1960 State of the Union Address
The 1960 State of the Union Address was given on Thursday, January 7, 1960, by Dwight D. Eisenhower, the 34th President of the United States, to a joint session of the 86th United States Congress. He said, "We must strive to break the calamitous cycle of frustrations and crises which, if unchecked, could spiral into nuclear disaster; the ultimate insanity." It was the height of the Cold War, and both the Soviet Union and the United States had a responsibility to the world.
Key statements
- On my recent visit to distant lands I found one statesman after another eager to tell me of the elements of their government that had been borrowed from our American Constitution, and from the indestructible ideals set forth in our Declaration of Independence.
So dedicated, and with faith in the Almighty, humanity shall one day achieve the unity in freedom to which all men have aspired from the dawn of time.[1]
gollark: I should make PotatOS allocate a billion-element table on every computer on April Fools' day.
gollark: CC will kill your computer after 5 seconds not yielding, too.
gollark: I mean, if you need ordering, use ipairs, sure.
gollark: Changing how you iterate over tables is premature optimization in most cases.
gollark: Bees *will* be deployed.
References
- 1960 State of the Union Address (video) at C-SPAN
Preceded by 1959 State of the Union Address |
State of the Union addresses 1960 |
Succeeded by 1961 State of the Union Address |
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