[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book I)]
[May 23, 1996]
[Pages 812-815]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to the Community in Milwaukee
May 23, 1996

    Whoa! Thank you, Jasmine, and thank you, J.P. Weren't they great? 
[Applause] Those kids were great. Thank you. Governor Thompson, County 
Executive Ament, Mayor Norquist, Attorney General Doyle, ladies and 
gentlemen. Chancellor Kohl and I are delighted to be here. We thank the 
city of Milwaukee and the State of Wisconsin for a wonderful, wonderful 
welcome.
    I want to also say a special word of thanks to the Rufus King High 
School Marching Band that played our national anthem and those who 
performed before us, the Alta Kameraden Band, the choir Mosbach, from 
Mosbach, Germany, and the Milwaukee High School for the Arts Jazz 
Ensemble. Thank you all.
    I was asked to say that Senator Feingold and Senator Kohl wanted to 
be here, but they had to stay in Washington to vote on the budget. 
Chancellor Kohl is trying to find some way of being related to Senator 
Kohl; he thinks he will inherit half of the basketball team if he does. 
[Laughter] We are researching the records even as I speak. [Laughter] 
Congressman Barrett and Representative Kleczka also had to stay behind 
because they wanted a chance to vote on an increase in the minimum wage 
for the people of Milwaukee.

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    I want to say also a special word of thanks to the people who run 
the German immersion school. It's the only public elementary school in 
our country where the entire curriculum is taught in German. They won a 
blue ribbon award from the Department of Education and, as you can see, 
my German is a little rustier than theirs is, but I thought the children 
were wirklich wunderbar. They were terrific, and I believe we should 
congratulate them.
    Just 2 years ago, when Hillary and I were in Germany, Helmut and 
Hannelore Kohl opened their home to us. World leaders don't often get to 
visit in each other's homes, and I thought that there ought to be 
something I could do to kind of repay his extraordinary hospitality. So 
I thought he ought to have a chance, after 23 trips to Washington, DC, 
to come to a place where he could get some really great bratwurst, where 
everywhere he turns around there's a sign with a German name on it, and 
where he could feel at home in America's most German-American city. So 
thank you, Milwaukee, for making him feel so welcome.
    My fellow Americans, we stand on the verge of the greatest age of 
possibility in all human history. Because of the advances in technology, 
the arrival of the information age, the end of the cold war, the 
emergence of a global society, there are enormous opportunities for 
people to live in peace and prosperity, for Americans, for Germans, for 
people all around the world.
    But if we want to seize those opportunities, we must decide that we 
are going to be united with our friends all around the world, with 
friends like Germany--and America has no better friend than Germany--and 
we have to decide that amidst all of our diversities in the United 
States we're going to be united here, too, one Nation under God, 
reaching across the lines of race and region and income to grow and go 
forward together as one American family.
    As I look out on this vast crowd today, I see a picture of America, 
all different kinds of people, different races, different religions, 
bound together by the American creed. And I thank you for that. I want 
my fellow Americans to know that the United States has no better friend 
anywhere in the world than Germany and especially the Chancellor of 
Germany, Helmut Kohl. I am grateful to him, and all of us should be.
    And I want the German Chancellor to know that America has no better 
example of a State committed to reach out to the rest of the world than 
the State of Wisconsin, a State which is making the new global economy 
work for its citizens. You know, J.P. Tucker and Jasmine, they reminded 
me, with their German, that a century ago--listen to this--a century ago 
half a million American children learned German in their elementary 
schools. New York, which had the second largest population of any city 
in the world, and Chicago had the eighth largest, and Milwaukee was, 
even then, the most German city in our Nation. There, every third 
citizen here was born on the other side of the ocean.
    So when you hear Jasmine Brantley and J.P. Tucker, remember that 
they are recapturing a sense of our being involved with other countries, 
which we once took for granted. A hundred years ago we knew we were a 
nation of immigrants. And a hundred years later, we dare not forget it.
    The German immigrants who helped to build cities across our land, 
founded our Nation's businesses, including some that made Milwaukee 
famous: Pabst and Blatz and Schlitz. More importantly, they made our 
communities successful with their strong families and their hard work. 
But it's important to remember that when the Germans and the other 
immigrants came here a hundred years ago, they faced new, enormous 
challenges. They arrived at a time of dramatic change, when our country 
was just moving from an age of agriculture to an age of industry; when 
more people, finally, were living in cities than were living in the 
rural areas; when instead of rising to the sun, they woke to a factory 
whistle. That was a very different time, the time that our grandparents 
and our great-grandparents brought to America. But it led to the 
enormous prosperity that the American people enjoyed in the 20th 
century.
    I ask you to think about this time, at the dawn of another new 
century, just as we now know a century ago Americans thought about it. 
Yes, we have a lot of challenges. Yes, we have economic challenges. Yes, 
we have social challenges. Yes, we have challenges around the world. But 
this country is stronger economically. It is facing its social problems. 
It is trying to come together around the basic ideas of work and family 
and community. And this is a safer world than it was just a few years 
ago.
    And one reason is, we have enjoyed a remarkable alliance with 
Germany for 50 long years, achieving unparalleled security and 
prosperity.

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And let me say that Helmut Kohl, as the first Chancellor of a free and 
unified Germany, is a symbol of that success.
    With Germany and our other allies in NATO, we are working to let 
peace take hold in the former Yugoslavia; to give the Muslims, the 
Croats, and the Serbs the chance to try to come together in the way we 
Americans are trying to come together; to say to each other, ``You 
cannot define your life by who you hate; you must be willing to lay down 
your hatreds and work together for a better, brighter future.'' That is 
the future we have fought for at home. That is the future Germany and 
the United States are fighting for in Bosnia.
    Thanks to the support of Germany and the United States for freedom 
and for free economic systems in Russia, we have taken a giant step back 
from the nuclear precipice. We are destroying two-thirds of all the 
nuclear weapons that existed at the height of the cold war. And today, 
for the first time since the drawn of the nuclear age, there are no 
Russian nuclear weapons pointed at the people of the United States or 
American weapons pointed at the people of Russia.
    Thanks to the efforts of the United States and Germany, as much as 
any other two nations in the world, we are creating a system of global 
trading opportunities where trade will be not only free but fair. And I 
congratulate and thank the Chancellor today for signing an open skies 
agreement with the United States. We will be the first two great nations 
to have completely open freedom in the air routes between Germany and 
the United States. Anybody that wants to come up with a route can do so, 
and the American people can go back and forth more cheaply. And the 
German people can do so as well. So, Governor Thompson, maybe a year 
from now, we can have 100,000 Germans here in Milwaukee instead of just 
one or two.
    And again I want to say to Chancellor Kohl, the people of Wisconsin 
deserve a lot of credit for taking advantage of these changes. Exports 
from Wisconsin have grown 39 percent over the last 3 years, faster than 
the rest of our country and the greatest export surge in our history. 
That is creating a 110,000 jobs in Wisconsin, including 18,000 brand new 
ones. Unemployment in this State is only 3.7 percent. And most 
important, we know that when we can tie jobs to exports, they tend to 
pay better and to provide a better living for the families of the people 
who are working there.
    I want to say, too, that we thank Germany for buying Wisconsin 
products. Wisconsin companies with names like Harnischfeger and Miller 
are bringing their products to Germany, the country their founders left 
more than a century ago. People moved here, sending the stuff back home; 
the marks come back to America in the form of dollars. Sounds like a 
pretty good deal to me.
    We also want to thank the German investors who have invested their 
money here and put the people of Wisconsin to work. We thank them again 
for building a global economy of prosperity and freedom. And finally, we 
thank Wisconsin for its willingness to experiment in many areas of our 
national life that need improvement, to find ways to put people from 
welfare to work, to lower the crime rate, to deal with the problem of 
growing the economy while preserving the incredible, beautiful natural 
environment that the people of Wisconsin enjoy. These are the challenges 
that all of us have to face in the years ahead.
    Let me say again in closing my remarks that it is important that 
every American know that if you look ahead at the opportunities the 
world will bring us, we cannot seize those opportunities alone. If we 
want to trade with other nations, it takes two to tango. Germany and the 
United States are the greatest trading nations in the world, and we have 
to lead the fight for fair and free trade. If we want to deal with the 
challenges of terrorism and drug running and weapons smuggling and the 
proliferation of chemical and biological weapons and global 
environmental threats where Helmut Kohl has been very outspoken, we 
cannot do this alone. If you want your children to have a system in 
which everybody who will work can have an opportunity and a system in 
which we can solve the new security problems of the 21st century, we 
cannot do it alone. The United States has to have friends and allies, 
and we have no better friend and ally anywhere in the world than Helmut 
Kohl of Germany, my friend, and I thank him for being here today.
    And thank you all. God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 1 p.m. in the Pere Marquette Park. In his 
remarks, he referred to German Immersion School students, Jasmine 
Brantley, who introduced the President, and John

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(J.P.) Tucker, who introduced Chancellor Helmut Kohl; Gov. Tommy 
Thompson of Wisconsin; Thomas Ament, Milwaukee County executive; Mayor 
John O. Norquist of Milwaukee; Attorney General James Doyle of 
Wisconsin.