[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[May 15, 1999]
[Pages 781-787]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Democratic Senatorial and Congressional Campaign Committees 
Dinner in Beverly Hills, California
May 15, 1999

    I have never before had the honor of being the warmup act for Andrea 
Bocelli, but I will. I will do my best. 
[Laughter] I want to--and if I sing a little, you will just have to--
[laughter]. I want to say first of all how grateful I am to all of you 
for being here, especially to the chairs and the cochairs of the dinner 
and, of course, to David and Steven and Jeffrey. I want to 
thank my leaders, Senator Daschle and 
Congressman Gephardt. I was looking at 
them up

[[Page 782]]

here. We knew each other, of course, before I was elected, but not so 
well as we do today. And I can tell you that it is a joy and an honor 
every day to work with them. They are people that we can really be proud 
of.
    And I have seen them in far less comfortable circumstances than we 
find ourselves tonight, and they are what they seem to be, and they're 
always there for the American people.
    I'd like to thank Governor Davis and 
Sharon for coming. I'm thrilled by his success 
and was honored to be asked to campaign here a time or two last year.
    And I want to echo what has already been said about Senator 
Feinstein and Senator Boxer. They are on the forefront of this still ongoing and 
yet unfolding struggle to protect our children on the gun issues, and I 
want you to give them a big boost tonight and a lot of support, because 
it's been pretty tough there, although the American people did a great 
job in turning some of those votes around last week.
    I'd like to thank Senator Torricelli for being here. It's his unhappy, or sometimes happy, duty 
to go around and try to make sure that we've got someone to actually run 
for all these Senate seats and take on some very tough fights. I thank 
Congressman Kennedy and your Congressmen, 
Henry Waxman and Brad Sherman, for being here. And Mayor Levin gave me a gift from the city tonight, so I'm delighted to 
be here. [Laughter]
    And I'm glad to be here in, as far as I know, the only beneficial 
product to the Teapot Dome Scandal here--this beautiful place.
    Most of what needs to be said has already been said, but I would 
like to try to put a few things in perspective, talk a little bit about 
some of the events of the present that are of great concern to people.
    When I came to California in 1991 and early '92, this was a very 
different place in a different country. People were divided and confused 
and drifting and frustrated. And I believed very strongly it was because 
we had no overriding vision for our future, no strategy to achieve it, 
no way, therefore, of pulling the American people together and getting 
us pointed in the right direction. And that's really why I got in the 
race for the President.
    It was not the easiest of races. I was laughing with Goldie 
Hawn tonight because I remember her being in the 
Biltmore in Los Angeles on June 2, 1992, when I was nominated for 
President, really officially. I won in California and New Jersey and 
Ohio that night, so it was clear that I had enough votes to be 
nominated. And all the stories were the exit polls showing that Ross 
Perot was really in first place, and I was in third place. I say that to 
caution you about reading too much into any polls. [Laughter]
    But I knew something, I thought, about the American people, about 
where we were at this moment in our history and where I thought we ought 
to go. Just 6 weeks later there had been a complete reversal in the 
polls, and thank the good Lord, they stayed that way through November, 
and the people of California were very good to me and to Al Gore and to 
our families and our administration, twice. And I am very, very 
thankful.
    What I want you to do--you know what all the individual issues are, 
but what I want you to think about tonight, just for a minute, before we 
hear a magnificent performer and before you go home and you go back to 
your lives tomorrow and the days ahead, is what you would say to people 
if they asked you why you came tonight. You could say, ``Well, Geffen 
made me.'' [Laughter] Or there's a lot of things you could say. But I 
hope you will have some really good answers.
    I guess the first thing I'd like to say to you is, obviously, this 
is a fundraiser for the Congress. It's not for me. I can't run anymore. 
And I'm here because I believe very strongly that the people you just 
saw should lead the majorities in the House and Senate; because while I 
am very grateful for the opportunity I have been given to serve the 
American people as President and for whatever role I was able to play in 
this remarkable economic turnaround and the big drop in crime and 
welfare and the improvements in almost all the indicators of social 
health--the lowest minority unemployment in history, the highest 
homeownership--all the things that are moving in the right direction, 
I'm grateful that we've had a chance to be a force for peace and freedom 
around the world. What I want you to understand is, first, most of what 
we have done could not have been done, had it not been for the support I 
received from the Democrats in the Congress. Second, most of what we 
stopped could not have been stopped, had it not been for their support. 
And third and most important, what we did grew out of a vision of 21st 
century America as a

[[Page 783]]

place where there is opportunity for every responsible citizen, where we 
celebrate our differences but we come together in one community, and a 
place that can still lead the world for peace and freedom and 
prosperity, and out of a willingness to think in different ways about 
the future, to break out of the old vices that were paralyzing 
Washington.
    We believe, for example, that we can reward successful 
entrepreneurs, like many of you in this audience, and still expand the 
middle class and give poor people a chance to make it. We believe we can 
grow the economy and improve the environment. We believe we have an 
obligation to help people succeed not just at work but also at home, 
because raising children is the most important job of any society.
    We believe these things. We believe that we can have a quality and 
excellence and high standards and accountability in education. We 
believe we can be a force for peace in the world and still stand up if 
we have to, against ethnic cleansing and weapons of mass destruction and 
terrorism.
    And the work of the last 6 years has largely been our combined 
efforts to take these ideas and that vision and hammer them into 
specific proposals. It's what animates our efforts today to deal with 
the aging of America, with the reforms of Social Security and Medicare, 
doing something about long-term care, helping people to do more to save 
for their own retirement.
    It's what's driving me now that we have a big surplus instead of a 
huge deficit to say that we ought to deal with Social Security in a way 
that pays down the debt for the first time in anybody's memory, so that 
17 years from now, we could actually have the smallest debt this 
country's had since before World War I, which will mean for our children 
lower interest rates, a stronger economy, less dependent on the vagaries 
of the world economy.
    We believe that we have to continue to improve the environment in 
ways that are tangible. I'm proud of the fact that the air is cleaner, 
the water is cleaner, and we set aside more land than any administration 
except those of the two Roosevelts, in our term, but we have a lot more 
to do. And this environmental issue will continue to dominate public 
concern for at least another 30 to 40 years. So we still have more to 
do.
    But what I want to say to you is, those of you who are here because 
you've helped me through thick and thin for all these long years, this 
did not happen by accident, nor did it happen just because I was 
President. It happened because we had the right vision and the right 
ideas, and we worked to make them real. And it couldn't be done without 
the help of the people who have spoken before me and what they 
represent, and they deserve the chance to be in the majority so that we 
can see these ideas fully implemented in the beginning of the 21st 
century. That is what I want you to think about when you leave here 
tonight.
    Let me say, in spite of all the good news, most Americans have been 
sobered in the last several days because of the terrible tragedy at 
Littleton and the ongoing conflict in Kosovo. And I would like to say to 
you that I think how we respond to both of these will say a lot about 
what kind of country we have for years to come.
    And I believe that the ideas that I've tried to infuse into all of 
our work ought to be looked at against the backdrop of these two issues. 
I do think--you heard Dick Gephardt talking about what the person who 
lost a child at Littleton said, ``Don't let my child die in vain.'' I do 
believe that, even more than all the terrible tragedies that happened 
last year, because of the sheer scope and power of this event, it 
touched a deep nerve in America that has profoundly opened up our 
country to a serious examination of what it would take to give our 
children a safer childhood.
    And last Monday I had a lot of people from every sector of our 
society into the White House, with Hillary and Al and Tipper, to talk 
about how we could have a national campaign against children's violence 
in the same way that we have seen other national campaigns prevail in 
the past. And what I'd like to say is--what I've pleaded with people to 
do is not to make this chapter 57 in the ongoing American culture war 
saga.
    You know, if the house next door here were burning down, we'd 
probably all be willing to go over there and help put the fire out. And 
think how absurd it would be if Norm looked at David and said, ``I'm not 
going to help put the fire out because it's your fault you left your car 
running outside the house, and its sparks from the fumes caused the 
fire.'' And David said, ``Norm, if you'd quit smoking years ago, you 
wouldn't have put a cigarette over in the yard, and that's what caused 
the fire.'' And so

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everybody gets in a fight about who's at fault here, and we let the 
house burn down--that is a dumb thing to do.
    This is far more important. We can't let those children have 
perished in vain. And I don't know--you know, probably a lot of you are 
like me. I have watched the parents of these children being interviewed. 
I have seen the school people. I have seen some of the wounded children. 
I have been, on the whole, profoundly moved and impressed by these 
people, by the depth of their faith and their conviction and their 
genuine striving to understand and go beyond this.
    So for me, I think we ought to--since I think what happens to our 
kids is more important than whether the house next door burns down, I 
think we ought to have the same attitude. We ought to say, ``Okay, I'm 
showing up for work. Tell me what I can do.'' And I believe that we have 
to do more to help parents do their job, whether it's better child care 
or family leave programs or, literally, people helping people understand 
that your kids can become strangers in your own home.
    And I agree with what has already been said. It is a fact that most 
parents in America spend far less time with their children today than 
they used to spend. That is not free. That's why I say, we will never be 
the society we want in the new century until we better balance work and 
family.
    I think we have to help the schools do more. I was in a fabulous 
school in Alexandria, Virginia, the other day--that's the most 
culturally diverse school district in America now, just across the river 
from the White House--where they have peer mediation programs and 
counseling services and mental health services and a 1-800 anonymous 
hotline that if one kid calls and says, ``I'm worried'' about another 
one, they know it will be followed up on, and they know they will be 
kept anonymous. We have to do those kinds of things. We have to give 
every school the ability to protect our children better.
    I think the people in the gun business ought to come to the table 
and help us. And I want to say one thing that wasn't mentioned, that I'm 
very proud of, is that the gun manufacturers, who for years sided always 
with the NRA and always opposed all these measures, have changed. And 
every one of you who believes that it's a good thing that we raise the 
handgun ownership age to 21 and that we close the loophole--and Senator 
Feinstein's assault weapons bill, so now we 
can stop these big ammunition clips from coming in--it's never had any 
purpose, anyway.
    We can also thank the gun manufacturers who supported the 
legislation this time in Congress and had the kind of civic 
responsibility that we need more from every American. I appreciate that.
    Now, we've still got a lot of work to do. We've got to do background 
checks on explosives. We've got to get this gun show loophole closed in 
the right way. And I'm going to watch it pretty close, because unlike 
most Americans, I've actually been to a lot of these gun shows. It was 
part of my job description at one time when I was Governor of Arkansas. 
And I enjoyed them greatly, but they ought to have background checks, 
and they ought not to have loopholes.
    So that's a big part of it. I also believe--let's talk about the 
entertainment issue. You know, I think the--here's the way I look at 
this. It's like the NRA can say, ``Guns don't kill people, people do.'' 
That's true, but people with guns kill more people than people without 
them. And we're the only country in the world that has no reasonable 
restrictions. There are now over 300 studies that show that sustained 
lifetime, week-in and week-out, night-in and night-out, exposure to 
indiscriminate violence through various media outlets over a period of 
time makes people less sensitive both to violence and to the 
consequences of violence.
    Now, for most kids, it won't make any difference. But if you have a 
society where we have already positive--there are more kids who are 
spending less time with their folks and less time being connected to 
somebody that they know they're the most important person in the world 
to, and if that same society has those same kids having easier access to 
weapons, then desensitizing them will be more likely to push those that 
are vulnerable into destructive behavior.
    Now, that doesn't make anybody who makes any movie or any video game 
or any television program a bad person or personally responsible with 
one show for a disastrous outcome. There's no call for finger-pointing 
here, but we just look around and we know that all these things go 
together, starting with the raw material that you've got more kids who 
are more isolated, some of them in their own homes, strangers.

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    So I would like to say, first, like I said about the gun 
manufacturers, it ought to be put in the record that the entertainment 
industry for 6 years has worked with Al Gore and me and with our 
administration on the V-chip, the television rating system, the video 
game rating system, the screening technologies that the video people--
the Internet people have worked with us to try to help parents screen 
inappropriate material away from their kids on the Internet.
    Today in my radio address, I said there were two or three other 
things--I had been studying this and listening--that I think ought to be 
done. I think that if young people can't see certain kinds of movies, 
then they shouldn't see the advertisement for the movies if the 
advertisement has the same stuff that caused the movie to be rated as 
inappropriate. And that's something I think the entertainment industry 
can look at and ought to look at very seriously, that the advertising 
ought to be consistent with the rating in terms of the audience that 
receives it.
    I also think there's a lot of evidence that these ratings are 
regularly ignored, not by you but by the people who actually sell or 
rent the video tapes or the video games or run the movie theaters. And 
the rating system ought to be used by checking ID's. And finally, I 
believe in light of the most recent research, it would be a very good 
thing if the industry would reexamine the nature of the rating system, 
especially the PG-13 as it relates to violence, not because anybody is 
willfully doing something that they know is going to hurt somebody, not 
because any one television program or video game or movie will do it, 
but because we know that by the time a person becomes 18 in America, he 
or she has seen about 40,000 killings, and because we have a higher 
percentage of vulnerable people.
    But we are determined to do this as a family. When we were at the 
White House, we sat around a big old table, and everybody was there, and 
everybody was asking, ``What can I do?'' And I say again to the 
Congress, this is not the time to let any interest group control doing 
things that are common sense. How in the world we can let somebody buy a 
gun at a gun show that they can't get in a gun shop because they've got 
a criminal background is beyond me. And this is a classic example--to go 
back to what my leaders said earlier--the people of Florida, not the 
most liberal State in America, voted last November, 72 percent to close 
the gun show loophole with no ifs, ands, or buts, no wrinkles or 
curlicues or subterfuge.
    So I say this is a time for all of us to do this. And how we deal 
with this, and whether we really come up with a kind of grassroots 
national campaign, like the campaign that Mothers and Students Against 
Drunk Driving launched that precipitously lowered deaths from drunk 
driving in America, like the effort that has been made that has 
precipitously lowered the teen pregnancy rate, like the grassroots 
effort business made that led to 10,000 business people hiring over 
400,000 people off welfare--how we do this will have a lot to say about 
whether we're really going to build one community.
    But there are other things we ought to do, too. And let me come back 
to Kosovo and talk about--you say, ``Well, what's that got to do with 
this?'' Well, first of all, all the studies, the reports indicate that 
these young men who were involved in this terrible tragedy at Littleton 
felt like they were a disrespected group and felt like they had to find 
some other groups to look down on or hate, the athletes, the minorities 
in the school.
    And in Kosovo what you see and what you saw in Bosnia is people who 
have been ethnically cleansed. That's a sort of sterilized word for 
being systematically killed, uprooted, raped, having your property 
records destroyed, having your mosques and your museums and your 
libraries destroyed, having an effort to basically eradicate your 
existence.
    But it's very interesting. Don't you find it ironic--especially 
those of you--I was talking to Steven the 
other day about my library, and we were talking about whether we could 
have some virtual reality effects in my library in the museum, you know. 
Sometimes I feel like I'm living in virtual reality, so I'm highly 
interested in this. [Laughter] This is the kind of thing you guys think 
about when you think about the 21st century, you know? Our kids are all 
on the Internet, and the human genome secrets have all been unlocked, 
and we all live to be 135, and we whiz around the world in safe 
airplanes that never have wrecks. And we'll be driving on the Los 
Angeles freeways, and there won't be any more traffic jams because all 
our cars will be computer programmed and directed and everything will be 
managed just fine. This is the exciting--and our kids will all have pen 
pals in Mongolia and Zimbabwe and Bolivia and

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every place around the world. Technology will bring us together, and 
there will be a new golden age. That's our sort of image for our 
children in the 21st century.
    Don't you think it is ironic that here we are in the last year of 
this millennium and that image is threatened by the oldest demon of 
human society, the hatred of the other? It starts as fear of the other, 
goes to hatred of the other, goes to dehumanization of the other, goes 
to killing of the other. Don't you think that's interesting? I mean, 
these people in Kosovo, they're not fighting over who gets the right to 
show the latest Hollywood movie in the theaters in Pristina. In Rwanda, 
they weren't killing each other over who got the latest software 
package. They're talking about how they worship God and what their 
ethnic group is, what real or imagined slights they have against one 
another as groups. And we are not free of it here.
    I was in Texas the other day meeting with the daughter of James Byrd, the African-American who was dragged to 
death in Texas. The other night, I went to the Leadership Conference on 
Civil Rights dinner in Washington and recognized the mother of Matthew Shepard, the young man who was killed in 
Wyoming because he was gay. So America's got some work to do here, too. 
We ought to pass the ``Hate Crimes Act'' and the ``Employment Non-
Discrimination Act,'' and we ought to--to show that we understand this.
    But let me say, how we respond to Kosovo will determine what kind of 
world we're going to live in. I think all of you who know me know that I 
have worked for peace, that I deplore violence, that I have been 
heartbroken by the people who have been innocents in this battle who 
have perished.
    You know, I'd a lot rather be in Northern Ireland giving speeches to 
my people about how they ought to put all their guns down. I want to go 
back and work on peace in the Middle East. I don't even think that we 
can intervene in all the ethnic conflicts in the world. We're not asking 
everybody to get along. We can't even ask them not to fight. But if we 
cannot stand, after the lessons of the 20th century, against the 
systematic killing of people and their uprooting because of their 
religion or their race or their ethnicity, then what kind of world are 
we leaving to our children?
    You know, I had a wonderful day today. I spent the day with my 
daughter today, and Hillary just got back from Macedonia. That's where she was in 
the refugee camps. And so we called her, and then we got lonesome, and 
we'd call her again. The three of us were talking about all this. And 
she was talking to me about these people and how they have lost 
everything and how they have loved ones they don't even know what 
happened to. There are tens of thousands of people who are unaccounted 
for. Nobody knows what happened to them. And she talked about this 
little girl that was holding her hand while she was speaking. The little 
girl had no idea what she was saying, just holding her hand.
    I saw them in Germany when I was there, the young women and the 
Muslim families--where rape is an even worse thing than it is in our 
culture--saying, ``I want to talk to you, but these are things I cannot 
discuss in my family.'' A 15-year-old boy stood up and said, ``I cannot 
talk about Kosovo,'' and sat down and started crying.
    I ask you to think about this. What Europe and the United States is 
doing, what we are now engaging the Russians in trying to do--we're not 
trying to redraw the map of Europe. We're not playing some power game. I 
don't want to control anybody's life. All I want to do is to create a 
world in which we do not idly turn away from systematic bigotry based on 
hatred of the other that leads to mass killing. And I believe, as 
difficult as all the questions are I have to answer here--God, I grieve 
for those Chinese people that were killed in that horrible mistake that 
was made. As difficult as all the questions I have to answer, I would 
rather answer these questions than answer the question of, why am I 
having a good time in Los Angeles tonight and we have not lifted a 
finger to help those people? That is the question I would have no answer 
to. I would have no answer to that.
    They are a part of our community. If you want a world that will 
really be fit for your children to live in, if you want the benefits of 
the modern world, we need at home the philosophy the Democratic Party 
has brought that we're going to have all these benefits; we're not going 
to leave anybody behind if we can help it. We're certainly not going to 
leave anybody behind that's willing to work to be a part of it. But even 
more, we have to build a sense of community, where we not only tolerate 
each other, we actually relish our differences. And

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we can have the security to relish them and make our lives more 
interesting because underneath we know that what binds us together is a 
whole lot more important than what's different about us.
    And I want to close with this story. Tom Daschle told you that we had these tribal leaders come to the 
White House. And he didn't tell you the whole story.
    We had the heads of 19 Indian tribes from the high northern plains, 
from the two Dakotas and Montana. They asked for a meeting at the White 
House through Senator Daschle and his colleagues. And then they came 
into the Roosevelt Room at the White House, which is in honor of Teddy, 
Franklin, and Eleanor Roosevelt, and Teddy Roosevelt's Nobel Peace Prize 
is hanging on the mantelpiece.
    And so the tribal leaders said, ``Well, could we sit in a circle? 
That is our custom.'' So we sat in a circle. And each in their turn, 
they stood up and said, ``Well, here's what we'd like to have help on. 
Here's our education concerns, our health care concerns, our economic 
concerns.'' And I came into the middle of the meeting, listened to it 
all. It was just fascinating.
    Then at the end, the guy who was sort of their main spokesman, the 
tribal leader, whose name was Tex Hall, 
interestingly enough, stood up and said, ``Well, there's one other thing 
we want to do.'' He said, ``Mr. President, we want to talk to you about 
Kosovo.'' He said, ``You see, we know something about ethnic cleansing. 
And our country has come a long way. And we believe what you are doing 
is right. And so the chiefs have signed this proclamation supporting 
it.''
    And then at the end of the room, another young man who was a tribal leader stood up, and he said, ``I 
would like to speak.'' He had this beautiful silver necklace on. And he 
was very dignified, and he said, ``Mr. President,'' he said, ``I had two 
uncles. One landed on the beach at Normandy. One was the first Native 
American fighter pilot in the United States military.'' He said, ``My 
great-great-grandfather was slaughtered by the 7th Calvary at Wounded 
Knee.'' He said, ``We have come a long way from my great-great-
grandfather's time, to my uncles' time, to this time.'' He said, ``I 
have only one son, and I love him more than life. But I would be honored 
if he went to Kosovo to stand up for the human rights of people who are 
different from the majority.''
    That is the journey America has made. That is the journey I hope we 
can help the world to make. And if we do, you will take care of the rest 
of our challenges.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:20 p.m. in the Courtyard at the 
Greystone Mansion. In his remarks, he referred to event cohosts David 
Geffen, Steven Spielberg, and Jeffrey Katzenberg, founders, DreamWorks 
SKG studios; Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli; Gov. Gray Davis of California 
and his wife, Sharon; Senator Robert G. Torricelli, chair, Democratic 
Senatorial Campaign Committee; Representative Patrick J. Kennedy, chair, 
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; Mayor Sandra J. Levin of 
Culver City, CA; actress Goldie Hawn; Norm Pattiz, chair and chief 
executive officer, Act III Productions; Renee Mullins, daughter of 
murder victim James Byrd, Jr.; Judy Shepard, mother of murder victim 
Matthew Shepard; Tex Hall, chairman of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara 
Nation (the Three Affiliated Tribes); and Gregg Bourland, chairman, 
Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe.