Chicago Sun-Times

AN INSPIRED NEW CALL FOR THE NEXT GENERATION

Kennedy stirred a generation to care at least a little more, and it would be terrific if we can look back and say Obama did the same.

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On Jan. 20, 1961, President John F. Kennedy, in his inaugural address, threw out a challenge to a generation of young Americans: “Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country.”

Sevenmonth­s later, on Aug. 4, 1961, Barack Obama was born, and he grew up with that call to action. Kennedy’s words were in the air, including in Hawaii and Kansas and Chicago. They were taught in school. They helped to fuel civil rights marches and anti- war parades. They inspired millions of young Americans, including a future president, to rise above narrow self interest.

On Tuesday, President Obama paid Kennedy’s gift forward. In a speech in Chicago, the president called another generation of Americans to public service, and he called on every citizen to recommit to the American ideal.

“Our Constituti­on is a remarkable, beautiful gift, but it is really just a piece of parchment; it has no power on its own. We the people give it power,” Obama said. “When something needs fixing, then mess up your shoes and do some organizing. . . . Grab a clipboard, get some signatures and run for office yourself.”

Kennedy, whatever else history has had to say about him, stirred a generation to care a little more, and it will be terrific if we can look back one day and say Obama did the same, for all else that history might have to say about him. Our hard- biting times could stand more of that.

Thatwas the flip side of Obama’s speech, that we live in perilous times — not because of foreign terrorists, but because of deep social and economic divisions.

The Founding Fathers, he said, understood that a successful democracy “does require a basic sense of solidarity, the idea that for all our outward difference­s, we are all in this together, that we rise or fall as one.”

But that sense of solidarity, the notion that we are all equally Americans, he said, is threatened by the increasing coarseness of our politics, by a splintered media thatmakes it easy to avoid having our assumption­s challenged, by a rejection of science and reason and by an unwillingn­ess to concede that an opponent might, shockingly, be making a fair point.

“Ask not what your country can do for you,” Kennedy said. “Ask what you can do for your country.” That’s oneway of saying it. “This is the great gift our Founders gave us,” Obama said. “The freedom to chase our individual dreams through our sweat, toil and imaginatio­n— and the imperative to strive together as well, to achieve a common good, a greater good.”

Not quite so catchy, but that works, too.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? President Obama delivers his farewell address at McCormick Place on Tuesday.
ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES President Obama delivers his farewell address at McCormick Place on Tuesday.

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