The  tragic shootings of a Democratic congresswoman and nineteen others  Saturday did little to ease the vitriol in the national dialogue, but  President Barack Obama's speech saw liberals and conservatives converge  with praise. 
In a televised memorial address Wednesday night at the University of  Arizona, the president called for national unity in the wake of the  tragedy that badly injured Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona and left  six others dead, including a federal judge and an aide to Giffords.
 "Our hearts are broken by their sudden passing. Our hearts are broken  -- and yet, our hearts also have reason for fullness," Obama said in an  emotional speech honoring the victims.
 Former Bush speechwriter Marc Thiessen, usually a vociferous critic of Obama, wrote in the Washington Post that the president was "brilliant and courageous" in his remarks.
 "He  shined a light on the victims and the  heroes and told their  stories,  which had been lost amid the shameful  debate that erupted  following the  attack. In so doing, he gave voice to  their courage and  sacrifice --  and reclaimed the narrative of the day  for them,"  Thiessen wrote,  referring to the speech as "genuine" and comprising  "elegance" and  "eloquence."
 At the National Review, contributor Jack Pitney wrote:   "President Obama gave a fine speech reminding us that there is more to   life than politics, and more to politics than self-interest."
 David Frum, also a former Bush speechwriter who now runs his own blog, said  the "president's challenge, as so often, was to make a human  connection.  In that, he succeeded tonight. He paid tribute to the  individuality of  the lost, honored the pain of the bereaved, and was  crucial in bringing  together the collective community acknowledgement  of grief that is the  only available comfort to those who mourn."
 Philip Klein of the conservative American Spectator opined that "for his first time in office, Barack Obama sounded like the president of all Americans."
 Liberals, such as editors David Corn of Mother Jones, Joan Walsh of Salon, and columnist Gail Collins of the New York Times, likewise offered him high praise.
 Obama, a father of two young girls, choked up while speaking of the   inexplicable death of a nine-year-old girl, Christina Taylor Green, in  the Tucson shootings.
 As the country mourns the victims and looks ahead, the president  invoked his vintage calls for transcending partisanship, indirectly  urging political adversaries to refrain from assigning blame upon each  other.
 "[W]hat we can't do is use this tragedy as one more occasion to turn  on one another," Obama said. "As we discuss these issues, let each of us  do so with a good dose of humility. Rather than pointing fingers or  assigning blame, let us use this occasion to expand our moral  imaginations, to listen to each other more carefully, to sharpen our  instincts for empathy, and remind ourselves of all the ways our hopes  and dreams are bound together."
 "I believe we can be better."
           
                            By Nathan Diebenow         Wednesday, January 12th, 2011 -- 7:56 pm
While eulogizing the victims of Saturday's mass shooting, President  Barack Obama revealed that just after he left the hospital doctors said  that Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) "opened her eyes" for the first time  since being shot in the head.
 "Gabby opened her eyes," he said to cheers. "So I can tell you, she knows we are here. She knows we love her."
 Obama further called for Americans to live up to the idealistic  expectations of the youngest victim of the shooting, nine-year-old  Christina Taylor Green, who was recently elected to her student council.
 "I want to live up to her expectations," he said. "I want our democracy to be as good as she imagined it."
 He continued, "All of us... we should make sure this country lives up to our children's expectations."
 Obama also encouraged Americans to bring civility to political  discussions out of respect for the six victims who lost their lives  outside a grocery store in Tucson, many of whom were exercising their  constitutional rights to free assembly and free speech.
 "If this tragedy prompts debate, let's make sure it is worthy of those we've lost," he said.
 The president recounted the lives of those five others fallen: John  M. Roll, a US district judge; Gabe Zimmerman, the director of community  outreach for U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords; Phyllis Schneck; longtime  minister of 76-year-old Dorwan Stoddard; and Dorothy Morris.
 "They believed, and I believe, we can be better," he said. "We may  not be able to stop all the evil in the world. but the way we treat each  other is entirely up to us."
 Obama also expressed gratitude for those who helped prevent further  lives from becoming lost that day: Daniel Hernandez, Jr., who is  credited with saving the life of Rep. Giffords; Roger Salzgeber and Bill  Badger, the men who tackled the gunman; and Patricia Maisch, who  prevented the gunman from reloading; and the doctors, nurses, and first  responders at the scene.
 "It's important for us to pause for a moment to make sure we talk in a  way that heals, not wounds," he said, adding, "What we cannot do is use  this occasion to turn on each other. That we cannot do. That we cannot  do."
 "As we discuss these issues, we use a dose of humility. Let's use  this occasion to expand our moral imaginations," Obama stressed.
 Prior to Obama's eulogy, scripture passages were read by Janet  Napolitano, Homeland Security Secretary and former Arizona governor, and  Eric Holder, US Attorney General. A Native American blessing was also  presented.
 "There is no way to measure what Tucson lost last Saturday," Jan  Brewer, the Republican governor of Arizona, said. "Arizona is united in a  mission of recovery."
 The following is from an earlier report...
 In attendance are First Lady Michelle Obama, Attorney General Eric  Holder, Homeland Secretary Janet Napolitano, and Supreme Court Justice  Anthony Kennedy.
 About 17,000 people were estimated to be in line at McKale Center by 2 p.m. The center's official capacity is 12,000.
 Obama returned from overseas to deliver the eulogy entitled “Together  We Thrive: Tucson and America” of the six people who died from  Saturday's tragic shootings outside a grocery store in Tucson, Arizona.
 The president prior to the memorial service visited with the families  of the victims as well as the target of the rampage Rep. Gabrielle  Giffords, who remains in critical condition after suffering a  point-blank gun-shot wound to the left side of her brain.
 Giffords' doctors reported signs of her improvement throughout the week.
 "She's getting better every day, and she's making more and more  spontaneous movements," Dr. Peter Rhee, head of trauma at University  Medical Center in Tucson, told the Los Angeles Times in an interview Wednesday.
 He continued, "She was able to actually even feel her wounds herself.  She can fix her gown. She's making very specific kinds of movements, so  we're very happy at this point."
 Giffords' alleged assassin Jared Lee Loughner. 22, is being held  without bail, facing five federal charges of murder and attempted  murder. His parents Tuesday released a statement expressing their sorrow  for the victims.
 "There are no words that can possibly express how we feel," they  wrote in a statement. "We wish that there were, so we could make you  feel better. We don't understand why this happened.
 "We care very deeply about the victims and their families. We are so very sorry for their loss."
 The motive behind Loughner's aggression remains a mystery, though  speculation abounds, including whether harsh political rhetoric  influenced the shooting.
 Sarah Palin, a former Republican vice president candidate, blamed the  media for the shooting despite criticism over her political action  committee's map had "targeted" Rep. Giffords with a bull's eye.
 Palin, now a Fox News commentator, offered no apology in her nearly eight-minute-long video released 15 hours before Obama eulogy.
 The Anti-Defamation League, meanwhile, concluded in its analysis  of Jared Lee Loughner's "Internet footprint" that he was neither  anti-Semitic nor a member of any particular extremist group, but rather  he is mentally ill.
 "Loughner's writings do not provide any solid body of evidence or any  patterns that would seem clearly to point to a particular ideology or  belief system as a significant motivating factor," the report said.
 Rep. Giffords is reportedly Jewish and served on the Arizona ADL's regional board.
 Loughner's friends reported that they had distanced themselves from him due to his increasing odd behavior over the past year.
 “He did not have many friends,” Zane Gutierrez, 21, told The New York Times Tuesday. “We stopped talking to him in March of 2010. He started getting weird.”
 The issue of mental health and violence  came up before in the Obama administration. In 2009, 12 people died and  31 were wounded after Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, a licensed  psychiatrist, opened fire at Fort Hood in Texas.
 “It may be hard to comprehend the twisted logic that led to this  tragedy," Obama said at the time of the Fort Hood attack. "But this much  we do know -- no faith justifies these murderous and craven acts; no  just and loving God looks upon them with favor. For what he has done, we  know that the killer will be met with justice -- in this world, and the  next.”
 This video is from Talking Points Memo TV, broadcast Jan. 12, 2011.
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