Donald Trump Speech on RNC Day 4: “Nobody know the system better than me, I alone can fix it”
ByThe most awaited part of the last day of the Republican National Convention is the acceptance speech of the party's Presidential Nominee Mr. Donald Trump. Everyone was curious on the content of his speech and how he would deliver it - will he read a prepared text on a teleprompter? The cheers from the crowd of supporters signified one thing -- the Presidential nominee has laid down good points during his two-hour speaking slot.
On the issue of law and order, in his speech, he said, "In this race for the Whitehouse, I am your Law and Order candidate". He cited the current administration's failure to protect its inner cities such as the 2,000 shooting incidents occurred in the hometown of President Obama in Chicago. He also emphasized his disgust over oppression thrown to the LGBTQ community and condemned the mass shooting in Orlando that claimed 49 lives.
He addressed the economic concerns through presenting his agenda to fight against poverty, "I will outline reforms to add millions of new jobs and trillions in new wealth that can be used to rebuild America." He added, "A number of this reforms that I will outline tonight will be opposed by some of our nation's most powerful special interests." He cited big businesses, elite media and major donors who are behind the demolition job against him. To the poor, he assured that he is their voice.
The issue of Islamic radicalism that led to terrorism was also addressed in three things. According to Trump, "We must have the best intelligence-gathering operation in the world, suspend immigration from any nation that has been compromised by terrorism and build a great border wall to stop illegal immigration."
The business-minded presidential candidate is serious in making America great again by saying, "I have made billions of dollars in business making deals - now I'm going to make our country rich again."
He ended his speech by thanking his family and honoring the memory of his father whom he considered as his mentor. "I'm with you - the American People," was his pledge to his supporters.