Remarks by the President at South Bend, Indiana Welcome
South Bend Regional Airport
South Bend, Indiana
1:57 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Listen, thank you all for coming. What a warm
welcome. I appreciate this Indiana hospitality. (Applause.) I'm
thrilled to be back here again. I wanted to come and talk to you about
some of the problems we face and our -- this nation's great character,
and our ability to overcome anything that stands in our way. See,
we're all going to work together to make America a safer place, a
stronger place, and as importantly, a better place. (Applause.)
I appreciate John Barnes for introducing me. I appreciate all the
good folks who put this event on. I want to thank my fellow citizens
for coming out. I particularly want to thank those of you who brought
your family members with you. I love to see our nation's young. I
love to be with our children. (Applause.)
I want to thank the mayor, Mayor Luecke of South Bend, Indiana, for
greeting me here. I want to thank Mayor Beutter for coming, as well.
I want to thank Mayor David Miller for being here. I want to thank any
local official who has taken time out of your busy day to come and say
hello. There's one member of the Congress who is here today -- that's
Steve Buyer. I appreciate Buyer being with us. (Applause.)
As you can see, I had some folks meet me out there at this
unbelievable airplane that you provide for the President. (Laughter.)
I want to thank our long-time friend Digger Phelps for being here. I
appreciate him coming to say hello. And as importantly, I want you to
know that if you're a Fighting Irish fan, which I presume some people
are -- (applause) -- that this great university hired a really good man
to be its head coach, Ty Willingham. (Applause.) I appreciate Ty
coming over.
And what's interesting about my administration, at least one person
in my administration, one of the finest women in America, one of the
smartest women in America is my close advisor on foreign policy -- that
happens to be Condoleezza Rice. (Applause.) She was a former student
here at Notre Dame, a former trustee at Stanford. She went and saw
Notre Dame's first victory. She's constantly telling me to watch out
for the Irish, because she knows Tyrone Willingham.
But anyway, I want to thank you all for coming. We've got some big
challenges facing this great nation. The first challenge is to make
sure that there is economic security in America. See, a better America
and a stronger America is an America in which people are able to find
work. If they're looking for work and can't find work, we've got a
problem, and we need to do something about it. Our country was in
recession -- when I got sworn in, it turns out the first three quarters
of my time in Washington was in recession.
Secondly, the enemy hit us, which shocked our economy. Thirdly, it
turns out we had some people that thought they could cook the books in
America, people that were -- thought the best way to get ahead was to
kind of shade the truth, to mistreat employee and shareholder. And
we're dealing with all of them. We're dealing with the latter by
passing law that says to those who want to cheat people, there's no
easy money in America, just hard time. We're going to find you, and
we're going to hold you to account. (Applause.)
We expect high standards, we expect high standards in America. And
Democrats and Republicans came together. We passed the most
comprehensive corporate reform bill since Franklin D. Roosevelt was the
President. It's a good piece of legislation. By the way, it shows
what's possible in Washington when we set aside our political parties
and focus on what's doing right for the American people. (Applause.)
But our economy got hurt -- was hurting, and got hurt. But we're
recovering. See, the foundations for growth are strong. Interest
rates are low. Inflation is low. We've got the best workers in the
world, the worker of the American -- the productivity of the American
worker is up. The entrepreneurial spirit is strong. The foundation
for growth is solid, it's solid.
One way to make sure that if people want to find work is to do more
on the tax front. Let me tell you something about my view of taxes.
Here's the textbook I read -- and by the way, some in Washington aren't
reading this textbook, they're reading another chapter. I believe if
you let a person keep their own money, that person is more likely to
demand a good or a service. And when they demand a good or a service,
in our society somebody is more likely to produce it. And when
somebody produces that good or service, somebody is more likely to find
work.
The tax relief we planned came at the right time in American
economic history. (Applause.) It was the right thing to do. It was
good for small business. America must understand that 70 percent of
new jobs are created by small business people. And when you cut the
tax rates like you did, and you understand most small businesses are
sole proprietorships or limited partnerships -- in other words, they
pay tax at the personal income tax level -- what we did was infuse
capital into the small business sector of our society. People are more
likely to find work because of the tax relief.
We also did two other things important. One, we mitigated the
damage done by the marriage penalty. Our tax code ought to encourage
marriage, not discourage marriage. (Applause.) And thirdly, we put
the death tax on the way to extinction. The death tax is bad for
Indiana farmers, it's bad for Indiana ranchers, it's bad for Indiana
small business owners. It is plain -- it's just plain a bad tax.
(Applause.)
But here's the problem, here's the problem -- because of the Senate
rules, all the tax relief that we passed, which both Republicans and
Democrats voted for, goes away after 10 years. Now, that's a hard one
to explain at the coffee shop there in Crawford. (Laughter.) How do
you say, on the one hand, you've got tax relief, but on the other hand,
you don't. The one hand giveth, the other hand taketh away. It sounds
like Washington to me. (Laughter.) But those are the Senate rules.
And so here's one way to make sure we continue to have jobs for
people, so that people can plan, so that people have certainty when it
comes to their businesses, so jobs will grow, is for Congress to make
the tax relief permanent. (Applause.)
There are some who are beginning to make noises that they want to
raise the taxes, they want to do away with the tax relief. For the
sake of people who want to find work in America, for the sake of job
creation, it is important for those voices in Congress to read the same
text book you and I have read, that tax relief is important for job
creation. (Applause.)
I'll tell you what else is important for job creation, is to make
sure that Congress does not overspend. The problem we have in
Washington is every program sounds like a beauty, sounds like a
winner. Every program sounds good. Just the problem is they all cost
billions. What we need to do is set our priorities, the priorities on
how to make America safer, stronger and better, and not overspend.
It's essential that the United States Congress meet our priorities and
hold the line on spending. And one way they can better understand how
to do that is understand whose money we're talking about. The money we
spend in Washington is not the government's money. The money we spend
in Washington is your money, the people's money. (Applause.)
We need an energy bill in America. An energy bill will be good for
job security. It will also be good for national security. We need an
energy bill which will encourage conservation, that will help unleash
the technology necessary for us to conserve more, the technologies and
the research necessary for us to do a better job with renewable sources
of energy. But at the same time, we've got to understand technology
has changed and we can explore for energy here at home in safer ways.
For the sake of job security and for the sake of national security --
and I say national security because we must do everything we can to
become less dependent on foreign sources of crude oil. (Applause.)
They've been talking about an energy plan for months. And with the
short time left before the Congress goes home for the elections, and
for the sake of American jobs, they've got to stop talking and get me
an energy bill. For the sake of the country, what's best for the
country, we need an energy policy.
And we need, by the way, a terrorism insurance policy, too. When
the terrorists hit us, they affected the ability of people to be able
to get insurance necessary to start construction projects. There are
over $10 billion of construction projects which have been delayed
because we can't get terrorism insurance for developers. Congress
ought to help. Congress ought to help not for the sake necessarily of
the developers, but the sake of the over 300,000 hard-hats who will be
able to find work. If you want to help economic growth, Congress, get
me a terrorism insurance bill that is -- that recognizes the importance
of the hard-hat, rewards the hard-hats of America and does not reward
the plaintiffs attorneys in this country. (Applause.)
I've got -- I'm optimistic about our future, because I'm optimistic
about America. I know the resiliency of our country. I know the
strengths of our country. And while some hurt now because of the
economic slowdown, I'm optimistic about our future, I really am. I
feel strong -- I feel strongly that there are better days ahead for
people who can't find work. The foundation is there, and we'll keep
working, we'll keep working.
My biggest job, however, is to protect you, the American people.
That's my biggest job now, is to secure the homeland, is to make sure
that we're safe -- (applause) -- is to make sure our American families
are protected. That job still exists, and it's important today because
there's still an enemy out there that hates us.
It is really important for all of us to communicate the right
message to our children when we talk with these harsh words. But you
need to tell your kids that these killers hate us because of what we
love. And what we love is we love freedom. We love the fact that
freedom can worship an -- the freedom to worship an almighty God the
way we see fit. (Applause.) We love our freedoms, we hold them dear,
and we're willing to defend them. We love freedom to speak, we love
freedom to assemble, we love freedom of the press. We love those
freedoms.
And the other thing -- one of the other things that distinguishes
from our enemy is that we value the worth of each life. Everybody
counts. (Applause.) Everybody matters. Each person has worth here in
America. And that's not the way the enemy thinks.
See, they've hijacked a great religion, and they don't care about
life. They've got their desires, their dark, dark ambitions. And if
people get in the way from them, that's just too bad, as far as they're
concerned. But the problem -- what they've got is, they've got a
mighty nation that stands between them and their ambitions.
(Applause.) We know they're out there, we know they're out there. And
therefore, we're doing everything we can to protect you. We're chasing
down every lead, every hint. There's a lot of really good, hardworking
people who are working overtime, working long hours to protect the
homeland.
One of the reasons I've asked -- or the reason I asked for us to
create a new department of homeland security is because I want to have
all the tools at our disposal necessary to protect you -- not just me,
but future Presidents. And notice I say future Presidents, because I
believe this struggle is going to be going on for quite a while.
Because we're not quitting freedom, and they're probably not going to
quit hating for a while.
I've asked the Congress to join me in creating this homeland
department because I want the over 100 agencies involved with your
protection to be under one agency. In other words, in order to affect
the culture of an agency, in order to set the right priorities, they
ought to be under one umbrella. They ought to be working toward the
same goal. That doesn't mean they can't do other things. But the
number one priority, the most important job that these agencies have is
to protect America.
And we're making some progress. I appreciate the way the House
voted the bill. But we've got a little problem in the Senate. And
here's the problem. I need flexibility in order to make decisions
necessary to protect you. I'll give you an example. One of the ways
-- one of the most important things to secure our homeland is to do a
better job on our borders. See, we need to know who is coming in the
country. We need to know what they're bringing into the country --
(applause) -- we need to know what they're bringing in and we need to
know if they're leaving when they say they're going to leave. That's
what we need to know.
And yet when you go down to the border, when you look at a border,
there's Customs, and there's INS and there's Border Patrol -- three
different uniforms, three different cultures, three different attitudes
perhaps. In order to better secure America, the administration, the
executive branch of government needs the capacity to move people to the
right place at the right time. The enemy moves quickly; we should be
able to move quickly. Yet the bill coming out of the Senate
micromanages the process. Listen, there are senators up there who are
more concerned about special interests in Washington and not enough
concerned about the security of the American people. (Applause.)
And I'm not going to accept a lousy bill. I'm not going to accept
a lousy plan. I insist for the sake of our security that the United
States Senate get it right. (Applause.) The best way to secure our
homeland and the best way to make sure that our children can grow up in
a free world is to hunt these killers down, one person at a time, and
bring them to justice, which is exactly what we're going to do.
(Applause.)
It's a different kind of war than we're used to. In the old days,
they could count tanks and figure out how strong the enemy was, or you
could look at airplanes and formations and flotillas. This is a war
where we're fighting tough people, smart killers, who hide in dark
caves or who kind of slither into shadowy recesses in large cities and
parts of the world and then send youngsters to their suicidal death.
See, it's a different kind of war, which means we've got to think
differently. We've got to be better at intelligence, we've got to
uphold that doctrine that says, either you're with us or you're with
the terrorists. (Applause.)
We will be steady, we will be patient. Sometimes you'll see the
action in this war, and sometimes you won't see the action in this
war. Sometimes you'll know whether we bring one of them to justice,
sometimes you won't know whether we bring one of them to justice.
(Laughter.) But you've got to know that we're after justice, that
we're steadily, slowly but surely -- (applause) -- we are slowly but
surely doing everything we can to protect the homeland; slowly but
surely finding these people.
Sometimes they think they can outwit us, but they can't outwit a
powerful nation that's just on the hunt. Once we get them on the run,
we're going to make sure that there's no place for them to light, make
sure that other countries under the consequences of accepting these al
Qaeda killers and other terrorists who hate America.
I also laid out another doctrine -- and by the way, I think it's
very important that when the United States speak, we do what we say,
for our credibility and for the sake of peace. I told the world loud
and clear, if you harbor a terrorist, if you feed a terrorist, if you
hide a terrorist, you're just as guilty as the killers who came to
America. (Applause.)
And one group of folks found out what we meant, the Taliban. I
want you to tell your children this, as well, that this great nation
went into Afghanistan -- in upholding that doctrine -- we went into
that country not to conquer anybody, but to liberate people. See,
every life matters to us. Every life matters. You need to tell your
young ones when they think about America and our values, that because
of this country and our friends, many young girls went to school for
the first time. We freed people from the clutches of a barbaric
regime. (Applause.)
I submitted the biggest increase in defense spending since Ronald
Reagan was the President to Congress recently. I did it for two
reasons. It's important for you to know why. First, any time we put
our troops into harm's way, our soldiers deserve the best possible pay,
the best training and the best equipment. (Applause.) We owe it to
our troops, we owe it to those who are sacrificing for our country, and
we owe it to their loved ones. By the way, if you happen to have a son
or a daughter or a nephew or niece or a mom or a dad in the military,
you tell them, thanks, on behalf of a grateful nation. (Applause.)
I submitted that bill that size because I wanted to send a message
to friend and foe alike that we're in this deal for the long haul, that
there's not a calendar on my desk that says, by such and such a date
we've got to quit. See, we love freedom. And it doesn't matter how
long it takes to defend freedom, we will defend freedom in America.
That's what we're made out of. That's the fiber of our country.
(Applause.)
That's important for people to understand. If there is a threat to
America, we will deal with it in a deliberative, smart way. If we face
a threat, we must confront that threat if we want our children -- see,
there's a new -- it's a new attitude around the world, we've got to
understand that. The battlefield is now here in America. It used to
be the oceans would protect us. But September the 11th taught us a new
lesson, and it's a lesson that must -- that we must take seriously. We
must understand the possibilities of what can happen in the new war of
the 21st century.
And that's why I started a dialogue yesterday on another threat to
America, a dialogue about Saddam Hussein. I want to assure you that I
want the American people to full understand all the consequences.
That's why we're going to have a debate here nationally. That's why
there's going to be a lot of discussion. That's why I've asked the
Congress to be a part of the deliberations. That's why there will be
open hearings. That's why members of -- appropriate members of my
administration will testify. That's why we'll share information as
much as we possibly can with the American people -- not only with the
American people, but with our friends and allies around the world.
I'll be meeting with Prime Minister Blair on Saturday, Prime
Minister Chretien on Monday. I'll be talking to President Putin and
Premier Jiang, and President Chirac tomorrow. I'll be beginning to
talk about the need for freedom-loving countries to deal with threats
today, before they become incredibly serious tomorrow. See, I believe
we owe that to our children.
Some things are certain, however. This is a man who used poisons
on his own people. He's invaded two countries -- two countries. He's
a person who has ignored all admonitions by international
organizations. There will be a good debate, but I firmly believe that
the world cannot allow the world's worst leaders to hold America
blackmail, to threaten America, to threaten our peace and threaten our
friends and allies with the world's worst weapons. (Applause.)
I don't know what was going through the mind of the enemy when they
hit us. They probably thought, you know, America is so self-absorbed,
and so materialistic, so shallow and so selfish that after September
the 11th, oh, they might file a lawsuit or two, but that's all they
would do. No, they don't understand our country, do they. They don't
understand the fact that when we need to be tough, we're plenty tough.
And when we need to be compassionate, we've got a huge heart.
Out of the evil done to America is going to come some good. Out of
the evil done to this country -- see, the enemy never could predict
that. Haters don't -- can't see. They can't see beyond their
selfishness. But I see something different, and I know many Americans
do, as well. I see peace. I believe that by being strong and forceful
when they need to be strong and forceful, by speaking clearly about
good and evil, by leading other peaceful and loving -- freedom-loving
people in a vast coalition, that we can achieve peace -- that we can
achieve peace not only for ourselves and for our children, but we can
achieve peace in parts of the world where people have quit thinking
about peace.
We have a chance. The enemy hit us. They awoke a mighty country
that not only will defend ourselves, but will lead toward a more
peaceful tomorrow. I want you to tell your children that when they
hear all the talk and all the speculation and all the thousands of
hours of so-called experts babbling away about this, that or the other,
that the true policy of this government is to achieve peace for
generations to come.
And at home the enemy hit us, and they have awakened a new spirit
in the country. I used to tell people, if you want to join the war on
terror, do some good. If you want to fight evil, love your neighbor
just like you'd like to be loved yourself. (Applause.) You want to be
a patriot, serve something greater than yourself.
Today we've got Ricardo Rios with us. He is a AmeriCorps member.
Ricardo, give them a wave. I'll tell you about Ricardo. He's decided
that he wants to serve something greater than self, so he became a
teacher, a 6th grade teacher. He knows what I know -- and I want you
all to hear this loud and clear -- one person can't do everything in
society, I know that; but each of us can do something to help change
America one heart, one soul, one conscience at a time.
See, that's the great hope here for this country. The enemy has
awakened a new spirit of compassion in America. We've got to recognize
that in this great country there are pockets of despair, there are
pockets of hopelessness, there's addiction. There are people who
wonder about the American Dream. And that can be changed. There can
be light where there is darkness, particularly when our fellow
Americans put their arm around people in need and say, I love you, what
can I do to help, how can I help make your life better? If you want to
join the war on terror, if you want to be a part of the change in
America, love your neighbor just like you'd like to be loved yourself.
(Applause.)
No, the enemy hit us, and as a result, there are more soldiers in
the armies of compassion all across America. The enemy hit us, and as
a result, people have taken a step back and have asked, what's
important in our lives? We've taken an assessment of our worth, an
assessment of our future. And as a result of what they have done, I
think our culture is changing -- a culture that used to say, if it
feels good, just go ahead and do it, and you've got a problem, blame
somebody else for your problem, to a new day in which each of us
understand we are responsible for the decisions we make in life.
If you're a mom or a dad -- if you're lucky enough to be a mom or a
dad, you're responsible for loving your child with all your heart and
all your soul. (Applause.) If you're fortunate enough to be a citizen
of South Bend, Indiana, you're responsible for the quality of
education. You're responsible for the public school system. You're
responsible for making sure that your faith-based groups, if they're
looking for help, are joined. You're responsible for helping feed the
hungry. It's your responsibility in order to be an American to serve
something greater than yourself in life.
Perhaps the most vivid example of that came with Flight 93. I want
you all to remember. For me, it's one of the most important moments of
the change that is taking place in America, the most vivid and sad
symbol of them all, but nevertheless vivid and clear. People are
flying across the country on an airplane, at least they thought they
were. They learned the plane was going to be used as a weapon. They
got on their telephones. They were told the true story. Many of them
told their loved ones good-bye. They said they loved them. They said
a prayer, a prayer was said. One guy said, "Let's roll." They took
the plane into the ground. (Applause.)
It is that spirit, it is that willingness to serve something
greater than yourself in life which is a part of this great country's
soul and fabric. No, the enemy hit us. They didn't know who they were
hitting. And out of the evil done to America is going to come some
incredible good, because this is the greatest nation on the face of the
Earth, full of the greatest people.