[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[April 30, 2000]
[Pages 798-803]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the NAACP Fight for Freedom Fund Dinner in Detroit, Michigan
April 30, 2000

    Thank you. Well--I don't know what to say. [Laughter] I will tell 
you that this magnificent work of African art will be up in our 
Residence at the White House before I go to bed tonight. I thank you for 
it.
    Reverend Anthony, thank you for an 
introduction the likes I have never had and never will have again. 
[Laughter] Thank you for spreading the caring arms of this branch of the 
NAACP from East Grand Boulevard all the way to Africa. [Laughter] And 
thank you for being my true friend.
    Thank you all, ladies and gentlemen, for honoring Secretary 
Cuomo. I am delighted that he and his wife, 
Kerry, are here with me, and he deserves the 
honor you gave him. You know, he and Secretary Slater make me look good every day. [Laughter] And too often I 
get the credit when they deserve more. I thank them for being here.
    I thank Thurgood Marshall, Jr., 
for being here; Maria Echaveste, all the 
people from the White House that prove the truth that we have given you 
an administration that looks like America. I thank all your elected 
Representatives who are here for their support and solidarity with the 
NAACP. Thank you, Governor Engler, Senator 
Levin, Senator Abraham, Congressman Dingell, 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick. 
Congresswoman Stabenow, thank you for 
running and proving that you believe in democracy. And thank you, thank 
you, thank you, my friend John Conyers, 
and thank you for giving him the award that he so richly deserves.

[[Page 799]]

    Thank you, Mayor Dennis Archer, and 
thank you, Trudy, for being Hillary's friend 
and my friend for so many years. Long before you were a mayor, back when 
you were a judge and above such things as petty politics, we were 
friends. [Laughter] I have enjoyed watching the success of Detroit and 
enjoyed helping on occasion you to contribute to it. I thank you all.
    I bring you--I also want to offer my condolences to the family and 
many friends of Bill Beckham, who passed away 
last week, who devoted his life to improving the lives of others in this 
great city. And I bring you greetings from two people who are not here: 
the First Lady, Hillary, who said she 
wished she could be here, but she is otherwise occupied in New York 
tonight; and the Vice President, who is 
otherwise occupied somewhere in America tonight, who loved being here.
    Now, I am told this is the largest sit-down dinner anywhere in the 
whole world. And I can honestly say, it's the only one I've ever 
attended that had four head tables--[laughter]--the only one I've ever 
attended when I didn't shake hands with everyone at the head tables--
[laughter]--and I learned tonight that I was the first sitting President 
ever to attend this great banquet. I will say this: If this encounter 
gets anything like the press coverage it deserves, I am quite certain I 
will not be the last President to be at this banquet tonight.
    More than anything else, I came tonight to say a simple thank you. 
Thank you for being my friends; thank you for being there for me in good 
times and bad; thank you for being there in our journey to help America 
go forward together.
    For more than 90 years now, the NAACP has been America's friend, the 
conscience of a nation struggling and too often failing to live up to 
its ideals, challenging always all of us to look into the mirror, to 
face our faults and right our wrongs. I have proceeded these last 7 
years and 3 months with a simple philosophy that I believe is your 
philosophy: I believe everybody counts, everybody should have a chance, 
everybody has a role to play, and we all do better when we help each 
other.
    Dr. King once said our lives begin to end the day we become silent 
about things that matter. The NAACP has never been silent about the 
things that matter, and the life of this organization is just beginning. 
For all the progress we have made together, there is still much to do.
    I am grateful for your support and the role you and your work have 
played in the progress we have made together for America. I am grateful 
that we have the lowest unemployment and welfare rates in 30 years, the 
lowest poverty rates in 20 years, the lowest minority unemployment ever 
recorded, the lowest female unemployment in 40 years, the highest 
homeownership in history, and the longest economic expansion in history. 
I am grateful for that.
    I am grateful that under the Vice President's leadership, we've created empowerment zones in Detroit 
and many other cities and set up community financial institutions to 
loan money to people that couldn't get loans otherwise, and done so many 
other things. I am grateful for that. I am grateful that we have a 
healing social fabric, that the homicide rate is the lowest in 30 years 
and gun crime's down 35 percent and adoptions are up 30 percent. I am 
grateful for all of that. I am grateful that 21 million Americans have 
taken family and medical leave and that 5 million families have 
benefited from our HOPE scholarship to help pay for college.
    I am grateful that 150,000 young Americans, including at least one I 
saw here tonight, have served our country in AmeriCorps in their 
communities. I am grateful that over 90 percent of our children are 
immunized for the first time from serious childhood diseases, and 95 
percent of our schools are hooked up to the Internet, as compared with 
16 percent when the Vice President and I set out to hook them all up 6 
years ago. I'm grateful for all that.
    I'm grateful that, as Wendell said so much more eloquently than I 
could, we have appointed more minorities and women to more positions in 
the Government and on the bench than any administration in history by a 
good long ways. I'm grateful for that.
    I am profoundly touched by your prayers, your friendship, and your 
support. I reminded Secretary Slater when 
Reverend Anthony was up here preaching--
[laughter]--that I went home with him last week to a memorial service 
for Daisy Bates, the great Arkansas heroine of the civil rights movement 
who shepherded those nine children through Little Rock Central High 
School 43 years ago and who just died a few months ago. Daisy's 
minister, Reverend Rufus Young, who is a 
gentleman way up in his eighties with a frail walk, with a strong voice,

[[Page 800]]

got up and looked up at me, and he said, ``Mr. President, the only 
reason you've survived is that so many of us black folks were praying 
for you so hard.'' [Laughter]
    What I hope now is, we will turn our prayers and energies toward 
tomorrow. For when people gather together, even though it's important to 
remember the past, in my wife's words, it's even more important to 
imagine the future. And I guess what I would like to ask you is, in this 
millennial election season, as a citizen--forget about party, forget 
about anything else--what do you as a human being believe that America 
should be doing?
    I have waited a long time for my country to be in the position to 
create the future of our dreams for our children. I watched for a long 
time America just being paralyzed by these assumptions of what we could 
not do. When I got elected President, I think most people thought we 
could never get rid of the deficit, much less run a surplus, but we 
have. I think most people thought the crime rate would always go up and 
never go down, but it's gone down for 7 years in a row now. I think most 
people thought that people on welfare didn't really want to work, but 
that turned out to be wrong. Almost 7 million have moved out of welfare. 
They were wrong about that.
    I think most people thought a lot of things couldn't get better. And 
now we don't have any excuses, because we know when we get together and 
work together, things can get better. And so what I want to ask you is, 
what do you propose to do about it?
    A great country can make mistakes not only when times are tough but 
when times are good. I look out here in this sea of faces, and I wonder 
how many thousand stories there are here tonight--stories of triumph and 
heroism and struggle against the odds to overcome some racial or 
economic or other handicap--how many of you have lost a loved one to 
violence or other tragedies. And now, what I want to say to you is, we 
know things can be better; what do you propose to do about it?
    We have choices to make. I believe that we should keep on going with 
this economic recovery until we have brought economic opportunity to all 
those neighborhoods, all those little rural towns, all those Indian 
reservations, all those people who have still been left behind and don't 
know there's been a recovery because they haven't felt it. And we can do 
it now in a way that we've never been able to do before.
    I believe we should keep going until all of our children understand 
how to use computers and can make the most of it. I believe we should 
keep going until we find a way to guarantee health care rights to all 
Americans who are willing to work and do the right thing or who need 
help because they can't. I believe we should keep going until every 
American who wants to can go to college.
    Let me tell you something else a lot of people don't know; even a 
lot of African-Americans don't know this. Last year, for the first time 
in history, the percentage of African-Americans graduating from high 
school equaled the percentage of the white majority children graduating 
from high school. Now, we ought to keep going until the percentage going 
on to college equals that and then the percentage graduating. But we 
have to open the doors of college to everyone. We've made a lot of 
progress, but we've got more to do.
    And we've got more to do in so many other areas. I just want to 
mention two more before I leave. One is, in this whole business of 
sharing the bounty of America's public service. You know, I never 
thought about this in the way--my appointment of people of color and 
lots of women to important positions--in the way most people think about 
it. I always figured we'd do a better job if our Government was more 
representative of the rest of the people in the country. I always 
thought we would make better decisions. I always thought empowering 
people and communities was a positive good. I never thought it was 
something I was doing for somebody else. I just thought I was trying to 
make democracy work.
    And we made a lot of progress. But I want you to know, there's one 
real problem we've still got that directly affects Michigan. When it 
comes to appointing judges, the United States Senate is not doing what 
it ought to be doing, especially with regard to women and minority 
appointees.
    Hey, I need your help on this. A blue ribbon study found that during 
the 105th Congress, women and minority judicial nominees took much 
longer to be considered than white males. It found that minority 
nominations failed at a much higher rate than the nominations of whites. 
Last year there was a disgraceful rejection of an African-American State 
supreme court

[[Page 801]]

judge from Missouri named Ronnie White, 
solely on the basis of party politics.
    I have nominated two people from Michigan to the sixth circuit, and 
neither one of them have even gotten a hearing so far. Judge Helene 
White, a highly qualified Michigan appellate 
judge, has been waiting for a hearing from the Senate Judiciary 
Committee for 3 years, longer than any other pending nominee.
    My other sixth circuit nominee, Kathleen McCree Lewis, the daughter of Wade McCree, is here tonight. 
She would become the first African-American woman ever to serve on the 
sixth circuit. I think the Senate ought to give Helene White and Kathleen McCree Lewis hearings. Vote them up or 
down. Tell the American people how you stand. Let us hear from you. 
Don't hide behind having no hearing.
    I had to work and work and work to get a distinguished Hispanic 
judge and a female attorney appointed out in California. They made him 
wait 4 years. Now, why did they do that? Because they didn't want to put 
him on the court. They just didn't want you to know they didn't want to 
put him on the court. [Laughter] So if you don't want to do something, 
but you don't want the people to know you don't want to do something, 
instead of saying no, you just never get around to it. [Laughter]
    Now, we're going to have a new election in November. And we'll have 
a new President and a new Senate, and I hope a new House, with 
John as the Chairman of the House 
Judiciary Committee. But I want you to know this: I am proud of the fact 
that my party has never been guilty of delaying nominees to this extent 
and particularly putting the burden on women and people of color. And 
it's a shame, and we ought to do something about it. And I hope you'll 
help me do something about it.
    Now, let me just mention one other thing, because we have lots of 
choices this year. You will have choices about whether to keep on 
changing in accord with this economic policy and bringing everybody into 
it while we keep paying down the debt, investing in education, give 
families tax cuts we can afford, or going back to the economic policy we 
had before I came in, with even bigger tax cuts that, once I get out of 
office, would benefit primarily people like me. [Laughter] But we won't 
have any money for education, and we'll start running deficits again.
    We'll have choices about education policy, health policy, 
environmental policy, a lot of other things. But I want you to think 
about the things that we choose that really define us as a community. 
John Conyers talked about one. I'm proud that gun crime is down 35 
percent. Anybody that thinks that America is safe enough is free to walk 
out on my speech right now. But we know we can make America safer, and 
we know the best way to do it is by preventing crime in the first place. 
That's why we want to close the gun show loophole and do other things to 
keep guns out of the hands of children and criminals. That's why we want 
more community police on the street. That's why we want more after-
school and summer school programs for our kids, to give them something 
to say yes to.
    But when three-quarters of the people in the penitentiary are people 
of color and they're more likely to be in the penitentiary than they are 
to go to college, there's something wrong still. I don't think we've 
done as much as we can. I think we can make America safer and have more 
of our kids going to college at the same time. But we have a choice to 
make.
    I think we ought to pass the hate crimes legislation. There are 
still people in this country who are shot, who are abused, who are 
killed because of their race, their religion, just because they're gay. 
We've seen it over and over again, tragically. We saw it just this week: 
five people in a suburb of Pittsburgh shot and killed for no other 
reason, it appears, than the color of their skin or the way they worship 
God.
    Now, you will hear all kinds of arguments about this hate crime 
business, but I have studied this. It is simply not true that we do not 
need national legislation making hate crimes against people, because of 
race or because of sexual orientation or because of disability or 
because of religion, a Federal crime. We do.
    And I have looked into the eyes of the brother and the sister of 
that Filipino postal worker that was gunned down in California. I have 
seen one of those little Jewish children that was wounded, and his 
family, at that community center in Los Angeles. I have talked to the 
widow of the African-American former basketball coach at Northwestern 
who was shot walking in his neighborhood. I have put my arms around the 
parents of Matthew Shepard, who was stretched out on a rack in Wyoming 
because he was gay. And I have seen the brother and sister of James

[[Page 802]]

Byrd, who was dragged to death in Texas because he was black.
    Now, if we want to be one America and we don't want any politics in 
it, the easiest way that we can do that is to join hands and unanimously 
say, ``We can argue about a lot of things, but one thing we're never 
going to argue about again is our common humanity. Here is this hate 
crimes bill. It is who we are. It is what we stand for. It is what we 
believe.''

    You know, we do have a lot of bridges to cross. As long as there are 
people without economic opportunity and we can give it to them, we ought 
to do it. As long as there are people who don't have access to world-
class education and we can give it to them, we ought to do it. As long 
as there are working families who can't take care of their children, we 
ought to do it. As long as there--we ought to give them child care 
support and access to health care they can afford. We ought to do these 
things.

    There are so many challenges out there, but the main thing I want to 
tell you is this: If the good Lord came to me tonight when I walked out 
of this room and said, ``Mr. President, now I'm not going to let you 
serve the end of your term. I'm taking you home tonight, and I'm no 
genie. I'm not going to give you three wishes, but I will give you one. 
What do you want?'' I would wish for our country to be truly one 
America.

    I would wish for us to be able--you know, I have--you may have heard 
me tell this story on television, but I'm going to tell it one more 
time. I have got, on a table in the Oval Office--when you see me there 
with a world leader, and you see two chairs and two big couches and a 
table there--right on that table, you look next time--standing on that 
table in a vacuum-packed glass container is a rock that Neil Armstrong 
took off the Moon in 1969. That rock is 3.6 billion years old. And when 
people come in to see me, and they get all riled up, and they get all 
mad at each other, and they're thinking about little things, and they're 
all torn up and upset, ever since I've got that, I say, ``Wait a minute, 
look at that rock. You see that rock? That is 3.6 billion years old. Now 
chill out. We're all just passing through here.'' [Laughter]

    And I say that to remind you that, whether you're President of the 
United States or somebody serving us this dinner tonight, the most 
important things about us are not the differences between me and the 
people serving you dinner but the things we have in common.

    And when life is all said and done, the stories we really will be 
thinking about in our last moments were who liked us and who loved us 
and what moved us and the springtimes we remember and the moments of 
personal drama and courage and meaning that came into our lives. The 
purpose of public life, the purpose of citizenship, the purpose of the 
NAACP is to give people a sense of our common humanity and our common 
cause. You know, Wendell said that I learned that from my grandparents, 
and that's true. But I learn it every day from all the stories of all 
the people I see.

    You have given me a memory tonight I will never forget. Your support 
has meant more to me than I can ever say. The people of Detroit and the 
State of Michigan have been with me through thick and thin. But the only 
thing that really matters now is, what are you going to do tomorrow? 
What do you propose to do with this magic moment?

    Let me tell you this: The last time we had an economy this good was 
in the 1960's. We broke the record of the 1960's for economic 
expansions. There are a lot of young children here who weren't alive 
back then, but I was. And I graduated from high school in 1964 in the 
middle of that great economic expansion, low unemployment, low 
inflation, high growth, everything booming. We thought the civil rights 
problems would be handled in Congress and the courts. We never dreamed 
we'd be caught up in Vietnam. We thought we would win the cold war, no 
sweat. We thought we were on automatic, marching into the future. And 
what happened? What happened?

    Within 4 years, when I graduated from college, it was 2 days after 
Senator Kennedy was killed, 2 months after Martin Luther King was 
killed, 9 weeks after President Johnson, the great civil rights 
President, couldn't even run for reelection because the country was so 
divided over Vietnam. And within a few months, the longest economic 
expansion in history was itself history.

    Life is fleeting. Things change. I have been waiting for 35 years, 
not as President, as an American citizen, for my country to be in the 
position you're in tonight, to build the future of our dreams for our 
children. That should

[[Page 803]]

be the mission of the NAACP in this millennial year.

    Thank you, and God bless you all.

 Note:  The President spoke at 7:10 p.m. in the Cobo Convention Hall. In 
his remarks, he referred to Rev. Wendell Anthony, president, NAACP 
Detroit Branch; Gov. John Engler of Michigan; and Mayor Dennis W. Archer 
of Detroit, MI, and his wife, Trudy.