Nixon
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1:32:03
...tailback... the one
with the blood disease.

1:32:05
Ernie Davis.
Yeah, right, right, right.

1:32:09
I used to play a little ball
myself at Whittier.

1:32:12
Of course, they used to use me
as atackling dummy.

1:32:17
We didn't come here
to talk about football.

1:32:21
Yeah, I understand that.
1:32:25
How old are you, young lady?
Nineteen.

1:32:29
Yeah.
1:32:31
Well, probably most of you think
I'm a real S.O.B. I know that.

1:32:35
I understand how you feel.
1:32:37
But, you know,
I want peace too.

1:32:40
But peace with honor.
What does that mean?

1:32:43
Well, you can't have peace
without a price.

1:32:47
Sometimes you have to be,
uh, willing to fight for peace...

1:32:50
...and sometimes to die.
1:32:52
Yeah? Tell that to the G.I.s who
are going to die tomorrow in Vietnam.

1:32:56
What lets you kill
women and children?

1:32:58
What you have to understand is we're
willing to die for what we believe in.

1:33:01
Thas right.
Is the truth.

1:33:04
Yeah.
1:33:08
Look, that man up there...
1:33:10
...he lived in similar times.
1:33:12
Oh, he had chaos, civil war,
hatred between the races.

1:33:16
This is all bullshit.
Sometimes I go to the Lincoln Room...

1:33:20
...at the White House
and just pray.

1:33:22
But, you know, Liberals...
1:33:24
...act like idealism belongs to them.
1:33:28
Thas not true.
1:33:30
My family...
1:33:33
...went Republican because
Lincoln freed the slaves.

1:33:36
My grandmother
was an abolitionist.

1:33:38
It was Quakers who founded
Whittier, my hometown.

1:33:41
Uh, to abolish slavery.
1:33:45
They were, you know,
conservative bible folk...

1:33:47
...but they had a powerful
sense of right and wrong.

1:33:51
Forty years ago...
I was like you.

1:33:55
Looking for answers.
1:33:58
See?
1:33:59
Tricky Dick himself.

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