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Note: H.R. 4546, approved December 2, was assigned Public Law No. 107-
314.
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[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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Week Ending Friday, December 6, 2002
Statement on the Death of George Christian
December 2, 2002
George Christian was an honorable, decent, and kind man who
represented the best of public service, and he was devoted to his
family. He was a statesman of the highest integrity. He also was a great
Texan, whose wise counsel was sought by generations of leaders. Laura
joins me in offering our most heartfelt condolences to the Christian
family. We are grateful for the life he lived and the many positive
contributions he made to his country and to his State.
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[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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[Page 2116-2120]
Pages 2107-2136
Week Ending Friday, December 6, 2002
Remarks in Shreveport, Louisiana
December 3, 2002
Thank you all. Thank you all very much. I'm glad I came. Thank you
all. Please be seated--unless you don't have a chair. [Laughter] It's an
honor to be here in Shreveport. I'm so thrilled that you all came out.
It's kind of getting close to home if you know what I mean. I'm proud to
be in the great State of Louisiana.
The last time I was in Shreveport was on September the 11th, 2001. I
went to Barksdale Air Force Base. Since that time, the world has seen
the resolve of the United States of America. I thank the men and women
who wore our uniform then at Barksdale, and I know you join me today in
thanking them to make sure America is free.
We're grateful for our freedom here in America. We love our
freedoms. Nobody is going to take freedom away from this country. But
part of living in a free society means we have responsibilities as
citizens. We have the obligation as a citizen of America to do our duty,
and one of the duties we have is when it comes to election time, one of
the duties is to go vote. So I'm here in the great State of Louisiana
urging all the citizens, Republicans and Democrats and folks who could
care less about political party, to go to the polls this Saturday. But
I've got a suggestion. [Laughter] For the good of Louisiana, for the
good of everybody in Louisiana, Suzie Terrell needs to be the next
United States Senator.
I'm proud of the race she's running. She talks about what she
believes in. She sets the right kind of tone. She's the kind of person
with whom I can work to get something done for Louisiana and the people
of Louisiana. No doubt in my mind, she's the right choice for everybody
who lives in this State.
And I want to thank you for coming to show your support for Suzie. I
want to thank you for your activity at the grassroots level. You need
over the next couple of days to go to your coffee shops, your community
centers and tell the people that you've got a good one running for the
United States Senate. You've got somebody who can do the job for all the
people of this State. She's counting on you, and I'm counting on you to
do everything you can to turn out a big vote and send this good woman to
the United States Senate.
And we need to have Lee Fletcher in the House of Representatives
too. I look forward to working with Lee. I look forward to having Lee a
part of a fine delegation from the great State of Louisiana. He'll fit
in just right with people like Billy Tauzin, who's doing a fabulous job
for our country, Jim McCrery and David Vitter--all of them fine Members
of Congress. So when you get in that booth, make sure you not only vote
for Suzie, but if you live in Lee Fletcher's district, pull the Fletcher
lever, too.
I appreciate so very much the Governor showing up. Yes, he's a good
man. Foster is a good man. He's my kind of guy. He's down-to-earth. He
speaks his mind. But most importantly, he's done in office what he said
he would do. He's been a great Governor for the people of Louisiana. One
of these days, he's going to invite me to come hunting again.
I regret that the first team of our family isn't here today. She's
helping decorate the White House. But I am proud of Laura. She is a
fabulous First Lady for America. And she sends her best to Suzie and
Suzie's family. And like me, she urges you all to get to those polls
come Saturday. Show up. Do your duty. Send a good, strong message that
Louisiana is wise when it comes to electing candidates. It makes sense
to have one in one party and a Senator in the majority party if you want
to get something done.
And one thing about Suzie is, she's got a good record. She's proven
herself to be a competent soul, somebody who can get the job done. You
might remember the election commissioner's office. It needed a house-
cleansing. She cleaned house. There's now integrity in that office.
People can be proud of that office thanks to Suzie Haik Terrell. She
told the people of Louisiana she would do the job, and she has done that
job. She understands who she's accountable to. She's accountable to the
people. She understands she works for the people of Louisiana.
She saved $20 million for the taxpayers of Louisiana. She's got an
awesome responsibility, and she saved money, because she understands
what I know. When you spend the Government's money, you don't spend--
it's
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not the Government's money you're spending; it's the people's money.
No, she's got a can-do spirit. See, we need people to go to
Washington to set aside all the political bickering that tends to
dominate the discourse, to get things done on behalf of the American
people. That's what we need. We need an attitude of cooperation. Oh, I
expect there to be independent voices in Washington, DC, and no question
about her, she's an independent voice. She kind of tells you what's on
her mind. But it's an attitude that's important. We need an attitude in
the Senate to bring people together so we can say that we're doing the
people's business and we're making a difference in people's lives.
And we're making some progress. I was proud to sign the Department
of Homeland Security bill. It made sense. It now means we're going to
reorganize our Government so we can do our job, and that is to protect
the American people from further attack. We want people all focused in
the same direction. We want cultures to change, if need be, to make sure
that we can do everything we can to say to the American people, ``We're
working overtime to protect you.'' We need to know who's coming in the
country, what they're bringing into the country, if they're leaving the
country when they're supposed to be leaving the country, so America is
protected.
We're making progress about bringing people together to get things
done. I'm convinced Suzie's election will continue that progress. I went
to the Pentagon yesterday and fulfilled a campaign pledge, signed the
most significant increase in the authorization of defense spending since
the President--Ronald Reagan was the President.
I was able to sign a piece of legislation that will get our hardhats
back to work. I signed a terrorism insurance bill that will enable
construction projects that have been on hold to go forward. I'm worried
about the fact that some people are looking for work and can't find work
in America. I want our hardhats working. I want our welders welding. I
want the construction people back to work. I want to reward the
hardhats, not the trial lawyers of America.
We're making progress up there. Suzie's election will help us make
more progress. We've got work to do on education. Listen, anytime any
child can't read means we've got to stay on education. I appreciate the
Governor's hard work of joining and setting high standards. We need
somebody in the Senate who will join me in making sure we've got local
control of our schools in America.
Last year, we spent $847 million of Federal money on Louisiana
schools, and that's good. But now we're starting to ask the question
that Mike's been asking and I know Suzie will ask: ``Are we getting our
money's worth?'' See, you've got to ask that question if you don't want
any child left behind. You know, are the dollars we're spending making a
difference in the lives of our children? Can our children read and write
and add and subtract? And when we find they can, we'll praise the
teachers. And for those of you who are teachers, thanks for what you do.
But what's important is that when we find children in schools which
won't teach and won't change, that we challenge the status quo. No child
should be left behind in America.
And speaking about schools, I want to thank the Byrd High School
Band and the Parkway High School Band for coming. I'm glad you all came.
I'm sorry you had to miss school to come. [Laughter] Just put my name on
the excuse slip. And if you're 18, make sure you vote.
We've got more work to do. We've got to make sure this economy
continues to grow. I'm for a growth agenda--want to do things in
Washington, DC, that helps create jobs. The role of Government--and
Suzie understands this--the role of Government is not to create wealth
but an environment in which the small business can grow to be a big
business, in which the entrepreneurial spirit flourishes. And the best
way to help people who are looking for work, the best way to stimulate
economic vitality is to make the tax cuts we passed permanent.
See, when that economy started slowing down, I decided to fulfill
what I said I was going to do and urge that the Government let people
keep more of their own money. See, when you have more of your own money,
it means you're likely to demand an additional good or a service. And
when you
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demand additional good or a service, somebody is likely to produce the
good or a service. And when somebody produces the good or a service, it
means somebody in Louisiana or Texas or anywhere else is likely to be
able to find a job. The tax relief plan came at the right time. And now,
in order to make sure our economy is strong and vibrant, we better make
sure the tax cuts are permanent.
And there's one person in this Senate race who's willing to stand up
and say she will join the President in listening to the people and
making tax cuts permanent, and that is Suzie Terrell.
No, we've got more work to do. We've got more work to do. I need
somebody in the Senate with whom I can work and Billy can work to make
sure we get us an energy bill. We got a problem when it comes to energy.
We get too much of our energy from countries that may not like us.
That's a problem. We can do a better job of conserving. We can do a
better job of promoting technologies that will make us less dependent on
foreign sources of crude oil. But we've got to do a better job here at
home of finding more hydrocarbons in the United States of America. An
energy bill is good for our job base. It's good for economic security,
and it's good for national security.
I want to thank Billy Tauzin for working hard to get an energy bill.
That new Senate may make it easier for us to get a bill done on behalf
of the American people.
We've got more work to do, and I look forward to working with Suzie
to make sure that we modernize Medicare. See, medicine has changed, and
the Medicare system hasn't changed. Medicine is modern, but Medicare is
stuck in the past. For the sake of our seniors, we need to fulfill our
national promise and modernize Medicare, which means prescription drugs
for our seniors.
I look forward to working with Suzie on behalf of the citizens of
Louisiana. I also look forward to working with Suzie to make sure that
our judiciary represents the values of Louisiana. Amazing what an
election did--kind of changed the attitude in Washington. Up until
recently, I couldn't get a lot of my judges through the Senate. They
were playing politics with the judges. I had named some very fine people
from around the country, good, honest people, and we couldn't get them
through because they wanted to play politics.
You need somebody from Louisiana who will join with this President
to make sure the judges I name reflect the values of Louisiana. We don't
need any more people legislating. We don't want our judges legislating.
We want our judges interpreting the Constitution. Those are the kind of
judges I'll name, and I can count on Suzie's vote to make sure they get
confirmed.
But the biggest job we have for a while is to protect this country.
That's the biggest job we've got. Our most awesome responsibility is to
make this homeland secure. And the best way to do it is to chase the
killers down one at a time and bring them to justice. That's the biggest
job facing this administration and the next Congress and administrations
and Congresses to come. This is a long haul to get them. [Laughter]
I guess they didn't realize who they were hitting. They probably
thought the national religion was materialism and that we were so
selfish that we all might file a lawsuit or two. [Laughter] They didn't
understand America. They don't understand that when it comes to
defending our freedoms, it doesn't matter how long it takes. We will
defend freedom no matter what the cost.
And we're making progress. We're making progress. It's a different
kind of war. You've just got to know it's a different kind of war. In
the old days, we could destroy tanks and airplanes and ships, and people
say, ``Well, they're making progress.'' It's a different kind of war
because we're fighting people who are--they send youngsters to their
suicidal deaths, and they try to find a dark cave. They're kind of
lurching around in the dark corners of some cities around the world.
They're in over 60 countries. And slowly but surely, we're dismantling
the terrorist network which hates us because of what we love. See, they
hate the fact that we love freedom. They can't stand the fact that in
this country people can worship the Almighty God any way he or she sees
fit.
Thanks to our military, thanks to our fantastic military, we won the
first battle of the first war of the 21st century. And we won it when we
got rid of the Taliban regime in
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Afghanistan. But in so doing, it's important for you to remind your
youngsters that this great country never went in to conquer anybody. We
went in to liberate. Thanks to America and our friends, many young girls
go to school for the first time in Afghanistan. Not only did we rout the
Taliban and many of the killers they harbor, but we freed people to
realize their dreams. And we're not leaving. We're going to stay there
to make sure this good country is secure and the good country can
flourish and that the hope we want for our own children is the hope that
mothers and dads in Afghanistan can realize for their children.
We're making progress on this war against terror. Sometimes you'll
see the progress, and sometimes you won't. It's a different kind of war.
The other day, we hauled a guy in named al-Nashiri. That's not a
household name here in America. [Laughter] I can understand why some go
blank when they hear his name. But he was the Al Qaida commander in the
Gulf states. Let me just put it to you this way. He no longer has the
capacity to do what he did in the past, which was to mastermind the
U.S.S. Cole that killed--the plot on the Cole that killed American
soldiers. He's out of action, for the good of the world.
Sometimes you'll see it, and sometimes you won't. But you've got to
know that in this war against terror, the doctrine stands that says,
``Either you're with us, or you're with the terrorists.'' And a lot of
nations have heard that message, and they're with us. We're cutting off
their money. We're sharing intelligence. We're hunting down the killers
one at a time. It doesn't matter how long it takes. This country will
stay the course until Al Qaida is completely demolished.
But September the 11th brought home a new reality, and it's
important for all our citizens to understand that reality. See, a lot of
us, when we were raised, never really worried about the homeland. We all
believed that two oceans would forever separate us from harm's way and
that if there was a threat gathering overseas, we could pick and choose
whether or not we wanted to be involved in dealing with that threat.
September the 11th delivered a chilling message to our country, and that
is, oceans no longer protect us. And therefore, it is my obligation to
make sure that we address gathering threats overseas before they could
do harm to the American people.
And that's why I elevated the issue of Iraq. That's why I took our
message of peace and freedom to countries around the world. I want them
to understand the nature of the man who runs Iraq is the nature of a man
who doesn't tell the truth. He says he won't have weapons of mass
destruction. He's got them. He's not only got them; he's used them. And
he's not only used them in his neighborhood; he's used them on his own
people. That's the nature of the man with whom we deal. For 11 long
years, he has deceived and denied.
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