[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 34 (Monday, August 26, 1996)]
[Pages 1465-1467]
[Online from the Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
Remarks at a Democratic National Committee 50th Birthday Gala for the
President in New York City
August 18, 1996
The President. Thank you. First of all, I just want to say I hope
all of you have had just half as good a time tonight as I have. I want
to thank my friend Whoopi Goldberg and all the other magnificent
entertainers and Jeff Margolis, who did the production; let's give him a
hand. He was great.
I know the hour is late, but I'd like to say just a thing or two. I
mean, I only turn 50 once, you know. [Laughter] First of all, I feel an
overwhelming sense of gratitude tonight.
[[Page 1466]]
A lot of times some of you will come up to me somewhere around the
country when something is not going so well. You ask me how am I doing,
and I've tried to develop the discipline of saying----
Audience members. Shame! Shame! Shame!
The President. Okay, okay. We hear you. You want to hear them
anymore?
Audience members. No-o-o!
The President. Okay, we've heard your message now. Thank you very
much. All right, give them a hand as they exit, will you? We heard them.
Give them a hand. Give them a hand. [Applause] Be nice to them; don't be
rough. They don't have a right to do this, but they don't have a right
to be roughed up. Just show them to the door.
Thank you.
You know, one of the greatest things about this country is you can
say whatever is on your mind, and nobody can shut you up. On the other
hand----
Audience members. Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
The President. Thank you. Four years from now some of them will come
back and say, ``You know, you were right about that, Mr. President. You
were right about that.''
Let me say just one or two things if I might----
Audience member. Throw them out!
The President. Relax. Relax. Lay back. Anyway, even now, what I was
going to tell you is I've tried to develop the discipline--when somebody
comes up to me and says, ``Well, how are you doing,'' and something is
not going very well, of saying, ``Better than I deserve, thank you.''
And you ought to think about it.
Because I was looking at all those decades pass by--I don't know
where all the time went--and I was thinking of all the gifts that I have
been given. I thank God for my family, for those who are here and those
who aren't. I wish my brother could have been here tonight, but his wife
and his son are here. I wish my wonderful father-in-law were still
living; I miss him. And Lord, I miss my mother. She liked a good party,
you know, and she would have liked this tonight. But I thank them. I
mean, who could have thought it, where we all started.
And I thank my friends. Some of them have been subject to ridicule,
you know. FOB's has become, I don't know, an epithet in some quarters.
But I wouldn't be here today without them, and all of you who were there
with me in each step along life's way, I thank you. I thank all of those
who worked with me in every job I ever had, and all of you who helped me
to come to this point. I just feel a great sense of gratitude.
I'd also like to make just two other observations in closing. The
first is that I appreciate what Hillary said. I'm sure I'm not the best
man she's ever known, but I sure have loved her and my wonderful child,
and I thank them.
There's something that's happened in our country in the last few
years that I don't think is very good. And that is that a lot of people
in public life have taken to trying to show how good they are by showing
how bad the people who disagree with them are, and I don't think that's
a very good thing. And I have my mother to thank for that attitude,
because she taught me never to resent anyone else's success, never to
look down on anybody else, and never, ever to think I was better than
anybody else, that it was a hard enough job in life just to be a good
person yourself without trying to lift yourself up in putting somebody
else down. And I'd like to see more of that in our country. I think it
would be more civil and a better place.
The second thing I'd like to leave you with is the image of those
children that were up here behind us. You know, we have debates from
time to time--were they right or am I right about the welfare reform
issue. And I disagree with my opponent, Senator Dole, on so many things.
But let me ask you this: Just think about your own life here and ask
yourself, why are we doing this? Why are we here? The purpose of
politics is nothing more or less than to enable more kids like those
kids that just sang on the stage to live their dreams the way I got to
live mine. There is no other purpose here.
And I thank God for everybody I've ever been able to work with,
those of you who are here. A lot of them are gone too, now. I miss my
friend and brother, Ron Brown. He would have liked this tonight, and
what a wonderful job he would have done.
[[Page 1467]]
I started out my Presidency with one of the greatest men I ever met
in my life, the late Prime Minister of Israel, Yitzhak Rabin. I miss him
so much. There are a lot of people I miss, and I'm sorry they had to
leave this Earth before I did. But you know, all of us left ahead,
because we got to live out our dreams. And most of us here, truth were
known, we'd have to say we've done better than we deserved. And I would
like for every child in this country and every child in this world to be
able to say that more than they can say it now when our time here is
done.
We have to get this country ready for the next century. It will be
the time of greatest possibility in all of human history. More of our
kids, without regard to their race, their gender, their station in life,
will have a chance to live their dreams if we do our job. That is really
what we're here about.
I've been luckier than most people because I had family who loved
me, friends who took care of me, folks who worked with me and made me
look better than I deserved, and a chance to do work I loved. But in the
end, all that matters is whether, when we finish, we have made it
possible for more people to be what God meant them to be. And you have
helped to give me that chance, and that is the best birthday present of
all.
Thank you, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 9:25 p.m. at Radio City Music Hall.