Remarks
at Charlotte, North Carolina Welcome
Charlotte Coliseum
Charlotte, North Carolina
October 24, 2002
9:35 A.M EDT
Thank you all for coming. I'm glad to be back in North Carolina, and thanks
for such a warm welcome. (Applause.) I want to talk about some things that are
important. I want to talk about the future of this great country. We've got
some tough tasks ahead of us. No question in my mind we can accomplish anything
we set our mind to; we're the greatest nation on the face of the Earth. (Applause.)
I want to talk to you about how to make our country safer, stronger, and better.
And one way to do so is to send Elizabeth Dole to the United States Senate.
(Applause.) There is no question in my mind she is the right person for the
job for North Carolina. (Applause.)
The senior Senator from North Carolina is retiring after a lot of good years
of service to our country. I admire his service -- (applause.) No finer gentleman
in the United States Senate. He represented North Carolina well. He's a credit
to our country. And the right person to follow Senator Jesse Helms is soon to
be Senator Elizabeth Dole. (Applause.)
She married well, and so did I. The truth of the matter is, Senator Dole --
the male Senator Dole -- and I married above ourselves. Laura sends her best.
I just talked to her on the phone. She's on our -- she wishes she could be here.
She's on our ranch in Texas. It's been raining, so she needs to sweep the porch,
because the President of China is coming tomorrow. (Laughter.)
But she's doing great. She sends her love to Elizabeth, her best to all the
candidates. She sends her best to all the friends of ours in North Carolina.
I'm really proud of the job she's done on behalf of the American people. (Applause.)
I want to thank you all for coming, because it gives me a chance to thank you
for what you have done, and for what you're going to do. And what I hope you
do, and I think you're going to do, is go to your coffee shops and your places
of worship and your community centers, and remind people that in America they
have a duty to vote; that in this country -- (applause) -- that in this country
there is a responsibility that comes with being a United States citizen. We
expect you to vote. We expect you to do your duty. And by the way, when you're
reminding them to vote, you might make a couple of suggestions. (Laughter.)
One suggestion is Elizabeth Dole. (Applause.) When you're getting on the telephone
and when you're putting up the signs and when you're mailing the mailers, the
grassroots that makes a difference in an election, make sure you do so -- if
you're living in Robin Hayes' district -- to send Robin Hayes back to the United
States Congress. (Applause.)
I appreciate Robin. I appreciate talking to him; I appreciate his firm stands
on national security. And he's kind of wearing me out when it comes to jobs
in North Carolina. (Laughter.) He cares deeply about the people in his district
and the people of this state. He cares deeply about making sure people can find
work. And I appreciate his deep concern. I appreciate working with him to make
sure our economy continues to grow.
With us today, as well, is Congressman Cass Ballinger. He's another friend.
He's another good one you sent up to the United States Congress from the state
of North Carolina. (Applause.) And I'm real proud of Sue Myrick. She's done
a great job. (Applause.) She's a fine soul. She's got those North Carolina values
etched in her heart, and she represents you well in the United States Congress.
I want to wish Carolyn Grant all the best, and hope for the folks in her district
realize she is the best candidate for the United States Congress. (Applause.)
I'm thankful for the Mayor being here. Mr. Mayor, thanks for your time. (Applause.)
You've got a -- a couple of your relatives showed up, Mayor. (Laughter.)
You've got a lot of great candidates running for your court, particularly the
Supreme Court. And I hope, as you're getting out to work, you make sure you've
got a bench that is strong, a bench where people aren't on there to legislate,
but to interpret the Constitution of the state of North Carolina. (Applause.)
And speaking about benches, another reason we need Elizabeth Dole in the Senate,
besides the fact that she's going to do a great job for North Carolina, is I've
got to have United States senators who will work with me to make sure our federal
judiciary is strong. The record -- (applause.) I'm picking good people to be
judges, good, solid, honorable people to be the judges on the federal judiciary;
people who will strictly interpret the Constitution of the United States. Not
people who will use the bench to write new legislation. (Applause.)
And the record of this United States Senate is a lousy record. (Applause.) They
have politicized the process. They have distorted the records of many of our
good candidates we put forward. They're playing petty politics with the candidates
that I put up there. We're not getting a hearing fast enough. The percentage
of judges is the worst in modern history, percentage of judges approved. And
that's not right.
Let me tell you about one, Terry Boyle from North Carolina, I nominated for
the 4th Circuit Court. I nominated him a long while ago. He can't even get a
hearing. For the sake of a good, sound judiciary, we need to change the United
States Senate, and you can start by electing Elizabeth Dole to the Senate. (Applause.)
You got a good shot if you go out and vote and you work hard to capture the
legislature. And that's important. So I'm here not only to tout the candidacies
of some fine people, but I'm here to thank you -- thank you for getting to --
getting ready to get to work. We're coming down the stretch. Candidates can't
win without you. So do your duty. Convince your neighbors to do their duty.
And by the way, make sure you not only talk to Republicans, but talk to some
Democrats. Some of these Democrats understand the difference between good government
and bad government. They know the difference between a good candidate and a
bad candidate. They know the difference between plain talk and -- and somebody
who is going to cloud up the issues. And also find those who don't give a hoot
about a political party, and turn them out to vote. It's the right thing for
America to do that. (Applause.)
I appreciate so very much Elizabeth's focus on education. I share the same focus.
We share the same philosophy. It starts with the belief that every child can
learn. That's an important distinction. It's important to have that ingrained
in your heart. If you believe every child can learn, it means you're going to
insist upon high standards and high expectations. It means you're willing to
challenge what I call the soft bigotry of low expectations. If you lower the
bar, if you believe certain children can't learn, if you believe certain inner-city
kids can't possibly learn, if you believe children whose parents may not speak
English as a first language can't learn, then you're willing to have low standards
and low expectations. And that's not right for America.
Secondly, Elizabeth and I not only believe you ought to set high standards,
we believe in local control of schools. ((Applause.) We believe that you got
to trust the local folks. Listen, the people who care more about the children
of North Carolina are the people of North Carolina -- not people living in Washington,
D.C. (Applause.)
We're spending federal money on education. As a matter of fact, North Carolina
will receive $1 billion of federal monies. And that's good. And it's monies
targeted to people who need help. But for the first time, we're starting to
ask the question, are we getting a return on our dollar spent?
See, for the first time the United States Congress has said, for money spent,
we expect every child to learn because we believe every child can learn. Therefore,
you got to show us whether or not the children can read and write and add and
subtract. And if not -- first of all, if so, we'll heap praise where it belongs.
And that's on your teachers and your parents and your principals who are working
hard to make sure there's a quality education for every child. But if the accountability
system shows that there are children trapped in schools which will not teach
and will not change, you better make sure you've got public representatives
who are willing to challenge the status quo. No child should be left behind
in America. (Applause.)
I look forward to working with Elizabeth on education matters, based upon the
philosophy I just outlined. I look forward to working with her to make sure
medicine works. Listen, medicine has changed; Medicare hadn't. Medicine is modern;
Medicare is stuck. And yet it's an incredibly important program. It's a promise
which we have made to our seniors. It's a promise that we must keep for the
sake of having a stronger America and a better America. I look forward to working
with Elizabeth Dole to make sure that Medicare is modern just like medicine,
and the seniors have got a prescription drug plan. (Applause.)
We share the same view that if somebody is looking for work in America, and
can't find a job, that we need to do everything we can to increase jobs in America,
that we ought to be thinking about pro-growth policies. Pro-growth so people
can find work; not pro-growth so the federal government expands. Pro-growth
so that the person here in North Carolina who's looking for work is able to
put food on the table. That's what we want. And one way to do that is to let
people keep more of their own money. (Applause.)
We read from the same textbook. It says, if a person has more money in their
pocket, he or she is more likely to demand a good or a service. And when somebody
demands a good or a service in our society, in the marketplace, somebody is
more likely to produce the good or a service. And when somebody produces that
good or a service, somebody in North Carolina, or elsewhere in America, is more
likely to find work.
The best way to invigorate a sluggish economy, the best way to make sure that
people are able to find work, is to let people keep more of their own money.
The tax cuts that Elizabeth Dole supports will provide -- (applause) -- will
provide the people of North Carolina over the next 10 years $28 billion in income
tax and death tax relief, $4.5 billion in child credit relief, $1.8 billion
in marriage penalty relief. Billions of dollars over the next 10 years to be
in your pocket so you can decide what to do with it, so you can help invigorate
the economy by just doing what you normally do, which is demand a good or a
service. (Applause.)
But the issue is alive and well because there are some in Washington that do
not want to make the tax relief plan we put in place permanent. See, it's temporary.
I need a United States senator to join me -- with me to make sure that tax relief
is permanent. How can you plan if tax relief is temporary? How can you run your
small business if you're not sure what the tax rules are going to be? It doesn't
make any sense to say, on the one hand, we giveth; on the other hand, we taketh
away. We need a United States Senate that will make the tax relief permanent.
(Applause.)
I know it makes some of them nervous up there to hear us talking about that.
But they've got to understand that small business is the engine of economic
vitality for America. Seventy percent of new jobs are created by small businesses.
We want the entrepreneurial spirit to flourish. We want small businesses to
be able to grow to be big businesses. And one way you do so is you let them
keep more money in their pocket. That's how you encourage small business growth.
And by cutting the individual tax rates, which most small businesses pay because
they're sole proprietorships or limited partnerships, we are invigorating the
small business sector of America. (Applause.)
I believe this economy is going to be fine, because interest rates are low,
inflation is low, and productivity is high. It's also going to be fine because
the entrepreneurial spirit is strong in America. That dream is a big dream for
people. Today we've got with us David and Helen Marie Berthold. They started
their own business. It's called Ehren-Haus Industries. It's a plastics and wire
company. They had a dream; they wanted to own their own business, they wanted
to make employment opportunities available in North Carolina. They worked hard
to build up their own business, and they're pretty darn good about it, by the
way. David and Marie won the 2001 Entrepreneurial Award from the Chamber of
Commerce. Marie is the National Association of Women Business Owners Woman of
the Year. They know what they're doing.
But let me tell you what they're worried about. They're worried about over-regulation.
They see reams of regulations coming out of these bureaucracies at the federal
and state level. I look forward to working with Elizabeth Dole to make it easier
for small businesses to prosper, not harder for small businesses to prosper,
by reducing unnecessary regulations. (Applause.)
Let me tell you what else they're worried about -- and so am I. They're worried
that they're not going to be able to leave their business to their family. If
you're a farmer, or you're a rancher, or you're a small business owner, the
death tax is an incredibly punitive tax. See, people work all their life to
build up their small business, like David and Helen Marie have done. You've
got farmers here in North Carolina worked all their life to build up their farms,
and then want to leave it to their child. But the death tax oftentimes prevents
people from doing that. It means a person's assets are taxed twice. It means
the federal government gets in between the owner of the asset and the person
they want to leave it to.
You need to have a United States senator who speaks plainly on how bad the death
tax is to America, and make sure that the death tax is repealed forever. (Applause.)
Let me talk about one other issue right quick, about domestic policy. And I
worry about the cost of health care, and I'm worried about the accessibility
of health care. And one reason the cost of health care is up, and one reason
there's fewer doctors practicing medicine is because there's too many junk and
frivolous lawsuits hurting our docs. (Applause.) We want people to have access
to the courts, but you can't have access to the courts when you've got frivolous
lawsuits filed all over the place. And you've got docs being run out of business.
I was in Mississippi the other day, and I was talking to a young doctor who
had moved down to the Delta. He followed his heart. He and his wife moved to
the Delta from up north because they wanted to help people who couldn't help
themselves with medicine. The lawsuits, the trial lawyers have made it so hard
for this guy to practice compassionate medicine; he said, I've had it, I'm moving
back home.
Listen, we can have a health care system that's responsive. We need a legal
system that takes care of people who are injured. But we need a law at the federal
level, a medical liability reform law that prevents the plaintiff's attorneys
of America from driving up health care costs and driving good people out of
medicine. (Applause.)
No, there's a lot of work we're going to do together to make sure that America
is a stronger place, make sure the economy goes forward, make sure people get
educated. We've also got to make sure America is a secure place, safer place.
It's the biggest challenge we have right now in America, is to protect the homeland.
You've just got to know that there's an enemy out there lurking around which
hates America. They just do. And they hate us because of what we love. We love
freedom, is what we love. We love to be able to worship an Almighty any way
we see fit in America. (Applause.) We value our elections -- although the candidates
may be getting a little tired of it. We value open discourse. We value a free
press. We value freedom. And so long as we love freedom there's going to be
an enemy out there which hates what we love. You've just got to understand that.
We're in a new era. Oceans no longer protect us. After September 11th, 2001,
we learned a harsh lesson here in America that reality has changed. It used
to be when we were coming up or when we were younger that two oceans could protect
us. And there would be conflict overseas, and the United States had the luxury
of picking and choosing whether or not we wanted to participate in the conflict.
We had that luxury. But it's changed. And America must understand it has changed.
No longer can we assume oceans will protect us. As a matter of fact, quite the
contrary. We must assume that the enemy is coming, and we've got to do everything
we can to protect the homeland.
That's why I started talking about the issue of Iraq. In the new reality we
must view all threats -- we must take all threats seriously. We must have a
cold, hard look at every threat facing America. And the man over there in Iraq
is a threat. After all he has gassed his own people. (Applause.) He hates what
we stand for. He hates what America believes in. He has not only gassed his
own people, he used weapons of mass destruction on his own people. He's used
weapons of mass destruction on countries in his neighborhood. He has told the
world he won't have weapons of mass destruction; for 11 years he's lied. Time
and time and time again, he has lied. Time and time and time again, the United
Nations has passed resolutions telling him, disarm. He's totally ignored the
resolutions.
So here is our strategy. Our strategy is to make it clear to the United Nations,
we want you to be effective. We don't want you to be the League of Nations.
We want you to be an effective United Nations. It's your choice to make. (Applause.)
We're sending a clear message to Mr. Saddam Hussein, we believe in peace in
America. We want the world to be peaceful, not only for ourselves, but for people
in your neighborhood. And so you must disarm. You said you would disarm, and
you must disarm. It's your choice to make.
We have made the call to the international community and to Mr. Saddam Hussein,
himself, to disarm. But, my friends, if the United Nations won't act, if they're
feeble in their responsibility, and if Saddam Hussein won't disarm, the United
States will lead a coalition in the name of peace to disarm Saddam Hussein.
(Applause.)
That's our responsibility. That's my responsibility to see as clearly as I can
see, to anticipate true threats to our homeland and deal with them -- deal with
them in a way that enables me to tell you that I'm doing everything I can --
or we're doing everything we can -- to protect the people. That's our most important
responsibility. (Applause.)
There is a lot of good people -- there is a lot of good people working hard
on your behalf; people at the federal level, people at the state level, people
at the local level, a lot of people. See, we're on alert. We understand the
realities. We remember and we're not forgetting what took place. We saw what
happened in Indonesia. We understand the people we're dealing with. There's
no therapy, by the way, that can heal these people. These are cold-blooded killers.
That's all they are. (Applause.)
And so, therefore, we got to do everything we can here at home to button up
the homeland. So I asked the Congress to join me in setting up a department
of homeland security. A department that's -- whose job it is to make sure that
number one priority of agencies involved with the homeland security is just
that -- is your protection. We need people under one agency, I felt, because
in order to make sure that that becomes the number one priority, that some cultures
within agencies need to change. And we could effect a cultural change better
if there was one agency involved with your protection.
We're making some progress. The House voted a good bill. And the Senate is stuck.
The Senate hasn't gotten a homeland security bill. They're arguing over things.
As a matter of fact they said, we'll get you one, Mr. President, but you got
to pay a price. And here's the price they wanted me to pay: They want to roll
back an authority that every President since John F. Kennedy has had, which
will allow me to suspend some work rules for the sake of national security.
See, I need to have that capacity, like every President since John Kennedy has
had, to say that it's in our national interest that certain work rules be suspended.
Not that we're going to suspend collective bargaining rights; not that people
can't accumulate the way they see fit; but that certain rules which may get
in the way of our ability to protect America need to be suspended. I'll give
you an example.
We thought it was important for Customs agents to wear radiological detection
devices. After all, if you're worried about weapons of mass destruction coming
into America, you want your Customs people to have a device that will help detect
weapons of mass destruction. The union heads said, wait a minute, you can't
make these people wear that. That's an issue over which we must have collective
bargaining.
See, because I had the power to suspend the rules, after four months' discussion,
we got it done. But the Senate is stuck. They're more interested in some special
interests up there. And I'm not going to stand for it. It's not right for America.
(Applause.) I need to be able to put the right people at the right place at
the right time to protect America, and Elizabeth Dole will be a strong ally.
(Applause.)
The best way to protect America, however, is to hunt the killers down, one at
a time, and bring them to justice. (Applause.) And we're making progress. But
it's a different kind of war. Used to you could measure progress based upon
the number of tanks that no -- were out of commission, or number of airplanes
you shot down.
These people we fight are people who hide in caves, or lurk around the dark
corners of parts of the world, and send youngsters to their suicidal death.
See, that's the new kind of army we face. And they're tough. They're not as
tough as we are, but they're tough. (Applause.) They hide. You got to understand
when you explain this to your children -- it's important you do, and -- or people
who are questioning why this is going on -- you've got explain to them that
here in America we value life. Everybody counts. Everybody is a precious soul.
But they, the enemy, they don't value life. They've hijacked a great religion
and they murder. Innocent life doesn't matter to them. It just doesn't count.
It doesn't -- it's just not on their radar screen.
And there's a difference. And therefore, we fight a determined enemy. But the
only way to deal with them is to keep our coalition strong and to hunt them
down. You know, I laid out a doctrine -- you just got to know it still stands
-- it said, either you're with us, either you love freedom and with nations
which embrace freedom, or you're with the enemy. There's no in-between. And
the doctrine still stands. (Applause.)
Sometimes -- sometimes you'll see the progress on your TV screens, and sometimes
you're not going to see the progress on your TV screens. It's a different kind
of war. We're cutting off their money when we can find it. We're sharing intelligence.
And we're hauling them in.
The other day a guy popped his head up, named bin al-Shebh -- (Laughter.) He's
not a problem anymore. (Laughter and applause.) He was a significant character
because he wanted to be the 20th hijacker. He was still out there plotting.
Slowly but surely, this great country -- with our friends and allies -- are
hunting them down and bringing them to justice. It doesn't matter how long it
takes, by the way. Yesterday I signed a defense appropriations bill, right there
in the Rose Garden. I said two things about it. One, any time we put our troops
into harm's way, they deserve the best pay, the best training, and the best
possible equipment. (Applause.)
And secondly, that was a message to friend and foe alike, it doesn't matter
how long it takes. The increase in defense spending, the largest since Ronald
Reagan, sends a clear message: We're in this deal for the long haul. See, we
understand freedom. We understand responsibility. I don't know what the enemy
was thinking when they hit us. I can't imagine. They must have thought we were
so self-absorbed, so selfish, so materialistic that after 2001 -- September
2001, oh, we might have filed a lawsuit or two. They didn't know. They don't
understand America. They don't understand America like I understand America.
When it come to the defense of our freedom, when it comes to our obligations
and duty for the future for our children, this country will remain strong and
this country will remain tough. (Applause.)
For those of you who have got relatives in the United States military, you tell
them their Commander-in-Chief has got all the confidence in the world in those
good troops. (Applause.) I'm glad they're on my side.
No, we got a lot of work to do, but I want you to know -- I firmly believe this
-- that if we stay the course and do our duty, fulfill our obligation, we can
achieve peace. That's my dream. My dream is not only for a peaceful America,
but to bring peace in parts of the world who have quit on peace.
I believe it's possible that we can achieve peace in the Middle East. I have
a clear vision on how we can get there. Going to have to renounce terror. We
have to remain true to our principles. We have to remember that freedom is God-given,
it's not United States-given; that freedom is a universal value, not an American
value. (Applause.)
No, out of the evil done to America can come some great good, starting with
peace in the world. And here at home, we can be a better America. You just got
to understand there are pockets of despair in this country. People hurt. Places
where people are addicted or lost. People wonder whether or not the American
experience, the so-called American Dream, is meant for them. My attitude is,
so long as one of us hurts, all of us hurt. But I believe we can eradicate those
pockets of despair and hopelessness. I believe that -- not only by having a
good education system, good health care, making sure that the welfare system
is in place that encourages and helps people work. I believe we can accomplish
that. But we've got to understand the limitations of government.
Government can hand out money, but it can't put hope in people's hearts. It
can't put a sense of purpose in people's lives. The way we can change America,
one heart, one soul, one conscience at a time is for each of us to understand
people hurt and put our arm around them and tell them we love them. If you want
to change America, love your neighbor just like you'd like to be loved yourself.
(Applause.)
No, our vision -- Elizabeth's vision and my vision -- understands the great
power of all faiths in our society. We understand a universal law of love. And
we understand that America can change, that there are forces more powerful than
addiction, there are force more power than -- powerful than hopelessness, there
are forces more powerful than loneliness.
My call to our fellow Americans, if you want to join the fight against evil,
is do some good. Mentor a child -- just like your Mayor does. Mentor a child.
You can save Charlotte, North Carolina, one heart, one soul, one conscience
at a time. Be a Boy Scout leader or a Girl Scout leader. Go to your Boy's Clubs
or Girl's Clubs. Feed the hungry. Find housing for those who need a home. There's
all kinds of ways you can help.
One person can't do everything, I recognize that. But each of us can be that
one person doing something to make sure that the enemy which hits us understands
that they hit the greatest, most powerful, and, yet, at the same time, most
compassionate country on the face of the Earth. (Applause.)
Now, they hit us -- they didn't know who they were hitting. Out of the evil
done to this great country is going to come a more peaceful world. And out of
the evil done to this great country is going to come a more hopeful day.
I want to thank you for your interest in our political process. I urge you to
get out the vote. In the meantime, may God bless you all, and God bless America.
(Applause.)