[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (1999, Book II)]
[October 19, 1999]
[Pages 1820-1824]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to the Voices Against Violence Conference
October 19, 1999

    Thank you. Good morning. I think Rebecca Hunter did a wonderful job with her pledge and with her 
introduction, don't you? Let's give her another hand. [Applause] I 
thought she was great.
    I would like to begin by thanking our House Democratic leader, Dick 
Gephardt, and all others who were 
involved in this Voices Against Violence meeting. I want to thank 
Congressmen Frost, Bonior, DeLauro, Clement, and Menendez, who are over 
here to my left. And I see Representative Capps 
out there. There may be more Members of Congress here. I thank all of 
them for being here.
    I would like to thank our Secretary of Education, Dick Riley, who came with me; Jeff Bleich, who runs our national grassroots campaign against youth 
violence. And I'd like to thank Ananda Lewis of 
MTV and all the other organizations who are working to help make this a 
safer place for all of you. I thank the parents, the teachers, and the 
chaperons who came here with you today.

[[Page 1821]]

    But most of all, I came here to say thank you to all of you for 
taking responsibility, taking a stand in raising your voices against 
violence.
    I also have to say that this is a good day for me for you to be here 
because I know a lot of you have been trained in conflict resolution, 
and I'm meeting with the leaders of the Congress this afternoon, the 
Republicans and the Democrats, to try to resolve our conflict over the 
budget. [Laughter] And if I don't do so well, I may keep some of you in 
Washington for an extra day or 2 to help me. I think that would be a 
good idea.
    Actually, we do agree on things from time to time. Later today I'm 
going to sign legislation that will make good our common commitment to 
veterans, housing, science and technology, and to a part of what I call 
my new markets initiative, to give economic opportunity to the poor 
parts of America where our recovery has not reached.
    And now we have to finish the rest of the budget. The most important 
thing to me and to all of us is that we do a good job on education. It 
has got to be the number one priority for our country for the new 
century. We have the largest and most diverse student population we have 
ever had. It poses new challenges for us, but it gives America an 
unprecedented opportunity.
    So I want you to see what we want to do about youth violence in the 
larger context of what I believe should be our commitment to give you 
the best possible education and the best possible future that any 
children have ever had in the history of our country.
    We're trying to put 100,000 teachers in our classrooms for smaller 
classes. We're trying to build or modernize 6,000 schools, because so 
many kids are in housetrailers and broken-down old schools today, 
because there are so many more schoolchildren than we've ever had 
before. We're trying to make sure that by the end of next year we have 
hooked up every classroom in America to the Internet. We're trying to 
provide funds for summer school and after-school programs, funds to turn 
around schools that aren't doing a good job, more efforts to mentor 
young people in middle school to get them ready to go on to college.
    We're also fighting for funds for health care and the environment 
and for more community police officers. And we're doing it in a way that 
will enable us to do something else you should care about, which is to 
save Social Security and Medicare when the so-called baby boom 
generation retires, and then there will only be about two people your 
age working for every one person retired. And it's very important that 
we use this moment, here, where we're prosperous, to protect your 
future.
    Most of us who are in the baby boom generation are panicked by the 
thought that when we retire, we'll impose a big burden on your 
generation and your ability to raise your kids. So we're determined to 
avoid that, and we can.
    And finally, let me say, from the time I was your age until today, 
our country has always been in debt, and over the last 10 or 12 years, 
increasingly so, before I became President. We've got a chance to get 
this country out of debt over the next 15 years, to make America debt-
free for the first time since 1835, and I hope we will do that.
    I've been asking all the American people, including our young 
people, to imagine the future and to recognize that our country has a 
certain, unique moment here, when we've got a lot of prosperity and when 
our problems have been laid bare for us for all to see by tragic 
instances, like the instance at Columbine. But it's not the only kind of 
violence young people are subjected to. They're also subjected to hate 
crimes: Matthew Shepard being killed in Wyoming; the children shot at, 
at the Jewish community center; and then the Filipino postalworker 
murdered; the young Korean killed in the Middle West by the guy on the 
hate crime spree who also killed the African-American former basketball 
coach at Northwestern.
    So when you have all these opportunities out there and you have your 
problems laid bare and you have the strength of the country and the 
prosperity of the country giving us the confidence do deal with them, 
what I hope you will say to everybody here and when you go back home is, 
America will never have a better time to face its biggest problems; 
America will never have a better time to save all of its children. And 
that is what I think we ought to be thinking about.
    You heard Congressman Gephardt say that our crime rate has been 
going down 7 years in a row. That's the first time that's happened for 
over 40 years. The overall crime rate is the lowest it has been in 26 
years. The murder rate is the lowest it has been in more than 30 years. 
That sounds great, and I'm proud of

[[Page 1822]]

that. And I'm glad we've worked on that. But does anybody think America 
is as safe as it ought to be? No. Of course not, obviously.
    Six months after Columbine--tomorrow, 6 months after Columbine, no 
serious person believes that America is as safe as it ought to be. And 
every day, every day we lose more than a dozen kids to violence. They 
die in ones and twos, so we don't see them on the evening news; we don't 
see their names blared in headlines.
    So why don't you help us adopt a real goal? Why don't we, together, 
say that we're going to make America the safest big country in the world 
in the 21st century, starting with making our children safe? You can do 
that, and that's what I want to do.
    We need an organized way in every community in America to capture 
the spirit that brought you to Washington this week. We need people 
working on specific things. I thought Rebecca Hunter's pledge was great. You just think about it. If every 
young person in every high school and junior high school in America took 
the pledge that she stated and acted on it, violence would go down. At 
least violence perpetrated by young people would go down.
    I want you to help us while you're here. What else can we do? How do 
we make our schools sanctuaries of safety? How do we recognize the early 
warning signs of violence? How do we teach people to resolve their 
differences peacefully? How do we share good ideas from one community to 
another? How can people who are injured find it in their hearts to 
forgive people they've been angry at, instead of trying to get even? 
These are very important questions.
    It seems to me there is no quick-fix solution, and what we have to 
do in Washington is to try to give you the tools and the framework and 
as safe as possible condition to do this work. But our young people have 
to be reached one by one. In many ways, all of you can have more 
influence on your peers than I can as President, or than any of us can. 
We can try, but you can make all the difference.
    I also would like to say that I think that this conference has to 
recognize that there are things that you can do and things that we have 
to do and that we have some obligations here to understand the problem 
of youth violence in the environment as a greater violent level of our 
community. And let me just mention a few things. Mr. Gephardt mentioned 
a couple of them before, but when I took office, almost 7 years ago now, 
I had spent a lot of time going from community to community, walking the 
streets with police officers and with community leaders, sitting and 
listening to young people talk about the violence in their streets. I'll 
never forget, I was in California one time--this was way--8 or 9 years 
ago--and this young person in a grade school told me what it was like 
when they had a drive-by shooting at random and all the kids had to get 
out of their desks and hit the floor. And I've listened to people talk 
to me about this stuff.
    And I asked the Congress to do what the local people told me would 
help to lower crime. So we put more community policing programs out 
there; we passed the Brady bill; we banned assault weapons. We did a lot 
of things that were good, and we supported local community initiatives. 
We had a zero tolerance for guns in school policy.
    And as I said, it is working, and that is good. But now I think we 
have to do some more things. I also should say that all these people 
here in our caucus who supported all those crime policies took a lot of 
heat for doing it, because we were told that--the NRA told everybody we 
were going to take their guns away and they couldn't go hunting anymore. 
Well, everybody's still hunting, but it's a safer country, and we're 
still having the same argument up here.
    We held the first-ever school safety conference at the White House, 
and we gave over $100 million in safe school grants to schools and 
communities to help them fight youth violence. We started mentoring 
programs to help kids know that if they stayed in school and stayed out 
of trouble, they could actually go on to college. And after the terrible 
wave of violence culminating in Columbine, I launched a new White House 
youth violence council to coordinate our work throughout all the 
Government agencies.
    Now, today we are going to release at the Government level--this 
makes the very point I made to you in the beginning about why I'm glad 
you're here--today we're going to release our second annual report on 
school safety. The Secretary of Education 
has done wonderful work on this. It shows that, once again, the vast 
majority of our schools are safe. It also shows they're getting safer, 
which is a tribute to you

[[Page 1823]]

and to your teachers. Homicides in schools remain rare. Crimes are down 
both in and out of school, and there are now far fewer students carrying 
weapons to schools than there were 6 years ago. That's the good news.
    The bad news is we've had Columbine, Jonesboro, Springfield, Pearl--
I could go on and on--all the places where there have been these 
horrible examples of school violence. We know that more and more 
students feel unsafe. So I want to say to you that--again I say, I want 
you to help us with new ideas. But I want to tell you what we're doing 
now, up here. And then I want to close and ask you to think about 
something for the rest of the time you're here.
    First of all, we want to do more to help you reach other people. Our 
Justice Department and the Education Department worked with MTV to 
provide a youth action guide and a CD that focused on concrete steps to 
reduce youth violence, such as mentoring, conflict resolution, and youth 
advocacy. I want to thank the Recording Industry Association of America 
for their help in putting this CD together. We've already distributed 
over a quarter of a million, over 250,000 of these CD's. Today the 
Justice Department is going to send out 200,000 more to organizations 
around the country: after-school programs, law enforcement agencies, 
foundations, and civic groups.
    Now, this CD basically sounds a call for action. It's a commonsense 
tool that helps to make a difference if it's put in the right hands, the 
hands of people like you. And we're doing our part. But let me also say, 
to again echo what Mr. Gephardt said, we need Congress to help us. 
Especially, we need Congress to help us to keep guns out of the wrong 
hands.
    Now, I've heard all this talk with--people say it doesn't really 
matter whether we do anything about guns. All I know is, we passed the 
Brady bill. We've kept 400,000 people with criminal backgrounds from 
buying handguns since 1994, and we have the lowest crime rate in 26 
years. I don't believe the things are unrelated.
    And one of the real problems with the Brady bill is there is a 
loophole: If you buy a gun at a gun show or in urban flea markets, they 
don't have to do a background check on you. So we want to close that. We 
also want to ban the import of large ammunition clips. And we want to 
require child-safety locks.
    Let me just give you this statistic to think about. You want to be 
against unintentional violence as well as intentional violence. The 
accidental death rate of children from guns in America--the accidental 
death rate--listen to this--is 9 times higher than the rates for the 
next 25 biggest industrial countries combined. You take the next 25 
biggest economies and put them all together, our accidental death rate 
from guns is 9 times higher than all of them put together.
    So we should do more to create an environment in which we will be 
more safe, that will help you when you're trying to get kids to sign the 
pledge, when you're trying to solve the conflicts in your schools. I 
also believe it's very important for Congress to pass this hate crimes 
legislation which makes it explicitly criminal to attack people because 
of their racial, their religious, or their sexual orientation. I think 
it is very, very important.
    Now, last night the Republicans on the relevant committees removed 
important hate crimes protection from a bill that had already passed the 
Senate. And they tried to kill this bill when we weren't watching, but 
now we're watching this morning. I want to ask you also to speak up for 
that, and that's the last point I want to make.
    This hate crimes legislation is important because--why? It embodies 
what I think is the biggest challenge facing not only our society but 
societies all over the world. The great thing about the modern world is 
we've got a lot of movement across national borders. A lot of you have 
probably been on the Internet talking to people in other countries. And 
when I look ahead to your future, I see a time when we'll have these 
unbelievable scientific discoveries. And your children, literally, may 
be born with a life expectancy of about 100 years. We're unlocking the 
secrets of the human gene. And you will be, literally, able to not only 
be American citizens but citizens of the world in ways that no one else 
has ever been, even if you don't travel beyond your home county, because 
of the way the Internet is working to bring us together. That's the good 
news.
    The bad news is that the same demons that lead people to commit 
racial and religious and sexual orientation-related crimes and 
discrimination in America are sweeping the world in more violent ways. 
Basically, the conflict in Northern Ireland is a religious conflict. The 
conflict in the Middle East is an ethnic and religious conflict. The 
conflicts in Kosovo and Bosnia were

[[Page 1824]]

ethnic and religious conflicts. The brutal killings in Africa were 
tribal conflicts. All over the world, people are getting into modern 
technology, but they're behaving as if they lived 1,000 or 2,000 or 
3,000 years ago, because they're afraid of people who are different from 
them still.
    Don't you think that's interesting, that you live in the most modern 
of all worlds, and yet the biggest problem we've got is the oldest 
problem of human society, people being scared of people who are 
different from them? And you can help that.
    I had, last week, at the White House--really my wife had this meeting, and I just went along for 
the ride. But she sponsored this lecture by a man who helped to create the infrastructure of the Internet 
and a man who knows more than nearly anybody in 
America about the human genome project, the breaking down of the 
component parts of the genes, and how it fits in the body. And they 
talked about how we were going to be able to solve all these health 
problems by merging computer technology and what we know about genetics.
    But let me tell you what the genome specialist said. He said--now 
listen to this--look around this room, all the different kinds of people 
that are in this room. He said that 99 percent of us, 99.9 percent of 
each of our bodies is identical to the other. We are 99.9 percent the 
same genetically. Even more interesting, he said, if you take two ethnic 
groups, there are more differences in the gene structures within the 
ethnic groups than there are between the ethnic groups. That is, if you 
take, let's say, a group of Hispanic kids and a group of Asian kids, 
there will be more differences within the group than what you average 
out what the genetic makeup is between the Hispanics and the Asians.
    We're getting a message here. Science is reaffirming what our values 
tell us. And I'm telling you, if you all can do something about violence 
and fear and the compulsive alienation of so many of our young people, 
which turns into their need to look down on people and eventually 
dehumanize them and eventually think it's okay to act violently against 
them, if you can deal with that--it's the oldest problem of human 
society--if you can deal with that, you're going to have the brightest 
future of any generation of Americans.
    You will have a chance to solve diseases, to solve poverty problems, 
to give people potential that they never would have had before. But the 
whole thing can be held down by the failure to deal with our violent 
impulses, which are the product of our most deep-seated fears. So think 
about that.
    If you want to live in the new world of the 21st century, you've got 
to help people get rid of their old hatreds and old fears. We'll do our 
part, and we're very proud of your leadership in doing yours.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:30 a.m. in the Cannon Caucus Room at the 
Cannon House Office Building. In his remarks, he referred to Rebecca 
Hunter, a student from Nashville, TN, who introduced the President; 
Jeffrey Bleich, Executive Director, National Campaign Against Youth 
Violence; Ananda Lewis, host of MTV's ``HotZONE;'' Vinton G. Cerf, 
senior vice president for Internet architecture and technology, MCI 
WorldCom; and Eric Lander, director, Whitehead Institute/MIT Center for 
Genome Research. The conference, entitled Voices Against Violence: A 
Congressional Teen Conference, was sponsored by House Minority Leader 
Richard A. Gephardt and the House Democratic caucus.