Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Disarmament requires trust.
The first thing I see is the obligation to serve peace.
Beyond peace, there is no longer any existence possible.
One of our most noble political tasks is to open up trust.
Insecurity and resignation mingle with the hope for a better order.
Liberal democracy must finally become the vital element of our society.
Everywhere, authority and tradition have to justify themselves in the face of questions.
Ladies and gentlemen, I take office at a time in which the world is living in extreme contradictions.
The time has come - and must come - for multilateral conversations about a secure peace in all of Europe.
Some fatherlands are difficult. Germany is one of them. But it is our fatherland. Here is where we live and work.
Therefore it does not help to sneer at the imperfection of today's reality or to preach absolutes as a daily agenda.
Trust cannot be commanded; and yet it is also correct that the only one who earns trust is the one who is prepared to grant trust.
In this life of ours we remain directed toward the relative utopia of a better world, and sensibly this can be the only model for our action.
I have left the federal government and the German Bundestag; I have resigned from all my positions in the Social Democratic Party of Germany.
Not less, but more democracy - that is the demand, that is the great goal that we have to prescribe for ourselves, and especially for our youth.
We have to recognize that the freedom of the individual has to be protected not only from the power of the state, but even more so from economic and societal power.
I appeal to the responsibility of the blocs and the major powers, not to seek security in the arms race, but rather in a meeting for joint disarmament and arms limitations.
The secret of big and revolutionary actions also consists in discovering the tiny step that is simultaneously a strategic step, insofar as it entails additional steps in the direction of a better reality.
War is not the quintessential emergency in which man has to prove himself, as my generation learned at its school desks in the days of the Kaiser; rather, peace is the emergency in which we all have to prove ourselves.
Ladies and gentlemen, on the occasion of my election I received many letters from people representing all segments of the population and all professions, especially from the younger generation, linking my inauguration with great - far too great - expectations.