Republican National Convention
Mr. President, Mrs.
Ford, Mr. Vice President, Mr. Vice President-to-be, the distinguished guests
here, you ladies and gentlemen. I was going
to say fellow Republicans here but those who are watching from a distance
(including) all those millions of Democrats and independents who I know are
looking for a cause around which to rally and which I believe we can give them. Mr. President, before you arrive tonight,
these wonderful people, here, when we came in, gave Nancy and myself a welcome.
That, plus this, plus your kindness and generosity in honoring us by
bringing us down here will give us a memory that will live in our hearts
forever.
Watching on television
these last few nights I’ve seen also the warmth with which you greeted
And a call to us to
really be successful in communicating and reveal to the American people the
difference between this platform and the platform of the opposing party which
is nothing but a revamp and a reissue and a rerunning of a late, late show of
the thing that we have been hearing from them for the last 40 years.
If I could just take a
moment, I had an assignment the other day.
Someone asked me to write a letter for a time capsule that is going to opened in
It sounded like an easy
assignment. They suggested I write about
the problems and issues of the day. And
I set out to do so, riding down the coast in an automobile, looking at the blue
Pacific out on one side and the Santa Ynez Mountains
on the other, and I couldn’t help but wonder if it was going to be that
beautiful a hundred years from now as it was on that summer day.
And then as I tried to
write-let your own minds turn to that task.
You’re going to write for people a hundred years from now who know all
about us, we know nothing about them. We
don’t know what kind of world they’ll be living in. And suddenly I thought to myself, “If I write
of the problems, they’ll be the domestic problems of which the President spoke
here tonight; the challenges confronting us, the erosion of freedom taken place
under Democratic rule in this country, the invasion of private rights, the
controls and restrictions on the vitality of the great free economy that we
enjoy.” These are the challenges that we
must meet and then again there is that challenge of which he spoke that we live
in a world in which the great powers have aimed and poised at each other
horrible missiles of destruction, nuclear weapons that can in a matter of minutes
arrive at each other’s country and destroy virtually the civilized world we
live in.
And suddenly it dawned
on me; those who would read this letter a hundred years from now will know
whether those missiles were fired. They
will know whether we met our challenge.
Whether they will have
the freedom that we have known up until now will depend on what we do
here. Will they look back with
appreciation and say, “Thank God for those people in 1976 who headed off that
loss of freedom? Who kept us now a
hundred years later free? Who kept our
world from nuclear destruction?”
And if we fail they
probably won’t get to read the letter at all because it spoke of individual
freedom and they won’t be allowed to talk of that or read of it.
This is our challenge
and this is why we’re here in this hall tonight. Better than we’ve ever done before, we’ve got
to quit talking to each other and about each other and go out and communicate
to the world that we may be fewer in numbers than we’ve ever been but we carry
the message they’re waiting for. We must
go forth from here united, determined and what a great general said a few years
ago is true: “There is no substitute for victory.” Mr. President.