Melania Trump said Sunday that kindness, compassion and positivity are important traits in life.
The first lady helped SADD – Students Against Destructive Decisions – open its annual national conference at a hotel just outside Washington. The appearance followed her trip last week to the U.S.-Mexico border to see the effect on children of her husband’s “zero-tolerance” policy against illegal immigration.
It also followed her recent announcement of a campaign called “Be Best” that’s about adults helping children be their best selves.
“I feel very strongly that it is the job of adults to provide you with the tools you need to become the best you can be in all areas of life,” she said during brief remarks to about 450 students and adults attending the conference. “That is why I am here today. I believe in SADD’s mission of empowering you to confront the risks and pressures you are challenged with every day.”
“Kindness, compassion and positivity are very important traits in life,” she continued. “It is far easier to say nothing than it is to speak words of kindness. It is easier to judge quickly than to take time to understand. It is often easier to see a glass half empty rather than half full.”
“Nevertheless, you have the power to be the positive force in so many people’s lives,” added the first lady, who is the mother of a 12-year-old boy. “Show respect to each other. Treat your community like your family, and look out for one another.”
SADD was founded in 1981 as Students Against Drunk Driving but changed its name and mission in the late 1990s to focus on prevention of all behaviors and attitudes that are harmful to middle, high school and college students, including substance abuse, traffic safety and bullying.
Mrs. Trump said she was “inspired” when she first heard about the organization and the conference. The audience erupted into loud squeals and cheers when she was introduced by Dylan Mullins, of Marlboro, New Jersey, who is SADD’s National Student of the Year.
Mullins said the first lady’s campaign aims to highlight programs and organizations, like SADD, that seek to help young people overcome some of the issues they face every day.
Before she addressed the gathering, which concludes Wednesday, Mrs. Trump met with the organization’s leadership and helped make blankets the group is donating to shelters, said her spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham.
(AP)
3 Responses
How about with starting to show compassion with the messages that you send with the clothing that you wear. How about teaching your husband to treat others with kindness. How about not plagirizing speeches and pamphlets. Stop being a hypocryte.
The clothing could be improved, but President Trump must criticize his Democratic opponents, those liers. Those speeches of Mrs Trump could have been in all possibility plagiarized by the person who it appears “composed” them for Mrs Obama, as all the speeches of government agencies come from a common pool of “legalise”, legal talk.
Maybe she should tell her husband about compassion.