1 1 2 3 4 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA 5 SPRING COMMENCEMENT 6 7 8 9 10 KEYNOTE ADDRESS OF 11 JANET RENO, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY GENERAL 12 13 14 15 16 17 Friday, May 3, 1996 18 Carolina Coliseum 19 Columbia, South Carolina 20 3:00 P. M. 21 22 23 24 REPORTED BY 25 LESLIE S. TOOLE, CSR 2 1 CONTENTS 2 3 Page 4 Keynote Address by Attorney General Reno 3 5 Certificate of Reporter 17 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 3 1 2 P R O C E E D I N G S 3 (The following text is the verbatim keynote address 4 given by United States Attorney General Janet Reno.) 5 ATTORNEY GENERAL RENO: Thank you very, very 6 much. I am honored to share this day with you. And it 7 is so wonderful to look out to see so many who have 8 worked so hard to obtain their diploma today. 9 I especially want to say hello to my fellow 10 chemistry majors. In 1960, I earned my Chemistry Degree 11 from Cornell University. So to you parents who worry 12 that your graduating sons and daughters still lack a 13 clear career goal, I suggest give them a little more 14 time. You never know what might happen. 15 Since my graduation in 1960, so many things in 16 America have changed for the better. In 1960, the Iron 17 Curtain divided the world between freedom and 18 dictatorship. Just two weeks ago, I walked the streets 19 of Budapest, alongside the free people of Hungary, and I 20 talked with western Europeans and eastern Europeans 21 alike about our common fight against crime. 22 In 1960, even after the Supreme Court outlawed racial 23 segregation, much of America was still divided into two 24 nations, black and white. But in the civil rights 25 efforts that soon followed, our nation kept the promises 4 1 the founding fathers made, and finally made equality the 2 law of the land. 3 In 1960, when I graduated from college, people 4 told me a woman couldn't go to law school. And when I 5 graduated from law school, people told me, "Law firms 6 won't hire you." Thirty years later, no one has ever 7 told me I couldn't be Attorney General. 8 You are graduating into an amazing era. In 9 1960, nobody had ever heard of the Internet. No one had 10 been to the moon. The CAT scan was not invented until 11 1973. But even though our world is more safe, our 12 country is more just, and new technologies are changing 13 our lives, nobody would say that we are a nation without 14 serious, serious challenges. 15 Many of these challenges seem so stubborn and 16 unyielding, such as violent crime, homelessness, and 17 poverty. Others seem complex and inscrutable, like the 18 international economy and the spread of AIDS. And 19 others seem overwhelming, like the fear of terrorism and 20 environmental catastrophe. But America is a nation of 21 optimists and problem-solvers. Each generation looks to 22 its children to keep our society moving and to make life 23 better. After the parties and the vacations and the 24 graduate degrees yet to come, America will look to you 25 for help. For no matter where you go, and what you do, 5 1 you can make a difference. 2 That's what I would like to talk about today. 3 For in these last thirty years, too many people of good 4 will have looked at these very hard problems and started 5 throwing up their hands and turning away. They are 6 getting caught up in the three deadly sins of our public 7 life: extremism, cynicism, and defeatism. 8 The first great threat to our optimistic 9 spirit is extremism. For it blinds us to the tough, 10 tough choices we all confront when we wrestle with the 11 difficult problems of today. 12 The historian Arthur Schlesinger once observed that America's 13 progress and freedom were fueled by what he called the "vital center" 14 in American politics. He meant a place where men and 15 women of reason and good will could meet, regardless of 16 their political party affiliation, a place to hash out 17 their differences and debate the problems of the day. A 18 lively debate, to be sure, sometimes even unruly. But 19 one carried out on common terms with respect for the 20 other person. 21 The vital center has always been a place where 22 people might be divided in their approach to solving a 23 problem, but where they were united as Americans in 24 their determination to act reasonably and to see the 25 virtue in other points of view. In short, the politics 6 1 of the vital center means using democracy as a process 2 of working together, to find solutions that attack 3 problems with progress, slow sometimes, terribly slow, 4 and exhausting, to be sure. But always in the American 5 tradition of reforms that are not perfect, but taken one 6 step forward, one important step forward. 7 Today I fear many Americans are forgetting 8 about the vital center. Too often, in today's politics, 9 on all sides, people are confronting tough problems, and 10 retreating to extremes and simple solutions, instead of 11 embracing the complexity that problem-solving always 12 demands, and that democracy requires. 13 You may not like everything that government does; I know I 14 don't. But the alternative is not to throw up your hands or turn to 15 violence. What we must do is to sit down together as 16 reasonable people and make our government do what is 17 right, and stop doing what may be wrong-headed or 18 wasteful. 19 Extremism wants to spread, when the race is 20 really a marathon. Extremism wants to escape the 21 complexity of democracy, and the staggering diversity of 22 human nature, but it never can. Extremism argues that 23 problems are easy to solve, but if they were, we would 24 have licked them a long, long time ago. 25 As Attorney General, I deal with problems that frustrated 7 1 previous Attorney Generals for years, such as crime, terrorism, 2 and domestic violence. There is no vaccination for 3 crime, as there is for polio. The only thing we have is 4 hard work, seven days a week. Parents raising children 5 right, police walking the beat every single night, and 6 prosecutors putting criminals behind bars, one by one. 7 We're not a bumper sticker away from solving 8 terrorism. We have to be eternally vigilant, close our 9 borders to those who threaten us, and work slowly and 10 patiently for peace in the lands where foreign 11 terrorists come from. Just as we must fight the hatred 12 and the paranoia that fuels domestic terrorism. 13 There is no sound byte that can make domestic 14 violence go away. You have to stop abusers, one by one, 15 and let them know that there is never an excuse for 16 hitting someone you love. We have to build shelters one 17 at a time to give victims a safe place away from the 18 abuse, and we have to help victims rebuild their lives 19 slowly and steadily. 20 The vital center knows that problems are 21 complicated, and that answers are rarely simple. I hope 22 that in your lives you will choose the course of 23 leadership, not partisanship. Think twice when someone 24 has a simple answer. Remember that so many of our 25 problems took decades to get where they are. That no 8 1 amount of sloganeering can fix them overnight. 2 And don't ever forget to listen. For I have learned so much 3 when I have listened to the people with whom I have 4 disagreed. Sometimes I have changed my mind, and 5 sometimes I have changed theirs. 6 The second great threat to our nation's 7 optimistic spirit is cynicism. Maybe you have faced it 8 already. The cynic knows so much about what is wrong, 9 and why it can't be fixed. He can tell you which 10 baseball players strike out the most, and why planes and 11 stock markets crash. She can tell you which public 12 figures were caught doing something wrong, why the 13 current peace negotiations are doomed, and why so many 14 marriages end in divorce. It may be a beautiful South 15 Carolina day, but the cynic knows it's going to rain 16 again someday. 17 Of course, cynicism never happens by itself. 18 It always builds on genuine problems and disasters. 19 Watergate and other scandals convinced millions of 20 Americans that government was permanently broken, and 21 that everyone in public life was some sort of alien from 22 ordinary American life, that they might as well have 23 landed in a spaceship. 24 In fact, you can look at any of our institutions, and you can find 25 a scandal, and cynics told you so. Sports heroes, police officers, business 9 1 leaders, doctors, ministers, teachers and politicians; 2 everyone can point to people in all walks of life who 3 have fallen below society's standards. 4 We can use a funny line to dismiss politicians 5 or teachers or Wall Street bankers, but that's the easy 6 way out. And after we do, what's different? Nothing, 7 except that fewer people are willing to work to make our 8 government better, care for the helpless amongst us, or 9 build a business that puts its customers' needs first. 10 At the very least, if you're finding yourself falling 11 prey to cynicism, consider it's cousin, skepticism. 12 At least the skeptic has an open mind. The 13 skeptic sees all the same problems, and asks all the 14 same questions, but is willing to let the answer be good 15 or bad. If you're a recovering cynic, and you have made 16 it back to skepticism, why not just take the final step, 17 and become an idealist in the best American tradition? 18 And I don't mean for a minute that you should 19 be naive. The Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. talked 20 about the need for all of us to have a tough mind and a 21 tender heart. I can tell you that no one can come to 22 Washington and ever hope to do well, if they don't start 23 the morning by asking tough questions, and end the day 24 getting real answers. But this nation was founded by 25 idealists with tough minds, and with tender hearts, and 10 1 they formed a government designed to check the worst in 2 human nature, just as they risked their lives to found a 3 country that cherished freedom and liberty over 4 oppression. They took the hard way, and they made a 5 difference. 6 A month ago, as the sun was setting, before it 7 rose again on Easter morning, I was in Dover, Delaware, 8 listening to President Clinton honor Commerce Secretary 9 Ron Brown, and 32 other Americans who died in the plane 10 crash in Bosnia. They were young and old, men and 11 women, government workers and business leaders, but they 12 were all there because they believed they could help a 13 ravaged country heal from civil war. These 33 lives, 14 said the President, show us the best of America. They 15 are a stern rebuke to the cynicism that is all too 16 familiar these days. He talked about how family after 17 family told him how their loved ones were proud of their 18 work, and believed in what they were doing, and believed 19 they could make a difference. 20 Finally, I want to talk to you about the 21 brother of extremism and cynicism: defeatism. Not 22 everyone faces hopelessness, but no one is far away from 23 someone who does. It may be across town, where family 24 can't afford to pay the rent, or take the child to the 25 doctor, because they don't have a job. It may be in the 11 1 next classroom, where a student is convinced that he 2 will never succeed, that no one cares, and that street 3 crime will be the only way out of a hard life. It might 4 be next door, where a wife or child faces terror every 5 night, at the hands of an abusive spouse or parent. 6 You may never find yourself at the bottom of 7 life's pit, and if you do, I pray that you have the 8 energy and the courage to get up and out. But you may 9 know someone who has fallen, someone who doesn't even 10 want to try, because they are sure it won't make a 11 difference if they do. 12 Defeatism isn't always dramatic. When more 13 people stay at home on Election Day, it means that they 14 don't see how voting can make their lives any better. 15 When good people hear the screams outside or next door, 16 and shut their windows, they have given up hope that 17 they can work with the police and the community to make 18 our streets safer. 19 And worst of all, what about the children who 20 never learn to hope? Their bright faces have fallen by 21 age 12. Perhaps they are ignored or abused. Maybe they 22 can find their first real family in a gang. But what if 23 there is a police officer who spends time with that 24 child, to get him off on the right path? What if a 25 neighbor or counselor takes the time to make a 12 1 difference? What if defeatism is met head-on by the 2 apostles of the American dream, people who know in their 3 hearts that we can all do better? 4 One of your greatest challenges in this world 5 will be to learn how to deal with extremis, cynicism, 6 and defeatism. But the more I travel around America, 7 the more I see we can. I see what the alternative to 8 these evils are. It's right in front of our face, if we 9 will just lift up our eyes and see it. 10 Nobody can choose the problems they face, but everybody has 11 the power to choose how they will respond to them, and the 12 Americans past and the Americans present are 13 filled with, people who have faced up to their choice, 14 and who have chosen the path of action, and who have chosen 15 to stand for what is right and good in the world. 16 Ten minutes east of here is the W. A. Perry 17 Middle School. Eight years ago, like a lot of schools, 18 it faced so many tough problems, like teen pregnancy, 19 drugs and violence. And a woman named Mary Solomon made 20 a choice. She's not a politician, or a generous 21 millionaire, or a road scholar. She could have just let 22 the problem be, and closed her doors, and even moved 23 somewhere else. 24 But Mary Solomon made her choice, and took a 25 stand. She organized forty of her neighbors. None of 13 1 them had children in the school, but all of them 2 remembered better days. They formed the Perry Middle 3 School Task Force. Together, they got the school board 4 to fix up the school. Then they heard there was no 5 money in the budget for a nurse, so they got grant money 6 to pay for one. They identified more resources to fight 7 drugs, got the city police to work with students, and 8 worked with social workers to turn things around. 9 Mary Solomon and the Perry Middle School Task 10 Force made a choice. And they made a difference. Teen 11 pregnancies fell nearly ninety percent. Students had 12 more extracurricular activities to keep them on the 13 right path. A whole school of young people is being 14 taught to reject extremism, cynicism, and defeatism in 15 their life. Mary Solomon is here today with us, and I'd 16 like her to stand and be recognized for taking the stand 17 she has. (Pause). 18 In my own hometown in August of 1992, I 19 watched the people of Miami respond to Hurricane Andrew, 20 as you watched people respond to Hurricane Hugo. In the 21 first two or three days, the world seems to fall apart 22 from you. There was no cohesion, there was no 23 community, there was no society. People looked stunned 24 and adrift. But then people came together. They 25 started directing traffic on their own, and delivering 14 1 materials, and bringing water, and 2 reaching out and caring and helping. And that community 3 is stronger and better for it today. 4 And then, almost a year ago, on the Sunday 5 that followed the terrible tragedy in Oklahoma City, I 6 went to a memorial service in that town, and watched the 7 people of that city come together, to speak out against 8 the violence that had spawned that blast, to work with 9 law enforcement to hold those who had done it 10 accountable, and to reach out to the survivors, to help 11 them begin to heal. 12 I have been Attorney General now for three 13 years. My faith in the American people, and their 14 ability to deal with adversity, has never been so 15 strong. I have never been so sure that we can prevail 16 against the causes of wrong in this world. I know we 17 can defeat extremism, and reclaim the vital center. I 18 know we can defeat cynicism, and seek what is good 19 amidst all that is bad. I know we can defeat defeatism, 20 and teach those who have fallen to get up and hope 21 again. 22 It won't be easy, and it will take a lot more 23 than any speech can ever do, but I come here today 24 because you are the future of this country. I know you 25 have the energy. I know you have the commitment. I 15 1 know you can make the choice to stand for what is right 2 and good in this world. If you choose public service, 3 you will be choosing one of the most rewarding and 4 fulfilling careers our society can offer. But whether 5 you are running a business, or teaching a class, 6 prosecuting criminals, or raising a family, you can make 7 a difference. 8 In another springtime, 33 years ago, the 9 Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. sat in a Birmingham 10 jail, exhausted from years of seeking justice for all. 11 He was dispirited, and now even some of his fellow 12 ministers were saying he should back off and wait for 13 progress to happen on its own. He must have struggled 14 to keep cynicism out of his every thought, and sitting 15 in that jail cell day after day, with progress coming 16 slowly or not at all, he had to wonder why any man had a 17 right to hope. 18 But Reverend King made his choice. He began 19 writing until his words filled the margins of a 20 secondhand newspaper. The power of his choice flowed 21 out of then pen, and into the conscience of America. 22 Today, as you prepare to make your choices in 23 life, I would like to close with a few of those words 24 from Dr. King's letter from that Birmingham jail: 25 "We must come to see that human progress never 16 1 rolls in on wheels of inevitability. It comes 2 through the tireless efforts and persistent work of 3 men, willing to be co-workers with God, and without 4 this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the 5 forces of social stagnation. We must use time 6 creatively, and forever realize that the time is 7 always right to do right." 8 I hope and pray that you will make your choice the 9 choice of standing for what is right and good in this 10 world. Thank you, congratulations, good luck, and God 11 bless you. 12 (End of verbatim keynote address.) 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 17 CERTIFICATE OF REPORTER STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA ) ss: COUNTY OF RICHLAND ) I, Leslie S. Toole, the officer before whom the foregoing proceedings were recorded, do hereby certify that the foregoing proceedings were taken by me to the best of my ability and thereafter reduced to typewriting under my direction; and that the foregoing pages constitute a true, accurate, and complete transcription of said proceedings. ______________________________ LESLIE S. TOOLE, CSR Notary Public in and for State of South Carolina My commission expires February 12, 2001.