I come to Houston to melt the ice - and I don't
mean the ice on that rink. I do mean whatever is cool between Texans and
the Democratic Party. For like the ice on that rink, it is artificial.
Luckily, I've been having some help. My sister
and sister-in-law came here 2 weeks ago with Lady Bird Johnson. And I want
to thank all of you, and especially all you women, for the kind reception
they were given here in Houston.
Long before they came here, I was being helped
by one of the greatest leaders in all American history. I mean Sam Houston.
When Sam Houston first sat down to draw the
boundaries of Texas, he extended them west to the sources of the Rio Grande,
and north as far as Wyoming. That may seem a little ambitious. But it symbolizes
the tie that links Texas and the Democratic Party. That tie is growth-thrusting,
venturesome, forward-looking, ambitious growth.
There was growth in everything that Sam Houston
did, and there has been growth in everything about the city that bears
his name.
When Spindletop opened up the oil fields and
the 20th century - that was growth. When Jesse Jones insisted on the canal
to Galveston - that was growth. When your magnificent skyline started building
- that was growth. When petro-chemicals came, that was growth. When your
great port became one of the busiest in the world, that was growth. When,
last year, Houston cracked into the circle of the 10 biggest American cities
- that was growth too.
And the future holds out promise of even more
growth. There is growth, and maybe a whole new industry, in the water desalination
station opened up only the other day in Freeport. There is enormous growth
potential in the mammoth project for a coastal canal that will bring new,
fresh water supplies to every city along the Golden Crescent.
The initiative for all this growth is local.
I give full marks to Texas enterprise and Texas drive and Texas vision
and Texas boldness. But enterprise, drive, vision, and boldness thrive
only in the night climate - in the climate of growth. And right there lies
one of the great issues in this campaign - an issue that divides the parties
and the candidates.
The Republicans, in Isaiah's words, are "gone
away backward." They're against growth. They have slowed growth by the
policy of no new starts on river development projects. They have throttled
growth by high interest rates.
Under their regime, this country has grown
at a rate that is one-third of the rate of Russian advance. We have lagged
behind nearly every other industrial country in the world - Britain, Japan,
France, Germany as well as Russia. And still the Vice President makes sport
of the whole thing. He calls it "growthmanship."
What's more, the Republicans have always been
against growth. There are men in this audience whose daddies and granddaddies
told them they'd never fare well under the Republicans. They knew, because
they'd heard, year after year, the same tired Republican slogans. Just
listen to them:
There was "Stand pat with McKinley." There
was "Back to normalcy" with Harding." There was "Keep cool with Coolidge."
There was "Had enough?" with Dewey. And this year, it's "Experience." The
Republicans are still looking backward.
We Democrats haven't had enough. We don't
think the American people had enough. We're not smug and we're not satisfied,
and we never have been. Our slogans proclaim our attitude. Listen to them.
There was the New Freedom of Woodrow Wilson.
There was the New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt. There was the Fair Deal of
Harry Truman. There was the New America of Adlai Stevenson. And now we
stand on the New Frontier.
With your help, we will open the way to growth
once again. We will flash the green light for river basin development.
We will release the brake of high interest. And then we shall once more
start down the high road to a strong America and a peaceful world.
I am not satisfied to see Khrushchev daring
to affront us on our own soil. I am not satisfied to see communism gaining
a foothold in the Congo, and in Cuba. I am not satisfied to see your defense
line at Key West instead of across the ocean. I am not satisfied with an
America that is first maybe, first perhaps, first if. I want an America
that is first, period.
Reaching that goal will not be easy. I do
not run for the Presidency because it is an easy job. I do not come among
you offering the unbought ease of life- presents, gifts, favors. I come
among you asking hard work for the future. I say, give me your vote, give
me your hand, and together we will build a better America.
And though the task ahead is not easy, it
is exciting. For our cause is a sacred cause. Our fight is the fight of
God-fearing men against godless communism. Our business is the unfinished
business - not of Houston alone, not of Harris County alone, not of America
alone. It is the unfinished business of the world. It is the business of
making peace.
For the making of peace is the noblest work
of God-fearing man. It is the righteous way. And righteousness exalteth
a nation.
Thank you.