HWS Daily Update
BILL CLINTON AND HILLARY CLINTON
 Mark Gearan:
Mark Gearan:
                Welcome  everybody. Well, Mary and I and our two daughters are delighted to  welcome the Clintons to Geneva, to our home and to their Finger Lakes  Labor Day vacation. Of course, this is Senator Hillary Clinton's third  visit to Geneva and we're delighted she brought along her husband for  his first visit to Geneva. The Clintons are here for some time to  relax, to enjoy our region here in the Finger Lakes and this beautiful  campus. Our hope is that they will find what my family has found in the  past two years since moving up here to Geneva, and that is the  friendliness of the people here in our area in Geneva, the beauty of  this region, and the dynamic community of our students here at Hobart  and William Smith. Students? (audience cheers) As well as our faculty  and staff and all that make up the Hobart and William Smith family. To  show this kind of hospitality we have some gifts for the Clintons to  make sure their time here is an enjoyable one. We need to start with  some Hobart and William Smith apparel. We all need Hobart and William  Smith apparel. Courtesy of The College Store presented to President  Clinton by our student trustee Quentin Robbins. Quentin? (presentation  of sweatshirt) Not to be outdone, William Smith trustee Reneé Conklin  has a hat for Senator Clinton. Many of our community members wanted to  make sure that they also welcome the Clintons here to the City of  Geneva. Acting Mayor John Greccho is here; Mayor Kass is out of town,  but Acting Mayor Greccho will present a framed watercolor by Yolanda  Scofield depicting various Geneva buildings. They want to make sure  President Clinton has that forum. Mayor Greccho? 
              
From the Geneva schools, if he can carry it, Antwon Evansburg, a  freshman at Geneva High, will present to Senator Clinton. (oversized  gift presented) We may need someone to help the Senator with that.  We'll make sure that gets back to the house. From DeSales High School,  the Catholic high school here, Sharon Rose Mantell wanted to also  present a gift to Senator Clinton. (bouquet of roses presented) 
              
And lastly, the Geneva Area Chamber of Commerce wanted to recognize  Senator Clinton for all her work on economic development. The past  President and his wife, Frank Pullano and Donna Pullano, who present a  basket of area wines and assortments for the Clintons. (Mark pointing  to his right "There's a great sign there, 'Clinton is God.' Which one  are you talking about, we have them both here.") Let me get right to  the program here and introduce New York's junior Senator, Hillary  Rodham Clinton, who is certainly no stranger to this campus. She's been  here, as I mentioned; this is her third visit. She was here about a  year and a half ago where she moderated a forum for 90 minutes with our  students about service and community service. She came back to meet  with area college presidents. She certainly is very hard working, as  the Chamber wanted us to remind everyone, for the economic development  issues in this region. I was impressed by reading Time magazine and  noting an interesting statistic about our senator, that she has  introduced and co-sponsored and written more legislation than any  junior senator.
              
Hillary Rodham Clinton:
                Thank you. Wow. Thank you so much.  I am absolutely delighted to be back and I'm so pleased that we could  have an opportunity to greet all of you and thank you for coming out,  both from the colleges and the community, and that my husband could  come because I've been telling him how beautiful Geneva is and I have  all of President Gearan's talking points about the colleges so I've  been also telling him how special Hobart and William Smith are and now  he can see for himself. Thank you for welcoming us here to the  Colleges. I want to thank all the students for being here and I also  want to recognize that the Latin American and Caribbean Student  Associations were having a barbecue on Smith Green so I'm glad that  they would come over and be part of this event as well. Let me thank  you, Mayor and the Pullanos and everyone who's gathered here as part of  this, but I especially want to thank our longtime friends, the Gearans.  I'm so pleased that Bill and I will have a chance to just relax and  spend some time here with Mark and Mary and their daughters and really  get a little R&R in this beautiful Finger Lakes area. 
              
How many freshmen are here at Hobart and William Smith? (loud  cheers) Well, welcome to college. You've made a very good choice. Mark  was pointing out to me the big sculpture of the scissors is a perfect  metaphor for what you're finding here and I wish you well this first  year and I hope that everything works out for you. You know, New York  has so many colleges and universities that are first rate and the small  liberal arts colleges are particular favorites of mine because I just  think you have so many opportunities to get to know one another and  your professors and really pursue other interests that you might never  have thought about before you came. I'm also impressed, as I was when I  first visited, with the breadth of community service on this campus. It  is very impressive to me and I know it must be not only the faculty and  staff who are very proud of the work that you do but based on my visit,  it's true throughout the region because you're doing so much work that  wouldn't otherwise be done. I thank you for that because while you're  getting not only a good academic education, you're learning more about  yourselves and about what goes on around you and that's a tremendous  experience and you're making a great contribution. 
              
You know, we're going back into session next week and it's going to  be a very difficult couple of months because we have a lot of hard  decisions to make and they're not partisan decisions, they're  problem-solving decisions. I mean, how are we going to fund education?  I'm going to be on the education conference committee because I serve  on that committee and there's no issue that I care more about. If we  don't make the kinds of investments in our public school system and  have the sort of accountability that we know will work to increase  student learning then I think we're turning our backs on the  institution that really makes America unique. 
              
You know, I've been fortunate to travel all over the world both on  my own and with my husband. You can go to any country anywhere in the  world and you'll find very smart people and you'll find very rich  people and you'll find accomplished artists and great athletes but you  won't find what we have, which is this extraordinary engine of  opportunity that provides people who are willing work for their  betterment and a better future for themselves and their children. The  chance to really show what they can do. I believe with all my heart  that our education system is absolutely essential to the continuation  to the kind of country we've always enjoyed and loved. 
              
And so part of what we'll be working on is how we going about doing  that. We'll be facing environmental and energy issues, and when I met  here, the second time I was on campus, the presidents and executives  from so many of the colleges and universities from around upstate New  York, I was thrilled to hear about the work that is being done in wind  power and bio-mass and fuel cells and all kinds of alternative energy,  but if we don't have an energy policy that is a 21st century energy  policy to invest in those kinds of alternative energy sources, I'm  afraid we're going to go backwards instead of forwards. We also have to  make a real commitment to developing our energy needs to that we are  self-sufficient without undermining our commitment to the environment.  That's why I oppose drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge  (applause) and it's why Chuck Schumer and I fought for and successfully  passed a prohibition on any drilling in the Finger Lakes for any reason  whatsoever. (applause) 
              
And we're going to have big health care issues. We really believe  it's important to provide a prescription drug benefit for people on  Medicare and that's something I thought everybody agreed to in the last  election. But it's not going to be easy or maybe even possible, given  what's happened to the budget and the slowdown in the economy. And I  think it's important that we modernize, reform, and protect and  preserve Social Security, and I will be fighting to do that so that it  does remain a solemn obligation and contract. And part of why I'm  concerned is because we have had something of an economic slowdown but  it's been made worse by the economic policies that have been pursued. I  am very concerned that we have moved back into fiscal irresponsibility.  We're heading back into deficits. We're beginning to see the use of the  social security surplus. I don't think that's smart and it's not smart  because it places a burden on young people like you and our daughter. I  don't think that's fair. One of the reasons I was so proud of the last  eight years because, under my husband's leadership, our country moved  out of deficits and began paying down on our debt and investing in our  future. 
              
You know, I supported a more balanced approach. I didn't support the  big tax cut. I thought it was too big. I supported a more reasonable,  affordable tax cut. I supported paying down the debt and I supported  making investments in education and the environment and energy and  health care and economic development for places like upstate New York.  And that's what I'm going to keep fighting for because to me there  isn't any place that is either more beautiful or more deserving of  investment than upstate. I mean, all you have to do is come to the  shores of this beautiful lake, come to Geneva, travel throughout  upstate New York. So much of our history was made here. So many of the  people have a work ethic that you're not going to find anywhere else.  We should be making investments, tax credits, incubators, broadband,  and the kind of investments that will make it possible for people to be  part of the new modern economy that will come because this is a  beautiful place to live and work. So we have our work cut out for us in  order to make that case and I'm going to do everything I possibly can. 
              
We just came from the State Fair where we had a great time and I  gave a speech about agriculture because I'm sure a lot of you know, but  many New Yorkers don't even know, that agriculture is still the number  one industry in New York. We need to support our farmers and we need to  be buying local New York products. So it's a great honor to serve in  the Senate and represent you and every day I'm just absolutely  privileged and delighted to go to work and advocate for all of you and  for the needs of this institution, and Geneva, and everyone who makes  New York not only a great state but, I think, sort of the leading edge  of change and opportunity as it always has been historically, but will  be into the future. 
              
I will not surprise you by saying that I believe we had a good eight  years. I believe that the two terms of the Clinton/Gore Administration  were not only good for New York and America but good for our world. As  we look around the world we see a lot of troubling spots. We're not  sure exactly what's going to happen from Northern Ireland to the  Macedonia conflict to the Middle East, and we have many worries that we  have to pay careful attention to. 
              
There's going to be a big debate about national missile defense. I hope you all will follow it. Don't let your eyes glaze over. This may be the most important decision that is made in the next year or two because if we don't do it right we not be safer and secure. We will be rendered less safe and less secure. I am a very strong supporter of defense. I was up at Fort Drum. I don't know if any of you are from the north country. I was up at Fort Drum, which is one of the most advanced bases we have anywhere in America. We deploy out of there to Sinai and the Balkans and those men and women are ready to go to represent the American interest. They need our support. We do not need to be deploying unproven technology. How many of you have followed this and seen that a couple of months ago they said that they had done a test where the missile was intercepted, and that was a success, and lo and behold we pick up a publication called Defense Week and we read that the missile had a global positioning beacon in it so they knew exactly where it was and that's how they could shoot it down. I don't think Saddam Hussein is going to say 'let's put a beacon in our missile so that they'll know where it is.' We need to do the research, we need to be careful about how we do this and do it right. You're going to have a great treat in the next couple of days. Madeleine Albright is going to be here and she has traveled around this world, knows what's going on. You'll be able to talk with her. But now it's my great pleasure, because I'm so pleased that he could come and see how beautiful this campus is and how beautiful this area is, to introduce my husband, our former president, Bill Clinton.
Bill Clinton:
                Thanks, thank you very much.
              
From audience:
                Nice boots, Bill.
 Bill Clinton:
Bill Clinton:
              Thanks,  I got these boots in Australia, but I have some from Texas where I once  took a very brief vacation. (laughter) Let me first of all thank  President Gearan. Well, that sounds funny. (laughter) Right before I  left office, Mark said 'well, at least one of us is not term-limited.'  But I want to thank Mark and Mary and members of the Hobart and William  Smith and Geneva communities for making us feel so welcome. You've just  heard the politician in my family speak. Didn't she do a good job? I'm  very, very grateful to the people in this part of New York State for  the support you gave to me and the Vice President through our eight  years and the support you gave to Hillary in the last election. It is  true, as Mark said, she has introduced more legislation that any other  freshman member of the Senate and she's also passed more, and I am very  proud of her for doing that. 
This is a higher education community and I just want to sort of make two observations, if I might, that may help you think about these political issues as they come up. What should you think about the tax cut? What should we do about it now? What should you think about Social Security and national missile defense or the energy crisis? I just want to offer two observations. Number one, if I ask you to describe in a sentence, the dominant characteristic of this age, what would your answer be? What is the most important characteristic of the early 21st century? You might say information technology. You might say the technology revolution. When I became President there were 50 sites on the World Wide Web, now there are 350 million. Nothing like it ever in history. You might say the globalization of the economy, which had ironically lifted more people out of poverty in the last 20 years than in any time in history, but we still have half the people in the world living on less than two dollars a day; a billion people living on less than a dollar a day. You might say global warming. Hillary talked about that. Eight of the ten hottest years ever recorded were in the last decade and if we have 50 more years like them, then we'll lose about 50 feet of Manhattan Island, we'll lose the Florida Everglades; we'll lose the Louisiana sugarcane fields, and Pacific island nations will be flooded, and we'll have tens of millions of food refugees within 50 years. You might say the increasing diversity within our societies. Look around here today and you can see that. You might say, to echo something Hillary said, that the explosive mixture of modern technology and weaponry with ancient racial, religious, tribal, and ethnic hatreds. Bosnia, Kosovo, the Middle East, Northern Ireland and other places.
What do all these things, positive and negative, have in common? Our interdependence. Global warming is an interdependent problem. We may be the worst emitters of greenhouses gases but they're hurt just as bad in Africa, Asia, and Latin America as Americans are by a climate change. Maybe worse. Every one of those issues, the global economy proves our interdependence. The threats of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction prove our interdependence. Information technology is premised on our interdependence.
You might also talk about the phenomenal rise in medical research. The sequencing of the human genome and that fact that in all probability, there'll be a cure for most cancers within a matter of ten years and we'll be able to be tested and further have them identified before they're a few cells in size. Scientists are now working in digital chips that can replicate damaged nerves in spines that will enable people confined to wheelchairs to stand up and walk. So, you might say all those things but every one of the developments of the modern world emphasizes and increases the extent to which our future is tied up with others around the country and around the world. Therefore, every time you hear one of these issues debated you should ask yourselves 'is this going to make our interdependence more positive or more negative.'
The second thing I think you ought to think about it is the speed with which we are moving into the future and how much things will change when the baby-boomers retire in ten years. One of the things I'm proudest of in our eight years is we increased college aid by more than had been increased in 50 years since the GI Bill was established at the end of World War II. We had a record number of people going to college from all racial and ethnic groups. Why? Because I thought it was important to your future and to our nation's future. So the second question you ought to ask yourself whenever any issue is debated today is 'how will this issue look ten years from now?' because that's when it will matter to most of you. Those young students here, when you move out of here and get into your child-bearing years, your children will in all probability with have a life expectancy in excess of 90 years because of biomedical research. You'll come up with the right position on whatever the issue is. Thank you, God bless you.
Mark Gearan:
                I'd like to announce the latest adjunct  professor here at Hobart and William Smith, William Jefferson Clinton.  He's agreed to come without tenure so members of the faculty here, meet  your new colleague. We're glad you're all here. The Clintons are going  to spend the weekend here at our house. We promised to keep the noise  down to our neighbors on South Main Street. Thank you all very much for  coming. Good afternoon.
INFORMATION
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and Former President Bill Clinton Visit
Sept. 1, 2001
