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Fred Thompson-Republican
Convention Speech
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Tonight our thoughts are
still with our friends and fellow citizens in the Gulf Coast
area, and our thanks go to those who have worked so hard to
keep them safe. There can be no more important work than this.
But what we are doing at
this convention is also important to our country.
We are going to nominate
the next president and vice president of the United States of
America.
We do so while taking a
different view of our country than that of the other party.
Listening to them you'd
think that we were in the middle of a great depression; that
we are down, disrespected and incapable of prevailing against
challenges facing us.
We know that we have challenges
... always have, always will.
But we also know that we
live in the freest, strongest, most generous and prosperous
nation in the history of the world and we are thankful.
Speaking of the vice presidential
nominee, what a breath of fresh air Governor Sarah Palin is.
She is from a small town,
with small town values, but that's not good enough for those
folks who are attacking her and her family.
Some Washington pundits
and media big shots are in a frenzy over the selection of a
woman who has actually governed rather than just talked a good
game on the Sunday talk shows and hit the Washington cocktail
circuit. Well, give me a tough Alaskan governor who has taken
on the political establishment in the largest state in the Union
and won over the beltway business-as-usual crowd
any day of the week.
Let's be clear ... the selection
of Governor Palin has the other side and their friends in the
media in a state of panic. She is a courageous, successful,
reformer, who is not afraid to take on the establishment.
Sound like anyone else we
know?
She has run a municipality
and she has run a state.
And I can say without fear
of contradiction that she is the only nominee in the history
of either party who knows how to properly field dress a moose
... with the possible exception of Teddy Roosevelt.
She and John McCain are
not going to care how much the alligators get irritated when
they get to Washington, they're going to drain that swamp.
But tonight, I'd like to
talk to you about the remarkable story of John McCain.
It's a story about character.
John McCain's character
has been tested like no other presidential candidate in the
history of this nation.
He comes from a military
family whose service to our country goes back to the Revolutionary
War.
The tradition continues.
As I speak, John and Cindy
McCain have one son who's just finished his first tour in Iraq.
Another son is putting "Country
First" and is attending the Naval Academy. We have a number
of McCains in the audience tonight.
Also here tonight is John's
96-year-old mother, Roberta. All I've got to say is that if
Roberta McCain had been the McCain captured by the North Vietnamese,
they would have surrendered.
Now, John's father was a
bit of a rebel, too.
In his first two semesters
at the Naval Academy, he managed to earn 333 demerits.
Unfortunately, John later
saw that as a record to be beaten.
A rebellious mother and
a rebellious father I guess you can see where this is
going.
In high school and the Naval
Academy, he earned a reputation as a troublemaker.
But as John points out,
he wasn't just a troublemaker. He was the leader of the troublemakers.
Although loaded with demerits
like his father, John was principled even in rebellion.
He never violated the honor
code.
However, in flight school
in Pensacola, he did drive a Corvette and date a girl who worked
in a bar as an exotic dancer under the name of Marie, the Flame
of Florida.
And the reason I'm telling
you these things, is that, apparently, this mixture of rebellion
and honor helped John McCain survive the next chapter of his
life:
John McCain was preparing
to take off from the USS Forrestal for his sixth mission over
Vietnam, when a missile from another plane accidentally fired
and hit his plane.
The flight deck burst into
a fireball of jet fuel.
John's flight suit caught
fire.
He was hit by shrapnel.
It was a scene of horrible
human devastation.
Men sacrificed their lives
to save others that day. One kid, who John couldn't identify
because he was burned beyond recognition, called out to John
to ask if a certain pilot was OK.
John replied that, yes,
he was.
The young sailor said, "Thank
God" ... and then he died.
These are the kind of men
John McCain served with.
These are the men and women
John McCain knows and understands and loves.
If you want to know who
John McCain is, if you want to know what John McCain values,
look to the men and women who wear America's uniform today.
The fire on the Forrestal
burned for two days.
20 planes were destroyed.
134 sailors died.
John himself barely dodged
death in the inferno and could've returned to the States with
his ship.
Instead, he volunteered
for combat on another carrier that was undermanned from losing
so many pilots.
Stepping up.
Putting his "Country
First."
Three months later John
McCain was a prisoner of war.
On October 26, 1967, on
his 23rd mission over North Vietnam, a surface-to-air missile
slammed into John's A-4 Skyhawk jet, blowing it out of the sky.
When John ejected, part
of the plane hit him breaking his right knee, his left
arm, his right arm in three places.
An angry mob got to him.
A rifle butt broke his shoulder.
A bayonet pierced his ankle
and his groin.
They took him to the Hanoi
Hilton, where he lapsed in and out of consciousness for days.
He was offered medical care for his injuries if he would give
up military information in return.
John McCain said "No."
After days of neglect, covered
in grime, lying in his own waste in a filthy room, a doctor
attempted to set John's right arm without success ... and without
anesthesia.
His other broken bones and
injuries were not treated. John developed a high fever, dysentery.
He weighed barely a hundred pounds.
Expecting him to die, his
captors placed him in a cell with two other POWs who also expected
him to die.
But with their help, John
McCain fought on.
He persevered.
So then they put him in
solitary confinement ... for over two years.
Isolation ... incredible
heat beating on a tin roof. A light bulb in his cell burning
24 hours a day.
Boarded-up cell windows
blocking any breath of fresh air.
The oppressive heat causing
boils the size of baseballs under his arms.
The outside world limited
to what he could see through a crack in a door.
We hear a lot of talk about
hope.
John McCain knows about
hope. That's all he had to survive on. For propaganda purposes,
his captors offered to let him go home.
John McCain refused.
He refused to leave ahead
of men who'd been there longer.
He refused to abandon his
conscience and his honor, even for his freedom.
He refused, even though
his captors warned him, "It will be very bad for you."
They were right.
It was.
The guards cracked ribs,
broke teeth off at the gums. They cinched a rope around his
arms and painfully drew his shoulders back.
Over four days, every two
to three hours, the beatings resumed. During one especially
fierce beating, he fell, again breaking his arm.
John was beaten for communicating
with other prisoners.
He was beaten for NOT communicating
with so-called "peace delegations."
He was beaten for not giving
information during interrogations.
When his captors wanted
the names of other pilots in his squadron, John gave them the
names of the offensive line of the Green Bay Packers.
Whenever John was returned
to his cell walking if he could, dragged if he couldn't
as he passed his fellow POWs, he would call out to them.
He'd smile ... and give
them a thumbs-up.
For five-and-a-half years
this went on.
John McCain's bones may
have been broken but his spirit never was.
Now, being a POW certainly
doesn't qualify anyone to be president.
But it does reveal character.
This is the kind of character
that civilizations from the beginning of history have sought
in their leaders.
Strength.
Courage.
Humility.
Wisdom.
Duty.
Honor.
It's pretty clear there
are two questions we will never have to ask ourselves, "Who
is this man?" and "Can we trust this man with the
presidency?"
He has been to Iraq eight
times since 2003.
He went seeking truth, not
publicity.
When he travels abroad,
he prefers quietly speaking to the troops amidst the heat and
hardship of their daily lives.
And the same character that
marked John McCain's military career has also marked his political
career.
This man, John McCain is
not intimidated by what the polls say or by what is politically
safe or popular.
At a point when the war
in Iraq was going badly and the public lost confidence, John
stood up and called for more troops.
And now we are winning.
Ronald Reagan was John McCain's
hero.
And President Reagan admired
John tremendously.
But when the president proposed
putting U.S. troops in Beirut, John McCain, a freshman Congressman,
stood up and cast a vote against his hero because he thought
the deployment was a mistake.
My friends ... that is character
you can believe in.
For years, members of Congress,
Republican and Democrat alike, have gouged the taxpayer with
secret earmark spending.
Well, he has never sought
an earmark.
I've experienced John's
character first hand.
In 1993, when I was thinking
of running for the Senate, I went to John for advice. He convinced
me I could help make a difference for our country.
I won that election, and
with Republican control of Congress, we reformed welfare.
We balanced the budget.
And we began rebuilding
our military.
What I remember most about
those years is sitting next to John on the Senate floor as he
led battle after battle to change the acrimonious, pork barreling,
self serving ways of Washington.
The Senate has always had
more than its share of smooth talkers.
And big talkers.
It still has.
But while others were talking
reform, John McCain led the effort to make reform happen
always pressing, always moving for what he believed was right
and necessary to restore the people's faith in their government.
Confronting when necessary,
reaching across the aisle when possible, John personified why
we came to Washington in the first place.
It didn't always set too
well with some of his colleagues.
Some of those fights were
losing efforts.
Some were not.
But a man who never quits
is never defeated.
Because John McCain stood
up our country is better off.
The respect he is given
around the world is not because of a teleprompter speech designed
to appeal to American critics abroad, but because of decades
of clearly demonstrated character and statesmanship.
There has been no time in
our nation's history, since we first pledged allegiance to the
American flag, when the character, judgment and leadership of
our president was more important.
Terrorists, rogue nations
developing nuclear weapons, an increasingly belligerent Russia.
Intensifying competition
from China.
Spending at home that threatens
to bankrupt future generations. For decades an expanding government
... increasingly wasteful and too often incompetent.
To deal with these challenges
the Democrats present a history making nominee for president.
History making in that he
is the most liberal, most inexperienced nominee to ever run
for president. Apparently they believe that he would match up
well with the history making, Democrat controlled Congress.
History making because it's the least accomplished and most
unpopular Congress in our nation's history.
Together, they would take
on these urgent challenges with protectionism, higher taxes
and an even bigger bureaucracy.
And a Supreme Court that
could be lost to liberalism for a generation.
This is not reform.
And it's certainly not change.
It is basically the same
old stuff they've been peddling for years. America needs a president
who understands the nature of the world we live in.
A president who feels no
need to apologize for the United States of America.
We need a president who
understands that you don't make citizens prosperous by making
Washington richer, and you don't lift an economic downturn by
imposing one of the largest tax increases in American history.
Now our opponents tell you
not to worry about their tax increases.
They tell you they are not
going to tax your family.
No, they're just going to
tax "businesses!" So unless you buy something from
a "business," like groceries or clothes or gasoline
... or unless you get a paycheck from a big or a small "business,"
don't worry ... it's not going to affect you.
They say they are not going
to take any water out of your side of the bucket, just the "other"
side of the bucket! That's their idea of tax reform.
My friends, we need a leader
who stands on principle.
We need a president, and
vice president, who will take the federal bureaucracy by the
scruff of the neck and give it a good shaking.
And we need a president
who doesn't think that the protection of the unborn or a newly
born baby is above his pay grade.
The man who will be that
president is John McCain.
In the days ahead at this
convention, you will hear much more about what John will do
as president what he will do on the economy, on energy,
on health care, the environment. ... It is not my role tonight
to explain that vision.
My role is to help remind
you of the man behind the vision. Because tonight our country
is calling to all of us to step up, stand up, and put "Country
First" with John McCain.
Tonight we are being called
upon to do what is right for our country.
Tonight we are being called
upon to stand up for a strong military ... a mature foreign
policy ... a free and growing economy and for the values that
bind us together and keep our nation free.
Tonight, we are being called
upon to step up and stand up with John just as he has stood
up for our country.
Our country is calling.
John McCain cannot raise
his arms above his shoulders.
He cannot salute the flag
of the country for which he sacrificed so much. Tonight, as
we begin this convention week, yes, we stand with him.
And we salute him.
We salute his character
and his courage.
His spirit of independence,
and his drive for reform.
His vision to bring security
and peace in our time, and continued prosperity for America
and all her citizens.
For our own good and our
children's, let us celebrate that vision, that belief, that
faith so we can keep America the greatest country the world
has ever seen.
God bless John McCain and
God bless America.
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