[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[March 4, 2000]
[Pages 382-384]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at a Democratic National Committee Reception in Los Angeles, 
California
March 4, 2000

    Thank you, Neil. I want to begin by just 
telling you that from the moment I got out of the car, I realized that I 
was going to have a wonderful time this evening. I thank the Nazarians, the Farahniks, and the Kadishas, and all of you for being here.
    Gray Davis was talking about this being the 
Governor's Mansion. When I walked in here and looked up at the spiral 
staircase, I said, ``You know, I really do live in public housing, after 
all.'' [Laughter]
    Seriously, let me say to all of you that I am profoundly honored to 
be here with you tonight because what our host said in his opening 
remarks, about coming here from Iran with nothing and how well he has 
done, and all of you have done, is a testament to the power of faith and 
family and work. Thank you for having the rabbi here tonight. He even 
gave me a book to read tonight. [Laughter] I promised to read it as 
quickly as I can.
    I ran for President because I felt that this country had the best 
system in the world if people were given the conditions and the tools in 
which their faith, their family, their work could flourish. And it has 
been a joy and an honor to serve. For whatever role I have played in our 
prosperity and our improving social progress and our role in peace 
around the world, I am very grateful. But I want you to think tonight 
about, also, the role you can play. There is no such thing as a time to 
completely rest, maybe a day, a week, but not a long time. And a country 
becomes great by always trying to do better, sometimes in small steps, 
sometimes in large steps.
    I believe some very basic, simple things. You said that the 
President is not royalty yet. Most of the people in the national 
political press certainly agree with that statement. [Laughter] But I 
came from the heartland of America. I was the first person in my family 
ever to graduate from college. But I was taught to believe something as 
a child I still believe. And I look around here, and I see the living 
embodiment.
    I believe every person counts, that everyone should have a chance, 
that everyone has a responsible role to play in life, and that we all do 
better when we help each other. I believe that freedom is the best 
system of government to allow the values that any of us have to 
flourish. And the fact that you can come here, preserve your community, 
and be a part of the larger American community is stunning evidence that 
that is right.
    I regret that so many of you had to leave your native land, one of 
the most wonderful places in all of human history, one of the most 
important places, culturally, in all of human history. And I hope and 
pray that what we have seen in three elections now, there, means that 
there is a movement toward openness and freedom there, too, and that 
someday all of you will be able to go home to visit and have two homes, 
complete and open and free.
    I have done my best to support that process in the limited way any 
American President can. I have also done my best to stand against the 
forces of religious and racial and ethnic and tribal hatred throughout 
the world, as you pointed out, from Northern Ireland to the Middle East 
to Africa to the Balkans. I have tried to protect the right of every 
person in this country and to advance the right of every person in every 
country to practice their faith as they see

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fit. And I have found more than ever that usually, when you do the right 
thing, it turns out to be the practically beneficial thing.
    And so, as I think about this moment--here we are on the eve of 
another set of elections--it seems like only yesterday I first took the 
oath of office. And this is the first election in almost 30 years that I 
have not been involved in as a candidate. And on most days, I'm all 
right. [Laughter] But tonight I speak to you not only as your President 
but as a citizen. I believe that our obligation in this election is to 
show that we are grateful for our prosperity, and we intend to do 
something with it. I believe our obligation in this election is to show 
that we are not arrogant about our progress, because we realize we'd 
have profound challenges here and around the world that we can still 
have an impact on, and we should shoulder those challenges and embrace 
them eagerly.
    I believe that this election will be determined by what the people 
of this country decide the election is about. If they decide it's about 
who can offer the most immediate, short-term gratification, we'll be in 
trouble. If they decide that this has been a pretty good 7 years because 
we continued to take the long view and we asked people to save a little 
so that we could get the country out of deficits, and now we're trying 
to get the country out of debt--and lo and behold, it turned out to be 
good social policy, because when interest rates dropped, more jobs were 
created. And more poor people worked themselves into the middle class, 
and the welfare rolls were cut in half. And we were still able to double 
our investment in education. So that's what I am concerned about, as 
your President and as a citizen.
    You came here, some of you came here directly from Iran after a 
terrible upheaval. You know, therefore, that you can never take life's 
blessings for granted. I don't want the American people to take life's 
blessings for granted. I want them to take this as an enormous 
opportunity to build the future of our dreams for all the children of 
this country. If we do that, we'll be just fine.
    Tomorrow I'm going, at 5 o'clock in the morning, to Selma, Alabama, 
where 35 years ago tomorrow, 600 brave Americans walked across a bridge 
for the right to vote. Some of them were killed for it. Many of them 
were brutalized for it. But because they walked across that bridge, this 
country is a better place.
    What I want to say to you is, at the time that happened, most of you 
were not in this country then. Most of you in this room weren't even 
born then. But I was just a young boy. I believed that my President was 
doing a great thing to give every American the right to vote, something 
that had been too long denied. I believed that my Congress was doing a 
great thing to guarantee the civil rights of all Americans. And I 
believed that we were in an economic period of opportunity that would go 
on forever.
    You may know that last month we celebrated the longest economic 
expansion in the history of America. I'm proud of that. The last longest 
economic expansion in the history of America was the decade of the 
1960's, and because we were not careful, it got away from us. And 
instead of passing civil rights laws in Congress, we had riots in the 
streets. Instead of winning the cold war by the power of our example and 
our values and our strong defenses, the country was torn apart over the 
war in Vietnam. Instead of electing people that we admired, we saw 
Senator Kennedy and Martin Luther King killed just before I graduated 
from college.
    I say that not to depress anyone but just to remind you of what you 
who are immigrants and who had to flee your country know: Opportunities 
in life are not to be taken for granted; good fortune is not to be taken 
for granted. We are never to believe that we deserve everything we have. 
Instead, we are to ask ourselves, what is our responsibility? And the 
greater our good fortune, the greater our responsibility. It is not only 
true for families and communities, it is true for a country.
    This country has never had the chance it now has to literally build 
the future of our dreams and to be a force for peace and freedom 
throughout the world. For all of you who have helped me to serve, I am 
very grateful. I worked as hard as I could to turn it around and to get 
things going in the right direction. And I'm not done yet. I get a 
little queasy when people start thanking me for doing a good job. I feel 
as if I'm hearing a eulogy, and I pinch myself--[laughter]--and I feel 
perfectly alive and still very much in harness. But you do have to think 
to the future. You are having elections. You are planning for the 
future.
    The reason I like this Governor and the 
reason my wife, who wishes she could 
be here tonight, told me--when most people thought he had no chance to 
win, she said, ``He'll win,

[[Page 384]]

because he's serious about the job, and he has thought more about what 
he would do if he got it.'' And Vice President Gore and I, we've worked 
hard to be serious about the job, to do things that would advance the 
values that we share.
    And so I say to you, I thank you for your help. We'll do our best to 
invest your contributions wisely. But I hope you will continue to talk 
to your friends and neighbors. If somebody asks you tomorrow or the next 
day or the next day, why were you here tonight, don't say, ``Father made 
me come.'' [Laughter] Tell them you came because you understand that 
this good fortune has to be nourished. You understand that it carries 
with it responsibilities, because you want every American to have the 
same chances that you have had, and because we all do better when we 
work together.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 8:46 p.m. at a private residence. In his 
remarks, he referred to reception cohosts Neil and Dora Kadisha, Parviz 
and Pouran Nazarian, and Leon and Debbie Farahnik; and Gov. Gray Davis 
of California.