 That couldn't get in, thank you outside. We begin by telling you what no other candidate for president will tell you. And that is that given the realities of the economy and the political life of America today, no president, not Bernie Sanders or anybody else, is capable of dealing with the many crises that we have. The only way that we transform this country is through a political revolution. What that means is that millions of people throughout our country, many of whom, by the way, have given up on the political process. They look at Washington, they look at their state capitals, and they do not see efforts there to address the real problems they face. They say, hey, I don't want to get involved in this charade. And young people, many of whom have never been involved in the political process, what we need to do now is to see millions of people jump into the political process and understand that when they stand up and fight back, they are very powerful people. You know, when we began this campaign almost a year ago, we had no political organization. We had no money. We had no name recognition out of Vermont. And we were considered to be a fringe candidacy by the media. They understood that my hair really looked great and that I had a GQ look which made me president. Despite all of that, they considered us to be a fringe candidacy. And not only that, we were taking on and are taking on Wall Street. We're taking on corporate America. We're taking on super PACs. We're taking on the corporate media. We are taking on virtually the entire democratic political establishment. And in the Clinton organization, we're taking on the most powerful political organization in the United States, an organization that has elected Bill Clinton twice, Hillary Clinton ran a very strong campaign in 2008. That is what we were taking on. Well, you know what, a year has come and gone. And as of today, we have now won 17 primary and caucus states. With your help, we're going to win here in Indiana next Tuesday, 1,350 delegates to the Democratic Convention. When we began this campaign, we were 60 points behind Secretary Clinton. Well, in the last few weeks, several of the national polls actually have us leading or just a few points behind. And most importantly and most interestingly, if you look at the last half a dozen national matchup polls between Secretary Clinton and Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump, in every one of these polls, we are beating Trump badly and we are beating him by larger margins in every instance than Secretary Clinton. The political reason for that is pretty obvious and that is this campaign is getting the support of the vast majority of Democrats, but we are also reaching out to independence. And the truth is that Democrats will only win if we bring in a number of Democrats onto our side and many of them are prepared to do that. The reason that this campaign is going to win is because we are doing something very unusual in contemporary American politics. We're telling the truth. And let me just suggest to you that the truth is not always pleasant. It is not always easy to hear what we want to hear, not in our personal lives and not in our political lives. And I believe that if we continue to sweep under the rug the most important problems that we face, this country will never ever be able to go forward. And that's what this campaign is about and what the political revolution is about. It is having the courage to face up to the real problems that we face and then address them effectively. Let me mention to you some of those problems, problems that we don't talk about enough, very rarely talked about in the media. Problem number one is today we are living under a corrupt campaign finance system which is undermining American democracy. Democracy is not a complicated process. What it means is you have one vote, you got one vote, you got one vote. One person, one vote. That's democracy. Democracy is not about you having a vote and him spending several hundred million dollars in a campaign through a super PAC to elect candidates who represent the wealthy and the powerful. That is not democracy. That is called oligarchy. And one of the issues, one of the great issues that we have got to address is that politically, economically, and in terms of media ownership, we are seeing fewer and fewer wealthy and powerful entities controlling the United States of America. What democracy means to me is that our country has one of the largest voter turnout rates, one of the highest voter turnout rates of any major country on earth, not one of the lowest voter turnout rates. What democracy means is telling Republican governors all over this country that they will not get away with trying to suppress the vote and making it harder for people to vote. Our job is to think big. Our job is to think outside of the status quo. Our job is to think of a democracy when 75, 80% of the people vote, not 40 or 50% of the people voting. Our job is to say that of any person here tonight, whether you're progressive or conservative or a moderate. If you want to run for public office, you should be able to do so without having to beg wealthy people for campaign contributions. So let me repeat what I have said many times before. If I'm elected president, no nominee of mine to the U.S. Supreme Court will get that nomination unless he or she is crystal clear in telling the American people they will vote to overturn Citizens United. So issue number one is to create a democracy now in which ordinary people have the power, not just a handful of billionaires. But that's not all that we have got to do. We have got to understand that today not only do we have a corrupt campaign finance system, we have a rigged economy. A rigged economy is when the top one-tenth of 1% now owns almost as much wealth as the bottom 90%. A rigged economy is when the 20 wealthiest people, 20 people, own more wealth than the bottom 150 million Americans, half of our population. A rigged economy is when one family, the Walton family who owns Walmart, one family owns more wealth than the bottom 40% of the American people. But it is worse than that because a rigged economy is when the wealthiest family in America pays its employees wages that are so low that many of these workers are forced to go on Medicaid and food stamps. And the middle class ends up paying higher taxes to subsidize the low wages paid by the wealthiest family in America. That is a rigged economy. I hear a lot of Republican senators and Congress people, they go all over the country and they talk about how people are ripping off the welfare system. Well, let me tell you that the major welfare beneficiary in this country is the wealthiest family, the Walton family. And I say to that family, I say to that family, the wealthiest family in America, get off of welfare, pay your workers a living wage. This campaign, again, is thinking outside of the box, thinking outside of the ways and the options that television or Congress wants you to think. Question, I want you to think about this one. 40 years ago in this country, before the explosion of technology and cell phones and space age technology and all that stuff, before the explosion of the global economy, one person in a family, one person could work 40 hours a week and earn enough money to take care of the whole family. The question that we have got to ask is how does it happen that with all of the technology and the increase in worker productivity, why today does it take mom working 40 hours a week, dad working 40 hours, the kids working, and they still don't have enough money to pay the bills? What we have been seeing in this country, again, not talked about terribly much in the media, is that for the last 30, 40 years we have been seeing the middle class shrinking and shrinking and almost all new wealth and income going to the people on top. In fact, in the last 25 years, the top one-tenth of 1% has seen a doubling of the percentage of wealth they own. There has been a massive transfer of trillions of dollars from the hands and the pocketbooks of the middle class to the very wealthiest people in this country. Here in the state of Indiana, for example, since 2007, real median income has gone down by more than $4,700. And Indiana is not the only state in our country where that is happening. Are you guys ready for a radical idea? Here is the radical idea. At a time when we have massive levels of income and wealth inequality. At a time when our people work the longest hours of any people in the industrialized world. At a time when we have the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any major country on earth together, we are going to create an economy that works for all of us, not just the 1%. Now, if we were a poor country, and there are, God knows, too many impoverished countries all over the world, we would have a certain type of discussion. And the discussion would be sure we want great health care, sure we want great education, sure we want a great infrastructure. But we're a poor country. We just can't afford to do that. Brothers and sisters, we are not a poor country. We're the richest country in the history of the world. But nobody knows that because all of the wealth and income or almost all of it is going to the people on top. Now, that means that we've got to take a hard look at what goes on in America today. Question. Any psychologist here? Any psychologist? There we go, okay. Every psychologist who has studied the issue will tell you that the most important years of the human being's development are zero through fours, all right? All right. That is when we develop intellectually and when we develop emotionally. Think for a moment. Mom is out working. Dad's out working. Who's taking care of the kids? Well, all over this country, mom and dad are desperately trying to find quality, affordable childcare, and in many cases, they can't. Turns out that there are childcare workers, people who have the responsibility of providing the intellectual and emotional nourishment that the youngest Americans need. Their wages are lower than McDonald's workers. If we want the young generation to grow, to blossom, to be the kinds of young people that we know they can be, we owe them much more. We owe them a first-class childcare pre-K system. Is that, is that a radical demand to say that our young children, the future of this country, deserve quality childcare and their parents, deserve the right to know that when they go to work, their kids are well taken care of. I don't think that that is a radical idea. We need in America, when we think about our economy, if you go out to work and you work 40 hours a week, in America, you should not be living in poverty. But in America today, and again, this is something you don't see on the media, and the reasons I want you to be thinking about that as well. Why what gets on media and what doesn't get on media and who makes those determinations and for what reasons. But in America today, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, 47 million people are living in poverty. Here in your great state of Indiana, 330,000 children are living in poverty. 16,000 public school students in Indiana were homeless during the 2012-2013 school year. 16,000 children in this state were homeless. Why is that? Why do we tolerate that? Why do we accept that? And together, we are going to create an economy which will not accept that. But if you are working in this country and you're making eight, nine bucks an hour, you're not making it. There's nobody can make it on eight or nine dollars an hour. And that is why we have got to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. There is an issue of huge consequence that we have very little discussion about. And that is our disastrous trade policies that have cost us over the years millions of good-paying jobs. Since 2001, last 15 or so years, in our country, we have lost 60,000 factories and millions of good-paying jobs. Not all of that is attributable to trade policy, but a lot of it is. Policies like NAFTA and CAFTA and permanent normal trade relations with China were written by corporate America for one reason and one reason alone. They would determine not to pay people in Indiana or workers in Vermont 20 bucks an hour or 25 bucks an hour. They would determine to shut down plants in this country, move to Mexico, move to China, pay people their pennies an hour, and bring their products back into this country. Since the passage of NAFTA in 1994, Indiana has lost 113,000 good-paying manufacturing jobs. In 2014, Caterpillar threw 250 workers out on the street in Lafayette and moved its engine manufacturing plant to China. And in February, Carrier and United Technologies announced it would be shutting down two manufacturing plants in Indiana, throwing 2100 workers out on the street and moving to Monterey, Mexico, where they can pay workers $3 an hour. And that is a company that last year made a profit of $7 billion and a company that paid its CEO over $14 million in total compensation. But that is the type of corporate greed that is destroying the American middle class. And I say to corporate America that if I'm elected president, those days of greed are going to end. You're not going to throw, you are not going to throw American workers out on the street and then move to China or to Mexico. When we talk about our economy, we have to talk about the fact that our infrastructure is in a state of collapse. And again, I ask you, how does it happen that in the wealthiest country in the history of the world, our water systems, our wastewater plants, our roads, our bridges, our rail system, airports, levees, and dams are in massive need of repair, and in many cases are crumbling. Let me read you something, just a recent article. This is what it says. The United States is on the verge of a national crisis that could mean the end of clean, cheap water. Hundreds of cities and towns are at risk of sudden and severe shortages, either because available water is not safe to drink or because there simply isn't enough of it. I was in Flint, Michigan a few months ago, talked to the parents of children who have been poisoned through lead in the water. But it is not just Flint, Michigan, it is hundreds of communities throughout this country. And it's not just our water systems, it is other parts of our infrastructure. And that is why if I'm elected president, we are going to invest a trillion dollars in rebuilding our roads, our water systems, our wastewater plants. And when we do that, not only do we make America more productive and safer, we create 13 million good-paying jobs. This campaign is going to win because we are listening to the American people and not just wealthy campaign contributors. And I come before you with a great deal of pride in telling you that I am the only candidate out there for president who does not have a super PAC, does not want a super PAC. We made a decision early on in our campaign that we were not going to ask the drug companies or the fossil fuel industry or Wall Street for money. We don't want their money. We don't need their money. Instead, we did something very unusual. We said to the American people, if you want to support a campaign that is going to support the middle class, that is going to stand up to the big money interests, help us out. And what happened is over the last 11 and a half months, we have received more than 7 million individual campaign contributions. Anyone know what the average contribution is? All right. That's right, 27 bucks. And that in itself is revolutionary. Because what we are showing is we can run a winning campaign without being dependent on big money interests. Democratic opponent Secretary Clinton has chosen to raise money in a different way. She has several super PACs and has received $25 million in a recent reporting period from special interest, including $15 million from super PACs, from $15 million from Wall Street. And in addition to that, as some of you may know, she has given speeches on Wall Street for $225,000 a speech. I believe that if you give a speech for $225,000, it must be a pretty fantastic speech. Must be a speech that will probably solve all of the crises facing humanity. Must be a speech written in Shakespearean prose. So I kind of think that it would be great for the Secretary to share that speech with all of us so we can learn from it. Now, Secretary Clinton says, well, she is prepared to release the transcripts if other people do the same. So no, no, no, no. Are you ready for a major, major announcement? There it is. Hold your breath. It's coming. I am prepared tonight to release all of the transcripts of all of the speeches that I have given to Wall Street. Are you ready? Here they are. Of course, I am being, of course, I'm being a little bit silly. Wall Street has not yet invited me to give a speech for $225,000, but I've got to tell you I've got my cell phone on. I'm waiting. I'm waiting for Wall Street to call. And I don't want $225,000, I don't want $2,000, but I do want and would like the opportunity to tell Wall Street what they have done to the American people. In my view, as a result of the unquenchable greed of Wall Street, as a result of their recklessness and their illegal behavior, this country was plunged, as you all know, into the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. And as a result of that, millions of our fellow Americans lost their jobs, and by the way, many have not yet recovered. Many have lost their homes, and some lost their life savings. That is what Wall Street greed did. And if I were to go before Wall Street, what I would tell them is they were bailed out by Congress against my vote, because the leading banks, because the major banks were too big to fail. In other words, the perception was that if they were allowed to go down, they would take half of the economy with them. Well, it turns out that today, three out of the four largest banks in this country are bigger than they were when they were bailed out because they were too big to fail. In my view, when you have a handful of giant financial institutions and the six largest banks in this country issue two-thirds of the credit cards and one-third of the mortgages, when you have a small number of people with so much economic and political power, we have got to break them up. We need a financial system that works for small and medium-sized businesses, that works for consumers, not just a financial system that is an island unto itself only concerned about their own profits. And I want to take a moment to tell you a short story, which really will kind of encapsulate everything that is wrong with our economic and political system. Some of you may have noticed that two or three weeks ago, Goldman Sachs, one of the major financial institutions on Wall Street, reached a settlement with the United States government and paid $5 billion. They reached that settlement because they were guilty of selling worthless packages of subprime mortgage loans. They were lying to investors about what was in those packages. They paid a fine of $5 billion. That's point number one. And you've got to think about that for a second. Wall Street is the most powerful economic entity in the United States of America, and virtually all of the major banks have a business model which is based on fraud. Number two, when we talk about the political power of big money interest, Goldman Sachs itself over the last 25 years has had two executives from their company, from Goldman Sachs, become secretaries of the Treasury. And many other people from Goldman Sachs have assumed very important governmental positions under Republican and Democratic administrations. That is called the revolving door. You know what the revolving door is? You go from Wall Street to government. You do Wall Street's business while you're in government, then you leave and you go back to Wall Street and you make a whole lot more money. Number three, like many other major Wall Street and powerful corporate interests, Goldman Sachs has made millions and millions of dollars of campaign contributions and in fact have paid certain speakers $225,000 for an hour's work. All right. Number four, point number four. So you're looking at a fraudulent Wall Street. You're looking at a political system in which power rests with powerful financial institutions. You're looking at their political power coming from major campaign contributions and speaker's fees. But the fourth point that I want to make probably gets the American people angriest of all. Some kid in Indianapolis tonight gets picked up for possession of marijuana. That kid will have a criminal record for the rest of his life. And that's not a joke. That's not a joke because if you have a criminal record and you go in and you're trying to get a job and your employer says, well, tell me about yourself. Have you ever been arrested? Well, yes, sir. I was arrested. Well, I got somebody else interested in that job. Not an insignificant thing, but I want you to consider this. If you are the executive of a major Wall Street firm whose illegal behavior destroyed the lives of millions of Americans, you don't get a criminal record. Not at all. You get an increase in your compensation package. And that is why we need to bring justice back to a broken criminal justice system. The word has got to go out. The word has got to go out from one end of this country to the other, that it is not just low income kids who are going to get criminal records. Even if you are powerful and a billionaire, if you break the law, you are going to pay the price. And while we are on the subject of criminal justice, let me say this. Every person in this room, in this state, in this country should be embarrassed that we have in this great country more people in jail than any other country on Earth. We've got to think that one through. Because we're talking about a corrupt campaign finance system, a rigged economy, and a broken criminal justice system in which today we are spending $80 billion every year to lock up 2.2 million Americans, disproportionately African American, Latino, and Native Americans. Together we are going to end that international embarrassment. I want this country not to have more people in jail. I want this country to have the best educated population in the world. Now, right now, and again, this is an issue, many of these issues I'm talking about, you don't see on TV, they're just not talked about, but they are the most important issues. Today, right now, throughout this country, youth unemployment, kids 17 to 20 who graduated high school, kids are white, 33% unemployed, underemployed. Latino, 36%, African American, 51%. Together what we are going to do is what makes sense from a human perspective and from a cost-effective perspective. We are going to invest in jobs and education for those kids, not jails or incarceration. Think of an America, not where half of our children, our kids, are hanging out on street corners, unemployed or underemployed, but an America where those young people are getting the job training they need to build the affordable housing and the quality schools that their communities deserve. When we talk about criminal justice, it is also important to talk about major police, local police department reform. I was a mayor for eight years in Burlington for a month, and I work very hard with my local police department, and I work hard with police offices and organizations all over the country. Truth is that the overwhelming majority of police officers in this country are honest, hardworking, and doing a very difficult job. But as in the case of any kind of public official, when a police officer breaks the law, that officer must be held accountable. We have got to demilitarize our local police departments. We have got to make police departments look like the diversity of the communities they serve. We have got to end private corporate ownership of jails and detention centers. It is a very perverse incentive to enable private corporations to make money by jailing fellow Americans. So we are going to end that. And the other thing that we have got to do, and this is a bit controversial, but we have got to take a hard look at the so-called war on drugs. For over the last 30 years, millions of Americans have received police records for possession of marijuana, and today, under the Federal Control Substance Act, marijuana is listed as a Schedule I drug right next to heroin. And that is why I have introduced legislation which will take marijuana out of the Federal Control Substance Act. Now, whether or not marijuana becomes legal is a statewide decision. Four states in D.C. have reached that decision, but possession should not be a federal crime. This campaign is listening to women, and women are tired of earning 79 cents on the dollar compared to men. Appropriately enough, what the whole damn dollar in this room will stand with the women in the fight for pay equity. This campaign is listening to young people, and young people are asking me how does it happen that when they do the right thing, when they do what their parents tell them, what their teachers tell them, when they do what their community tells them, go out and get the best education you can. Why are they ending up $30, $50, $70,000 in debt? And the other point is, 40, 50 years ago, you had a high school degree. You were pretty well educated. You can go out and get a good middle class job. But the economy and technology have changed. People today need more education. And that is why, you know, when you think outside of the box and outside of the status quo, you come to the obvious conclusion that public education today in 2016 cannot simply be first grade through 12th grade. That was great 50 years ago, 30 years ago. Today we need to make public colleges and universities tuition free. Now think about it for a second. Is this a radical idea? It really isn't. The world has changed. People need more education than they used to. And if we believe in public education, it means we make public colleges and universities tuition free. Now, furthermore, all of you know that in Germany and Scandinavia and countries around the world, they're doing it today. Those countries are smart enough to understand that it makes a lot of sense to be investing in their young people and the future of their country. We also have to deal with the crisis of student debt. And that means that for the millions of people who have that debt, those debts today, we have got to allow them to refinance those loans at the lowest possible interest rates they can find. Now, I am criticized for thinking too big. This is just too radical an idea. Bernie, you're Santa Claus, you're giving away all these free things. How are you going to pay for it? Well, let me tell you exactly how we're going to pay for it. 2009, the United States Congress bailed out Wall Street. I believe that now, with Wall Street doing just fine, it is time to impose a tax on Wall Street speculation. And that will bring in more than enough money to make public colleges, universities, tuition free, and substantially lower student debt. The campaign is listening to the African American community. They're asking a very simple and intelligent question, and that is, how does it happen that we have enough money to spend trillions of dollars on a war in Iraq that we never should have gotten into? A war which I vigorously opposed, but how does it happen that we have trillions of dollars for war but we don't have sufficient funds to rebuild inner cities throughout this country? In Flint, Michigan, children were drinking poison water. In Detroit, their public school system is on the verge of a financial collapse. In Baltimore, Maryland, tens of thousands of people are heroin addicts and not getting the treatment that they need. And in inner cities all over this country, kids are living in extreme poverty, in homelessness, and certainly not getting the healthcare that they need. If this country is capable of investing in the infrastructure of Iraq and Afghanistan, we sure as hell can rebuild inner cities in this country. It is called getting our priorities right. Less money for war, no tax breaks for billionaires reinvesting in inner cities in America. This country is listening to the Latino community. And what they are telling me is there are 11 million people in this country who are now undocumented. Many of them are being exploited every single day by their employers because when you do not have legal status, your employer can cheat you and you have no recourse. And that is why I believe that we need comprehensive immigration reform and a path toward citizenship. This campaign is listening to a people whose pain is very, very rarely heard and that is the Native American community. Anyone who has studied American history knows that from before the time we were a country when the first settlers came here, the Native American people were lied to, they were cheated, and many of the treaties they negotiated and signed were broken. We owe the Native American people more than we can ever repay. Among so many other things, more than anyone else, they have taught us that we as human beings are part of nature, that we have got to live with nature. And if we continue to destroy nature, we are going to destroy our own species. That is what they have taught us. But yet, despite the enormous contributions they have made to our country on reservations throughout this country and in Native American communities, unemployment and poverty are sky high. The suicide rate of young people is beyond belief. If elected president, we will change our relationship to the Native American people of this country. I talked a moment ago about the greed and irresponsibility and illegal behavior of Wall Street and what they have done to our economy. Let me talk for a moment about the greed and irresponsibility of the fossil fuel industry. I am a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Environment. And in that capacity, I have had the privilege of talking to some of the great scientists in our country and around the world. And what they have said without ambiguity and almost unanimously, climate change is real, climate change is caused by human activity, and climate change already is causing devastating problems in this country and throughout the world. And what they have also told us is that we have a very short window of opportunity to move aggressively, to move boldly, to transform our energy system away from fossil fuel to energy efficiency and sustainable energies. This is no small thing. This is like the future of the planet. And we have, as custodians of this earth, we have a moral responsibility to work with China, Russia, India, countries all over the world in telling the fossil fuel industry that their short-term profits are not more important. Now, let me just connect a few dots here and tell you again something that the media, for obvious reasons, does not talk about. And that is how does it happen that we have a major political party, a party that controls the U.S. Senate today and the U.S. House, and yet not more than a handful of Republicans in Congress are prepared to tell you and the American people that virtually the entire scientific community has concluded. And that is that climate change is real and threatening the planet. Now, why does this happen? How does it happen? Is it because Republicans are dummies? The answer is no. I know you're going to say yes, it's no. Now, I've been on committees with Republicans. We talk about healthcare and Alzheimer's and diabetes, and they ask very sensible questions. The answer here ties into a corrupt campaign finance system. Because today, the day that a Republican comes here at IU and says, you know what, I've talked to the scientists, I've read the literature, this climate change is serious, we've got to do something about it. On that day, the Koch brothers and the other people in the fossil fuel industry cut their campaign funds. And that is why we have got to tell the Republican Party, listen to the scientists, not your campaign contributors. And by the way, when we, not if, but when we together transform our energy system, when we create a modern transportation system that takes cars and trucks off the roads, when we weatherize our homes and our buildings, when tens of millions of Americans have solar panels on their rooftops, and when wind energy becomes far more prevalent than it is today, when all of that happens, we're going to create millions of good paying jobs. And one of the differences between Secretary Clinton and myself is that I believe this crisis of climate change is so significant, is so threatening to our planet that we have got to act boldly. That is why I have introduced the most comprehensive climate change legislation in the history of the Congress, which includes a tax on carbon. And I would hope very much that Secretary Clinton would understand, given the severity of the crisis, that that is exactly what we have to do. Now this campaign is asking people again to think outside of the box, to ask kind of obvious questions that too often we just don't ask. Questions such as, why is it that the United States of America is the only major country on earth, the only one that does not guarantee health care to all people as a right? Go to the United Kingdom, health care for all, go to France, health care for all, Germany, Holland, Scandinavia, health care for all, go to Canada, 50 miles away from where I live, health care for all. We are the only country. And the reason again gets back to money and politics. Everybody, the vast majority of the American people understand that from a moral perspective, when a poor person or a working class person gets sick, that person should be entitled to the same type of health care as a wealthy person with good health insurance. The question is, why haven't we moved in the direction of every other major country? Why is it that today, despite the gains of the Affordable Care Act, why is it that 29 million people still have no health insurance? Why is it that many of you and millions of other Americans are underinsured with high deductibles and copayments? And you know what high deductibles and copayments mean? It means you may not go to the doctor when you get sick. And you know what that means, that thousands of people in this country die every year because they go to the doctor too late. Why is it that in our dysfunctional health care system, we pay by far the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs? You want to hear crazy? Crazy is one out of five Americans going to their doctor, getting a prescription, and not being able to afford to fill that prescription. Crazy is senior citizens in Indiana cutting their pills in half because they don't have the money to buy the medicine they need. And crazy is the three major drug companies in this country last year made $45 billion in profits. Crazy is that despite all of these issues that we have, we end up spending far, far more per capita on health care than do the people of any other nation. We spend almost three times more than the British, 50% more than the French, far more than the Canadians. In my view, the time is now for us to join the rest of the industrialized world, guarantee health care to all people as a right, and do that through a Medicare for all single-payer program. My good friend Donald Trump, not just kidding, not my good friend. I myself and my wife did not even get invited to his wedding. Can you believe that? Some people did, but we didn't. And there is a lot of concern that Donald Trump might become president of the United States. Don't worry, it won't happen. It won't have reasons. I was just looking before I came here at some polling, the last half dozen polls taken in April of this year. Every one of them had us far, far, far ahead of Donald Trump. And I mean far ahead like 15 or 20 points. We're also much further ahead of him than Secretary Clinton. Donald Trump will not become president of the United States because he believes that when we have a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, we should not raise that minimum wage. I think that's nuts. The American people want a minimum wage of $15 an hour, not keeping the minimum wage at 7 and a quarter. American people are not going to vote for Donald Trump for president because he thinks that climate change is a hoax. Now listen to this. This is pretty amazing that Republicans think it's a hoax, is sad but not surprising. But he has his own particular angle on this. He thinks it's a hoax created by the Chinese. Which was very confusing to me. I thought he would have thought it was a hoax created by Muslims or Mexicans. Donald Trump is not going to become president because he wants to throw millions of people off of the Affordable Care Act and he has no alternative. Donald Trump will not become president because in a Republican quote unquote debate, there I call them debates, he suggested that wages in America were too high. Donald Trump will not become president because he thinks it's a wonderful idea that we give hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks to billionaire families like his. But I'll tell you why else Donald Trump will not become president. Because the American people will not be voting for a candidate to become president who every single day is insulting Mexicans and Latinos. Who is insulting Muslims, who is insulting women, who is insulting veterans, who is insulting the African American community. That is not the type of candidate, that is not the type of candidate the American people will vote for for president. Which is why we can only hope and pray that he gets the Republican nomination. At a deeper level, the American people understand that what makes this country great is our diversity. The American people understand that when we come together, black and white people born in this country, people born abroad, Latino, Asian Americans, Native Americans, gay and straight, that when we come together as a people, that always is stronger and that always trumps dividing us up. The American people understand that no person in this world, in this country, survives alone. That in one way or another we are dependent on each other and that we need to support each other. That we are great when your family is in trouble, my family is there for you. When my family is in trouble, you are there for us. The American people understand that supporting each other always trumps selfishness and perhaps most importantly in a very troubled and violent world. The American people understand what every major religion on earth, whether it's Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, whatever the religion may be, the American people understand in the depths of their souls that love always trumps hatred. In this country, the American people are looking at the status quo. They're looking around them and they're saying, why do we have so much income and wealth inequality? Why is it that the middle class continues to decline? Why is it that youth unemployment is 30, 40, 50 percent? Why is it that we have a dysfunctional child care system? Why is our infrastructure collapsing in front of us? Why is it that women are making 79 cents on the dollar? Why is it that kids are leaving school 30, 40, 50 thousand dollars in debt? Why aren't we doing more to transform our energy system in combat climate change? Why is it that we are the only major country on earth that doesn't guarantee paid family and medical leave or health care for all of our people? Now some people, including my Democratic opponent, say Bernie is thinking too big. You've got to be more incremental. You've got to think small. You can't really address those issues. And I believe I strongly disagree because I believe that the lesson of history, whether it is the fight to end worker exploitation, whether it's the civil rights movement, whether it is the women's movement, whether it is the gay movement, no matter what those movements are, what they always tell us is that real change in America never comes from the top on down, always from the bottom on up. And what this campaign is about is asking millions of Americans, from all walks of life, to begin the process of standing up and fighting back, of understanding that it is just too late for establishment politics and establishment economics to understand that when we stand together, we can create a government that represents all of us and not just wealthy campaign contributors. On Tuesday there is going to be a very, very important Democratic primary here in the state of Indiana. And what I have learned throughout this campaign is that we do well when the turnout is high. We do not do well when the turnout is low. Next Tuesday, let us have the highest voter turnout in Indiana history for Democratic primary. And let the great state of Indiana join the 17 other states have said it is time for a political revolution. Thank you all.