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In the approaching
contest, the nation faces a crisis.
Fundamental principles are involved.
Shall the America of our fathers,
with its republican form of government,
its principles of civil liberty,
and its whole democratic social
and industrial order be maintained
for a new period of constructive
progress, or shall it be abandoned
for some untried experiment? This
is not the first crisis in the history
of our republic. It is not the first
time that the principles for which
the Republican party stand have
been called upon to save the country
from its enemies. There are elements
in our population which teach doctrines
that sound strange to the American
ear. The present crisis is brought
about by those who have lost faith
in America -- who no longer
believe in, or who do not understand
the principles of the Declaration
of Independence and of the Constitution
of the United States -- who would
turn their backs upon a republican
form of government, in order to
set up in its place a system of
control by a privileged class. Such
men frankly proclaim their preference
for the political philosophy of
Lenin and Trotsky to that of Washington,
Hamilton, Webster, and Lincoln.
Once let the American people understand
the issue, and they will rise in
their might to overwhelm the enemies
of America. The issue is a preservation
of the American form of government,
with its incomparable blessing of
liberty under the law.
The Republican
party must lead the way. I like
to recall the splendid acts, the
stupendous achievements of America
under the leadership of its constructive
forces. Take the names that have
interwoven their teachings and their
lives with the name and the fame
of our republic through the medium
of the principles of the Republican
party. Write them out and what becomes
of American history? You can not
take out of the story of America
these names. You can not take out
of the story their achievements.
You can not take out of the story
of America their record. It is our
duty to strive to be worthy of their
example, of their counsel, and of
our opportunity.
The question
to be settled by the people this
year is whether the American nation
shall remain upon its foundations
of ordered liberty and free opportunity,
or whether there will arise in its
stead a social democracy -- autocracy's
best friend -- to take over the
management of each individual's
life and business, to order his
comings and his goings, to limit
his occupations and his savings,
and to say that the great experiment
of Washington and Hamilton, of Jefferson
and Madison, of Marshall and Webster,
of Adams and Clay, and of Lincoln
and Roosevelt, has come to an end,
and gone to join the list of failures
in free government, with the ancient
republics of Greece and Rome, and
their later followers of Venice
and Genoa. Our nation will not divide
under the leadership and guidance
of the Republican party. It will
become all American.
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