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in the world. For years, the Cali cartel pumped drugs into the American
economy and into the veins of the American people with impunity. But
after years of operating largely untouched by Colombian law enforcement,
I am proud to say that seven of the eight top drug traffickers in the
Cali cocaine cartel were arrested by Colombian authorities with our
support and cooperation in 1995.
Investigative activity by United States enforcement agencies
provided much of the evidence against the Cali kingpins. We are also
using our military and our law enforcement activities beyond our borders
in other ways. We are working more closely together among ourselves and
with other countries. We are beginning to have a real impact.
But we know that cutting off the supply is only half the equation.
As long as the demand remains great in America, people will figure out
how to provide some supply. We have to take more steps here in this
country to reduce demand. We have to take more steps to punish people
who are making a killing by killing other people. And we have to take
more steps to empower people like you to do the education, the
treatment, and the
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prevention work that will turn this generation of young people away from
this madness.
A year ago with the enactment of the crime bill we attempted to give
the American people the tools they need to do what has to be done here
at home. We put more police on the street, and we did more to get guns
and drugs and children off the street.
The 100,000 police commitment of the Federal Government is running
ahead of schedule and under budget. The crime rate is down in almost
every State in America, in no small measure because people are out there
in uniform, walking the streets in the communities, doing what they can
to help prevent crime. More and more law enforcement officers are in our
schools through programs like the D.A.R.E. program, trying to help
educate children and prevent the drug problem from taking hold.
``Three strikes and you're out'' is now the law of the land, and
more and more career criminals are being tried under it and convicted
under it. We are taking steps against the terrible problems of violence
against women. And the crime bill, together with the education bills
that were passed in our budget, have increased our commitment to drug
treatment as well as to education and other prevention strategies, which
is also important.
Throughout, there has been an emphasis on community empowerment. If
you think about what your National Government does directly--well, we do
the national defense directly. We do some law enforcement directly. We
do some things directly through the mail, the Social Security checks,
the Medicare checks. But a lot of what we do--in the form of education,
in the form of protecting the environment, in the form of promoting law
enforcement and safe streets, in the form of growing the economy--a lot
of what we do, we do in partnership with individuals at the community
level. And we have tried to focus on that very sharply. So we've tried
to bring down the size of the Federal bureaucracy but to increase the
commitment of the Federal Government at the grassroots level so you
could do what needs to be done.
You know, this is beginning to work. We know that for the first time
in a long time, as I said, the crime rate is down. There is a greater
responsibility ethic in the country. There's a stronger sense of family
in the country. There's a stronger sense of community in the country.
In addition to the crime rate being down, you might be interested to
know that over the last 3 years, the welfare rolls are down, the food
stamp rolls are down, the teen pregnancy rate has come down 2 years in a
row, and the poverty rate is down. Child support payments are up 40
percent, and the college loan delinquency rate is down by 50 percent.
There is a real sense that this country is coming back together around
core values, and that's very important.
Having said that, we know that crime, welfare, poverty, violence,
and drug abuse are still far too high. We know that random juvenile
violence and casual juvenile drug use are both going up, even as the
overall statistics seem to be getting better. There's still too many of
our children out there raising themselves. There are too many kids out
there who aren't a part of something wholesome and positive and bigger
than themselves; the people are not taking responsibility for their
future and trying to help them take responsibility for themselves. And
there is still way too much violence in this country, as the tragic
example of the Plank family shows.
So let me say--and Jim made a reference to it, but it is in this
context that I want you all to see and make your own judgments about the
budget battle now raging in Washington. We do have to continue to bring
this deficit down, and we do need to balance our budget. I'm proud of
the fact that it's gone from a $290 billion a year budget to $164
billion a year budget in just 3 years. And I'm--you might be interested
to know that as a percentage of our income, the United States now has
the lowest budget deficit of any industrial country in the world except
for Norway, in the entire world today.
Now, that doesn't mean that we don't need to do more. We built up
such a huge debt in the 1980's and early nineties. We need to do more.
But it means we have to do it in a way that's consistent with our
values. Why do we need to eliminate the deficit? Because we want to grow
the economy and raise incomes and give our children a brighter future.
But we have to do it in a way that
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looks to our values, give people a chance to make the most of their own
lives, to strengthen families, to reward work and family, and to help
communities solve their problems. That is the purpose of this.
That's why I have said repeatedly I think it is a mistake to balance
the budget if we cut education or if we harm the health care system or
undermine the environment or weaken law enforcement or raise taxes on
working families. I don't think those should be options. If you look at
the work at which you are involved, you are doing this work, but it
makes a difference if the Nation is contributing to law enforcement. It
makes a difference if a nation is contributing to drug education. It
makes a real difference if the Nation is contributing to the treatment
programs. All these things matter.
We simply cannot balance the budget in a way that puts our children
at risk or that weakens our resolve to fight the drug problem. And we do
not have to do that. We cannot walk away from the fight against drugs
and violence. We have to walk right into it. If the Plank family,
bearing the burden of their grief only 2 weeks old, have the courage to
come here and stand up for making America a better place to live, a
drug-free place to live, a violence-free place to live; if these other
families that have sustained their terrible losses have the courage to
come here, surely the rest of us can have the courage and vision and
wisdom to say, we can deal with our budget problems in Washington
without walking away from our values and our responsibilities.
Let me say that one of the things that concerns me most as President
is to see the economy coming back and all these indicators that society
is getting healthier, and then to see underneath it that juvenile
violence is still going up and that casual juvenile drug use is still
going up. If we don't turn that around, then all of these directions
could be brought to a screeching halt as more and more of these
juveniles become adults.
And I told the Attorney General that in terms of law enforcement we
need to focus on the problem of juvenile violence more than ever before
to see what can be done there. We can't tolerate the killing of an
innocent child by gang members simply because her parents drove down the
wrong street. We can't tolerate the killing of innocent children in
schools, or what happened in Maryland not very long ago, an honor
student standing at a bus stop just happened to be in the way, in the
crossfire of two gangs that took a notion to shoot at each other. We
can't tolerate the shooting of one youth by another simply because the
killer felt that he was shown disrespect and therefore had a right to
shoot another child. That is not the America I grew up in. That is not
the America that won World War II or the cold war or that stood for
freedom and opportunity for the whole world. And that is not the America
we can afford to leave to our children.
We also have to deal with this whole problem of casual drug use. You
heard Jim Burke talk about it; you heard Lee Brown talk about it.
There's a lot of evidence that young people simply have--starting in
about 1991, began to believe that some kinds of casual drug use simply
weren't dangerous and didn't have to be countenanced very seriously.
That is not true. It is not true because as a pure medical matter,
marijuana is more toxic than ever before, because people who do it are
now mixing it with other things, like huffing all these dangerous fumes,
because very often they get into other drugs. We have got to do
something about it.
Most of our children are busy building good lives. Most of our kids
are more than happy to show up for activities like this. They're not
involved in violent activities. They're doing well in their schools.
They, I would say, should be applauded. I think that we forget
sometimes--[applause]--what we need to ask these young people to do is
what these young people are doing here. If the kids are doing well--and
the vast majority are--if the kids are emphasizing the importance of
staying in school and staying drug-free--as the vast majority are--we
need to ask more of them to do what these young people are, to be an
example to their peers, because many of them can have far more influence
over young people their age than the rest of us old fogies can.
[Laughter] And we need to applaud them and give them encouragement.
The other thing I want to say, just to reemphasize what Jim Copple
said and what Jim
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Burke said, we need every community in America to be a part of this
alliance. Every community in America should have a group that's a part
of this alliance, because we know that we can make a difference. It is
simply not true that you cannot whip this problem. And a lot of you are
living evidence of that.
The citizens of Pierce County, Washington, for example, who have the
safe streets campaign to combat illegal drug and gang activity and
violence that accompanies these problems, they know their efforts are
making a difference. They have closed down over 600 drug dealing
locations in 12 communities and reduced calls to 911 by 23,000.
Not just an urban problem, Hamilton, Missouri, citizens are banding
together, using such innovations as a youth peer court in conflict
mediation beginning in the 4th grade to educate and empower young
people. There's a lot of things you folks are doing that are working.
And as I look out at this whole array of energetic, wide-eyed, upbeat,
positive people, I think to myself: The real problem we have in America
is that we have not learned yet to figure out how to take a solution
that works in one community and put it into every community which is not
doing anything. So I want to say to you, I want you to keep up the good
work, but we have to find a way to say to every community in America,
``If something is working somewhere else, you're really doing your
children and your future a disservice if you haven't done it in your
community.'' Every community in America should be a part of this
alliance.
In an attempt to facilitate greater progress in dealing with the
problems of juvenile violence and juvenile drug use, I will convene a
White House Leadership Conference on Adolescent Drug Use and Violence in
January. We want to bring together people like you to highlight
successes in local communities, and we want to help you build a true,
national coalition to combat drugs and violence. You'll be hearing more
about that in the coming weeks.
One of the things we want to highlight is the positive role the
media can play in the fight against drugs. Every day, as many of us have
said, the children of this country are bombarded with messages that tell
them it's cool, sexy, attractive to drink and smoke and do drugs. But
conversely, let's not forget, that the media can also play a very
positive role in influencing the attitudes of our young people about the
harmfulness and the unacceptability of using drugs. The Partnership for
a Drug-Free America, which Jim Burke has led so ably, has proven that
over and over again. The media has donated over $2 billion in support of
partnership antidrug messages on television and radio, in print and
outdoor billboards. Lee Brown has been able to enlist the support of a
number of sports and television celebrities in new TV and radio public
service campaign spots aimed at our Nation's youth, telling them they do
have the power to stay drug-free.
So these messages are working to change attitudes. They can make a
difference. So what I want to say is, just like I want every community
in the country to have an organization that's a member of CADCA, and I
want you to go out to all them and get it done, just as I want the vast
majority of our young people who are doing the right thing with their
lives to do what these young people are doing and reach out to other
kids and help them. We ask the media across this Nation, when it comes
to the fight against drugs, turn up the volume.
I also ask you not to forget that the media is not a national thing
entirely. Lee Brown and Bill Clinton and Jim Burke and Jim Copple and
all the rest, we can go to the networks and to the large media centers
and say, ``Will you help us do this?'' But the media in America is a
many-faceted thing. And there are things that can be done in your
community by people who are more than willing to help if you ask them to
do it.
Oftentimes, too many of our young people spend too much time
relating to the media as opposed to other people. They don't have enough
time for a lot of things that time ought to be spent on, and too much
time sitting in front of the television. We need to ask for help to turn
up the volume. I have been profoundly impressed by the number of
positive things that our media has done to help us in this battle. We
need to come up with systematic plans in every community to do more.
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So that's it. I feel pretty good about the future of this country,
and you should, too. This is a very great country. We go through
difficult periods from time to time. We will always have some bad
people, as any society does. There will always be a measure of tragedy,
as is the lot of human nature, as the Scripture teaches us. But America
is coming back together. America is moving forward economically. But
America dare not forget that our children are the future of this
country. And if we want America to be the strongest, greatest nation in
the world in the 21st century, we have got--we have got to stamp out
this madness.
And you have to do your part; I have to do mine. In the end, we know
that what you do to get people to take control of their own lives, their
families' lives, and their community lives will tell the tale.
I think we are moving in the right direction. We know we've just got
too many kids out their that are still raising themselves, and we have
to help that. But if we do it--if we do it, we can make the service and
the sacrifice of people like Trooper Plank a shining memory in the life
of our country. We owe it to them. Let's deliver.
Thank you, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 10:55 a.m. at the J.W. Marriott Hotel. In
his remarks, he referred to Lori Plank, widow of Maryland State Trooper
Ed Plank, killed in the line of duty; and James E. Copple, president,
and Marni Vliet, board chair, Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
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Monday, November 6, 1995
Volume 31--Number 44
Pages 1951-1982
Week Ending Friday, November 3, 1995
Statement on Congressional Action on Proposed Environmental Legislation
November 2, 1995
Today's vote on the 17 special interest environmental riders is a
step in the right direction, but we still have a long way to go if we
are to stop Congress' assault on public health and the environment.
Even with the elimination of the riders, the Republican budget still
dismantles vital protections that keep our Nation healthy, safe, and
secure. It still cuts funding for enforcement of environmental laws in
half. America cannot protect the environment if we gut enforcement of
anti-pollution laws.
As important as today's vote was, Congress' responsibility does not
end here. Now, Congressional Republicans must take the next steps and
change their bill to fully protect public health and the environment. As
we balance the budget in the interest of our children, we must not leave
them a world that is more polluted and less livable.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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[Page 1971-1972]
Monday, November 6, 1995
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