[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[October 2, 1999]
[Pages 1661-1665]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 1661]]


Remarks at an Access Now for Gay and Lesbian Equality Dinner in Beverly 
Hills, California
October 2, 1999

    Thank you. Let me say, first of all, I thank you for that. I'm 
profoundly moved. And I was thinking when I was watching David 
Mixner make those remarks that 30 years ago, 
when I let him sleep on my floor--[laughter]--when we were much younger 
men in England, and I didn't charge him a nickel for it--[laughter]--I 
never dreamed that either of us would be in this place tonight doing 
these things. [Laughter]
    David's life has taken a lot of twists and 
turns since then. He's had his ups and his downs like all the rest of 
us. But I can tell you something, when I met him when he was young, I 
thought I had never met a person whose heart burned with the fire of 
social justice so strongly. He has never forgotten the roots of his 
childhood. He has never forgotten not only the pain that he and other 
gay and lesbian Americans have endured; he also cares for other people 
who are dispossessed and downtrodden and underrepresented and often 
forgotten.
    And tonight I was watching him, and he 
introduced his wonderful sister--who 
has also been a friend of mine for nearly 30 years now--and I was 
thinking how fortunate we are in this country at this time, with all the 
things we've had to do, to have had his energy, his heart, his devotion, 
his passion. It was 8 years ago that he and Scott Hitt and a few other ANGLE members met with me this week 8 
years ago, here. Then in May of '92 we had a big event out here, and 
some of you were there. And I told you that I had a vision of America, 
and you were part of it, that we were all part of the same community.
    Well, tonight I thank you for helping to make that happen. I thank 
my good friend Governor Gray Davis for the 
leadership he has given in California. I thank our leader in the House of Representatives, who--when David 
made that crack about the ``Canterbury Tales'' and how we're known by 
our traveling companions--[laughter]--it kind of made me feel sorry for 
Dick Gephardt. [Laughter] You talk about a guy that gets up and goes to 
work every day under adverse conditions and continues to do the right 
thing, he does.
    But I know that Representatives Baldwin 
and Becerra and Kennedy and Sherman and Waxman are here, and they're his good fellow travelers. We just may need five more in the 
company to make it a much better trip.
    I want to thank Bill Melamed, Skip 
Paul, Gwen Baba, Roberta 
Bennett for putting this together. I want to 
thank the members of our administration who came: Sean Maloney, Karen Tramontano, Minyon 
Moore, Fred Hochberg, 
Richard Socarides, Marsha Scott. And I want to thank Scott Hitt, especially, who's been the Chair of the AIDS council. 
He's having his last meeting as Chair on Monday, and he's been 
magnificent, and we ought to give him a big hand. [Applause]
    I'd also like to thank the Gay Men's Chorus. I was back there 
feverishly trying to write down all those lines. [Laughter] I want to 
call Hillary and give her those best 
lines tonight. You know, I'm trying to remember them all. It was 
unbelievable. If someone would furnish me with the lyrics of that song, 
I would be eternally grateful. [Laughter]
    You know, I'd like to put what brought us all here tonight just for 
a minute. I know a lot of other people are going to speak and have a lot 
of great things to say, but I would like to put this in, just for a 
moment, in the context of history and the larger context of our future, 
and how the fight for equal rights and equal opportunity and full 
participation to build one America fits in with all the other things we 
should be doing as a country, and how what we are at home will determine 
what we can do around the world in the new millennium.
    When I ran for President in 1992, most Americans felt things were 
pretty dismal in this country. The economy was in bad shape; the society 
was divided; all the social indicators--crime, welfare, and other 
things--were going in the wrong direction. Politics was, as we all 
remember from the convention they had back then on the other side, a 
matter of division, you know, just drive a wedge in society and make 
sure your wedge is bigger than their wedge; you get more votes, you win; 
and if

[[Page 1662]]

everybody is all torn up and upset, who cares, you're in power.
    And over and over and over again, things in Washington were sort of 
repeating themselves like a broken record. And I felt that we could do 
better with a unifying vision. That's why I set out a vision of America, 
and you were part of it. But I also had a vision that we could build an 
economy that was good for working people and employers. I believed we 
could build a country where we could grow the economy and make the 
environment better, not worse.
    I have always believed that the real purpose of life and growth is 
to try and figure out how to develop these unifying visions and to move 
closer to them and to break down all these funny walls we have to put up 
in our minds to organize life into little boxes so we can figure out how 
to get from here to there.
    And, you know, in '92, the American people just sort of took a 
chance on me and Al Gore. I mean, it was an argument we made and there 
was no evidence for it because the other crowd had been in so long. We 
just made an argument. And it was not an easy race. A month after we had 
that meeting out here in May of '92, I won the California primary. And 
the headline the next day was that the exit poll showed that all the 
people that voted for me really wanted Ross Perot 
to be President. [Laughter] And I was in third place.
    And then he and President Bush got in a fight about who messed up whose daughter's 
wedding or something. [Laughter] You remember that? I mean, it was an 
amazing--and I thought to myself, people don't have jobs; they're being 
foreclosed on; why are you guys fighting about this? The wedding went 
off without a hitch. What is this about? [Laughter] And somehow the 
American people decided to give me a chance, decided to give Al and 
Hillary and Tipper and all the people that came in the administration a 
chance.
    I guess what I'd like to say tonight, first of all--not with 
arrogance, but with humility--is that we now know that there is evidence 
that we're right and that pulling things together and moving forward 
actually works. We have the lowest unemployment in 29 years, the lowest 
welfare rolls in 32 years, the lowest poverty rates in 20 years, the 
lowest crime rates in 26 years, the first back-to-back budget surpluses 
in 42 years, the highest homeownership in history, the longest peacetime 
expansion in history.
    And you have to--15 million Americans took leave under the family 
leave law. And when it was vetoed in the previous administration, they 
said, ``Oh, well, we've got to veto this bill because if we let people 
take time off from work when their babies are born or their parents are 
sick, why, it will ruin the small business economy.'' And every year, 
we've set a new record for new small businesses in America.
    Ninety percent of our kids are immunized against serious diseases 
for the first time, our young children. We're giving 5 million more of 
them health insurance. A hundred thousand young people served in 
AmericCorps. I could just go on and on. And along the way, we gave 
America the most diverse, truly representative government by far in the 
history of America. That included you and everybody else.
    What I want to say to you is, this is not an argument anymore. 
[Laughter] We have evidence. And so you should be of good cheer. And 
when you look ahead to these elections in 2000, you should be absolutely 
sure that anybody who is not with you knows they're doing it in the face 
of the evidence.
    And because--what really bothers me about what's going on in 
Washington now, it's like there are all these people out there making 
decisions in the congressional majority as if the last 6\1/2\ years just 
didn't happen. And that bothers me. So I say to you, when they say, 
looking at the Vice President and our party, ``Well, America needs a 
change,'' I agree with that. America always needs a change. We've got a 
lot more to do on your agenda. America needs a change. The question is 
not whether we'll change, but how are we going to change? How are we 
going to change?
    You mark my words, the world is changing so fast in how we work and 
live and relate to each other and folks around the globe, that the world 
will change. The question is, how? And are we going to use this 
unprecedented moment, the chance of a lifetime to say, okay, what are 
our big challenges out there, and seize them? Or are we going to do what 
got us into so much trouble in the first place? Are we going to pretend 
that the last 6\1/2\ years just didn't happen? That's very important.
    And I want to try to put the things that you're thinking about now 
into that context. What are the really big challenges facing America 
that affect you, too? One, the aging of America--I hate it because I'm 
doing it. [Laughter] But

[[Page 1663]]

I'm the oldest of the baby boomers. The number of people over 65 will 
double in the next 30 years; there will be two people working for every 
one person retired and drawing Social Security.
    Now, we have never been in a position, until now, in my lifetime, to 
deal with that challenge. But we now have the ability to run the life of 
Social Security out 50 years, to add more than a decade to the life of 
Medicare, to cover prescription drugs for elderly people--three-quarters 
of them cannot afford quality prescription drugs today--and to do it in 
a way that all of you who are younger than that should rejoice about. 
Because I can tell you those of us in the baby boom generation are 
plagued by the notion that our retirement will be so expensive for our 
country that it will burden our children and our ability to give our 
grandchildren the childhoods they deserve. But we can fix it now. So I 
gave them a plan to do it. So far, they say no.
    Another thing that really bothers me: we've got the largest and most 
diverse group of children in our school in history. We never had over 53 
million children in schools, and they come from more different 
backgrounds than ever before. And that will be a godsend to 21st century 
America if, but only if, they all have a world-class education. And I 
think they're entitled to it.
    So I gave Congress a plan to build and modernize 6,000 schools and 
hire 100,000 teachers for smaller classes; make sure all the kids had 
computers in their classrooms; make sure we stopped social promotion, 
but had after-school programs for the kids who needed it; and more of 
these charter schools that California has led the way in bringing to our 
children. So far, they said no.
    Funny thing, maybe Mr. Gephardt will 
talk about this later, but one of the most interesting things is last 
year, right before the election in '98, they got religion on this 
education program. [Laughter] And they supported this big downpayment on 
our plan for 100,000 teachers, and we funded 30,000 of those teachers. 
And you had those real liberals, like Mr. 
Armey--[laughter]--going home. This is serious business; ask Dick. You 
had these real liberals going out and saying, ``Man, this is a great 
thing we've done. We've made a big downpayment on 100,000 teachers; 
we're going to put 30,000 teachers out there, and this is a great 
Republican program because there is no bureaucracy in it. We just give 
it to the schools, and they hire the teachers.'' They thought it was the 
greatest thing since sliced bread before the election.
    They have just voted not only to refuse to fund any more of those 
but to no longer earmark the money for the 30,000. So there's a big 
difference here.
    I'm worried about the families of our country. I'm worried about all 
these working people. How are they going to have the child care they 
need? How are they going to have the health care they need? Why don't we 
pass the Patients' Bill of Rights that protects working people? There's 
a difference between the two parties on that, and I think it's 
important. We're finally going to get a chance--we've been working for 2 
years--finally going to get a chance to vote on the Patients' Bill of 
Rights in the House next week.
    I'm very worried about this fabulous economy, because we've left 
some people behind. Yes, we've got the lowest poverty rate in 20 years, 
but there are still people in places that have not felt this recovery. 
If you come from--a lot of you come from other places, the Mississippi 
Delta, Appalachia, the Indian reservations, many of the inner cities. So 
I want to do some things that I think will change all that. I want to, 
first of all, give Americans with money the same incentives to invest in 
poor areas in America we give them to invest in poor areas around the 
world. I think that's important.
    I hope in the near future we'll be able to make access to the 
Internet as universal as telephone access is. It will have a huge impact 
on the economy. Last night I was in northern California, and I was with 
some people who work with eBay. A lot of you probably buy things on 
eBay. [Laughter] It seems like everybody does now. And I learned that 
over and above the employees of that company, there are now over 20,000 
people, including a lot of people that used to be on welfare, who 
actually make a living buying and selling things, trading on eBay, over 
20,000 people.
    Well, I'm telling you, that means nothing at the Pine Ridge Indian 
Reservation in South Dakota, where the unemployment rate is 73 percent. 
Now, we can do better. And we ought not to quit until every American has 
the chance to participate in our prosperity if he or she is willing to 
work. And I won't rest until that happens.

[[Page 1664]]

    I want you to keep a checklist in your mind, and when I get to the 
end, ask yourself what's all this about, what's it got to do with you as 
Americans? This is part of being part of America. I think we need to do 
more, not less, for the environment. The Vice President has this livability agenda to deal with, using all kinds 
of computer technology to alleviate traffic congestion, to buy more 
green space in urban areas. We're trying to lead the world toward 
recognizing that this global warming is real, but that you do not have 
to end your economic growth, because now there are technologies 
available to allow us to grow the economy as we reduce our greenhouse 
gas emissions. There are people in the other party who believe that this 
is some sort of subversive plot to wreck America's economic future.
    Not very long ago, I came out here and went to San Bernardino, to 
the Inland Empire, and we announced a housing development for low income 
working people in which the developers pledged, by the use of energy 
conservation technologies, to cut the utility bills of these low income 
working people by 40 percent. And I just got a report that the average 
reduction is 60 percent. That's good for the economy. That's not bad for 
the economy, and it's good for the environment.
    Let me just mention a couple of other things. I am very concerned 
that America, even though we've got the lowest crime rate in 26 years, 
is still a pretty dangerous country compared to other countries. We 
should be the safest big country in the world. This is a free and 
prosperous place. We welcome all kinds of people. It is not rational. 
Why aren't we the safest country in the world? Because we haven't taken 
reasonable steps, not enough of them, to keep guns out of the hands of 
criminals and children. And because, frankly, even though we've put 
100,000 more police on the street in community policing, we've still got 
neighborhoods that don't have enough coverage.
    So I gave Congress a plan to deal with both those things: put 50,000 
more police officers out there to prevent crime in the highest crime 
areas of the country and to deal with guns and so forth. They say no. 
Our crowd says yes; their crowd says no. Big difference.
    What about our role in the world? I've tried, from Bosnia to Kosovo 
to the Middle East to Northern Ireland, to stand up for the idea that 
people ought not to be murdered or moved wholesale because of their race 
or their religion. We have worked to support other countries and to 
build the capacity in Africa to prevent future Rwandas, because people 
ought not to be murdered because of what tribe they're in. And you can 
define tribe however you want. [Laughter]
    We're about to start a great debate on the Comprehensive Test Ban 
Treaty, to end nuclear testing, something that Dwight Eisenhower and 
John Kennedy wanted us to do years ago. We're finally going to have a 
chance to do it. In so many of these areas, there are partisan 
differences which surprise me. And let me come back to you.
    Why are we for the hate crimes legislation? Why are we for ENDA? 
Because if we can't build one America, it's going to be very hard to 
have a unifying force that will deal with every other one of these 
issues. And that's what I want you to think about. Don't you think that 
it's interesting that here we are on the verge of this new millennium 
with all these absolutely breathtaking technological breakthroughs that 
people who are technologically challenged, like me, can hardly keep up 
with? [Laughter]
    I mean, isn't it amazing to you that we have--modernity is bursting 
out all over in the form of high technology. And yet, the world's 
largest problem and America's largest problem, that you can see when 
those kids got shot at that Jewish school and that Filipino postalworker 
was murdered here; that you could see when that guy who said he belonged 
to a church that didn't believe in God but did believe in white 
supremacy killed all those people of color and wounded others in 
Illinois and Indiana; that you could see when Matthew Shepard was 
murdered and James Byrd was torn apart; and that you can see in the 
tribal slaughters of Rwanda, and the persecution of the Kosovar 
Albanians or the Bosnian Muslims or the fights in Northern Ireland or 
the continued agonies of the Middle East--here we are on the verge of 
this great modern world, where we can make movies with virtual reality 
now, and virtual reality seems sometimes more real than what is real, 
and the biggest problem we've got is the primitive, age-old fear and 
hatred and dehumanization of the other people who aren't like us.
    And so I say--I'm nearly done; I just want to say this--[laughter]--
I'm going to do everything I can, every day that I have, to remind 
people of that, that we have to be one America.

[[Page 1665]]

We can have honest differences over issues, but we can't have honest 
differences about whether we share a common humanity. And we cannot be 
under the illusion that either material prosperity or technological 
breakthroughs alone can purge the darkness in our hearts.
    I believe that America's best days are still out there. I believe 
with all my heart that we can find a way to marry prosperity and peace 
and humanity. But we must have a unifying vision. I want to say, again, 
I am grateful to people who have worked in my administration who have 
made me more alive to the concerns of your community, not only those who 
themselves are gay and lesbian, but others, beginning with my Vice 
President, who has been terrific on all of 
that in ways you will never know.
    But people are still scared of people who aren't like them. And 
other people are scared of themselves, and they're afraid they won't 
count unless they've got somebody to look down on. And if you have to 
find somebody to look down on, it must be somebody that is different 
from you. Because if you look down on somebody who is just like you, 
then you're looking down on yourself. [Laughter] And so we, in our 
little minds, come up with all these boxes. But all of life is a 
struggle to find a more and more and more and more unifying vision that, 
at least for me, makes us both more human and more in tune with our 
maker.
    I wish I could have done better. But we've done pretty well. And 
we're a long way from where we were. But I want you to think about this 
a little bit every day between now and next year, 13 months until the 
millennial election to define what America will be like; whether we will 
continue to embrace these big challenges and change in a positive way, 
building on what we now have evidence of; whether we will continue to 
look for those unifying visions that allow us all to join hands and go 
forward together.
    And I want you to remember the enthusiasm with which you greeted me 
tonight. And I want you to remember that it's easy to shout in the 
moment. But the world is turned by those who day in and day out, with 
courage and determination and heart and hope, stay the course. We need 
you. America needs you. I still believe in the future of America, and 
you are a part of it.
    Thank you, and God bless you. Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 8:10 p.m. in the International Ballroom at 
the Beverly Hills Hilton Hotel. In his remarks, he referred to ANGLE 
member David Mixner, who introduced the President, and his sister, 
Patricia Mixner Annison; H. Scott Hitt, Chairman, President's Advisory 
Council on HIV/AIDS; Gov. Gray Davis of California; and ANGLE members 
and dinner cochairs Bill Melamed, Skip Paul, Gwen Baba, and Roberta 
Bennett. The President also referred to ENDA, the proposed employment 
nondiscrimination act.