 Thank you very much. Thank you. My goodness, if they had done this for bedtime for Bonzo, I never would have left Hollywood. Well, thank you all very much, and a special thanks to the members of the Army Band and the Harold Trumpeters. They thank them for the spirit and energy they contribute to this event and other events throughout the year. Well, it is 1988, and before saying anything else, I'd like all of you have been part of the administration since 1981 to stand. Well, I think we owe these battle veterans a special round of applause, and you already did that. Thank you. Words can't express my appreciation to each and every one of you, whether you've been on the team for seven months or seven years for the contribution that you're making. Everything we've accomplished can be traced to your hard work and professionalism. Your willingness to work the extra hours and to make the extra phone calls. You are the unsung heroes, the people who've made it happen, and I salute you. When we came here seven years ago, we pledged to the American people that we were not here to conduct business as usual, that we intended to bring about a fundamental change of direction for our beloved country. First, we turned around an economy wracked by inflation and uncertainty, and an economy that was headed into an abyss. We put America back on the high road to growth and expanding opportunity to hope and improving living standards. And now over the years, there's been a lot said about so-called Reagan luck. Well, being a Irish extraction, sometimes I'm inclined to believe such things. However, I can assure all of you that the great economic expansion our country has enjoyed has had more to do with low tax rates, deregulation, and responsible federal policies than with leprechauns. In fact, the only people who still seem to believe in tooth fairies and leprechauns are those who've tried to tell us that if we only raise taxes, the budget deficit will disappear. Well, luck, as it is said, is where preparation meets opportunity. And for the first two years of our administration, we've prepared America for better times. We cut the tax rates. We streamlined government and cut useless regulations. Through our block grant program, we returned power and authority for a number of programs back to the states. But most significant, we turned to the people themselves. We left resources in their hands that others would have taken away. We took the yoke of over-regulation off their shoulders. We looked to the entrepreneur instead of the federal planner, the free enterprise system instead of the bureaucracy. And they proved something I've always believed in, and that is more often than not, the best thing government can do for a free people is get its hands out of their pockets and get out of their way. I think we can be proud that our policies, based on an abiding faith in the people, have worked. America is still enjoying the fruits of the longest peacetime expansion in history. The real gross national product, which is the value of all the goods and services produced in the United States, has risen more than 21% during this expansion. Inflation running a double-digit killer rates in 1979 and 80 has averaged some 3.3% since the recovery began. The prime interest rate, which was 21% just before we got to Washington, is down to, last month, 8.75%. What does all this mean to the American people? It means that more of them are working, and a higher percentage of the population is employed than ever before. It means the median after inflation income of the American family, which was dropping when we got to Washington, increased 4.2% in 1986. Homes again are again affordable to the average citizen. In March of last year, America built its 100 million home. You know, I wonder sometimes where certain candidates for an office of the other party, why they haven't found out all these figures. Don't let anyone tell you that this expansion has excluded the poor and the minorities, as some of them are saying. The poverty rate, which was rising precipitously when we got here, is now declining. The tragic, that tragic trend we inherited has been reversed. Among minorities, the news is also good. Teenage black unemployment, for example, though still far too high, has been cut dramatically in recent years. And the percentage of blacks in the group of Americans who make over $50,000 has almost doubled since 1982, something that seems to be popular of latest suggesting that greed is characterized the 1980s in America. Well, I don't happen to believe that pejorative word is appropriate. We should applaud people who are trying to better their lot, not put them down. One cover story, which seemed to be saying the 1980s had been a period of selfishness instead of self-improvement, contained a poll which reported that between 1982 and 1987, there had been a 66% increase in the number of people who answer yes to this question. Are you involved in any charity or social service activities such as helping the poor, the sick, or the elderly? And furthermore, we know that between 1980 and 1986, charitable giving shot up 77%, so much for the so-called era of greed. This has been a time of people getting involved and helping one another without waiting for government. It's been a time of increasing hope, of rising standards of living, of economic expansion. And don't let anyone tell you it's all over. We were told it couldn't be done even before we started. The doomsayers then claimed it could never last, yet it has been one of the longest, as I said, peacetime expansions in history. On the network news, we saw story after story that would lead one to conclude that poverty was increasing. And when the statistics finally came out, we found there had been a significant decline in the poverty rate. We heard the professional pessimists telling us America was being deindustrialized. And then we found out that our industry was making record gains in productivity and that our manufacturing industries were making a big comeback. And now we even hear highly touted analysts telling economic movers and shakers that a report heralding the good news that unemployment is going down is actually bad news. I don't think the American people believe in this kind of Alice in Wonderland economics. I don't think the American people believe good news is really bad news. We can be proud of what's been accomplished. The doomsayers who can't make the front page or network news unless they've got something bad to say, they've been wrong for the last seven years. And in 1988, we and the American people are going to prove them wrong again. In the year ahead, we're not going to be on the defensive, shoring up problems and answering our critics. We're moving forward. And I have no doubt that when we look back, 1988 will be a year of great accomplishment toward our goals. This is the year when Judge Anthony Kennedy will be confirmed and the Supreme Court will again be brought up to full strength. The federal judiciary is too important to be made a political football. I would hope, and the American people should expect, not only for Judge Kennedy's confirmation, but for the Senate to get to work and act on 27 other judicial nominations that have been left in limbo for quite a while now. This is also the year that the United States will strongly affirm that democracy, not communism, is the future of Central America. In a few weeks, Congress will determine if we're to provide the democratic resistance in Nicaragua what they need to survive. The Guatemala peace plan can succeed, only if the Sandinistas have reason to compromise and institute democratic reforms. We must have the courage to stand behind those who continue to put their lives on the line for democracy in Nicaragua. We've learned on another front that standing firm, that strength, not weakness, is the best way to achieve results with our adversaries. Nearly seven years ago, I proposed the zero option, suggesting the elimination of an entire class of U.S. and Soviet intermediate-range nuclear-armed missiles. Many of our opponents called for the so-called nuclear freeze, which would have left Soviet intermediate-range missiles threatening both Europe and Asia. Against great outcries, we and our allies installed our crews and perching two missiles. It was this determination which finally convinced the Kremlin to bargain realistically. I believe we can all be proud that at last month's summit, we signed the first agreement between the Soviet Union and the United States that actually reduced our respective nuclear arsenals. The Senate will begin its review of the INF treaty next week, and while there will be a thorough examination, there should be no reason to delay ratification. Let us note that one stand we took in this arms reduction process concerned our commitment to the Strategic Defense Initiative. SDI will give us the possibility to base deterrence increasingly on defenses which threaten no one, rather than on the threat of nuclear retaliation. I would hope that Congress does not, in the months ahead, take away in the committee room what the Soviets were unable to get at the bargaining table. We must push forward in the SDI research and testing. Progress continues to be made as well toward strategic nuclear reductions, and another summit may occur in the near future. But let me note arms reductions cannot and will not be pursued in isolation from other areas of deep concern to the American people and the other free people of the world. If relations with the Soviet Union are to improve, if we are to enter into a new period of rapprochement with our adversary, we must see greater respect for human rights. We need to see more freedom and a further opening of the immigration door. We also need to see a peaceful resolution to regional conflicts which Soviet weapons personnel and policies now help to prolong. In particular, the Soviet government needs to realize that relations with the United States cannot be expected to flourish while Soviet troops remain in Afghanistan. And I can promise all those who love freedom and whose hearts must be with those freedom fighters who struggle for their national survival, that the Soviet troops must leave Afghanistan and the United States will never agree to any steps that would put the freedom fighters and Afghan hopes for self-determination at risk. I am optimistic about the chances for better relations between East and West. Clearly, the people of the world are bound and rounding rapidly into a new era of technology and enterprise. Tremendous advances are being made that are opening up vast new potential. Communist societies, in contrast, stagnate under the heavy hand of repression and the failure of socialism. They must change relations with the West, must improve, or communist governments will simply be left behind. It's that simple. And here in this continent, we're about to undertake one of the most truly visionary steps of the 20th century. Early this month, Prime Minister Mulroney and I signed and I fully expect the Congress to approve an agreement that will eliminate the tariffs and tear down the barriers that have frustrated and taxed trade and commerce between the United States and Canada. What we're putting in place is the largest free trade area in the world. This historic step will be a source of growth and prosperity on both sides of the border for years to come and be a lasting legacy of which we all can be immensely proud. The only thing that can keep America back is an unwillingness to do what needs to be done, to do what is within our ability to do. Congress, for example, needs to act to make good on the second year of its agreement to bring down federal deficit spending. Nothing could give greater confidence to the investing community than responsible action by Washington to bring down the level of deficit spending. And finally, I'd like to discuss with you personally something that's been of utmost concern to Nancy and me during our stay at the White House. Of all we've been able to do, I'm perhaps the proudest of what we've done to change attitudes in America about the use of drugs. It's no longer fashionable to use drugs, and by the end of this administration, I'd also like to be able to say that it's no longer tolerated. We've spent much time and money on interdicting drugs, on arresting the traffickers, and stopping the flow of drugs from their source. Yet we cannot ignore that as long as there are users, the problem will persist. Progress has already been made. The number of daily marijuana users among high school seniors, according to some reports, has dropped from one in nine in 1978 to one in 30 in 1987. In the time left in our administration, I would hope that you'll do everything possible to eliminate drug abuse from the federal workplace. The federal government is the nation's largest employer, and it should be an example to the rest of the nation. We've got to make it an example. Can I count on you? I don't know why I asked. You've never disappointed me. You've changed and are changing the direction not only of American history, but of world history. We have been revolutionaries, and for seven years the so-called sophisticates have at every turn said our revolution had failed. Well, again and again they've been wrong because they've forgotten our secret weapon, the human spirit. Yes, ours is a revolution for the most powerful yearnings of the spirit. Yearning for opportunity, for a better life for your children, for freedom, for true and lasting peace. The yearning of the spirit in all the history of humanity no force is stronger or more blessed. So when you leave here today, remember one more year, not for the Gipper, but for Americans and for all mankind. Because I had something else to follow my speech, and that is I'd like to introduce to you some of my small friends from the young Americans for America who have a big message for you.