Thank you very much.
I want to say first how much my wife, Pat,
and I appreciate this wonderful crowd here in Johnstown. Incidentally,
you know, I have visited an awful lot of cities and States, but I always
know where I am, anyway.
You know - a funny thing - I really couldn't
believe it when somebody said when Mr. Kennedy was here he referred to
this place as Johnson City - You know, that's the only time he's mentioned
his running mate's name since he has been nominated.
But, first, the fact that some of you would
come out in this rather, shall we say, crisp weather, the fact that you
would welcome us this way is indeed a very inspiring thing on this whistle-stop
tour of Pennsylvania.
However, I remember, John, the great meeting
we had in the center of town, you remember, 4 years ago, and I said then
that I was hoping I could come back. I didn't know then I would come back
as a candidate for the Presidency, but, believe me, you have greatly outdone
the crowd there, and I thank all of those who have made this such a wonderful
success.
We thank you for coming. I, too, want to express
appreciation to all of the bands that are here. You know, the color, as
we look around here, certainly indicates the competitive spirit of this
city, and let's give them all a hand.
Now, there are a number of subjects that I
know you would like to hear discussed. I know many of you had the opportunity
to hear our television debates. So, I will not go into the subjects that
we were discussing there the last time in any detail, but I thought that
since I was here in Johnstown, that what would be of greater interest to
you was for me to take up at the outset a couple of points that I understand
my opponent made when he was here. John Saylor was telling me a little
earlier that he said, "I challenge the Vice President when he comes to
Johnson City - I challenge him to discuss the depressed-areas bill. I challenge
him to discuss the medical care bill"
Well, I'm going to discuss them, and, believe
me, he isn't going to like it, because it's the truth.
Now, as far as the so-called distressed-area
bills are concerned, let's set the record straight. President Eisenhower
has been trying to get legislation through the Congress for years in this
field. The Congress has stopped it. The Congress has passed some bills,
which the President has vetoed. Why did he veto them? Because they wouldn't
do the job. They would use a shotgun where you want to use a rifle. And
using a shotgun, it would have meant instead of a place like Johnstown
that needed a good rifle bullet to handle this problem, it would have gotten
a little buckshot that wouldn't have done the job at all in a depressed
area. What I am trying to say really is this: We need a depressed-area
bill. But we need the right kind of bill. We have one which is supported
by Senator Scott, John Saylor; one that I support, and that we're going
to get through in the next Congress with the support of the American people.
And it will do the job where they didn't act, and we're going to act.
In other words, my friends, you will find
they always talk a good game, but we produce on their promises, and we've
been doing it for years, and we're going to do it again, too.
Now, I want to talk about a subject that is
also very close to my heart. I remember the year my father died, in 1956,
in the election year. He was 77 years old. That year he had a number of
doctor bills, operations. I remember they ran over $2,000. My mother also
was ill that year, and together the bills of the doctors ran over $3,000.
I want to tell you something about them. It was the best medical care that
you could possibly get, and we have the best in the world, and we want
to keep it that way; but my mother and father found it difficult to pay
those bills. They did. They saved enough that they were able to, but I
realize and you realize that for many of our older people, when they get
beyond 65 particularly, it's a very difficult problem they are confronted
with when a major illness strikes. Now, the question is: What can we do
about it? My opponent says when he was here, "Oh, Mr. Nixon is against
helping the older people who need medical care." Now, that is just a complete
falsehood. It's a falsehood, and I will tell you why.
He's against it, because if he hadn't been
against it, he would have supported the bill that would have done something
about it in the last Congress, and he didn't do that.
Let me point out what I mean. You see, this
problem is one that affects everybody over 65, and the bill that he wanted
would have only applied to people who had social security, and that would
take care of a lot; but you know there are 3 million older people who don't
have social security at all. What are you going to do about them? He would
do nothing. And, so, we had a bill that covered all the people over 65.
And another thing: His bill was one that would have forced everybody who
had social security, including the wealthy as well as those who were not
as wealthy, to have compulsory health insurance whether they wanted it
or not. Ours was a bill that provided that everybody over 65 who wanted
health insurance could get it; that everybody who needed it would be encouraged
to get it.
We said that nobody who did not want it should
be forced to have it against his will, and that's the American way to handle
a problem of this type.
Now, I could go on on these issues, but let
me summarize simply in this way. We're going to move forward in America
in these next 4 years, but the way to move forward is not to return to
the policies we left in 1953, when Eisenhower cleaned up the mess Harry
Truman left back here.
The way to move forward is for Government
to encourage the American people to develop to the full the tremendous
abilities they have - and, believe me, we have the program that will do
it. We will produce again in all of these areas, in which America wants
progress. But one other point I would make: We will do it not with programs
that will raise your taxes, that will raise your prices, and theirs will.
And let me say to every housewife here: If you vote for our opponents,
the prices of everything you buy in the grocery store will go up because
of their farm program, incidentally, that won't help the farmer, either;
but it will certainly have that effect, and they know it. Other prices
will go up, and I say, my friends, that the American people want higher
wages, yes; they want prosperity, yes; but they want it without inflation,
and without war, and that's the kind we produce, and that's the kind you
want.
Now let me turn to the issue of foreign policy,
because it is the most important of all. Why is it most important? Because,
my friends, we can have the best jobs and the best medical care in the
world, and it isn't going to make any difference if we're not around to
enjoy it, and, therefore, the most important qualification of the next
President is: Does he have the experience and the background to keep the
peace, to keep it without surrender, and to extend freedom throughout the
world.
You heard us debate that last Friday. I want
to say today that I believe Cabot Lodge and I have some experience the
American people should consider.
For 7 years we have participated in the making
of and discussing of great decisions. For 7 years we have sat in the Security
Council and the Cabinet with the President of the United States - Lebanon,
Quemoy, and Matsu - we were there. We know what it means to handle these
problems. And one other thing: We have had the experience of dealing with
Mr. Khrushchev. We both sat opposite him at the conference table, and whoever
is the next President of the United States has to be able to do that. He
must not be fooled by him. He must be able to be sure that we're firm,
without being belligerent.
My friends, I think we've done a pretty good
job, and I think the American people know what we will do, and I think
that's why they want us to continue the leadership that Dwight Eisenhower
has given.
Now what do our opponents offer in this field?
They say we want the same thing. We can't question that. Everybody wants
peace and everybody wants it without surrender, but, my friends, look at
what he would have done had he been in the position of Commander in Chief
these last 7½ years.
In Quemoy and Matsu - you heard him on that
television debate say we should have sliced off these islands, given them
to the Communists. Why? Not because he was interested, of course, in surrendering
anything; but as a matter of principle because he apparently thought this
would bring peace, and that's the kind of woolly thinking that got the
United States in the Korean war.
The President didn't do it. That's why we
kept the peace. And then you remember again my opponent said, "President
Eisenhower could have apologized or expressed regrets to Khrushchev," but
he couldn't do that, because if he had you see that would have encouraged
Khrushchev to do the very thing that we must not have - to blackmail the
United States, because whenever you give a dictator an inch that he doesn't
deserve, he takes not only a mile, he'll take the whole world. Therefore,
we can't give him that inch, and I'm sure I'm not going to give him the
inch anyplace in the world.
Now, in the final analysis, then, I say to
you that we know what peace demands. We know that what it needs is a strong
America, a firm America - one in which we will be firm in our policy toward
those who threaten the peace, but one in which we will always remember
that it's the responsibility of the President of the United States never
to lose his temper, never to shoot from the hip where the whole peace of
the world is involved.
Finally, I say to you: If you believe that
Cabot Lodge and I are the ones who can give America the leadership it needs,
then I want you to go to work. I want you to work hard. I want you to go
through this district as it has never been gone through before. Support
all of our candidates, because, believe me, they're a fine team, but, as
you work and as you vote for us at the Presidential level, at the congressional
level, remember: You're not just voting for a man or for a party, but you're
voting - and it must be this way in your hearts and in your minds - you're
voting for what you think America needs. Only if you believe that we are
the men that America needs in this critical period, only then can I ask
for your support. But if you believe it, then I ask for all of you to go
out and work for us. Go out and vote for us - not for us, but for America,
and for America you will also be voting for the cause of freedom throughout
the world. Remember, what we do this year, 1960, affects you; affects our
children; but it affects the hopes of people throughout the world - the
people of Poland whom I saw a year ago, 250,000 of them on the streets
shouting "Long live America"; the people even in Russia; the people in
all the 50 countries we visited. We have the hopes of the world in our
hands; let's be worthy of it. Let's be worthy by being strong at home in
our economy; by being strong militarily; but mainly being strong in our
faith, never thinking of America as a second-rate country, because she
isn't, always thinking of America as the best nation in the world, believing
in the right things.
If we think that way, if we believe that way,
we will win this struggle, and this will be the greatest century in the
history of the world, because of what a great people the American people
are.
Thank you very much.