Badpuppy Gay Today |
Monday, 09 June 1997 |
Good morning. This morning I want to talk about
one of America's greatest challenges and greatest opportunities
- conquering the forces of hatred and division that still exist
in our society so that we can move forward into the 21st century
as one America.
We are clearly the world's most diverse democracy,
bound together across all of our differences by a belief in the
basic dignity of every human being's life and liberty and the
right of every American who lives by our
laws and lives up to his or her responsibilities
to share in the full promise of the greatest nation on Earth.
Especially as we move into a new century with its
global economy and its global society, our rich diversity is a
powerful strength, if we respect it.
We are clearly stronger as a nation when we use the
full talents of all of our people, regardless of race or religious
faith, national origin or sexual orientation, gender or disability.
Much of America's story is
really the stories of wave after wave of citizens
struggling over our full history for full equality of opportunity
and dignified treatment.
We stand today in sharp contrast to the racial, ethnic,
tribal and religious conflicts which continue to claim so many
lives all around the world. But we have still not purged ourselves
of all bigotry and intolerance. We still have our ugly words
and awful violence, our burned churches and bombed buildings.
In a predominantly white suburb of Atlanta, Georgia
last month, an African American couple was greeted with racial
epithets as they moved into their new home. Just a week later,
their home was sprayed with gunfire in the middle of the night.
In a recent incident right here in Washington DC, three men accosted
a gay man in a park, forced him at gunpoint to go under a bridge
and beat him viciously while using anti-gay epithets. Last fall
in Los Angeles, a Jewish student's dormitory room was bombed with
a quarter stick of dynamite and a swastika was drawn near the
door.
Such hate crimes, committed solely because the victims
have a different skin color or a different faith or are gays or
lesbians, leave deep scars not only on the victims, but on our
larger community. They weaken the
sense that we are one people with common values and
a common future. They tear us apart when we should be moving
closer together. They are acts of violence against America itself.
And even a small number of Americans who harbor and act upon
hatred and intolerance can do enormous damage to our
efforts to bind together our increasingly diverse
society into one nation realizing its full promise.
As part of our preparation for the new century, it
is time for us to mount an all out assault on hate crimes, to
punish them swiftly and severely, and to do more to prevent them
from happening in the first place. We must. This is why I'm
convening a special White House conference on hate crimes this
November 10th. We'll bring to the White House victims of hate
crimes and their families to understand why the impact of these
acts runs so much deeper than the crimes themselves. We'll bring
together law enforcement
experts and leading officials from Congress and the
Justice Department to take a serious look at the existing laws
against hate crime and consider ways to improve enforcement and
to strengthen them. We'll bring together community and religious
leaders to talk about solutions that are already making a real
difference in our communities all across the nation.
In preparation for the conference, Attorney General
Reno has begun a thorough review of the laws concerning hate crimes
and the ways in which the federal government can make a difference
to help us to build a more vigorous plan of action. But, of course,
the fight against hatred and intolerance must be waged not just
through our laws, but in our hearts as well.
A newborn child today does not know how to hate or
stereotype another human being; that behavior must be learned.
And intolerance does not generally begin with criminal acts.
Instead, it begins with quiet acts of
indignity: the bigoted remark, the African American
who is followed around the grocery store by a suspicious clerk,
the gay or lesbian who is denied a job, the Hispanic or Asian
who is targeted because of unfair stereotypes. To truly move
forward as one community, it is just not enough to prevent acts
of violence to our bodies, we must prevent acts of violence to
our spirits.
By convening the very first White House Conference
on Hate Crimes this November, America can confront the dark forces
of division that still exist.
We can shine the bright light of justice, humanity
and harmony on them.
We'll take a serious look at the laws and remedies
that can make a difference in preventing hate crimes. We'll have
the frank and open dialogue we need to build one America across
all difference and diversity.
And, together, we will move closer to the day when
acts of hatred are no longer a stain on our community or our conscience,
closer to the day when we can redeem for ourselves and show to
the world the 220-year-old promise of our founders, that we are
"One nation under God, indivisible, with
liberty and justice for all."
Thank you for listening.
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