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[applause]
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you. It is--thank you. Bless you.
Thank you. Thank you, Pennsylvania.
It is a great honor for me to be here tonight with the love of my life, Karen,
over here and my 93-year-old mother, from Florida,
and some of our children.
My oldest son, John, wanted to be here tonight,
but he's a first-year cadet at The Citadel.
So I just want to say to you, John, I'm proud of you, son. Thank you.
I am a first-generation American.
At the age of 7, my dad came to Johnstown, Pennsylvania,
from the mountains of northern Italy
on a ship named "Providence."
How providential that one day his son would announce for President
just down the road from the deep mines where his father,
my grandfather, mined coal until he was 72 years old.
When my grandfather died, I remembered as a kid, kneeling at his casket.
and not being able to take my eyes off his thick, strong hands,
hands that dug his path in life and gave his family a chance at living the American dream.
Working the mines may not have been the dream he ever dreamed.
I never dared to ask him.
But I think his answer would have been that America gave him more
than he had ever hoped.
America believed in him.
That's why he believed in America.
[applause]
My grandfather, like millions of other immigrants, didn't come here for some
government guarantee of income equality
or government benefits to take care of his family.
In 1923 there were no government benefits for immigrants excepatient one--freedom.
[applause]
Under President Obama, the dream of freedom and opportunity has become a nightmare
of dependency, with almost half of America receiving some sort of government assistance.
It's no surprise fewer and fewer Americans are achieving their dreams
and more and more parents are concerned their children won't realize theirs.
President Obama spent 4 years and borrowed 5 trillion dollars trying to convince you
that he can make things better for you,
to put your trust in him and the government to take care of every problem.
The result? Massive debt, anemic growth, and millions more unemployed.
The president's plan didn't work for America, because that's not how
America works.
In America--in America we believe in the freedom and responsibility that comes with it
to work hard to make the dream of reaching our God-given potential come true.
We believe it. We believe it because it still works.
Even today, graduate from high school, work hard,
and get married before you have children, and the chance you will ever be in poverty is just 2 percent.
Yet, if you don't do these three things, you're 38 times more likely to end up in poverty.
We understand many Americans don't succeed because the family that should be there
to guide them and serve as the first rung on the ladder of success,
isn't there or is badly broken.
The fact is that marriage is disappearing in places where government dependency
is the highest.
Most single mothers do heroic work and an amazing job raising their children.
[applause]
But if America is going to succeed, we must stop the assault on marriage and the family
in America today.
[applause]
From lowering taxes to reforming social programs,
Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan are dedicated to restoring the home
where married moms and dads are pillars of strong communities
raising good citizens in our neighborhoods.
[applause]
A solid education should be the second rung on the ladder to success,
but the system is failing.
President Obama's solution has been to deny parents' choice,
attack private schools, and nationalize curriculum and student loans.
Mitt Romney believes that parents and the local community must be in charge
of our schools, not the department of education.
[applause]
Yet we all know there is one key to success
that has helped people overcome even the greatest of obstacles--hard work.
That's why work was the centerpiece of the bipartisan welfare reform law.
Requiring work as a condition for receiving welfare succeeded,
and not just because the welfare rolls were cut in half,
but because employment went up, poverty went down,
and dreams were realized.
It's a sturdy ladder of success that is built with healthy families,
education, and hard work.
[applause]
But President Obama's policies undermine the traditional family,
weaken the education system, and this summer
he showed us once again he believes in government handouts and dependency
by waiving the work requirement for welfare.
Now, I helped write the welfare reform bill.
We made the law crystal clear.
No president can waive the work requirement.
But, as with his refusal to enforce our immigration laws,
President Obama rules like he is above the law.
[applause]
Americans, take heed.
When a president can simply give a speech or write a memo
and change the law to do what the law says he cannot do,
we will no longer be a republic.
[applause]
Yet, as my family and I criss-crossed America,
something became so obvious to us.
America is still the greatest country in the world,
and with God's help and good leadership,
we can restore the American dream.
[applause]
Why? Because I held its hand.
I shook the hand of the American dream,
and it has a strong grip.
I shook the hands of farmers and ranchers,
who made America the breadbasket of the world.
Hands weathered and worn and proud of it.
I grasped the dirty hands with scars that come from years of labor
in the oil and gas fields, mines and mills.
Hands that power and build America
and are stewards of the abundant resources that God has given us.
I've gripped hands that work in restaurants and hotels, hospitals, banks,
and grocery stores--hands that serve
and care for all of us.
I clasped hands of men and women in uniform
and their families, hands that sacrifice and risk all
to protect and keep us free,
and hands that pray for their safe return home.
[applause]
I held hands that are in want.
Hands looking for the dignity of a good job.
Hands growing weary of not finding one
but refusing to give up hope.
And finally,
I cradled the hands, the little broken hands
of the disabled.
Hands that struggle. Hands that bring pain.
Hands that ennoble us and bring great joy.
They came to see us.
Oh, did they come to see us when they found out
that Karen and I were blessed with caring for someone special, too,
our Bella.
[applause]
Four and a half years ago I stood over a hospital isolette,
staring at the tiny hands of our newborn daughter,
who we hoped was perfectly healthy.
But Bella's hands were just a little different, and I knew different wasn't good news.
The doctors later told us that Bella--that Bella was incompatible with life
and to prepare to let go.
They said even if she did survive, her disabilities would be so severe
that Bella would not have a life worth living.
We didn't let go.
[applause]
Today Bella is full of life, and she has made our lives and countless others',
much more worth living.
[applause]
I thank God that America still has one party that reaches out their hands in love
to lift up all of God's children, born and unborn.
[cheers, applause]
And we say--and we say that each of us has dignity
and all of us have the right to live the American dream.
[applause]
And we also say that without you--without you America is not keeping faith with its dream
that all men--all men--are created equal and endowed by their creator
with the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
[applause, cheers]
Ladies and gentlemen, you know we are stewards
of a great inheritance.
In November,
we have a chance to vote for life and liberty,
not dependency.
A vote for Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan will put our country back in the hands
of leaders who understand what America can, and for the sake of our children,
must be to keep the dream alive.
Thank you, and God bless you, and God bless America.
Thank you.
[applause, cheers]