State of the Union Address (1790-2001) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 5,523 pages of information about State of the Union Address (1790-2001).

State of the Union Address (1790-2001) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 5,523 pages of information about State of the Union Address (1790-2001).

For seven years the people have borne with uncomplaining courage the tremendous burden of national and local taxation.  These must both be reduced.  The taxes of the Nation must be reduced now as much as prudence will permit, and expenditures must be reduced accordingly.  High taxes reach everywhere and burden everybody.  They gear most heavily upon the poor.  They diminish industry and commerce.  They make agriculture unprofitable.  They increase the rates on transportation.  They are a charge on every necessary of life.  Of all services which the Congress can render to the country, I have no hesitation in declaring t neglect it, to postpone it, to obstruct it by unsound proposals, is to become unworthy of public confidence and untrue to public trust.  The country wants this measure to have the right of way over an others.

Another reform which is urgent in our fiscal system is the abolition of the right to issue tax-exempt securities.  The existing system not only permits a large amount of the wealth of the Notion to escape its just burden but acts as a continual stimulant to municipal extravagance.  This should be prohibited by constitutional amendment.  All the wealth of the Nation ought to contribute its fair share to the expenses of the Nation.

TARIFF TAW

The present tariff law has accomplished its two main objects.  It has secured an abundant revenue and been productive of an abounding prosperity.  Under it the country has had a very large export and import trade.  A constant revision of the tariff by the Congress is disturbing and harmful.  The present law contains an elastic provision authorizing the President to increase or decrease present schedules not in excess of 50 per centum to meet the difference in cost of production at home and abroad.  This does not, to my mind, warrant a rewriting g of the whole law, but does mean, and will be so administered, that whenever the required investigation shows that inequalities of sufficient importance exist in any schedule, the power to change them should and will be applied.

SHIPPING

The entire well being of our country is dependent upon transportation by sea and land.  Our Government during the war acquired a large merchant fleet which should be transferred, as soon as possible, to private ownership and operation under conditions which would secure two results:  First, and of prime importance, adequate means for national defense; second, adequate service to American commerce.  Until shipping conditions are such that our fleet can be disposed of advantageously under these conditions, it will be operated as economically as possible under such plans as may be devised from time to time by the Shipping Board.  We must have a merchant marine which meets these requirements, and we shall have to pay the cost of its service.

PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
State of the Union Address (1790-2001) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.