[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 35, Number 8 (Monday, March 1, 1999)]
[Pages 262-267]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Dinner Celebrating the 90th Anniversary of the NAACP

February 19, 1999

    I have been friends with Chairman Bond a long time. We have had many 
interesting conversations; not all of them have been that laudatory. But 
Julian, I have that on film now, and I'm going to play it--[laughter]--
whenever I need a little boost in life, I'm just going to turn that film 
on. [Laughter]
    Thank you. I want to say publicly something I said to Julian Bond 
privately when he agreed to become the chair of the NAACP. I called him, 
and I thanked him. And I thank him again. And I thank all of you for 
what you are doing.
    When Kweisi Mfume agreed to become president of the NAACP and leave 
the Congress, I wept. [Laughter] But he told me, he said, ``Now, don't 
worry.'' He said, ``I'll have a good replacement in Congress''--and he 
did--``and I need to do this. It's the right thing for my country and 
for my people.'' And he, too, has served well. And I'm very proud of our 
friendship and of the service.
    I thank all of you who are helping. When Suzanne DuBose was up here 
talking about scientists slowing down the speed of light and the rest of 
us speeding up the speed of justice, I wish I had thought of that 
myself. [Laughter] That line won't rest. It will be used again and 
again. [Laughter]
    I want to thank Bell Atlantic and all the other companies who are 
standing with the NAACP. I am delighted to see Bishop Graves and the 
other officers here. And Bishop, thank you for your friendship.
    Most of the people with our administration have been introduced, but 
I want to thank Secretary and Mrs. West and Secretary Slater and Bill 
Lann Lee for being here, and Judy Winston, who did such a good job with 
our initiative on race. I want to acknowledge, also, the presence in the 
audience of Mary Beth Cahill, our new Special Assistant to the President 
for Public Liaison. And I want to recognize Ben Johnson, and many of you 
know he is the first Director of the White House Office on our 
Initiative for One America, and I thank him for doing that. Since Bell 
is so well recognized, there's one other former member of the White 
House staff

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here, Eric Eve, who went on for the money and the fame of Bell. I want 
to thank him.
    Ladies and gentlemen, I came here tonight for two purposes. One is 
to say a simple thank you. Thank you for what you've done for America, 
and thank you for being my friends. I am grateful. I am very grateful. 
The second is to say that--as Suzanne said so eloquently--we're in a lot 
better shape than we used to be, but nowhere near where we ought to be. 
And what we have to do as a people, as a whole country--but especially 
you, because you know--you know things about where we are and where we 
need to go that not every American does, because of the life you've 
lived and the things you've seen and the work you do. You know that no 
great nation, and certainly not this one, can afford to say, well, we're 
a lot better off than we used to be, so let's take a vacation from 
progress. Let's take a vacation from our struggle for liberty and 
equality. Let's take a vacation from our attempt to spread the reach of 
prosperity and freedom to Africa, to the Caribbean, to our friends in 
the Americas.
    You know that this is not a time to take a break; it is a time to 
thank God for our prosperity and our opportunities and make the best use 
of them. The Sun is shining, and we need to make hay. We need to work 
while the Sun is shining.
    And to do what I would like to do in these last 2 years of my 
Presidency, just like the last 6, we need the help of every one of your 
2,200 branches. We need to forge new coalitions across the lines of race 
and class and religion. We need to close America's remaining opportunity 
gaps.
    A lot of you have lived in homes when you were younger--and not so 
well off and prosperous as you are now--[laughter]--where there were 
literally gaps in the walls or the windows, and you could feel the wind 
blowing. Well, there are a lot of people still getting blown by those 
kinds of winds and the opportunity gaps of America.
    Kweisi said, as all of you know, that the NAACP was formed 90 years 
ago. It was founded, as all of you know, I'm sure, in direct response to 
a riot in Springfield, Illinois. Now, I learned something in getting 
ready to come here tonight that I did not know. I had always thought it 
was simply a cruel irony that this riot occurred in Abraham
Lincoln's hometown and where he was buried. I learned that the white mob 
was actually, deliberately conducting the riot there, trying to make Mr. 
Lincoln turn over in his grave. They yelled, storming through the black 
neighborhoods, ``Lincoln freed you; we'll show you where you belong.''
    Well, quite to the contrary, it was the NAACP that helped to show 
you where you belong. On any bus and any lunch counter and any voting 
booth, in any school, in the Armed Forces, in the highest echelons of 
Government and business, you belong everywhere. And so do your friends. 
And we will never make what Congressman John Lewis so beautifully called 
the ``beloved community'' until everybody who belongs can be wherever 
they belong.
    I am very grateful for the work we have done together in these last 
6 years. Previous speakers commented on all these folks from our 
administration, and how our crowd looks like America. What I would like 
history to say is, ``They had the administration that looked the most 
like America and that did the most for America, proving that excellence 
and diversity and community all go hand in hand.''
    I am grateful that we have stronger communities, with a dropping 
crime rate; that there are only about half as many people on welfare as 
there were 6 years ago; that the doors of college are open to every high 
school student who will work for it through the HOPE scholarship and the 
other academic aid that we have provided; that we have the longest 
peacetime expansion in history and the lowest peacetime unemployment 
since 1957. I am grateful that the prosperity is wider, with the lowest 
African-American unemployment rate ever recorded, the highest African-
American homeownership rate ever recorded, record numbers of new 
African-American businesses every year.
    But it takes a long time to get it all fixed. Just before I came 
over here tonight, 117 years too late, I awarded a pardon, posthumously, 
to Lieutenant Henry Flipper, who, because of racial prejudice, was 
wrongfully convicted of conduct unbecoming an officer and dismissed from 
the Army more than

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a century ago. He was born a slave. He was the first African-American 
graduate of West Point. He served with great distinction in the 10th 
Cavalry. In Fort Sill, Oklahoma, he eliminated the cause of malaria as a 
civil engineer by digging what is still called ``Flipper's Ditch,'' and 
is now a national monument. He lived to be 84. He served as an adviser 
to a Cabinet Secretary; he did all kinds of wonderful work throughout 
the world. He was cleared of wrongdoing 20 years ago, but he was never, 
never fully restored in his good name, until about an hour and a half 
ago, when, in the presence of 16 of his family members, several African-
American graduates of West Point, General Colin Powell, and a number of 
others who are here, I signed his pardon.
    Now, we don't want the rest of America to have to wait 117 years for 
justice. And we don't want people to have to wait until they're gone for 
people to say something halfway nice about them. We don't want to have 
America outraged, even though we honor the outrage, by another killing 
like the killing of James Byrd.
    We know still, every day there are qualified African-Americans who 
are turned away from home loans or business loans; African-American 
drivers pulled over because they look suspicious. Some of you call it 
the offense of ``driving while black.'' We know every day there are 
African-American children who are stuck in failing schools when they're 
entitled to good schools.
    So we've been working at it for 6 years, to try to bring a special 
focus to the need to build one America, and to deal not only with the 
problems of African-Americans and Hispanic-Americans and Native 
Americans but the fact that we are now becoming the most diverse 
democracy in the world--California, 10 percent Asian-American, soon to 
have no majority race. We started the initiative on race in 1997 to 
institutionalize the work of building one America. I appointed Ben 
Johnson to continue our work, in an organized, specific, and concrete 
way. And I want you to help us do that.
    I would like it very much if, after the next Presidential election, 
the new President is asked repeatedly. ``Now who is going to head your 
One America office?'' I don't want this to be a one-shot deal. I want 
this to be a journey, not a destination. And I want it to be something 
that makes us think more and more every day, seriously, about how we're 
going to build unity out of our increasing diversity, get rid of our old 
problems, and meet our new challenges. And I want you to help me do 
that.
    I want you to help us, also, to pass this new budget, which helps to 
close some of those large opportunity gaps: the disparities in 
education; in jobs; in economic development; in civil rights 
enforcement; in homeownership; and quality health care.
    I came here tonight to celebrate and thank you, not to talk policy, 
but I want to mention just two areas. First, the economy. We all know 
that even though we have the lowest peacetime unemployment rate since 
1957, there are places that haven't felt much of this vaunted recovery. 
We all know that even though we have the lowest African-American 
unemployment rate every recorded--and the same for Hispanic-Americans--
it's still quite a bit higher than the national average. And for young, 
single men, it is still quite high indeed.
    Now, if we can't use this moment of unprecedented prosperity to 
bring jobs and opportunity and enterprise to the neighborhoods and to 
the people who have not yet felt it, but are willing to work for it, we 
will never get around to doing the job. Now is the time to do that.
    So the NAACP is a nonpartisan organization; you do have Republican 
supporters out across this country who believe in civil rights. And I 
want you to go get them. [Laughter] And haul them up here to Washington, 
with the Democrats, too, and say, ``Look, we want you to pass this new 
markets initiative. We can put $15 billion in private investment into 
neighborhoods in this country that have not seen new investment and new 
jobs and new opportunity for people by giving the right kind of 
incentives, the right kind of tax cuts, the right kind of loan 
guarantees, the right kind of support to business people. And if we 
don't get around to doing it now, we will never get around to it.'' We 
need to do it now.
    I also want to tell you that a lot of farsighted business people 
have figured out that

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it would be very good for the American economy. Why? For the first 5 
years of my Presidency, 30 percent of our growth came from expanded 
exports, selling more to other people around the world. Last year we had 
a good year, but we didn't get 30 percent growth from our exports. Why? 
You know why, because of the financial troubles in Asia and in a lot of 
Latin American countries. Now, I think we ought to help our friends in 
Asia, Latin America, and in Africa to trade with us more so we can grow 
and they can grow. But in the meanwhile, we've got the most significant 
untapped market for the growth of the American economy right here at 
home, in all these neighborhoods that still are not growing as they 
should.
    The second thing I want to ask you to do is to help me give every 
child in this country a world-class education. I want you to help me 
finish the job of hiring 100,000 more teachers. I want you to help me 
finish the job. I want you to help me again. I want you to bring your 
Republican and your Democratic friends up here and help me convince the 
Congress not to say no this time to our proposal to build or modernize 
5,000 schools. I'm tired of going into these inner-city schools and 
seeing schools so old we can't even hook them up to computers, with 
broken windows and peeling plaster. It's wrong.
    And in many other areas, you go, and the kids are all having half 
their classes in house trailers because the schools are bursting at the 
seams. We need to do that. I want you to help me continue our work to 
hook up every classroom and library to the Internet by the year 2000. I 
want to ask you to help me change the way we give out Federal money, to 
not become victim to a tyranny of low expectations.
    I have said many times that I want to end the practice of social 
promotion, but not for the purpose of punishing the kids for a system 
that is failing them. And let me just give you one fact--I said this in 
the State of the Union, but I'm going to say it until I'm convinced 
every American knows it--last year, in the international test in math 
and science, a representative sample of American children, by race and 
income, scored near the top of the world in the fourth grade test. By 
the eighth grade, they had fallen to average. By the 12th grade, they 
were near the bottom. Nobody came and took brain cells out of those 
kids' heads. They did not get dumber. The system was failing them.
    So, yes, I believe we should end social promotion, but we also are 
tripling funds for after-school and summer school and tutoring programs 
and sending more college students into the schools to mentor kids when 
they're in middle school and tell them they can stay in school and go to 
college and what they need to do to do that. We need to do that.
    We are dramatically increasing our scholarship program to tell young 
people, ``If you'll go into inner cities or isolated rural areas and 
teach school for 3 or 4 years, we'll pay off your student loan. We want 
you to go out there and give something back to your country.''
    We have got to change the way we spend the money. The teachers and 
the parents and the kids are telling us what works; we ought to stop 
funding what doesn't work and start funding what does. We ought to say 
that school districts should raise standards for teachers, and we put 
money in there. There are so many of our teachers out there having to 
teach courses, with the schools overcrowded, that they don't have 
college majors or college minors in.
    That's what happens in high school. It's not that these people are 
not dedicated. They are, but they have not had the chance to be properly 
prepared. And the schools can't get enough teachers to put enough people 
in the classrooms with the kind of academic background. We ought to help 
them change that.
    And there are school districts with schools that are doing great and 
schools that aren't doing so well. The school with the biggest--the 
State with the biggest gain in student performance in the last couple of 
years is North Carolina, because they adopted a strategy that says, 
``We've got to turn around or shut down failing schools.'' When you do 
that, you almost never have to shut one down. They find a way to turn 
around.
    The great English scholar Benjamin--I mean, Samuel Johnson, once 
said--I had Benjamin Johnson on my mind--[laughter]--Samuel Johnson said 
that it is remarkable how the prospect of one's own demise concentrates 
the mind. [Laughter] We don't

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want to punish anybody; we want to turn schools around--and there's 
things in this budget to do that--and to help the teachers and to give 
the parents more information and to help more districts set up charter 
schools and to do things that will work, so that we don't have one size 
fits all.
    I read a story the other day about a school district out West that 
organized a school just for high school dropouts. Let them come at 
different hours. Let them have access to computers and special tutors. 
And all of a sudden, almost all the dropouts came back to school. There 
are all kinds of different things that can be done to raise the 
performance level of our schools.
    But I think all of you know that we'll never really have one 
America, and we'll never really get by discrimination, unless we create 
opportunity in the schools and opportunity in the economy. So I ask you 
to help me pass these initiatives.
    Now, let me just say one last thing. I was delighted to be asked to 
come tonight, honored to accept. The work that I have been privileged to 
do as President, and before, in my life to advance the cause of equal 
opportunity is perhaps the thing I cherish most, of all the things that 
I and my wife and our administration have been able to do.
    You'd be amazed how may times in my weekly lunch with the Vice 
President, after we get through with whatever business we have to do, we 
get back to talking about this subject. I guess it's because I grew up 
in the segregated South. Maybe it's because I met and was influenced by 
people like some of you here tonight, so many years ago. But part of it 
is, I know that it's a pure miracle that, starting out from where I did 
as a kid, I wound up here tonight. A pure miracle.
    I once heard a guy say every politician wants you to believe he was 
born in a log cabin he built himself. [Laughter] But the truth is, we 
don't build our log cabins ourselves. And not a person standing here or 
sitting here tonight got here on your own. And most of us get out of 
this life better off than we deserve, because God is good and so are the 
people that we get in touch with.
    But it really bothers me that there are children in this country, 
who are certainly just as smart, full of as many dreams, with whatever 
abilities God gave me--that they have them--who may not be able to live 
out their dreams. And if all of us as citizens have one responsibility--
apart from honoring our country and Constitution and laws--it ought to 
be to make sure that at the end of our days we have done everything we 
can to make sure no one we ever touched was denied the chance to live 
their dreams. We know we'll be better off when that's true. We know 
we'll all get something out.
    I look at these young kids that are here tonight, these young 
people. I'm kind of jealous, actually. If they'd let me be 20, I think 
I'd let them be President. [Laughter] You know? I think about the life 
that lies before them and all that they might be. I imagine, 30 years 
from now, some African-American, Hispanic, Asian female standing here as 
President of the United States, you know?
    But I know that as long as there are Native American reservations, 
where young American citizens live in communities where the diabetes 
rate is two and three and four and five times the national average; as 
long as there are neighborhoods where kids really don't have a chance to 
get a world-class education; as long as there are places where nobody's 
taking care of the pollution, so the health rates are not what they 
ought to be; as long as there is anyplace where anybody can't live out 
their dreams, the NAACP will have work to do, and America will have new 
ground to break. And together, there is no better cause for our energies 
and our lives.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Notes: The President spoke at 9:07 p.m. in the Great Hall at the 
National Museum of Women in the Arts. In his remarks, he referred to 
Julian Bond, chairman of the board, Kweisi Mfume, president and chief 
executive officer, and Bishop William H. Graves, vice chairman of the 
board, NAACP; Suzanne DuBose, president, Bell Atlantic Foundation; Gail 
West, wife of Secretary of Veterans Affairs Togo D. West, Jr.; Judith A. 
Winston, former Executive Director, President's Advisory Board on Race; 
and Gen. Colin Powell, USA (Ret.), chairman, America's Promise--The 
Alliance For Youth. This item was not received in time for publication 
in the appropriate issue.

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