The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Blinken to Tech grads: Seek answers

Top U.S. diplomat extolls Georgia’s Jimmy Carter as a public servant to whom students should look.

- By Vanessa Mccray Vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

America’s top diplomat on Saturday urged Georgia Tech graduates to look to Jimmy Carter as an example of a public servant willing to take a different path.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken repeatedly referenced the former president, who studied at Georgia Tech for a year, in a keynote commenceme­nt address.

Blinken spoke admiringly of Carter’s decision as a young man to return to his tiny hometown, where he threw himself into local service and ran the family farm. Carter, 98, announced in February that he was entering home hospice care, surrounded by loved ones in Plains.

“Jimmy found something different in Plains, something that he’d been missing for years, that he hadn’t been able to put his finger on — a sense of community,” Blinken said. “I’m confident that as you reflect back on how you made it to this day, behind everything you’ve done and everything you’re proud of, there is a ‘we.’”

Blinken’s speech, in front of several thousand at Bobby Dodd Stadium, capped off a two-day visit to Atlanta. On Friday, he toured the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention alongside Dr. Rochelle Walensky, who announced she would be stepping down as the agency’s director next month.

On Saturday, Blinken met with Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens as well as leaders of Atlanta’s historical­ly Black colleges, including Clark Atlanta University and Morehouse and Spelman colleges. He said the group discussed ways the State Department can support efforts to give college students more opportunit­ies for internatio­nal travel and engagement.

“I think they see what we are living every day, which is a world that is evermore interconne­cted. And for their students to go out and succeed and thrive, having that kind of internatio­nal experience can make a big difference,” he said in an interview with The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

Blinken also said he wants to recruit more people from diverse background­s to careers in public service.

“The connection­s that we have with HBCUS, with minority-serving institutio­ns, are absolutely vital to our own future because we’re trying among other things to make sure that we have a department that actually reflects the country it represents,” he told the AJC. “We want to make sure that we have the diversity of viewpoints, experience­s, knowledge to bring to bear against really hard challenges that we’re dealing for with every single day.”

The State Department plans to organize a training program in Atlanta for advisers at HBCUS and other schools to grow participat­ion in the Fulbright Program, through which students can study abroad.

Georgia Tech President Ángel Cabrera acknowledg­ed the importance of that program in his own life. Cabrera, a native of Spain, told the commenceme­nt crowd that he came to Georgia Tech as a graduate student and Fulbright Scholar.

Blinken advised graduates who might be anxious about their future to “get comfortabl­e with not having answers.”

“The search for them will lead you to your most important discoverie­s,” he said.

The subjects that graduates have studied, such as artificial intelligen­ce and biotechnol­ogy, are already having a “profound” impact on lives, he said.

”Whether technology makes our societies more or less equitable, whether it promotes or represses human rights, whether it brings us together or drives us apart, that will come down in no small part to what you do,” he said.

Nearly 5,700 Georgia Tech graduates received their bachelor’s, master’s or doctoral degrees in ceremonies Friday and Saturday.

Saturday’s ceremony was marked with cheers and school pride. Parents brought bouquets of flowers. Graduates filed one by one across the stage, buoyed by inspiring words.

“We are innovators, problem solvers, leaders and competitor­s but most of all we are fighters,” said Zharia Redhead, addressing her fellow members of the Class of 2023.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM ?? Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken joins Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens outside the Refuge Coffee Co. in Atlanta on Saturday before the Georgia Tech commenceme­nt.
STEVE SCHAEFER / STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken joins Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens outside the Refuge Coffee Co. in Atlanta on Saturday before the Georgia Tech commenceme­nt.

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