[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 29, Number 33 (Monday, August 23, 1993)]
[Pages 1627-1629]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
The President's Radio Address

 August 14, 1993

    Good morning. This week we took a big step toward restoring 
opportunity and prosperity to the people of our Nation when I signed 
into law our economic growth plan. It puts our house in order with the 
largest deficit reduction measure in our history, mandating more than 
$250 billion in spending cuts, with substantial cuts in more than

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200 specific spending programs. It makes over 90 percent of our small 
businesses eligible for tax cuts if they invest to spur job creation. 
And it provides new incentives to lift people who work full time and 
have children in their homes but still live in poverty above the poverty 
line. That's a real incentive for the working poor to stay at work and a 
downpayment on our plan to end the welfare system as we know it.
    With this economic plan in place, private analysts believe more than 
8 million jobs will be created over the next 4 years. Already the plan 
has brought interest rates to historic lows and the stock market to 
historic highs. People are refinancing home loans and business loans, 
saving a lot of money, money that can be invested to grow this economy. 
And we've had about a million new jobs come into the economy in the last 
6\1/2\ months. This plan will help us to restore the economy and revive 
the American dream.
    But there's another threat to our security, to our economic revival, 
and to our most basic values. It's the crime that's ravaging our 
neighborhoods and communities. There were 90,000 murders in America in 
the last 4 years and a startling upsurge in gang activity, drive-by 
shootings, and bloody car- jackings. There's a virtual war on many of 
our streets, and crime has become a national security issue to millions 
of Americans. I've worked to fight crime as an attorney general and a 
Governor. I've worked with law enforcement officers, community leaders, 
victims groups. I know we can make our streets safer and our children's 
future more secure.
    This week I announced my administration's anticrime plan, and law 
enforcement officers from all over America came to support it. People 
from Massachusetts to Mississippi spoke up. William O'Malley, a district 
attorney in Massachusetts, said the murder rate in Plymouth County had 
doubled, and the age of defendants in court is getting younger. One of 
the law enforcement officers said that in his area the average age of a 
killer was now under 16 years of age. Police commissioner Bill Bratton 
of Boston spoke of the fear that grips his city where homicides have 
gone up 60 percent this year because of gangs and domestic violence. The 
attorney general of Mississippi pointed out that the crime wave has now 
reached small towns and rural areas, and we can't leave them out of our 
solution.
    These facts could be repeated by any prosecutor, any police officer 
in the United States. We have to give these people the help they need to 
seize the control of our streets. And that's precisely what I'm 
determined to do.
    Our new crime initiative goes back to basics: toughening criminal 
laws and disarming criminals, putting more police on patrol, protecting 
students, restoring order to our streets. It also emphasizes some good 
ideas that do work: community policing, working with citizens to prevent 
crime and catch criminals, and boot camps for youthful offenders to give 
them a second chance to develop self-discipline and other skills to live 
lawful, successful lives.
    Society has the right to impose the most severe penalty on the 
hardened criminals who commit the most heinous crimes. I support capital 
punishment, especially against those who kill our police officers. This 
legislation expands the Federal death penalty and limits the time 
available to criminals to appeal their sentences. The plan cracks down 
on the easy availability of guns. I'm eager to sign the Brady bill, 
which requires a waiting period before the purchase of a handgun. And 
I've signed a directive ordering the Treasury Department to suspend the 
importation of foreign-made assault pistols, the weapons of choice for 
many gangs and drug dealers.
    Our crime bill will fund the hiring of up to 50,000 new police 
officers to walk the beat. It will also create a police corps to allow 
young people to pay for college and then ask them to return to their 
communities as police officers in exchange for the educational benefit. 
The plan expands the cop on the beat program to help pay to put more 
police on the street, to hire more security guards to keep our schools 
safe, to beef up patrol in public housing and communities where small 
businesses are vulnerable to crime. We ask for new Federal boot camps to 
provide wayward young people the discipline, the education, the training 
they need for a chance to avoid a lifetime of crime.

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    And we put these new tools into the hands of the toughest and most 
talented trio of crimefighters ever assembled at the Federal level: the 
Attorney General, Janet Reno, a seasoned prosecutor from Miami; the FBI 
Director, Louis Freeh, a streetwise former prosecutor and tough Federal 
judge with a nationally acclaimed record of crimefighting; and Lee 
Brown, the former police chief of New York, Houston, and Atlanta, the 
father of community policing, who now serves as our Director of Drug 
Control Policy.
    But these law enforcement leaders cannot and must not wage this war 
alone. We in Government can start by ensuring that the criminal justice 
system reflects our values and restores people's confidence in the 
Government's ability to prevent and punish crime. But the power of every 
individual to influence those around them is also very strong, and it's 
also a power we must turn to if we're going to turn the crime problem 
around. Too many of our fellow citizens simply reject values like 
decency, order, and the respect for the rule of law. Often we can yank 
people like that back to what is right and what is true.
    Every one of us needs to speak up and provide better role models for 
our young people before we lose them to the meanness of the streets. We 
can take simple but effective actions like taking car keys away from 
teenagers and adults who are under the influence of alcohol or drugs 
before they get behind the wheels of their cars and risk great damage to 
themselves and to others. We can urge broadcasters and advertisers to 
tone down the violence we see on television and in theaters every day 
and persuade them that there is a market for programs and movies that 
reflect and reinforce our values. We can remind people of the 
opportunities they have for community service so that they can express 
their patriotism and caring by giving something back to the country 
which gives us so much and helps people in need at the same time.
    In short, we can work together as partners. And when we do, when the 
Government works with us and not against us, there is nothing the 
American people can't do.
    With the economic plan in hand and a very tough anticrime bill on 
the way, we can truly say our country is headed in a new direction: more 
responsibility, more opportunity, a deeper sense of community, and 
restoring the American dream.
    Thanks for listening.

Note: The address was recorded at 4:40 p.m. on August 13 at the Park 
Oakland Hotel in Oakland, CA, for broadcast at 10:06 a.m. on August 14.