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Transcript for Tea Party Celebration
| Time | Content |
|---|---|
| 00:00 → 00:03 |
[Applause] |
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I have to tell you that this group, this movement, this excitement, has been unbelievable. |
| 00:15 → 00:21 |
leaving surgery to start a software company, and having a lot of fun along the way, but I've never been involved |
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in politics. Politics always seemed so "out there", politicians are all bought and paid for, |
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it's all run by special and corporate interests, and I just wanted to be left alone to try and create value |
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as a free human being. It wasn't until I realized that we actually had one true statesman left, |
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there was actually one person who, unbeknownst to me, had been laboring tirelessly |
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in Washington for the past 30 years saying, "Hey, you know what? When we founded this country, |
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it wasn't just a bunch of guys getting around a table and saying 'Majority rules', |
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there was actually the Rule of Law involved, and there's this thing called the Constitution, |
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and if you listen to it, and if you follow what it says, it sets out what is the appropriate scope |
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and scale of the federal government, and let's leave all this other stuff, all the tough decisions, |
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all the hard work, let's leave that to the states and the local people. |
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Because they're closest to the action, and that's where the government can be the most responsive, |
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and it can allow us to have the most amount of freedom, and the most amount of liberty, |
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to pursue what is in our best interest as free Americans." |
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And boy, does that sound revolutionary, or what? [Applause] |
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I've had this splinter in my brain for years, thinking that something's not right, |
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and when I left surgery residency to start this software company, all of a sudden |
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I was in the process of creating jobs, of building a business, raising money, allocating capital, |
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building teams, trying to serve the market, and it was hard work. |
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Does anyone in here own their own business? Any business owners? That's good! |
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We NEED more owners in this country! We need to have folks who are not going to necessarily |
| 02:04 → 02:08 |
get a job, but people who are going to create jobs. When I look at the experience that I had, |
| 02:08 → 02:16 |
in getting out of a path towards a profession, i.e. medicine, and actually starting a company, |
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trying to create value in the marketplace, you begin to realize that things when you're actually trying |
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to create value for customers, and convince people to GIVE you money, |
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NOT to take money from people, but to convince people to GIVE you money, |
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boy, that's a big challenge! That's a big responsibility. And what would it be like |
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if our citizens, if everyone in this room, looked at a job application from the perspective of |
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"Yeah, I could get that job, I could take that job, or I could do my own thing over here"? |
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If you try to go out on your own, if you try to "be your own boss" and start your own business, |
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or to grow a small or family business, what are you dealing with? |
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You're dealing with IRS, EIN, SEC, you name it, there are tons of 3- and 4- letter bureaucracies |
| 02:58 → 03:05 |
that you've got to navigate just to create value for yourself and your community as a free individual. |
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And I'm really pleased and thrilled to be out here this evening with such a great group of people, |
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I've really enjoyed getting involved in the Ron Paul movement because I think that the essence of it |
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is this idea that liberty and freedom as the ideals on which our country was founded |
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really get down to economic freedom, as well. And that's the thing that I find so exciting |
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and so empowering and I'm really excited to be able to share with us tonight. |
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We've got some great sponsors for the evening, the good folks at Ninth Street Bakery |
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gave us some fantastic baked goods, [Applause] |
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I was talking to Frank, the guy who owns Ninth Street Bakery, the cost of his organic whole wheat flour |
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is up 67 percent! Wow, go figure that one out. So, clearly, they're not getting a lot of corporate welfare |
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to help build their business, and they're not being paid say, NOT, to make bread, while we have |
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industrial agriculture being paid not to grow corn or wheat. How do I sign up for that job, right? |
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But here are small businesses trying to do a good job in their community, and are dealing with all these challenges. |
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I'd also like to recognize our sushi chef in the back corner, [Applause] |
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Now that is a craft, that is a skill! I can't do that! And it's just amazing to me that I can walk into a room, |
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part with a five dollar Federal Reserve Note, and get some REALLY good sushi. That's just fantastic! |
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Is this a great country, or what? We need more of that. We need more of that initiative, |
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we need more of that entrepreneurship, and in the way, way back I want to recognize |
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M.K. and Morgan... show of hands... now this is a startup business. |
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Ok, so we're talking about Carolina Biofuels and Greenway Transit. |
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So Carolina Biofuels has literally recycled an old Exxon oil terminal here in downtown Durham, |
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and they are taking waste vegetable oil and trap grease and stuff from restaurants. |
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Restaurants in the past had to PAY to get taken out of their fryers and hauled away and disposed of. |
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Well, you can actually create a business out of recycling that waste into fuel that will |
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get you around in a diesel car, or heat your home. How's that? That's a pretty good deal! [Applause] |
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but they're not getting a lot of corporate welfare, there aren't any tax breaks for their "exploration costs", |
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they don't have the U.S. taxpayer and military at their beck and call to secure their pipelines and so forth, |
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what they're doing is just taking advantage of an economic opportunity and making something happen. |
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What's so exciting about what we're doing here, and what we're seeing here |
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is that people who previously thought that our federal government was out of reach |
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are beginning to realize that no, in fact, it's not. And it can't be. And it shouldn't be. |
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Because if we do not want to completely lose our freedom to a government whose interests |
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are no longer distinguishable from corporate interests, now is the time to act. |
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I got into this not because I wanted to be a politician, but because I have three kids, and an amazing wife, |
| 06:28 → 06:34 |
and I am really concerned about the nation and the direction it's going and what kind of world |
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my kids are going to inherit. [Applause] |
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It's been an extreme pleasure and extreme privilege... I see some kids waving up there, there we go... |
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It's been an extreme privilege working with such a fantastic group of patriots, and frankly folks that I |
| 07:00 → 07:05 |
never previously knew existed. But I think that the amazing thing is that people are waking up. |
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And the problem is that folks are so BUSY. We're all busy, but people who are "middle class", |
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such that the middle class even exists any more, two income families, working two jobs, |
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it's all you can do to put food on the table, put the kids to bed, lather, rinse, repeat, and |
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So it is up to us, it's up to the people who have the inclination to get involved, to be involved, |
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to spread the word, and get our neighbors involved as well, because this is the time to act. |
| 07:37 → 07:44 |
And our nation is being galvanized around the candidacy of one gifted and courageous individual |
| 07:44 → 07:49 |
who has stood on principle for 30 years, and we're celebrating that tonight. We're also celebrating |
| 07:49 → 07:54 |
the fact that lots of other people are getting involved too. We're about to hear from Mike Munger, |
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we've just heard from Bob Orr, we have people who are putting their voices into the debate, |
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and I hope, I sincerely hope, that many, many, many more of the people in this room |
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will stand up and say, "I want to run for office." Because until we get to the point where we get back |
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to a government that's of the people, by the people, BY the people, and for the people, |
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we're going to be moving in the wrong direction. There aren't any easy answers, there's no silver bullet, |
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we're in a bad position right now, but while we can't change our POSITION immediately, |
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we CAN change our DIRECTION immediately. And all we have to do is change the direction. |
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And that's what's so exciting. |
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Just for a quick money check, we have the Internet back up, what's the money bomb doing? |
| 08:42 → 08:56 |
[Dana]: $16.3 [B.J.]: So we're at $16.3 million for the quarter, [Applause] |
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I imagine folks thought Ron Paul was kind of crazy when he said he'd raise $12 million for the quarter. |
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So $16.3 is pretty good. And I am really excited to introduce a good friend and courageous colleague. |
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I am going to be shortly giving up, well, shortly i.e., immediately giving up my leadership |
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of the Triangle Meetup, not because it's not one of the most amazing and rewarding experiences |
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I've had in my adult life, but because I'm in the process of launching my own candidacy for U.S. Congress |
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here in North Carolina. [Applause] |
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And again, I'm not a politician. If you ask me a question, you're going to get what I think at this moment in time, |
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we'll discuss it, we'll debate it, and we'll go to the mat because I'm just not good at talking around things. |
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Given our position as a country, it's too important for us to be talking around the issues. |
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We need to be talking about the issues. |

