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In his speech, "A Time to Lead," Forbes first addressed the
scandals
facing the Clinton administration.
"Congress must hold publics hearings on all these matters," he
said.
Forbes then turned to the issues of the day. He called for "an
American
foreign policy, not one run by the International Monetary Fund or the
World
Bank or the bureaucrats of the United Nations." On Social
Security,
Forbes said the country should "phase in a new system for our younger
people."
On education he said we should "put parents in charge again."
Forbes struck a
familiar
refrain on taxes and then, toward the end of the speech, addressed
abortion.
Citing the language of the Declaration of Independence, Forbes noted
the
"unalienable Rights" granted by the Creator are life, liberty and the
pursuit
of happiness--in that order. "First life, then liberty, then the
pursuit
of happiness," Forbes said. "The right to life is not a
state-given
right, it is a gift of God."
Forbes also
placed a full-page
ad in the Sept. 18 Washington Times urging the U.S. Senate to
override
President Clinton's veto of the partial birth abortion ban.
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After delivering his speech,
Forbes and wife Sabina signed copies of The
Moral Basis of a Free Society at the AHGO booth. A long line
quickly formed. |