[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 35, Number 32 (Monday, August 16, 1999)]
[Pages 1597-1600]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at the AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps Graduation 
Ceremony

August 9, 1999

    Thank you. When I came up here, Josh said, ``I warmed them up for 
you.'' [Laughter] He certainly did that. Now he's sitting in my seat, 
which might be--[laughter]--might be a good omen. [Laughter]
    Let me thank all of you for being here today. I want to say a 
special word of thanks to Harris Wofford, who, as you heard from his own 
speech, his public service to America goes all the way back to World War 
II. He was a major player in the civil rights revolution, the 
establishment of the Peace Corps. He served in the United States Senate. 
He agreed to come back and run our national service program and to do it 
in a way that reached out to all Americans from all walks of life and 
all political backgrounds. And he has done a superb job. I'm very 
grateful to Senator Harris Wofford for his leadership of AmeriCorps. 
He's been great in our whole national service program.
    I want to thank General Chambers and Kate Becker for their 
leadership, and welcome all of you here, but especially the AmeriCorps 
NCCC graduates. Senator Wofford mentioned that on the morning you were 
sworn in with great symbolism in front of the FDR Memorial, it was quite 
cold. But within, literally 24 hours, many of you were already off to 
Texas and Puerto Rico to help the victims of a hurricane and a flood. 
After a year of such duty--I think you call them spikes, just like these 
fellows did so many years ago--you have fulfilled your AmeriCorps 
pledge. You have made a difference; you have gotten things done for 
America.
    So to all the parents and family members and friends here today, let 
me say that your sons and daughters may look about the same as they did 
a year ago, but they have grown in remarkable ways. They are now 
firefighters, homebuilders, relief workers, community organizers, 
mentors, educators. They are confident. They are leaders; they are also 
servants as they lead.
    Congratulations to Class Five of DC. Like the CCC alumni here today, 
you have touched lives and changed communities in ways that will be 
remembered and appreciated for years and years to come.
    You know, in so many ways, AmeriCorps is the embodiment of the deal 
I struck with the American people in 1992. At the time, unemployment was 
high; the debt had quadrupled in the previous 12 years; social division 
was increasing; political stagnation was the order of the day in 
Washington. And I wanted our country to change course and come together. 
I acknowledged that Government can't solve all the problems, but we 
can't leave the people that you've been helping out there to sink or 
swim on their own, either. And so I wanted to create a Government that 
would give people the tools to solve their own problems and live their 
own dreams and to basically have a new compact in which we said, we will 
attempt to create opportunity for all Americans who are, themselves, 
responsible, and we will attempt to build an American community of all 
responsible citizens.
    AmeriCorps embodies that. You go out there creating opportunity 
every day. You are

[[Page 1598]]

fulfilling your citizen responsibilities. And you have certainly helped 
us to build one American community.
    So far, as Harris said, there have been 100,000 of you. You have 
built tens of thousands of homes, immunized hundreds of thousands of 
children, taught millions of students to read, planted millions of 
trees, and are now in New Jersey enrolling children in the new 
Children's Health Insurance Program, an initiative I hope to take 
nationwide, because we have still over 8 million children without any 
health insurance in American today, and we now have the funds in 
Washington to cover most of them. We just have to get them enrolled.
    Now we're trying to take AmeriCorps up to 100,000 a year. Think what 
we could do; just think about everything you've done in this last year. 
Think how we could change the face and future of America if there were 
100,000 of you out there every single year from now on doing what you 
have done. Think how many more young people would also be able to use 
the AmeriCorps scholarships to go on to college. Think how that would 
change the face and future of America, the range of opportunities 
available, the lives that people would live.
    I think this is a very important moment for America. We have the 
strongest economy in a generation, the lowest minority unemployment rate 
ever recorded, the lowest unemployment rate in 30 years, the lowest 
welfare rolls in 32 years, the lowest crime rate in 26 years, highest 
budget surplus we've ever had, highest homeownership in history. What 
are we going to do with it?
    I think we should use it to meet our big long-term challenges. The 
baby boomers, people like me, when we retire, if we don't do something 
now, Social Security and Medicare won't be able to sustain the burden of 
our numbers. But we now have the ability to fix Social Security and 
Medicare in a way that enables us to retire without imposing burdens on 
you, so that you will be able to raise your children without having to 
spend your hard-earned money to support your parents. I think that is 
very important.
    Because of the surplus, we can get this country out of debt, for the 
first time since Andrew Jackson was President in 1835. And if we do 
that, if we do that, it means that when you go out into the world, 
interest rates will be lower, businesses will be stronger, jobs will be 
more plentiful, incomes will be higher, homes will be more affordable, 
and so will college education. It's important.
    It means we can invest in the education of all of our children and 
meet our other fundamental responsibilities and still afford a modest--
not a big, but a modest--tax cut designed to help people deal with the 
biggest challenges they face.
    It means that we can go out into the areas that you know all too 
well, which, in spite of this fabulous economy, have not yet felt this 
recovery. I was in Appalachia, in the Mississippi Delta, on the Pine 
Ridge Indian Reservation, in south Phoenix and East St. Louis and Watts 
and East L.A. And you know as well as I do that for all the economic 
progress of the last few years, there are still some people who are 
living only in the shadows of this prosperity.
    All of this we can do now. And I think it is my responsibility--and 
not just my responsibility as President, but my responsibility as a 
member of my generation, and that of every other member of my 
generation--or to leave you an America in the 21st century that is 
strong and that is worthy of the service you have just rendered. That is 
really what we're discussing up here.
    You heard Josh talking--we don't have to put up with things we don't 
agree with in America, with conditions and human suffering and problems 
that we know we can change. It doesn't have to be this way. You have 
proved that lives can be changed. You have proved that circumstances can 
be improved. You can prove--have proved that dreams can be realized, not 
only yours but the people you've tried to help. And this is sort of a 
magic moment for our country, and if we do the right things now, then 
the feelings you have from your service as AmeriCorps volunteers are 
things that you will be able to put into practice, to good effect for 
your country and for young people that come along behind you for the 
rest of your lives.
    I can tell you now, having lived a good deal longer than you have, 
there are two

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things that I want to tell you about the difference in my age and yours. 
One is, it doesn't take long to close the gap. [Laughter] Right? Is that 
right? [Applause] I mean, when I said that, every person here in this 
room that's at least 50 years old was thinking the same thing: It seems 
like yesterday when I was 20. [Laughter] Isn't that right? We're all 
sitting here thinking the same thing. By the way, I'd let you be 
President for a year and a half if you'd let me be 20. [Laughter] I'd 
take my chances on doing it again. One.
    Number two, there are certain chances that come along every day and 
others that just come along once in a lifetime. For example, my parents' 
generation won World War II and endured and whipped the Great 
Depression. The youngest of them are about Senator Wofford's age. He 
looks a lot younger than he is and acts even younger than that. And they 
did that, and they were called upon to do that when they were young, to 
save freedom and to beat a depression.
    Then in the intervening generation, they dealt with the civil rights 
revolution in America and gave us an America that looks more like this 
AmeriCorps class. And thank God for them, all of them.
    Our generation was blessed to be raised with enormous material 
satisfaction, and when I was young, it was the last time the economy was 
about as good as it is now. And we have waited a long time for the time 
when we would be presented with our one great opportunity and 
responsibility of a lifetime. We have it now in the present economic 
conditions of America.
    I've tried to fulfill our generation's responsibility by giving you 
the chance to serve and by helping to build one America across all the 
racial and religious and cultural and other lines that divide us. But we 
are being tested now, and our values are being defined.
    One of the things that is most amazing to me is that there are still 
some Republicans--and I want to say the word some; we've had good 
bipartisan support for AmeriCorps--but there are still some who are 
determined to zero out funding for AmeriCorps, in other words, 
ideological argument in the face of all the evidence of all the good 
you've done. Well, if they zero out the funding, their bill has zero 
chance of becoming law, because I will veto it.
    But the AmeriCorps budget is just one example of what will happen, 
or would happen, if their big tax cut could become law. I mean 
politicians normally, when they have money, like--you give it back to 
people in an election season, say, ``This is your money. I'm going to 
give it back to you. Please vote for me.'' And that's normally a better 
political position than the one I'm in, which is, ``It's your money, but 
I don't think we can give it back to you, at least we can't give as much 
back as they want to give back to you.'' You can readily see which is 
the more appealing position, can't you?
    Remember when you were kids, you used to argue about your parents, 
you know. You can just hear them arguing up there: ``My tax cut is 
bigger than your tax cut.'' [Laughter] But that's not really the 
question.
    The question is, what does it take to save America's future in the 
face of the aging crisis? It means you have to lengthen the life of 
Social Security past the lifespan of the baby boomers. That's what it 
means. And my plan takes Social Security out to 2053. A lot of you will 
be around then, but I probably won't. But we owe it to you to lengthen 
Social Security beyond the lifespan of the baby boomers. It means we 
should strengthen Medicare and provide for a prescription drug benefit 
because of medical revolutions which enable people to live longer and 
better if they can access medicine. It means we should get out of debt, 
so we can give you the strongest possible economy. It means we should 
invest in education and the environment and health care and national 
defense, and saving our farmers that are in so much trouble today, and 
the care of our veterans. And then we should give what is left in a tax 
cut.
    The reason that you have people up there trying to zero AmeriCorps 
is they know they can't pay for their tax cut without big cuts. There 
are special interest tax breaks in this tax bill that I threatened to 
veto, just special interest provisions, that would fund AmeriCorps 10 
times over. And I would urge the American people to look at the fine 
print of this bill, because it also has big cuts in education, in 
research and development, in the environment. It could even force 
closure

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of some of the national parks you worked on.
    And again I say, this doesn't have to be a partisan issue. This 
should be a generational issue. And--just like when you go out on a 
project, you have to do first things first. If you're working on a 
mountain, you've got to put the right kind of shoes or boots on before 
you go up there. This debate over this tax cut in Washington has not 
actually been a very good object lesson for the older generation to you. 
This debate is like a family getting around the table and saying, ``Hey, 
let's take the vacation of our lifetime, the vacation of our dreams, and 
when we get home we'll see if we can't pay the mortgage and send the 
kids to college.'' That's what's going on.
    It is the reverse of what you have done: getting things done for 
your country, making a difference, thinking about the future.
    So I say to all of you, I hope you will always believe you can make 
a difference. And I hope all of the leaders here in Washington will 
realize that we have the chance of a lifetime to make a difference.
    When you leave this program, I hope you will remember the other 
thing I said to you, which is that the distance between your age and 
mine is shorter than you think. It looks like a very long way from where 
you are, but from where I am, it looks like it happened in the flash of 
an eye. What you have done for your country and also what you have done 
for yourselves proves that it is truly more blessed to give than to 
receive and that in giving you do receive.
    All over the world today there is turmoil, from the Balkans, Kosovo, 
and Bosnia, to Northern Ireland to the Middle East to the tribal 
conflicts of Africa, where people are fighting and dying because their 
vision is so limited that they believe their life only counts if they 
can lift themselves up by putting someone else down, someone of a 
different race, someone of a different religion, someone with a 
different slant on life, someone in Africa of a different tribe. All 
over the world this is happening.
    AmeriCorps is living, daily, practical, flesh-and-blood proof that 
there's a better way to live; and that what we have in common is more 
important than what divides us; and that if we work together and hold 
hands and believe we're going into the future together, we can change 
anything we want to change.
    You are the modern manifestation of the dream of America's Founders. 
And I hope, when you leave here, you will never, ever, ever stop being 
proud of what you've done. And I hope you will never stop preaching the 
lessons you have learned. For in the end, if we're all working toward 
one America, the chances are we'll get where we're going.
    Good luck, and God bless you. Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 12:16 p.m. in the Sidney Yates Auditorium 
at the Department of the Interior. In his remarks, he referred to 
AmeriCorps service corpsman Joshua Watson, who introduced the President; 
AmeriCorps officer Lt. Gen. Andrew Chambers, USA (Ret.), Director, 
National Civilian Community Corps; and Kate Becker, Director, National 
Capital Region Campus.