Radio Address to the
Nation on Economic Growth and the War on Drugs
My
fellow Americans:
You're
probably just as delighted as I am with the wonderful news about unemployment
that we received yesterday. The unemployment rate dropped fully two-tenths of a
percent in September to 5.4 percent for all civilian workers and 5.3 percent
when you include the military. But behind these numbers is more good news:
255,000 people got new jobs last month in the nonfarm
sector, which means that since the recovery began in 1982, over 18 million new
jobs have been created. There's nothing more pleasing than watching
Now,
I'd like to turn to another subject: the war on drugs. I want all Americans to
take heart. This war is not yet won, not by a long shot. But we're doing
better, and our nation is united against this scourge as never before.
Right
now there's a drug bill on Capitol Hill. It has passed the House but hasn't
even come up for consideration in the Senate, and time is fast running out. The
House bill has many good and tough provisions that express our national
commitment to five simple but powerful words. Those words are ``zero
tolerance'' and ``just say no.''
When
we say zero tolerance, we mean, simply, that we've had it. We will no longer
tolerate those who sell drugs and those who buy drugs. All Americans of good
will are determined to stamp out those parasites who
survive and even prosper by feeding off the energy and vitality and humanity of
others. They must pay. We believe that when those who sell drugs are caught
they must make redress for the damage they cause.
That's
why the administration, personified by the leadership and passion of this
administration's point man on drugs, Vice President George Bush, and the
national voice of conscience, my wife, Nancy, has advocated tougher measures than
ever before to combat the drug runners and the drug dealers. We're doing this
by seizing the ill-gotten possessions of drug dealers and their accomplices.
Those fancy cars and fancy houses and bank accounts full of dirty money aren't
really theirs. They were bought from the sale of illegal blood pollutants. We
do not tolerate companies that poison our harbors and rivers, and we won't let
people who are poisoning the blood of our children get away with it either.
Those
who have the gall to use federally subsidized housing to peddle their toxins
must get the message as well. We will not tolerate those who think they can do
their dirty work in the same quarters where disadvantaged Americans struggle to
build a better life. We want to kick the vermin out and keep them out.
Nor
can we allow these people to hide behind bizarre legal challenges when we do
arrest them and work to see them jailed. And that's why we are advocating a
change in the law that will allow exceptions in the so-called exclusionary rule
to permit the use in court of evidence gathered in good faith by the police.
Nor can our vigilance cease once they're behind bars. George Bush has proposed,
and I support, drug testing for all who seek early release from jail, to send
them this message: You don't go free until you're drug free.
We
won't have a drug-free society until we manage to stop the drugs before they
get to our shores. We must protect our coasts, and that means using the
resources and calling on the noble men and women of the Coast Guard to protect
us. We've sought increases in the drug enforcement budget, but in the past
we've encountered consistent resistance from Congress. I requested $538 million
for the Drug Enforcement Administration in fiscal '89, but Congress hacked $33 million
away. I think drug enforcement is too important a matter for this kind of
political behavior, and I imagine you agree with me.
But
there is a way, more vital than all of these, that we can express our revulsion
at the violence and degradation of the life of the drug peddler. These people
seem to feel nothing -- no fear, no remorse, nothing -- when they pull out a
machinegun and murder a police officer in the line of duty. The bill that has
passed the House provides for the death penalty for these vicious killers. We
must, we need, and we will, have this law.
Now,
there are those who have opposed the House bill because it includes the death
penalty. Others oppose it because of the ``good-faith'' exception to the
exclusionary rule. I believe these people are more concerned with the abstract
rights of criminals than the right of our society to save itself from those in
this country and outside who seek their fortune in our national misfortune. I
challenge the U.S. Senate to get that bill passed. The Nation demands it, and
there's no time to waste. Compromises on the key provisions are unacceptable.
We must let the drug kingpins know: Your days are numbered.
Our
cause is just, and we will triumph. Until next week, thanks for listening, and
God bless you.
Note: The
President spoke at 12:06 p.m. from Camp David, MD.