Home > 1994 Presidential Documents > pd07no94 in Des Moines, Iowa...pd07no94 in Des Moines, Iowa...
with muscles would pick her up. But she's in California on our behalf. I
had a great time here last year, too. Fabio lifted Hillary up; Danny
DeVito sat in my lap. [Laughter] At least it wasn't Dom DeLuise.
[Laughter] We had a great--all of us had a good time here.
You know, I'm sure everyone thinks from time to time about what he
or she might have liked to do with their lives, and a lot of you know
I've been made fun of for some of my habits. But when I saw Nicholas
Cage tonight, I told him that one of my great disappointments was that I
wasn't hired as one of the Elvis impersonators to be in ``Honeymoon in
Las Vegas'' with him. [Laughter] He promised me a role in his next
movie. [Laughter]
Senator Leahy said in jest what I would say in jest, which is that
it was nice to be home in the safety and security of the White House
after going to the Middle East. [Laughter] I want you to know a couple
of things about that, seriously. First of all, a gunman did open fire;
nobody was hurt. The man was captured. The man was captured in part
because of ordinary citizens who were standing there, who did their
duty. And I hope that is an example for others around the country. I
also want you to know the Secret Service did their usual magnificent
job. I was upstairs listening to a football game, and the shots were
sort of intermittent with
[[Page 2198]]
the cheers--[laughter]--and they were up there within a minute. And I
thank them for the fine work that they do every day for our country. The
last thing I'd like to say to all of you is, if we ever needed an
example of why the Congress did the right thing to pass the crime bill,
including the assault weapons ban, that was it today.
As you know, Senator Leahy and I just returned from the Middle East.
We got home this morning about 8 o'clock. I went there for three
reasons: first of all, to witness the historic peace treaty between
Israel and Jordan, which the United States was privileged to help bring
about, second, to try to continue to further the peace process in the
Middle East. We now have the Washington Declaration between the PLO and
Israel, and I was there working to see that it is fully implemented and
that we do everything we can to minimize the ability of terrorists to
kill the peace by killing innocent people and to try to further the
prospect of peace with Syria and with Lebanon, without which we will
never have a complete peace there. And finally, I went there to thank
our troops in the Persian Gulf and to reiterate the intention of the
United States to protect the freedom of the nations in the Persian Gulf.
I'm sure all of you shared the pride that I felt, the pride of an
ordinary American citizen, over the last several weeks as we have seen
from the Middle East to South Africa, from Northern Ireland to Haiti,
the people of the world look to America to support them in their
courageous efforts to support peace and freedom. They respect our
strength. They respect our military and our economic strength. But they
also respect our energy, our drive, our creativity, the power of our
example, and the fact that they know the United States has good
intentions for the rest of the world, that what we really want is to be
more secure and more prosperous by helping other people to live up to
the fullest of their capacities and by taking away all incentives for
people to oppress each other, so that they can get on with the business
of building better lives for themselves and their children.
Sometimes I think we'd all be better off if every American could
just, once in a great while, travel beyond our borders, just to see a
little more how other people see us. If you could have seen the people
lining the streets in Jordan, the reaction from the Jordanian Parliament
when I had the privilege of being the first Western leader ever to
address the Parliament, the people in the streets in Israel, the people
pouring out of their apartments in Damascus to see the first President
in 20 years on the streets of Damascus, it just made me so proud of our
country and so grateful to be the representative of 250-plus million
people who are setting a standard, with all of our difficulties, that
others want to strive for.
It is the standard that brought so many of you or your parents or
your grandparents to these shores. It is our capacity for constant
renewal and for continued efforts to institutionalize our sense of good
will and our sense of challenge.
And if I could say anything else today, I would be happy for all the
words to be forgotten, if you could just remember this: This is a very
great country. But it requires us to keep working to make it great. If
you look at all the renewal that's going on in the world, the
restoration of democracy in Haiti, the success of a booming democracy in
South Africa, the struggles of the people, Catholic and Protestant, to
lay down their centuries-old conflict in Northern Ireland--[applause]--I
just said that to see whether Pat Leahy would clap. [Laughter] I'm
always trying to test which side of his ethnicity is the more dominant.
[Laughter] If you think about the Middle East, if you could have just--I
know you saw it on television, but it was overwhelming to see those two
little girls bringing flowers to Prime Minister Rabin and King Hussein,
one the granddaughter of an Israeli, the other the granddaughter of a
Jordanian killed in war fighting each other, and to think that our
country had the chance to be a part of helping to make it possible for
them to do what they desperately wanted to do. What we need to remember
is, this renewal that is sweeping the world, energized in large measure
by the impulses of the people themselves, but in no small measure by the
support and the encouragement of the United States, we also have to do
that here at home for ourselves.
[[Page 2199]]
We have to say: Look, we have challenges; we're going to face them
instead of complain about them. Instead of pointing the finger of blame,
we're going to assume responsibilities. Sure we've got problems, but the
promise of this country at the dawn of the next century, at the dawn of
the new millennium, is far greater than the range of our problems if
only we will have the same sense of confidence in ourselves that others
have in us. That is my message to you tonight, my fellow Americans.
I must say, there is something to be said--Frank took away all my
good lines, because he mentioned most of the Italian-Americans in my
administration that I was going to eulogize so they'd be nice to me
tomorrow morning--[laughter]--but there is something to be said for the
incredible spirit and energy and drive and adherence to old-fashioned
Americanism that I see in every Italian-American in my administration,
from Leon Panetta on down. Because they keep the spirit of this country
alive in our work every day. And you do that everywhere.
I do want to tell Ed Rensi that I had nothing to do with his being
recognized tonight, in spite of my affiliation with McDonald's, which is
well-known. [Laughter] You can see it in my eyes; you can see it in my
waist. That's why I stand behind this wide podium, hoping your
imagination will get the better of you.
This is a very important thing. We sometimes minimize the power of
the spirit of the imagination. If I have learned anything since I have
been President, it is that this job and the work of this country
involves a lot of very specific things: Do we have the right foreign
policy, or don't we? Did we pass the family leave bill, or didn't we?
Did we do this or that specific thing? But it is also a spirit. And it
has to pervade people in their lives. It has to reach down deep into
them in order for us to do what we can do.
This Nation has never been made great primarily by its Government.
Its Government has to reflect the greatness, the energy, the direction
of the people. And leadership in a democracy like ours is possible only
insofar as it is connected to what is profoundly good and enduring but
also open to change in America. The greatest thing about this country
is, and the reason we're still around after more than 200 years, is that
we have been rooted to a set of constitutional values and principles
rooted in the deep, philosophical conviction that each and every one of
us is a creature of God, entitled to be treated equally before the law,
entitled to be challenged and given the opportunity to live up to the
fullest of our God-given capacities.
That is what has kept us going. And rooted to those things, we have
been free, therefore, to change over and over and over again, with every
age and time to meet whatever challenges we've faced, the freedom to
change because we were rooted in these values, and they were enshrined
in our Constitution. And we were willing to fight and die for them. That
is what has kept us here as the longest lasting free government in all
of human history. It is a magical thing.
Now, if you look at the problems we have today, they largely grow
out of a curious combination of our refusal to adapt to the challenges
of today and tomorrow and our violation of traditional values which got
us where we are. And so I say, as you look toward the future, we have to
do something that you may think is contradictory but is not
contradictory at all. We have to do the basic things better, and we have
to be better at facing our problems and turning them into a promise and
being agents of change.
Consider the problems of America. For 30 years we have had
increasingly difficult social problems, all starting with the breakdown
of the solidity of the family--the institution which made most Italian-
Americans what they are today and the rest of us as well--then the
breakdown of the sense of community and the other institutions of
community and the availability of work, without which life does not have
sufficient dignity. And all the things we don't like, the drugs, the
gangs, the guns, the violence, the deterioration of the ability of our
young people to exercise discipline and self-control, all of the bad
things we don't like were created because of the vacuum which existed
from the absence of the good things.
Now, this did not happen overnight. It has been a generation in
coming. And it will not turn around overnight. Your Government has
certain responsibilities, in the crime bill, to
[[Page 2200]]
empower communities to hire more police and to defend themselves and to
make the schools safer and to do more about violence within the families
and to protect victims and all of the things we tried to do in the crime
bill--in dealing with the assault weapons.
But a lot of this has to be done at the grassroots level; where
communities and police work together, the crime rate goes down. There
are many cities in this country where, for 3 years running now, we've
have double-digit reductions in the crime rate. In every case, it was
because of what people did where they live and work, not because of
something that happened up here.
We have empowered people to drive down crime and lift up kids, but
they must do it; you must do it. And in the end, all of these young
people who are going astray have got to have somebody to look up to
again. They have got to have somebody to look up to again.
Did you ask yourselves what in God's name was going on in the minds
of those kids that dropped the 5-year-old from the high rise in Chicago?
What turns the heart of a 10-year-old to stone? Everybody in this
world's going to look up to somebody. Who is it going to be? What will
they stand for?
At the end of this congressional session, a bill little noticed and
barely commented on, sponsored by the retiring Senator from Ohio, Howard
Metzenbaum, passed the Congress, a bill to make it easier for Americans
to adopt children without families across racial lines. It was just a
small step. It was just a small step, but I hope and pray this is
something we'll be able to get together people across racial lines,
across religious lines, across political party lines. I am telling you,
these little kids are going to look up to somebody or something. They're
either going to watch 4 hours of television at night, with people with
violent behavior providing cheap thrills, where the future is what
happens in 5 minutes, not 10 years, or somebody is going to be putting a
hand on them and showing them a different way.
And the Italian-American community can have a major impact on our
ability to lift the children of America, to turn around a 30-year trend
and push it back the other way. For all the modernization of America, if
we continue to allow the brutalization of childhood for millions of our
kids, we will not have what we need to have. And that is a fact.
Now, if you look at the economy, you find a different set of
challenges. For 20 years, more or less--although there is some
indication the trend may finally be changing this year--for 20 years,
more or less, hourly wage-earners have not gotten a raise. The average
working family is spending more hours at work in 1994 than in 1969, 25
years ago.
Why? Well, there are lots of reasons. But most of it, I'm convinced,
is the globalization of the economy, the globalization of wage rates,
the fact that every job and every investment now has to be considered in
terms of all the pressures all around the world and our failure to adapt
to those changes.
Why is America coming back? Because the private sector is adapting.
The United States car companies, in 1994, sold more automobiles than the
automobile companies of Japan for the first time since 1979 this year.
We've had 9 or 10 months of manufacturing job growth for the first time
in 10 years. For the first time in 9 years, the annual vote of
international economists said America had the most productive economy in
the world. Why? Because we were prepared to change.
And now we have to do more of that. We have to make some changes if
this economy is going to work right. We have to move people who are
dependent on welfare to work, through welfare reform. We have to provide
people--you can clap for that. [Applause] We have to provide for a
lifetime of education and training. The average 18-year-old will change
jobs six times in a lifetime.
Sooner or later, in some way that people trust, that they don't
think is too dominated by the Government, we've got to face the health
care crisis. Another million Americans lost their health insurance this
year, and they were in working families. They were not on welfare; they
were working people.
So, you tell me what the answer is. I can tell you that this year,
for the first time in 25 years, your Government reduced both defense and
domestic spending, the first domestic spending reduction in 25 years,
even though we increased investment in education. The only thing that
increased was health care costs; they're exploding. We
[[Page 2201]]
spend 14 percent of our income on it; nobody else spends more than 10
percent. And yet, we've got 40 million people without insurance, and the
85 percent with insurance almost all are at risk of losing it at some
time in their lifetime. Now, if you didn't like what I tried to do, you
tell me what we ought to do. But I'll tell you this: We have got to face
this challenge. Burying our head in the sands is not an answer and not
an option.
And I would like to say one other thing. So we've got the old
problems. Where we violate our values, we have new challenges where we
have to change, and we have to do both.
One last thing I'd like to say is, I believe most of the problems we
face today do not have an easy, partisan division, if you define it in
terms of the rhetoric that has dominated our politics for the last 20
years. And I just want to say, since one of them is here today, the more
we can have partnership instead of partisanship, the better this country
is going to be.
I want to thank good Republicans like Congresswoman Connie Morella,
who is here, and Mayor Rudy Giuliani for their support of the crime
bill. That's the kind of work we ought to be doing in America today.
You know, I always like to speak here because you're so
enthusiastic. And I promised I wouldn't talk very long. And I know I'm a
little tired, and tomorrow Hillary will watch this on film and tell me I
talked too long. [Laughter] But I want to just say one other thing. A
reasonably famous Italian, Niccolo Machiavelli--whom Leon can read
without benefit of translation--[laughter]--said 500 years ago, ``There
is nothing so difficult in all of human affairs than to change the
established order of things, for all people who will be discomforted by
the change will immediately oppose you, and those who will be benefited
will be lukewarm, because they are uncertain of the result.'' Based on
the last 2 years, I'd say he was a pretty smart fella. [Laughter]
I ask you to remember that again, because the secret of our
successes today are rooted once again--I say again, if you look at
Haiti, if you look at the Gulf, in both cases, a part of that story is
something that you hardly ever read about. Our ability to perform well
in Haiti, our ability to move in the Gulf in part represented the
success of American military strategy in the last 2 years, learning from
the Gulf war, increasing our ability to coordinate our military efforts
and to move more quickly--change, change in the service of traditional
American values of freedom and democracy and prosperity and security.
If you look at why our economy is growing today, it's because we got
the deficit down, we got our house in order, we began to invest in
America again, and the private sector changed to become more
competitive. Old-fashioned values, commitment to change, that is what
you represent. That's what your foundation's activities represent.
That's what your personal stories represent.
And so I say, again, I wish every one of you could have been with us
in the Middle East. I wish you could have looked into the faces of those
people. I wish you could see this country as others see it. One of the
reasons I think that immigrant families in the first or second
generation are so often the most patriotic of Americans is that they
still have a collective memory of America from the outside-in, as well
as from the inside-out.
So I ask you to think about it. If we're going to go into the next
century as the greatest country on Earth, and I am convinced our best
days are still ahead of us, we must blend a ferocious devotion to the
institutions of family and work and community and to the values of our
Constitution and the integrity of the individual in this country, with a
relentless willingness to change to do whatever it takes to develop and
empower the capacities of our people to do well in an increasingly
interdependent world. We must stand up for what we believe abroad,
because it makes us more secure. But every day, we have to first stand
up for what we believe at home. You can lead the way.
Thank you, and God bless you all.
Other Popular 1994 Presidential Documents Documents:
|
| GovRecords.org presents information on various agencies of the United States Government. Even though all information is believed to be credible and accurate, no guarantees are made on the complete accuracy of our government records archive. Care should be taken to verify the information presented by responsible parties. Please see our reference page for congressional, presidential, and judicial branch contact information. GovRecords.org values visitor privacy. Please see the privacy page for more information. |

![]() |