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Rice Touts Virtues of 鈥楳essy鈥 Democracy

Condoleezza Rice speaks at the 黑料百科 President's Breakfast March 4
Condoleezza Rice speaks at the 黑料百科 President's Breakfast March 4

Condoleezza Rice, who has served as both national security advisor and U.S. secretary of state, talked about freedom, democracy and education at the 黑料百科 President鈥檚 Breakfast March 4. More than 860 people attended the breakfast in the main ballroom of Fess Parker鈥檚 Doubletree Resort and an adjoining room that featured a live simulcast.

鈥満诹习倏 is a place that values the student experience,鈥 Rice said, 鈥渘ot just the liberal arts experience, but one that teaches students that faith and reason are not enemies of one another but rather that they go hand in hand to make a complete and total human being.鈥

Rice also recalled several compelling personal stories that she detailed in her most recent book, 鈥淓xtraordinary, Ordinary People: A Memoir of Family.鈥

鈥(A 黑料百科 education) will teach them to be people who understand as my parents taught me that you might not always be able to control your circumstances, but you can control your response to your circumstances,鈥 Rice said. 鈥淭hat helps you to recognize that you should never be aggrieved because there are always others who are struggling more than you are and that you should never feel entitled because there are always those who have less than you have.鈥

Rice discussed Sept. 11 and the painful days that followed, concluding that the U.S.鈥檚 biggest threat comes from failed states. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a long journey in Afghanistan, which is the fifth poorest country in the world,鈥 she said.鈥漌e need to find a way to help the people secure themselves and find a good life.

鈥淣orthern Mexico is beginning to resemble a failed state, which is a state where government authority doesn鈥檛 hold. Drug cartels can outgun the Mexican army, and this is a security concern for the U.S.鈥

Rice said that everyone deserves to live in freedom鈥攏ot an American value or a Western value, but a universal value.

鈥淧eople have the right to choose who will govern them, to say what they think, to worship freely, to be free from police and from the oppression of the state,鈥 she said. 鈥淣o one deserves to live in tyranny鈥攚e recognize the worth of the individual and we can鈥檛 live in comfort in the U.S. and not care about those who risk their lives for the freedoms we enjoy.鈥

Political unrest spreading through the streets of Cairo, Tunis and Tripoli added weight to Rice鈥檚 comments about democracy.

鈥淲hen I spoke at Cairo University in 2005, I urged the Egyptian government to be out on the forefront of change,鈥 she said. 鈥淒emocracy is inefficient and messy and disruptive and some of us may think it doesn鈥檛 work too well even in our country, but democracy has this going for it: If we get too fed up, we can throw the bums out.鈥

She said the U.S. has advocated for democracy, change and human rights everywhere but in the Middle East, where we have promoted stability to get peace and have gotten neither. 鈥淭he U.S. can鈥檛 fear democratic change because countries might elect leaders we won鈥檛 like or we will hear voices we don鈥檛 like,鈥 she said.

Rice, professor of political economy at Stanford Graduate School of Business, Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow on Public Policy at the Hoover Institution and professor of political science at Stanford University, also discussed the importance of education. She told a story about her grandfather earning a scholarship at Spellman College after agreeing to become a Presbyterian minister. 鈥淗e recognized the value of education and the family has been college-educated and Presbyterian ever since,鈥 she said. 鈥淓ducation is a powerful, transforming force. 鈥 We can鈥檛 lose a whole generation of children who can鈥檛 read, who will be unemployable and left out of the values and beliefs that sustain us. If that happens we have lost the core of who we are.鈥

After the breakfast, Rice answered questions from a student panel during convocation in Murchison Gym. There, she candidly answered a question about the decision for the U.S. to attack Iraq and overthrow its dictator. 鈥淚n Iraq the intelligence was not correct about WMDs鈥擲addam Hussein had used them in the past and had been close to developing a nuclear weapon,鈥 she said. 鈥淚ntelligence is always uncertain and we could have done a better job of talking about the uncertainties in giving the rationale for attacking Iraq. We will always have to deal with the lives lost. Nothing of value is achieved without sacrifice.鈥