[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 43 (Monday, October 28, 1996)]
[Pages 2129-2136]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to the United Michigan Clergy in Detroit

October 21, 1996

    The President. Thank you very much. Well, the bishop has prayed over 
us so well, and my longtime friend Reverend Jones, who shares my roots 
in Arkansas, has spoken with such passion, and you've made Senator Levin 
more energetic than I ever heard him before. He's on fire. [Laughter] 
And Mayor Archer is on his way to becoming the world's greatest mayor. 
He did so well, I think I should quit while I'm ahead. He was wonderful.
    I want to thank all the religious leaders behind me and all those in 
front of me. I thank Senator Levin for being here, along with the other 
Members of Congress who are here: Congressman Conyers, Congressman 
Dingell, Congressman Levin. I'm not sure if Congressman Bonior is here 
or not, but if he's not, you pretend like he's here. He's been working 
for you in Washington overtime. Our nominee for Congress, Carolyn Cheeks 
Kilpatrick, thank you for being here, Carolyn. Thank you, my good friend 
Governor Blanchard, for being here.
    I want to thank the people who performed before I came out, Witness 
and the Craig Brothers. And I want to thank the people who did that 
remarkable and unique job of our national anthem, Mr. Benjamin Pruitt 
and Sister Nancy Bradley. Thank you. If she had gone up one more 
``America,'' I was going to volunteer to withdraw from the campaign and 
become her agent. [Laughter] It was so amazing.
    Ladies and gentlemen, we have a wonderful array of people of faith 
here. We have Christians who are Catholic and Protestant; we have 
American Jews here; we have American Muslims here. And there is one 
person I think I know would be here if his health

[[Page 2130]]

permitted him to be, Father William Cunningham, who does a brilliant 
job. You all know him. And I've been to a lot of places in

my career in public service all across America where people are keeping 
hope alive and giving people a chance to make the most of their God-given 
abilities. But the work that Father Cunningham has done is truly unique. 
And he's had a pretty tough time lately, and he's doing a little better. 
But I'd like to ask if we could each in our own way just take a few seconds 
in a moment of silent prayer for Father William Cunningham and his health 
and God's will.

[At this point, a moment of silence was observed.]

    The President. Amen.
    Audience members. Amen.
    The President. Let me say to all of you how glad I am to be here. I 
thank the mayor for mentioning the opportunity I had. I thought it was 
an opportunity to give the Nation's highest civilian award, the 
Congressional Medal of Freedom, to Rosa Parks. She symbolized the 
empowerment that will come to every American on election day.
    And the mayor went through the issues, and I think you know what the 
differences are in the choices we face. So what I want to say to all of 
you is that we're going into a big, different, brilliant new world. I 
was just with the mayor and Wayne County Executive Ed McNamara out at 
the airport. We were breaking ground on this new $1.6 billion project 
that will bring you 20,000 jobs and companies from all over the world 
coming here to the Detroit area to invest, putting people to work. And I 
was thinking about that on the one hand and then, on the other, what has 
been done here by the businesses in this area when Detroit won in a 
competition, fair and square, the right to become one of our first six 
urban empowerment zones and then put together $2 billion worth of 
private commitments to invest in the city and then in a matter of a 
couple of years cut the unemployment rate by more than 50 percent in 
this city--in just a matter of a couple of years.
    Those are the two great things I want you to focus on. One is we're 
going into a big new world full of new possibilities, dominated by 
technology, information, and the raw speed of transfer of information, 
ideas, money, technology, and people around the world and across 
national borders. The second is that if we want to make the most of 
those developments, we've got to do a better job of developing ourselves 
from the grassroots up. That's what the Detroit empowerment zone 
represents, making the most of the human potential. The greatest 
untapped economic market for America is still the

Americans that aren't working up to the fullest of their capacities, 
learning up to the fullest of their capacities, or living up to the fullest 
of their capacities. And the great choice before us is whether we believe 
that we have an obligation to work together to make the most of this new 
world and to meet the challenges that remain or whether we would be better 
off sort of on our own or with our own little crowd.

    I do believe it takes a village to raise a child, build a city, 
build a State, and build a nation. And I do believe that we have to 
build a bridge to the future that's big and strong enough for all of us 
to walk across and that all of us will do better if everybody has a 
chance to get on that bridge and go right on across into that new 
century. That's what I believe.
    When I became President, I told you when I came here that I would 
give you an administration that looked like America but that I would do 
my best not to give any person a job for which they were not qualified. 
I said I'd try to do both things. And it was amazing to me that when I 
got to Washington some of the people wrote about this as if this was 
some strange and radical idea, some crazy notion.
    But all I know is, after 4 years, we've given more women and people 
of color a chance to serve in the Cabinet, on the Federal bench, in high 
positions in the White House and other places than any previous 
administration--[applause]--than any previous administration by far. And 
yet my nominees to the Federal court have received the highest ratings 
from the American Bar Association of any President since the ratings 
system began. You can have excellence and diversity; you can have high 
standards and give every- 

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body a chance to live up to those high standards.
    I said that I would try to find ways for everybody to participate in 
the bounty of America. That's what the empowerment zones were all about. 
That's why we're setting up community development banks all across the 
country to make loans to people who normally can't get loans. I've 
discovered--nearly a decade ago now--a man by the name of Mohammed Yunis 
who was educated in the United States and went home to Bangladesh--one 
of the poorest countries in the world--who's made loans through 
neighborhood banks to over a million poor village women to help them 
start enterprises in one of the poorest countries in the world. And he's 
got a higher repayment rate than the commercial banks do in the country. 
I figured if it was good enough for Bangladesh, it ought to be good 
enough for Detroit and Little Rock and every other place in the country 
where people ought to be given a chance to work.
    And they're working out there. They're working to give people a 
chance to tap into the free enterprise system. We just put, for the 
first time, $5 million of our campaign funds, which we have to save and 
invest, in minority banks, four leading minority owned banks, two 
African-American and two Hispanic. Nobody had ever done that before. 
I'll bet you--I shouldn't be gambling with people of the cloth. 
[Laughter] Let me rephrase that. [Laughter] If I were a betting man--
[laughter]--I would bet that that money will be cared for just as well 
and will earn just as much interest for our campaign as if we put it 
somewhere else. Meanwhile, it can be invested in communities where 
people really need the money to create jobs and go to work.
    So--and let me just mention one or two other things. When I was 
confronted with the question of what to do about affirmative action, I 
said it may not please some of my friends, but I don't think all those 
programs have worked the way they're supposed to. And we're going to 
have to tighten the standards on some; we even got rid of one or two. 
But the idea that there's no more discrimination in this country and 
that there's no more burden that people bear, it seems to me there's no 
evidence to support that. And I favor not quotas, not preferences for 
anybody that's unqualified, but I do favor making an extra effort to 
give everybody a chance to prove whether they're qualified. And that's 
what this is about. And I might say that there is an enormous amount of 
opinion of people who run big business operations, many of them in the 
other party, who have had the same experiences I have, who have the same 
position I do about this. We need to be bringing the people together, 
not dividing.
    One of the things I--because we have people of different faiths in 
this room, I want to say something else that I really have cared a great 
deal about. One of the great honors of my Presidency that many people 
didn't hear about because there wasn't enough controversy associated 
with it--[laughter]--was to sign a bill called the Religious Freedom 
Restoration Act. And let me tell you what this bill did. This bill 
basically says that the Federal Government cannot interfere with, 
undermine, or weaken the practice of anybody's religion in the United 
States unless there is some overwhelming reason for it and the public 
interest cannot be protected in any other way whatsoever. In other 
words, the first amendment means what it says: We will not interfere 
with the practice of the freedom of religion. This has changed a lot of 
things in America.
    We--for example, in a white evangelical church, a man had made his 
tithe payment after he'd gone bankrupt, and the Government was going to 
get the money back. And we said, no, no, no, we signed a law; we're not 
taking that money back from that church; they've got it.
    For example, we have respected the religious practices that are the 
oldest in our country, the practice of the Native Americans, our Indian 
people, more than ever before. We have tried to bend over backwards to 
respect the religious practices of Muslims wherever they live in 
America, even if the people involved are converts who happen to be in 
our penal institutions. Everywhere we have tried to work to say, the 
most important amendment in the Constitution is the first one: freedom 
of speech, freedom of association, freedom of assembly, and freedom of 
religion.

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    So all these things--I think it made a difference to America. And 
that brings me to the point I want to make most strongly. The mayor has 
gone over most of our record and there's lots of other stuff that's 
good, but he did as good a job as I could. I'll just leave that alone. 
[Laughter]
    There's a big idea here. Do you believe that we're better off if we 
go forward together with mutual respect for each other, with all of our 
diversity, or are we better off having a fight every time we disagree 
with somebody over something instead of saying, ``If you share the 
values of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of 
Independence, if you're willing to respect me even though I'm different 
from you, and if you're willing to show up for work tomorrow and be a 
law-abiding citizen, that's all I need to know about you. You're part of 
my America. We're going forward together into the 21st century.'' That's 
what I think our position ought to be.
    Lest you get carried away here--this is not a simple thing. This 
seems self-evident to you. This is a big deal. Look at the world. Look 
at how the world is convulsed by the--how children, innocent children 
still being killed on the brink of the 21st century because of tribal, 
ethnic, racial, and religious differences around the world. Consider the 
Holy Land, the home of the three great religions of the world who all 
believe we are all created in the image of one God, our Creator, our 
Judge. How shall He judge us for keeping on killing each other into the 
21st century because we're different from somebody else?
    Some people said they thought I had overreacted when these churches 
were being burned, when synagogues were being defaced with swastikas, 
when there was an Islamic center destroyed in South Carolina. 
Congressman Conyers went with me down to South Carolina to see one of 
these churches that had been burned and then rebuilt. And I said, no, I 
don't think so, not just because churches have been burned in my region 
in my lifetime and we did this before and it didn't work out very well, 
but because all over the world you see the logical conclusion of human 
affairs if we define ourselves primarily in terms of what we are not 
instead of what we are. If we start looking at other people and say, 
thank God I'm not them, then it's not very long before you say, well, 
maybe God wants me to do away with them. Is that right? [Applause] 
That's right. You think about it.
    So in America we--there's a connection, a direct connection between 
this fundamental religious concept we're talking about here, whether 
we're all the creatures of God and all equal in the eyes of God, and the 
much more secular event I just came from, dedicating that new airport. 
Why? Because this is the only great democracy that's got somebody from 
everywhere. This county has nearly got somebody from everywhere in it.
    When Hillary and Chelsea and I went to open the Olympics and there 
were people from 192 different groups there, national and ethnic groups 
around the country--our biggest county, Los Angeles County, has people 
from over 150 of those groups in one county. And I'll bet you're over 
100 here in Wayne County.
    So if you want to take the benefits of the modern world, you have to 
embrace the values in their purest form of honoring other people as 
equals in the eyes of God, if they behave, treat you with respect, even 
if they do things you think are dead wrong, if they don't break the law 
and they treat you with respect and they're part of our country.
    This is very important. And that's why I have spent so much time on 
religious freedom, why I've spent so much time on this church burning, 
why after the Oklahoma City incident I tried--first of all, you 
remember, there were all these people who said, oh, this must be some 
terrorist attack from the Middle East. I said, don't jump on those 
people; there's no evidence of that yet. And it turned out to be a 
problem here at home.
    And so I ask you all to think about that. Yes, there are these 
issues. Yes, I believe I'm right about family leave and our opponents 
are wrong--the leaders of the Congress and my opponent in the race. Yes, 
I think I'm right about college loans and our opponents are wrong. I 
believe all that. Yes, I think we were right on the empowerment zones 
and they were wrong to oppose us. Yes, I think we were right on trying 
to prove you can grow the

economy and still clean up all these

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toxic waste sites in our cities and give our kids safety, and they were 
wrong to oppose it. I believe all that.

    But you have to understand that underneath every one of those 
specific things there is this--these big ideas. Are we going to treat 
each other with respect and bring our country together and build one 
community and say, thank you, God, for giving the United States all this 
diversity on the brink of the 21st century? And if we do what is morally 
right with this great challenge You've given us--it's challenging for 
all of us to get along. It's challenging for all of you in one family to 
get along, and challenging to get everybody in this church to get along. 
It's a challenge. So you say, thank you, God, for giving us this burden. 
If we can meet this challenge, there is no country better positioned for 
the 21st century than the United States, because it's going to be a 
global society and we've got somebody from everybody here already --from 
everywhere.
    So I say to you, when I talk about opening the doors of college 
education to all or hooking up every classroom in America to the 
information superhighway so that children will be talking to each other 
in the poorest school districts and the richest and the most middle 
class in America--they'll be talking to kids halfway around the world in 
Africa and Asia and the Middle East, in Europe, by E-mail before you 
know it. We'll have for the first time in American history--all of our 
children will have access to the same information in the same time and 
the same way. All those things--every one of these issues you have to 
think about this is a way to let people live up to the fullest of their 
God-given potential and to live by our values.
    And we have to live by our values and treat each other with respect; 
otherwise, we can't take advantage of all this. The two things go 
together. We can't build that bridge to the future unless we're going to 
let everybody walk over it. It won't be strong enough.
    And there's so many things where you will be called upon to meet 
those challenges; I just want to mention two. One is we have to do more 
to help families succeed at work and at home. That's what the Family and 
Medical Leave Act was about. All of you will know this, but let me just 
put it out there anyway. The average American parent is spending more 
time at work and less time at home today than in 1969. People are 
working harder. That's why I wanted the Family and Medical Leave Act. 
That's why I want to expand it so people can go see their children's 
teacher or take their kids or their own parents to the doctor without 
losing their

jobs--just a little expansion. I want to do that.

    But it's also why we passed a law to say new television sets have to 
have this V-chip in it so a parent can determine what the children are 
watching when they're too young to make their own judgment, so they 
shouldn't be exposed to things they shouldn't see.
    And it's why we've tried to protect our children from the dangers of 
tobacco being advertised to them. You know, 3,000 kids a day start 
smoking in this country even though it's illegal, and 1,000 will die 
sooner because of it. And it's illegal to do. So, yes, I plead guilty; 
we're trying to stop those companies from advertising, marketing, and 
distributing tobacco in a way that inevitably goes to kids. I think 
that's good. We need to finish that work.
    It's why we have supported the safe and drug-free schools program, 
so there will be somebody for our 10-year-olds in a uniform standing in 
front of every class in the country, and people can look up to him and 
say, well, if they're not getting it at home, at least they ought to get 
it in school, somebody telling these children these drugs are wrong, 
they can kill you. They're not just illegal, they're wrong and they can 
kill you.
    And let me just say in that regard, I want to ask you for your 
support about a specific thing I recommended on Saturday. We have a 
particularly troubling time because there's still too many of our 
children out there raising themselves. A lot of you know that better 
than I do. And I am proud, as the mayor said, that we've increased child 
support collections by nearly 50 percent. We're going to increase it a 
lot more in the next 4 years. But getting the check is not the same 
thing as having mama and daddy at home talking about right and wrong. 
It's not the same thing. It's important, but it's not the same thing.

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    Now consider this: The crime rate has gone down in America for 4 
years in a row. The violent crime rate has gone down for 4 years in a 
row, but the juvenile murder rate didn't start going down until last 
year. And the juvenile rate of violence didn't start going down until 
this year. Isn't that awful? Who would have ever believed that our kids 
under 18 could be in worse shape when it comes to violating the law than 
a lot of people older?
    The drug rates in this country--the rates--casual drug use, 
marijuana use, and cocaine use have all gone down substantially in the 
last 4 years. But the rate of drug use in our country among juveniles 
has gone up substantially. I want to say--let me--let's get this clear: 
About 90

percent of our kids are still drug-free, and they're not experimenting, 
they're not doing anything wrong. But still, 10 or 11 percent of the people 
fooling around with drugs is terrifying. It's terrifying. And last weekend, 
I said one of the things I think we ought to do is to say to our young 
people, if you want to get a driver's license, we want you to pass a drug 
test. And if you don't pass it, you can't have a driver's license. I think 
that's important.

    Now, I want to ask you--[applause]--I want to ask you to support 
that because some of our young people say, ``Well, what's that old, 
cranky President doing that to me for? I'd never think of doing that.'' 
I want you to ask the 90 percent of our kids who hadn't done anything 
wrong to take this on as a personal responsibility. They are--we are 
inconveniencing them to help us identify those kids that are in trouble 
before it is too late.
    And I hope you will support me from the pulpit on this because this 
is important. We cannot afford to have a country where all the young 
adults--where people normally take a lot of the risks in life--are 
getting smarter about drugs, and the juveniles, the kids under 18, are 
still getting dumber about drugs. We have to do something about it. So 
that's one idea we have I hope you'll support.
    The other specific thing I want to ask you for is this: I am proud 
of the fact that because of the strength of our economy, that we all did 
together, and because of special work I've done with States and 
communities around the country, the welfare rolls have almost 2 million 
fewer people on them than the day I became President--people moving from 
welfare to work. I'm proud of that.
    Now, there has been a lot of controversy about this welfare reform 
law I signed, but I want to just ask you to think with me for about 2 
minutes about that. Let me tell you what the law says. The law says the 
National Government will continue to guarantee to poor families and 
little children medical care and food and if the parent, the mother goes 
to work, more child care than ever. The money that used to be in the 
welfare check itself, which is part Federal and part State--it used to 
go out every month in the check--that money will now go to the States, 
and the States and the communities will have 2 years to figure out how 
to turn the welfare check into a paycheck for able-bodied people. That 
is a good and honorable thing to do. But we can only do it if there is a 
job there to earn a paycheck from.
    So to me this is not a matter of rhetoric. I want to take poverty 
out of politics. I want poor people to be treated like other people. And 
to do that, we've got to take it out of

politics. And to do that, we have to develop community- and neighborhood-
based programs to treat people like individuals and families like 
individual families with dignity.

    Now, let me give you an example of what can be done. And I want 
every one of you to think about whether your church, your synagogue, 
your mosque, your Islamic center could participate in this. Under the 
law now, it is now legal for every State in the country to say to any 
employer, including a religious institution, if you will add one person 
to your work force and you will pay them something about the minimum 
wage and guarantee them a job for a while, you can have their welfare 
check as a wage supplement.
    In addition to that, I'm going to offer to the Congress a special 
targeted tax cut for people to hire people off welfare. Now, consider 
this. A welfare check on average in most States for a family of three is 
worth about--I don't know--three bucks an hour. If somebody gets hired 
at $7.50 an hour, $8 an hour or whatever, the employer gets the check as 
a subsidy to take people and train them and care about their children 
and end the phys- 

[[Page 2135]]

ical isolation that happens to people who get trapped without 
opportunity.
    But don't kid yourself; this law will be a flop if the rest of us 
don't do our responsibility. All the people that criticized me for 
signing this bill, if we do a lousy job they'll be right, because poor 
people will be worse off after the bill than before. The problem is 
before, we tried it that way and half the people were always stuck. So 
there was a limit to how much good we could do before, and the real 
value of these monthly checks is much lower than it was 20 years ago.
    Now we've got a chance to take the politics out of poverty, to make 
it into a people problem and a challenge, and the new system will 
literally permit every business person in the country, every nonprofit 
employer in the country, every religious institution in the country to 
get one family and say, ``You're mine.'' And then if the State has got 
any sense at all, they would do this, every State, to give the 
communities the power to say, ``Here's the check. It's a supplement. 
We're going to pay you to prove that this person and her children can be 
just like everybody else in life if they get the right kind of help.'' 
And I ask you, I want you to help me do that. Will you think about 
helping me do that? Will you prove that we can give poor people another 
chance? Will you help us do that? [Applause]
    The last thing I want to say is this: If you don't show up November 
5th, all this is a highly academic conversation. I have worked as hard 
as I could to show the American

people--whenever I go to a big rally--I don't know if you've ever seen them 
on television--I am always introduced by a citizen who has done something 
related to something I'm working on in Washington, because I want people 
like the folks that show up with you every week to see the connection 
between what we do in Washington--Senator Levin and I and these Members of 
Congress--and what you do here. That's what I want. And I'm just saying, 
anything you can do to increase that voter turnout, you ought to do. We 
talk a lot about politicians' responsibility; voting is the citizens' 
responsibility. That's the price you pay for democracy.

    And I will end with this story. I was in Cleveland before I came 
here today--a great American city. And I drove by a church--just by 
total accident, it wasn't planned--I drove by a church that 4 years ago, 
about this time, I was in. And the pastor, a great American pastor--a 
lot of you know him--his name is Otis Moss, a great American preacher. 
And Otis Moss was talking to the flock that night, and he said, ``A lot 
of you don't think you ought to vote.'' He said, ``Let me tell you a 
story.'' He said, ``I grew up in the South when we weren't allowed to 
vote. And finally, after people going to jail, and people going to 
court, and Congress passing laws, my daddy got the right to vote. And he 
walked 10 miles to the polling place. And those people looked at him, 
and they'd say, `I'm sorry, Mr. Moss, you're at the wrong polling place. 
You got to go someplace else.' And he said he had to walk 4 or 5 miles 
to the next polling place. And he said when he got there, they said, 
`I'm sorry, Mr. Moss, the polls are closed.' He said he'd been waiting 
all his life to vote.'' He said, ``The first time my daughter was old 
enough to vote, I took her to the polling place and we both got into the 
place at the same time and we closed the machines.'' And he said, 
``Before I could vote, I put my ear up next to my voting booth and I 
listened to my daughter vote, and I thought about my daddy walking all 
those miles all those years.'' He said, ``Nobody in my family has ever 
missed a vote.''
    And so I ask you to think about that bright new day that's out there 
before us and the many, many miles people walked without the right to 
have a say about that new day, and do everything you can with everybody 
you know to make sure that on November 5th we build that bridge to the 
21st century.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 7:42 p.m. at the Cobo Center. In his 
remarks, he referred to Rev. Odell Jones, pastor, Pleasant Grove Baptist 
Church; Mayor Dennis W. Archer; James J. Blanchard, former Governor of 
Michigan; Father William Cunningham, director, Project Hope; and civil 
rights activist Rosa Parks.

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