 Ladies and gentlemen, my name breath means a great deal to me, and I've always been happening to me over 50 years ago. 50 years ago, in addition to this, things were very rough at that time, and I didn't have tuition for my last semester at school. A defender against victory, anti-Semitism, racism, and all those issues. And I'm going to say to you, I'd like to read a little article in this article. Four years ago, Al Spiegel made remarks, a couple other programs. For the last point, let me say this. Have you remember the racism, Zionism, equation of racism? There hasn't been anything which his enemies have not said. President of the United States. Thanks, Fisher. You might be really smart. I'll just sit down and be good. Today, our country has a bigger heart, a deeper sense of the generosity of spirit that must always define America. And on behalf of all Americans, I thank you. The last four years, once again, I want to talk about American policy toward Israel, today's new policy of deep friendship and strength and support. But first, permit me to share with you my view of how, working together, the American people have replaced our own nations' descent into influence and despair with the rebirth of freedom, prosperity, and hope. Our country has faced since the Great Depression. In foreign affairs, we have lost the respect of friend and foe, and our willpower to own weak and soft, undermining commitments to allies like Israel. Our leaders seem to have lost faith in the American people and in America's future. They spoke of the national malaise. The States of America reached such a pathetic state of American evidence. For today, just four years later, we're seeing not humiliation, our accomplishments, and ourselves. On the economic front, the last and vigorous economic expansion this day gives up. Our tax rate reductions have restored incentives to the American people, and when tax indexes end up a tragedy that befell them. But let me read you Isaac's own words. Nicaraguan Jews never encountered anti-Semitism until the Sandinistas. But the Nicaraguan people did, in Nicaragua, will be done by the Palestinians. For today, some in our national life would have America take a position of weakness in Central America, or we stand four square on the side of human liberty. I pledge to you that we will maintain the deaths of millions in Cambodia, or the travail of the Mosquee Indians in Nicaragua, for the benevolent has been among the most concerned of the group advocating American support in the genocide convention. No threat will harm mutual interests in the Middle East. This free trade ring was in our friendship stronger than at any time in the history of our two nations. Indeed, Prime Minister Shamir recently described American-Israeli relations. Our continuing labors. Let me assure you, we will never attempt to impose a solution on Israel, nor will we be energized. God bless you. Nice to see you. How are you? Fine. What's your average age? Jack. How are you? Pleasure to meet you. Nice to see you, Jack. How are you? Nice to see you. How are you? Nice to see you, sir. Can we meet last year? Yes, we did. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. I'm Roger. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. How are you? Nice to see you, sir. I want to get over here and do a group photo. Good. What do you want? Great places. Let's do it. Let's do the one with the blazers first. How was that for you? Thank you. Do you want to join us? Okay. Stay right here. Thank you. United States of America. I would like to thank you with your own person. Well, thank you very much. We'll have it up here. Thank you, sir. There you go. Hey, we're so in one place. Nice to see you. What's this? That's for him. That's for him. That's for him. That's for him. Hey, we're so in one place. We're having a camp. Yes, we do. We're having a camp. Yes, we do. Thank you very much. I have no excuse. I have to go bowling. I'm sorry, but I'm sorry. I'm sorry. You should have heard the razzling. I will protect the principle. It's fine. Hopefully, you'll have the more fun in the bowling. He handled it very well, by the way. He handled it very well. Yes. Probably got more mileage out of that than all the campaign. We're bowling it. How many million did you say? 70 million in the United States Bowl. Thank you so much. We have memberships combined of 8 million and the juniors have 750 to 800,000. Out of our offices in Milwaukee, we service nearly 9 million people. And on behalf of the four million that belong to the women's international bowling counters, and I'm sorry, Mrs. Reagan couldn't be with us. We'd like to present her with an honorary membership in the women's international bowling counters. She's in Oregon right now. I'm sorry, she's not here. Oh, yes. I'm going to say a full set of equipment for her and for Mrs. Bush over in the other building. Well, thank you very much. Now, no excuse not to go bowling. All for her. I know you have another video to do, but I'm sorry. Well, under Camp David, there's a photo. Yes, we do. We'll expect to see you get off the helicopter with them in your hand. I should confess something, too, though. But some years ago, I was invited to the dinner. There was some bowling awards that were being given out in Los Angeles that came back in my previous life. I think so. And my opening line was to tell them that they usually tried to associate your being there with some connection with the sport. And I said the only connection I can find is that my score in both bowling and golf, I'm still trying to break that. Thank you, Mr. President. Mr. President, I also have an honorary lifetime membership, but this one is for you. And that's from the American Bowling Congress, and we extended it with our 400 members. Congratulations. Thank you very much. Our pleasure. Thank you very much. Thank you. Next time, I'll try to do better. Thank you. Thank you. There are written questions, and I'll provide them to them after this session. Then they will ask you why at this point in your head you didn't just quit, and they'll follow that up by asking you, are you going to conduct a low-profile campaign? Mr. President, I'd like to see if you indeed are going to come. Hi. We have a message from you. We were called to speak to the Prime Minister. She sent her regards. Well, she's rather busy these days. It's a bit busier than you are. Yes. I think we should both come over here and act like we're working. Right. Thank you. Mr. President, this seat here is for you. Good of you to make a time. Thank you very much. That's kind of what I was thinking about. Appreciate it. You know, my first visit to England was in me. Back in 1948, Woolford made the hasty heart. And on those days, I preferred traveling on the surface. So I took the Britannia. A little bit slower than the Concorde. What? A little bit slower than the Concorde? Ah, yes. In fact, it was a seven-day, but we had to leave from Nova Scotia because there was a dock strike in New York. Oh, I'm glad it wasn't me. On the ship going over, I became acquainted with a member of the London Times, Tommy Thompson. Oh, absolutely, yes. A small group of us sort of used to get together on a virtually daily basis on the ship's father. I know it's him. That is kind of character. Are you all geared up for the campaigns? Ah, yes. I know what it's going to be like because I've had one experience as Governor of Caledonia. You have to do the job, too. It won't exactly be the kind where you would extend the tours as it was four years ago. From the Irish receipt? Yes. But you are so far ahead. Are we seeing a sea change in American politics? Ah, I'm not going to be tempted by those. It's a matter of fact that maybe too many people are going to get complacent and think their votes aren't needed. I keep remembering a Republican candidate named Dewey. So you think it's a danger of getting through every comfort of the past? Well, not for me. I never was that way when I was in sports and athletics. I was thinking as I put it, I'm going to run one vote behind. Why do you think Mrs. Tattrick had re-elected last year on policies not too different from yours? Seeing the election in Canada, your way ahead and it goes, what's happening? Well, I think speaking, I won't speak for another country. I'll speak for my own. I think there has been a growing awareness in the part of people in both parties here that there is an increase in government and in government intervention in what had traditionally been the private sector and so forth is finally catching up with us. The people have found that the cost of government has skyrocketed and that there are things that government cannot do as well as the private sector. I think this is what we're seeing. I think here in our own country we came to a point in which government's relationship with its own business and industrial community was adversarial rather than working together for years. There seems to have been quite a reaction to that once we started to turn it around. The debate for these last three and a half years that for about 50 years had been one of, well, how much are we going to spend on this program and that program and what new programs? Suddenly the debate for these last four years it turns out has been how much can we cut the spending? So the debate's on your terms now? Yes. You've changed to that extent but you said but I think in a way the people determined that also. If you get re-elected or when what's going to be your major power I think that's the point. I think that's the point. Well, it has to be peace and it has to be reduced arms. Particularly in the strategic field. I have to believe that if we persuade the Soviet Union to join in reducing those weapons that perhaps we can all see the wisdom be reduced but I don't think the world should have to live with this threat anymore and it really doesn't make any sense. Every weapon that's ever been introduced until this one has had a defencing weapon. And you could look at war as win or lose a woman in the normal sense but we've come to a point now that a previous president of ours said might have come to a point where a war with the weapons now at hand there is no foreseeing of victory or defeat in the tradition of terms. The weapons are capable of destroying mankind and civilization and when that time comes as he himself said then it's time for the nations to sit down. On that note I think we're just about to start. I hope Mr. President in another read in the administration that the kind of fissures that have been growing between Western Europe and the United States will not get deeper. There sometimes seems to be trends in the 1980s that pulling us a bit apart. Well my feeling is that yes that I came in in an era to such a situation but I believe that that has been changed. I don't think we've ever been closer to our NATO partners than we are now and architecture has had a great deal to do with that. I've got to take a second to tell you one thing when we had the summit at Williamsburg which was the first dinner, the first night the heads of state we all met at and dined at what had been the British colonial governors so I was all set for and I was waiting until we were all settled and that my line was going to be Margaret, if one of your predecessors had been a little more clever you would be hosting this so it all worked that way and I started I said Margaret if one of your predecessors had been a little more clever she said I know I would have been hosting this she said a lot she really is Mr. President that's good to see you it's good to see you I don't feel good I can't I'll just see you I'll just see you I don't I'll just see you I don't I don't I don't I don't see you I don't appreciate you It's like they're standing in there and they just run them in the games all the time. And he's asking for four more years of that. Well, sometimes that's the most fun thing they have. Well, anyway, we're glad for you once you know that. Well, thank you very much. We'll do it four more years back up. I'd like to. I can change the 22nd Amendment by the time we finish that. I know when I'm most grateful about it. Well, we, the way we approach it, we want to play it when you have the spare time, even if you're having spare time. Well, thank you very much. You're welcome. You sure are. Yeah. I'm just going to get it. Sooner or sooner. Sooner. Thank you very much. You're welcome. We'll get David. Turn him back. I'm sure he's going to see you. I just want to sit there. Thank you.