Article 3622 of alt.politics.clinton:
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Subject: GORE SPEECH TEXT: VISION FOR AMERICA (DEM NAT CONV)
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Organization: University of Illinois at Chicago
Date: Saturday, 15 Aug 1992 21:02:52 CDT
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A VISION FOR AMERICA
SENATOR AL GORE
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION
NEW YORK CITY
7/6/92

Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.  Thank you
very much.

I have to tell you, I've been dreaming of this moment since I was
a kid growing up in Tennessee, that one day I'd have the chance to
come here to Madison Square Garden and be the warm-up act for
Elvis.

My friends, I thank you for your confidence expressed in the vote
this evening.  I pledge to pour my heart and soul into this crusade
on behalf of the American people.  And I accept your nomination for
the Vice-Presidency of the United States of America.

I did not -- I did not seek this nomination, nor did I expect it.
But I am here to join this team because I love my country and
because I believe in my heart that together Bill Clinton and I
offer the American people the best chance we have as a nation to
move forward in the right direction again.

I'm here because the country I love has a government that is
failing our people--Failing the forgotten majority in your home
town and mine--those who scrimp and save and work hard all their
lives to build a better life for their children.

I'm here to renew a journey our founders began more than 200 years
ago.  In my lifetime I have seen America's ideals and dreams change
the world.  And I believe that now is the time to bring those
ideals and dreams home, here, to change America.

Our country is in trouble.  And while George Bush and Dan Quayle
have been making excuses for deadlock and delay, people in other
nations inspired by the eternal promise of America have torn down
the Berlin Wall, brought Communism to its knees and forced a racist
government in South Africa to turn away from apartheid.

Throughout the world, obstacles to liberty that many thought might
stand forever turned out to simply be no match for men and women
who decided in their hearts that their future could be much greater
than their past would let them dream.  Their faith in the power of
conscience and their confidence in the force of truth required a
leap of the human spirit.

Can we say truthfully that their chance for change was better than
ours?  And yet we face our own crisis of the spirit here and now in
America.  We're told we can no longer change; we've seen our better
days.  They even say we're history.

The cynics are having a field day because across this country
millions of American families have been betrayed by a government
out of touch with our values and beholden to the privileged few.

Millions of people--millions of people are losing faith in the very
idea of democracy and are even in danger of losing heart because
they feel their lives may no longer have any deeper meaning or
purpose.  But you can't kill hope that easily, not in America, not
here where a cynic is just a disappointed idealist in disguise, a
dreamer yearning to dream again.

In every American, no matter how badly betrayed or poorly, led
there is always hope.  Even now, if you listen, you can hear the
pulse of America's true spirit.  No, the American spirit isn't
gone.  But we vow here tonight that in November George Bush and Dan
Quayle will be history.

I'm not saying that they're bad people.  But their approach to
governing this country has badly failed.  They have taxed the many
to enrich the few.  And it is time for them to go.

They have given us false choices, bad choices and no choice.  And
it is time for them to go.

They have ignored the suffering of those who are victims of AIDS,
of crime, of poverty, of ignorance, of hatred, and harassment.  It
is time for them to go.

They have nourished and appeased tyranny and endangered America's
deepest interests while betraying our cherished ideals.  It is time
for them to go.

They have mortgaged our children's future to avoid the decisions
they lack the courage to make.  It is time for them to go.

They embarrassed our nation when the whole world was asking for
American leadership in confronting the environmental crisis.  It is
time for them to go.

They have demeaned our democracy with the politics of distraction,
denial and despair.  What time is it?

CROWD: IT IS TIME FOR THEM TO GO.

What time is it?

CROWD: IT IS TIME FOR THEM TO GO.

What time is it?

CROWD: IT IS TIME FOR THEM TO GO.
The American people are disgusted with excuses and tired of blame.
They know that throughout American history each generation has
passed on leadership to the next.  That time has come again.  The
time for a new generation of leadership for the United States of
America to take over from George Bush and Dan Quayle.  And you know
what that means for them.  It's time for them to go.

Ladies and gentlemen, in 1992 our challenge is not to elect the
last President of the 20th Century but to elect the first President
of the 21st Century, President Bill Clinton.

Bill Clinton has a plan that offers real answers for the real
problems of real people.  A bold new economic strategy to rebuild
this country and put our people back to work.

And if you want to know what Bill Clinton can do, take a look at
what he has already done.  For more than a decade he has been
fighting against incredible odds to bring good jobs, better skills
and genuine hope to one of the poorest states in our country.

A decade ago when his state needed dramatic reform to shake up one
of the poorest school systems in America, Bill Clinton took on the
established interests and made Arkansas the first state to require
teacher testing.  He has cut classroom size, raised test scores
above the national average, and earned the support of both teachers
and parents who now know Bill Clinton will be the real Education
President for this country.

For most of the last decade, while the Republicans have been trying
to use welfare to divide us, Bill Clinton has led the fight to
reform the welfare system, to move people off welfare and into the
work force.  And he did all this while balancing eleven budgets in
a row.

Let me say that again:  While balancing eleven budgets in a row and
giving the people of Arkansas one of the lowest tax burdens in this
country.  No wonder Arkansas under Bill Clinton has been creating
manufacturing jobs at ten times the national rate.  And no wonder
that when all of the nation's governors, Republicans and Democrats
alike, were asked to vote on who was the most effective governor in
all the land, by an overwhelming margin they chose Bill Clinton.

What we need in America in 1992 is a President who will unleash the
best in us by putting faith in the decency and good judgment of our
people--a President who will challenge us to be true to our values
and examine the ways in which our own attitudes are sometimes
barriers to the progress we seek.  I'm convinced that America is
ready to be inspired and lifted again by leaders committed to
seeking out the best in our society, developing it and
strengthening it.

I've spent much of my career working to protect the environment,
not only because it is vital to the future of my State of
Tennessee, our country and our earth air, but because I believe
there is a fundamental link between our current relationship to the
earth and the attitudes that stand in the way of human progress.

For generations we have believed that we could abuse the earth
because we were somehow not really connected to it.  But now we
must face the truth.  The task of saving the earth's environment
must and will become the central organizing principle of the post
Cold War world.

And just as the false assumption that we are not connected to the
earth has led to the ecological crisis, so the equally false
assumption that we are not connected to each other has led to our
social crisis.

Even worse, the evil and mistaken assumption that we have no
connection to those generations preceding us or those who will
follow us has led to the crisis of values we face today.  Those are
the connections that are missing from our politics today.  Those
are the bridges we must rebuild if we are to rebuild our country.
And those are the values we must honor if we are to recapture the
faith in the future that has always been the heart of the American
Dream.

We have another challenge as well.  In the wake of the Cold War and
in the reemergence of ancient ethnic and racial hatreds throughout
the world, the United States must once again prove that there is a
better way.

Just as we accepted as a people, on behalf of all humankind, the
historic mission of proving that political freedom is the best form
of government, and that economic freedom is the best engine of
prosperity, we must now accept the obligation of proving that
freedom from prejudice is the heart and soul of community--that,
yes, we can get along.

Yes, people of all backgrounds can not only live together
peacefully but enrich one another, celebrate diversity and come
together as one.  Yes, we will be one people-and live the dream
that will make this world great.

In the end, this election isn't about politics.  It isn't even
about winning, though that's what we're going to do.  This election
is about the responsibilities that we owe one another--the
responsibilities we owe our children--the calling we hear to serve
our country, and to be a part of a community larger than ourselves.

You've heard a lot in the past week about how much Bill Clinton and
I have in common.  Indeed, we both share the values we learned in
our home towns--individual responsibility, faith, family, and the
belief that hard work should be rewarded.  We're both fathers with
young children--children who are part of a generation whose very
future is very much at stake in this election.  And we're both
proud of our wives, Hillary Clinton and Tipper Gore, two women who
have done more for the children of this country in the last 12
years than the last two men who have sat in the Oval Office have
done in their entire lifetimes.

I'm proud my father and mother could be here tonight to see me join
a ticket that will make good on the best advice they ever gave me:
to tell the truth and always love my country.  My sister and I were
born to two wonderful people who worked hard to give us a better
life.

1992 is the Year of the Woman.  It's also the 46th anniversary of
the year my mother, born in a time when women weren't even allowed
to vote, became one of the first women to graduate from Vanderbilt
Law School.

My father was a teacher in a one-room school, who worked his way to
the United States Senate.  I was eight years old when my father's
name was placed in nomination for the Vice-Presidency before the
Democratic Convention in 1956.  And growing up I watched him stand
courageously for civil rights, economic opportunity and a
government that worked for ordinary people.

I don't know what it's like to lose a father.  But I know what it's
like to lose a sister, and almost lose a son.  I wish my late
sister Nancy could be here this evening.  But I am grateful beyond
words for the blessings that my family has shared.

Three years ago my son, Albert, was struck by a car crossing the
street after watching a baseball game in Baltimore.  Tipper and I
watched as he was thrown 30 feet through the air and scraped
another 20 feet on the pavement after he hit the ground.

I ran to his side and held him and called his name, but he was limp
and still, without breath or pulse.  His eyes were open with the
empty stare of death.  And we prayed, the two of us, there in the
gutter, with only my voice.  His injuries inside and out were
massive.  And for terrible days he lingered between life and death.
Tipper and I spent the next 30 days and nights there at his
bedside.

Our family was lifted and healed in no small measure by an
incredible outpouring of love and compassion and prayers from
thousands and thousands of people, most of whom we never even knew.

Albert is plenty brave and strong, and with the support of three
wonderful sisters, Korrina, Kristin and Sarah, and two loving
parents who helped him with his exercises every morning and prayed
for him every night, he pulled through.  And now, thank God, he has
fully recovered and runs and plays and torments his older sisters
like any little boy.

But, ladies and gentlemen, I want to tell you this straight from my
heart--that experience changed me forever.  When you've seen your
six-year old son fighting for his life, you realize that some
things matter a lot more than winning.  You lose patience with the
lazy assumption of so many in politics that we can always just
muddle through.  When you've seen your reflection in the empty
stare of a boy waiting for his second breath of life, you realize
that we were not put here on earth to look out for our needs alone.


We are part of something much larger than ourselves.  All of us are
part of something much greater than we are capable of imagining.
And, my friends, if you look up for a moment from the rush of your
daily lives, you will hear the quiet voices of your country crying
out for help.  You will see your reflection in the weary eyes of
those who are losing hope in America.  And you will see that our
democracy is lying there in the gutter waiting for us to give it a
second breath of life.

I don't care what party you're in, whether you're an Independent,
whether you have been tempted to just give up completely on the
whole political process, we want you to join this common effort to
unite our country behind a higher calling.

If you have been supporting Ross Perot, I want to make a special
plea to you this evening:  stay involved.  You have already changed
politics in this country for the better; keep on fighting for
change.

The time has come for all Americans to be a part of the healing.
In the words of the Bible, do not lose heart.  This nation will be
renewed.

In order to renew our nation, we must renew ourselves.  Just as
America has always transcended the hopes and dreams of every other
nation on earth, so must we transcend ourselves.  And in Ghandi's
words, "become the change we wish to see in the world."

Let those of us alive today resolve with one another that we will
so conduct ourselves in this campaign and in our lives, that 200
years from now Americans will say of our labors that this nation
and this earth were healed by people they never even knew.

I'm told that Hope, Arkansas is indeed a lot like my home town
Carthage, Tennessee--a place where people do know about it when
you're born and care about it when you die.  That's the America
Bill Clinton and I grew up in.  That's the kind of nation we want
our children to grow up in.  Just as Hope is a community, so is
America.

When we bring the community of America together we will rekindle
the American spirit and renew this nation for generations to come.
And the way to begin is to elect Bill Clinton President of the
United States of America.

Thank you very much.