United
States
Capitol
Washington,
D.C.
THE
PRESIDENT:
Mr.
Speaker,
Vice
President
Cheney,
members
of
Congress,
distinguished
guests,
and
fellow
citizens:
America
this
evening
is a
nation
called
to great
responsibilities.
And we
are
rising
to meet
them.
As we
gather
tonight,
hundreds
of
thousands
of
American
servicemen
and
women
are
deployed
across
the
world in
the war
on
terror.
By
bringing
hope to
the
oppressed,
and
delivering
justice
to the
violent,
they are
making
America
more
secure.
(Applause.)
Each
day, law
enforcement
personnel
and
intelligence
officers
are
tracking
terrorist
threats;
analysts
are
examining
airline
passenger
lists;
the men
and
women of
our new
Homeland
Security
Department
are
patrolling
our
coasts
and
borders.
And
their
vigilance
is
protecting
America.
(Applause.)
Americans
are
proving
once
again to
be the
hardest
working
people
in the
world.
The
American
economy
is
growing
stronger.
The tax
relief
you
passed
is
working.
(Applause.)
Tonight,
members
of
Congress
can take
pride in
the
great
works of
compassion
and
reform
that
skeptics
had
thought
impossible.
You're
raising
the
standards
for our
public
schools,
and you
are
giving
our
senior
citizens
prescription
drug
coverage
under
Medicare.
(Applause.)
We
have
faced
serious
challenges
together,
and now
we face
a
choice:
We can
go
forward
with
confidence
and
resolve,
or we
can turn
back to
the
dangerous
illusion
that
terrorists
are not
plotting
and
outlaw
regimes
are no
threat
to us.
We can
press on
with
economic
growth,
and
reforms
in
education
and
Medicare,
or we
can turn
back to
old
policies
and old
divisions.
We've
not come
all this
way --
through
tragedy,
and
trial
and war
-- only
to
falter
and
leave
our work
unfinished.
Americans
are
rising
to the
tasks of
history,
and they
expect
the same
from us.
In their
efforts,
their
enterprise,
and
their
character,
the
American
people
are
showing
that the
state of
our
union is
confident
and
strong.
(Applause.)
Our
greatest
responsibility
is the
active
defense
of the
American
people.
Twenty-eight
months
have
passed
since
September
11th,
2001 --
over two
years
without
an
attack
on
American
soil.
And it
is
tempting
to
believe
that the
danger
is
behind
us. That
hope is
understandable,
comforting
-- and
false.
The
killing
has
continued
in Bali,
Jakarta,
Casablanca,
Riyadh,
Mombasa,
Jerusalem,
Istanbul,
and
Baghdad.
The
terrorists
continue
to plot
against
America
and the
civilized
world.
And by
our will
and
courage,
this
danger
will be
defeated.
(Applause.)
Inside
the
United
States,
where
the war
began,
we must
continue
to give
our
homeland
security
and law
enforcement
personnel
every
tool
they
need to
defend
us. And
one of
those
essential
tools is
the
Patriot
Act,
which
allows
federal
law
enforcement
to
better
share
information,
to track
terrorists,
to
disrupt
their
cells,
and to
seize
their
assets.
For
years,
we have
used
similar
provisions
to catch
embezzlers
and drug
traffickers.
If these
methods
are good
for
hunting
criminals,
they are
even
more
important
for
hunting
terrorists.
(Applause.)
Key
provisions
of the
Patriot
Act are
set to
expire
next
year.
(Applause.)
The
terrorist
threat
will not
expire
on that
schedule.
(Applause.)
Our law
enforcement
needs
this
vital
legislation
to
protect
our
citizens.
You need
to renew
the
Patriot
Act.
(Applause.)
America
is on
the
offensive
against
the
terrorists
who
started
this
war.
Last
March,
Khalid
Shaikh
Mohammed,
a
mastermind
of
September
the
11th,
awoke to
find
himself
in the
custody
of U.S.
and
Pakistani
authorities.
Last
August
the 11th
brought
the
capture
of the
terrorist
Hambali,
who was
a key
player
in the
attack
in
Indonesia
that
killed
over 200
people.
We're
tracking
al Qaeda
around
the
world,
and
nearly
two-thirds
of their
known
leaders
have now
been
captured
or
killed.
Thousands
of very
skilled
and
determined
military
personnel
are on
the
manhunt,
going
after
the
remaining
killers
who hide
in
cities
and
caves,
and one
by one,
we will
bring
these
terrorists
to
justice.
(Applause.)
As
part of
the
offensive
against
terror,
we are
also
confronting
the
regimes
that
harbor
and
support
terrorists,
and
could
supply
them
with
nuclear,
chemical
or
biological
weapons.
The
United
States
and our
allies
are
determined:
We
refuse
to live
in the
shadow
of this
ultimate
danger.
(Applause.)
The
first to
see our
determination
were the
Taliban,
who made
Afghanistan
the
primary
training
base of
al Qaeda
killers.
As of
this
month,
that
country
has a
new
constitution,
guaranteeing
free
elections
and full
participation
by
women.
Businesses
are
opening,
health
care
centers
are
being
established,
and the
boys and
girls of
Afghanistan
are back
in
school.
With the
help
from the
new
Afghan
army,
our
coalition
is
leading
aggressive
raids
against
the
surviving
members
of the
Taliban
and al
Qaeda.
The men
and
women of
Afghanistan
are
building
a nation
that is
free and
proud
and
fighting
terror
-- and
America
is
honored
to be
their
friend.
(Applause.)
Since
we last
met in
this
chamber,
combat
forces
of the
United
States,
Great
Britain,
Australia,
Poland
and
other
countries
enforced
the
demands
of the
United
Nations,
ended
the rule
of
Saddam
Hussein,
and the
people
of Iraq
are
free.
(Applause.)
Having
broken
the
Baathist
regime,
we face
a
remnant
of
violent
Saddam
supporters.
Men who
ran away
from our
troops
in
battle
are now
dispersed
and
attack
from the
shadows.
These
killers,
joined
by
foreign
terrorists,
are a
serious,
continuing
danger.
Yet
we're
making
progress
against
them.
The once
all-powerful
ruler of
Iraq was
found in
a hole,
and now
sits in
a prison
cell.
(Applause.)
Of the
top 55
officials
of the
former
regime,
we have
captured
or
killed
45. Our
forces
are on
the
offensive,
leading
over
1,600
patrols
a day
and
conducting
an
average
of 180
raids a
week. We
are
dealing
with
these
thugs in
Iraq,
just as
surely
as we
dealt
with
Saddam
Hussein's
evil
regime.
(Applause.)
The
work of
building
a new
Iraq is
hard,
and it
is
right.
And
America
has
always
been
willing
to do
what it
takes
for what
is
right.
Last
January,
Iraq's
only law
was the
whim of
one
brutal
man.
Today
our
coalition
is
working
with the
Iraqi
Governing
Council
to draft
a basic
law,
with a
bill of
rights.
We're
working
with
Iraqis
and the
United
Nations
to
prepare
for a
transition
to full
Iraqi
sovereignty
by the
end of
June.
As
democracy
takes
hold in
Iraq,
the
enemies
of
freedom
will do
all in
their
power to
spread
violence
and
fear.
They are
trying
to shake
the will
of our
country
and our
friends,
but the
United
States
of
America
will
never be
intimidated
by thugs
and
assassins.
(Applause.)
The
killers
will
fail,
and the
Iraqi
people
will
live in
freedom.
(Applause.)
Month
by
month,
Iraqis
are
assuming
more
responsibility
for
their
own
security
and
their
own
future.
And
tonight
we are
honored
to
welcome
one of
Iraq's
most
respected
leaders:
the
current
President
of the
Iraqi
Governing
Council,
Adnan
Pachachi.
Sir,
America
stands
with you
and the
Iraqi
people
as you
build a
free and
peaceful
nation.
(Applause.)
Because
of
American
leadership
and
resolve,
the
world is
changing
for the
better.
Last
month,
the
leader
of Libya
voluntarily
pledged
to
disclose
and
dismantle
all of
his
regime's
weapons
of mass
destruction
programs,
including
a
uranium
enrichment
project
for
nuclear
weapons.
Colonel
Qadhafi
correctly
judged
that his
country
would be
better
off and
far more
secure
without
weapons
of mass
murder.
(Applause.)
Nine
months
of
intense
negotiations
involving
the
United
States
and
Great
Britain
succeeded
with
Libya,
while 12
years of
diplomacy
with
Iraq did
not. And
one
reason
is
clear:
For
diplomacy
to be
effective,
words
must be
credible,
and no
one can
now
doubt
the word
of
America.
(Applause.)
Different
threats
require
different
strategies.
Along
with
nations
in the
region,
we're
insisting
that
North
Korea
eliminate
its
nuclear
program.
America
and the
international
community
are
demanding
that
Iran
meet its
commitments
and not
develop
nuclear
weapons.
America
is
committed
to
keeping
the
world's
most
dangerous
weapons
out of
the
hands of
the most
dangerous
regimes.
(Applause.)
When
I came
to this
rostrum
on
September
the
20th,
2001, I
brought
the
police
shield
of a
fallen
officer,
my
reminder
of lives
that
ended,
and a
task
that
does not
end. I
gave to
you and
to all
Americans
my
complete
commitment
to
securing
our
country
and
defeating
our
enemies.
And this
pledge,
given by
one, has
been
kept by
many.
You
in the
Congress
have
provided
the
resources
for our
defense,
and cast
the
difficult
votes of
war and
peace.
Our
closest
allies
have
been
unwavering.
America's
intelligence
personnel
and
diplomats
have
been
skilled
and
tireless.
And the
men and
women of
the
American
military
-- they
have
taken
the
hardest
duty.
We've
seen
their
skill
and
their
courage
in
armored
charges
and
midnight
raids,
and
lonely
hours on
faithful
watch.
We have
seen the
joy when
they
return,
and felt
the
sorrow
when one
is lost.
I've had
the
honor of
meeting
our
servicemen
and
women at
many
posts,
from the
deck of
a
carrier
in the
Pacific
to a
mess
hall in
Baghdad.
Many
of our
troops
are
listening
tonight.
And I
want you
and your
families
to know:
America
is proud
of you.
And my
administration,
and this
Congress,
will
give you
the
resources
you need
to fight
and win
the war
on
terror.
(Applause.)
I
know
that
some
people
question
if
America
is
really
in a war
at all.
They
view
terrorism
more as
a crime,
a
problem
to be
solved
mainly
with law
enforcement
and
indictments.
After
the
World
Trade
Center
was
first
attacked
in 1993,
some of
the
guilty
were
indicted
and
tried
and
convicted,
and sent
to
prison.
But the
matter
was not
settled.
The
terrorists
were
still
training
and
plotting
in other
nations,
and
drawing
up more
ambitious
plans.
After
the
chaos
and
carnage
of
September
the
11th, it
is not
enough
to serve
our
enemies
with
legal
papers.
The
terrorists
and
their
supporters
declared
war on
the
United
States,
and war
is what
they
got.
(Applause.)
Some
in this
chamber,
and in
our
country,
did not
support
the
liberation
of Iraq.
Objections
to war
often
come
from
principled
motives.
But let
us be
candid
about
the
consequences
of
leaving
Saddam
Hussein
in
power.
We're
seeking
all the
facts.
Already,
the Kay
Report
identified
dozens
of
weapons
of mass
destruction-related
program
activities
and
significant
amounts
of
equipment
that
Iraq
concealed
from the
United
Nations.
Had we
failed
to act,
the
dictatator's
weapons
of mass
destruction
programs
would
continue
to this
day. Had
we
failed
to act,
Security
Council
resolutions
on Iraq
would
have
been
revealed
as empty
threats,
weakening
the
United
Nations
and
encouraging
defiance
by
dictators
around
the
world.
Iraq's
torture
chambers
would
still be
filled
with
victims,
terrified
and
innocent.
The
killing
fields
of Iraq
-- where
hundreds
of
thousands
of men
and
women
and
children
vanished
into the
sands --
would
still be
known
only to
the
killers.
For all
who love
freedom
and
peace,
the
world
without
Saddam
Hussein's
regime
is a
better
and
safer
place.
(Applause.)
Some
critics
have
said our
duties
in Iraq
must be
internationalized.
This
particular
criticism
is hard
to
explain
to our
partners
in
Britain,
Australia,
Japan,
South
Korea,
the
Philippines,
Thailand,
Italy,
Spain,
Poland,
Denmark,
Hungary,
Bulgaria,
Ukraine,
Romania,
the
Netherlands
--
(applause)
--
Norway,
El
Salvador,
and the
17 other
countries
that
have
committed
troops
to Iraq.
(Applause.)
As we
debate
at home,
we must
never
ignore
the
vital
contributions
of our
international
partners,
or
dismiss
their
sacrifices.
From
the
beginning,
America
has
sought
international
support
for our
operations
in
Afghanistan
and
Iraq,
and we
have
gained
much
support.
There is
a
difference,
however,
between
leading
a
coalition
of many
nations,
and
submitting
to the
objections
of a
few.
America
will
never
seek a
permission
slip to
defend
the
security
of our
country.
(Applause.)
We
also
hear
doubts
that
democracy
is a
realistic
goal for
the
greater
Middle
East,
where
freedom
is rare.
Yet it
is
mistaken,
and
condescending,
to
assume
that
whole
cultures
and
great
religions
are
incompatible
with
liberty
and
self-government.
I
believe
that God
has
planted
in every
human
heart
the
desire
to live
in
freedom.
And even
when
that
desire
is
crushed
by
tyranny
for
decades,
it will
rise
again.
(Applause.)
As
long as
the
Middle
East
remains
a place
of
tyranny
and
despair
and
anger,
it will
continue
to
produce
men and
movements
that
threaten
the
safety
of
America
and our
friends.
So
America
is
pursuing
a
forward
strategy
of
freedom
in the
greater
Middle
East. We
will
challenge
the
enemies
of
reform,
confront
the
allies
of
terror,
and
expect a
higher
standard
from our
friend.
To cut
through
the
barriers
of
hateful
propaganda,
the
Voice of
America
and
other
broadcast
services
are
expanding
their
programming
in
Arabic
and
Persian
-- and
soon, a
new
television
service
will
begin
providing
reliable
news and
information
across
the
region.
I will
send you
a
proposal
to
double
the
budget
of the
National
Endowment
for
Democracy,
and to
focus
its new
work on
the
development
of free
elections,
and free
markets,
free
press,
and free
labor
unions
in the
Middle
East.
And
above
all, we
will
finish
the
historic
work of
democracy
in
Afghanistan
and
Iraq, so
those
nations
can
light
the way
for
others,
and help
transform
a
troubled
part of
the
world.
(Applause.)
America
is a
nation
with a
mission,
and that
mission
comes
from our
most
basic
beliefs.
We have
no
desire
to
dominate,
no
ambitions
of
empire.
Our aim
is a
democratic
peace --
a peace
founded
upon the
dignity
and
rights
of every
man and
woman.
America
acts in
this
cause
with
friends
and
allies
at our
side,
yet we
understand
our
special
calling:
This
great
republic
will
lead the
cause of
freedom.
(Applause.)
In
the last
three
years,
adversity
has also
revealed
the
fundamental
strengths
of the
American
economy.
We have
come
through
recession,
and
terrorist
attack,
and
corporate
scandals,
and the
uncertainties
of war.
And
because
you
acted to
stimulate
our
economy
with tax
relief,
this
economy
is
strong,
and
growing
stronger.
(Applause.)
You
have
doubled
the
child
tax
credit
from
$500 to
$1,000,
reduced
the
marriage
penalty,
begun to
phase
out the
death
tax,
reduced
taxes on
capital
gains
and
stock
dividends,
cut
taxes on
small
businesses,
and you
have
lowered
taxes
for
every
American
who pays
income
taxes.
Americans
took
those
dollars
and put
them to
work,
driving
this
economy
forward.
The pace
of
economic
growth
in the
third
quarter
of 2003
was the
fastest
in
nearly
20
years;
new home
construction,
the
highest
in
almost
20
years;
home
ownership
rates,
the
highest
ever.
Manufacturing
activity
is
increasing.
Inflation
is low.
Interest
rates
are low.
Exports
are
growing.
Productivity
is high,
and jobs
are on
the
rise.
(Applause.)
These
numbers
confirm
that the
American
people
are
using
their
money
far
better
than
government
would
have --
and you
were
right to
return
it.
(Applause.)
America's
growing
economy
is also
a
changing
economy.
As
technology
transforms
the way
almost
every
job is
done,
America
becomes
more
productive,
and
workers
need new
skills.
Much of
our job
growth
will be
found in
high-skilled
fields
like
health
care and
biotechnology.
So we
must
respond
by
helping
more
Americans
gain the
skills
to find
good
jobs in
our new
economy.
All
skills
begin
with the
basics
of
reading
and
math,
which
are
supposed
to be
learned
in the
early
grades
of our
schools.
Yet for
too
long,
for too
many
children,
those
skills
were
never
mastered.
By
passing
the No
Child
Left
Behind
Act, you
have
made the
expectation
of
literacy
the law
of our
country.
We're
providing
more
funding
for our
schools
-- a
36-percent
increase
since
2001.
We're
requiring
higher
standards.
We are
regularly
testing
every
child on
the
fundamentals.
We are
reporting
results
to
parents,
and
making
sure
they
have
better
options
when
schools
are not
performing.
We are
making
progress
toward
excellence
for
every
child in
America.
(Applause.)
But
the
status
quo
always
has
defenders.
Some
want to
undermine
the No
Child
Left
Behind
Act by
weakening
standards
and
accountability.
Yet the
results
we
require
are
really a
matter
of
common
sense:
We
expect
third
graders
to read
and do
math at
the
third
grade
level --
and
that's
not
asking
too
much.
Testing
is the
only way
to
identify
and help
students
who are
falling
behind.
This
nation
will not
go back
to the
days of
simply
shuffling
children
along
from
grade to
grade
without
them
learning
the
basics.
I refuse
to give
up on
any
child --
and the
No Child
Left
Behind
Act is
opening
the door
of
opportunity
to all
of
America's
children.
(Applause.)
At
the same
time, we
must
ensure
that
older
students
and
adults
can gain
the
skills
they
need to
find
work
now.
Many of
the
fastest
growing
occupations
require
strong
math and
science
preparation,
and
training
beyond
the high
school
level.
So
tonight,
I
propose
a series
of
measures
called
Jobs for
the 21st
Century.
This
program
will
provide
extra
help to
middle
and high
school
students
who fall
behind
in
reading
and
math,
expand
advanced
placement
programs
in
low-income
schools,
invite
math and
science
professionals
from the
private
sector
to teach
part-time
in our
high
schools.
I
propose
larger
Pell
grants
for
students
who
prepare
for
college
with
demanding
courses
in high
school.
(Applause.)
I
propose
increasing
our
support
for
America's
fine
community
colleges,
so they
can --
(applause.)
I do so,
so they
can
train
workers
for
industries
that are
creating
the most
new
jobs. By
all
these
actions,
we'll
help
more and
more
Americans
to join
in the
growing
prosperity
of our
country.
Job
training
is
important,
and so
is job
creation.
We
must
continue
to
pursue
an
aggressive,
pro-growth
economic
agenda.
(Applause.)
Congress
has some
unfinished
business
on the
issue of
taxes.
The tax
reductions
you
passed
are set
to
expire.
Unless
you act
--
(applause)
--
unless
you act
--
unless
you act,
the
unfair
tax on
marriage
will go
back up.
Unless
you act,
millions
of
families
will be
charged
$300
more in
federal
taxes
for
every
child.
Unless
you act,
small
businesses
will pay
higher
taxes.
Unless
you act,
the
death
tax will
eventually
come
back to
life.
Unless
you act,
Americans
face a
tax
increase.
What
Congress
has
given,
the
Congress
should
not take
away.
For the
sake of
job
growth,
the tax
cuts you
passed
should
be
permanent.
(Applause.)
Our
agenda
for jobs
and
growth
must
help
small
business
owners
and
employees
with
relief
from
needless
federal
regulation,
and
protect
them
from
junk and
frivolous
lawsuits.
(Applause.)
Consumers
and
businesses
need
reliable
supplies
of
energy
to make
our
economy
run --
so I
urge you
to pass
legislation
to
modernize
our
electricity
system,
promote
conservation,
and make
America
less
dependent
on
foreign
sources
of
energy.
(Applause.)
My
administration
is
promoting
free and
fair
trade to
open up
new
markets
for
America's
entrepreneurs
and
manufacturers
and
farmers
-- to
create
jobs for
American
workers.
Younger
workers
should
have the
opportunity
to build
a nest
egg by
saving
part of
their
Social
Security
taxes in
a
personal
retirement
account.
(Applause.)
We
should
make the
Social
Security
system a
source
of
ownership
for the
American
people.
(Applause.)
And we
should
limit
the
burden
of
government
on this
economy
by
acting
as good
stewards
of
taxpayers'
dollars.
(Applause.)
In
two
weeks, I
will
send you
a budget
that
funds
the war,
protects
the
homeland,
and
meets
important
domestic
needs,
while
limiting
the
growth
in
discretionary
spending
to less
than 4
percent.
(Applause.)
This
will
require
that
Congress
focus on
priorities,
cut
wasteful
spending,
and be
wise
with the
people's
money.
By doing
so, we
can cut
the
deficit
in half
over the
next
five
years.
(Applause.)
Tonight,
I also
ask you
to
reform
our
immigration
laws so
they
reflect
our
values
and
benefit
our
economy.
I
propose
a new
temporary
worker
program
to match
willing
foreign
workers
with
willing
employers
when no
Americans
can be
found to
fill the
job.
This
reform
will be
good for
our
economy
because
employers
will
find
needed
workers
in an
honest
and
orderly
system.
A
temporary
worker
program
will
help
protect
our
homeland,
allowing
Border
Patrol
and law
enforcement
to focus
on true
threats
to our
national
security.
I
oppose
amnesty,
because
it would
encourage
further
illegal
immigration,
and
unfairly
reward
those
who
break
our
laws. My
temporary
worker
program
will
preserve
the
citizenship
path for
those
who
respect
the law,
while
bringing
millions
of
hardworking
men and
women
out from
the
shadows
of
American
life.
(Applause.)
Our
nation's
health
care
system,
like our
economy,
is also
in a
time of
change.
Amazing
medical
technologies
are
improving
and
saving
lives.
This
dramatic
progress
has
brought
its own
challenge,
in the
rising
costs of
medical
care and
health
insurance.
Members
of
Congress,
we must
work
together
to help
control
those
costs
and
extend
the
benefits
of
modern
medicine
throughout
our
country.
(Applause.)
Meeting
these
goals
requires
bipartisan
effort,
and two
months
ago, you
showed
the way.
By
strengthening
Medicare
and
adding a
prescription
drug
benefit,
you kept
a basic
commitment
to our
seniors:
You are
giving
them the
modern
medicine
they
deserve.
(Applause.)
Starting
this
year,
under
the law
you
passed,
seniors
can
choose
to
receive
a drug
discount
card,
saving
them 10
to 25
percent
off the
retail
price of
most
prescription
drugs --
and
millions
of
low-income
seniors
can get
an
additional
$600 to
buy
medicine.
Beginning
next
year,
seniors
will
have new
coverage
for
preventive
screenings
against
diabetes
and
heart
disease,
and
seniors
just
entering
Medicare
can
receive
wellness
exams.
In
January
of 2006,
seniors
can get
prescription
drug
coverage
under
Medicare.
For a
monthly
premium
of about
$35,
most
seniors
who do
not have
that
coverage
today
can
expect
to see
their
drug
bills
cut
roughly
in half.
Under
this
reform,
senior
citizens
will be
able to
keep
their
Medicare
just as
it is,
or they
can
choose a
Medicare
plan
that
fits
them
best --
just as
you, as
members
of
Congress,
can
choose
an
insurance
plan
that
meets
your
needs.
And
starting
this
year,
millions
of
Americans
will be
able to
save
money
tax-free
for
their
medical
expenses
in a
health
savings
account.
(Applause.)
I
signed
this
measure
proudly,
and any
attempt
to limit
the
choices
of our
seniors,
or to
take
away
their
prescription
drug
coverage
under
Medicare,
will
meet my
veto.
(Applause.)
On
the
critical
issue of
health
care,
our goal
is to
ensure
that
Americans
can
choose
and
afford
private
health
care
coverage
that
best
fits
their
individual
needs.
To make
insurance
more
affordable,
Congress
must act
to
address
rapidly
rising
health
care
costs.
Small
businesses
should
be able
to band
together
and
negotiate
for
lower
insurance
rates,
so they
can
cover
more
workers
with
health
insurance.
I urge
you to
pass
association
health
plans.
(Applause.)
I ask
you to
give
lower-income
Americans
a
refundable
tax
credit
that
would
allow
millions
to buy
their
own
basic
health
insurance.
(Applause.)
By
computerizing
health
records,
we can
avoid
dangerous
medical
mistakes,
reduce
costs,
and
improve
care. To
protect
the
doctor-patient
relationship,
and keep
good
doctors
doing
good
work, we
must
eliminate
wasteful
and
frivolous
medical
lawsuits.
(Applause.)
And
tonight
I
propose
that
individuals
who buy
catastrophic
health
care
coverage,
as part
of our
new
health
savings
accounts,
be
allowed
to
deduct
100
percent
of the
premiums
from
their
taxes.
(Applause.)
A
government-run
health
care
system
is the
wrong
prescription.
(Applause.)
By
keeping
costs
under
control,
expanding
access,
and
helping
more
Americans
afford
coverage,
we will
preserve
the
system
of
private
medicine
that
makes
America's
health
care the
best in
the
world.
(Applause.)
We
are
living
in a
time of
great
change
-- in
our
world,
in our
economy,
in
science
and
medicine.
Yet some
things
endure
--
courage
and
compassion,
reverence
and
integrity,
respect
for
differences
of faith
and
race.
The
values
we try
to live
by never
change.
And they
are
instilled
in us by
fundamental
institutions,
such as
families
and
schools
and
religious
congregations.
These
institutions,
these
unseen
pillars
of
civilization,
must
remain
strong
in
America,
and we
will
defend
them. We
must
stand
with our
families
to help
them
raise
healthy,
responsible
children.
When it
comes to
helping
children
make
right
choices,
there is
work for
all of
us to
do.
One
of the
worst
decisions
our
children
can make
is to
gamble
their
lives
and
futures
on
drugs.
Our
government
is
helping
parents
confront
this
problem
with
aggressive
education,
treatment,
and law
enforcement.
Drug use
in high
school
has
declined
by 11
percent
over the
last two
years.
Four
hundred
thousand
fewer
young
people
are
using
illegal
drugs
than in
the year
2001.
(Applause.)
In my
budget,
I
proposed
new
funding
to
continue
our
aggressive,
community-based
strategy
to
reduce
demand
for
illegal
drugs.
Drug
testing
in our
schools
has
proven
to be an
effective
part of
this
effort.
So
tonight
I
proposed
an
additional
$23
million
for
schools
that
want to
use drug
testing
as a
tool to
save
children's
lives.
The aim
here is
not to
punish
children,
but to
send
them
this
message:
We love
you, and
we don't
want to
lose
you.
(Applause.)
To
help
children
make
right
choices,
they
need
good
examples.
Athletics
play
such an
important
role in
our
society,
but,
unfortunately,
some in
professional
sports
are not
setting
much of
an
example.
The use
of
performance-enhancing
drugs
like
steroids
in
baseball,
football,
and
other
sports
is
dangerous,
and it
sends
the
wrong
message
-- that
there
are
shortcuts
to
accomplishment,
and that
performance
is more
important
than
character.
So
tonight
I call
on team
owners,
union
representatives,
coaches,
and
players
to take
the
lead, to
send the
right
signal,
to get
tough,
and to
get rid
of
steroids
now.
(Applause.)
To
encourage
right
choices,
we must
be
willing
to
confront
the
dangers
young
people
face --
even
when
they're
difficult
to talk
about.
Each
year,
about 3
million
teenagers
contract
sexually-transmitted
diseases
that can
harm
them, or
kill
them, or
prevent
them
from
ever
becoming
parents.
In my
budget,
I
propose
a
grassroots
campaign
to help
inform
families
about
these
medical
risks.
We will
double
federal
funding
for
abstinence
programs,
so
schools
can
teach
this
fact of
life:
Abstinence
for
young
people
is the
only
certain
way to
avoid
sexually-transmitted
diseases.
(Applause.)
Decisions
children
now make
can
affect
their
health
and
character
for the
rest of
their
lives.
All of
us --
parents
and
schools
and
government
-- must
work
together
to
counter
the
negative
influence
of the
culture,
and to
send the
right
messages
to our
children.
A
strong
America
must
also
value
the
institution
of
marriage.
I
believe
we
should
respect
individuals
as we
take a
principled
stand
for one
of the
most
fundamental,
enduring
institutions
of our
civilization.
Congress
has
already
taken a
stand on
this
issue by
passing
the
Defense
of
Marriage
Act,
signed
in 1996
by
President
Clinton.
That
statute
protects
marriage
under
federal
law as a
union of
a man
and a
woman,
and
declares
that one
state
may not
redefine
marriage
for
other
states.
Activist
judges,
however,
have
begun
redefining
marriage
by court
order,
without
regard
for the
will of
the
people
and
their
elected
representatives.
On an
issue of
such
great
consequence,
the
people's
voice
must be
heard.
If
judges
insist
on
forcing
their
arbitrary
will
upon the
people,
the only
alternative
left to
the
people
would be
the
constitutional
process.
Our
nation
must
defend
the
sanctity
of
marriage.
(Applause.)
The
outcome
of this
debate
is
important
-- and
so is
the way
we
conduct
it. The
same
moral
tradition
that
defines
marriage
also
teaches
that
each
individual
has
dignity
and
value in
God's
sight.
(Applause.)
It's
also
important
to
strengthen
our
communities
by
unleashing
the
compassion
of
America's
religious
institutions.
Religious
charities
of every
creed
are
doing
some of
the most
vital
work in
our
country
--
mentoring
children,
feeding
the
hungry,
taking
the hand
of the
lonely.
Yet
government
has
often
denied
social
service
grants
and
contracts
to these
groups,
just
because
they
have a
cross or
a Star
of David
or a
crescent
on the
wall. By
executive
order, I
have
opened
billions
of
dollars
in grant
money to
competition
that
includes
faith-based
charities.
Tonight
I ask
you to
codify
this
into
law, so
people
of faith
can know
that the
law will
never
discriminate
against
them
again.
(Applause.)
In
the
past,
we've
worked
together
to bring
mentors
to
children
of
prisoners,
and
provide
treatment
for the
addicted,
and help
for the
homeless.
Tonight
I ask
you to
consider
another
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