| Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, members
of the 105th Congress, distinguished guests, and my fellow Americans:
I think I should start by saying, thanks for inviting me
back. I come before you tonight with a challenge as
great as any in our peacetime history, and a plan of action to meet
that challenge, to prepare our people for the bold new world of the
21st century.
We have much to be thankful for. With four years of
growth, we have won back the basic strength of our economy. With
crime and welfare rolls declining, we are winning back our optimism,
the enduring faith that we can master any difficulty. With the Cold
War receding and global commerce at record levels, we are helping to
win unrivaled peace and prosperity all across the world.
My fellow Americans, the state of our union is strong.
But now we must rise to the decisive moment, to make a
nation and a world better than any we have ever known. The new
promise of the global economy, the Information Age, unimagined new
work, life-enhancing technology -- all these are ours to seize. That
is our honor and our challenge. We must be shapers of events, not
observers. For if we do not act, the moment will pass -- and we will
lose the best possibilities of our future.
We face no imminent threat, but we do have an enemy --
the enemy of our time is inaction. So, tonight, I issue a call to
action -- action by this Congress, action by our states, by our
people, to prepare America for the 21st century. Action to keep our
economy and our democracy strong and working for all our people;
action to strengthen education and harness the forces of technology
and science; action to build stronger families and stronger
communities and a safer environment; action to keep America the
world's strongest force for peace, freedom and prosperity. And above
all, action to build a more perfect union here at home.
The spirit we bring to our work will make all the
difference. We must be committed to the pursuit of opportunity for
all Americans, responsibility from all Americans, in a community of
all Americans. And we must be committed to a new kind of government
-- not to solve all our problems for us, but to give our people --
all our people -- the tools they need to make the most of their own
lives.
And we must work together. The people of this nation
elected us all. They want us to be partners, not partisans. They
put us all right here in the same boat, they gave us all oars, and
they told us to row. Now, here is the direction I believe we should
take.
First, we must move quickly to complete the unfinished
business of our country -- to balance our budget, renew our
democracy, and finish the job of welfare reform.
Over the last four years, we have brought new economic
growth by investing in our people, expanding our exports, cutting our
deficits, creating over 11 million new jobs, a four-year record.
Now we must keep our economy the strongest in the world.
We here tonight have an historic opportunity. Let this Congress be
the Congress that finally balances the budget.
In two days, I will propose a detailed plan to balance
the budget by 2002. This plan will balance the budget and invest in
our people while protecting Medicare, Medicaid, education, and the
environment. It will balance the budget and build on the Vice
President's efforts to make our government work better, even as it
costs less. It will balance the budget and provide middle class tax
relief to pay for education and health care, to help to raise a
child, to buy and sell a home.
Balancing the budget requires only your vote and my
signature. It does not require us to rewrite our Constitution.
I believe it is both unnecessary and unwise to adopt a
balanced budget amendment that could cripple our country in time of
crisis, and force unwanted results, such as judges halting Social
Security checks or increasing taxes. Let us at least agree, we
should not pass any measure -- no measure should be passed that
threatens Social Security. Whatever your view on that,
we all must concede we don't need a constitutional amendment, we need
action.
Whatever our differences, we should balance the budget
now. And then, for the long-term health of our society, we must
agree to a bipartisan process to preserve Social Security and reform
Medicare for the long run, so that these fundamental programs will be
as strong for our children as they are for our parents.
And let me say something that's not in my script
tonight. I know this is not going to be easy. But I really believe
one of the reasons the American people gave me a second term was to
take the tough decisions in the next four years that will carry our
country through the next 50 years. I know it is easier for me than
for you to say or do. But another reason I was elected is to support
all of you, without regard to party, to give you what is necessary to
join in these decisions. We owe it to our country and to our future.
Our second piece of unfinished business requires us to
commit ourselves tonight, before the eyes of America, to finally
enacting bipartisan campaign finance reform.
Now, Senators McCain and Feingold, Representatives Shays
and Meehan, have reached across party lines here to craft tough and
fair reform. Their proposal would curb spending, reduce the role of
special interests, create a level playing field between challengers
and incumbents, and ban contributions from noncitizens, all corporate
sources, and the other large soft money contributions that both
parties receive.
You know and I know that this can be delayed. And you
know and I know the delay will mean the death of reform. So let's
set our own deadline. Let's work together to write bipartisan
campaign finance reform into law and pass McCain-Feingold by the day
we celebrate the birth of our democracy -- July the 4th.
There is a third piece of unfinished business. Over the
last four years, we moved a record 2.25 million people off the
welfare rolls. Then last year, Congress enacted landmark welfare
reform legislation, demanding that all able-bodied recipients assume
the responsibility of moving from welfare to work.
Now each and every one of us has to fulfill our
responsibility -- indeed, our moral obligation -- to make sure that
people who now must work, can work. Now we must act to
meet a new goal: 2 million more people off the welfare rolls by the
year 2000.
Here is my plan: Tax credits and other incentives for
businesses that hire people off welfare; incentives for job placement
firms and states to create more jobs for welfare recipients;
training, transportation, and child care to help people go to work.
Now I challenge every state: Turn those welfare checks
into private sector paychecks. I challenge every religious
congregation, every community nonprofit, every business to hire
someone off welfare. And I'd like to say especially to every
employer in our country who ever criticized the old welfare system,
you can't blame that old system anymore, we have torn it down. Now
do your part. Give someone on welfare the chance to go to work.
Tonight, I am pleased to announce that five major
corporations -- Sprint, Monsanto, UPS, Burger King and United
Airlines -- will be the first to join in a new national effort to
marshal America's businesses, large and small, to create jobs so that
people can move from welfare to work.
We passed welfare reform. All of you know I believe we
were right to do it. But no one can walk out of this chamber with a
clear conscience unless you are prepared to finish the job.
And we must join together to do something else, too --
something both Republican and Democratic governors have asked us to
do -- to restore basic health and disability benefits when misfortune
strikes immigrants who came to this country legally, who work hard,
pay taxes and obey the law. To do otherwise is simply unworthy of a
great nation of immigrants.
Now, looking ahead, the greatest step of all -- the high
threshold of the future we now must cross -- and my number one
priority for the next four years is to ensure that all Americans have
the best education in the world.
Let's work together to meet these three goals: Every
8-year-old must be able to read; every 12-year-old must be able to
log on to the Internet; every 18-year-old must be able to go to
college; and every adult American must be able to keep on learning
for a lifetime.
My balanced budget makes an unprecedented commitment to
these goals -- $51 billion next year. But far more than money is
required. I have a plan, a Call to Action for American Education,
based on these 10 principles.
First, a national crusade for education standards -- not
federal government standards, but national standards, representing
what all our students must know to succeed in the knowledge economy
of the 21st century. Every state and school must shape the
curriculum to reflect these standards, and train teachers to lift
students up to them. To help schools meet the standards and measure
their progress, we will lead an effort over the next two years to
develop national tests of student achievement in reading and math.
Tonight, I issue a challenge to the nation: Every state
should adopt high national standards, and by 1999, every state should
test every 4th grader in reading and every 8th grader in math to make
sure these standards are met.
Raising standards will not be easy, and some of our
children will not be able to meet them at first. The point is not to
put our children down, but to lift them up. Good tests will show us
who needs help, what changes in teaching to make, and which schools
need to improve. They can help us to end social promotion. For no
child should move from grade school to junior high, or junior high to
high school until he or she is ready.
Last month, our Secretary of Education Dick Riley and I
visited Northern Illinois, where 8th grade students from 20 school
districts, in a project aptly called "First in the World," took the
Third International Math and Science Study. That's a test that
reflects the world-class standards our children must meet for the new
era. And those students in Illinois tied for first in the world in
science and came in second in math. Two of them, Kristin Tanner and
Chris Getsla, are here tonight, along with their teacher, Sue Winski;
they're up there with the First Lady. And they prove that when we
aim high and challenge our students, they will be the best in the
world. Let's give them a hand. Stand up, please.
Second, to have the best schools, we must have the best
teachers. Most of us in this chamber would not be here tonight
without the help of those teachers. I know that I wouldn't be here.
For years, many of our educators, led by North Carolina's Governor
Jim Hunt and the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards,
have worked very hard to establish nationally accepted credentials
for excellence in teaching. Just 500 of these teachers have been
certified since 1995. My budget will enable 100,000 more to seek
national certification as master teachers. We should reward and
recognize our best teachers. And as we reward them, we
should quickly and fairly remove those few who don't measure up, and
we should challenge more of our finest young people to consider
teaching as a career.
Third, we must do more to help all our children read.
Forty percent -- forty percent -- of our 8-year-olds cannot read on
their own. That's why we have just launched the America Reads
initiative -- to build a citizen army of one million volunteer tutors
to make sure every child can read independently by the end of the 3rd
grade. We will use thousands of AmeriCorps volunteers to mobilize
this citizen army. We want at least 100,000 college students to
help. And tonight I am pleased that 60 college presidents have
answered my call, pledging that thousands of their work-study
students will serve for one year as reading tutors.
This is also a challenge to every teacher and every
principal. You must use these tutors to help students read. And it
is especially a challenge to our parents. You must read with your
children every night.
This leads to the fourth principle: Learning begins in
the first days of life. Scientists are now discovering how young
children develop emotionally and intellectually from their very first
days, and how important it is for parents to begin immediately
talking, singing, even reading to their infants. The First Lady has
spent years writing about this issue, studying it. And she and I are
going to convene a White House Conference on Early Learning and the
Brain this spring, to explore how parents and educators can best use
these startling new findings.
We already know we should start teaching children before
they start school. That's why this balanced budget expands Head
Start to one million children by 2002. And that is why
the Vice President and Mrs. Gore will host their annual family
conference this June on what we can do to make sure that parents are
an active part of their children's learning all the way through
school.
They've done a great deal to highlight the importance of
family in our life, and now they're turning their attention to
getting more parents involved in their children's learning all the
way through school. And I thank you, Mr. Vice President, and I thank
you especially, Tipper, for what you do.
Fifth, every state should give parents the power to
choose the right public school for their children. Their right to
choose will foster competition and innovation that can make public
schools better. We should also make it possible for more parents and
teachers to start charter schools, schools that set and meet the
highest standards, and exist only as long as they do. Our plan will
help America to create 3,000 of these charter schools by the next
century -- nearly seven times as there are in the country today -- so
that parents will have even more choices in sending their children to
the best schools.
Sixth: Character education must be taught in our
schools. We must teach our children to be good citizens.
And we must continue to promote order and discipline,
supporting communities that introduce school uniforms, impose curfews
enforce truancy laws, remove disruptive students from the classroom,
and have zero tolerance for guns and drugs in school.
Seventh: We cannot expect our children to raise
themselves up in schools that are literally falling down. With the
student population at an all-time high, and record numbers of school
buildings falling into disrepair, this has now become a serious
national concern. Therefore, my budget includes a new initiative
--$5 billion to help communities finance $20 billion in school
construction over the next four years.
Eighth: We must make the 13th and 14th years of
education -- at least two years of college -- just as universal in
America by the 21st century as a high school education is today, and
we must open the doors of college to Americans.
To do that, I propose America's HOPE Scholarship, basedon
Georgia's pioneering program: two years of a $1,500 tax credit
for college tuition, enough to pay for the typical community college.
I also propose a tax deduction of up to $10,000 a year for all
tuition after high school; an expanded IRA you can withdraw from tax
free for education; and the largest increase in Pell Grant
scholarships in 20 years. Now, this plan will give most
families the ability to pay no taxes on money they save for college
tuition. I ask you to pass it -- and give every American who works
hard the chance to go to college.
Ninth: In the 21st century, we must expand the
frontiers of learning across a lifetime. All our people, of whatever
age, must have a chance to learn new skills. Most Americans live
near a community college. The roads that take them there can be
paths to a better future. My G.I. Bill for America's Workers will
transform the confusing tangle of federal training programs into a
simple skill grant to go directly into eligible workers' hands. For
too long, this bill has been sitting on that desk there without
action -- I ask you to pass it now. Let's give more of our workers
the ability to learn and to earn for a lifetime.
Tenth: We must bring the power of the Information Age
into all our schools. Last year, I challenged America to connect
every classroom and library to the Internet by the year 2000, so
that, for the first time in our history, children in the most
isolated rural towns, the most comfortable suburbs, the poorest inner
city schools, will have the same access to the same universe of
knowledge. That is my plan -- a Call to Action for
American Education. Some may say that it is unusual for a President
to pay this kind of attention to education. Some may say it is
simply because the President and his wonderful wife have been
obsessed with this subject for more years than they can recall. That
is not what is driving these proposals.
We must understand the significance of this endeavor:
One of the greatest sources of our strength throughout the Cold War
was a bipartisan foreign policy; because our future was at stake,
politics stopped at the water's edge. Now I ask you -- and I ask all
our nation's governors; I ask parents, teachers, and citizens all
across America -- for a new nonpartisan commitment to education --
because education is a critical national security issue for our
future, and politics must stop at the schoolhouse door.
To prepare America for the 21st century we must harness
the powerful forces of science and technology to benefit all
Americans. This is the first State of the Union carried live in
video over the Internet. But we've only begun to spread the benefits
of a technology revolution that should become the modern birthright
of every citizen.
Our effort to connect every classroom is just the
beginning. Now, we should connect every hospital to the Internet, so
that doctors can instantly share data about their patients with the
best specialists in the field. And I challenge the private sector
tonight to start by connecting every children's hospital as soon as
possible, so that a child in bed can stay in touch with school,
family and friends. A sick child need no longer be a child alone.
We must build the second generation of the Internet so
that our leading universities and national laboratories can
communicate in speeds 1,000 times faster than today, to develop new
medical treatments, new sources of energy, new ways of working
together.
But we cannot stop there. As the Internet becomes our
new town square, a computer in every home -- a teacher of all
subjects, a connection to all cultures -- this will no longer be a
dream, but a necessity. And over the next decade, that must be our
goal.
We must continue to explore the heavens -- pressing on
with the Mars probes and the international space station, both of
which will have practical applications for our everyday living.
We must speed the remarkable advances in medical
science. The human genome project is now decoding the genetic
mysteries of life. American scientists have discovered genes linked
to breast cancer and ovarian cancer, and medication that stops a
stroke in progress and begins to reverse its effect, and treatments
that dramatically lengthen the lives of people with HIV and AIDS.
Since I took office, funding for AIDS research at the
National Institutes of Health has increased dramatically -- to $1.5
billion. With new resources, NIH will now become the most powerful
discovery engine for an AIDS vaccine, working with other scientists
to finally end the threat of AIDS. Remember that every
year -- every year we move up the discovery of an AIDS vaccine will
save millions of lives around the world. We must reinforce our
commitment to medical science.
To prepare America for the 21st century, we must build
stronger families. Over the past four years, the Family and Medical
Leave law has helped millions of Americans to take time off to be
with their families. With new pressures on people in the way they
work and live, I believe we must expand family leave so that workers
can take time off for teacher conferences and a child's medical
checkup. We should pass flex-time, so workers can choose to be paid
for overtime in income or trade it in for time off to be with their
families.
We must continue -- we must continue, step by step, to
give more families access to affordable, quality health care. Forty
million Americans still lack health insurance. Ten million children
still lack health insurance -- 80 percent of them have working
parents who pay taxes. That is wrong.
My balanced budget will extend health coverage to up to
5 million of those children. Since nearly half of all children who
lose their insurance do so because their parents lose or change a
job, my budget will also ensure that people who temporarily lose
their jobs can still afford to keep their health insurance. No child
should be without a doctor just because a parent is without a job.
My Medicare plan modernizes Medicare, increases the life
of the trust fund to 10 years, provides support for respite care for
the many families with loved ones afflicted with Alzheimer's. And
for the first time, it would fully pay for annual mammograms.
Just as we ended drive-through deliveries of babies last
year, we must now end the dangerous and demeaning practice of forcing
women home from the hospital only hours after a mastectomy.
I ask your support for bipartisan legislation to
guarantee that a woman can stay in the hospital for 48 hours after a
mastectomy. With us tonight is Dr. Kristen Zarfos, a Connecticut
surgeon whose outrage at this practice spurred a national movement
and inspired this legislation. I'd like her to stand so we thank her
for her efforts. Dr. Zarfos, thank you.
In the last four years, we have increased child support
collections by 50 percent. Now we should go further and do better by
making it a felony for any parent to cross a state line in an attempt
to flee from this, his or her most sacred obligation.
Finally, we must also protect our children by standing
firm in our determination to ban the advertising and marketing of
cigarettes that endanger their lives.
To prepare America for the 21st century, we must build
stronger communities. We should start with safe streets. Serious
crime has dropped five years in a row. The key has been community
policing. We must finish the job of putting 100,000 community police
on the streets of the United States. We should pass the
Victims Rights Amendment to the Constitution.
And I ask you to mount a full-scale assault on juvenile
crime, with legislation that declares war on gangs, with new
prosecutors and tougher penalties; extends the Brady Bill so violent
teen criminals will not be able to buy handguns; requires child
safety locks on handguns to prevent unauthorized use; and helps to
keep our schools open after hours, on weekends, and in the summer, so
our young people will have someplace to go and something to say yes
to.
This balanced budget includes the largest antidrug
effort ever: to stop drugs at their source, punish those who push
them, and teach our young people that drugs are wrong, drugs are
illegal, and drugs will kill them. I hope you will support it.
Our growing economy has helped to revive poor urban and
rural neighborhoods. But we must do more to empower them to create
the conditions in which all families can flourish and to create jobs
through investment by business and loans by banks.
We should double the number of empowerment zones.
They've already brought so much hope to communities like Detroit,
where the unemployment rate has been cut in half in four years. We
should restore contaminated urban land and buildings to productive
use. We should expand the network of community development banks.
And together we must pledge tonight that we will use this empowerment
approach -- including private sector tax incentives -- to renew our
Capital City, so that Washington is a great place to work and live,
and once again the proud face America shows to world.
We must protect our environment in every community. In
the last four years, we cleaned up 250 toxic waste sites, as many as
in the previous 12. Now, we should clean up 500 more, so that our
children grow up next to parks, not poison. I urge you to pass my
proposal to make big polluters live by a simple rule: If you pollute
our environment, you should pay to clean it up.
In the last four years, we strengthened our nation's
safe food and clean drinking water laws; we protected some of
America's rarest, most beautiful land in Utah's Red Rocks region;
created three new national parks in the California desert; and began
to restore the Florida Everglades. Now we must be as vigilant with
our rivers as we are with our lands. Tonight, I announce that this
year I will designate 10 American Heritage Rivers, to help
communities alongside them revitalize their waterfronts and clean up
pollution in the rivers, proving once again that we can grow the
economy as we protect the environment.
We must also protect our global environment, working to
ban the worst toxic chemicals and to reduce the greenhouse gases that
challenge our health even as they change our climate.
Now, we all know that in all of our communities, some of
our children simply don't have what they need to grow and learn in
their own homes, or schools or neighborhoods. And that means the
rest of us must do more, for they are our children, too. That's why
President Bush, General Colin Powell, former Housing Secretary Henry
Cisneros will join the Vice President and me to lead the President's
Summit of Service in Philadelphia in April.
Our national service program, AmeriCorps, has already
helped 70,000 young people to work their way through college as they
serve America. Now we intend to mobilize millions of Americans to
serve in thousands of ways. Citizen service is an American
responsibility which all Americans should embrace, and I ask your
support for that endeavor.
I'd like to make just one last point about our national
community. Our economy is measured in numbers and statistics, and
it's very important. But the enduring worth of our nation lies in
our shared values and our soaring spirit. So instead of cutting back
on our modest efforts to support the arts and humanities, I believe
we should stand by them and challenge our artists, musicians, and
writers -- challenge our museums, libraries and
theaters -- we should -- we should challenge all
Americans in the arts and humanities to join with our fellow citizens
to make the year 2000 a national celebration of the American spirit
in every community -- a celebration of our common culture in the
century that has passed, and in the new one to come in a new
millennium, so that we can remain the world's beacon not only of
liberty, but of creativity, long after the fireworks have faded.
To prepare America for the 21st century we must master
the forces of change in the world and keep American leadership strong
and sure for an uncharted time.
Fifty years ago, a farsighted America led in creating
the institutions that secured victory in the Cold War and built a
growing world economy. As a result, today more people than ever
embrace our ideals and share our interests. Already, we have
dismantled many of the blocs and barriers that divided our parents'
world. For the first time, more people live under democracy than
dictatorship, including every nation in our own hemisphere, but one
-- and its day, too, will come
Now, we stand at another moment of change and choice
--and another time to be farsighted, to bring America 50 more years
of security and prosperity. In this endeavor, our first task is to
help to build, for the first time, an undivided, democratic Europe.
When Europe is stable, prosperous and at peace, America is more
secure.
To that end, we must expand NATO by 1999, so that
countries that were once our adversaries can become our allies. At
the special NATO summit this summer, that is what we will begin to
do. We must strengthen NATO's Partnership for Peace with non-member
allies. And we must build a stable partnership between NATO and a
democratic Russia. An expanded NATO is good for
America. And a Europe in which all democracies define their future
not in terms of what they can do to each other, but in terms of what
they can do together for the good of all -- that kind of Europe is
good for America.
Second, America must look to the East no less than to
the West. Our security demands it. Americans fought three wars in
Asia in this century. Our prosperity requires it. More than two
million American jobs depend upon trade with Asia.
There, too, we are helping to shape an Asian Pacific
community of cooperation, not conflict. Let our progress there not
mask the peril that remains. Together with South Korea, we must
advance peace talks with North Korea and bridge the Cold War's last
divide. And I call on Congress to fund our share of the agreement
under which North Korea must continue to freeze and then dismantle
its nuclear weapons program.
We must pursue a deeper dialogue with China -- for the
sake of our interests and our ideals. An isolated China is not good
for America. A China playing its proper role in the world is. I
will go to China, and I have invited China's President to come here,
not because we agree on everything, but because engaging China is the
best way to work on our common challenges like ending nuclear
testing, and to deal frankly with our fundamental differences like
human rights.
The American people must prosper in the global economy.
We've worked hard to tear down trade barriers abroad so that we can
create good jobs at home. I am proud to say that today, America is
once again the most competitive nation and the number one exporter in
the world.
Now we must act to expand our exports, especially to
Asia and Latin America -- two of the fastest growing regions on Earth
-- or be left behind as these emerging economies forge new ties with
other nations. That is why we need the authority now to conclude new
trade agreements that open markets to our goods and services even as
we preserve our values.
We need not shrink form the challenge of the global
economy. After all, we have the best workers and the best products.
In a truly open market, we can out-compete anyone, anywhere on Earth.
But this is about more than economics. By expanding
trade, we can advance the cause of freedom and democracy around the
world. There is no better example of this truth than Latin America
where democracy and open markets are on the march together. That is
why I will visit there in the spring to reinforce our important tie.
We should all be proud that America led the effort to
rescue our neighbor, Mexico, from its economic crises. And we should
all be proud that last month Mexico repaid the United States -- three
full years ahead of schedule -- with half a billion dollar profit to
us.
America must continue to be an unrelenting force for
peace --- from the Middle East to Haiti, from Northern Ireland to
Africa. Taking reasonable risks for peace keeps us from being drawn
into far more costly conflicts later.
With American leadership, the killing has stopped in
Bosnia. Now the habits of peace must take hold. The new NATO force
will allow reconstruction and reconciliation to accelerate. Tonight,
I ask Congress to continue its strong support for our troops. They
are doing a remarkable job there for America, and America must do
right by them.
Fifth, we must move strongly against new threats to our
security. In the past four years, we agreed to ban -- we led the way
to a worldwide agreement to ban nuclear testing. With Russia, we
dramatically cut nuclear arsenals and we stopped targeting each
others citizens. We are acting to prevent nuclear materials from
falling into the wrong hands and to rid the world of land mines.
We are working with other nations with renewed intensity
to fight drug traffickers and to stop terrorists before they act, and
hold them fully accountable if they do.
Now, we must rise to a new test of leadership:
ratifying the Chemical Weapons Convention. Make no
mistake about it, it will make our troops safer from chemical attack;
it will help us to fight terrorism. We have no more important
obligations -- especially in the wake of what we now know about the
Gulf War. This treaty has been bipartisan from the beginning --
supported by Republican and Democratic administrations and Republican
and Democratic members of Congress -- and already approved by 68
nations.
But if we do not act by April the 29th -- when this
Convention goes into force, with or without us -- we will lose the
chance to have Americans leading and enforcing this effort. Together
we must make the Chemical Weapons Convention law, so that at last we
can begin to outlaw poison gas from the Earth.
Finally, we must have the tools to meet all these
challenges. We must maintain a strong and ready military. We must
increase funding for weapons modernization by the year 2000, and we
must take good care of our men and women in uniform. They are the
world's finest.
We must also renew our commitment to America's
diplomacy, and pay our debts and dues to international financial
institutions like the World Bank, and to a reforming United Nations.
Every dollar we devote to preventing conflicts, to
promoting democracy, to stopping the spread of disease and
starvation, brings a sure return in security and savings. Yet
international affairs spending today is just one percent of the
federal budget -- a small fraction of what America invested in
diplomacy to choose leadership over escapism at the start of the Cold
War. If America is to continue to lead the world, we here who lead
America simply must find the will to pay our way.
A farsighted America moved the world to a better place
over these last 50 years. And so it can be for another 50 years.
But a shortsighted America will soon find its words falling on deaf
ears all around the world.
Almost exactly 50 years ago, in the first winter of the
Cold War, President Truman stood before a Republican Congress and
called upon our country to meet its responsibilities of leadership.
This was his warning -- he said, "If we falter, we may endanger the
peace of the world, and we shall surely endanger the welfare of this
nation." That Congress, led by Republicans like Senator Arthur
Vandenberg, answered President Truman's call. Together, they made
the commitments that strengthened our country for 50 years.
Now let us do the same. Let us do what it takes to
remain the indispensable nation -- to keep America strong, secure and
prosperous for another 50 years.
In the end, more than anything else, our world
leadership grows out of the power of our example here at home, out of
our ability to remain strong as one America.
All over the world, people are being torn asunder by
racial, ethnic, and religious conflicts that fuel fanaticism and
terror. We are the world's most diverse democracy, and the world
looks to us to show that it is possible to live and advance together
across those kinds of differences.
America has always been a nation of immigrants. From
the start, a steady stream of people, in search of freedom and
opportunity, have left their own lands to make this land their home.
We started as an experiment in democracy fueled by Europeans. We
have grown into an experiment in democratic diversity fueled by
openness and promise.
My fellow Americans, we must never, ever believe that
our diversity is a weakness -- it is our greatest strength.
Americans speak every language, know every county.
People on every continent can look to us and see the reflection of
their own great potential -- and they always will, as long as we
strive to give all of our citizens, whatever their background, an
opportunity to achieve their own greatness.
We're not there yet. We still see evidence of abiding
bigotry and intolerance, in ugly words and awful violence, in burned
churches and bombed buildings. We must fight against this, in our
country and in our hearts.
Just a few days before my second Inauguration, one of
country's best known pastors, Reverend Robert Schuller, suggested
that I read Isaiah 58:12. Here's what it says: "Thou shalt raise up
the foundations of many generations, and thou shalt be called, the
repairer of the breach, the restorer of paths to dwell in." I placed
my hand on that verse when I took the oath of office, on behalf of
all Americans. For no matter what our differences -- in our faiths,
our backgrounds, our politics -- we must all be repairers of the
breach.
I want to say a word about two other Americans who show
us how. Congressman Frank Tejeda was buried yesterday, a proud
American whose family came from Mexico. He was only 51 years old.
He was awarded the Silver Star, the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart,
fighting for his country in Vietnam. And he went on to serve Texas
and America fighting for our future in this chamber. We are grateful
for his service and honored that his mother, Lillie Tejeda, and his
sister, Mary Alice, have come from Texas to be with us here tonight.
And we welcome you.
Gary Locke, the newly elected Governor of Washington
State, is the first Chinese-American governor in the history of our
country. He's the proud son of two of the millions of Asian-American
immigrants who have strengthened America with their hard work, family
values and good citizenship. He represents the future we can all
achieve. Thank you, Governor, for being here. Please stand up.
Reverend Schuller, Congressman Tejeda, Governor Locke,
along with Kristin Tanner and Chris Getsla, Sue Winski and Dr.
Kristen Zarfos -- they're all Americans from different roots, whose
lives reflect the best of what we can become when we are one America.
We may not share a common past, but we surely do share a common
future.
Building one America is our most important mission --
"the foundation for many generations," of every other strength we
must build for this new century. Money cannot buy it. Power cannot
compel it. Technology cannot create it. It can only come from the
human spirit.
America is far more than a place. It is an idea, the
most powerful idea in the history of nations. And all of us in this
chamber, we are now the bearers of that idea, leading a great people
into a new world. A child born tonight will have almost no memory of
the 20th century. Everything that child will know about America will
be because of what we do now to build a new century.
We don't have a moment to waste. Tomorrow there will be
just over 1,000 days until the year 2000. One thousand days to
prepare our people. One thousand days to work together. One
thousand days to build a bridge to a land of new promise. My fellow
Americans, we have work to do. Let us seize those days and the
century.
Thank you, God bless you and God bless America.
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