[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 34, Number 36 (Monday, September 7, 1998)]
[Pages 1724-1728]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to Employees at Gateway, Inc., in Santry, Ireland

September 4, 1998

    Thank you for the wonderful welcome, the waving flag, the terrific 
shirts. I want one of

[[Page 1725]]

those shirts before I leave. At least shirts have not become virtual, 
you can actually have one of them. [Laughter]
    I want to say to the Taoiseach how very grateful I am for his 
leadership and friendship. But I must say that I was somewhat ambivalent 
when we were up here giving our virtual signatures. Do you have any idea 
how much time I spend every day signing my name? I'm going to feel 
utterly useless if I can't do that anymore. [Laughter] By the time you 
become the leader of a country, someone else makes all the decisions; 
you just sign your name. [Laughter] You may find you can get away with 
virtual Presidents, virtual Prime Ministers, virtual everything. Just 
stick a little card in and get the predictable response.
    I want to congratulate Baltimore Technologies on making this 
possible, as well. And Ted Waitt, let me thank you for the tour of this 
wonderful facility. As an American I have to do one little chauvinist 
thing. I asked Ted--I saw the Gateway--do you see the Gateway boxes over 
there and the Gateway logo, and I got a Gateway golf bag before I came 
in, and it was black and white like this. So I said, ``Where did this 
logo come from?'' And he said, ``It's spots on a cow.'' He said, ``We 
started in South Dakota and Iowa and people said, `How can there be a 
computer company in the farmland of America?' '' And now there is one in 
the farmland of America that happens to be in Ireland.
    But it's a wonderful story that shows the point I want to make 
later, which is that there is no monopoly on brain power anywhere. There 
have always been intelligent people everywhere, in the most 
underinvested and poorest parts of the world. Today on the streets of 
the poorest neighborhoods in the most crowded country in the world--
which is probably India, in the cities--there are brilliant people who 
need a chance.
    And technology, if we handle it right, will be one of the great 
liberating and equalizing forces in all of human history, because it 
proves that unlike previous economic waves, you could be on a small farm 
in Iowa or South Dakota or you could be in a country like Ireland, long 
underinvested in by outsiders, and all of a sudden open the whole world 
up. And you can prove that people you can find on any street corner can 
master the skills of tomorrow. So this is a very happy day.
    I want to thank the other officials from the Irish Government, 
Minister Harney and Minister O'Rourke and others. I thank my great 
Commerce Secretary, Bill Daley, for being here, and Jim Lyons, who heads 
my economic initiatives for Ireland, and Ambassador Jean Kennedy Smith, 
who has done a magnificent job for us and will soon be going home after 
having played a major role in getting the peace process started, and we 
thank her.
    I thank you all personally for the warm reception you gave George 
Mitchell, because you have no idea how much grief he gave me for giving 
him this job. [Laughter] You all voted for the agreement now, and 
everything is basically going in the right direction, but it was like 
pulling fingernails for 3 years; everybody arguing over every word, 
every phrase, every semicolon, you know? In the middle of that, George 
Mitchell was not all that happy that I had asked him to undertake this 
duty.
    But when you stood up and you clapped for him today, for the first 
time since I named him, he looked at me and said thank you. So thank you 
again; you made my day. [Applause] Thank you.
    I'd also like to thank your former Prime Minister and Taoiseach, 
John Bruton, who's here and who also worked with us on the peace 
process. Thank you, John, for coming; it's delightful to see you. And I 
would like you to know that there are a dozen Members of the United 
States Congress here, from both parties, showing that we have reached 
across our own divide to support peace and prosperity in Ireland. And I 
thank all the Members of Congress, and I'd like to ask them to stand up, 
just so you'll see how many there are here. Thank you very much.
    I know that none of the Irish here will be surprised when I tell you 
that a recent poll of American intellectuals decided that the best 
English language novel of the 20th century was a book set in Dublin, 
written by an Irishman, in Trieste, and Zurich, and first published in 
New York and Paris--a metaphor of the world in which we now live. James 
Joyce's ``Ulysses'' was the product of

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many cultures, but it remains a deeply Irish work.
    Some of you will remember that near the beginning of the book, Joyce 
wrote, ``History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.'' Much 
of Irish history, of course, is rich and warm and wonderful, but we all 
know it has its nightmarish aspects. They are the ones from which 
Ireland is now awakening, thanks to those who work for peace and thanks 
to those who bring prosperity.
    Much of Ireland's new history, of course, will be shaped by the Good 
Friday peace agreement. You all, from your response to Senator Mitchell, 
are knowledgeable of it and proud of it, and I thank you for voting for 
it in such overwhelming numbers in the Republic.
    I think it's important that you know it's a step forward not only 
for Irish people but for all people divided everywhere who are seeking 
new ways to think about old problems, who want to believe that they 
don't forever have to be at the throats of those with whom they share a 
certain land, just because they are of a different faith or race or 
ethnic group or tribe. The leaders and the people of Ireland and 
Northern Ireland, therefore, are helping the world to awaken from 
history's nightmares.
    Today Ireland is quite an expansive place, with a positive outlook 
on the world. The 1990's have changed this country in profound and 
positive ways. Not too long ago, Ireland was a poor country by European 
standards, inward-looking, sometimes insular.
    Today, as much as any country in Europe, Ireland is connected in 
countless ways to the rest of the world, as Ted showed me when we moved 
from desk to desk to desk downstairs with the people who were talking to 
France and the people who were talking to Germany and the people who 
were talking to Scandinavia and on and on and on.
    This country has strong trade relations with Britain and the United 
States, with countries of the European Union and beyond. And Ireland, as 
we see here at this place, is fast becoming a technological capital of 
Europe. Innovative information companies are literally transforming the 
way the Irish interact and communicate with other countries. That is 
clear here--perhaps clearer here than anywhere else--at Gateway, a 
company speaking many languages and most of all the language of the 
future. Gateway and other companies like Intel and Dell and Digital are 
strengthening Ireland's historic links to the United States and reaching 
out beyond.
    I think it is very interesting, and I was not aware of this before I 
prepared for this trip, that Dublin is literally becoming a major 
telecommunications center for all of Europe. More and more Europeans do 
business on more and more telephones, and more and more of their calls 
are routed through here. You connect people and businesses in every 
combination: a German housewife, a French computer company, a Czech 
businessman, a Swedish investor, people all around Europe learning to do 
business on the Internet.
    At the hub of this virtual commerce is Ireland, a natural gateway 
for the future also of such commerce between Europe and the United 
States. In the 21st century, after years and years and years of being 
disadvantaged because of what was most important to the production of 
wealth, Ireland will have its day in the Sun because the most important 
thing in the 21st century is the capacity of people to imagine, to 
innovate, to create, to exchange ideas and information. By those 
standards, this is a very wealthy nation indeed.
    Your growth has been phenomenal: last year, 7.7 percent; prices 
rising at only 1.5 percent; unemployment at a 20-year low. Ireland is 
second only to the United States in exporting software. This year the 
Irish Government may post a surplus of $1.7 billion. The Celtic tiger is 
roaring, and you should be very proud of it.
    It has been speculated, half seriously, that there are more 
foreigners here than at any time since the Vikings pillaged Ireland in 
the 9th century. [Laughter] I guess I ought to warn you--you know, 
whenever a delegation of Congressmen comes to Ireland they all claim to 
be Irish--and in a certain way they all are--but one of the Members of 
the delegation here, Congressman Hoyer, who has been a great friend of 
the peace process, is in fact of Viking heritage, descent. [Laughter] 
Stand up, Steny.

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    Now, all the rest of us come here and pander to you and tell you we 
love Ireland because there is so much Irish blood running in our veins. 
He comes here and says he loves Ireland because there is so much of his 
blood running in your veins. [Laughter]
    Let me get back to what I was saying about the Internet because your 
position vis-a-vis telecommunication can be seen through that. When I 
came here just 3 years ago--had one of the great days of my life; there 
was so much hope about the peace process then--only 3 million people 
worldwide were connected to the Internet, 3 years ago. Today there are 
over 120 million people, a 40-fold increase in 3 years. In the next 
decade, sometime it will be over a billion. Already, if you travel, you 
can see the impact of this in Russia or in China or other far-flung 
places around the globe.
    I had an incredible experience in one of these Internet cafes in 
Shanghai, where I met with young high school students in China working 
the Internet. Even if they didn't have computers at home, they could 
come to the cafe, buy a cup of coffee, rent a little time, and access 
the Internet. This is going to change dramatically the way we work and 
live. It is going to democratize opportunity in the world in a way that 
has never been the case in all of human history. And if we are wise and 
decent about it, we can not only generate more wealth, we can reduce 
future wars and conflicts.
    The agreement that we signed today does some important things. It 
commits us to reduce unnecessary regulatory barriers, to refrain from 
imposing customs duties, to keep taxes to a minimum, to create a stable 
and predictable environment for doing business electronically. It helps 
us, in other words, to create an architecture for one of the most 
important areas of business activity in the century ahead.
    There are already 470 companies in Ireland that are American, and 
many of them are in the information sector. The number is growing 
quickly. So I say to you that I think this agreement we have signed 
today, and the way we have signed it, will not only be helpful in and of 
themselves but will stand for what I hope will be the future direction 
of your economy and America's, the future direction of our relationship, 
and will open a massive amount of opportunity to ordinary people who 
never would have had it before.
    A strong modern economy thrives on education, innovation, respect 
for the interests of workers and customers and a respect for the Earth's 
environment. An enlightened population is our best investment in a good 
future. Prosperity reinforces peace as well. The Irish have long 
championed prosperity, peace, and human decency, and for all that I am 
very grateful.
    I would like to just say, because I can't leave Ireland without 
acknowledging this, that there are few nations that have contributed 
more than Ireland, even in times which were difficult for this country, 
to the cause of peace and human rights around the world. You have given 
us now Mary Robinson to serve internationally in that cause. But since 
peacekeeping began for the United Nations 40 years ago, 75 Irish 
soldiers have given their lives.
    Today we work shoulder-to-shoulder in Bosnia and the Middle East. 
But I think you should know, that as nearly as I can determine, in the 
40 years in which the world has been working together on peacekeeping, 
the only country in the world which has never taken a single, solitary 
day off from the cause of world peace to the United Nations peacekeeping 
operations is Ireland. And I thank you.
    In 1914, on the verge of the First World War, which would change 
Europe and Ireland forever, William Butler Yeats wrote his famous line, 
``In dreams begin responsibility.'' Ireland has moved from nightmares to 
dreams. Ireland has assumed great responsibility. As a result, you are 
moving toward permanent peace, remarkable prosperity, unparalleled 
influence, and a brighter tomorrow for your children. May the nightmares 
stay gone, the dreams stay bright, and the responsibility wear easily on 
your shoulder, because the future is yours.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 4:12 p.m. on the factory floor. In his 
remarks, he referred to Ted Waitt, chief executive officer, Gateway, 
Inc.; Deputy Prime Minister Mary Harney and Minister for Transportation, 
Energy, and Tourism Mary O'Rourke of Ireland; former Senator 

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George J. Mitchell, who chaired the multiparty talks in Northern 
Ireland; and Mary Robinson, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights. A 
tape was not available for verification of the content of these remarks.