Tipper Gore, Wife of Vice President Gore
GORE: Thank you.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much.
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Hi, Tennessee.
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Thank you. Please. Thank you. Thank you very much.
Thank you very much. Hello, everybody. It's great to see
you.
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Great to see you.
Mr. Chairman and delegates and fellow Democrats and fellow
Americans, tonight I would like to talk with you about a civil
society, the kind of society that I want my four children to
live in, the kind of society that you and I are working to
build.
A civil society is built by the smallest, simplest gestures
-- things that we do every day without thinking twice about
them.
Seventy-six years ago, Mrs. Burn from east Tennessee did such
a thing. Women's suffrage had come down to one vote and her son
Harry, a 24-year-old Tennessee state representative was expected
to vote no.
But then, Mrs. Burn wrote a letter. It said, "Be a good
boy, Harry, and do the right thing."
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Yes.
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He switched. He switched from no to yes, and that's how the
19th Amendment was ratified to give women the right to vote.
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So to Mrs. Burn and all Americans who teach their children to
do the right thing, thank you. You are the cornerstones of a
civil society, the pillars of strong communities, the models of
personal responsibility and the bridge-builders to a brighter
future.
You will find no better champions than President Clinton and
my husband, Al Gore.
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Because they -- they are working every day to give you better
tools to raise your children and create a more civil society.
As you know, I began a difficult fight long before it became
fashionable to give parents the tools to protect their children
from violence and obscenity and the degradation of women.
We won voluntary labeling of records and CDs, and today
parents have a more powerful tool to insure that their values
will not be undermined. Then, the battle was music. But now,
thanks to President Clinton and to Vice President Gore, parents
will have even more powerful tools -- the V-chip that gives the
TV controls back to families...
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... voluntary ratings and three hours of children's
educational programming a week on the networks.
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GORE: That's one way in which President Clinton and Vice
President Gore are shifting the balance of power back to
America's families.
And here's another way that this administration considers the
impact of the policy decisions on the American family. For too
long diseases of the brain have had second class status. But
President Clinton has fought along side compassionate members of
Congress for equal insurance coverage for mental health and to
change...
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... and he's worked to change the lives and the outlook of
families living with mental illness.
I'm proud to be a Democrat because our party fights not just
for families, but also for children. Parents and children need
strong communities, strong congregations, strong schools and
strong neighborhoods.
And I'm proud to be a Democrat because our party has always
sought to create a civil society, not only in the policies that
we promote but in the politics that we practice.
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I really believe, as I know that you believe, that it is our
responsibility to America's voters to eliminate viciousness from
our political discourse, to choose language that unites rather
than divides, to disagree with decency and dignity and to keep
our sense of humor.
Civil discourse advances the Democratic Party's vision of a
society that embodies Mrs. Burn's simple advice, to do the right
thing.
So, let us pledge tonight that we will continue building a
future that is more caring, more humane, more civil, more
tolerant and more virtuous, for America's parents, for America's
families and for the American community.
And now -- and now it is my honor and privilege to introduce
a woman who has devoted her life to building a more civil
society for all of America's families; a woman who has had the
courage to blaze new trails, who has the gift of a great mind
and the blessing of a compassionate heart; a woman who is a
strong and unwavering voice for those who haven't yet found
their voices, our children. And a woman who always maintains
her grace, dignity and humor even while being subjected to the
most unimaginable incivility.
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She is a woman I am proud to call a dear and loyal friend, a
woman parents and children are proud to call their champion and
a woman America is proud to call our first lady. Hillary Rodham
Clinton.
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END
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