Sunday, March 17, 2013

Transcript: Mitt Romney's Speech at the 2013 Conservative Political Action Conference

The following is Mitt Romney's address as prepared for delivery Friday, March 15, at the 2013 Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Md.:

What an honor to be introduced by Governor Nikki Haley, a woman of uncommon courage and conviction; whose principles have guided her governance. We need more governors like her!

I've also had the honor of your support from the very beginning. You gave my campaign an early boost. You worked on the front lines?promoting my campaign, turning out voters. Thank you.

With help from so many of you, I had the honor of becoming my party's nominee for president. I was given the privilege of experiencing America in ways Ann and I had never imagined. Across this great country, our fellow citizens opened up their homes and hearts to us.

Of course, I left the race disappointed that we didn't win. But I also left honored and humbled to have represented values we believe in and to speak for so many good and decent people. We've lost races before, and in the past, those setbacks prepared us for larger victories. It is up to us to make sure that we learn from my mistakes, and from our mistakes, so that we can win the victories those people and this nation depend upon.

It's fashionable in some circles to be pessimistic about America, about conservative solutions, about the Republican Party. I utterly reject that pessimism. We may not have carried the day last November 7th, but we haven't lost the country we love, and we haven't lost our way. Our nation is still full of aspirations and hungry for new solutions. We're a nation of invention and of reinventing. My optimism about America wasn't diminished by my campaign; no, it grew?It grew as I came to know more of our fellow Americans.

I have seen American determination in people like Debbi Sommers. She runs a furniture rental business for conventions in Las Vegas. When 9/11 hit and again when the recession tanked the conventions business, she didn't give up, close down, or lay off her people. She taught them not just to rent furniture, but also to manufacture it.

I've seen perseverance. Harold Hamm drove a truck for ten years so that he could afford to go to college. He majored in Geology. Studying geological surveys, he concluded that there should be oil in North Dakota. He went there and drilled a well. It was dry. I'm told that it costs about $2 million to drill a dry hole. But he kept on drilling. 16 dry holes later, they called it Harold's folly. That changed with the 17th. The Bakken range he discovered is estimated by some to hold as much as 500 billion barrels of oil.

I've seen risk taking. The flagging lumber business and mounting losses convinced International Paper Corporation that they needed to shut down their lumber mill in Ossipee, New Hampshire. Into the breech stepped Jim Smith and Kim Moore, the plant manager and sales manager. They borrowed and invested everything they could, to buy the broken business. They saved their jobs and 30 other peoples' jobs, growing sales from $5 million a year to $50 million.

I've met people of great faith. I sat in the home of Billy Graham and in the residence of Cardinal Dolan and prayed with these men of God.

I met heroes in our armed forces: men and women who re-signed with the National Guard after multiple tours of duty in Afghanistan, knowing that in all probability, they would be going back again.

I met heroes in the homes of the nation: single moms who are working two jobs so that their kids will have clothes like those that the other kids wear, dads who almost forget what a weekend is, because of all the jobs they've taken on to keep the house.

We are a patriotic people. The heart of America is good. Our land is blessed by the hand of God; may we as a people always be worthy of His grace, and His protection.

Like you, I believe a Conservative vision can attract a majority of Americans and form a governing coalition of renewal and reform. As someone who just lost the last election, I'm probably not the best person to chart the course for the next election. That said, I do have advice. Perhaps because I am a former governor, I would urge you to learn the lessons that come from some of our greatest success stories: the 30 Republican governors.

Yes, they are winning elections, but more importantly, they are solving problems. Big problems. Important problems. Governor Nathan Deal of Georgia secured a constitutional amendment to expand charter schools. Governor Rick Snyder signed Right to Work legislation?in Michigan! Several secured tort reform. Many turned huge deficits into surpluses. Republican governors reached across the aisle, offered innovative solutions and have been willing to take the heat to make tough decisions.

We need the ideas and leadership of each of these governors. We particularly need to hear from the Governors of the blue and purple states, like Bob McDonnell, Scott Walker, John Kasich, Susanna Martinez, Chris Christie, and Brian Sandoval because their states are among those we must win to take the Senate and the White House.

We can also learn from the examples of principle, passion and leadership that we have seen during these last several weeks from fellow conservatives here in Washington. I may be a little biased, but I applaud the clear and convincing voice of my friend, Paul Ryan.

If I were to offer advice to any president of the United States, it would be this: do whatever you can do to keep America the most prosperous and free and powerful nation on earth.

It is no secret that the last century was an American century. And it is no secret that over the span of the 21st century, America's pre-eminent position is far from guaranteed. The consequence if America were to be surpassed would be devastating. Why? Because among the primary rivals for world leadership?China, Russia, and the Jihadists?not one believes in the freedoms we take for granted. Freedom depends on American leadership.

American leadership depends on a military so strong, so superior, that no one would think to engage it. Our military strength depends on an economy so strong that it can support such a military. And our economy depends on a people so strong, so educated, so resolute, so hard working, so inventive, and so devoted to their children's future, that other nations look at us with respect and admiration.

That is the America we grew up in, and it is the America our children deserve.

What other nation would have enjoyed hegemonic military power for a quarter of a century, and never have used it to seek revenge against its former foes or to seize precious natural resources from the weak?

What nation is the most philanthropic in the world, the first to bind up the wounds of the injured from hurricanes, tsunamis, and war?

What nation is the largest contributor to the fight against AIDS in Africa?

Who came to the rescue of Europe when it faced its darkest hour and came to the rescue of others under the threat of tyranny, in Korea, Vietnam, Panama, Bosnia, Kuwait, Afghanistan and Iraq? Whatever you think of these interventions, the impulse behind them was liberation, not conquest. In all of human history, there has never been a great power that has so often used its power to liberate others from subjugation, to set the captives free. This we must teach our children, and never ourselves forget.

I'm inspired by a people who believe in and live for something greater than themselves?whether their faith, their country, their family, their school.

I marvel at the prescience, the brilliance and the sacrifices made by the nation's Founders.

I'm proud of our immigrant heritage, proud that so many of us and of our ancestors came here because they wanted to be here, to build a better future for their children here, to worship their God here.

At a campaign stop in Texas, I met a Cambodian-American named Sichan Siv. Sichan came here in 1976, escaping the killing fields of Cambodia. His first job was picking fruit, then he drove a cab in New York City. He later volunteered on the campaign of George H.W. Bush. Thirteen years after coming to America he went to work in the White House. And then, he was appointed as a United States Ambassador to the United Nations. He said that whenever he stood to speak in behalf of America, his emotions choked, and he asked himself in what other nation could an impoverished Cambodian refugee have become its Ambassador.

America began with an idea, a noble one. That idea was that every person is endowed by their Creator with unalienable rights. Freedom flows in American veins. It invigorates our many enterprises, it inspires us to live beyond ourselves, it calls us to care for the suffering and downtrodden. It has made us a great nation.

Today, history and duty summon us again. The country is imperiled by mounting debt, by failing institutions, by families stressed beyond their limits, by schools that fail to make the grade, and by public servants who are more intent on scoring political points than on national renewal.

Each of us in our own way will have to step up and meet our responsibility. I am sorry that I will not be your president ? but I will be your co-worker and I will stand shoulder to shoulder with you. In the end, we will win just as we have won before, and for the same reason: because our cause is right...and just.

Thank you again for your help and support along our journey. Ann and I will treasure these memories all the days of our lives. God bless you, and God Bless the United States of America.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/transcript-mitt-romneys-speech-2013-conservative-political-action-183607600.html

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Sport is losing its romance, says Peter FitzSimons | Sports Business ...

SPORT is a central aspect of Australian culture but will it continue to hold such a prominent place in society?

Ex-Wallaby turned journalist, Peter FitzSimons, told me his concerns for the future of Australian sport. Mr Fitzsimons doesn?t devour sport like a main meal, rather he sees it as the salt and pepper of life. ?I worry on many levels at once that sport in many ways has lost its romance. And I think that sports administration in the future has to look at, how do I put this, working out how sport can keep its magic.?

The Australian Cricket team is an example of a sporting body that certainly appears to have lost its magic. During the current tour of India, four players were stood down, including vice captain Shane Watson and paceman James Pattinson, for failing to deliver a presentation on what they could bring to the team during the next test. For a cricket team that is greatly under-performing, having lost the previous two tests against India, these actions seem rather severe. Coach Mickey Arthur and captain Michael Clarke appear to be taking a hard line on their players, who are desperately needed if Australia has a chance of winning the third test.

Mr FitzSimons suggested the romance in sport was getting lost behind the serious side of the game. ?They (the administrators) can?t get themselves lost in ?It?s a serious serious business.? he said. ?They must always remember that at its very heart what they are presenting is a game and therefore the players have to take joy in that game, the spectators have to take joy in that game.?

Western Bulldogs midfielder, Liam Picken, recently told the Herald Sun ?AFL is very serious now. When Dad played, the game was full of characters,? he said. ?Dad was working full-time ? he?d go to training after work and play on the weekends. They had heaps of fun when they were playing. Now it?s very cutthroat, very serious, I suppose. On the footy field, you?ve got to be focused.? Sport has undergone significant change since the 1970?s when Picken?s father, Bill, was playing for Collingwood. Being an elite athlete is now considered a full time job. It certainly comes with the price tag too; according to the AFL the average player earned $251,559 last year.

Commercial agreements and television rights have seen sports expand in size and popularity. But will the money continue to flow? Or will it curtail at some point?

Mr FitzSimons thinks the money will eventually run out as the last main surge came through paid television. Paid television has had a profound effect on they way we consume sports. Rugby union can thank the success of Super Rugby for its inception into professional sport. Fox Sports first broadcast the league in 1996 as Super 12; it now contains 15 teams spread throughout three countries.

Furthermore the internet now allows sports to be instantaneously broadcast from anywhere in the world. ?The internet?s changed everything but I think that the money that sport gets from television, paid television I suspect will come under attack in years to come and I can?t see anywhere where they?ll get another serge in money like they have.?

However, Mr FitzSimons said rugby union currently appears disaffected with tickets to the British and Irish Lions tour selling out in less than 15 minutes. Tickets to the Australian tour to be held between June and July across Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane sold for up to $295 each.

?They?re parting big bucks there but I expect we won?t continue to see the exponential growth.? he said.

One of the major challenges sport faces in the future is to ensure it expands. Rugby league and union are heavily supported in NSW and QLD, whereas the AFL is dominated by Victoria teams.

?I think the challenge for the AFL is to move out of Melbourne (and) to not be so heavily Melbourne-centric. The challenge for Sydney is equally the same, is not to be so Sydney-centric for rugby league.? said Mr FitzSimons. ?Rugby league needs to have presence. Ideally they?d have a presence in Perth the way they once did and they?d continue to grow to bring in different markets.?

Cricket has successfully distributed its presence throughout Australia. There is an Australian domestic cricket side in each Australia state, with the exception of the two territories. However the ACT and the NT both have cricket-governing bodies and have teams that play at lower levels.

To ensure to future of sport in Australia, sporting codes and organisations must ensure that fans and players get enjoyment out of the game.

Source: http://sportsbusinessinsider.com.au/features/sport-is-losing-its-romance-says-peter-fitzsimons/

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