2019中英文演讲稿(4篇)

时间:2023-06-01 15:40:33 作者:会员上传

  比尔·盖茨和夫人梅琳达·盖茨在斯坦福大学XX年毕业典礼上的演讲。整个演讲以“乐观”为主线,强调了他们对科技的乐观态度,以及对世界美好未来的乐观态度。盖茨夫妇轮流讲述了自己的亲身经历和故事,告诉学生应该站在他人的立场上,感同身受那些处境不及自己的人,尽自己所能去帮助那些需要帮助的人,让全世界所有人类同胞都有一样的美好未来。

  stanford university.

  (斯坦福大学)

  bill gates: congratulations, class of XX!

  比尔·盖茨:XX届毕业生,祝贺你们顺利毕业

  (cheers).(欢呼)

  melinda and i are excited to be here. it would be a thrill for anyone to be invited to speak at a stanford commencement, but it's especially gratifying for us. stanford is rapidly becoming the favorite university for members of our family, and it's long been a favorite university for microsoft and our foundation.

  我和梅琳达怀着激动的心情与你们欢聚在此共贺毕业。能受邀到斯坦福大学学位授予典礼上做演讲是一件让人激动的事,对我们而言,这尤为荣幸。斯坦福大学正日渐成为我们家庭成员最喜爱的大学。而长久以来,斯坦福也是微软以及比尔与梅琳达基金会最喜爱的一所大学。”

  our formula has been to get the smartest, most creative people working on the most important problems. it turns out that a disproportionate number of those people are at stanford. (cheers).

  我们一直致力于让最聪颖有创造力的人攻克最为重要的问题。结果证明,一大部分这样的人才都来自于斯坦福校园。(欢呼)

  right now, we have more than 30 foundation research projects underway here. when we want to learn more about the immune system to help cure the worst diseases, we work with stanford. when we want to understand the changing landscape of higher education in the united states, so that more low-income students get college degrees, we work with stanford. this is where genius lives.

  如今,我们在这里进行着30多个研究项目。当我们想要通过对免疫系统的研究来寻找治愈世界上最可怕疾病的方法,我们需要斯坦福。当我们需要通过对美国高等教育的研究来帮助低收入学生上大学时,我们亦需要斯坦福。这便是人才的摇篮。

  there's a flexibility of mind here, an openness to change, an eagerness for what's new. this is where people come to discover the future, and have fun doing it.

  在这里,有着灵活的思维,对于改变的开放态度以及对新鲜事物的渴求。在这里,人们善于发现新事物,并乐享这份经历。

  melinda gates: now, some people call you all nerds and we hear that you claim that label with pride. (cheers and applause).

  梅琳达•盖茨:当下,一些人用书呆子这样词语称呼你们,而我们听说你们正为这个称呼而倍感骄傲。(欢呼和掌声)

  bill gates: well, so do we. (cheers and applause).

  比尔盖茨:嗯,我们与你们同在。(欢呼和掌声)

  bill gates: my normal glasses really aren't all that different. (laughter).

  比尔盖茨:我的这副普通眼镜也没多大差异嘛。(笑声)

  there are so many remarkable things going on here at this campus, but if melinda and i had to put into one word what we love most about stanford, it's the optimism.

  there's an infectious feeling here that innovation can solve almost every problem.that's the belief that drove me in 1975 to leave a college in the suburbs of boston and go on an endless leave of absence.(laughter).

  在这所校园中,每时每刻都有非凡的事件发生,但如果要我和梅琳达用一个词来表达对斯坦福的挚爱,那便是“乐观”。这是一种极富感染力的乐观精神,那便是,所有的问题在创新之下都能迎刃而解。这便是驱使我在1975年离开波士顿郊区的大学,并永远辍学的一个动力。(笑声)

  i believed that the magic of computers and software would empower people everywhere and make the world much, much better.

  当时的我相信计算机和软件的魔力能够赋予全世界人民以力量,并能够让这个世界变得更加美好。

  it's been 40 years since then, and 20 years since melinda and i were married.we are both more optimistic now than ever. but on our journey, our optimism evolved.

  据那时算起,已有40年之久,我和梅琳达喜结连理也有20年之远了。这些年间,我们都比过去更为乐观开朗,但是在这些人生之旅中,我们的乐观也实现了进化。

  we would like to tell you what we learned and talk to you today about how your optimism and ours can do more for more people.when paul allen and i started microsoft, we wanted to bring the power of computers and software to the people, and that was the kind of rhetoric we used.one of the pioneering books in the field had a raised fist on the cover, and it was called "computer lib."

  我们今天很想与大家分享我们所学到的一切,并和你们聊聊我们的和你们的乐观精神怎样为更多的人服务。当初和保罗创立微软之时,我们的目标是把计算机和软件的力量普及到普通大众,这便是我们当时的说法。在早期的一本书上的封面有一个上扬的拳头,他们称之为《计算机解放》。

  at that time, only big businesses could buy computers.we wanted to offer the same power to regular people and democratize computing.

  在那个时候,只有大企业才能购置计算机。我们想让这种计算机设备普及到社会大众并让计算机民主化。

  by the 1990s, we saw how profoundly personal computers could empower people, but that success created a new dilemma.if rich kids got computers and poor kids didn't, then technology would make inequality worse.that ran counter to our core belief.

  在上个世纪90年代,我们目睹了个人电脑对人们的巨大效用,但是这种成功同时造成了新的困局。如果富人的孩子拥有计算机而穷人的孩子却不能时,这种科技会加剧不平等。而这与我们的核心理念相抵触。

  technology should benefit everyone.

  科技应当惠及万众。

  so we worked to close the digital divide. i made it a priority at microsoft, and melinda and i made it an early priority at our foundation. donating personal computers to public libraries to make sure that everyone had access.

  因此我们应当努力缩小这种差距。我将它定位为微软的首要任务,也是我和梅琳达在建立基金会之初的首要任务。为公众图书馆捐献个人电脑从而确保人人都能有机会使用。

  the digital divide was a focus of mine in 1997, when i took my first trip to south africa. i went there on business so i spent most of my time in meetings in downtown johannesburg. i stayed in the home of one of the richest families in south africa.

  当我在1997年首次出访南非时,我便开始关注“数码鸿沟”。因公事出差的我将大部分时间都花费在约翰内斯堡的市区开会中。当时我住在南非最富裕的一户家庭中。

  it had only been three years since the election of nelson mandela marked the end of apartheid. when i sat down for dinner with my hosts, they used a bell to call the butler. after dinner, the women and men separated and the men smoked cigars. i thought, good thing i read jane austen, or i wouldn't have known what was going on. (laughter).

  那时距离尼尔森•曼德拉上台,并结束种族隔离只有3年。当我同主人共进晚餐时,他们使用铃铛来使唤管家。在晚饭后,男女相互分开而男人们开始抽雪茄。当时我想,幸好我读过简•奥斯汀的书否则我就不知道发生了什么。(笑声)

  but the next day i went to soweto, the poor township southwest of johannesburg, that had been the center of the anti-apartheid movement. it was a short distance from the city into the township, but the entry was sudden, jarring and harsh.

  但在第二天我去了索韦托,约翰内斯堡西南的一个贫穷小镇,那里曾经是反种族隔离的中心。尽管从约翰内斯堡到索韦托路程不长,但从进入索韦托的那一刻起,一切都令人无比震惊。

  i passed into a world completely unlike the one i came from. my visit to soweto became an early lesson in how naive i was. microsoft was donating computers and software to a community center there. the kind of thing we did in the united states.

  我觉得我来到了一个和我所来自的地方截然不同的世界。索韦托之行让我很早便意识到自己竟是如此天真。微软向那里的一个社区中心捐赠计算机和软件。和我们在美国所做的一切相同。

  but it became clear to me, very quickly, that this was not the united states.

  但是我很快明白了,这里并不是美国。

  i had seen statistics on poverty, but i had never really seen poverty.the people there lived in corrugated tin shacks with no electricity, no water, no toilets. most people didn't wear shoes. they walked barefoot along the streets, except there were no streets, just ruts in the mud.

  我曾经阅览过有关贫穷的调查数据,但是却未曾目睹过贫穷。那里的人们住在用铁皮搭成的简陋棚户里,没有电,没有自来水,也没有厕所。人们几乎不穿鞋,赤脚行走。或者可以说根本没有街道,只是一些坑洼的泥土路。

  the community center had no consistent source of power. so they rigged up an extension cord that ran 200 feet from the center to the diesel generator outside. looking at this setup, i knew the minute the reporters left, the generator would get moved to a more urgent task. and the people who used the community center would go back to worrying about challenges that couldn't be solved by a personal computer.

  由于社区中心没有持续供电的设施,所以他们安装了一根延长线连接到200英尺以外的柴油发电机上。看过了这些装置,我明白了一旦记者离开后,发电机将会被运用到更紧迫的任务上。使用社区中心的人们也会因此而离开,为电脑所不能解决的问题而担忧。

  when i gave my prepared remarks to the press, i said soweto is a milestone. there are major decisions ahead about whether technology will leave the developing world behind. this is to close the gap.

  当我向媒体道出已准备好的发言时,我谈到索韦托的经历对我而言是一个里程碑,我们所面临的重大决定是科技是否会让发展中国家落后。这也便是要缩小差距。

  but as i read those words, i knew they weren't super relevant. what i didn't say was, by the way, we're not focused on the fact that half a million people on this continent are dying every year from malaria. but we are sure as hell going to bring you computers.

  但当我说出这些词时,我发现他们并不是如此相关。我没有说的是,“顺便说一下,我们并没有注意到这个大洲上每年都会有50万人死于疟疾的事实。”但我们还是万分确信我们会为他们带来计算机。

  before i went to soweto, i thought i understood the world's problems but i was blind to many of the most important ones. i was so taken aback by what i saw that i had to ask myself, did i still believe that innovation could solve the world's toughest problems? i promised myself that before i came back to africa, i would find out more about what keeps people poor.

  在我去索韦托之前,我认为自己很理解这个世界存在的问题,可那时我才明白我忽视了最重要的问题,我不停问自己‘你还认为创新能解决世界上最棘手的问题吗?’我向自己保证,在重回非洲之前,会找到更多让人们贫穷的原因。

  over the years, melinda and i did learn more about the pressing needs of the poor.

  数年来,我和梅琳达确实发现了穷人们的当务之需。

  on a later trip to south africa, i paid a visit to a hospital for patients with mdr-tb, multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, a disease with a cure rate of under 50%. i remember that hospital as a place of despair.

  在后来一次到南非的时候,我去了一家住有很多抗药性肺结核患者和耐多药结核病患者的医院,这是一种治愈率不到50%的顽疾。我还记得那个充满绝望的地方。

  it was a giant open ward, with a sea of patients shuffling around in pajamas, wearing masks. there was one floor just for children, including some babies lying in bed. they had a little school for kids who were well enough to learn, but many of the children couldn't make it, and the hospital didn't seem to know whether it was worth it to keep the school open.

  在一个巨大的开放性病房里,住着很多很多病人,他们穿着睡衣,带着口罩,慢慢挪动着。有一层楼是专为孩童开设的,其中包括还在卧床的婴儿们。医院中也为适龄儿童设有小学校,但是大多数孩子都无法战胜病魔踏入学堂,因此医院似乎并不确信是否有必要开设这所学校。

  i talked to a patient there in her early 30s. she had been a worker at a tb hospital when she came down with a cough. she went to a doctor and he told her said she had drug-resistant tb. she was later diagnosed with aids. she wasn't going to live much longer, but there were plenty of mdr patients waiting to take her bed when she vacated it. this was hell with a waiting list.

  我同一位30多岁的病人做了交谈,并了解到她曾肺结核医院的一名职工,因为咳嗽而病倒。她看了医生,医生告诉她患上了耐药性结核病,在后来也被诊断患有艾滋。她活不了过久了,但有很多耐多药结核病患者却“觊觎”着她即将空出的床位。这是一个有很多候场病人的地狱。

  but seeing this hell didn't reduce my optimism. it channeled it. i got into the car as i left and i told the doctor we were working with i know mdr-tb is hard to cure, but we must do something for these people. and, in fact, this year, we are entering phase three with the new tb drug regime for patients who respond, instead of a 50% cure rate after 18 months for $2,000, we get an 80% cure rate after six months for under $100. (applause).

  但是目睹了这个地域并不能减少我的乐观心态,相反,它指导着乐观的前行。在我们离开时,我在车里跟与我们同行的医生说,我虽然知道耐多药结核病是一种顽疾,但我们必须为这些人做一些实事。实际上,在今年,我们进入了新结核药物研发的第三阶段,对于那些病人而言,他们不再需为18个月50%的治愈率而花费XX美元,我们的新药物花费不超100美元便能在6个月后实现80%的治愈率。(掌声)

  optimism is often dismissed as false hope. but there is also false hopelessness. that's the attitude that says we can't defeat poverty and disease. we absolutely can.

  乐观常被视为错误的希望。但是错误的无望也存在于世,那就是我们无法击败贫困和疾病的态度。但我们却能够做到。

  melinda gates: bill called me that day after he visited the tb hospital and normally if one of us is on an international trip, we will go through our agenda for the day and who we met and where we have been. but this call was different.

  在比尔去过结核病医院后,他曾给我致电。(因为)惯例上当我们其中一个出国的话,我们都会聊聊这天我们遇到的人和我们去过的地方。但是这番电话有些特别。

  bill said to me, melinda, i have been somewhere that i have never been before. and then he choked up and he couldn't go on. and he finally just said, i will tell you more when i get home. and i knew what he was going through because when you see people with so little hope, it breaks your heart.

  比尔说,梅琳达,我(今天)去了一个我之前从未去过的地方。然后他哽咽地说不出话了。他最后只是说,等我回来了再详细告诉你。(其实)我知道他经历了什么,因为当你看到濒临绝望的人们,他会让你十分悲痛。

  but if you want to do the most, you have to go see the worst, and i've had days like that too. about ten years ago, i traveled with a group of friends to india. and on last day i was there, i had a meeting with a group of prostitutes and i expected to talk to them about the risk of aids that they were facing, but what they wanted to talk to me about was stigma.

  但是如果你想做得更多,你必须要看到最坏的情况,我也经历过那些日子。大概十年前,我和一群朋友去印度旅游。在我临走的那一天,我和一群妓女进行了交谈,我希望跟她们讲她们所面对得艾滋病的风险,但是她们想跟我聊的只是(作为妓女的)耻辱。

  many of these women had been abandoned by their husbands. that's why they even went into prostitution. they wanted to be able to feed their children. they were so low in the eyes of society that they could be raped and robbed and beaten by anyone, even the police, and nobody cared.

  这当中的很多人都是被她们的丈夫所抛弃。这就是为什么她们去卖淫的原因。她们想养活自己的孩子。他们在社会的眼中是如此卑微,以致于她们可以被任何人甚至是警察xx,抢劫,甚至挨揍,(而)根本没有人会在意(她们)

  talking to them about their lives was so moving to me, but what i remember most was how much they wanted to be touched. they wanted to touch me and to be touched by them. it was if physical contact somehow proved their worth. and so before i left, we linked arms hand in hand and did a photo together.

  聊起她们的生活让我感触至深。但是我印象最深的就是她们多么想接触他人。她们希望触摸我,也希望让我能去触碰她们也许是通过这种身体上的触碰证明了她们存在的价值。所以当我离开之前,我们肩并肩,手牵手,一起照了相。

  later that same day, i spent some time in india in a home for the dying. i walked into a large hall and i saw rows and rows of cot and every cot was attended to except for one, that was far off in the corner. and so i decided to go over there.

  之后在那天,我去了印度的一个弥留者的家中。我走进大厅,我看见一排排的床,除了远在角落的一张床,每张床都有人在照顾。所以我决定过去看看。

  the patient who was in this room was a woman in her 30s. and i remember her eyes. she had these huge, brown, sorrowful eyes. she was emaciated and on the verge of death. her intestines were not holding anything and so the workers had they put a pan under her bed, and cut a hole in the bottom of the bed and everything in her was just pouring out into that pan. and i could tell that she had aids. both in the way she looked and the fact that she was off in this corner alone.

  这位病人是一个30岁左右的妇女。我还记得她的眼睛的样子。她有着大而悲伤的棕色的眼睛。当时的她如此憔悴并且徘徊在死亡的边缘。她的肠道里什么东西也盛不下,所以那里的工作人员就在她的床下放了一个盘子,然后在床的底部开了个洞,这样一切东西就能倾泻到那个盘子中。我看得出她得了艾滋病。不仅可以从她的外表,而且也可以从她独自在这个角落中看出来。

  the stigma of aids is vicious, especially for women. and the punishment is abandonment. when i arrived at her cot, i suddenly felt completely and totally helpless. i had absolutely nothing i could offer this woman. i knew i couldn't save her. but i didn't want her to be alone. so i knelt down with her and i put my hand out and she reached for my hand and grabbed it and she wouldn't let it go. i didn't speak her language and i couldn't think of what i should say to her. and finally i just said to her, it's going to be okay. it's going to be okay. it's not your fault.

  得艾滋病令人声名狼藉,特别是对女性。并且得病的惩罚就是被抛弃。当我走进她床边时,我突然感觉彻底的无力和无助感。我无能为力实施帮助。我知道我不能救活她。但是我不想让她独自一人(死去)。所以我跪下来然后伸出手,她摸到我的手然后就抓住,不松开。我不会说她们的语言而且我也不知道我能对她说什么。最后我只是对她说,一切都会好起来的。一切都会好起来的。这不是你的错。

  and after i had been with her for sometime, she started pointing to the roof top. she clearly wanted to go up and i realized the sun was going down and what she wanted to do was go up on the roof top and see the sunset. so the workers in this home for the dying were very busy and i said to them, you know, can we take her up on the roof top? no. no. we have to pass out medicines. so i waited that for that to happen and i asked another worker and they said, no no no, we are too busy. we can't get her up there. and so finally i just scooped this woman up in my arms.

  在我陪着她待了一会之后,她的手指向了屋顶。很显然她很想上屋顶,而我发现太阳快要落山了,所以她想做的就是等上屋顶并且看日落。那时房子里的工作人员非常忙碌,然后我对他们说,我们能不能把她抬到屋顶上?不行。我们现在必须要分派药物。所以我就等着他们分派药物,然后我又问了另外的工作人员,他们说不行,我们太忙了。我们不能抬她上去。所以,最后我就把她抱在了怀中。

  she was nothing more than skin over bones and i took her up on the roof top, and i found one of those plastic chairs that blows over in a light breeze. i put her there, sat her down, put a blanket over her legs and she sat there facing to the west, watching the sunset. the workers knew -- i made sure they knew that she was up there so that they would bring her down later that evening after the sun went down and then i had to leave.

  她不过是骨瘦如柴,我就抱着她上了屋顶。找到了一个在微风的吹拂下响着的破旧不堪塑料凳。我把她放在椅子上,拿一个毛毯盖住她的腿,然后她就坐在那里望向西边,看着日落。工作人员知道她在屋顶上,我确保他们知道并且会在日落以后把她带下来。而不久后我就要离开。

  but she never left me. i felt completely and totally inadequate in the face of this woman's death. but sometimes, it's the people that you can't help that inspire you the most.

  但是她从未离开过我。我感到彻底的无力去面对这位妇女的死亡。但是有时,就正是这些你不能帮助的人群给了你最大的激励。

  i knew that those sex workers i had met in the morning could be the woman that i carried upstairs later that evening. unless we found a way to defy the stigma that hung over their lives.

  我知道早上我碰到的那些性工作者将来可能就会是那天夜晚我抱上屋顶妇女的样子。除非我们找到一个方法来对抗这个羁绊她们一生的耻辱。

  over the past ten years, our foundation has helped sex workers build support groups so they could empower one another to speak up and demand safe sex and that their clients use condoms. their brave efforts have helped to keep hiv prevalence low among sex workers and a lot of studies show that's the big reason why the aids epidemic has not exploded in india.

  过去的十年中,我们的基金已经帮助性工作者建立了支持小组,那样她们可以互相协助,要求安全的性行为,让客户就使用安全套。正是因为性服务者们勇敢的努力保持了性工作者的低hiv感染率,并且很多研究表明这就是为什么印度没有大范围地爆发艾滋病的一个重要原因。

  when these sex workers gathered together to help stop aids transmission, something unexpected and wonderful happened. the community they formed became a platform for everything. police and others who raped and robbed them couldn't get away with it anymore. the women set up systems to encourage savings for one another and with those savings, they were able to leave sex work. this was all done by people that society considered the lowest of the low.

  如果这些性工作者一起帮助阻止艾滋病的传播,就会发生意想不到的好事。她们形成的这个社区成为了一个任何事互相协助的平台。警察和其他任何xx或者抢劫她们的人都不可能无法无天。妇女们组建起了互相鼓励储蓄财产的系统,这样有了足够的储蓄,她们就可以离开性服务行业。这就是那些在社会上被视作底层中的最下等人做的事情。

  optimism, for me, is not a passive expectation that things are going to get better. for me, it's a conviction and a belief that we can make things better. so no matter how much suffering we see, no matter how bad it is, we can help people if we don't lose hope help and if we don't look away. (applause).

  对我而言,乐观并非消极地期待事情会变好而是一种相信事情会做的更好的确信和信念。因此不管我们目睹了怎样的痛苦,不管事态如何糟糕,如果我们没有失去希望不转头而去,那么我们便能伸出援手。(掌声)

  bill gates: melinda and i have described some devastating scenes, but we want to make the strongest case we can for the power of optimism. even in dire situations, optimism fuels innovation and leads to new approaches that eliminate suffering. but if you never really see the people that are suffering, your optimism can't help them. you will never change their world. and that brings me to what i see is a paradox.

  比尔盖茨:我和梅琳达描述了几个最为在男性的画面,但是我们还是要尽量强调乐观的力量。即使是在绝境之中,乐观也会加速创新,产生新的避免痛苦的方法。但是如果你从未看过那些痛苦折磨着的人时,你的乐观也将无能为力。你也将不会改变他们的世界。这让我想到了我眼中的一个悖论。

  the modern world is an incredible source of innovation and stanford stands at the center of that, creating new companies, new schools of thought, prize-winning professors, inspired art and literature, miracle drugs, and amazing graduates. whether you are a scientist with a new discovery, or working in the trenches to understand the needs of the most marginalized, you are advancing amazing breakthroughs in what human beings can do for each other.

  现代社会拥有无与伦比的创新精神,而斯坦福大学正处在创新的核心。斯坦福孕育了许许多多的新公司,有思想的学校,硕果累累的教授,富有灵感的艺术文化,创新的软件,药品,还有优秀的毕业生。无论你是收获新发现的科学家,还是在深沟中了解社会最边缘人的需求,你都在为人类相互间的协作做出惊人的突破。

  at the same time, if you ask people across the united states is the future going to be better than the past, most say no. my kids will be worse off than i am. they think innovation won't make the world better for them or their children.

  同时,如果你问全美国的人——未来回避过去更好吗?大部分人会说不,我的孩子不如我优秀。他们认为创新不会让自己或孩子的世界更好。

  so who is right? the people who say innovation will create new possibilities and make the world better? or the people who see a trend toward inequality and a decline in opportunity and don't think innovation will change that?

  那么谁是对的?是那些说创新产生新机遇让世界更好的人么?还是那些目睹不平衡的趋势,目睹机遇减少且不指望创新带来改变的人呢?

  the pessimists are wrong, in my view. but they are not crazy. if innovation is purely market driven, and we don't focus on the big inequities, then we could have amazing advances and in inventions that leave the world even more divided. we won't improve cure public schools, we won't cure malaria, we won't end poverty. we won't develop the innovations poor farmers need to grow food in a changing climate.

  在我看来,悲观者是错误的。但是他们并不疯狂。如果创新仅凭市场驱动,我们都不关注不公正现象,那么我们的重大发明将令世界的两极分化更加严重。我们不会改善公立学校,我们不会治愈疟疾,更不会终止贫穷。我们不会研发出让贫困农民在气候变化中也能种出植物的发明。

  if our optimism doesn't address the problems that affect so many of our fellow human beings, then our optimism needs more empathy. if empathy channels our optimism, we will see the poverty and the disease and the poor schools. we will answer with our innovations and we will surprise the pessimists.

  如果我们的乐观无法用来解决那些影响许许多多同胞的问题,那么这种乐观主义还需要融入更多的移情元素。如果我们能在乐观中融入同情,我们就能解决贫困,疾病以及教育匮乏的问题。我们会以创新作答,并震惊那些悲观主义者。

  over the next generation, you, stanford graduates, will lead a new wave of innovation. which problems will you decide to solve? if your world is wide, you can create the future we all want. if your world is narrow, you may create the future the pessimists fear.

  在下一代中,你们,这些斯坦福毕业生,将开启一波创新的新潮。你们会决定解决哪些问题呢?如果你的世界很宽,那么就能创造出我们理想的未来。如果你的世界很狭隘,就会造出悲观者恐惧的未来。

  i started learning in soweto, that if we are going to make our optimism matter to everyone, and empower people everyone, we have to see the lives of those most in need. if we have optimism, without empathy, then it doesn't matter how much we master the secrets of science.

  正如我在索维托所学到的,如果我们要让自己的乐观影响所有人,并赋予他们力量,我们就要看到他们最紧迫的需求。如果我们的乐观没有融入同情,那么我们掌握多少科学秘密也没有任何用处。

  we are not really solving problems. we are just working on puzzles. i think most of you have a broader world view than i had at your age. you can do better at this than i did. if you put your hearts and minds to it, you can surprise the pessimists. we are eager to see it. (applause).

  我们都解决不了世界上的难题。我们只是在玩智力游戏罢了。我想,你们中的大多数人比当时的我视野更宽广。你们会比曾经的我做得更出色。如果你们全身心地投身于此,你们便能震惊那些悲观者。我们对之迫不及待。(掌声)

  melinda gates: so let your heart break. it will change what you do with your optimism.

  梅琳达•盖茨:让你们的心为之而碎。这会改变你们处理乐观的方式。

  on a trip to south asia, i met a desperately poor indian woman. she had two children and she begged me to take them home with me. and when i begged her for her forgiveness she said, well then, please, just take one of them.

  在去南亚的旅行中,我遇见了一位贫困潦倒的印度妇女。育有两子,她后来乞求我让我把这两个孩子带走。当我祈求她原谅时,她说,那好吧,请至少带走一个也可以吧。

  on another trip to south los angeles, i met with a group of the students from a tough neighborhood. a young girl said to me, do you ever feel like we are the kids' whose parents shirked their responsibilities and we are just the leftovers? these women broke my heart.

  在另一个去洛杉矶南部的旅途中,我遇见了一群来自贫困社区的学生。一个年轻女孩对我说,你是不是觉得我们就是那群父母逃避责任,我们只是留守儿童呢?这些女性让我心碎。

  and they still do. and the empathy intensifies if i admit to myself, that could be me. when i talk with the mothers i meet during my travels, there's no difference between what we want for our children. the only difference is our ability to provide it to our children.

  而她们现在依然让我心碎。当我对自己承认,我也可能会是她们中的一员。我与旅途中的母亲交流时发现,我们想给予孩子的没有什么不同。唯一的不同在于我们将其给予孩子的能力。

  so what accounts for that difference? bill and i talk about this with our own kids around the dinner table. bill worked incredibly hard and he took risks and he made sacrifices for success. but there's another essential ingredient of success, and that is luck. absolute and total luck. when were you born? who are your parents? where did you grow up? none of us earn these things. these things were given to us.

  那么差距何在呢?我和比尔曾就此问题与我们的孩子在餐桌上共同讨论。比尔工作非常努力,他冒过风险,为成功做出不少牺牲。但是还有一个成功的重要因素,那便是运气。完完全全的运气。你出生何处?你的父母是谁?你在哪里成长?没有任何人赚得这些东西,我们只是被赐予了这些东西而已。

  so when we strip away all of our luck and our privilege and we consider where we would be without them, it becomes someone much easier to see someone who is poor and say, that could be me. and that's empathy. empathy tears down barriers and it opens up whole new frontiers for optimism.

  所以当我们剥去运气和优待,并思考没有他们我们会将如何时,这个人就更容易看到那些贫困者,并说,这可能就是我。这就是同情心,同情心抹平障碍,为乐观敞开新的大门。

  so here is our appeal to you all. as you leave stanford, take all your genius and your optimism and your empathy, and go change the world in ways that will make millions of people optimistic. you don't have to rush. you have careers to launch and debts to pay and spouses to meet and marry. that's plenty enough for right now. but in the course of your lives, perhaps without any plan on your part, you will see suffering that's going to break your heart. and when it happens, don't turn away from it. that's the moment that change is born.

  所以这就是我们对你们所有人的呼吁。在你离开斯坦福校园之后,带着你的天分,乐观以及同情心,改变这个世界,让数百万人为之乐观起来。你无须急功近利,你还要开创事业,付清债款,找寻另一半并喜结良缘。现在就这些便足够了,但是在你们的生命之中,可能你们并未计划过,你会目睹那些让你心碎的苦楚。当这些痛苦发生时,不要掩面离开,在这一刻,改变因此而孕育。

  congratulations and good luck to the class of XX!

  最后,向XX届毕业生表示祝贺,并祝你们好运!

父亲节中英文演讲稿范文

  today day is a memorable day, are the annual father's day!

  deep sea motherly love, fatherly love heavy as a mountain. people at the same time to celebrate mother's day and did not forget his father's achievements. someone start the year on the recommendation of father's day. years, it is to celebrate the first father's day. at that time, the late father of all people have to wear a white rose, the father of the people alive while wearing red roses. this custom has been passed so far.

  it is said that the selection of father's day is a month over month because of the sun are the most heated one, a symbol of the father to give their children the love that hot. paternal such as mountains, tall and lofty, let me look timid and afraid to climb health; father such as days,and far-reaching, so that yang and my heart did not dare pity; paternal great deep are pure and not return , but love is a bitter, difficult to understand depression and the unattainable.

  father, like a tree, always, let him lush foliage of a solid arm for the tree to create shadeus. years such as the fingers over the water, like, before i knew it, we have grown up, while the tree is gradually aging, and even the new leaves are no longer the hair full of vitality. annually on the third sunday is father's holiday, let us sincerely say: father, i love you! happy father's day!

  now, the certificate of education examination and the final exams approaching, i suggest that we should seize the time, study hard, with excellent results as to the father's gift, great father to return, i believe his father at that time are the most beautiful smile! students, come on now! ! !

  今天天是个值得纪念的日子,是一年一度的父亲节!

  母爱深似海,父爱重如山。人们在庆祝母亲节的同时,并没有忘记父亲的功绩。年就开始有人建议确定父亲节。年月,人们庆祝了第一个父亲节。当时,凡是父亲已故的人都佩戴一朵白玫瑰,父亲在世的人则佩戴红玫瑰。这种习俗一直流传至今。

  据说,选定月过父亲节是因为月的阳光是一年之中最炽热的,象征了父亲给予子女的那火热的爱。父爱如山,高大而巍峨,让我望而生怯不敢攀登;父爱如天,粗旷而深远,让我仰而心怜不敢长啸;父爱是深邃的伟大的纯洁而不可回报的,然而父爱又是苦涩的,难懂的忧郁而不可企及的。父亲像是一棵树,总是不言不语,却让他枝叶繁茂的坚实臂膀为树下的我们遮风挡雨制造荫凉。岁月如指间的流水一样滑过,不觉间我们已长大,而树却渐渐老去,甚至新发的树叶都不再充满生机。每年月的第三个星期日是父亲的节日,让我们由衷的说一声:爸爸,我爱你!父亲节快乐!

  现在,会考和期末考试将至,我建议我们要抓紧时间,努力学习,用优异的成绩作为送给父亲的礼物,去回报伟大的父爱,我相信那时父亲的笑容是最美的!同学们,加油吧!!!

I have a dream  马丁路德金的演讲稿 (中英文)

  five score years ago, a great american, in whose symbolic shadow we stand today, signed the emancipation proclamation. this momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. it came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of bad captivity.

  but one hundred years later, the negro still is not free. one hundred years later, the life of the negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. one hundred years later, the negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity. one hundred years later, the negro is still languished in the corners of american society and finds himself an exile in his own land. so we’ve come here today to dramatize a shameful condition.

  i am not unmindful that some of you have come here out of great trials and tribulations. some of you have come fresh from narrow jail cells. some of you have come from areas where your quest for freedom left you battered by the storms of persecution and staggered by the winds of police brutality. you have been the veterans of creative suffering. continue to work with the faith that unearned suffering is redemptive.

  go back to mississippi, go back to alabama, go back to south carolina, go back to georgia, go back to louisiana, go back to the slums and ghettos of our northern cities, knowing that somehow this situation can and will be changed. let us not wallow in the valley of despair.

  i say to you today, my friends, so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, i still have a dream. it is a dream deeply rooted in the american dream.

  i have a dream that one day this nation will rise up, live up to the true meaning of its creed: “we hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created equal.”

  i have a dream that one day on the red hills of georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave-owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.

  i have a dream that one day even the state of mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice.

  i have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color if their skin but by the content of their character.

  i have a dream today.

  i have a dream that one day down in alabama with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification, one day right down in alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers.

  i have a dream today.

  i have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight, and the glory of the lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.

  this is our hope. this is the faith that i go back to the south with. with this faith we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. with this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. with this faith we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom together, knowing that we will be free one day.

  this will be the day when all of god’s children will be able to sing with new meaning. 

  my country, ’ tis of thee,

  sweet land of liberty,

  of thee i sing:

  land where my fathers died,

  land of the pilgrims’ pride,

  from every mountainside

  let freedom ring.

  and if america is to be a great nation this must become true. so let freedom ring from the prodigious hilltops of new hampshire.

  let freedom ring from the mighty mountains of new york!

  let freedom ring from the heightening alleghenies of pennsylvania!

  let freedom ring from the snowcapped rockies of colorado!

  let freedom ring from the curvaceous slops of california!

  but not only that; let freedom ring from stone mountain of georgia!

  let freedom ring from lookout mountain of tennessee!

  let freedom ring from every hill and molehill of mississippi!

  from every mountainside, let freedom ring!

  when we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of god’s children, black men and white men, jews and gentiles, protestants and catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old negro spiritual, “free at last! free at last! thank god almighty, we are free at last!”

  我有一个梦想

  一百年前,一位伟大的美国人签署了解放黑奴宣言,今天我们就是在他的雕像前集会。这一庄严宣言犹如灯塔的光芒,给千百万在那摧残生命的不义之火中受煎熬的黑奴带来了希望。它的到来犹如欢乐的黎明,结束了束缚黑人的漫漫长夜。

  然而一百年后的今天,黑人还没有得到自由,一百年后的今天,在种族隔离的镣铐和种族歧视的枷锁下,黑人的生活备受压榨。一百年后的今天,黑人仍生活在物质充裕的海洋中一个贫困的孤岛上。一百年后的今天,黑人仍然萎缩在美国社会的角落里,并且意识到自己是故土家园中的流亡者。今天我们在这里集会,就是要把这种骇人听闻的情况公诸于众。

  我并非没有注意到,参加今天集会的人中,有些受尽苦难和折磨,有些刚刚走出窄小的牢房,有些由于寻求自由,曾早居住地惨遭疯狂迫害的打击,并在警察暴行的旋风中摇摇欲坠。你们是人为痛苦的长期受难者。坚持下去吧,要坚决相信,忍受不应得的痛苦是一种赎罪。

  让我们回到密西西比去,回到阿拉巴马去,回到南卡罗莱纳去,回到佐治亚去,回到路易斯安那去,回到我们北方城市中的贫民区和少数民族居住区去,要心中有数,这种状况是能够也必将改变的。我们不要陷入绝望而不能自拔。

  朋友们,今天我对你们说,在此时此刻,我们虽然遭受种种困难和挫折,我仍然有一个梦想。这个梦是深深扎根于美国的梦想中的。

  我梦想有一天,这个国家会站立起来,真正实现其信条的真谛:“我们认为这些真理是不言而喻的;人人生而平等。”

  我梦想有一天,在佐治亚的红山上,昔日奴隶的儿子将能够和昔日奴隶主的儿子坐在一起,共叙兄弟情谊。

  我梦想有一天,甚至连密西西比州这个正义匿迹,压迫成风,如同沙漠般的地方,也将变成自由和正义的绿洲。

  我梦想有一天,我的四个孩子将在一个不是以他们的肤色,而是以他们的品格优劣来评判他们的国度里生活。

  我今天有一个梦想。

  我梦想有一天,阿拉巴马州能够有所转变,尽管该州州长现在仍然满口异议,反对联邦法令,但有着一日,那里的黑人男孩和女孩将能够与白人男孩和女孩情同骨肉,携手并进。

  我今天有一个梦想。

  我梦想有一天,幽谷上升,高山下降,坎坷曲折之路成坦途,圣光披露,满照人间。

  这就是我们的希望。我怀着这种信念回到南方。有了这个信念,我们将能从绝望之岭劈出一块希望之石。有了这个信念,我们将能把这个国家刺耳的争吵声,改变成为一支洋溢手足之情的优美交响曲。有了这个信念,我们将能一起工作,一起祈祷,一起斗争,一起坐牢,一起维护自由;因为我们知道,终有一天,我们是会自由的。

  在自由到来的那一天,上帝的所有儿女们将以新的含义高唱这支歌:“我的祖国,美丽的自由之乡,我为您歌唱。您是父辈逝去的地方,您是最初移民的骄傲,让自由之声响彻每个山冈。”

  如果美国要成为一个伟大的国家,这个梦想必须实现。让自由之声从新罕布什尔州的巍峨峰巅响起来!让自由之声从纽约州的崇山峻岭响起来!让自由之声从宾夕法尼亚州阿勒格尼山的顶峰响起!让自由之声从科罗拉多州冰雪覆盖的落矶山响起来!让自由之声从加利福尼亚州蜿蜒的群峰响起来!不仅如此,还要让自由之声从佐治亚州的石岭响起来!让自由之声从田纳西州的了望山响起来!让自由之声从密西西比州的每一座丘陵响起来!让自由之声从每一片山坡响起来。

  当我们让自由之声响起来,让自由之声从每一个大小村庄、每一个州和每一个城市响起来时,我们将能够加速这一天的到来,那时,上帝的所有儿女,黑人和白人,犹太人和非犹太人,新教徒和天主教徒,都将手携手,合唱一首古老的黑人灵歌:“终于自由啦!终于自由啦!感谢全能的上帝,我们终于自由啦!”

奥巴马感恩节英语演讲稿(中英文)

  【奥巴马XX年感恩节英语演讲稿】

  hi, everybody. on behalf of all the obamas – michelle, malia, sasha, bo, and the newest member of our family, sunny – i want to wish you a happy and healthy thanksgiving.

  大家好!我代表我们家所有人——米歇尔、玛利亚、萨莎、波尔以及新添成员桑尼,祝愿大家有一个快乐舒适的感恩节。

  we’ll be spending today just like many of you – sitting down with family and friends to eat some good food, tell stories, watch a little football, and most importantly, count our blessings.

  我们今天会和家人朋友一起享用美味的食物、讲故事、看点足球比赛,最重要的是,感恩——就像你们大多数人一样。

  and as americans, we have so much to be thankful for.

  作为美国人,我们有那么多值得感恩的东西。

  we give thanks for the men and women who set sail for this land nearly four centuries ago, risking everything for the chance at a better life – and the people who were already here, our native american brothers and sisters, for their generosity during that first thanksgiving.

  我们对近4XX年前航行到这片土地的人们表达感谢,因为他们为了寻求更好的生活,甘冒一切风险。我们还要感激已经在这片土地上的,我们的原住民印第安兄弟姐妹们,感激他们在第一次感恩节上的慷慨大度。

  we give thanks for the generations who followed – people of all races and religions, who arrived here from every country on earth and worked to build something better for themselves and for us.

  我们对相继而来的世世代代的人们表达感激。来自世界各国的人们——来自不同民族并有着不同宗教信仰,齐心协力为他们自己和我们建筑起更美好的将来。

  we give thanks for all our men and women in uniform – and for their families, who are surely missing them very much today. we’re grateful for their sacrifice too.

  我们对穿制服为我们服务的人们表达谢意,对今天必定无比想念他们的亲人表达谢意。我们感激他们的牺牲。

  we give thanks for the freedoms they defend – the freedom to think what we want and say what we think, to worship according to our own beliefs, to choose our leaders and, yes, criticize them without punishment. people around the world are fighting and even dying for their chance at these freedoms. we stand with them in that struggle, and we give thanks for being free.

  我们感恩他们所捍卫的自由——让我们敢想敢说的自由、让我们选择信仰的自由、让我们选择自己的领导人的自由,以及,不受惩罚地批评领导人的自由。世界各国人民都在为有这些自由而奋斗甚至牺牲。我们和他们站在同一战线上,我们为自由而感恩。

  and we give thanks to everyone who’s doing their part to make the united states a better, more compassionate nation – who spend their thanksgiving volunteering at a soup kitchen, or joining a service project, or bringing food and cheer to a lonely neighbor. that big-hearted generosity is a central part of our american character. we believe in lending a hand to folks who need it. we believe in pitching in to solve problems even if they aren’t our problems. and that’s not a one-day-a-year belief. it’s part of the fabric of our nation.

  而且,我们感恩所有让美国成为更强大并且更富同情心的国家而尽责职守的人们——那些感恩节在救济所参加志愿服务的人,或者参加服务项目的人,或者给孤单的邻居送去食物和鼓励的人。这样的大度慷慨是我们美国人性格中的核心部分。我们愿意给需要的人以援手,我们愿意路见不平拔刀相助。这些不是一年一次的想法,这是我们国家的构成。

  and we remember that many americans need that helping hand right now. americans who’ve lost their jobs and can’t get a new one through no fault of their own. americans who’ve been trapped in poverty and just need that helping hand to climb out. citizens whose prayers and hopes move us to act.

  我们牢记着许多美国人现在需要帮助。那些失去工作而且没有丝毫过错却找不到新工作的美国人,那些深陷贫困而且急需救援之手的美国人。正是这些公民的祈祷和希望促使我们行动。

  we are a people who are greater together than we are on our own. that’s what today is about. that’s what every day should be about. no matter our differences, we’re all part of one american family. we are each other’s keeper. we are one nation, under god. that core tenet of our american experience has guided us from the earliest days of our founding – and it will guide us to a future that’s even brighter than today.

  我们是一个团结胜过单独行动的国家。今天如此,每天都如此。不管我们多么不同,我们都是美国大家庭的一份子。我们是彼此的守护者。我们是上帝庇佑的一个国家。我们美国历史实践出的这个核心信条将带领我们走向比今天更辉煌的未来,从建国初期到将来都是如此。

  thank you, god bless you, and from my family to yours, happy thanksgiving.

  谢谢,上帝保佑你。还有我们全家想对大家表示感恩节快乐。

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