South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford's State of the State Address

With all that being said – the state of our state is that we have both enormous challenges and opportunities before us. They will necessitate us doing what was suggested in a recent email that came my way that said simply, “We have to be doing things we should have been doing a long time ago.“ My question to every one of you is indeed can we make this the year that we make the changes that we should have begun long ago. We
can’t do anything about the “long ago,“ but we can do something about bringing change this year. In Washington it was that spirit that in part gave us a new administration. We all saw a campaign based on the concepts of change and the resounding theme of “yes, we can.“ As an American I would wish the new administration success in deliberately working through many of the challenges facing this country, but as a South Carolinian I would simply ask that we take up the same mantle of “yes, yes we can” in overcoming so many of our state’s challenges.

Can we commit to the notion of “yes, we can” on just a couple of things this year key to bettering the lives of so many here in South Carolina? Because after all it was this thinking of “yes, we can” that led to the shattering of a glass ceiling that has hung over our nation for the last 200 years. Given this example alone, can we break the glass ceiling of an outdated governmental structure that has hurt the people of our state for more than 100 years?

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Posted in * Economics, Politics, * South Carolina, Politics in General, State Government

2 comments on “South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford's State of the State Address

  1. RalphM says:

    “Given this example alone, can we break the glass ceiling
    of an outdated governmental structure that has hurt the people of our state for more than 100 years?”

    Can someone in SC explain what he’s talking about? Is it the SC gov’t or the US gov’t.?

  2. John Wilkins says:

    fortunately, sc doesn’t need money. they apparently feed and house the poor well.