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The President:
Well, it is wonderful to see all of you here today,
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to be with all of you.
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I want to make some special
acknowledgements.
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We've got some legislators here
who have been fighting on behalf
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of the disabilities community
for a very long time.
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We're so proud of the
legislation I'm signing today,
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as well as legislation we signed
earlier this week.
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So I want to acknowledge all of
them.
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First of all, responsible in
large part for guiding this
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process through in the Senate -- Senator Mark Pryor of Arkansas.
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Representative Ed Markey,
Democrat from Massachusetts.
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We also have here Senator Jay
Rockefeller of West Virginia.
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Senator Barbara Mikulski,
Democrat of Maryland.
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We've got Kent Conrad, as well
as Byron Dorgan --
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the Dakota boys from North
Dakota.
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(laughter)
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We've got Representative Henry
Waxman,
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who's on so many important
pieces of legislation this year,
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and we're grateful to him.
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Mr. Julius Genachowski is here,
who's the chairman of the FCC.
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Where's Julius?
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There he is right there -- a classmate of mine,
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somebody who has just been a great friend for a long time.
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And finally, we've got this guy.
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(laughter)
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Some of you may know him.
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I happened to be listening to
him this morning when I woke up.
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He's what I work out to.
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(laughter)
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He's what I sweet-talk Michelle
to.
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(laughter)
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Mr. Stevie Wonder is in the
house.
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(applause)
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I was doing a little rendition
of some of his music to him and
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he was kind enough not to laugh.
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(laughter)
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Now, earlier this year, we
celebrated the 20th anniversary
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of the Americans with
Disabilities Act right here in
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the White House.
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Many of you were here.
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And it was a moment for every
American to reflect not just on
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one of the most comprehensive
civil rights bills in our
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history, but what that bill
meant to so many people.
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It was a victory won by
countless Americans who refused
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to accept the world as it is,
and against great odds,
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waged quiet struggles and
grassroots crusades until
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finally change was won.
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The story of the disability
rights movement is enriched
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because it's intertwined with
the story of America's progress.
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Americans with disabilities are
Americans first and foremost,
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and like all Americans are
entitled not only to full
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participation in our society,
but also full opportunity in our society.
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So we've come a long way.
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But even today, after all the
progress that we've made,
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too many Americans with
disabilities are still measured
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by what folks think they can't
do,
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instead of what we know they can
do.
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The fight for progress isn't
about sympathy, by the way --
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it's about opportunity.
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And that's why all of us share a
responsibility to keep building
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on the work of those who came
before us --
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one life, one law, one step at a
time.
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So today, we're here to take two
more steps on that journey.
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First of all, on Tuesday, I
signed Rosa's Law.
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This is named for a
nine-year-old girl,
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right there -- Rosa, wave to everybody.
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(applause)
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That's some good waving there,
Rosa.
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(laughter)
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Rosa Marcellino -- it's so inspiring to have her here.
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As one of hundreds of thousands
of Americans with Down Syndrome,
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Rosa worked with her parents and
her siblings to have the words
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"mentally retarded" officially
removed from the health and
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education code in her home state
of Maryland.
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Now, Rosa's Law takes her idea a
step further.
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It amends the language in all
federal health,
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education and labor laws to
remove that same phrase and
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instead refer to Americans
living with an "intellectual disability."
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Now this may seem to some people
like a minor change,
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but I think Rosa's brother Nick
put it best -- where's Nick?
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You right there, Nick?
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You can wave, too.
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Go ahead.
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(laughter)
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But I want everybody to hear
Nick's wisdom here.
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He said, "What you call people
is how you treat them.
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If we change the words, maybe it
will be the start of a new
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attitude towards people with
disabilities."
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That's a lot of wisdom from
Nick.
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(applause)
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Nick and Rosa's parents are all
choking up because they're
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really proud of their kids, and
appropriately so.
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Now, the bill I'm signing today
into law will better ensure full
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participation in our democracy
and our economy for Americans
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with disabilities.
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The 21st Century Communications
and Video Accessibility Act will
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make it easier for people who
are deaf,
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blind or live with a visual
impairment to do what many of us
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take for granted -- from navigating a TV or DVD menu to
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sending an email on a smart phone.
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It sets new standards so that
Americans with disabilities can
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take advantage of the technology
our economy depends on.
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And that's especially important
in today's economy,
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when every worker needs the
necessary skills to compete for
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the jobs of the future.
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So together, these changes are
about guaranteeing equal access,
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equal opportunity, and equal
respect for every American.
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And they build on the progress
that we've already made as an
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administration over the last 20
months.
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Together, we put in place one of
the most important updates to
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the ADA in 20 years by
prohibiting disability-based
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discrimination by government
entities and private businesses
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and by updating accessibility
standards.
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I issued an executive order
focused on establishing the
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federal government as a model
employer of Americans with disabilities.
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We passed the Christopher and
Dana Reeve Paralysis Act --
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the first piece of comprehensive
legislation aimed at addressing
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the challenge faced by Americans
living with paralysis.
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We reauthorized the Children's
Health Insurance Program,
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covering an additional 2.6
million children in need in
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2009, including children with
disabilities.
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And the Affordable Care Act we
passed will give every American
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more control over their health
care --
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and will do more to give
Americans with disabilities
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control over their own lives
than any legislation since the ADA.
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So equal access.
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Equal opportunity.
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The freedom to make of our lives
what we will.
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Living up to these principles is
an obligation we have as
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Americans -- and to one another.
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Because, in the end, each of us
has a role to play in our economy.
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Each of us has something to
contribute to the American story.
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And each of us must do our part
to continue on this never-ending
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journey towards building a more
perfect union.
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So I am so proud of the
legislators here today.
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I want to thank all the
advocates who helped bring this
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legislation about.
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And now I'm very proud to sign
the bill.
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(applause)
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(the bill is signed)
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(cheers and applause)