以激发我们的潜能,引导我们走向正确的道路。
以下是我对教育力量的几点理解:一、教育培养人才,助力国家发展一个国家的发展离不开人才的支持。
而人才的培养,离不开教育。
教育是国家富强、民族振兴的基石。
我国自古以来就有“教育兴邦”的说法,强调教育对于国家发展的重要性。
在新时代,我们要继续深化教育改革,提高教育质量,培养更多优秀人才,为国家的发展注入源源不断的活力。
二、教育塑造人格,引领人生方向教育不仅仅是知识的积累,更是人格的塑造。
教育可以教会我们如何做人,如何处理人际关系,如何面对人生的挑战。
一个拥有健全人格的人,才能在人生的道路上坚定前行。
教育让我们懂得尊重他人,关爱社会,成为对社会有用的人。
三、教育激发潜能,助力个人成长每个人都有自己的潜能,而教育就是发掘和激发这些潜能的钥匙。
通过教育,我们可以了解自己的兴趣和特长,找到适合自己的发展方向。
教育让我们在知识、技能、思维等方面得到全面提升,助力个人成长。
四、教育促进公平,实现社会和谐教育公平是社会公平的重要体现。
一个公平的教育体系,可以让每个孩子都有机会接受教育,实现自己的人生价值。
在我国,政府高度重视教育公平,努力缩小城乡、区域、校际之间的差距。
通过教育,我们可以消除歧视,实现社会和谐。
那么,如何发挥教育的力量呢?一、加强教育改革,提高教育质量我们要不断深化教育改革,优化教育资源配置,提高教育质量。
加强师资队伍建设,提高教师待遇,激发教师的工作热情。
同时,要关注学生的个性发展,实施素质教育,培养学生的创新精神和实践能力。
二、关注教育公平,促进教育均衡发展我们要加大对教育投入,特别是对农村、贫困地区教育的扶持力度。
大家好!今天,我站在这里,非常荣幸能够与大家分享一些关于梦想与奋斗的心得。
我想以“梦想照亮未来,奋斗成就梦想”为题,与大家共勉。
首先,让我们谈谈梦想。
梦想,是人生的指南针,是心灵的灯塔。
它犹如一颗璀璨的明珠,照亮我们前行的道路。
每个人心中都有一份梦想,这份梦想或许微小,或许宏伟,但都是我们前进的动力。
在座的各位,也许正怀揣着不同的梦想。
有人梦想成为一名科学家,为国家的科技进步贡献力量;有人梦想成为一名医生,救死扶伤,悬壶济世;还有人梦想成为一名教师,传播知识,培育下一代。
这些梦想,都是我们心中最美好的期盼。
然而,梦想的实现并非一蹴而就。
正如古人所说:“天下无难事,只怕有心人。
”要实现梦想,就必须付出艰辛的努力。
这就需要我们拥有坚定的信念、顽强的毅力和不懈的奋斗。
首先,我们要坚定信念。
信念是人生的支柱,是奋斗的动力。
面对困难和挫折,我们要坚信“长风破浪会有时,直挂云帆济沧海”。
只有坚定信念,我们才能在风雨中勇往直前,无惧挑战。
其次,我们要拥有顽强的毅力。
毅力是成功的基石,是战胜一切困难的法宝。
在实现梦想的道路上,我们会遇到各种各样的困难和阻碍。
这时,我们要学会坚持,不畏艰难,勇往直前。
最后,我们要不懈奋斗。
奋斗是梦想的翅膀,是成功的阶梯。
只有不懈奋斗,我们才能不断超越自我,实现梦想。
在这里,我想给大家分享一个故事。
曾经,有一位名叫爱迪生的年轻人,他有一个伟大的梦想——发明电灯。
为了实现这个梦想,他付出了常人难以想象的努力。
经过上千次实验,他终于发明了电灯,为世界带来了光明。
爱迪生的故事告诉我们,只要我们拥有梦想,并为之不懈奋斗,就一定能够实现梦想。
同学们,让我们携手共进,为实现自己的梦想而努力拼搏。
在未来的道路上,让我们用信念、毅力和奋斗书写属于自己的精彩篇章!最后,祝愿在座的每一位同学都能拥有美好的未来,实现自己的梦想!谢谢。
How well our children do at school is vital, of course, to the youngsters themselve s and their families.
A good start at school, a good education, makes a huge difference to children's ch ances in later life.
But the quality of education our children receive also matters to the country as a whole - because our future economic success and prosperity depends on it.
In this new century, more than ever before, the raw material that counts is the tale nt and skills of our people.
So to succeed, we need to make sure that everyone gets the chance to make the most of that potential.
It's for these reasons that we made education our number one priority. And we ha ve backed that pledge with record and sustained investment.
It is investment which can only be afforded now and in future years because of th e tough decisions taken to bring long-term stability to our economy.
The importance of education to our children and our country is why I was so pleas ed this week to hear of the steady progress taking place in our secondary schools.
The latest performance tables highlight the continued and welcome improvements in overall standards.
It's particularly good news that we have seen better than average improvements in secondary schools in some of our inner-city areas.
Many inner city schools now have programmes for bright children, extra staff to co pe with those with problems and more backing to improve discipline.
And they show how the policies that David Blunkett has targeted at those communi ties with some of the greatest problems, are paying off.
But while I'm pleased that Government policies are playing their part in these impr ovements, the real hard work has been done by the pupils, parents and, of course, teachers.
It's the thousands of dedicated teachers, day in day out in classrooms up and dow n the country, who are making the difference.
And these results show just what can be achieved by committed teachers and their pupils, supported by effective national strategies and investment.
The results also build on the dramatic improvements we have already seen in our primary schools.
Here the introduction of the numeracy and literacy hours have helped teachers ens ure their pupils have a better grip on the basics.
So successful have these dedicated lessons proved - and so popular have they pr oved with teachers - that we are now extending them to the early years in second ary schools.
They will particularly help those children who leave primary school without reaching the standards in reading, writing and maths expected for their age.
£82 million more has been allocated by David Blunkett, whose leadership has play ed such a vital role in improving standards, to give secondary teachers the support and the tools they need to adapt the literacy and numeracy strategies for their pu pils.
Our secondary schools then can improve just like our primary schools. So, pupils, parents and teachers have real reason for pride.
But there's no room for complacency. We need to keep improving standards.
We need to keep working so that the standards in our best comprehensive schools - like Thomas Telford School in Shropshire where every pupil achieved five or mo re A* to C grades in their GCSE exams last year - become the norm.
We've already greatly expanded specialist schools like this. Within four years, nearl y 30 per cent of all secondaries will have a specialism in technology, languages, a rts and sports.
We need to keep working so that the progress witnessed in these schools - whose results are improving at 50 per cent more than the average level - then help driv e up standards across all secondaries.
Pupils can't bring about these improvements on their own. Nor can teachers, paren ts or the Government.
It needs us all to continue working together to deliver the results we want. It's imp ortant we succeed - for the future of our children and for our country.。