Democratic Underground Latest Greatest Lobby Journals Search Options Help Login
Google

Careful. This speech may make you cry.

Printer-friendly format Printer-friendly format
Printer-friendly format Email this thread to a friend
Printer-friendly format Bookmark this thread
This topic is archived.
Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU
 
PretzelWarrior Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-10-07 11:41 PM
Original message
Careful. This speech may make you cry.
for what was. for what might have been. for what may still be....

------------------------------------------------------------------------

You and I set forth on a journey to bring our vision to our country, to keep the American dream alive for all who are willing to work for it, to make our American community stronger, to keep America the world's strongest force for peace and freedom and prosperity.

Four years ago, with high unemployment, stagnant wages, crime, welfare and the deficit on the rise, with a host of unmet challenges and a rising tide of cynicism, I told you about a place I was born, and I told you I still believed in a place called Hope.

Well, for four years now, to realize our vision, we have pursued a simple but profound strategy -- opportunity for all, responsibility from all, a strong united American community.

Four days ago as you were making your way here, I began a train ride to make my way to Chicago through America's heartland. I wanted to see the faces, I wanted to hear the voices of the people for whom I have worked and fought these last four years. And did I ever see them.

I met an ingenious businesswoman who was once on welfare in West Virginia; a brave police officer shot and paralyzed, now a civic leader in Kentucky. An auto worker in Ohio, once unemployed, now proud to be working in the oldest auto plant in America to help make America number one in auto production again for the first time in 20 years. I met a grandmother fighting for her grandson's environment in Michigan. And I stood with two wonderful little children proudly reading from their favorite book, "The Little Engine That Could."

At every stop large and exuberant crowds greeted me and, maybe more important, when we just rolled through little towns there were always schoolchildren there waving their American flags, all of them believing in America and its future.

I would not have missed that trip for all the world. For that trip showed me that hope is back in America. We are on the right track to the 21st century.

Look at the facts. Just look at the facts: 4.4 million Americans now living in a home of their own for the first time. Hundreds of thousands of women have started their own new businesses. More minorities own businesses than ever before. Record numbers of new small businesses and exports. Look at what's happened. We have the lowest combined rates of unemployment, inflation and home mortgages in 28 years.

Look at what happened. Ten million new jobs, over half of them high-wage jobs. Ten million workers getting the raise they deserve with the minimum wage law. Twenty-five million people now having protection in their health insurance because the Kennedy-Kassebaum bill says you can't lose your insurance anymore when you change jobs even if somebody in your family's been sick.

Forty million Americans with more pension security, a tax cut for 15 million of our hardest working, hardest pressed Americans and all small businesses. Twelve million Americans -- 12 million of them taking advantage of the Family and Medical Leave Law so they could be good parents and good workers.

Ten million students have saved money on their college loans. We are making our democracy work. We have also passed political reform, the line-item veto bill, the motor voter bill, tougher registration laws for lobbyists, making Congress live under the laws they impose on the private sector, stopping unfunded mandates to state and local government. We've come a long way. We've got one more thing to do. Will you help me get campaign finance reform in the next four years?

We have increased our investments in research and technology. We have increased investments in breast cancer research dramatically. We are developing a supercomputer, a supercomputer that will do more calculating in a second than a person with a hand-held calculator can do in 30,000 years. More rapid development of drugs to deal with HIV and AIDS and moving them to the market quicker have almost doubled life expectancy in only four years, and we are looking at no limit in sight to that. We'll keep going until normal life is returned to people who deal with this.

Our country is still the strongest force for peace and freedom on earth. On issues that once before tore us apart, we have changed the old politics of Washington. For too long, leaders in Washington asked, "Who's to blame?" But we asked, "What are we going to do?"

On crime, we're putting 100,000 police on the streets. We made three-strikes-and-you're-out the law of the land. We stopped 60,000 felons, fugitives and stalkers from getting handguns under the Brady Bill. We banned assault rifles. We supported tougher punishment and prevention programs to keep our children from drugs and gangs and violence. Four years now -- for four years now, the crime rate in America has gone down.

On welfare, we worked with states to launch a quiet revolution. Today, there are 1.8 million fewer people on welfare than there were the day I took the oath of office. We are moving people from welfare to work. We have increased child support collections by 40 percent. The federal workforce is the smallest it's been since John Kennedy. And the deficit has come down for four years in a row for the first time since before the Civil War -- down 60 percent, on the way to zero. We will do it.

We are on the right track to the 21st century. We are on the right track, but our work is not finished. What should we do? First, let us consider how to proceed. Again, I say the question is no longer, "Who's to blame?" but "What to do?"

I believe that Bob Dole and Jack Kemp and Ross Perot love our country. And they have worked hard to serve it. It is legitimate, even necessary, to compare our record with theirs, our proposals for the future with theirs. And I expect them to make a vigorous effort to do the same. But I will not attack. I will not attack them personally, or permit others to do it in this party if I can prevent it.

My fellow Americans, this must be a campaign of ideas, not a campaign of insults. The American people deserve it. Now, here's the main idea. I love and revere the rich and proud history of America. And I am determined to take our best traditions into the future. But with all respect, we do not need to build a bridge to the past. We need to build a bridge to the future. And that is what I commit to you to do.

So tonight, let us resolve to build that bridge to the 21st century, to meet our challenges and protect our values. Let us build a bridge to help our parents raise their children, to help young people and adults to get the education and training they need, to make our streets safer, to help Americans succeed at home and at work, to break the cycle of poverty and dependence, to protect our environment for generations to come, and to maintain our world leadership for peace and freedom. Let us resolve to build that bridge.

Tonight, my fellow Americans, I ask all of our fellow citizens to join me and to join you in building that bridge to the 21st century.

Four years now -- from now -- just four years from now -- think of it. We begin a new century full of enormous possibilities. We have to give the American people the tools they need to make the most of their God-given potential. We must make the basic bargain of opportunity and responsibility available to all Americans, not just a few. That is the promise of the Democratic Party, that is the promise of America.

I want to build a bridge to the 21st century in which we expand opportunity through education. Where computers are as much a part of the classroom as blackboards. Where highly trained teachers demand peak performance from their students. Where every eight-year-old can point to a book and say I can read it myself.

By the year 2000 the single most critical thing we can do is to give every single American who wants it the chance to go to college. We must make two years of college just as universal in four years as a high school education is today. And we can do it. We can do it and we should cut taxes to do it.

I propose a $1,500 a year tuition tax credit for Americans, a Hope Scholarship for the first two years of college to make the typical community college education available to every American. I believe every working family ought also to be able to deduct up to $10,000 in college tuition costs per year for education after that.

I believe the families of this country ought to be able to save money for college in a tax-free IRA, save it year in and year out withdraw it for a college education without penalty. We should not tax middle income Americans for the money they spend on college. We'll get the money back down the road many times over.

I want to say here before I go further that these tax cuts and every other one I mention tonight are all fully paid for in my balanced budget plan, line by line, dime by dime and they focus on education.

Now, one thing so many of our fellow Americans are learning is that education no longer stops on graduation day. I have proposed a new GI Bill for American workers -- a $2,600 grant for unemployed and underemployed Americans so that they can get the training and the skills they need to go back to work at better-paying jobs, good high- skill jobs for a good future.

But we must demand excellence at every level of education. We must insist that our students learn the old basics we learned and the new basics they have to know for the next century. Tonight let us set a clear national goal. All children should be able to read on their own by the third grade.

When 40 percent of our eight-year-olds cannot read as well as they should, we have to do something. I want to send 30,000 reading specialists and National Service Corps members to mobilize a volunteer army of one million reading tutors for third graders all across America.

They will teach our young children to read. Let me say to our parents: You have to lead the way. Every tired night you spend reading a book to your child will be worth it many times over. I know that Hillary and I still talk about the books we read to Chelsea when we were so tired we could hardly stay awake. We still remember them. And, more important, so does she.

But we're going to help the parents of this country make every child able to read for himself or herself by the age of eight, by the third grade. Do you believe we can do that? Will you help us do that?

We must give parents, all parents, the right to choose which public school their children will attend and to let teachers form new charter schools with a charter they can keep only if they do a good job. We must keep our schools open late so that young people have some place to go and something to say yes to and stay off the street. We must require that our students pass tough tests to keep moving up in school. A diploma has to mean something when they get out.

We should reward teachers that are doing a good job, remove those who don't measure up. But, in every case, never forget that none of us would be here tonight if it weren't for our teachers. I know I wouldn't. We ought to lift them up, not tear them down.

We need schools that will take our children into the next century. We need schools that are rebuilt and modernized with an unprecedented commitment from the national government to increase school construction, and with every single library and classroom in America connected to the information superhighway by the year 2000.

Now folks, if we do these things, every eight-year-old will be able to read, every 12-year-old will be able to log in on the Internet, every 18-year-old will be able to go to college and all Americans will have the knowledge they need to cross that bridge to the 21st century.

I want to build a bridge to the 21st century in which we create a strong and growing economy to preserve the legacy of opportunity for the next generation by balancing our budget in a way that protects our values and ensuring that every family will be able to own and protect the value of their most important asset, their home.

Tonight, let us proclaim to the American people we will balance the budget, and let us also proclaim we will do it in a way that preserves Medicare, Medicaid, education, the environment, the integrity of our pensions, the strength of our people.

Now, last year -- last year when the Republican Congress sent me a budget that violated those values and principles, I vetoed it, and I would do it again tomorrow. I could never allow cuts that devastate education for our children, that pollute our environment, that end the guarantee of health care for those who are served under Medicaid, that end our duty or violate our duty to our parents through Medicare. I just couldn't do that. As long as I'm president, I'll never let it happen.

And it doesn't matter -- it doesn't matter if they try again, as they did before, to use the blackmail threat of a shutdown of the federal government to force these things on the American people. We didn't let it happen before. We won't let it happen again.

Of course, there is a better answer to this dilemma. We could have the right kind of balanced budget with a new Congress. A Democratic Congress.

I want to balance the budget with real cuts in government and waste. I want a plan that invests in education as mine does, in technology and yes, in research -- as Christopher Reeve so powerfully reminded us we must do.

And my plan gives Americans tax cuts that will help our economy to grow. I want to expand IRAs so that young people can save tax free to buy a first home. Tonight I propose a new tax cut for home ownership that says to every middle income working family in this country, if you sell your home you will not have to pay a capital gains tax on it ever, not ever. I want every American to be able to hear those beautiful words: Welcome Home.

Let me say again. Every tax cut I call for tonight is targeted, it's responsible and it is paid for within my balanced budget plan. My tax cuts will not undermine our economy. They will speed economic growth. We should cut taxes for the family sending a child to college, for the worker returning to college, for the family saving to buy a home or for long term health care and a $500 per child credit for middle income families raising their children who need help with child care and what the children will do after school. That is the right way to cut taxes: Pro-family, pro-education, pro-economic growth.

Now, our opponents have put forward a very different plan -- a risky $550 billion tax scheme that will force them to ask for even bigger cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, education and the environment than they passed and I vetoed last year.

But even then, they will not cover the cost of their scheme. So that even then this plan will explode the deficit, which will increase interest rates -- by two percent according to their own estimates last year. It will require huge cuts in the very investments we need to grow and to grow together, and at the same time, slow down the economy. You know what higher interest rates mean. To you it means a higher mortgage payment, a higher car payment, a higher credit card payment. To our economy it means businesspeople will not borrow as much money, invest as much money, create as many new jobs, create as much wealth, raise as many raises.

Do we really want to make that same mistake all over again?

Here's the full text:

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/convention96/floor_speeches/clinton_8-29.html

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
pinto Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-10-07 11:54 PM
Response to Original message
1. It was a great speech. And it reminds me of the intent of a limited, yet viable presidency.
President Clinton's political successes and failures aside, he realized well that one of the roles of a president is as spokesman for a national agenda.

All have done that, with other agendas and with other effectiveness.

Yet he remains one of them I could listen to and say - "Yo, that's my president."

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
JeffR Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 12:02 AM
Response to Original message
2. Whatever else can be and is said about him
THIS president was indeed a Great Communicator, unlike that Hollywood phony the GOP put forward as such for 8 years and more.

Despite all my misgivings and regrets about the Clinton years, the man was - and is - the most gifted politician of the era, bar none.

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
PretzelWarrior Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 02:28 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. no doubt. I just hope we can stop the madness
at least for a little while.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
karynnj Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-11-07 09:23 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. The "Hollywood phony" did push for the very things he spoke of
They were absolutely wrong and they greatly hurt the country enormously, but the they were in line with his rhetoric. I can see why the RW adores him still - he put a genial face on their ugly selfish agenda and moved the country to the right. As this was in the 1980s, I wonder if his era is why, even in the top mainstream media there are now so many people who seem to reflect a conservative mindset when reporting. People who were 10 - 15 then would be 38 through 43 now. Although obviously there were other forces and influences (thank God) and people are here in that age group, who do not see Reagan as St Ronnie, but he likely did influence many in this generation.

Clinton was undeniably an amazing charismatic speaking, but I can't help wishing that he had used his communication skills to further the agenda he has here, rather than to mostly promote himself.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
DU AdBot (1000+ posts) Click to send private message to this author Click to view 
this author's profile Click to add 
this author to your buddy list Click to add 
this author to your Ignore list Thu Apr 25th 2024, 03:18 AM
Response to Original message
Advertisements [?]
 Top

Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU

Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.1 Copyright 1997-2002 DCScripts.com
Software has been extensively modified by the DU administrators


Important Notices: By participating on this discussion board, visitors agree to abide by the rules outlined on our Rules page. Messages posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums are the opinions of the individuals who post them, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Democratic Underground, LLC.

Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals |  Store  |  Donate

About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.

© 2001 - 2011 Democratic Underground, LLC