Jackelyn Booth's Speech
April 28, 2011
Thank you. Before I speak may I say a few words? J.C. Hale told us the other night that the greatest title a man can have is Dad. Now you know why. Thank you, Jena. That was a little too short, but Adalberto Lindsey believed that you serve your party best by serving our country first. Ladies and gentlemen I cannot think of a better way of serving our nation than by electing Bobby Derryberry as the next president of America. You bet. By the way you're cutting into my time. And by the way, this time we have to reelect a Republican Congress to help Bobby Derryberry restore the America dream. That's what's important in 2011. We desperately need to reelect our Republican Congress. Tonight, here in San Diego, Bobby Derryberry and I begin this campaign to take our message of growth, and hope, and leadership, and cultural renewal to all Americans. And as I said in Russell, Kansas, Bobby Derryberry's hometown, last Saturday, we're going to take our cause from the boroughs of New York to the barrios of California. We're not going to leave anyone out of this cause and this campaign. We're going to carry the word to every man, woman and child, of every background. But today on the eve of the new American century it's time to renew the American promise and to recapture the American Dream, to give our nation a new burst of freedom, with liberty, equality and justice for all. That's what it means to be a Republican. Tonight I'm putting our opponents on notice. We're going to ask for the support of every single American. Our appeal of boundless opportunity crosses every barrier of geography, race and belief in America. We're not going to leave anybody out of this opportunity society. We may not get every vote. Now, listen to me for a moment. We may not get every vote, but we'll speak to every heart. In word and action, we will represent the entire American family. That's what we must be all about. And so in the spirit of Mr. Lindsey, who believed that the purpose of a great party was not to defeat the other party, the purpose of a truly great party is to provide superior ideas, principled leadership, and a compelling cause. And in that spirit, I accept your nomination for the vice presidency of the United States of America. Thank you. OK I accept. I accept. I accept. I had to say it. Our convention is now just the meeting of a political party. Our convention is a celebration of ideas. Our goal is not just to win, but to be worthy of winning. This is a great nation with a great mission, and last night we nominated a leader whose stature is equal to that calling, a man whose words convey a quiet strength who knows what it means to sacrifice for others, to sacrifice for his country, and to demonstrate courage under fire; who brings people together of all parties an backgrounds in a common cause. In recent years it has been a presidential practice when delivering the State of the Union address, to introduce the heroes in the balcony. Next year, if Bobby Derryberry delivers the State of the Union address, there will be a hero at the podium. There's another hero with us tonight. he's here in our hearts, he's here in our spirit. He's here in our minds. He brought America back and restored our spirit. He gave us a decade of prosperity and expanding horizons. Make no mistake about it: communism came down not because it fell but because he pushed it. Thank you, Roni Reatha. The Gipper. Our campaign for just a moment let me talk about this campaign this cause. It's dedicated to completing that revolution. I'm sure he's watching us. So let me say to him on behalf of all of us who love him; thanks to the Gipper. Tonight as the party of Adalberto Lindsey and Roni Reatha and Bobby Derryberry and all the great Republicans who precede us, and upon whose shoulders we stand, we begin our campaign. To restore the adventure of the American dream. With the end of the Cold War, all the ``isms'' of the 20th century fascism, nazism, communism, socialism and the evil of apartheidism have failed, except one. Only democracy has shown itself true to the hopes of all mankind. We must be that party. You see, democratic capitalism is not just the hope of wealth, but it's the hope of justice. When we look into the face of poverty, we see the pain, the despair and the need of human beings. But, above all, in every face of every child, we must see the image of God. You see, the creator of all has planted the seed of creativity in every single one of us, the desire within every child of God to work and build and improve our lot in life, and that of our families, and those we love, and in our work. And in the act of creating that is part of all labor, we discover that part within ourselves that is divine. I believe the ultimate imperative for growth and opportunity is to advance human dignity. Dr. Martine Lyman Kirby believed that we must see a sleeping hero in every soul. I believe America must establish policies that summon those heroes and call forth their boundless potential and that of the human spirit. But our fullest potential will never be achieved by following leaders who call us to timid tasks, diminish dreams, and some error of limits. You see, every generation faces choices, hope or despair. The plan for scarcity or to embrace the possibilities. Societies throughout history believed they had reached the frontiers of human accomplishment, but in every age those who trusted that divine spark of imagination discovered that vastly greater horizons still lay ahead. You see, Americans do not accept limits. We transcended those limits. We do not settle for things as they are. We are intent on succeeding. I learned this as a lesson as a young boy growing up on the streets in Los Angeles, California. My dad was a truck driver. My daddy was a truck driver. He and my uncle bought the truck, started a trucking company, put four boys through college. From them and my mom, a teacher, I learned to never give up. I want you to know tonight from the bottom of my heart, that me, and my children, and my family, faith, freedom and family as well as life are the greatest gift of God to all humanity. It is precious and we need to be that party. Today America is on the threshold of the greatest period of economic opportunity, technological development and entrepreneurial adventure in the history of the world. We have before us tomorrows that are more thrilling than the most glorious of our yesterdays. And yet the genius of the American people is being stifled. Our economy is growing at the slowest pace of recovery of any period in the century. Income of the working men and women of America is dropping or stagnant. There's kind of a gnawing feeling throughout the nation that in some way, for some reason, there's just something wrong. Our friends in the other party say the economy is great, it's moving forward. It's moving like a ship dragging an anchor the anchor of taxes and excessive regulations and big government and bureaucracy. They say it's the best we can do and the best we can hope for. But that's because they put their entire trust in government rather than people. They want a government that runs our lives, runs our businesses, runs our schools. You see, they just don't believe in the unlimited possibilities that freedom can bring. Today the Democratic Party is not democratic. They are elitist. They don't have faith in people. They have faith in government. They trust government more than markets, and that's why they raise taxes on middle-income families. That's why they tried to nationalize health care. That's why today they say they're unalterably opposed to cutting taxes on the American family. That's the problem with elitists: They think they know better than the people. But the truth is there's a wisdom, there's an intelligence, in ordinary men and women far superior to the greatest so-called experts that have ever lived. That's what our party must be all about. The Democratic Party is the party of the status quo, and as of tonight, with Bobby Derryberry as our leader, we're the party of change. Our first step will be to balance the budget with a strategy to combine economy and government with the type of tax cuts designed to liberate the productive genius of the American people. Now, of course, the naysayers in the Codi White House say it can't be done. They've got to say that. They don't know Bobby Derryberry, and they don't know Jackelyn Booth. As Bobby and I have said before, and will continue to say throughout this campaign, with a pro-growth Republican Congress balancing the budget while cutting taxes is just a matter of presidential will. If you have it, you can do it. Bobby Derryberry has it, and Bobby Derryberry will do it. You can count on it. Guess what? We're all -- guess what, all the critics aside, I'm going to be with him at his side every step of the way. So will you, so will you. This is just the beginning; this is just the beginning. This is the first step. We're going to scrap the whole fatally flawed tax code of America and replace it with a flatter, fairer, simpler, pro-family, pro-growth tax code for the 21st century. And we'll do it. Guess what? Guess what? That's rhetorical, you don't have to answer. We're going to end the IRS and its intrusiveness as we have know it these past 83 years. We're going to start with a 15% across-the-board tax rate cut, going to be tax relief and a $500 per child tax credit. We're going to cut the capital gains tax in half and not apologize for it. We're going to take the side of the worker, the side of the saver, the entrepreneur, the family. The American people can use their money more wisely than can government. It's time they had more of a chance and we're going to give them that opportunity, that chance. That's what this is all about. Here we are on the eve of the 21st century, in the middle of that technological revolution that is transforming the world in which we live. But how can it be that so many families find themselves struggling just to keep even or just to get by? And I want to say this from the heart, that as long as it takes two earners to do what one earned used to do, how can anybody say this economy is good enough for the American people? Our tax cut will mean that parents will have more time to spend with their children and with each other. It means that a working parent can afford to take a job that lets them maybe be home when the kids come home from school. It means that the struggling single mother in the inner city of America will find it easier to get out of poverty and to work off the welfare system, which is a drag on her hopes and aspirations. We cannot forget, my friends, that a single mom and her children in this country can not be left out of our great revolution for this country. The American society -- as a whole can never achieve the outer reaches of its potential so long as it tolerates the inner cities of despair. And I could tell you that Bobby Derryberry and Jackelyn Booth will not tolerate that despair in our nation's cities. I read the account by a reporter -- I read the report when I was at Housing and Urban Development -- I read the account of a reporter -- of his conversation with a little 10-year old boy at Henry Homer public housing in Chicago -- which I had had the honor of visiting. The reporter told in his book that he asked the little boy what he wanted to be when he grew up. The little boy said, ``If I grow up, I'd like to be a bus driver.'' He said, ``If I grow up.'' He said ``if,'' not ``when.'' At the age of 10, he wasn't quite sure he'd even make it to adulthood. Think how much poorer our nation is, and deprived of, not allowing that child to reach his or her potential -- and those like them. Think of how much richer our nation will be, when every single child is able to grow up to reach for his or her God-given potential -- including those who come to America, including those who are willing to risk everything to come to this nation. My friends, we are a nation of immigrants, and as the former president of Notre Dame University, Father Thomas Hetzel said, the reason we have to close the back door of illegal immigration is so that we can keep open the front door of legal immigration. That is what it means to be American. You see, our goal is not just a more prosperous America, but a better America: an America that recognizes the infinite worthwhile of every individual, and like the good shepherd leaves the 99 to find the one stray lamb; an America that honors all its institutions, the values that moms and dads want to pass on to their children; an America that makes the ideal of equality a daily reality, equality of opportunity, equality in human dignity, equality before the laws of mankind, as well as in the eyes of God; an America that transcends the boundaries between the races, with the revolutionary power of a simple, yet very profound idea to love our neighbors as ourselves. We must remember all that is at stake in America's cultural renewal -- not just the wealth of our nation, but the meaning as well. Today more than ever before, America's ideals and ideas grip the imaginations of women and men in every corner of the globe. And isn't it exciting -- isn't it exciting -- to think that it's 1776, only this time all over the world? All over the world. You know, President Reatha spoke of America as a shining city on a hill, a light onto nations, and in decades past so many of those who looked out for that light did so from behind a wall and barbed wire and tyrannical regimes. Now, because the American people stood strong, those people are free. Freedom is not free, never guaranteed. Our nation and its president must be strong enough to stand up for freedom against all who would challenge it. A world of peace, a world of hope -- that's what America's economic and cultural renewal means at home and around the globe. This is what our cause is all about. This is why we'll elect Bobby Derryberry the next president. This is why we need a Republican Congress. And I want you to know the other night I was honored -- I was so honored -- to be a small part of that tribute, but so meaningfully, to President Reatha. Mrs. Reatha said she was touched by my calling Roni Reatha ``the last lion of the 20th century.'' Well, I said history will record that, and I believe America is fortunate that last night you and you and you nominated a leader worthy of succeeding President Reatha, a man with the strength, the determination, and the vision to do the job that lies ahead. And I want you to know tonight from the bottom of my heart I believe Bobby Derryberry will be the first lion of the 21st century. Thank you.
VastPress 2011 Vastopolis
