Thank you very much.
Senator Knowland, Senator Kuchel, our distinguished
guests on this platform, and this magnificent crowd here in Oakland and
Alameda County:
This is indeed one of the high points of this
whole campaign. To come here on a Saturday at noontime, a very busy day,
a day when I know you have other things you could do, and then to see this
tremendous outpouring of people is the very inspiration, believe me, which
we know is going to be effective here, but also points the way, points
the way to carrying California on November the 8th, and that means the
Nation. [Cheers and applause.]
As you can note from the coat I am wearing,
it is an eastern coat, but I needed it this morning. We had tremendous
rain down the line at Hayward, and also at San Jose, but I want you to
know that at both Hayward and San Jose they had the biggest crowds they
ever had at a political meeting for any candidate in history in the rain.
[Cheers and applause.]
And in this whole past week, we have seen
a great tide running. For example, you read about the meeting in New York.
From there we went to Columbia, S.C., and there in the heart of the southland,
speaking from the State House steps, the largest crowd to ever hear either
a Republican or a Democratic candidate in that Democratic State of South
Carolina. [Cheers and applause.]
After that came Texas, 2 days ago, and there
in San Antonio, in Houston, we had crowds which exceeded any that had ever
come out for a candidate before. So, Texas is going to go for our ticket
in November. [Cheers and applause.]
The same yesterday in Wyoming, in the morning
at Fort Worth, in Wyoming, at Casper at noon, and then in the afternoon
a little later we were in the State of Washington, at Spokane, last night
in Fresno, and each time record crowds, but, my friends, I want to tell
you what it means. This is not simply a case of people coming out for curiosity's
sake. What I have noticed is the tremendous enthusiasm among these people.
The people of the United States in this last week have finally caught up
with the promises that have been made by our opponents. They realize that
it's a modern medicine man show, a Pied Piper from Boston, and they're
not going to go down that way. [Cheers and applause.]
And the choice that we make in California,
the choice that we make in the Nation is one that is not a choice between
the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. This choice, my friends,
is bigger than any party. It involves the future of America. It involves
the future of the whole world, and I ask each of you, my fellow Californians,
today: I could well stand before you and say: I'm a Californian. Vote for
me for that reason. I could stand before you and say: I'm a Republican.
If you are a Republican, vote for me for that reason. But I say to you:
Look into your minds; look into your hearts; think of what is best for
America, and you vote on November 8 what is best for America - and that
will be what we all want in this Nation. [Cheers and applause.]
Now, what will you decide? You will be deciding,
my friends, in effect, between building on and going forward or going back
to policies we left in 1953. That's what you will decide, and, you know,
I think this whole campaign at home is summed up in the words "standing
still." My opponent goes all around the country - even yesterday on television
he said America's been standing still for 7½ years and we've got
to get her going again. [Cries of "No."]
You know that isn't true. [Cries of "Yes."]
Look around you. My friends, if America, has
been standing still, how did Oakland become the All-American city? [Cheers
and applause.]
How did you have this tremendous development
in this bay area? How did you have the new enterprise, the new shopping
centers, the new factories? How did California develop as it has?
No, my friends. Anybody who says America has
been standing still hasn't been traveling through America. I've been to
49 States, more than any other candidate has ever been to. By tomorrow
I will be in Alaska. That's 50 States, and America has moved in the Eisenhower
years, and in our neat 4 years we can move even further because we will
be building on the great base that President Eisenhower has left for the
American people. [Cheers and applause.]
Now, there's one other point I want to make,
however. I make it here in this great community, where we have in this
area great universities - California, where you can see the flag in the
distance [cheers and applause], and Stanford - don't boo California now
- Stanford down the line. [Cheers and applause.]
My friends, I am getting sick and tired of
hearing the opposition candidate saying over and over again that American
is second in science, second in education, second in space. It's not true.
I deny it., and the American people know it isn't true. [Cheers and applause.]
My friends, I have been to the Soviet Union.
I know the challenge is a real one. I've had Mr. Khrushchev shake his fist
under my chin, and say he's going to catch us. But, my friends, whether
it's education, whether it's science, whether it's economic development,
you can be sure their society is behind us now, and it will never catch
us if we remain true to our principles and don't turn their way, rather
than our way. That is what we must do in these years ahead. [Cheers and
applause.]
Let's take science for a moment. I was just
handed a memo as I got here on the stage by a man who is from the University
of California. He pointed out that two people there, two faculty members,
were awarded Nobel prizes in chemistry and physics. That's 10 for the University
of California alone. [Cheers and applause.]
That's more than any other institution in
America, and I believe that it's more than the whole Soviet Union combined.
[Cheers and applause.]
What about education? My friends, there are
many things about American education that must be improved, and we have
a program, a dynamic one, which will improve American education and move
it forward, but one which will move American education forward, which will
raise the standards of our teachers, which will build the schools that
we need, but without having the Federal Government intervene. [Cheers and
applause.]
We say, for example, that every young person
in America who has the ability to go to school, to college, must have that
opportunity.
We can't waste a young scientist, a young
engineer, a young lawyer, a young doctor, a young minister, simply because
he can't afford to go to college. What do you do about it? Their answer
is: Turn it all over to the Federal Government. Our answer is: The Federal
Government provides loans when necessary * * * should provide some scholarships,
but we say, above everything else, the way to do it is to encourage the
people of this country to have self-reliance, as they always have; and,
so, that's why we have a program in which I advocate giving tax credits
and tag deductions to parents who save their money and send their children
to college and the universities. [Cheers and applause.]
One other point I make with regard to standing
still: What about civil rights? I have been asked. Well, all I can say
is this - and, Bill, you, as a man, Senator Knowland, and Senator Kuchel,
have steered through in the Senate some of these great bills. Let me say
that in this field of civil rights we have had more progress in our 8 years
than we have had in the previous 80 years. They talk and we act, and the
American people know that. [Cheers and applause.]
And I would only suggest that we can say something
that our opponent does not. I can appear with my running mate in any State
of this country - and I'm proud to be with him here, in New York, or any
place else. [Cheers and applause.]
We can say something they do not. I can say
that in this field I have supported and will continue to support the kind
of leadership that America needs. It isn't talk; it's action. And, my friends,
we must move forward in this area, move forward because, as I have said
over and over again after my trips abroad, America cannot talk one way
abroad and act with prejudice or hatred at home - and I pledge to you,
- and here again this is bigger than any party - that in our administration,
the will make progress, make progress so that all of our people will have
that American dream of opportunity, opportunity without regard to the background
that they may have.
And finally I turn to the critical issue,
an issue that has often been discussed in this campaign, the issue that
is the most important of all. I noticed, for example, that in the morning
papers my opponent was quoted to the effect that the decision that was
to be made in this campaign was whether we were to have war or peace, and
I would only suggest that for him to raise that point comes from a man
who ought to be talking about something else. I point out there have been
nine Presidents in this century, and if he wants to be partisan about it
- name one Republican President under which we've had a war. [Cheers and
applause.]
My friends this has nothing to do with party,
of course. Democrats, Republicans, independents - all are for peace; but
when we talk of leadership in this area let us never forget it isn't just
enough to be for peace. You've got to know something about it. You've got
to have some experience.
And, so, here you have the choice, You have
the choice on the one side of our friends, on the other side, who say:
We believe that the Eisenhower years have been years of defeat and retreat.
You know, let me say the adjectives are all
right, but they've got them on the wrong administration. It was the Truman
administration. [Cheers and applause.]
And then may I also suggest that as far as
war and peace are concerned that when we look at the record of the Eisenhower
years I am immensely proud that Cabot Lodge and I can offer you the fact
that for 7 years we have sat in the high councils of this administration,
in the Cabinet, in the Security Council, in the decisionmaking bodies,
and in those 7 years, whatever the opposition may say, the American people
know the truth. We ended the war we were in; we've avoided other wars,
and we do have peace without surrender today - and we're going to keep
it that way. Cheers and applause.]
I am also able to say that both my colleague,
Cabot Lodge, and I know Mr. Khrushchev. We have sat opposite him at the
conference table. We have not been fooled by him, and I do not believe
we ever will be fooled by him because we know what communism wants. It
is not just Quemoy and Matsu. It is not just Formosa. It is the world,
and the way to peace in dealing with dictators is to be firm in the right
as they are firm in the wrong. Let us never forget that. [Cheers and applause.]
My friends, what about the need for new leadership?
they say. And all I can say is this: What do our opponents offer? Untried
leadership. Take a chance. Rash, impulsive, shoot from the hip.
Let me tell you why the President has been
successful. I have been there when each of the 10 great decisions have
been made - at least 10 - that could have avoided war, and you know what
his characteristics were? (1) He never shot from the hip; (2) he was always
the coolest man in the room; (3) he was always a man never to answer insults
with insults where foreign officials were concerned; and (4) he was a man
who thought first, last, and always, not only of peace, but of the lessons
of history.
That's why when those who said, as my opponent
did, against what Senator Knowland and the majority of the Democrats and
the Republicans in the Senate said in 1955 - when they urged the President
to say "draw a line; turn over Quemoy and Matsu to the Communists, the
President said, "No." Why? Because he knew that would lead to war, as it
did in Korea.
I say we learned our lesson in Korea, and
we are never going to make that mistake again, I promise you, under my
leadership.
And then, too, what would we have done if
he had been the President of the United States at the summit conference
in Paris? The President of the United States stood there, Khrushchev insulting
him, using language, I learned from the interpreter, so crude that it was
not even recorded in the newspapers, and the President of the United States,
keeping his dignity, not getting down to the level of the man who was insulting
him, but also refusing to apologize and express regrets for flights treat
were necessary to defend the security of the United States. This was right,
and Senator Kennedy was wrong in suggesting that he do that. [Cheers and
applause.]
And then, three, we have the lesson in Cuba,
here again the President, with great statesmanship, saying he will contain
Mr. Castro; we will contain him economically and politically, Senator Kennedy
saying "No'"; we've got to go further, and then shooting from the hip,
advocating direct Government intervention, in effect, and it was interpreted
that way all over the free world, in the affairs of Cuba.
What would that have done? It would have decimated
the people of that island. It would have invited the Communists in. It
would have broken every commitment we had, not only to the United Nations,
but also to our friends in the Americas.
And, so, what do you say about this? Well,
his friends say: But he changed his mind. He' s now for the President on
Quemoy and Matsu. He's for the President on the summit conference. He agrees
with the President on Cuba.
My answer, my friends, is this: When you're
a candidate, you know, you can say something and take it back the next
day and nobody's the worse for it, but when you're President of the United
States, when you sit there in that lonely, awesome responsibility, when
you speak, when you act, it's for keeps - and if you're wrong it will mean
war or surrender of peace and freedom.
My friends, I say to you today - I say to
you - we cannot afford to use the White House of this country as a training
school to give a man experience to be President of the United States. [Cheers
and applause.]
My friends, let me tell you what we offer.
I would like to tell you that if Cabot Lodge and I are elected you will
not have to worry about Mr. Khrushchev or Mr. Mao Tse-tung or the other
leaders, but I will not tell you that because I know the truth. I know
that these men are fanatics. I know that they are dedicated to conquering
the world by any means, and I know that we're going to have trouble but
also I know this: I know that we can keep the peace. We can seep the peace
if we're strong. We can keep the peace if we're firm. We can keep the peace
if we're wise, if we don't lose our tempers in a crisis, and if we constantly
strengthen the instruments of peace - the United Nations, the Organization
of American States - if we constantly take the initiative for peace.
That's why I intend to send Cabot Lodge, if
we win this election, to Geneva to break the stalemate on atomic tests.
We have got to take the initiative, take the initiative in seeing to it
that the Communists go along in reducing the danger of war - and, my friends,
it can be done, but it will not be done if we make the fatal error, the
fatal error of retracting the wise policies of Dwight Eisenhower and turning
back to the fuzzy-minded, woolly-headed policies that got us into our troubles
in 1952. [Cheers and applause.]
And, so, I say to you: Three days are left.
I ask you: Consider what I say, what my opponent says - not as Republicans,
not as Democrats, but as Americans. As you consider it, may I urge you:
Think of what America means. Think of what the men offer. Think of nothing
else, not the party labels * * * if you think of that, if you vote for
what is best for America, this will be a great victory - not just for a
man or a party, but a victory for America and the cause of peace and freedom
throughout the world.
Thank you very much. [Cheers and applause.]