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John Edwards speech to the Democratic National Convention, July
28, 2004
Remarks of John Edwards, Boston, MA, July 28, 2004.
Boston, MA - Thank you. Now, you know why
Elizabeth is so amazing.
I am a lucky man: to have the love of my life at my side. We have
been blessed with four beautiful children: Wade, Cate, Emma Claire,
and Jack.
My mother and father, Wallace and Bobbie Edwards are here
tonight. You taught me the values that I carry with me in my
heart: faith, family, responsibility, and opportunity for
everyone. You taught me that there's dignity and honor in a hard
days work. You taught me that you look out for your neighbors, you
never look down on anybody, and you treat everyone with
respect.
Those are the values John Kerry and I believe in, and nothing
makes me prouder than standing with him in this campaign. I am so
humbled to be your candidate for Vice President of the United
States.
I want to talk about our next president. For those who want to
know what kind of leader he'll be, I want to take you back about
thirty years. When John Kerry graduated college, he volunteered
for military service. He volunteered to go to Vietnam and to
captain a swift boat, one of the most dangerous duties you could
have. And as a result he was wounded and honored for his valor.
If you have any question about what he's made of, you need to
spend three minutes with the men who served with him then and stand
by him today.
They saw up close what he's made of. They saw him reach down and
pull one of his men from the river and save his life. And in the
heat of battle, they saw him decide in an instant to turn his boat
around, drive it straight through an enemy position, and chase down
the enemy to save his crew.
Decisive. Strong. Aren't these the traits you want in a
Commander in Chief?
We hear a lot of talk about values. Where I come from, you don't
judge someone's values based on how they use that word in a
political ad. You judge their values based upon what they've
spent their life doing.
So when a man volunteers to serve his country, and puts his life
on the line for others-that's a man who represents real American
values.
This is a man who is prepared to keep the American people safe and
to make America stronger at home and respected in the world.
John is a man who knows the difference between what is right and
what is wrong. He wants to serve you-your cause is his cause. And
that is why we must and we will elect John Kerry as our next
president.
For the last few months, John has been talking about his positive,
optimistic vision for the country-talking about his plan to move
this country in the right direction.
But we've seen relentless negative attacks against John. So in
the weeks ahead, we know what's coming-don't we-more negative
attacks.
Aren't you sick of it?
They are doing all they can to take this campaign for the highest
office in the land down the lowest possible road.
This is where you come in. Between now and November-you, the
American people-you can reject the tired, old, hateful, negative,
politics of the past. And instead you can embrace the politics of
hope, the politics of what's possible because this is America,
where everything is possible.
I am here tonight because I love my country. And I have every
reason to love my country because I have grown up in the bright
light of America.
I grew up in a small town in rural North Carolina. My father
worked in a mill all his life, and I will never forget the men and
women who worked with him. They had lint in their hair and grease
on their faces. They worked hard and tried to put a little
something away every week so their kids and their grandkids could
have a better life. They are just like the auto workers, office
workers, teachers, and shop keepers on Main Streets all across
America.
My mother had a number of jobs. Her last job was working at the
post office so my parents could have health care. And she owned
her own small business-refinishing furniture to help pay for me go
to college.
I have had such incredible opportunities in my life, and I was
blessed to be the first person in my family to go to college. I
worked my way through, and I have had opportunities way beyond what
I could have ever imagined.
And the heart of this campaign-your campaign-is to make sure that
everyone has those same opportunities that I had growing up-no
matter where you live, who your family is, or what the color of
your skin is. This is the America we believe in.
I have spent my life fighting for the kind of people I grew up
with. For two decades, I stood with families and children against
big HMOs and big insurance companies. And as a Senator, I fought
those same fights against the Washington lobbyists and for causes
like the Patients' Bill of Rights.
I stand here tonight ready to work with you and John to make
America strong again.
And we have so much work to do. Because the truth is, we still
live in two different Americas: one for people who have lived the
American Dream and don't have to worry, and another for most
Americans who work hard and still struggle to make ends meet.
It doesn't have to be that way. We can build one America
We can build one America where we no longer have two healthcare
systems. One for people who get the best healthcare money can buy
and then one for everybody else, rationed out by insurance
companies, drug companies, and HMOs-millions of Americans who don't
have any health insurance at all.
It doesn't have to be that way.
We have a plan that will offer everyone the same health care your
Senator has. We can give tax breaks to help pay for your health
care. And we will sign into law a real Patients' Bill of Rights so
you can make your own health care decisions.
We shouldn't have two public school systems in this country: one
for the most affluent communities, and one for everybody else.
None of us believe that the quality of a child's education should
be controlled by where they live or the affluence of their
community.
It doesn't have to be that way.
We can build one public school system that works for all our
children. Our plan will reform our schools and raise our
standards. We can give our schools the resources they need. We
can provide incentives to put quality teachers in the places and
the subjects where we need them the most. And we can ensure that
three million kids with a safe place to go after school. This is
what we can do together.
We shouldn't have two different economies in America: one for
people who are set for life, their kids and grandkids will be just
fine, and then one for most Americans who live paycheck to
paycheck.
And you know what I'm saying. You don't need me to explain it to
you, you know-you can't save any money, can you? Takes every dime
you make just to pay your bills, and you know what happens if
something goes wrong-a child gets sick, somebody gets laid off, or
there's a financial problem, you go right off the cliff.
And what's the first thing to go. Your dreams.
It doesn't have to be that way.
We can strengthen and lift up your families. Your agenda is our
agenda-so let me give you some specifics.
First, we can create good paying jobs in America again. Our plan
will stop giving tax breaks to companies that outsource your jobs.
Instead, we will give tax breaks to American companies that keep
jobs here in America. And we will invest in the jobs of the
future-in the technologies and innovation to ensure that America
stays ahead of the competition.
We will do this because for us a job is about more than a
paycheck-it's about dignity and self respect. Hard work should be
valued in this country and we're going to reward work, not just
wealth.
We don't want people to just get by; we want people to get ahead.
So let me give you some specifics about how we're going to do
that.
To help you pay for health care, a tax break and health care
reform to lower your premiums up to $1,000. To help you cover the
rising costs of child care, a tax credit up to $1,000 to cover
those costs so your kids have a safe place to go while you work.
And to help your child have the same chance I had and be the first
person in your family to go to college, a tax break on up to $4,000
in tuition.
So now you ask how are we going to pay for this? Well, here's how
we're going to pay for it. Let me be very clear, for 98 percent of
Americans, you will keep your tax cut-that's 98 percent. But we'll
roll back the tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, close
corporate loopholes, and cut government contractors and wasteful
spending. We can move our country forward without passing the bill
and the burden on to our children and grandchildren.
We can also do something about 35 million Americans who live in
poverty every day. Here's the reason we should not just talk about
it, but do something about millions of Americans who still live in
poverty, because it is wrong. We have a moral responsibility to
lift those families up.
I mean the very idea that in a country of our wealth and our
prosperity, we have children going to bed hungry. We have children
who don't have the clothes to keep them warm. We have millions of
Americans who work full-time every day for minimum wage to support
their family and still live in poverty-it's wrong.
These are men and women who are living up to their part of the
bargain: working hard and taking care of their families. Those
families are doing their part; it's time we did ours.
We will do that when John is in the White House. We will raise
the minimum wage, finish the job on Welfare Reform, and bring good
paying jobs to the places that need them. And we will say no
forever to any American working full-time and living in poverty-not
in our America, not in our America.
Let me talk about why we need to build one America. I saw up
close what having two Americas does to our country.
From the time I was very young, I saw the ugly face of segregation
and discrimination. I saw young African-American kids sent upstairs
in movie theaters. I saw white only signs on restaurant doors and
luncheon counters. I feel such an enormous responsibility when it
comes to issues of race and equality and civil rights.
I have heard some discussions and debates about where, and in
front of what audiences we should talk about race, equality, and
civil rights. Well, I have an answer to that question.
Everywhere.
This is not an African-American issue, not a Latino issue, not
an Asian-American issue, this is an American issue. It's about who
we are, what our values are, what kind of country we want to live
in.
What John and I want-what we all want-is for our children and our
grandchildren to be the first generations to grow up in an America
that's no longer divided by race.
We must build one America. We must be one America, strong and
united for another very important reason-because we are at
war.
None of us will ever forget where we were on September 11th. We
share the same terrible images: the Towers falling, the Pentagon in
flames, and the smoldering field in Pennsylvania. And we share the
profound sadness for the nearly three thousand lives lost.
As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, I know that we
have to do more to fight terrorism and protect our country. And we
can do that. We are approaching the third anniversary of September
11th, and I can tell you that when we're in office, it won't take
us three years to get the reforms in our intelligence we need to
protect our country. We will do whatever it takes, for as long as
it takes, to make sure that never happens again, not to our
America.
When John is president, we will listen to the wisdom of the
September 11th Commission. We will build and lead strong alliances
and safeguard and secure weapons of mass destruction. We will
strengthen our homeland security and protect our ports, safeguard
our chemical plants, and support our firefighters, police officers
and EMT's. We will always use our military might to keep the
American people safe.
And we will have one clear unmistakable message for al Qaida and
the rest of these terrorists. You cannot run. You cannot hide.
And we will destroy you.
John understands personally about fighting in a war. And he knows
what our brave men and women are going through in another war-the
war in Iraq.
The human cost and extraordinary heroism of this war, it surrounds
us. It surrounds us in our cities and towns. And we will win this
war because of the strength and courage of our own people.
Some of our friends and neighbors saw their last images in
Baghdad. Some took their last steps outside of Fallujah. And
some buttoned their uniform for the final time before they went out
to save their unit.
Men and women who used to take care of themselves, they now count
on others to see them through the day. They need their mother to
tie their shoe. Their husband to brush their hair. And their
wife's arm to help them across the room.
The stars and stripes wave for them. The word hero was made for
them. They are the best and the bravest. They will never be left
behind. You understand that. And they deserve a president who
understands on the most personal level what they have gone
through-what they have given and what they have given up for their
country.
To us, the real test of patriotism is how we treat the men and
women who put their lives on the line every day to defend our
values. And let me tell you, the 26 million veterans in this
country won't have to wonder if they'll have health care next week
or next year-they will have it always because they took care of us
and we will take care of them.
But today, our great United States military is stretched thin.
More than 140,000 are in Iraq. Nearly 20,000 are serving in
Afghanistan. And I visited the men and women there and we're
praying for them as they keep working to give that country
hope.
Like all of those brave men and women, John put his life on the
line for our country. He knows that when authority is given to the
president, much is expected in return. That's why we will
strengthen and modernize our military.
We will double our Special Forces, and invest in the new equipment
and technologies so that our military remains the best equipped and
best trained in the world. This will make our military stronger so
we're able to defeat every enemy in this new world.
But we can't do this alone. We have to restore our respect in the
world to bring our allies to us and with us. It's how we won the
World Wars and the Cold War and it is how we will build a stable
Iraq.
With a new president who strengthens and leads our alliances, we
can get NATO to help secure Iraq. We can ensure that Iraq's
neighbors like Syria and Iran, don't stand in the way of a
democratic Iraq. We can help Iraq's economy by getting other
countries to forgive their enormous debt and participate in the
reconstruction. We can do this for the Iraqi people and our
soldiers. And we will get this done right.
A new president will bring the world to our side, and with it-a
stable Iraq and a real chance for peace and freedom in the Middle
East, including a safe and secure Israel. And John and I will
bring the world together to face our most dangerous threat: the
possibility of terrorists getting their hands on a nuclear,
chemical or biological weapon.
With our credibility restored, we can work with other nations to
secure stockpiles of the worlds most dangerous weapons and
safeguard this dangerous material. We can finish the job and
secure all loose nukes in Russia. And we can close the loophole in
the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty that allows rogue nations
access to the tools they need to develop these weapons.
That's how we can address the new threats we face. That's how we
can keep you safe. That's how we can restore America's respect
around the world.
And together, we will ensure that the image of America-the image
all of us love-America this great shining light, this beacon of
freedom, democracy, and human rights that the world looks up
to-that that beacon is always lit.
The truth is every child, every family in America will be safer
and more secure if you grow up in a world where America is once
again looked up to and respected. That's the world we can create
together.
Tonight, as we celebrate in this hall, somewhere in America, a
mother sits at the kitchen table. She can't sleep. She's worried
because she can't pay her bills. She's working hard to pay the
rent and feed her kids. She's doing everything right, but she
still can't get ahead.
It didn't use to be that way in her house. Her husband was called
up in the Guard and he's been serving in Iraq for more than a
year. She thought he'd be home last month, but now he's got to
stay longer.
She thinks she's alone. But tonight in this hall and in your
homes-you know what? She's got a lot of friends. We want her to
know that we hear her. And it's time to bring opportunity and an
equal chance to her door.
We're here to make America stronger at home so she can get ahead.
And we're here to make America respected in the world so that we
can bring him home and American soldiers don't have to fight the
war in Iraq and the war on terror alone.
So when you return home, you might pass a mother on her way to
work the late-shift-you tell her……hope is on the
way.
When your brother calls and says that he's working all the time at
the office and still can't get ahead-you tell
him……hope is on the way.
When your parents call and tell you their medical bills are
through the roof-you tell them…...hope is on the way.
When your neighbor calls you and says that her daughter has worked
hard and wants to go to college-you tell her……hope is
on the way.
When you talk to your son or daughter who is serving this country
and protecting our freedoms in Iraq-you tell
them……hope is on the way.
And when you wake up and sit with your kids at the kitchen table,
talking to them about the great possibilities in America, you make
sure that they know that John and I believe at our core that
tomorrow can be better than today.
Like all of us, I have learned a lot of lessons in my life. Two of
the most important are that first, there will always be heartache
and struggle-you can't make it go away. But the other is that
people of good and strong will, can make a difference. One lesson
is a sad lesson and the other's inspiring. We are Americans and we
choose to be inspired.
We choose hope over despair; possibilities over problems, optimism
over cynicism. We choose to do what's right even when those around
us say "You can't do that." We choose to be inspired because we
know that we can do better-because this is America where everything
is still possible.
What we believe-what John Kerry and I believe-is that you should
never look down on anybody, that we should lift people up. We don't
believe in tearing people apart. We believe in bringing people
together. What we believe-what I believe-is that the family you're
born into and the color of your skin in our America should never
control your destiny.
Join us in this cause. Let's make America stronger at home and
respected in the world. Let's ensure that once again, in our one
America-our one America-tomorrow will always be better than
today.
Thank you and God bless you.
Source: http://www.johnkerry.com.
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© 2003 The Acronym Institute.
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