-Caveat Lector-

for more go:
"Clinton Plugs Wife's Campaign at Fund Raiser"
http://www.msnbc.com/local/WNBC/499572.asp

----- Original Message -----
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, August 30, 1999 7:15 PM
Subject: [CTRL] Remarks by President Clinton


> See this article at:
> http://www.trib.com/HOMENEWS/WASH/clinton.html
>
> >>
>
> Remarks by President Clinton at DNC Dinner Aug. 29 (1/2)
>
> To: National Desk
> Contact: White House Press Office, 202-456-2100
> WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Following is a transcript of
remarks
> by President Clinton at a DNC dinner Aug. 29 (1/2):
> Private Residence
> Bridgehampton, New York
>
> 10:00 P.M. EDT
> THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you very much.
>
> (Laughter.)
>
> I must say, I thought Hillary was going to say, if you think it's windy
now,
> wait until Bill gets up to talk. (Laughter.) I feel badly about this wind.
> It came up about the time I was explaining the finer points of voodoo
around
> our table -- (laughter)
>
> -- and the conviction that Haitians and others have that the spirits of
> light and darkness are more or less in equal balance and they manifest
> themselves in all kinds of physical ways. And all of a sudden the lights
> started moving and -- (laughter)
> -- so we'll just have to hope the good guys win tonight.
>
> Let me just say first to Craig and Jane I'm very, very grateful to be in
> their home here -- I've also been in their home in New York City. Thank
you,
> Brian; thank you, Robert. They're quite wonderful people -- among other
> things, when I came to see them in New York they provided me, since I had
a
> little down time, with a tenor saxophone and so I played a tune for them.
So
> I got here tonight and the horn was here again. But I didn't put them
> through it again.
>
> (Laughter.)
>
> But it was very touching and I thank you for that.
> I also want to thank all of those who are here. Jon, thank you; and,
Richie,
> for entertaining. Jon Bon Jovi has been very good to me, he has played for
> me a number of times over these last six and a half years and I thought
they
> were terrific tonight and I thank them for being here.
>
> (Applause.)
>
> I want to thank the people who prepared the wonderful dinner and all those
> who served it and all the volunteers who have been part of this tonight.
And
> I would like to just make a couple of brief points.
>
> Somebody will ask you tomorrow why you came here tonight. And I wonder
what
> you will say: I wanted to see their house, it looked kind of interesting.
> (Laughter.)
> I wanted to hear the music. I hear the food was going to be great. The
> restaurant was closed tonight.
>
> I'd just like to offer a few things that I hope you'll think about. First
of
> all, New York has been very, very good to me and to Hillary, to Al and
> Tipper Gore, to our whole administration. We had a wonderful convention
here
> in '92. I had a very interesting, eventful primary here in '92 -- but it
> came out okay. And then the state voted for us big in '92 and then,
> breathtakingly in '96 and I'm very grateful.
>
> But in 1992, I asked the country and I asked the people of this state to
> take a chance on me, on my family, my Vice President, my administration
and
> on a whole new direction for the country. I saw a survey the other day
which
> said that things had been going so well in our country for so many years
> now, nobody could -- people have no memory of what it was like in '91 and
> '92. They've forgotten entirely.
>
> But the economy was in the tank, and the country was divided, and the
social
> problems were worsening. And we had a lot of challenges around the world
> that weren't being addressed. And, you know, I lived a long way from
> Washington, D.C., but it seemed to me that we were working on the wrong
> things, and not working on the right things. And I asked the American
people
> to give me a chance -- to create a country in which there was opportunity
> for all who were responsible; in which we could build a community of all
> Americans; in which we could be a force for peace and freedom and justice
> around the world. And so you took a chance.
>
> The first thing I hope you'll say -- and one of you said this to me
> tonight -- when you go home and they ask you why you came, is that it was
a
> good chance to take and it worked out all right; that we've got the
longest
> peacetime expansion in history, and the lowest crime rate in 26 years, and
> the lowest welfare rolls in 32 years, and the lowest minority unemployment
> ever recorded, and the highest homeownership in history; that our country
> has been a force for peace and freedom, from Northern Ireland to the
Middle
> East to the Balkans; that we have tried to include all Americans in our
> future.
> The second thing I hope you'll say -- because, as Joe Andrew said earlier,
> politics is always about tomorrow -- is that you think we're right about
the
> things we're talking about for today and tomorrow. You know, I'm not
running
> for anything anymore. Joe Andrew used to have a great line in his
speeches:
> Bill Clinton doesn't have to be here, he's not running for anything
anymore.
> That's where Hillary started running for something, now I do have to be
> here -- (laughter)
> -- in a different role.
>
> (Applause.)
>
> But I believe this anyway and I want you to think about this. Once in a
> lifetime -- once in a lifetime -- if you get real lucky, maybe twice -- a
> country, like a person, has a moment that is either seized or squandered.
> You may have a lot of wonderful moments, but some will be greater than
> others. Mr. DeNiro has made a lot of great movies, but some were greater
> than others. Steven Spielberg and Kate and I, we were talking with Hillary
> and Chelsea on the way over about the greatest moments of his movie
career.
> Countries are like that, just like in your personal life.
>
> A time like this comes along once in a lifetime, where we went from
> having -- we quadrupled our debt in 12 years, and now we've got the
biggest
> surplus we ever had. And we project for 15 years or more we'll have it.
Oh,
> there will be ups and downs in the economy but, on average, it will be
> there. Now, what are we going to do with it?
> Our friends in the other party, they say that all that's not attributable
to
> Social Security taxes, we ought to give it back to you in a tax cut. And
> that's very popular, especially in this crowd. Some of you will say you
> ought to have your head examined, because every one of you should be over
> there with them tonight.
>
> We say we ought to face the challenges facing our children. And I'll just
> give you three real quick: the aging of America. There will be twice as
many
> people over 65 in 2030 as there are now. I hope to be one of them, so do
> most of you. If we don't save Social Security and Medicare and do it in a
> way so that the children of the baby boomers don't have to support them,
so
> they'll be free to support their children, we're going to have an enormous
> amount of heartache and difficulty in this country. But if we do it,
you'll
> have people living longer and better than ever before. The children of the
> baby boomers will be free to pursue their own destiny and they'll be free
to
> raise their grandchildren in the best possible way.
>
> The second thing we ought to do is face the fact that we've got more kids
in
> this country in school than ever before -- over 53 million of them. More
of
> them come from families whose first language is not English than ever
> before. But it's a godsend in a global society if we can give every single
> one of them a world-class education.
>
> The third thing we ought to do is figure out how we can keep this economy
> going and how we can bring it to people who haven't felt it yet. Because I
> can tell you, in spite of all the prosperity the last six and a half
years,
> there are inner-city communities, there's the Mississippi Delta, there are
> places in Appalachia, there are all these Indian reservations in America,
> there are small towns in upstate New York -- which, if it were a separate
> state, would rank 49th in job creation in the last five years -- where the
> sunshine of all this prosperity has not yet reached.
>
> We all hope there won't be other interest rate increases. We say, gosh,
> let's keep interest rates down and keep growth going. You want to expand
the
> economy with no inflation, invest in the places that haven't had any
growth.
> These are big deals.
>
> (more, more)
>
> -0-
> /U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/
> <<

.

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