Mr. Chairman, Senator Javits, Senator Keating,
Congressman Barry, we've had a very great day in New York today starting
this morning in Brooklyn, then going out to Nassau, then finally ending
up with a ticker tape parade with a meeting at Herald Square, and now this
reception here in Yonkers. And I just want to say that based on the enthusiasm
I have seen, based on the record crowds - and they have been record crowds
- press please note - bigger than any that anybody's ever had in this area
before, [cheers and applause] based on that we're on the way in the State
of New York to carry New York and the Nation on November the 8th [applause].
I am particularly happy to be here for that
reason, but also for a personal reason that I mention. It happened that
before Pat and I were married and before she went to college - as a matter
of fact she was here earning the money to go to college - that she used
to visit in Yonkers a lot with the Sullivans, her cousins, and I'm glad
to see that Ed Sullivan and his mother and father are still here. So to
Pat, Yonkers is a very special place and we're glad to be back here for
that reason. [Applause.]
You know, sometimes I think people when they
see a candidate for the Presidency or for Vice President of the United
States, as the case might be and his wife, they sometimes get the impression
that they're different from other people without the same problems, and
of course, that's just as far from reality as you could possibly imagine,
because I think that since Pat has spent some time here, although I'll
get the dickens for this later, I'm going to tell you a little about her.
You know, reference has been made several
times during the course of this campaign to the fact that I worked my way
through school. I did do it but I got a lot of help from my parents. I
happened to get a scholarship and they helped me some as well, but with
five boys in the family we had, of course, to have some help the other
way as well.
Now, I want to say with regard to Pat that
she had no help whatever because her mother died when she was 13 years
old, her father was ill then for 3 years and he died when she was 17 and
here's a girl that worked her way clear through college without any help
at all, so I'm glad to be here. [Applause.]
And that, of course, is the American story.
It's one that will be retold over and over again in many families in this
audience. It's one that we must never forget. It's what makes America great
- the fact that, any one of the young people in this audience can be what
he wants to be, can and will have the opportunity to make his way.
And that is the kind of America we're working
for. We want to have all of you have that chance. We want to have all of
you have that chance. [Applause.]
Now, in the course of this campaign, of course,
as we get into - the final days there are many issues that will be uppermost
in your minds. I would say that the one that perhaps comes immediately
to mind on a day like this in the middle of the afternoon when many of
you are shopping is the problems that you have in keeping the family together.
I know something about that. I grew up in
a grocery store. I remember how the housewives that came in had the problems
of the family budget. I remember they were hard for most everybody, but
particularly difficult for those with large families, and particularly
difficult for those, of course, who were retired trying to live on a pension
or a little social security or something of that sort.
I want to say to you today that one of the
reasons why I believe that our ticket deserves the support not only of
Republicans but Democrats and Independents alike in America is that our
programs will produce progress in America - more progress in education,
in housing, in civil rights, in all the areas that you want than we've
ever had in its history, but they will produce progress without inflation.
And we need that my friends, so that you can meet the family budget and
that's what we all have to do. [Applause.]
You see, it's a very easy thing for a man
to get up and say, "I promise I'll do this; I promise I'll do that," and
to go all around the country promising everything to everybody, but I want
to tell you what it means.
What it means is that you pay, because there
is no money that grows on trees. The candidate doesn't pay for it. It doesn't
make any difference how much he has - you pay.
And so I say to you today that our program
is one that we're proud of because it is a progressive program, but because
it has in mind the problems of people. And I say to you also that you have
to consider the fact that our opponents offer to America the most promises
that any candidates have ever offered, but they would cost the most money
and that, of course, means your money.
And what does that mean? Let's put it right
in terms that everybody here will understand. If their farm program were
enacted, for example - and I also know something about farm programs
- if it were enacted, the career employees of the Department of Agriculture
- not the political appointees, the people who have down there, specialists
for years - say that it would mean a 25-percent increase in the grocery
bill of every family in America.
Do you know what that means? I grew up in
a grocery store. Two cents a loaf for every loaf of bread more. Four cents
a quart for every quart of milk. Twenty-two cents for every dozen eggs
more. Twenty-eight cents for every pound of chicken, twenty-eight cents
for every pound of butter. You say, well listen, can this really be true?
Could anybody suggest this kind of a program?
I'm not suggesting it, but my opponent has
come out for it. And I say he's wrong and I say the American people don't
want a 25 percent increase in their grocery bills. [Applause.]
And I say, too, that the farmers of America
don't want it either because the other side of this program is that it
would cut their production. It's a program based on scarcity, and it is
one that would put representatives of the Government - 50,000 new inspectors
in - and forcing upon the farmers of this country controls such as we have
never had and such as we never want to have in the United States. That
is one side of it.
Now, if I could go on from there. In other
words, what we're talking about here when you vote on November the 8th
is this - you're making a decision. Every day, every housewife here, every
homemaker, makes a decision. You go into a grocery store. You buy. You
buy one item rather than another because if you buy the first item it means
that you're going to be able to balance the family budget - pay the bills.
When you vote on November the 8th you're going
to make a decision and you will make a decision that will have more effect
on your family budget than all the decisions you will make all your lives
in every store in Yonkers or in New York City. [Applause.] And so that
means vote for the right way and that means the right team in this election
campaign. [Applause and cheers.]
Now, let me turn to the other issue that I
know is uppermost in the minds of everybody here - that's the future of
America, but not only our future but the future of free people throughout
the world.
We want peace. We want it without surrender.
We believe in freedom and w e believe in freedom not only for ourselves,
but for people throughout the world. These things are as American as any
ideals which could possibly be described. And the question again is, how
do we get them ? How do we achieve them?
And first, I want to say that I'm proud to
have been part of an administration under which the President of the United
States got this Nation out of a war that it was in and has kept it out
of other wars and we have peace without surrender today. [Applause.]
I want to say, too, that I have been present
when the President has made the great decisions. I know how difficult they
are. I know that no candidate can get up and say, "Elect me and I will
be great and you're not to worry about anything any more."
This isn't true. I know Mr. Khrushchev. I
have had him shake his fist right under my chin and say, "We're going to
catch you, Mr. Vice President. We're going to catch you and we're going
to pass you, because our system is better than yours. We're going to catch
you in 7 years."
And I'll tell you what our answer is. Our
answer is he won't catch us in 7 or 70 years if we're true to the principles
that have made America the great Nation that it is. [Applause.]
He also believes that the Communist system
is going to dominate the world. He believes that they're going to gain
a victory without war. My friends, he will not gain it provided again we
are not foolish. Provided we recognize the type of a man he is and Mao
Tse-tung and the other leaders of the Communist world. They don't react
like Mr. Adenauer, Mr. Macmillan, Mr. De Gaulle, Mr. Nehru. These men are
men who are ruthless and fanatical and who want nothing less than the world.
It isn't Quemoy and Matsu that they're after,
for example, or Formosa, but the world. It isn't Berlin, but Europe and
the world. And when you're dealing with men like this it means that you
must never surrender freedom any place in the world or you invite them
to take the whole world. [Applause.]
That's why my opponent was wrong when he said
that President Eisenhower should have done what he did - not do - in Quemoy
and Matsu, in dividing off a little bit of freedom and say, "Come and get
it." He was wrong and the President was right.
That's why the President was right and my
opponent was wrong when President Eisenhower refused to apologize and express
regrets to Khrushchev for defending the United States against surprise
attack. [Applause.]
My friends, I know that many well-intentioned
people in this audience might well say, but really, Mr. Vice President,
isn't there an easier way? Couldn't we agree for some of his proposals?
He says he is for disarmament. Why don't we agree to it? Why can't we take
the first step?
Listen, my friends. I don't think anybody
in this audience could feel stronger than I do on the subject of disarmament
and peace. I have had it drilled into me from the time I could speak. My
mother, my grandmother, both Quakers - to them peace is everything. I remember
when I volunteered for service in World War II, I remember how very much
they opposed it.
I know, too, that there are people of infinite
good will who believe that the President has been too firm, that he hasn't
gone far enough in reducing the defenses of the United States on the promise
that they would reduce theirs.
But I want to tell you something. For all
of you who love peace in this audience, let me tell you this. Anything
we do that would result in an increase of Communist power compared to American
power increases the risk of war rather than decreases it because, remember
this: As long as the United States is the strongest Nation in the world,
the cause of peace is safe because we will never use our strength except
to keep the peace. [Applause.] But the moment you have a situation where
as a result of an impractical deal, as a result of taking on faith what
we should never take on faith, their strength increases with regard to
ours, then the risk of war increases.
And that's why I say, Cabot Lodge and I will
work for peace. We will work to strengthen the United Nations and all other
instruments of peace. We will go the extra mile. We'll go halfway around
the world - clear around the world - to discuss, to attempt to work out
these differences between nations. But, my friends, we know that in dealing
with men like this the road to peace must be one in which we've got to
be stronger than they are and just as firm and just as determined for the
right as they are for the wrong. That is the road to peace and that is
the way we're going.
I have one other point that I mention. [Applause.]
It seems far away, I suppose, from these subjects that I mentioned today
but it is one that is infinitely important. As we came through the streets
of this city I saw many of the schools with the children on the streets,
I saw the churches, I saw the homes, and I realized that here was America
- not just part of America, but all of it.
Here are the hopes of America. Here are the
dreams of America. Here were the people - the people that we must always
remember if we succeed in this campaign, that we owe every devotion, every
obligation of which we are capable.
I also realize this: I realize, not only here,
but as I have traveled to 47 States already in this campaign and we're
going to all 50 incidentally by the end of this week, I realize as I travel
the 47 States, spoken to great crowds like this, seen literally millions
of people all the way from Hawaii to Maine to Florida to California to
Minnesota - I realize that these people down in Washington and other places,
the columnists and the commentators that are wringing their hands and sobbing
around and saying, "America's people have lost their sense of purpose.
America's people are becoming second in everything. America's people don't
have the drive and the determination of the Communists."
Believe me they don't know what they're talking
about. The don't know America and they don't know her people. Listen, there's
nothing wrong with the American people if our leaders would just recognize
it, we're the greatest people on earth. [Applause.]
Now that leaves us, however, a responsibility.
It leaves a responsibility for all of us to see that America, is always
at its best. I want to tell you something. I've traveled to 55 countries
with Pat - Asia, Africa, Europe, almost all the world, the Communist world,
the free world.
Do you know one of the most difficult problems
you have abroad? It isn't with explaining or defending the ideals we believe
in - we're for peace, we're for freedom for all people, we have faith in
God - all these things people want, people understand, but it's the fact
that sometimes they can point to the fact that we don't practice at home
the ideals that we believe in.
And I say to you, my friends, you can help
in this great struggle for peace and freedom. You can help not only by
voting on election day but you can help by making this city, your community,
your church, your home, your school, make it America at its best. Make
it a shining example of what we want America to be to all the world, of
equality of opportunity for all of our people, fighting prejudice and hatred
wherever it exists so that when the President of the United States goes
abroad, or when others come here, we can say, "We Americans not only believe
in equality, but we practice it."
This is what you can do and we ask you to
do it, not only now but in the future. [Applause.]
Now only 5 days remain in this campaign, and
those 5 days will determine the outcome. It would be easy for me simply
to say: "Vote our way," and that's the only message we have to leave. But
I urge you my friends, the decisions are so important, they affect your
lives, your future, I say that if you believe in the cause that we believe
in, don't just vote, go out and work for it. Go out and work for it remembering
that you are working for a cause that is bigger than a party. It's as big
as America. It's as big as the whole world itself.
I am convinced as I stand here, based on my
travels through the world, of great destiny for America. I am convinced
that this is a period that the great American people will either meet the
challenge which is ours - the challenge to lead the world to peace and
freedom - or fail to meet it. I think we're going to meet it. I think we're
going to win. But my friends, we can only meet it in the event that the
people in this country are strong morally and spiritually here at home.
And so I say to you, I ask you not only to
work in this election, not only to vote, but whatever the outcome, never
forget that you, the American people, have a destiny and that destiny is
to make America the finest land in all the world so that our President
can represent it abroad as we want it to be. Thank you very much. [Applause.]