Senator KENNEDY. Governor, the next Governor
of Illinois, Otto Kerner, your present U.S. Senator, and I am sure your
next U.S. Senator, my Colleague in the Senate, Paul Douglas; Mel Price,
your Congressman, ladies and gentlemen, I feel somewhat embarrassed saying
anything unkind about the Republicans right in front of their headquarters.
[Applause.] I don't want them to call the Vice President and say
we are mean in any way. But we are just trying to tell the truth.
[Applause.]
I think the overriding issue which is before
the United States in 1960 is how we can maintain our freedom, how we can
not only survive but how we can prevail. There are many domestic matters
that disturb us, the decline in agriculture, the slowdown in industry,
but they are all wrapped up in the one subject: How can the United States
maintain its position, how can the United States build a stronger country
here and help the cause of freedom throughout the world. I don't make any
mistake ahout it, that the 1960's are going to be the most difficult and
dangerous time in the life of our country. Anyone who says that the future
is easy is wholly wrong. I think the future is going to be a difficult
one, and because I think in the next 10 years that the people of Latin
America and Africa and Asia will begin to make their judgment as to which
direction they should move; should they come with us, should they follow
the road of freedom, or should they move in the direction of the Communists?
We can affect that judgment by the kind of
society that we build here. George Allen, the head of the U.S. Information
Service, testifying before a congressional committee this year, said that
ever since Sputnik, ever since the United States was second in space, the
people of the world had begun to feel the Soviet Union is moving ahead
faster than we are. We cannot afford to fail in any area of our national
and international life. If the people of the world begin to decide that
the Soviet Union and the Chinese Communists are strongest, if they begin
to decide that their educational system is better than ours, if they decide
that their effort in science and production is better than ours, if they
decide that they represent the way of the future, and that we represent
the way of the past, then we have lost the battle of the future.
I do not say that the future is easy. I do
not say that time and events have not placed a heavy burden upon us all.
It would be nice to turn those burdens over to some other country and some
other people, but we have had them placed on us, and I do not regret it.
I cannot possibly afford to permit the Soviet Union to produce as it now
does twice as many scientists and engineers as we do, to be first in space,
to be increasing their economic productivity three times the rate we are.
I don't say that our future is in danger of
a military attack if we maintain our strength. What I am concerned about
is that the people of the world whose support we need, the people of the
countries south of us, and Africa and Asia and in Europe, itself, and in
Eastern Europe, will begin to feel that the world and history are moving
in the direction of our adversaries and that we are standing still.
That is the basic dispute that I have with the present Republican leadership.
Their slogan has been, "You never had it so good." I think that our slogan
should be "We must do better, we must do better, we must do better." [Applause.]
Mr. Nixon has said that when I say that some
of these things could be better, that I am downgrading the United States.
I don't downgrade the United States. I served it for 18 years. I have the
greatest confidence in the United States. I am not satisfied to see it
second best in any area of national and international life. [Applause.]
I want an America that is not first, if; not first, but; not first, when;
but first, period, and I think we can do it. [Applause.] I believe that
this generation of Americans has the same rendezvous with destiny as that
generation of Americans in 1936 to whom Franklin Roosevelt addressed those
words, that that generation had a rendezvous with destiny. I believe we
do, too. The rendezvous was the question of whether freedom could be maintained
here in the United States. Our destiny is to determine whether freedom
can be maintained throughout the world, whether a house divided against
itself can survive, whether a world can exist half slave and half free.
I think we will move in the direction of freedom.
That is the purpose of this campaign, to build a stronger country here,
and in building a strong country, we strengthen the cause of freedom all
around the globe.
I ask your help in this campaign. I ask you
to join me in a journey across the new frontiers of the 1960's. I run for
the office of the Presidency not promising the things I am going to do
for the country, but asking you to join with me in serving our country,
in making it greater, in making it stronger, in making it fulfill its manifest
destiny.
This campaign is an important one. The American
people have the choice of whether or not they are going to give the green
light to the sixties, whether they are going to move ahead, as Woodrow
Wilson moved, and Franklin Roosevelt, and Harry Truman, whether we are
going to say yes to the 1960's whether we are going to move ahead. I ask
your help in this campaign. Thank you. [Applause.]