| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
|
unidentified
|
You know, the one thing I thought about is that, so in 2013, obviously Republicans really took it on the chin during the shutdown fight. | |
| Again, it was right around this time, you know, it's throughout the month of October. | ||
| You know, Democrats actually took like a half a dozen point lead on the House generic ballot polling, which is sort of a good marker as to how people are going to vote in the House. | ||
| You know, Republicans ended up winning the House easily. | ||
| They actually won their biggest majority since before the Great Depression. | ||
| They netted nine Senate seats, so they flipped control of the Senate. | ||
| We had a caller referring to Harry Reid, the then Senate majority leader. | ||
| You know, he lost that position in 2014. | ||
| Mitch McConnell, a Republican, became the Senate majority leader then. | ||
| There was one race in particular where the shutdown did seem to have some lingering impact, and that was one of the few kind of weak spots for Republicans is that there were a couple of Republican incumbents who lost who had sort of made basically boneheaded comments. | ||
| One of them, Lee Terry, a Republican from Nebraska too, which is the Omaha district that Don Bacon represents now, he made a comment about, you know, he didn't want to give up his paycheck from the shutdown. | ||
| And members of Congress are paid, I think, regardless of whether the shutdown. | ||
| And that was used against him in the campaign. | ||
| Now, there were other things that he had problems with. | ||
| But so I'm sort of looking to see if there's anything like that that comes up. | ||
| And you can watch this program in its entirety on our website, c-span.org. | ||
| We'll leave it here and take you live to a ceremony marking the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy. | ||
| It's being held at the Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia. | ||
| This is part of our America 250 coverage. | ||
| We are live here in Norfolk, Virginia for a ceremony marking the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy. | ||
| Speakers include President Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegsep, Navy Secretary John Phelan, and Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins. | ||
| The celebration also features a number of naval sea power demonstrations and flyovers. | ||
| This is part of our America 250 coverage, live here on C-SPAN. | ||
| Awesome! | ||
| It's such a joy and an honor to be here at the world's largest naval base and home to the U.S. Navy's Fleet Forces Command. | ||
| Especially today, when we all gather to salute the remarkable first 250 years of our incredible United States Navy, I am deeply honored to join President Trump, | ||
| First Lady Melania Trump, Secretary Hedgeseth, Secretary Collins, Secretary Phelan, and of course all of you to celebrate 250 years of naval power and American might. | ||
| The United States Navy has a glorious and storied past of historic victories at sea. | ||
| From the small but determined Continental Navy sealing American independence in the Battle of the Chesapeake, to victory over the Barbary pirates in the Barbary Wars, to the first battle of ironclad warships at Hampton Roads, to the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War, to the Battle of Midway, | ||
| which turned the tide in the Pacific theater in World War II, to the biggest naval battle in history, the Battle of Leyte Gulf, which shattered the enemy's naval capabilities for the rest of the Second World War. | ||
| The United States Navy has always protected and defended American freedom and brought glory upon glory to our great nation. | ||
| Today, history sets sail again, and we all have a front seat to freedom in motion as we honor America's awesome sea power. | ||
| This big birthday party for the U.S. Navy is part of a year-long celebration of our exceptional history and the start of a new era of American greatness. | ||
| Today, we launched the next 250 years of supreme U.S. naval power and of American liberty, dynamism, leadership, and pride. | ||
| And what an absolute gift it is to have President Trump in the White House during this epic moment in our nation's history. | ||
| Now, some of us may recall America's bicentennial in 1976 when we were all very, very, very young. | ||
| One of my earliest memories as a little girl is gathering with my family at the Jersey Shore to celebrate that very special day. | ||
| I'll never forget the indelible sense of American patriotism that took root in me that day. | ||
| I can't remember the specifics of July 4th, 1976, but I do remember gazing in wonder at the fireworks, holding red, white, and blue sparklers, waving a small American flag, and singing the national anthem with hundreds of others. | ||
| Whether or not you remember every detail of that day, you do remember how you felt. | ||
| Proud to be an American. | ||
| It is now our privilege to share this experience, this core memory, with the next generation of young Americans from sea to shining sea. | ||
| On the eve of America's 250th birthday, the national mood is one of celebration. | ||
| Americans are optimistic about the future. | ||
| Thanks to President Trump and Secretary Hedseth, we are renewing our commitments to military might and peace through strength. | ||
| We are working together to realign and reunite our great nation around our shared patriotic values and a renewed sense of civic pride as we sail toward July 4th, 2026. | ||
| There is no greater champion for this new patriotism than President Donald J. Trump. | ||
| I am so honored to be part of our national birthday party and to join with all of you in welcoming our exceptional Commander-in-Chief here today with the kind of tremendous reception he so greatly deserves. | ||
| We are now in a moment in our history when, thanks to President Trump, we are turning the tide again, just as the revolutionary generation that founded our great Navy did. | ||
| It is now our time to take big risks to save our country, and it is our duty to honor our past generations and their staggering sacrifices for which we owe them a huge debt of gratitude. | ||
| We are the natural successors to the Revolutionary War generation. | ||
| Fiercely independent, ruggedly individualist, faithful to God and to country, with a white-hot love of liberty and the unique, enduring American spirit. | ||
| It's been said that great civilizations tend to not last more than about 250 years. | ||
| We've made it to 249 with our big 250 next year. | ||
| But preparing for our next 250 years requires forever vigilance, something that the Navy has maintained with excellence, fortitude, and commitment to duty for two and a half centuries. | ||
| President Trump is reclaiming the American Republic for the American people. | ||
| He is launching us into the next 250 years of American greatness as he did in his first term by delivering a strong economy, an enforced border and record low illegal immigration, | ||
| a rebuilt, modernized military with record recruitment, a government that actually serves its people and world peace. | ||
| America first. | ||
| Next year's momentous celebration will be thanks to his leadership in activating a national and worldwide celebration of America's 250th birthday. | ||
| We are preparing to honor and celebrate our nation's history in unforgettable ways, from our military anniversaries as we're doing here today, to a majestic flotilla of tall ships from around the world to many other really big surprises. | ||
| We know that this celebration will have a truly global impact, showcasing American power and leadership while promoting a future of peace and prosperity. | ||
| America's 250th is so much more than just a date on the calendar. | ||
| This moment will inspire a new era of American greatness. | ||
| Not only will this be the most monumental and exciting celebration in American history, but it will spark a shared vision for America's future. | ||
| And Lord knows we need that. | ||
| Thanks to the Trump administration, next Independence Day will be a once or twice in a lifetime moment of sparkling American grandeur and patriotism. | ||
| This is the new golden age. | ||
| And with God's help, we will make America even greater over the next 250 years. | ||
| And it's all made possible by the unmatched force of the United States Navy and the innumerable sacrifices of every man and woman who has put on the naval uniform. | ||
| We owe so much of America's independence on July 4th, 1776, to the birth of the Navy on October 13th, 1775. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to the stage the United States Secretary of the Navy, John Phelan. | |
| Good afternoon. | ||
| Mr. President, First Lady, as always, it's great to see you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, thank you for your leadership and support of our nation's armed forces. | |
| Secretary of War, thank you for your leadership and restoring our focus on the warfighter ethos. | ||
| Secretary of Veteran Affairs, great to see you today, and thank you for all you do to support our Navy and Marine Corps veterans. | ||
|
unidentified
|
CNO, Navy leaders, thank you for ensuring that our Navy and Marine Corps remains the preeminent maritime naval force. | |
| Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and members of Congress, thank you for being here today. | ||
| After seeing today's display of naval power and standing on this pier surrounded by sailors, Marines, family members, and patriotic Americans, all I can say is that was damn impressive. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Come on, give him a hand. | |
| Bravo Zulu to the sailors that participated in today's sea demonstration. | ||
| It is the honor and privilege of my lifetime to serve as your 79th Secretary of the Navy, especially as we kick off the Navy's 250th birthday celebrations. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, President Trump, for your trust and confidence in me. | |
| Mr. President, your directive is clear, peace through strength, and we are executing it. | ||
| With your one big beautiful bill and your executive order on restoring America's maritime dominance, you've armed us with the authorities, resources, and urgency to modernize the fleet, expand our shipyards, rebuild the skilled workforce, deepen our magazines, and harden the infrastructure that wins wars at sea. | ||
|
unidentified
|
250 years ago, the Continental Congress made a bold bet who controls the seas controls the future. | |
| This was the birth of our Navy, a testament to our historic significance. | ||
| The Constitution states Congress shall have the power to provide and maintain a Navy. | ||
| The word maintained means the Navy is intended to be a permanent, continuous institution of national defense and warfare. | ||
| The founders understood the importance of having a Navy. | ||
| George Washington, in a letter to the Marquis de Lafayette, wrote, as certain as night succeeds the day, without a decisive naval force, we can do nothing definitive, and with it, everything honorable and glorious. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Today, 250 years later, history has proven that to be a superpower, one must be a sea power. | |
| Mr. President, your mandate ensures that when the world looks to the seas, it sees an American flag. | ||
| And behind that flag stands a team that is disciplined, lethal, and dominant. | ||
| Today we showed the world what American sea power means. | ||
| Deadly precision, meticulous execution, raw power, and the will to use it. | ||
| Secretary Hegseth, we are restoring the warrior ethos to this Department of the Navy, not by slogan, but by performance. | ||
| The Truman right here beside me sustained more than 50 days of tomahawk launches and precision airstrikes to degrade Iran-backed Houdi capabilities and protect commercial shipping during Operation Rough Rider. | ||
|
unidentified
|
There are many, many missions that we are operating and executing on very well, including choking off cartel cash flows. | |
| Between Operation Atlantic and Pacific Watch, we've seized over 450 metric tons of cocaine worth more than $11 billion. | ||
| These seizures represent lives saved. | ||
| All these operations show us our fleet is ready to answer the nation's call 24-7-365. | ||
| The remarkable success is a testament to the bold vision of President Trump, whose leadership has ignited a renewed sense of patriotism inserting more Americans to serve. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm happy to say the Navy broke its recruiting record four months early, so help is on the way for the high operating tempo you've been living through. | |
| To our Marines standing in the line with us, your grit and discipline give us a fighting force no adversary can match. | ||
| Warfighters, you are the backbone of this maritime strength, keeping our nation safe and secure and prosperous. | ||
| You prove every day freedom isn't free. | ||
| President Trump thanks you. | ||
| Secretary Hegset thanks you. | ||
| I thank you and your country thanks you. | ||
| We appreciate the sacrifice you and your families make and we value your unwavering commitment to the mission. | ||
| Sea power is a family business. | ||
| Your sacrifices are not unnoticed and they are deeply appreciated. | ||
| They may wear the uniform, but you share the honor and we share the pride. | ||
| God bless you. | ||
| God bless our Navy and Marine Corps and God bless the United States of America. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
| Fight for the rights of every man. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for what's right. | ||
| Fight for it. | ||
| It don't hurt to hide. | ||
| If you hurt my friends, then you hurt my pride. | ||
| I gotta be a man, I can't let it slide. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for the rights of every man. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for what's right. | ||
| Fight for your life. | ||
| I feel strong about right and wrong. | ||
| And don't take trouble for very long. | ||
| And none, no, no. | ||
| I get something deep inside of me. | ||
| Courageous the thing that keeps us free. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for the rights of every man. | ||
| We are live here in Norfolk, Virginia, for a ceremony marking the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy. | ||
| Speakers include President Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegsep, Navy Secretary John Phelan, and Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins. | ||
| The celebration also features a number of naval sea power demonstrations and flyovers. | ||
| This is part of our America 250 coverage, live here on C-SPAN. | ||
| I've got to be a man, I can't let it slide. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for the rights of every man. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for what's right. | ||
| Fight for your life. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for the rights of every man. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You're the one who slime. | |
| Fight for your life. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for the rights of every man. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for what's fine. | ||
| Fight for your life. | ||
| I am a real American. | ||
| Fight for the rights of man. | ||
| You shake my nerves and you rattle my brain. | ||
| In my desert as a man insane. | ||
| You broke my wind, one vote or three. | ||
| Goodness, you're registered with balls of fire. | ||
| I let the love of the falling funny. | ||
| You came along and you blew their honey. | ||
| I changed my mind, looking fine. | ||
| Goodness, brave whipping balls of fire. | ||
| It feels good, all the day. | ||
| President Trump, are you awarding that man? | ||
| Aborting the big day. | ||
| We're going to have a big day. | ||
| One of the biggest. | ||
| We're celebrating our Navy and our military. | ||
| We have the greatest military anywhere in the world, not even close, as you probably noticed. | ||
| And we rebuilt it largely during my first term. | ||
| And now I get to see it in action. | ||
| So we're going to have a very big day today. | ||
| It's going to be very exciting. | ||
|
unidentified
|
According to our plans, can you start for one more year? | |
| Would you like to do that? | ||
| President Putin offers to keep limits on nuclear arms for one more year to then hopefully negotiate the new president. | ||
| Sounds like a good idea to me. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, according to your plan, the Palestinian Authority may control Gaza today after Hamas. | |
| Now, can you please explain me what is the purpose by doing this? | ||
| If according Israel, they are paying Qataris, they're paying salaries to Dairy. | ||
| CONOPERTION Israel. | ||
| My name is Levy. | ||
| Well, it's a great deal for Israel, and it's a great deal for everybody. | ||
| And you want to get your hostages back, right? | ||
| Do you want to back or do you not want to back? | ||
| And it's a great deal for Israel. | ||
| It's a great deal for the entire Arab world, Muslim world, and world. | ||
| So we're very happy about it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
| When do you think the hostages will start being paid? | ||
| Very soon. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They're in negotiation right now as we speak. | |
| They've started the negotiation. | ||
| It'll last a couple of days. | ||
| We'll see how it turns out. | ||
| But I'm hearing it's going very well. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Are you open to extending the Affordable Care Act subsidies? | |
| We want to fix it so it works. | ||
| It's not working. | ||
| Obamacare has been a disaster for the people, so we want to have it fixed so it works. | ||
| We're going to look at that. | ||
| It was amazing. | ||
| Portland is burning to the ground. | ||
| It's insurrectionists all over the place. | ||
| It's Antifa. | ||
| And yet the politicians who are petrified. | ||
| Look, the politicians are afraid for their lives. | ||
| That's the only reason that they say like this, nothing happening. | ||
| And you've seen it. | ||
| The place is burning down and they pretend like there's nothing happening. | ||
| So we'll take a look at the order. | ||
| We haven't seen the order yet. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Now I've been spoken so long and I'm here to say Come here with a stranglehold, baby. | |
| You must get out of the way. | ||
| My goodness. | ||
| Well, good afternoon. | ||
| How are we doing sailors? | ||
| Absolute best of America. | ||
| I'm honored to be at the world's largest naval base. | ||
| Now, I'm the only thing between you, the First Lady, and the Commander-in-Chief, so I'm going to keep this very brief. | ||
| Looking out at all of you, I know, you know, why the President always says we have the strongest, most powerful, most lethal, most ready military on the planet. | ||
| And he's going to make sure we keep it that way. | ||
| This is the perfect way to mark 250 years of the United States Navy. | ||
| You know, President Trump has made our mission clear. | ||
| America first and peace through strength with common sense at every turn. | ||
| At the War Department, that is the War Department. | ||
| We're committed to that core mission of peace through strength. | ||
| And for the Navy, that means more sailors, more subs, more ships, and more munitions for all of them. | ||
| The Navy and the Marine Corps embody the resilience of our country. | ||
| Nobody, nobody in the world does it better than the United States Navy. | ||
| Always remember this. | ||
| Fact. | ||
| You are not civilians. | ||
| You are different. | ||
| Sailors, SEALs, Marines, you were set apart for a distinct purpose. | ||
| Your diversity is not your strength. | ||
| Your strength is your unity of purpose, your shared mission, your love of country. | ||
| Generation after generation, battle after battle, ship after ship, sailor after sailor, you have set the tone. | ||
| The story began with John Paul Jones when he declared, I have not yet begun to fight. | ||
| Today, we have a commander-in-chief who fights for all of you and fights for our country every single day. | ||
| A commander-in-chief who guarantees that you, the warfighters, have everything you need on the high seas to deter our enemies and, if necessary, win overwhelmingly. | ||
| We have a president who appreciates your dedication. | ||
| He appreciates your service, your sacrifice, and that of your family as well. | ||
| And as I always tell every service member, every sailor I see, he has your back. | ||
| So, warfighters, on behalf of everyone at the Department of War, thank you. | ||
| Thank you for your commitment to America's Navy. | ||
| You stand the watch 250 years later. | ||
| God bless you. | ||
| And may God bless our great republic. | ||
| Godspeed. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
| I'd like to turn the street. | ||
| Now I've been struggling for so long. | ||
| You're all here to say. | ||
| Oh, I wish I were in a land of cotton. | ||
| Old times there are not forgotten. | ||
| Look away, look away. | ||
| Look away. | ||
| Dixie Land. | ||
| Second door. | ||
| Oh, I wish I was in the sea all the way. | ||
| If it seemed our faith was fast to deliver our fears for Dixie Land where I was born in. | ||
| Early Lord, one frosty morning. | ||
| Look away. | ||
| We are live here in Norfolk, Virginia for a ceremony marking the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy. | ||
| Speakers include President Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseph, Navy Secretary John Phelan, and Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins. | ||
| The celebration also features a number of naval sea power demonstrations and flyovers. | ||
| This is part of our America 250 coverage, live here on C-SPAN. | ||
| Good afternoon. | ||
| Mr. President, First Lady, as always, it's great to see you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, thank you for your leadership and support of our nation's armed forces. | |
| Secretary of War, thank you for your leadership in restoring our focus on the warfighter ethos. | ||
| Secretary of Veteran Affairs, great to see you today, and thank you for all you do to support our Navy and Marine Corps veterans. | ||
|
unidentified
|
CNO, Navy leaders, thank you for ensuring that our Navy and Marine Corps remains the preeminent maritime naval force. | |
| Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and members of Congress, thank you for being here today. | ||
| After seeing today's display of naval power and standing on this pier surrounded by sailors, Marines, family members, and patriotic Americans, all I can say is that was damn impressive. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Come on, give them a hand. | |
| It is an honor to be with you to celebrate the 250th year since the United States Navy was officially established. | ||
| Generations of sailors have kept America free because of their presence on the high seas. | ||
| Your strength, bravery, and sacrifice inspires us all. | ||
| The President and I just attended an extraordinary demonstration, an inspiring display of skills that reflects the very best of our Navy. | ||
| For me, it brought back fond memories of my visit to the USS George H.W. Bush in 2018. | ||
| I will always remember the pride and professionalism of the sailors I met on that vessel. | ||
| I witnessed the enduring spirit of America's Navy, which propels every mission and lives on to every sailor who serves. | ||
| Now, it is my privilege to introduce someone who holds our military close to his heart. | ||
| Not only as the Commander-in-Chief, but as a proud American who believes deeply in the men and women who wear the uniform, please join me in welcoming my husband, The 45th and 47th president of the United States, Donald J. Trump. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I won't forget the men who died, who gave that life to me. | |
| And I gladly stand up next to you and defend her still today. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cause there ain't no doubt I love this land. | |
| God bless the USA from the lakes of Minnesota to the hills of Tennessee, across the plains of Texas, from sea to shining sea. | ||
|
unidentified
|
From Detroit down to Houston and New York to LA. | |
| Where there's pride in every American heart, and it's time we stand and say to be an American, where at least I know I'm free. | ||
| And I won't forget the men who died, who gave that life to me. | ||
| And I gladly stand up next to you and defend her still today. | ||
| Cause there ain't no doubt I love this land. | ||
|
unidentified
|
God bless the USA. | |
| And I'm proud to be an American where at least I know I'm free. | ||
| And I won't forget the men who died, who gave that life to me. | ||
| And I gladly stand up next to you and defend her still today. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cause there ain't no doubt I love this land. | |
| God bless the United States Navy. | ||
| Well, that was good timing, wasn't it? | ||
| We had to get that right. | ||
| We had to get that right. | ||
| But they always get it right. | ||
| I was just given a display with a wonderful First Lady, the likes of which I think few people have ever seen before. | ||
| We were a few minutes away, and the display of strength was absolutely incredible. | ||
| We appreciate it. | ||
| Thank you, Navy. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| And I want to thank our magnificent First Lady for that introduction. | ||
| People love our First Lady. | ||
| And let me say to all of the incredible sailors on this pier, it's great to be with the fleet, the fleet. | ||
| And let's also give a very special thanks to the shipmates who put on that spectacular display of Navy dominance. | ||
| That's what it was. | ||
| It was dominance. | ||
| And Bravo Zulu. | ||
| You know what that is? | ||
| Bravo Zulu. | ||
| You know, a lot of people don't. | ||
| And it's a true honor to be here with the thousands of our nation's finest sailors at the largest naval facility in the entire world. | ||
| It's the largest, and I would say more importantly, it's the best, okay? | ||
| It's both the Norfolk Naval Base. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| The largest, and it's the best. | ||
| We're gathered on this storied waterfront to celebrate 250 years of strength, tenacity, and unwavering courage by the greatest fighting force even. | ||
| And that's true. | ||
| No matter where you go, no matter where you go, no matter what you even think about, there's nothing like the fighting force that we have. | ||
| Roam the seas, it's called the United States Navy, and there's nothing in the world like it. | ||
| Nothing, not even close. | ||
| You read stories, they don't have it. | ||
| Let me tell you, we check it closely. | ||
| We check it closely. | ||
| Docked beside us today are a combined 150,000 tons of pure American naval supremacy and two colossal reasons why no one should ever want to start a fight with the USA. | ||
| They won't fight. | ||
| We're putting out a lot of fights, though. | ||
| Do you see that? | ||
| We're going to be close to number eight. | ||
| Number eight. | ||
| We don't want to send you into battle unless it's necessary, right? | ||
| We're putting out a lot of fires. | ||
| Maybe some of you will be angry. | ||
| You'll say, what's he doing? | ||
| We want to fight. | ||
| You know what? | ||
| If we can solve them the way I'm solving them, we solve seven. | ||
| We have another one that's taken 3,000 years, and we're pretty close, but I don't want to talk about it until it's done. | ||
| But let's give a big round of applause to the men and women of the majestic USS Kearsarge. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| And let's hear it for the sailors of the USS Harry S. Truman. | ||
| Those who call this carrier home live by a motto that captures the spirit of America's Navy. | ||
| It's very simple. | ||
| The words, give them hell, and we do give them hell. | ||
| For two and a half centuries, that is what every generation of American sailors have done. | ||
| You've conquered raging oceans and brave ferocious storms to vanquish America's enemies on the high seas and distant shores. | ||
| You've beaten mighty warships into twisted wrecks of steel. | ||
| You've splintered vast armadas and sent the mangled pride of empires sinking into oblivion. | ||
| You've surged the waters thick, danger, blood, brine, and through it all the United States Navy has kept the stars and stripes soaring high and proud above those big magnificent waves. | ||
| You love doing it too. | ||
| There's not a thing in the world that you'd rather do, is there? | ||
| Is there? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No. | |
| I like your life better than mine, I have to be honest with you. | ||
| Sailing on those beautiful waters all the time, you're so lucky. | ||
| Because the American sailor never quits, never fails, and never, ever lets us down. | ||
| They've never let us down. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| And we're honored to be joined today by service members representing every part of this great naval tradition. | ||
| Our incredible surface warriors are the reason America's enemies tremble at the sight of a Navy ship haze-gray or underway. | ||
| The instant U.S. carrier, cruiser, or destroyer breaks across the horizon. | ||
| Every tyrant and adversary on the planet knows their choice is very simple. | ||
| It's leave America in peace or be blown up in fire and fury never seen before. | ||
| All over the world, people know of the skill, nerve, swagger, and sheer attitude of the boldest and most daring pilots on the sea, the U.S. naval aviators, and I just got to witness it with Melania. | ||
| They land screaming jets on pitching decks in the dark of night with no room for error. | ||
| There's no room for error, the greatest pilots in the world. | ||
| And while Navy pilots rain down pain from above, the greatest adversaries fear the daring deeds of our silent service below. | ||
| And strike from crushing depths unseen, undetected and unstoppable. | ||
| They are our brave submariners. | ||
| Where are the submariners here? | ||
|
unidentified
|
And they are brave. | |
| The most lethal weapon in the world, I will tell you, nobody knows where it is and what it carries. | ||
| There's nothing that carries weaponry like that. | ||
| And we're 25 years ahead of any other country when it comes to submarines. | ||
| Nobody's even close. | ||
| Nobody can match us. | ||
| No roll call of Navy warriors would be complete without recognizing some of the fiercest and most elite commandos in the history of war. | ||
| They are the toughest, and there's nobody tougher. | ||
| It's just nobody. | ||
| That's what they tell me. | ||
| Is nobody tougher called the Navy SEALs. | ||
| What do you think about the Navy SEAL? | ||
| Where are the Navy SEALs? | ||
| We're not going to mess with the Navy SEALs. | ||
| They are great. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Credible people. | ||
| And of course, our enemies have learned to dread that special cast of warriors who have charged forward almost everywhere America seized a stronghold or stormed a beachhead. | ||
| They call themselves the leathernecks, the jarheads, the devil dogs, but we revere them as the United States Marines. | ||
| Incredible people. | ||
| Credible people. | ||
| With us today are some of those who have led these exceptional men and women. | ||
| They've led them like nobody else. | ||
| And I'll tell you, a person I'm very, very proud of. | ||
| He has stepped up and he's hitting home run after home run. | ||
| They love him. | ||
| I want to introduce again a man who's just exceptional. | ||
| I'm so happy with this choice, Secretary of War Pete Hegset. | ||
| Thank you, Pete. | ||
| Doing a job. | ||
| I said, Pete, what do you think? | ||
| You know, we used to call it Secretary of War, the Department of War, the War Department. | ||
| Now we call it Defense. | ||
| And I don't know, would you ever want to, you know, we won World War I. | ||
| We won World War II. | ||
| We won everything in between. | ||
| We won everything before. | ||
| And all of a sudden they decide to change the name. | ||
| They went woke then too, you know. | ||
| Woke is a long-term word. | ||
| I said, what do you think about changing it to the Department of War? | ||
| He said, I love it, sir. | ||
| And that was about the end of it, right? | ||
| That was the end of it. | ||
| Thank you, Pete. | ||
| Great job. | ||
| He's a great leader. | ||
| Also, Secretary of the Navy, a very, very successful man. | ||
| He gave it all up to do this. | ||
| And we're designing more ships. | ||
| We have more ships being built shortly. | ||
| We're going to have more great ships being built than we've ever had being built in the history of the Navy. | ||
| John Phelan. | ||
| John, thank you. | ||
| Great job, John. | ||
| He made a lot of money in the private sector. | ||
| And I said, you want to do this, John? | ||
| We need a lot of ships, and we need them fast. | ||
| And he said, I want to do it. | ||
| He gave up a lot, gave up everything to do this. | ||
| But he's loving it. | ||
| He's doing a fantastic job. | ||
| Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Darrell Caudle. | ||
| Admiral, thank you. | ||
| Great job. | ||
| Rear Admiral Gavin Duff, and along with so many different people here, they could introduce them all day long. | ||
| I don't want to do that because we got to get to business, talking a little bit about war and peace. | ||
| But along with your great officers here at Norfolk Naval Base, Vice Admirals John Gumbelton. | ||
| John? | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Thank you, John. | ||
| Great. | ||
| Young guy. | ||
| Great. | ||
| Doug Perry and Rob Goucher. | ||
|
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Thank you. | |
| And a very VA Secretary Doug Collins. | ||
| He's doing great. | ||
|
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Thank you, Pete. | |
| Doing a great job. | ||
| Ambassador Monica Crowley. | ||
| Monica, thank you very much. | ||
| A man that everybody loves. | ||
| He was my doctor in the White House, and I got to know him very well. | ||
| He was also the doctor for Barack Hussein Obama. | ||
| Have you heard of him? | ||
| And he was a doctor for a man named Bush. | ||
| And at a press conference, they asked him, who's in the best shape? | ||
| Who's the healthiest? | ||
| Who's the strongest? | ||
| Who's the best physical specimen of the three? | ||
| He said, that's easy. | ||
| President Donald Trump. | ||
| And I said, I love this guy. | ||
| I said, I love him. | ||
| Ronnie Jackson. | ||
| He's now a congressman, as you know. | ||
| So he was an admiral. | ||
| He was a chief doctor. | ||
| He was the whole boss of doctors. | ||
| And now he's a very, very successful congressman from Texas. | ||
| Thank you, Ronnie, very much. | ||
| And I appreciate those words. | ||
| I'll never forget them. | ||
| Jen Kiggins. | ||
| Jen, thank you. | ||
| John McGuire, Rob Whitman, Dan Crenshaw, Derek Van Orden. | ||
| These are unbelievable talented people that are with me and they fight. | ||
| Thank you very much, fellas. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Thank you very much, darling. | ||
| These are great Congress. | ||
| I say Congress warriors. | ||
| That's what you have to be today in Congress if you're going to make it. | ||
| I also want to recognize all of the newly pinned chief petty officers. | ||
| You've got a lot of them here today. | ||
| I had to improve it. | ||
| Who recently earned their anchors and now bear their venerable title Navy Chief, Navy Chief. | ||
| Thank you, Navy Chiefs. | ||
| Let's also express the gratitude of our entire nation to every Navy veteran who has come out to honor this big anniversary. | ||
| We see so many veterans. | ||
| I saw backstage, I was shaking hands with veterans all over the place. | ||
| And they are great. | ||
| And they're respected and they're loved. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Stand up if you'd like. | ||
|
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Thank you very much. I really love that. | |
| I saw it backstage. | ||
| I saw so many veterans. | ||
| My hand will never be the same. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| A great honor. | ||
| And a very special thanks to the countless Navy families who support our sailors with such love and devotion. | ||
| None of what are, and think of this. | ||
| Without them, you wouldn't be celebrating today. | ||
| Many of you would not be doing very well. | ||
| Male or female, you wouldn't be doing very well. | ||
| So we want to thank our family members, right? | ||
| All of them. | ||
| Parents, husbands, wives. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| From the American Revolution until today, the story of the U.S. Navy is a tale of loyalty, sacrifice, and commitment stretching back 250 years. | ||
| So we're celebrating 250. | ||
| I almost thought I wouldn't get to do that because I was president in 2016, and then they rigged the election on me. | ||
| And then we caught them, didn't we? | ||
| We caught them, but you know, we had to run it again. | ||
| I ran it again, and I got 250, and I got the World Cup, and I got the Olympics. | ||
| Can you believe all of it? | ||
| In my first term, I was the one that got the Olympics. | ||
| I was the one that got the World Cup. | ||
| And I said, you know, the sad part is, maybe I'll go, maybe I won't even be invited because it won't be during my term. | ||
| I would say, if we're a Democrat, I might not be invited. | ||
| They don't love me exactly too much. | ||
| And then when this happened, now all of a sudden they got all three. | ||
| But you know what's the most important? | ||
| 250 years is the most important, above World Cup, above Olympic. | ||
|
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But we got them all coming. | |
| And on June 14th, next year, we're going to have a big UFC fight at the White House, right at the White House on the grounds of the White House. | ||
| When the Continental Congress formed a fleet of just two ships in October 1775, many scoffed at their chances against the most powerful empire on earth. | ||
| That was the most powerful ever, relatively speaking. | ||
| We had two ships. | ||
| We had nothing other, but we had great heart. | ||
| They didn't know the audacity and the grit of the American sailor. | ||
| They had no idea the war for independence gave us some of the greatest American heroes of all time, including the father of the U.S. Navy, Captain John Paul Jones. | ||
| You know that. | ||
| When a far stronger British ship demanded his surrender, Jones yelled back that timeless battle cry right now, I have not yet begun to fight. | ||
| Don't ask me for that. | ||
| Think of that. | ||
| I could just see it. | ||
| He's a wise guy. | ||
| He's asking. | ||
| I haven't even begun to fight, and he knocked the hell out of him. | ||
| In the War of 1812, Captain James Lawrence shouted his final words to his crew as blood streamed down from his mortal wounds. | ||
| Fight her till she sinks, he yelled. | ||
| Don't give up the ship. | ||
| Don't give up the ship. | ||
| These are all incredible. | ||
| Very, very famous statements now with years and time. | ||
| Very famous. | ||
| Don't give up the ship. | ||
| I say it all the time. | ||
| You're a little behind. | ||
| I say, don't give up the ship. | ||
| And we win. | ||
| We all know how to win. | ||
| Today, that eternal creed is written into the hearts of every sailor in the fleet. | ||
| America's Navy never, ever gives up the ship, right? | ||
| We never give it up. | ||
| Another titan of the early Navy was the great Commodore Arthur Sinclair. | ||
| He defeated the French in the Caribbean battle. | ||
| And then he went to work on the Barbery pirates off the coast of Tripoli and raided British forces when they were so powerful in 1812, the War of 1812. | ||
| He raided them. | ||
| He was knocking them out one by one. | ||
| Everyone said, where does this guy come from? | ||
| And we're all descendants when you think of it. | ||
| Commodore Sinclair went on to become the commanding officer here at the Naval Station, Norfolk, right here, where he founded a nautical school for officers that eventually became the one and only U.S. Naval Academy. | ||
| And I'm going to be at your Army-Navy game this year. | ||
| Who am I going to root for? | ||
| You may be surprised. | ||
| It's going to be great. | ||
| We're going to be here. | ||
| Generations of the Commodore's descendants have forged their own towering legacies of service in the Navy, and we're joined today by his fifth great-grandson, Commander Link Mustin. | ||
| Where is Mustin? | ||
| Commander Mustin, where are you? | ||
| He's here. | ||
| Wow, look at this handsome guy. | ||
| That's good genetics, right? | ||
| He's got good genes. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Commander, thank you for continuing a family tradition that has endured for two and a half centuries. | ||
| Can you believe that, huh? | ||
| I wonder if they were as good looking as you. | ||
| I doubt it. | ||
| You just got better with age, right? | ||
| Congratulations. | ||
| Is that young man, your boy? | ||
| Well, he beats you. | ||
| They beat you. | ||
| That's what we want to see. | ||
| Over the generations, our Navy sailors raised old Lori above the streets of Veracruz, sent the Spanish fleet to its watery grave in Manila Bay, and buried the vicious German wolfbacks at the bottom of the sea. | ||
| Those were vicious, vicious wolfbacks. | ||
| They were brutal. | ||
| They were hitting us hard, and then we came up with the answer, didn't we? | ||
| We came up with the way to knock them out, and we were knocking them out so fast they didn't know what to do. | ||
| It was really the end once we discovered the secret through some brilliant minds. | ||
| A lot of them are descendants of the people here right now. | ||
| In every era of conflict, the Navy has never failed to hunt, kill, and to win. | ||
| Never failed. | ||
| Never failed. | ||
| In World War II, Admiral Bull Halsey's motto, hit hard, hit fast, hit often. | ||
| And that is exactly what the sailors do. | ||
| One of those warriors was submarine commander Eugene Fluke, who sent more Japanese tonnage to the ocean floor than any other man in history. | ||
| I don't like to talk about it too much now. | ||
| You know, they've been a nice ally, but anybody from Japan here right now? | ||
| We'll get off the subject immediately. | ||
| But think of it. | ||
| Sent more tonnage to this bottom of the sea, one after one. | ||
| Board the famed USS Barb. | ||
| He destroyed a Japanese tanker and a carrier with a single salvo to his men's chagrin. | ||
| They were very concerned about it. | ||
| They didn't think we could do that, and he just knocked them out one after another. | ||
| And again, torpedoes were flying, but his greatest feat came when he spotted 30 enemy ships at port off the coast of China. | ||
| You know that, a very famous story. | ||
| Commander Fluke ordered his men to their battle station, slipped into the harbor, and sank six vessels at one time before taking off into the beautiful, wild blue ocean. | ||
| He received four Navy crosses, the Legion of Merit, and the Congressional Medal of Honor. | ||
| That was a brave guy. | ||
| In recognition of the incredible achievements of the USS Barb under his command, this December we will lay the keel of a brand new Virginia-class submarine bearing that same legendary name and his grandson Tom will be there to pick it up. | ||
| Tom is with us today, and I want to thank you for keeping that great legacy around. | ||
| Where is Tom? | ||
| Oh, look, stand up, Tom. | ||
| Great. | ||
| Good, Tom. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| That's good genes too, Tom, isn't it? | ||
| That's good stuff. | ||
| Thank you very much both for being here. | ||
| From Midway to the Coral Sea to Leyte Gulf, American sailors fought the most epic naval battles in history. | ||
| And at Normandy, the Navy led the greatest armada ever formed to deliver the single largest invasion force the world has ever seen. | ||
| One of the sailors who did it was Felix Maurizio, who enlisted at age 18 and trained right here in Norfolk, chained right here. | ||
| On D-Day, June 6th, 1944, Felix banned an amphibious landing craft that did six harrowing runs to Omaha Beach. | ||
| You all know about it. | ||
| These are all famous fights. | ||
| He delivered hundreds of American troops into the battle, including his brother Sal. | ||
| Felix lost so many of his friends that day, but he kept fighting. | ||
| He kept going out there, getting more soldiers, getting more of everything. | ||
| He just kept coming. | ||
| They couldn't stop him and went on to serve in the Pacific under the great Admiral Nimitz. | ||
| In February 1945, he spent his 21st birthday landing Marines on the blood-soaked sands of Iwo Jima, one of the bloodiest, toughest battles ever. | ||
| Historic battle. | ||
| Six months later, he was aboard the USS Talladega in Tokyo Bay. | ||
| When Japan surrendered, they said, I don't think we want Felix hitting us anymore. | ||
| And he retired as a chief petty officer in 1966. | ||
| This year, Felix celebrated his 100th birthday, and he is here this afternoon as a living testament to the glory of the United States Navy. | ||
|
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Wow. | |
| He looks good. | ||
| Felix, you look better than I do. | ||
| I don't not happy about this, Felix. | ||
| No, they don't want to mess around with him. | ||
| And Felix, we salute you. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Incredible. | ||
| 100 years. | ||
| In Korea, American sailors and Marines carried out the daring landing in Incheon and flew more than a quarter of a million combat sortes against the enemy. | ||
| It was an amazing effort. | ||
| In Vietnam, the Navy unleashed Operation Rolling Thunder and deployed a brand new unit, the Navy SEALs, to tear up Mekong River Delta. | ||
| Problem with Vietnam, we stopped fighting to win. | ||
| We would have won easy. | ||
| We would have won Afghanistan easy. | ||
| We would have won every war easy. | ||
| But we got politically correct. | ||
| Let's take it easy. | ||
| We're not politically correct anymore, just so you understand. | ||
| We win. | ||
| Now we win. | ||
| We don't want to be politically correct anymore. | ||
| And history will never forget that it was the SEALs who stormed the compound at Osama bin Laden and put a bullet in his head. | ||
| Remember that? | ||
| And please remember, I wrote about Osama bin Laden exactly one year ago, one year before he blew up the World Trade Center. | ||
| And I said, you got to watch Osama bin Laden. | ||
| And the fake news would never let me get away with that statement unless it was true. | ||
| But I said, one year before to Pete Hegseth, I said, one year before, Wispy, in the book, I wrote, whatever the hell the title, I can't tell you, but I can tell you there's a page in there devoted to the fact that I saw somebody named Osama bin Laden, and I didn't like it, and you got to take care of him. | ||
| They didn't do it. | ||
| A year later, he blew up the World Trade Center. | ||
| So we've got to take a little credit because nobody else is going to give it to me. | ||
| You know the old story? | ||
| They don't give you credit, just take it yourself. | ||
| And it was the U.S. Navy that dumped his wretched corpse off the decks of the Carl Vinson to sink into the dark abyss. | ||
| The Navy's central role in the defense of our liberty continues to this day. | ||
| Just a few months ago, the Ohio-class guided missile submarine played an indispensable part in one of the most spectacular military feats the world has ever seen, the obliteration of Iran's nuclear sites in Operation Midnight Hammer. | ||
| How did that work out? | ||
| pretty good. | ||
| And we shot 30 tomahawks, you know that, on top of after the B2, how about that? | ||
| The B-2s, what they did, those beautiful flying wings, what they did, they hit every single target they hit. | ||
| And just in case we shot 30 tomahawks out of a submarine, every one of them hit two. | ||
| So I would say Iran was not particularly thrilled. | ||
| They were going to have a nuclear weapon within a month. | ||
| And now they can start the operation all over again, but I hope they don't because we'll have to take care of that too. | ||
|
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If they do, I let them know that you want to do that, it's fine. | |
| But we're going to take care of that, and we're not going to wait so long. | ||
| It should have been done long before I came along. | ||
| You know that I had the pilots of the B-2s in my office, the famous Oval Office. | ||
| I had them in the B-2s. | ||
| They came in to the White House and we talked about it. | ||
| They said, you know, sir, for 22 years, our predecessors and us trained for that hit. | ||
| For 22 years, they were training to take out the nuclear potential of Iran. | ||
| He said, but it was only when you came along that we did it. | ||
| And they were so happy that they did it. | ||
| But they've been training for that hit for 22 years, but no president wanted to do it. | ||
| They would have had a nuclear weapon within a month, probably within a month or shortly thereafter. | ||
| And speaking to them would have been much more difficult. | ||
| In recent weeks, the Navy has supported our mission to blow the cartel terrorists the hell out of the water. | ||
| hear that. | ||
| And you know, there are no boats in the water anymore. | ||
| You can't find any. | ||
| We're having a hard time finding them. | ||
| But, you know, it's a pretty tough thing we've been doing, but you have to think of it this way. | ||
| Every one of those boats is responsible for the death of 25,000 American people and the destruction of families. | ||
| So when you think of it that way, what we're doing is actually an act of kindness. | ||
| But we did another one last night. | ||
| Now we just can't find any. | ||
| You know, it's the old story. | ||
| We're so good at it that there are no boats. | ||
| In fact, even fishing boats, nobody wants to go into the water anymore. | ||
| Sorry to tell you that. | ||
| But we're stopping drugs coming into America. | ||
| That's okay. | ||
| We're stopping drugs at a level that nobody's ever seen before. | ||
| Last year, we lost, I believe, 300,000 people. | ||
| And that's not talking about the destruction to families. | ||
| Every one of us knows families that have been destroyed because the son, daughter, even mothers and fathers are destroyed by the fentanyl pouring in and drugs pouring in. | ||
| Well, they're not coming in by sea anymore, so now we'll have to start looking about the land because they'll be forced to go by land. | ||
| And let me tell you right now, that's not going to work out well for them either. | ||
| And it was the Truman Carrier Strike Group that unleashed American fury on the Houthi terrorists in the Red Sea. | ||
| And as you know, they settled. | ||
| But they settled because they made the statement, we've never been hit like that ever before. | ||
| And earlier this year, conducted the single largest airstrike from an American carrier in history. | ||
| That was the largest ever. | ||
| I want to express my personal thanks to every single sailor who contributed to these phenomenal victories. | ||
| We only know victory. | ||
| We're only going to know victory. | ||
| We don't want to know the other word. | ||
| We want to know victory. | ||
| We're going to have great victories in the years to come. | ||
| Well, at least for almost three and a half years, we're going to have great victories. | ||
| I want to thank a group of women from North Carolina. | ||
| Look at these great. | ||
| Will you stand up, please? | ||
| These beautiful women have followed me. | ||
| This is number 151. | ||
| You could call a rally. | ||
| This is sort of a rally. | ||
| Let's face it. | ||
| This is a rally. | ||
| This is a speech of love. | ||
| We all love our country. | ||
| But that group is from North Carolina. | ||
| They're up to about 151 visits. | ||
| They have a whole group of them. | ||
| I never see their husbands. | ||
| I don't know what's going on with their husbands. | ||
| I assume, do they still love you, the husbands? | ||
| Yes, good. | ||
| But I want to thank you. | ||
| 151, they've been following me since 2016, and you look even better now than you did then. | ||
| But I want to thank you very much. | ||
| It's a really group. | ||
| They love our country. | ||
| They like Trump. | ||
| But you know what they really do? | ||
| They love our country. | ||
| And we have the right policy, right? | ||
| We have policy. | ||
| We don't want crime. | ||
| We don't want men playing in women's sports. | ||
| We don't want transgender for everybody. | ||
| We don't want to have open borders where millions of people come into our country from jails, from prisons, from mental institutions and insane asylums. | ||
| Drug dealers, murderers. | ||
| 11,788 murderers were allowed to come into our country. | ||
| A lot of them are gone. | ||
| And by the way, Washington, D.C. is a safe place right now. | ||
| It went from one of the most dangerous cities in our country. | ||
| Can you believe that? | ||
| To probably the safest, among the safest in our country. | ||
| Nobody's being hit anymore. | ||
| It's very safe. | ||
| And I want to thank you. | ||
| A lot of the people here have helped. | ||
| A lot of the people in the audience are people that have straightened them out. | ||
| It took 12 days. | ||
|
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Think of that. | |
| Now we're in Memphis. | ||
| We're doing the same thing in Memphis. | ||
| And we're going to Chicago. | ||
| You know, we have a governor that thinks it's wonderful when 50 people in a short period of time were murdered in Chicago. | ||
| Over 200 people were hit. | ||
| And so we send in the National Guard. | ||
|
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You know what? | |
| We send in what's ever necessary. | ||
| People don't care. | ||
| They don't want crime in their cities. | ||
| And we're doing it, and we're doing it well. | ||
| We're doing it like nobody's ever done it before. | ||
| So I just want to tell you, you're very close to DC. | ||
| The restaurants are thriving. | ||
| The restaurants are dying. | ||
| They were closing one after another. | ||
| Now they're thriving. | ||
| They're opening up beautiful new restaurants. | ||
| Washington, D.C. is safe. | ||
| And I even went there and had dinner the other night. | ||
| And I stood right smack in the middle of the street. | ||
| Secret Service was thrilled. | ||
| And I gave a news conference. | ||
| It's a safe place now. | ||
| Washington, D.C., it's always going to be. | ||
| Our nation's capital is always going to be safe. | ||
| We're never going to let that happen again. | ||
| What happened there? | ||
| One of the most beautiful places. | ||
| We're doing a big beautification program. | ||
| It'll take me very little, very short, but we're doing a beautification program to go along with the security and safety. | ||
| We're getting rid of the graffiti, the potholes, the broken medians between roads. | ||
| We're doing a real job, and you'd be proud of it. | ||
| I think everybody here is proud of it, frankly. | ||
| That's our nation's capital, and that has to be clean, beautiful, and safe. | ||
| The U.S. Navy always stands for America as your commander-in-chief. | ||
| I will always stand for you. | ||
| I promise you that. | ||
| You know that. | ||
| That's why you voted for me in numbers that nobody's ever seen before. | ||
| And I want you to know that despite the current Democrat-induced shutdown, we will get our service members every last penny. | ||
| Don't worry about it. | ||
|
unidentified
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Don't worry about it. | |
| You'll worry about it. | ||
| Do not worry about it. | ||
| It's all coming. | ||
| It's coming. | ||
| And even more because I'm supporting the across-the-board pay raises for every sailor and service member in the United States Armed Force. | ||
| But we have to take care of this little gnat that's on our shoulder called the Democrats. | ||
| They want to give all of our money to illegal aliens that pour into the country. | ||
| And you know, I have a bigger heart than they do. | ||
| But the problem is when you do that, they come in by the millions. | ||
| Everybody wants that, so you can't do it. | ||
| But I've also pledged the largest ever investment in our military's history. | ||
| We're spending over $1 trillion. | ||
| We've never had anything like that before. | ||
| $1 trillion on our military. | ||
| And that includes, along with your Secretary of the Navy and Pete Heckseth, we're going to be building lots of ships and doing a lot of things that you haven't seen happen for 35 years. | ||
| We'll soon revitalize our once great shipyards with hundreds of billions of dollars in new investments and people coming from all around the world. | ||
| And they're going to build ships in America. | ||
| We want to build an America. | ||
| And as I told our generals and admirals last Tuesday, we are getting wokeness the hell out of our military. | ||
| It's gone. | ||
|
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It's really gone. | |
| I don't know that it was ever really here. | ||
| I think some of the top people had it. | ||
| I knew a few of them. | ||
| They were really, they were major losers. | ||
|
unidentified
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But they were losers. | |
| Unlike our great general, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who may be here, Dan Raisin Kane. | ||
| You know, Raisin Kane. | ||
| When I heard his name, I said, that's the guy I'm looking for. | ||
| But he's been an amazing warrior, and he was the one who headed up the attack on Iran. | ||
| And everything he's touched has turned out great. | ||
| He knocked out ISIS. | ||
| So I was told it would take four to five years to beat ISIS. | ||
| When he came on board, he did it in four weeks. | ||
| We knocked him out in four weeks. | ||
| 100% of the ISIS Caliphate. | ||
| Is Dan Kane here? | ||
| He is, you know why? | ||
| Because he's working. | ||
| That's the one thing. | ||
| We don't have to worry about him. | ||
| But he is a fantastic man. | ||
| That's the man I wanted right from the beginning. | ||
| I said, if I ever do this again and if I can get lucky enough to win, because we have a base like nobody in history has had, I said, I'm going to pick Raisin Kane as the chairman. | ||
| And that's what we did. | ||
| And he's been incredible. | ||
| We will not be politically correct when it comes to defending American freedom. | ||
| That's why we have renamed the Department of Defense at Department of War, as I said. | ||
| And we have changed the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. | ||
| That was easy. | ||
| That was an easy one. | ||
| You know, for years I've looked at it and I edited it up and I figured we have 92% of the frontage. | ||
| I say, how come we call it the Gulf of Mexico? | ||
| I mean, I wouldn't say that Mexico is thrilled with me, but what are you going to do? | ||
| It's the Gulf of America. | ||
| And I love it now. | ||
| I was watching the other night a report, and they said very routinely, in the Gulf of America, this is, you know, they just went on to talk about it. | ||
| They didn't do it with a smirk or a smile. | ||
| They just say, in the Gulf of America. | ||
| No, it's called the Gulf of America now, and nobody's playing games with it. | ||
| We got sued by the Associated Press, and they lost. | ||
| In fact, the judge was so good, he said he's calling it the Gulf of America. | ||
| He's got all the approvals. | ||
| You have to do that too to the very liberal Associated Press. | ||
| They got thrown out of court. | ||
| In fact, they're almost not allowed to cover me anymore because of that. | ||
| It's a big hit. | ||
| So I'm very proud of that. | ||
| Under our leadership, the spirit of the American forces is soaring like it has never soared before. | ||
| I think right now we have more spirit than we've ever had before after years of recruiting shortages. | ||
| We couldn't get guys or gals to become sellers. | ||
| One year ago, they didn't want to be a sailor. | ||
| Although I must say, once I said we're going to run, a lot of people made it better. | ||
| But let's go back two years, and it was even worse because there was no hope. | ||
| We had this horrible, horrible president who had no clue what the hell was happening. | ||
| The chances of him walking down those stairs successfully were not good. | ||
| And I have to be careful because one day I'm going to probably fall. | ||
| No, the North Carolina women said that will never happen to you. | ||
| I always say, walk down the steps nice and slowly. | ||
| You ever notice I do nice? | ||
| I don't have to bop down the stairs. | ||
| Walk nice and slowly. | ||
| But we have a waiting list. | ||
| Think of this. | ||
| We have a waiting list for people wanting to get into the United States Navy. | ||
| The Army, Navy, Coast Guard, Marines, Space Force. | ||
| Oh, we love Space Force. | ||
| But think of it, we have a waiting list for every branch of government now, and that includes police, police and firemen. | ||
| They didn't want to, nobody wanted to be a policeman. | ||
| Now they want to be a policeman. | ||
| Now they want to be in the Navy. | ||
| They want to be in the Air Force so badly. | ||
| The Marines, the Army, they want to be in all of it. | ||
| They love Space Force. | ||
| I love Space Force because I created Space Force. | ||
| That was my thing. | ||
| And it's going to turn out to be one of the most important. | ||
| But one year ago, our country was dead. | ||
| We had a dead country. | ||
| People say, sir, you shouldn't say that. | ||
| It's too straight to withdraw. | ||
| We had a dead country, and today we have the hottest country anywhere in the world by far. | ||
| One year, think of it. | ||
| One year ago, we were dead. | ||
| The king of Saudi Arabia said to me, President, one year ago, we thought we lost America. | ||
| We thought it was a dead country. | ||
| And now you have the hottest country anywhere in the world. | ||
| He said that. | ||
| I use this term. | ||
| And I'm pleased to say that 2025 was the Navy's single best recruiting year ever. | ||
|
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Not bad. | |
| So you went from those embarrassing headlines of a year ago. | ||
| Think of it. | ||
| Nobody wants to go into the Navy. | ||
| How does that make you feel? | ||
| Now you have a different problem. | ||
| You know what the problem is? | ||
| Everybody wants your job. | ||
| I like that better, right? | ||
| Yeah, but nobody's going to take your job. | ||
| were with us when it was not as nice. | ||
| It wasn't as nice. | ||
| Those are the people I like the best too. | ||
| The people that were with me when it wasn't looking so good, like these ladies from North Carolina, they were with me when it wasn't looking that good. | ||
| A lot of fake scandals were created, all fake. | ||
| One of those eager new recruits is 18-year old Aiden Rollins, a recruit like I'm so proud of. | ||
| Aiden's father was a sailor, his grandfather was a sailor, and after four years of Navy ROTC, it is Aiden's turn to carry on that tradition. | ||
| When he enlisted in April, his father Daniel, a Navy veteran, was so inspired that he decided to re-enlist too. | ||
|
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Wow. | |
| I'm delighted to say that father and son are here with us today representing the future of this great fleet. | ||
| Please, Aiden and your father, please stand up. | ||
|
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Wow, that's a good-looking family, I tell you. | |
| Thank you both. | ||
| That's a great story. | ||
| Beautiful. | ||
| Your father looks pretty young, Aiden. | ||
| I mean, he's a young-looking guy. | ||
| Every sailor, aviator, submariner, and shipmate in the Navy inherits a tradition of excellence and daring, power, and glory unmatched in the long saga of mankind's voyage on the sea. | ||
| From that first ship, the schooner Hannah, to the awesome sight of a modern carrier battle group underway, the U.S. Navy has always been the iron will of a proud and mighty nation pushing forward through the currents and over those big, beautiful waves. | ||
| Through the spray of raging combat and the fog of naval war, America's sailors have proven time and again that our Navy does just the best job there is. | ||
| Anything having to do with sailing the oceans, there's nobody to compete. | ||
| We own the skies, we stalk the depths, and we rule the seas like nobody has ever ruled the seas. | ||
| From Boston Harbor to Hampton Roads, from the Philippine Sea to the Red Sea, from the Guana Canal to the vast great Atlantic Ocean, our sailors have seized triumph upon triumph. | ||
| We don't know anything about defeat. | ||
| We heaped honor upon honor and carved greatness and splendor into the pages of history. | ||
| We only talk about the Navy and only use that word splendor. | ||
| We also say victory because that's the other. | ||
| We have splendor and we have victory on gun decks and flight decks. | ||
| In torpedo rooms and cockpits, they have poured out their blood, sweat, and tears and offered their very lives to defend this land between the seas. | ||
| They have crossed icy canals, leapt from burning records, plunged into frigid waters, sworded to deadly skies, and slashed across the mine-infested bays to claim American victory and to defend the cause of liberty, to defend, quite frankly, the American flag. | ||
| In every era and every part of this globe, our sailors have fought with courage in their hearts, patriotism in their souls, and salt water in their veins. | ||
| You have that salt water? | ||
| Don't let the doctors change it. | ||
| Keep it, because there's nothing like it. | ||
| There's no blood like it. | ||
| And standing before all of you today, I know that whatever our nation is threatened and whenever they need help, Whenever duty calls, American sailors will hoist our flag high and they will rally to Admiral Farragut's immortal battle cry. | ||
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Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead goes. | |
| I love it, guys. | ||
| With your help, we will fight, fight, fight. | ||
| We will win, win, win. | ||
| Because of you, our Navy and our country will always be proud and righteous and mighty and free. | ||
| Congratulations once again on 250 years of total dominance. | ||
| Sail fast. | ||
| Stay strong. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| God bless our sailors and God bless the United States of America. | ||
| Thank you very much, everybody. | ||
| I'll say to young man, pick yourself off the ground. | ||
| I'll say young man. | ||
| Cause you're in a new town. | ||
| There's no need to be unhappy. | ||
|
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Young man. | |
| There's a place you can go. | ||
| I'll say to young man. | ||
|
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When you're short on your dough, you can stay there. | |
| And I'll show you the five ways to have a good time. | ||
|
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It's fun to stay at the YMCA. | |
| It's fun to stay at the YMCA. | ||
| They have ever been made monumental enjoy. | ||
| You can hang out with all the boys. | ||
|
unidentified
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It's fun to stay at the YMCA. | |
| It's fun to stay at the YMCA. | ||
| You can get to somebody and you can have a good meal. | ||
|
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You can do whatever you feel. | |
| Young man. | ||
| Are you listening to me? | ||
|
unidentified
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I say young man. | |
| What do you want to be? | ||
|
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I'll tell you young man. | |
| You can make million dreams, but you've got to know this one thing. | ||
|
unidentified
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No man does it all by himself. | |
| I said, young man. | ||
| Put your pride on the shelf and just go there to the YMCA. | ||
|
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America marks 250 years, and C-SPAN is there to commemorate every moment. | |
| From the signing of the Declaration of Independence to the voices shaping our nation's future, we bring you unprecedented all-platform coverage, exploring the stories, sights, and spirit that make up America. | ||
| Join us for remarkable coast-to-coast coverage, celebrating our nation's journey like no other network can. | ||
| America 250. | ||
| Over a year of historic moments. | ||
| Only on the C-SPAN Networks. | ||
| Tonight on C-SPAN's Q&A, Christopher Scalia, son of the late Justice Antonin Scalia and author of 13 novels conservatives will love but probably haven't read, recommends 13 novels with conservative themes that he says aren't widely known by conservatives. | ||
| The title isn't conservative novels. | ||
| I think that that oversimplifies the case a little bit. | ||
| I think that their great literature is open to multiple, not infinite, but multiple interpretations and readings. | ||
| And so I offer what I think are reasonable conservative readings of all of these novels. | ||
| But I think that there are alternate readings that progressives could offer. | ||
| That would be reasonable. | ||
| I wouldn't necessarily agree with them. |