President Lyndon B. Johnson's
Annual Message to the Congress on the State of the Union
January 4, 1965
[ As delivered in person before a joint session at
9:04 p.m. ]
Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, Members of the Congress, my
fellow Americans:
On this Hill which was my home, I am stirred by old friendships.
Though total agreement between the Executive and the Congress
is impossible, total respect is important.
I am proud to be among my colleagues of the Congress whose
legacy to their trust is their loyalty to their Nation.
I am not unaware of the inner emotions of the new Members of
this body tonight.
Twenty-eight years ago, I felt as you do now. You will soon
learn that you are among men whose first love is their country,
men who try each day to do as best they can what they believe
is right.
We are entering the third century of the pursuit of American
union.
Two hundred years ago, in 1765, nine assembled colonies first
joined together to demand freedom from arbitrary power.
For the first century we struggled to hold together the first
continental union of democracy in the history of man. One hundred
years ago, in 1865, following a terrible test of blood and fire,
the compact of union was finally sealed.
For a second century we labored to establish a unity of purpose
and interest among the many groups which make up the American
community.
That struggle has often brought pain and violence. It is not
yet over. But we have achieved a unity of interest among our people
that is unmatched in the history of freedom.
And so tonight, now, in 1965, we begin a new quest for union.
We seek the unity of man with the world that he has built--with
the knowledge that can save or destroy him--with the cities which
can stimulate or stifle him--with the wealth and the machines
which can enrich or menace his spirit.
We seek to establish a harmony between man and society which
will allow each of us to enlarge the meaning of his life and all
of us to elevate the quality of our civilization.
This is the search that we begin tonight.
STATE OF THE WORLD
But the unity we seek cannot realize its full promise in isolation.
For today the state of the Union depends, in large measure, upon
the state of the world.
Our concern and interest, compassion and vigilance, extend
to every corner of a dwindling planet.
Yet, it is not merely our concern but the concern of all free
men. We will not, and we should not, assume that it is the task
of Americans alone to settle all the conflicts of a torn and troubled
world.
Let the foes of freedom take no comfort from this. For in concert
with other nations, we shall help men defend their freedom.
Our first aim remains the safety and the well-being of our
own country.
We are prepared to live as good neighbors with all, but we
cannot be indifferent to acts designed to injure our interests,
or our citizens, or our establishments abroad. The community of
nations requires mutual respect. We shall extend it--and we shall
expect it.
In our relations with the world we shall follow the example
of Andrew Jackson who said: "I intend to ask for nothing
that is not clearly right and to submit to nothing that is wrong."
And he promised, that "the honor of my country shall never
be stained by an apology from me for the statement of truth or
for the performance of duty." That was this Nation's policy
in the 1830's and that is this Nation's policy in the 1960's.
Our own freedom and growth have never been the final goal of
the American dream.
We were never meant to be an oasis of liberty and abundance
in a worldwide desert of disappointed dreams. Our Nation was created
to help strike away the chains of ignorance and misery and tyranny
wherever they keep man less than God means him to be.
We are moving toward that destiny, never more rapidly than
we have moved in the last 4 years.
In this period we have built a military power strong enough
to meet any threat and destroy any adversary. And that superiority
will continue to grow so long as this office is mine--and you
sit on Capitol Hill.
In this period no new nation has become Communist, and the
unity of the Communist empire has begun to crumble.
In this period we have resolved in friendship our disputes
with our neighbors of the hemisphere, and joined in an Alliance
for Progress toward economic growth and political democracy.
In this period we have taken more steps toward peace--including
the test ban treaty--than at any time since the cold war began.
In this period we have relentlessly pursued our advances toward
the conquest of space.
Most important of all, in this period, the United States has
reemerged into the fullness of its self-confidence and purpose.
No longer are we called upon to get America moving. We are moving.
No longer do we doubt our strength or resolution. We are strong
and we have proven our resolve.
No longer can anyone wonder whether we are in the grip of historical
decay. We know that history is ours to make. And if there is great
danger, there is now also the excitement of great expectations.
AMERICA AND THE COMMUNIST NATIONS
Yet we still live in a troubled and perilous world. There is
no longer a single threat. There are many. They differ in intensity
and in danger. They require different attitudes and different
answers.
With the Soviet Union we seek peaceful understandings that
can lessen the danger to freedom.
Last fall I asked the American people to choose that course.
I will carry forward their command.
If we are to live together in peace, we must come to know each
other better.
I am sure that the American people would welcome a chance to
listen to the Soviet leaders on our television--as I would like
the Soviet people to hear our leaders on theirs.
I hope the new Soviet leaders can visit America so they can
learn about our country at firsthand.
In Eastern Europe restless nations are slowly beginning to
assert their identity. Your Government, assisted by the leaders
in American labor and business, is now exploring ways to increase
peaceful trade with these countries and with the Soviet Union.
I will report our conclusions to the Congress.
In Asia, communism wears a more aggressive face.
We see that in Viet-Nam.
Why are we there?
We are there, first, because a friendly nation has asked us
for help against the Communist aggression. Ten years ago our President
pledged our help. Three Presidents have supported that pledge.
We will not break it now.
Second, our own security is tied to the peace of Asia. Twice
in one generation we have had to fight against aggression in the
Far East. To ignore aggression now would only increase the danger
of a much larger war.
Our goal is peace in southeast Asia. That will come only when
aggressors leave their neighbors in peace.
What is at stake is the cause of freedom and in that cause
America will never be found wanting.
THE NON-COMMUNIST WORLD
But communism is not the only source of trouble and unrest.
There are older and deeper sources--in the misery of nations and
in man's irrepressible ambition for liberty and a better life.
With the free Republics of Latin America I have always felt--and
my country has always felt--very special ties of interest and
affection. It will be the purpose of my administration to strengthen
these ties. Together we share and shape the destiny of the new
world. In the coming year I hope to pay a visit to Latin America.
And I will steadily enlarge our commitment to the Alliance for
Progress as the instrument of our war against poverty and injustice
in this hemisphere.
In the Atlantic community we continue to pursue our goal of
20 years--a Europe that is growing in strength, unity, and cooperation
with America. A great unfinished task is the reunification of
Germany through self-determination.
This European policy is not based on any abstract design. It
is based on the realities of common interests and common values,
common dangers and common expectations. These realities will continue
to have their way--especially, I think, in our expanding trade
and especially in our common defense.
Free Americans have shaped the policies of the United States.
And because we know these realities, those policies have been,
and will be, in the interest of Europe.
Free Europeans must shape the course of Europe. And, for the
same reasons, that course has been, and will be, in our interest
and in the interest of freedom.
I found this truth confirmed in my talks with European leaders
in the last year. I hope to repay these visits to some of our
friends in Europe this year.
In Africa and Asia we are witnessing the turbulent unfolding
of new nations and continents.
We welcome them to the society of nations.
We are committed to help those seeking to strengthen their
own independence, and to work most closely with those governments
dedicated to the welfare of all of their people.
We seek not fidelity to an iron faith, but a diversity of belief
as varied as man himself. We seek not to extend the power of America
but the progress of humanity. We seek not to dominate others but
to strengthen the freedom of all people.
I will seek new ways to use our knowledge to help deal with
the explosion in world population and the growing scarcity in
world resources.
Finally, we renew our commitment to the continued growth and
the effectiveness of the United Nations. The frustrations of the
United Nations are a product of the world that we live in, and
not of the institution which gives them voice. It is far better
to throw these differences open to the assembly of nations than
to permit them to fester in silent danger.
These are some of the goals of the American Nation in the world
in which we live.
For ourselves we seek neither praise nor blame, neither gratitude
nor obedience.
We seek peace.
We seek freedom.
We seek to enrich the life of man.
For that is the world in which we will flourish and that is
the world that we mean for all men to ultimately have.
TOWARD THE GREAT SOCIETY
World affairs will continue to call upon our energy and our
courage.
But today we can turn increased attention to the character
of American life.
We are in the midst of the greatest upward surge of economic
well-being in the history of any nation.
Our flourishing progress has been marked by price stability
that is unequalled in the world. Our balance of payments deficit
has declined and the soundness of our dollar is unquestioned.
I pledge to keep it that way and I urge business and labor to
cooperate to that end.
We worked for two centuries to climb this peak of prosperity.
But we are only at the beginning of the road to the Great Society.
Ahead now is a summit where freedom from the wants of the body
can help fulfill the needs of the spirit.
We built this Nation to serve its people.
We want to grow and build and create, but we want progress
to be the servant and not the master of man.
We do not intend to live in the midst of abundance, isolated
from neighbors and nature, confined by blighted cities and bleak
suburbs, stunted by a poverty of learning and an emptiness of
leisure.
The Great Society asks not how much, but how good; not only
how to create wealth but how to use it; not only how fast we are
going, but where we are headed.
It proposes as the first test for a nation: the quality of
its people.
This kind of society will not flower spontaneously from swelling
riches and surging power.
It will not be the gift of government or the creation of presidents.
It will require of every American, for many generations, both
faith in the destination and the fortitude to make the journey.
And like freedom itself, it will always be challenge and not
fulfillment.
And tonight we accept that challenge.
A NATIONAL AGENDA
I propose that we begin a program in education to ensure every
American child the fullest development of his mind and skills.
I propose that we begin a massive attack on crippling and killing
diseases.
I propose that we launch a national effort to make the American
city a better and a more stimulating place to live.
I propose that we increase the beauty of America and end the
poisoning of our rivers and the air that we breathe.
I propose that we carry out a new program to develop regions
of our country that are now suffering from distress and depression.
I propose that we make new efforts to control and prevent crime
and delinquency.
I propose that we eliminate every remaining obstacle to the
right and the opportunity to vote.
I propose that we honor and support the achievements of thought
and the creations of art.
I propose that we make an all-out campaign against waste and
inefficiency.
THE TASK
Our basic task is threefold:
First, to keep our economy growing;
--to open for all Americans the opportunity that is now enjoyed
by most Americans;
--and to improve the quality of life for all.
In the next 6 weeks I will submit special messages with detailed
proposals for national action in each of these areas.
Tonight I would like just briefly to explain some of my major
recommendations in the three main areas of national need.
IV. A GROWING ECONOMY
BASIC POLICIES
First, we must keep our Nation prosperous. We seek full employment
opportunity for every American citizen. I will present a budget
designed to move the economy forward. More money will be left
in the hands of the consumer by a substantial cut in excise taxes.
We will continue along the path toward a balanced budget in a
balanced economy.
I confidently predict--what every economic sign tells us tonight--the
continued flourishing of the American economy.
But we must remember that fear of a recession can contribute
to the fact of a recession. The knowledge that our Government
will, and can, move swiftly will strengthen the confidence of
investors and business.
Congress can reinforce this confidence by insuring that its
procedures permit rapid action on temporary income tax cuts. And
special funds for job-creating public programs should be made
available for immediate use if recession threatens.
Our continued prosperity demands continued price stability.
Business, labor, and the consumer all have a high stake in keeping
wages and prices within the framework of the guideposts that have
already served the Nation so well.
Finding new markets abroad for our goods depends on the initiative
of American business. But we stand ready--with credit and other
help--to assist the flow of trade which will benefit the entire
Nation.
ON THE FARMS
Our economy owes much to the efficiency of our farmers. We
must continue to assure them the opportunity to earn a fair reward.
I have instructed the Secretary of Agriculture to lead a major
effort to find new approaches to reduce the heavy cost of our
farm programs and to direct more of our effort to the small farmer
who needs the help the most.
INCREASED PROSPERITY
We can help insure continued prosperity through:
--a regional recovery program to assist the development of
stricken areas left behind by our national progress;
--further efforts to provide our workers with the skills demanded
by modern technology, for the laboring-man is an indispensable
force in the American system;
--the extension of the minimum wage to more than 2 million
unprotected workers;
--the improvement and the modernization of the unemployment
compensation system.
And as pledged in our 1960 and 1964 Democratic platforms, I
will propose to Congress changes in the Taft-Hartley Act including
section 14(b). I will do so hoping to reduce the conflicts that
for several years have divided Americans in various States of
our Union.
In a country that spans a continent modern transportation is
vital to continued growth.
TRANSPORTATION FOR GROWTH
I will recommend heavier reliance on competition in transportation
and a new policy for our merchant marine.
I will ask for funds to study high-speed rail transportation
between urban centers. We will begin with test projects between
Washington and Boston. On high-speed trains, passengers could
travel this distance in less than 4 hours.
II. OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL
Second, we must open opportunity to all our people.
Most Americans enjoy a good life. But far too many are still
trapped in poverty and idleness and fear.
Let a just nation throw open to them the city of promise:
--to the elderly, by providing hospital care under social security
and by raising benefit payments to those struggling to maintain
the dignity of their later years;
--to the poor and the unfortunate, through doubling the war
against poverty this year;
--to Negro Americans, through enforcement of the civil rights
law and elimination of barriers to the right to vote;
--to those in other lands that are seeking the promise of America,
through an immigration law based on the work a man can do and
not where he was born or how he spells his name.
III. TO ENRICH THE LIFE OF ALL
Our third goal is to improve the quality of American life.
THROUGH EDUCATION
We begin with learning.
Every child must have the best education that this Nation can
provide.
Thomas Jefferson said that no nation can be both ignorant and
free. Today no nation can be both ignorant and great.
In addition to our existing programs, I will recommend a new
program for schools and students with a first year authorization
of $1,500 million.
It will help at every stage along the road to learning.
For the preschool years we will help needy children become
aware of the excitement of learning.
For the primary and secondary school years we will aid public
schools serving low-income families and assist students in both
public and private schools.
For the college years we will provide scholarships to high
school students of the greatest promise and the greatest need
and we will guarantee low-interest loans to students continuing
their college studies.
New laboratories and centers will help our schools--help them
lift their standards of excellence and explore new methods of
teaching. These centers will provide special training for those
who need and those who deserve special treatment.
THROUGH BETTER HEALTH
Greatness requires not only an educated people but a healthy
people.
Our goal is to match the achievements of our medicine to the
afflictions of our people.
We already carry on a large program in this country. for research
and health.
In addition, regional medical centers can provide the most
advanced diagnosis and treatment for heart disease and cancer
and stroke and other major diseases.
New support for medical and dental education will provide the
trained people to apply our knowledge.
Community centers can help the mentally ill and improve health
care for school-age children from poor families, including services
for the mentally retarded.
THROUGH IMPROVING THE WORLD WE LIVE IN
The City
An educated and healthy people require surroundings in harmony
with their hopes.
In our urban areas the central problem today is to protect
and restore man's satisfaction in belonging to a community where
he can find security and significance.
The first step is to break old patterns--to begin to think
and work and plan for the development of the entire metropolitan
areas. We will take this step with new programs of help for the
basic community facilities and for neighborhood centers of health
and recreation.
New and existing programs will be open to those cities which
work together to develop unified long-range policies for metropolitan
areas.
We must also make some very important changes in our housing
programs if we are to pursue these same basic goals.
So a Department of Housing and Urban Development will be needed
to spearhead this effort in our cities.
Every citizen has the right to feel secure in his home and
on the streets of his community.
To help control crime, we will recommend programs:
--to train local law enforcement officers;
--to put the best techniques of modern science at their disposal;
--to discover the causes of crime and better ways to prevent
it.
I will soon assemble a panel of outstanding experts of this
Nation to search out answers to the national problem of crime
and delinquency, and I welcome the recommendations and the constructive
efforts of the Congress.
The Beauty of America
For over three centuries the beauty of America has sustained
our spirit and has enlarged our vision. We must act now to protect
this heritage. In a fruitful new partnership with the States and
the cities the next decade should be a conservation milestone.
We must make a massive effort to save the countryside and to establish--as
a green legacy for tomorrow--more large and small parks, more
seashores and open spaces than have been created during any other
period in our national history.
A new and substantial effort must be made to landscape highways
to provide places of relaxation and recreation wherever our roads
run,
Within our cities imaginative programs are needed to landscape
streets and to transform open areas into places of beauty and
recreation.
We will seek legal power to prevent pollution of our air and
water before it happens. We will step up our effort to control
harmful wastes, giving first priority to the cleanup of our most
contaminated rivers. We will increase research to learn much more
about the control of pollution.
We hope to make the Potomac a model of beauty here in the Capital,
and preserve unspoiled stretches of some of our waterways with
a Wild Rivers bill.
More ideas for a beautiful America will emerge from a White
House Conference on Natural Beauty which I will soon call.
Art and Science
We must also recognize and encourage those who can be pathfinders
for the Nation's imagination and understanding.
To help promote and honor creative achievements, I will propose
a National Foundation on the Arts.
To develop knowledge which will enrich our lives and ensure
our progress, I will recommend programs to encourage basic science,
particularly in the universities--and to bring closer the day
when the oceans will supply our growing need for fresh water.
IV. THE GOVERNMENT
For government to serve these goals it must be modern in structure,
efficient in action, and ready for any emergency.
I am busy, currently, reviewing the structure of the entire
executive branch of this Government. I hope to reshape it and
to reorganize it to meet more effectively the tasks of the 20th
century.
Wherever waste is found, I will eliminate it.
Last year we saved almost $3,500 million by eliminating waste
in the National Government.
And I intend to do better this year.
And very soon I will report to you on our progress and on new
economies that your Government plans to make.
Even the best of government is subject to the worst of hazards.
I will propose laws to insure the necessary continuity of leadership
should the President become disabled or die.
In addition, I will propose reforms in the electoral college--leaving
undisturbed the vote by States--but making sure that no elector
can substitute his will for that of the people.
Last year, in a sad moment, I came here and I spoke to you
after 33 years of public service, practically all of them here
on this Hill.
This year I speak after 1 year as President of the United States.
Many of you in this Chamber are among my oldest friends. We
have shared many happy moments and many hours of work, and we
have watched many Presidents together. Yet, only in the White
House can you finally know the full weight of this Office.
The greatest burden is not running the huge operations of government--or
meeting daily troubles, large and small--or even working with
the Congress.
A President's hardest task is not to do what is right, but
to know what is right.
Yet the Presidency brings no special gift of prophecy or foresight.
You take an oath, you step into an office, and you must then help
guide a great democracy.
The answer was waiting for me in the land where I was born.
It was once barren land. The angular hills were covered with
scrub cedar and a few large live oaks. Little would grow in that
harsh caliche soil of my country. And each spring the Pedernales
River would flood our valley.
But men came and they worked and they endured and they built.
And tonight that country is abundant; abundant with fruit and
cattle and goats and sheep, and there are pleasant homes and lakes
and the floods are gone.
Why did men come to that once forbidding land?
Well, they were restless, of course, and they had to be moving
on. But there was more than that. There was a dream--a dream of
a place where a free man could build for himself, and raise his
children to a better life--a dream of a continent to be conquered,
a world to be won, a nation to be made.
Remembering this, I knew the answer.
A President does not shape a new and personal vision of America.
He collects it from the scattered hopes of the American past.
It existed when the first settlers saw the coast of a new world,
and when the first pioneers moved westward.
It has guided us every step of the way.
It sustains every President. But it is also your inheritance
and it belongs equally to all the people that we all serve.
It must be interpreted anew by each generation for its own
needs; as I have tried, in part, to do tonight.
It shall lead us as we enter the third century of the search
for "a more perfect union."
This, then, is the state of the Union: Free and restless, growing
and full of hope.
So it was in the beginning.
So it shall always be, while God is willing, and we are strong
enough to keep the faith.
Source: Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States:
Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965. Volume I, entry 2, pp. 1-9. Washington, D. C.:
Government Printing Office, 1966.
Last Updated
June 6, 2007
|