Geburtsdatum | Mittwoch, 31. März 1948 |
Geburtsort | Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Sternzeichen | |
Beschreibung | Albert Arnold Gore Jr. (geboren am 31. März 1948) ist ein amerikanischer Politiker, Geschäftsmann und Umweltschützer, der von 1993 bis 2001 unter Präsident Bill Clinton als 45. stellvertretender Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten amtierte. Gore war der Kandidat der Demokraten für die Präsidentschaftswahlen 2000 und unterlag George W. Bush in einem sehr knappen Rennen nach einer Nachzählung in Florida. |
The Bush-Cheney administration had betrayed some basic American values. So there was hunger for change.
Our world faces a true planetary emergency. I know the phrase sounds shrill, and I know it's a challenge to the moral imagination.
Consider what kind of car you get. Buy cars and other products that have the least impact environmentally.
I pledge to you today that as president, in my first budget, I will introduce the largest increase in special education ever.
As I have said for many years throughout this land, we're borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the future of human civilization. Every bit of that has to change.
Our democracy, our constitutional framework is really a kind of software for harnessing the creativity and political imagination for all of our people. The American democratic system was an early political version of Napster.
I think the cost of energy will come down when we make this transition to renewable energy.
As human beings, we are vulnerable to confusing the unprecedented with the improbable. In our everyday experience, if something has never happened before, we are generally safe in assuming it is not going to happen in the future, but the exceptions can kill you and climate change is one of those exceptions.
A zebra does not change its spots.
While President Bush likes to project an image of strength and courage, the real truth is that in the presence of his large financial contributors, he is a moral coward.
I do genuinely believe that the political system is not linear. When it reaches a tipping point fashioned by a critical mass of opinion, the slow pace of change we're used to will no longer be the norm. I see a lot of signs every day that we're moving closer and closer to that tipping point.
The day I made that statement, about the inventing the internet, I was tired because I'd been up all night inventing the Camcorder.
If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure.
I think it's harder for people than it should be. But as more and more of us become carbon neutral and change the patterns in our lives to be part of the solution instead of part of the problem, we are now beginning to see the changes in policy that are needed.
I took the initiative in moving forward a whole range of initiatives that have proven to be important to our country's economic growth, environmental protection, improvements in our educational system.
America's political system has evolved over the last 50 years in ways that have enhanced the power of business lobbies.