- Jul 12, 2018
- 9,857
First 2004 Presidential Debate
Foreign Policy & International Affairs
Foreign Policy & International Affairs
On September 30, former Secretary of State Jackson Fitzgerald (Democrat), retired Marine Corps General Henry Sharp (Republican), and Vice President Benjamin V. Sinclair (Independent) gathered at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida for the first of two presidential debates. This was the first time since 1992 that an independent was on the presidential debate stage. The first debate covered the topics of United States foreign policy and international affairs, while the second debate covered domestic affairs within the United States. Those invited to the debates were equal in number of Republicans, Democrats, and supporters of Vice President Sinclair, as well as a limited number of students from the University of Miami. The election between Fitzgerald, Sharp, and Sinclair had grown quiet complicated, and all of the candidates were taking different approaches. Fitzgerald was focused on positive advertising and avoided mentioning his opponents, while Sharp's campaign released increasingly negative adds targeting both Fitzgerald and Sinclair. Sinclair was out in the field more than the other two candidates and was trying to meet and speak with as many people as possible. He did not shy away from mentioning his opponents by name, but did so sparingly and instead focused on needed policy changes. A stereotype of modern American politics is that Republicans are sterner on foreign policy and are better at leading the nation in times of war or international troubles, while Democrats are more sympathetic to the working man, and independent candidates are either crazy or cannot win. These generalizations are not, of course, entirely accurate - especially for these three candidates.
The debate started at time at 8:00PM EST. Jim Lehrer, the primetime anchor of PBS NewsHour, was the first thing that over 70-million Americans saw on their screens. He was the moderator that evening.
MODERATOR: Good evening from the University of Miami Convocation Center in Coral Gables, Florida. I’m Jim Lehrer of “The NewsHour” on PBS, and I welcome you to the first of the 2004 presidential debates between former Secretary of State Jackson Fitzgerald, the Democratic nominee, retired Marine Corps General Henry Sharp, the Republican nominee, and Vice President Benjamin Valentine Sinclair, who is an independent candidate. The debates are sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates and they will be conducted within formats and rules agreed to between the commission and the two campaigns. We’ll have the candidates at podiums. No answer to a question can exceed two minutes. Rebuttal is limited to one minute. But as moderator I have the option to follow up and to extend any particular give and take another three-and-a-half minutes. Even then, no single answer can exceed two minutes. The candidates under their rules may not question each other directly. There will be no opening statements, but each candidate may have up to two minutes for a closing statement. The questions and the subjects were chosen by me alone - tonight we will entirely focus on foreign policy and international affairs. I have told no one from the two campaigns, or the Commission, or anyone else involved what they are. There is a small audience in the hall tonight. They are not here to participate, only to listen. I have asked, and they have agreed, to remain silent for the next 90 minutes. Except for right now, when they will applaud as we welcome the three candidates, Secretary Fitzgerald, General Sharp, and Vice President Sinclair.
MODERATOR: And now the first question as determined by a flip of a coin, it goes to General Sharp. General, your campaign has run numerous advertisements criticizing the Gore Administration, and Secretary Fitzgerald, for how the United States has conducted foreign affairs since 1997. What is the underlying issue, and how is it connected to Secretary Fitzgerald?
SHARP: Jim, first let me thank the University of Miami for hosting us tonight and for you moderating the debate, I'm sure that you'll be fair. These debates are important because they can show the American People, live, in real time, who we are and how we can respond under pressure. Under the Gore Administration, which has had Secretary Fitzgerald as its chief diplomat, the United States has sat back repeatedly while things have gotten out of hand around the world. I am not calling for the United States to be some kind of global police with boots on the ground everywhere any time anything happens, but we need to get a grip and show these provocateurs around the world that we aren't going to stand for their nonsense. The Thai government, for example, has gone around the world terrorizing otherwise peaceful countries and harassing them with their military forces. They don't even try to hide that they're doing it, and now they've turned into a socialist state, which is the next step to authoritarianism. When a dog is barking at you, you can either run away and let it bite you on the behind, or you can kick it. If the Gore Administration had more grit, they would have solved this problem for the world years ago; instead the State Department, under Secretary Fitzgerald, placated states like Thailand and other provocateur nations, and things have only gotten worse.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, a one minute response.
FITZGERALD: Jim, I would also like to thank the University of Miami, the Commission on Presidential Debates, and yourself for moderating the debate tonight... There is a lot that General Sharp is leaving out about American foreign policy since 1997. First off, we united the world in the war against Turkey, a war where not a single American life was lost and we toppled a genocidal regime. Secondly, President Gore and I have worked closely with our allies and partners around the world to safeguard countries, especially smaller nations, from aggressive or irrational state-actors who were operating well outside of where they should be, and sticking their noses in the business of other nations. We dealt with them repeatedly in Europe, and it culminated in the United States deploying part of the Atlantic Fleet into the Mediterranean Sea to show our allies, the Free World, and everyone else that we are not going to tolerate petty bullying. The United States has the capacity to inflict lethal damage to any nation anywhere on the planet; however, just because we have that power does not mean that we should use it at the drop of a hat. Rarely do conversations accidentally cause wars, but accidents or misunderstandings during military deployments sure do.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, where do you see America's place in the world?
FITZGERALD: We won the Cold War and we're the only superpower left. Our responsibility is first and foremost to safeguard the American People, to keep our commitment to our allies, and to maintain the world order. If we can work with our partners around the world to prevent war and keep the peace between states, then we can help ensure a more prosperous future for mankind, and especially the United States. We need to branch out more, to more countries around the world. There is still progress to be made with countries such as Ethiopia, and other states that are often left on the back burner diplomatically. Every country has something to offer in making the world a better place, because if we show that we are willing to communicate and work with others, then they will want to work with the international community. We need to have a more global approach to politics and economics so that we can be closer with the rest of the world. We are doing well now, but we can always do better, and as president I will make that a reality for our country and the world.
MODERATOR: Mister Vice President, if you are elected, you will be the oldest president in American history the day that you are sworn in. Do you have the stamina to do this job for four, or possibly eight years? Why should the American People put their faith in you?
SINCLAIR: Thank you, Jim, for moderating tonight, and thank you to the University of Miami for hosting us. Florida is one of my favorite places in the world and I am honored to be on stage with these two gentlemen tonight. I feel relieved that the American People have three well-intentioned men of different backgrounds and a high caliber of character to choose from. I have been asked about my age several times. That is why my campaign is now releasing to the media, as we speak, a full medical evaluation that I have done. The evaluation included a physical test as well as extensive mental tests. The results were conclusive that I am in outstanding physical shape for my age, and that I have the mental cognition of a man in his late forties or early fifties. I am not surprised by these results, because I take my health seriously and because the Sinclair family has good genetics. Both of my parents are still alive and in their nineties, and all four of my grandparents lived to be older than 105. I have served my country in the military for thirteen years, and I served my country in the House of Representatives, the Senate, and now as Vice President. I am, without doubt, the most experienced man standing up here. I have an intimate knowledge of how our political system works, I have served in the military and I respect the men and women in it, and I am ready to lead the United States into an American Renaissance.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, a one minute response.
FITZGERALD: Jim, I would also like to thank the University of Miami, the Commission on Presidential Debates, and yourself for moderating the debate tonight... There is a lot that General Sharp is leaving out about American foreign policy since 1997. First off, we united the world in the war against Turkey, a war where not a single American life was lost and we toppled a genocidal regime. Secondly, President Gore and I have worked closely with our allies and partners around the world to safeguard countries, especially smaller nations, from aggressive or irrational state-actors who were operating well outside of where they should be, and sticking their noses in the business of other nations. We dealt with them repeatedly in Europe, and it culminated in the United States deploying part of the Atlantic Fleet into the Mediterranean Sea to show our allies, the Free World, and everyone else that we are not going to tolerate petty bullying. The United States has the capacity to inflict lethal damage to any nation anywhere on the planet; however, just because we have that power does not mean that we should use it at the drop of a hat. Rarely do conversations accidentally cause wars, but accidents or misunderstandings during military deployments sure do.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, where do you see America's place in the world?
FITZGERALD: We won the Cold War and we're the only superpower left. Our responsibility is first and foremost to safeguard the American People, to keep our commitment to our allies, and to maintain the world order. If we can work with our partners around the world to prevent war and keep the peace between states, then we can help ensure a more prosperous future for mankind, and especially the United States. We need to branch out more, to more countries around the world. There is still progress to be made with countries such as Ethiopia, and other states that are often left on the back burner diplomatically. Every country has something to offer in making the world a better place, because if we show that we are willing to communicate and work with others, then they will want to work with the international community. We need to have a more global approach to politics and economics so that we can be closer with the rest of the world. We are doing well now, but we can always do better, and as president I will make that a reality for our country and the world.
MODERATOR: Mister Vice President, if you are elected, you will be the oldest president in American history the day that you are sworn in. Do you have the stamina to do this job for four, or possibly eight years? Why should the American People put their faith in you?
SINCLAIR: Thank you, Jim, for moderating tonight, and thank you to the University of Miami for hosting us. Florida is one of my favorite places in the world and I am honored to be on stage with these two gentlemen tonight. I feel relieved that the American People have three well-intentioned men of different backgrounds and a high caliber of character to choose from. I have been asked about my age several times. That is why my campaign is now releasing to the media, as we speak, a full medical evaluation that I have done. The evaluation included a physical test as well as extensive mental tests. The results were conclusive that I am in outstanding physical shape for my age, and that I have the mental cognition of a man in his late forties or early fifties. I am not surprised by these results, because I take my health seriously and because the Sinclair family has good genetics. Both of my parents are still alive and in their nineties, and all four of my grandparents lived to be older than 105. I have served my country in the military for thirteen years, and I served my country in the House of Representatives, the Senate, and now as Vice President. I am, without doubt, the most experienced man standing up here. I have an intimate knowledge of how our political system works, I have served in the military and I respect the men and women in it, and I am ready to lead the United States into an American Renaissance.
Retired Marine Corps General
Henry Sharp
Republican
MODERATOR: General Sharp, what would American foreign policy look like under a Sharp Administration?
SHARP: On day one as President, I would order the Pentagon to create a full review of TASA, our alliances with the United Kingdom and Sweden, as well as our relationships with other partners around the world, and whether or not these strategic partnerships benefit us. Other countries often take advantage of the good nature of the United States. This manifests in different ways, but one of the most common is that they will drain their military spending and rely on us for protection. We feel a sense of honor and duty to protect our friends, but we can only do so much to help them. At the end of the day, we can only help others who are willing to help themselves. I'm not interested, for example, in sending Americans to die in South Africa so that Sweden can hold onto a puppet state. It is important for us to have a network of allies around the world, but only if they actually bring something to the table other than existing and courting us diplomatically every two or three years. We have had to deploy assets to Europe repeatedly in the past seven years, and we almost always did it too late. While we had to sail thousands of men over an entire ocean, the British typically send little more than a symbolic force into the region when things start to heat up. As president I would make sure that our allies can take care of themselves and the spheres of the world that they exist in, because we have our own problems that we need to deal with.
MODERATOR: Thank you, General Sharp. Secretary Fitzgerald, do you think that our allies have taken advantage of us?
FITZGERALD: I do not. The British, in particular, have worked with us and fought alongside us repeatedly. You have to remember, we are a country of 292-million people, and the United Kingdom has less than sixty-million. While we cannot expect their fighting force to be as large as ours, they still have a formidible armed forces with a global reach. While we have had civil disagreements in the past, the British have always given us support when we asked for it and it was physically possible for them to do so. We have other close partners around the world, like Poland, who have put a great amount of trust into us, and worked alongside our military in especially tense times. Our allies are the bedrock of American foreign policy, without them we stand alone on our corner of the New World. What we need to do is to expand our global reach diplomatically. As president, I will work closely with the Global Assembly to reform it and make it so that it is a more effective organization to keep the global peace. The United States is a global leader, but if we can delegate some of those responsibilities to a global, democratic institution, then we can focus on other matters at home and our own national defense instead of having to poke our heads into ever incident. What my Republican opponent has failed to understand is that if we go around swinging our weight, it is only going to build up resentment from the rest of the world. The Cold War is over.
MODERATOR: General Sharp, a one-minute response.
SHARP: We must not take on a policy of appeasement like that. The United States Navy has, since World War Two, guaranteed that global waters are largely free of pirates and open for global trade. That has revolutionized the world. This globalist utopia that my opponent is trying to push can only be achieved with safe seas and a strong, international force that will keep the world in check. I'm not so cynical, as my opponent is, that I think of the past thirty years as the United States bullying the world. The American Navy is a global force for good - it has protected the weak and defenseless, ensured the freedom of navigation around the world, and it has ensured global peace and stability. We have the Navy, and our armed forces at large, to thank for the end of the Cold War.
MODERATOR: Vice President Sinclair, in relation to global cooperation, will your administration pursue a policy of autarky, ensuring complete independence, or are there specific areas where in our globalizing world the United States can pursue interdependence with its allies and partners.
SINCLAIR: I think that question has an economic implication, as well as a geopolitical implication. I will start with economic. What the United States has come to learn since the 1980s is that free trade agreements do not benefit the United States. We have an incredibly wealthy and prosperous country and people. Other countries around the world are eager to have access to our market, but at the same time they always try to negotiate free trade agreements that are, in reality, anything but free. The American market is repeatedly opened up to foreign imports while domestic products produced in the United States are outcompeted domestically and still have tariffs against them internationally. I am not an absolute protectionist, but I adamantly believe that we must do more to protect American manufacturing. Our economy is slowly shifting towards being a service economy, and we need to stop that dead in its tracks. Americans don't just need jobs, they need careers. I would work with the unions, the Department of Commerce, and the State Department to make the United States a manufacturing Mecca again. I am not against common-sense trade deals with our allies and closest partners, but they cannot be one-sided. Geopolitically, I strongly support our alliance with the United Kingdom and Sweden, and I know that there are numerous other partners around the world that we can work with such as Poland and Australia. One more thing I do want to mention, on top of that, is that as president I would pursue normalized relations with the Russian Federation, and I would work with them to establish a working relationship politically, and have the framework to work together militarily if we ever needed to again. The world would be a much safer and better place if the United States and Russia could put some trust into each other and work together to fix some global issues.
MODERATOR: Thank you, Mister Vice President. This next question is for all three of you. The United States has the most powerful military force in the world. What changes, if any, would you make to the armed forces? General Sharp, we will start with you, sir.
SHARP: That's a great question, and an important question, Jim. There are many changes and improvements that need to be made - I could talk about this for two hours - but I will try to sum up things here as best as I can. First off, the Marine Corps needs to reembrace its original purpose, amphibious invasions. The Corps needs more funding and assets to be able to conduct a proper, large-scale amphibious invasion. Congress has always pushed to maintain this ability, and under the Gore Administration we have been lacking. Next, I would restructure the Coast Guard. Currently, it plays a role in national security that has detracted from its original mission of saving lives out at sea. Those resources and money would be better spent in the Navy. Next, speaking of the Navy, my administration would have the goal of doubling the size of the Navy over the next eight years. We need to have a force that is so formattable that we could fight a war on the fronts, or three different wars at once, and remain in good standing. An advantage that the United States has is that we have two oceans between us, and the rest of the world. Our Navy, combined with the Marine Corps, is essential to our ability to be able to project power. I would also like to see an increase in the armored units that we have now in both the Marine Corps and the Army. While these units are rarely used, they become very important when a major ground war happens anywhere in the world. Finally, I want to add that the Vice President's assertion that we can develop a close working relationship with the Russians, and even a military one, is simply... foolish. We cannot trust the Russians and they cannot trust us. It has always been like that, and it always will be.
MODERATOR: Vice President Sinclair, would you like a minute to respond to that?
SINCLAIR: There is nothing foolish about building the foundations of a proper relationship with the Russians, if they are willing to meet us half way. Since the fall of communism, the Russians have not been antagonistic towards us. In fact, they fought on the same side as us in the war with Turkey, and they lost many soldiers in the ground war, which was costly for them, but a massive benefit to the allies. I am not saying that we should share our national secrets with them, but what we do need to do is foster an opportunity where both of our countries can work together. I would like to see us going from having a look-warm tolerance to each other's existence, to a respected partnership where we can call on each other for assistance when the time comes. If we could accomplish that, it would be one of the greatest diplomatic achievements since the end of the Cold War.
Former Secretary of State
Jackson Fitzgerald
Democrat
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, the same question to you now: the United States has the most powerful military force in the world. What changes, if any, would you make to the armed forces?
FITZGERALD: Our armed forces today are in better shape then they were eight years ago, but there are still improvements that must be made. The military needs more specialized units that are highly trained and capable of being deployed around the world on a short notice and cooperating with allies and other forces. Outside of Tier One special forces, the Marines have MARSOC and the Coast Guard has Port Security units. These units need more development and attention. While the use of our armed forces abroad for large-scale conflicts is a rare occurrence and something that we should only do as a last resort, the use of these smaller, more specialized forces would still allow us to project power and assist our allies while also saving money and not committing a massive force to conflicts or incidents that don't really require it. A prime example of this would be the long-standing crisis in New Caledonia. There are paths of development where our armed forces can cooperate with allied and partner states while also becoming more specialized in their fields.
MODERATOR: Mister Vice President, the same question to you now.
SINCLAIR: There are several changes that I would want to see. Firstly, the modern Marine Corps have had a doctrine of being a military force within themselves. What I mean is that the mission was for them to essentially have their own air force for close air support and air-to-ground strike missions and transport, their own ground force for amphibious invasions and direct-action with an enemy, and armored units so that they don't have to rely on the Army. We need to get the Marine Corps back in that position again. While I do not agree that we will see any massive amphibious invasions in the near-future, I nevertheless believe that the Marine Corps need to maintain that ability. The Navy has been hesitant about maintaining the battleships that President Gore brought back into service during the war in Turkey - I think that we should not only maintain those two, but consider bringing back two more. If we do ever have to conduct a large-scale amphibious invasion, modernized Iowa-class battleships will be valuable tools. The Air Force and the National Guard have been neglected for years. They need more equipment and funding so that they can better protect the United States itself. Finally, I support the expansion of the Coast Guard, and the agencies within it, so that they can better protect the United States and assist those in distress at sea. The largest commitments here are the revitalization of the Marine Corps and the Air Force, but the National Guard will also need some work. I know that we are going to have an entire other debate about domestic affairs, but this is not to say that we do not need to divert funding to the American People, because we do. The Federal Government needs to make a significant commitment to bringing back America's urban areas to their former glory, improving education in our country and raising standards, and bettering the life of the every day American.
MODERATOR: Thank you, Vice President Sinclair. That is your two minutes. General Sharp, President Gore is an avid environmentalist, however we have yet to see any global action to leave a better Earth for our grandchildren. What action can we expect from your administration?
SHARP: I wouldn't call myself an environmentalist, but I am a conservationist. I - like many Americans - have great memories of playing in the woods with my friends, swimming in lakes and rivers, fishing and hunting, and enjoying the great outdoors. There are natural places in America that need to be protected, like our national parks and national forests, so that future generations can enjoy them too. Regulations already exist to protect the air and the water from pollution, and I support many of those regulations. Jim, I think that recent generations have forgotten what it is to be outside. This is not only important for a military force, but it's important for a society too. I want to lead a national initiative to encourage young Americans to join organizations like the Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts so that they can get in touch with the outdoors again gain some of those crucial skills that they have forgotten. There are many people in this country who probably wouldn't know how to start a fire or clean a rabbit if they had to. When people lose those kinds of skills, they become dependent instead of being independent. Our country would be a better place if more if the young people in America were hunting, camping in the woods, and fishing instead of playing video games and watching television all day. There is a lot more to being human than consuming media and buying Burger King. If we can encourage the newest generations, and the next generations, to live more in the outdoors and garner those skills, then they will live better lives.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, what say you?
FITZGERALD: I say that General Sharp just dodged that question because his campaign is funded by big oil and DuPont. We are not going to protect the environment by encouraging more Americans to go camping... The Gore Administration has maintained the crucial environmental regulations put into place under Nixon and has seen increased funding for Superfund sites around the country, but it has not been enough and it can do better. Global warming is an issue that we have to face, and the United States and other large, developed countries in Europe and Asia need to face. As president, I would lead an international effort to address some of the biggest environmental issues facing us, including global warming, acid rain, and the global destruction of forests that is occurring in developing countries around the world, such as the Congo in Africa and the Amazon in Brazil. These are problems that the United States cannot fix on its own; these are problems that the world is going to need to come together and agree to make certain changes. We share this planet together, so we are going to have to find solutions together. By the way, this is not unprecedented. The world has come together in the past for the greater good of the planet and mankind. The Montreal Protocol in 1987, for example, phased out the production and consumption of ozone-depleting-substances. These chemicals were being used in in refrigerators and air conditioning units around the world, but the world came together to take a reasonable approach to almost entirely eliminating their production and use, and since then the hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica has shrunk significantly. The world can solve problems together, and it will be able to do so even easier once we have necessary reforms made in the Global Assembly.
MODERATOR: General Sharp, would you like a one-minute response?
SHARP: I am not ashamed that some people in the oil industry have contributed to my campaign. The oil industry employs hundreds of thousands of people in the United States, in states like Texas, Louisiana, Florida, and Alaska. What America needs right now is less regulation on these industries that employ so many people. Don't get me wrong, we will continue to keep our waters and air clean, but the last time an oil refinery was built in the United States was 1998 in Atmore, Alabama. It is so difficult to build a refinery in this country, and there is so much red tape, that it is usually cost prohibitive all together. We are now importing gasoline from other countries, while we have the capacity to produce it here, because some politicians just can't stand the idea of having Americans making our own fuel and guaranteeing our energy independence.
FITZGERALD: Our armed forces today are in better shape then they were eight years ago, but there are still improvements that must be made. The military needs more specialized units that are highly trained and capable of being deployed around the world on a short notice and cooperating with allies and other forces. Outside of Tier One special forces, the Marines have MARSOC and the Coast Guard has Port Security units. These units need more development and attention. While the use of our armed forces abroad for large-scale conflicts is a rare occurrence and something that we should only do as a last resort, the use of these smaller, more specialized forces would still allow us to project power and assist our allies while also saving money and not committing a massive force to conflicts or incidents that don't really require it. A prime example of this would be the long-standing crisis in New Caledonia. There are paths of development where our armed forces can cooperate with allied and partner states while also becoming more specialized in their fields.
MODERATOR: Mister Vice President, the same question to you now.
SINCLAIR: There are several changes that I would want to see. Firstly, the modern Marine Corps have had a doctrine of being a military force within themselves. What I mean is that the mission was for them to essentially have their own air force for close air support and air-to-ground strike missions and transport, their own ground force for amphibious invasions and direct-action with an enemy, and armored units so that they don't have to rely on the Army. We need to get the Marine Corps back in that position again. While I do not agree that we will see any massive amphibious invasions in the near-future, I nevertheless believe that the Marine Corps need to maintain that ability. The Navy has been hesitant about maintaining the battleships that President Gore brought back into service during the war in Turkey - I think that we should not only maintain those two, but consider bringing back two more. If we do ever have to conduct a large-scale amphibious invasion, modernized Iowa-class battleships will be valuable tools. The Air Force and the National Guard have been neglected for years. They need more equipment and funding so that they can better protect the United States itself. Finally, I support the expansion of the Coast Guard, and the agencies within it, so that they can better protect the United States and assist those in distress at sea. The largest commitments here are the revitalization of the Marine Corps and the Air Force, but the National Guard will also need some work. I know that we are going to have an entire other debate about domestic affairs, but this is not to say that we do not need to divert funding to the American People, because we do. The Federal Government needs to make a significant commitment to bringing back America's urban areas to their former glory, improving education in our country and raising standards, and bettering the life of the every day American.
MODERATOR: Thank you, Vice President Sinclair. That is your two minutes. General Sharp, President Gore is an avid environmentalist, however we have yet to see any global action to leave a better Earth for our grandchildren. What action can we expect from your administration?
SHARP: I wouldn't call myself an environmentalist, but I am a conservationist. I - like many Americans - have great memories of playing in the woods with my friends, swimming in lakes and rivers, fishing and hunting, and enjoying the great outdoors. There are natural places in America that need to be protected, like our national parks and national forests, so that future generations can enjoy them too. Regulations already exist to protect the air and the water from pollution, and I support many of those regulations. Jim, I think that recent generations have forgotten what it is to be outside. This is not only important for a military force, but it's important for a society too. I want to lead a national initiative to encourage young Americans to join organizations like the Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts so that they can get in touch with the outdoors again gain some of those crucial skills that they have forgotten. There are many people in this country who probably wouldn't know how to start a fire or clean a rabbit if they had to. When people lose those kinds of skills, they become dependent instead of being independent. Our country would be a better place if more if the young people in America were hunting, camping in the woods, and fishing instead of playing video games and watching television all day. There is a lot more to being human than consuming media and buying Burger King. If we can encourage the newest generations, and the next generations, to live more in the outdoors and garner those skills, then they will live better lives.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald, what say you?
FITZGERALD: I say that General Sharp just dodged that question because his campaign is funded by big oil and DuPont. We are not going to protect the environment by encouraging more Americans to go camping... The Gore Administration has maintained the crucial environmental regulations put into place under Nixon and has seen increased funding for Superfund sites around the country, but it has not been enough and it can do better. Global warming is an issue that we have to face, and the United States and other large, developed countries in Europe and Asia need to face. As president, I would lead an international effort to address some of the biggest environmental issues facing us, including global warming, acid rain, and the global destruction of forests that is occurring in developing countries around the world, such as the Congo in Africa and the Amazon in Brazil. These are problems that the United States cannot fix on its own; these are problems that the world is going to need to come together and agree to make certain changes. We share this planet together, so we are going to have to find solutions together. By the way, this is not unprecedented. The world has come together in the past for the greater good of the planet and mankind. The Montreal Protocol in 1987, for example, phased out the production and consumption of ozone-depleting-substances. These chemicals were being used in in refrigerators and air conditioning units around the world, but the world came together to take a reasonable approach to almost entirely eliminating their production and use, and since then the hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica has shrunk significantly. The world can solve problems together, and it will be able to do so even easier once we have necessary reforms made in the Global Assembly.
MODERATOR: General Sharp, would you like a one-minute response?
SHARP: I am not ashamed that some people in the oil industry have contributed to my campaign. The oil industry employs hundreds of thousands of people in the United States, in states like Texas, Louisiana, Florida, and Alaska. What America needs right now is less regulation on these industries that employ so many people. Don't get me wrong, we will continue to keep our waters and air clean, but the last time an oil refinery was built in the United States was 1998 in Atmore, Alabama. It is so difficult to build a refinery in this country, and there is so much red tape, that it is usually cost prohibitive all together. We are now importing gasoline from other countries, while we have the capacity to produce it here, because some politicians just can't stand the idea of having Americans making our own fuel and guaranteeing our energy independence.
Vice President of The United States
Benjamin Valentine Sinclair
Independent
MODERATOR: Vice President Sinclair, I will repeat the question for you: President Gore is an avid environmentalist, however we have yet to see any global action to leave a better Earth for our grandchildren. What action can we expect from your administration?
SINCLAIR: The environmental issues in our county, and the world, are often oversimplified. Some people, nowadays, only want to focus on global warming or one singular issue when there is, in reality, several high-priority issues that are facing our country. Energy independence is a national security issue for the United States. Instead of drilling into the ground every one hundred feet in Alaska and Texas, there are better, more innovative solutions that we can focus on. As president, I would assemble the best mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers that we have in our country to design private and public transportation that does not rely on fossil fuels, but instead focuses on vehicles powered by electric batteries or hydrogen fuel cells. These vehicles would be clean on our streets and reduce smog and air pollution and, at the same time, they would be safer on the road. I would also encourage the construction of power stations that produced electricity by means other than coal including: natural gas, which burns much cleaner than coal, wind, solar, and nuclear. A combination of these forms of energy, in the right places and under the right circumstances, will put the United States on track to being a cleaner and more environmentally friendly nation. I would also make sure that these vehicles are manufactured in America to bring more high-paying jobs, and we could export them all over the country and all over the world. If we could remove fossil fuels from transportation, it would be the single-greatest step we can take to reducing the production of greenhouse gases, acid rain, and smog that chokes our children while they are walking to school. That would be an incredible first step which could reasonably be done, it will just take the right leadership to do it.
MODERATOR: Gentlemen, thank you for participating tonight. I will give each of you one minute to make a closing remark. General Sharp?
SHARP: America's strength comes from the American People. If we can give them more freedom and less taxes, they will be poised to be greater entrepreneurs and improve the economy. As president, I would cut spending and government bloat, and the government would take less in taxes from the everyday working man. If the government would just give the American People some breathing room, we could get our country back on track. If you want more jobs in our country, if you want the world to respect us, and if you want a powerful American military that will safeguard you and your family, I ask that you consider voting for me in November. Thank you Jim for moderating, and thank you to the fine people here at the University of Miami for hosting us.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald.
FITZGERALD: Thanks Jim, and thank you to the University of Florida for hosting us tonight. Internationally I want to see an America that works with the rest of the world so that we can all work together to move mankind forward. Our country has been a global leader since the 1920s, and we will continue to be under my administration. If we can focus on bettering relations with other countries around the world, it will pay dividends. We will reap advantages in trade, domestic production of goods, jobs, and we will be less likely to have to spend time in war or conflicts where Americans have to go and die. We, as a country, have come so far and now all we have to do is take the next great leap forward to achieve further greatness. I'm ready to take that leap, and I invite you to join me.
MODERATOR: Mister Vice President, your final thoughts sir?
SINCLAIR: What America needs is a president who is going to roll up his sleeves and go around this country to fix the problems that we are facing. I have seen the closed factories in Maine and New England, I have seen the ghost towns in the Midwest, I have seen the crumbling bridges in Louisiana and the slums in New York and Los Angeles! Our country does not have to tolerate poverty in the deep south and Appalachia, our country does not have to tolerate public schools with thirty-year-old textbooks and underpaid teachers! What our country needs is a president who will lead us the next four years into this twenty-first century, which we are going to make into another American century! Elect me as your president, and I swear on my honor to lead our republic to the stars. God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.
MODERATOR: We will continue this dialogue next week on October 13th at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. The format then will be more informal, more conversational with the three candidates seated at a table with me. Thank you, Secretary Fitzgerald, General Sharp, and Vice President Sinclair. See you next week. For now from Florida, I’m Jim Lehrer. Thank you, and good night.
SINCLAIR: The environmental issues in our county, and the world, are often oversimplified. Some people, nowadays, only want to focus on global warming or one singular issue when there is, in reality, several high-priority issues that are facing our country. Energy independence is a national security issue for the United States. Instead of drilling into the ground every one hundred feet in Alaska and Texas, there are better, more innovative solutions that we can focus on. As president, I would assemble the best mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers that we have in our country to design private and public transportation that does not rely on fossil fuels, but instead focuses on vehicles powered by electric batteries or hydrogen fuel cells. These vehicles would be clean on our streets and reduce smog and air pollution and, at the same time, they would be safer on the road. I would also encourage the construction of power stations that produced electricity by means other than coal including: natural gas, which burns much cleaner than coal, wind, solar, and nuclear. A combination of these forms of energy, in the right places and under the right circumstances, will put the United States on track to being a cleaner and more environmentally friendly nation. I would also make sure that these vehicles are manufactured in America to bring more high-paying jobs, and we could export them all over the country and all over the world. If we could remove fossil fuels from transportation, it would be the single-greatest step we can take to reducing the production of greenhouse gases, acid rain, and smog that chokes our children while they are walking to school. That would be an incredible first step which could reasonably be done, it will just take the right leadership to do it.
MODERATOR: Gentlemen, thank you for participating tonight. I will give each of you one minute to make a closing remark. General Sharp?
SHARP: America's strength comes from the American People. If we can give them more freedom and less taxes, they will be poised to be greater entrepreneurs and improve the economy. As president, I would cut spending and government bloat, and the government would take less in taxes from the everyday working man. If the government would just give the American People some breathing room, we could get our country back on track. If you want more jobs in our country, if you want the world to respect us, and if you want a powerful American military that will safeguard you and your family, I ask that you consider voting for me in November. Thank you Jim for moderating, and thank you to the fine people here at the University of Miami for hosting us.
MODERATOR: Secretary Fitzgerald.
FITZGERALD: Thanks Jim, and thank you to the University of Florida for hosting us tonight. Internationally I want to see an America that works with the rest of the world so that we can all work together to move mankind forward. Our country has been a global leader since the 1920s, and we will continue to be under my administration. If we can focus on bettering relations with other countries around the world, it will pay dividends. We will reap advantages in trade, domestic production of goods, jobs, and we will be less likely to have to spend time in war or conflicts where Americans have to go and die. We, as a country, have come so far and now all we have to do is take the next great leap forward to achieve further greatness. I'm ready to take that leap, and I invite you to join me.
MODERATOR: Mister Vice President, your final thoughts sir?
SINCLAIR: What America needs is a president who is going to roll up his sleeves and go around this country to fix the problems that we are facing. I have seen the closed factories in Maine and New England, I have seen the ghost towns in the Midwest, I have seen the crumbling bridges in Louisiana and the slums in New York and Los Angeles! Our country does not have to tolerate poverty in the deep south and Appalachia, our country does not have to tolerate public schools with thirty-year-old textbooks and underpaid teachers! What our country needs is a president who will lead us the next four years into this twenty-first century, which we are going to make into another American century! Elect me as your president, and I swear on my honor to lead our republic to the stars. God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.
MODERATOR: We will continue this dialogue next week on October 13th at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. The format then will be more informal, more conversational with the three candidates seated at a table with me. Thank you, Secretary Fitzgerald, General Sharp, and Vice President Sinclair. See you next week. For now from Florida, I’m Jim Lehrer. Thank you, and good night.
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