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DOCUMENT NO.
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re: Draft President William Jefferson Clinton remarks at the
presentation of the Medal of Freedom to President James Earl Carter
and Rosalynn Carter (18 pages)
08/08/1999
RESTRICTION
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Clinton Presidential Records
National Security Council
Speechwriting (Paul Orzulak)
ONBox Number: 4023
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[Medal of Freedom] [Folder 3]
2008-0702-F
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�Page 1 of6
THE WHITE HOUSE
"
Office of the Press Secretary
(Atlanta, Georgia)
For Immediate Release
August 9, 1999
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT,
PRESIDENT CARTER AND MRS. CARTER
AT THE MEDAL OF FREEDOM PRESENTATION
The Carter Center
Atlanta, Georgia
7:05 P.M. EDT
PRESIDENT CLINTON:
President and Mrs. Carter, members of the·
family, including grandchild number 10, Hugo, who's right
outside -- (laughter) -- members of the Cabinet who are here,
,
friends of ·the Carters, Mr. Mayo~.
Let me say to all of you
'
what a great pleasure it is for me to be here today.
I flew down
on Air Force One today with a number of former Carter administration
members who many of them are in our administration, many others
are mutual friends, and we relived old stories.
Cart~r
·"
I remember in 1974, Governor Jimmy Carter had a role in the
Democratic Party and he was trying to help us all win elections.
And I was running for Congress and he sent Jody Powell to Northwest
Arkansas to help me.
I should have known something was up.
(Laughter.)
Thank goodness he failed and ·I lost that election.
(Laughter.)
In 1975, Jimmy Carter came to Arkansas to give a speech, met
with me and my wife and others and we signed on.
In 1976, my home
state was the only state besides. Georgia where President Carter got
more than 65 percent of the vote.
So it's a great personal honor
f6r me to be h~re today.
Over the past several years, the President and Mrs. Carter have
received many awards, all of them well-deserved.
Rosalynn has received
more than a dozen just from children's organizations alone.
President
Carter has been knighted in Mali, made an honorary tribal chief in
Nigeria and Ghana:
There are at least three families in Africa he's
met who have named their newborn child Jimmy Carter.
(Laughter.)
Now these,are hard acts to follow.
(Laughter.)
But today, it
is my privilege, on behalf of a grateful nation, to confer America's
highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freed6m, on Jimmy
and Rosalynn Carter.
Twenty-two years ago, when presenting this same award
posthumously to Dr. Martin Luther King, President Carter said,
"there are many Americans who do great things, who make us proud
of them and their achievements, and who inspire us to do better
ourselves.
But there are some among those noble achievers who
are exemplary in every way, who reach a higher plateau
of achievement."
It is in that spirit that we look back on two extraordinary lives
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'
today.
In the past, this award has been presented to people who have·
helped America promote freedom -- by fighting for human rights, or
righting social wrongs, or empowering others to achieve, or
extending peac·e around the world.
But rarely do we honor two people
who have devoted themselves so effectively to advancing freedom in
all those ways.
Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter have done more good
things for more people in more places than any other couple on the
face of the earth.
(Applause.)
To be sure, there have been other Presidents who have continued
to contribute to the public good once they left office:
Thomas Jefferson founded the University of Virginia; John Quincy Adams
returned to Congress for eight terms and fought slavery; William Howard
Taft became Chief Justice.
But the work President Carter has done through this extraordinary
Carter Center to improve our nation and our world is truly unparalleled
in our nation's history. We've all gotten used to seeing pictures of
President Carter building homes for people through Habitat for Humanity.
But the full story lies in pictures we don't see, of the llS"countries
he's visited 5ince leaving office, to end hunger and disease and to
spread the cause of peace; by the more than 20 elections he's helped to
monitor, where democracy is taking root, thanks in part to his effor~s;
· of the millions in Africa who are living better lives thanks to his
work to eradicate diseases like Guinea worm and river blindness; of
the dozens of political prisoners who have been released, thanks in
part to letters he has written away from the public spotlight.
I was proud to have his support when we worked together to bring
democracy back to Haiti and to preserve stability on the Korean
Peninsula.
I am grateful for the many detailed, incisive reports he
has sent to me from his tri~ to troubled nations all across the globe,
always urging understanding of their problems and their points of view,
always outlining practical steps to progress.
To call Jimmy Carter the greatest former President in history,
as many have, however, does not do justice either to him or to
his work.
For, in a real sense,. this Carter Center is not a new
beginning, but .a continuation of the Carter presidency.
The work President Carter did in those four years not only broke
important new ground, it is still playing a large role in shaping
the world we live in today.
One of the proudest moments of my life
was the day in 1993 when Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat shook hands
on the South Lawn of the White House. That day was made possible by
the courage of the people of the Middle East and their leaders,
but also by another handshake 20 years before, and the persistence
of President Carter as he brokered the Camp David Accords. I know
it is a great source of pride for him that, 21 years later,
not a word of that agreement has been violated.
(Applause.)
If you talk to any elected leader in Latin America today, they
will tell you that the stand President Carter took for democracy
and human rights put America on the right side of history in our
hemisphere.
He was the first President to put America's commitment
to human rights squarely ~t the heart of our foreign policy. Today,
more than half the world's people live in freedom, not least
because he had the faith to lend America support, to brave
dissidents like Sakharov, Havel and Mandela. And there were
thousands of less well-known political prisoners languishing
in jails in the 1970s who were sustained by a smuggled news
clipping of President Carter championing their cause.
His role
in saving the life of the President of South Korea, President Kim,
is well known.
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Page 3 of6
His resolve on SALT II, even though it was never ratified,
helped to constrain the arms race for a full decade and laid the
groundwork for the dramatic reductions in nuclear weaponry we see
today.
By normalizing relations with China, he began a dialogue
which holds the promise of avoiding a new era of conflict and
containment and, instead, building a future of cooperation with.
the world's most popu~ous nation.
Here at home, his work on deregulation helped free up competitive
forces that continue to strengthen our economy today.
His work on
conservation, particularly the Alaska Lands Act, accelerated a
process that has created the cleanest air and water in a generation.
His advocacy of energy conservation and clean energy will loom even
larger in the years ahead as our' nation and our world finally come
to grips with the challenge of climate change. And by hiring and
appointing more women and more minorities than any other
· administration to that point, he set a shining example of the one
America we all long to live in.· (Applause.)
During the Carter years, Rosalynn Carter also brought vision,
compassion, tireless energy and commitment to the causes she advanced.
Just as Eleanor Roosevelt will be remembered for her work on
human rights, Rosalynn Carter will always be remembered as a pioneer
on mental health and a champion of our children.
For more than 30 years she has made it her missi6n to erase
the stigma surrounding mental health. As First Lady of Georgia,
she used to travel dusty back roads to meet with people and
volunteered her time at a state hospital. She took what she learned
to the White House, where she chaired the President's Commission on
Mental Health with style and grace. Afterwards, she initiated the
Rosalynn Carter Symposium on Mental Health Policy and has worked to
promote action on mental health worldwide.
We have made some progress in the last few years in extending
health coverage and health insurance policies to mental health
conditions, thanks in large measure to Tipper Gore's efforts; and in
broadening public understanding and support for further action.
It would not have happened if Rosalynn Carter hadn't done what she
did first.
(Applause.)
Thanks to.her work, I believe we will see
the day not too long away when mental illness is treated ju~t like
any other illness, and covered just like any
other illnesses.
We also owe her our gratitude for her efforts to ensure that
all our children are immunized.
Two decades ago, she helped America
see that while many vaccines were being di~covered, too few children
were being vaccinated.
She traveled across our country and became so
recognized as a leader on 'immunization that people used to joke that
every time she showed up, the kids would .start to cry because they
knew somebody was going to get a shot.
(Laughter.)
Her work inspired President Carter to launch a nationwide
campaign to immunize all children by the time they enter school
-- an effort we have built on.
I can tell you that in the last two
years, we can say for the first time in history, 90 percent of
America's children have been immunized against serious childhood
diseases.
That would not have happened if Rosalynn Carter hadn't
started this crusade more than two decades ago.
(Applause. ) We
have seen this kind of commitment in all of her endeavors, from her
work to organize relief for Cambodian refugees to her constant
efforts to ensure that ~omen get equal pay for equal work. ·
The extraordinary partnership between these two remarkable
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Americans has remained strong for more than 50 years now.
To see
it merely as a political journe~ tells only part of the story.
At its heart, those of us who admire them see the{r journey as one
of love and faith.
In many ways, this Center has been their ministry.
In his book, "Living Faith," President Carter recalls a sermon
that says, when we die, the marker on our grave has two dates:
the day we're born and the day we die. And a little dash in between,
representing our whole life on Earth, the little dash.
To God,
the tiny dash is everything.
What a dash they have already made.
(Applause.)·
By doing justice, by loving mercy, by walking humbly with.
their God, Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter are still living their faith,
still making the most of the dash in between the numbers.
It will be hard for any future historian to chronicle all the
good work they have done.
It will be quite impossible for anyone
to chronicle all the good works they have inspired in the
hearts and lives of others throughout the world.
Today, we do
all we can; a grateful.nation says thank you.
Colonel, read the citation.
(The citation is read.)
(Applause.)
PRESIDENT CARTER:
Mr. President, I'm almost speechless with
emotion for what you had to say and the generous way you said it.
It's a real honor to have you here again, and to welcome you to the
Carter Center, and to receive this award, really, on behalf of all
the wonderful people who have worked with us for the last 22 years
in the White House and more recently at the.Carter Center.
Many of them are assembled here this afternoon for this ceremony,
and I'd like to ask all of those with your spouses who have served
with us to please rise and let President Clinton see who you are.
(Applause. )
As President Clinton mentioned, Rosalynn and I have visited,
now, more than 115 nations in the world. We've had a chance to
learn about the people that we've visited. And we've seen in their
eyes quite often despair, and hopelessness and fear, and a lack of
self-respect -- quite often even fearful of their own governments.
We have learned in tha~ time th~ intimate relationship that should
exist between governments throughout the world and civilian
organizations, non-governmental organizations like the Carter
Center -- and, Mr. President,· like the one that in a few months
you'll be establishing for yourself and your wife.
It's very
important for us to realize that the intimate relationship between
officials who serve people and the people's own organizations
should be strong, and constant.
This afternoon, not only do we recognize the significance of this
wonderful award, but it's especially meaningful to me to receive it
from a leader who has pursued many of the same goals that were
mentioned in the generous ~itation. Mr. President, you have
demonstrated global leadership, often under the most difficult of·
circumstances, in your commitment to protect human rights, to bring
peace to people who live in Bosnia and Kosovo, and in the
Middle East -- and countries in Africa, which you and
your wife have visited. And also to take the leadership among
nations and working to alleviate human suffering.
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'
You still have some months to go before you join our small
fraternity laughter of former Presidents.
(Laughter.)
I might point
out that all but one of us were involuntarily retired, Mr. President.
(Laughter.)
But I can assure you that it will be a different life
and one that you are certain to relish. Each President of the
United States is different from all the others, just as each citizen
whom we have had the honor to ,serve is different from all of his or
her neighbors.
You'll make your own choices about what to do in
your post-presidential years.
In order to utilize the literally indescribable influence and ·
opportunities that you'll carry with you, having served as the leader
of the greatest nation on earth, one of the easiest privileges
of the future to visualize, and one of the fondest dreams is the
right to privacy.
In fact, early tomorrow morning, Rosalynn and I
will be leaving Atlanta and flying with our fly rods out to meet
some friends and to enjoy being with them in Colorado and Montana
for a week or so.
I can almost certainly say that we will not see
a single news reporter in that entire time.
(Laughter.)
Now, just imagine, Mr. President, you'll be able to play golf.
without any television, telephoto lenses focus~d on your itroke.
Isn't that great? (Laughter.)
But I think I have to warn you that
there are some down sides to beirig out of office, as well.
I
understand that golfing partners donit give as many mulligans to
ex-presidents as they do to presidents.
·
(Laughter.)
Mr. President, Rosalynn and I hope that you and Hillary will
find as much satisfaction and joy after you leave office as Rosalynn
and I have found for ourselves. We left Washington in something of
despair and embarrassment and disappointment and frustration.
We
didn't know what in the world we were going to do.
I was about the same age that you will be when you leave
the White House.
I found out from some of our friends at CDC that
I still had 25 years of life expectancy left -- (laughter) -what was I going to do with it?
(Laughter.) And out of that has
come the Carter Center, which has given us, in effect, a new life
a life of.pleasure and challenge and adventure, unpredictability
about the future, intimate relationships with those who needed us,
that I could never have had along with the official duties of the
presidency.
We have formed intimate relationships with people in small
villages in Africa and those hungry for freedom and democracy in
Indonesia and in Haiti, as you mentioned, and in Paraguay and other
countries.
We've tried to bring them the blessings of America in a
completely unofficial way, but in a personal way that will only come
to you after you do leave your great office.
We look forward to working with both of you, Rosalynn and I do,
after you establish your own foundation or your own center, or your
own institution in the years to come, and become a fellow member of
our small fraternity.
I
I thank you again for this honor. And I want to repeat,
another time, how overwhelmed I've been with the words that you
spoke -- as are many of the' things that you've done in office,
they are above and beyond the call of duty.
I accept this award on behalf of all of those assembled here, and
those that couldn't come, who have worked side-by-side with us as
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�Page 6 of6
i
partners, both in Washington
~nd
here in the Carter Center.
It~s now my pleasure to introduce someone whom I love and
respect and cherish, and honor: my wife, Rosalynn.
(Applause.)
MRS. CARTER:
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
(Applause.)
Thank you, Mr. President, also for your kind remarks, and for
this award. We are honored by the recognition of our work,
And I say "work," but it really hasn't been work at all. Well,
maybe a little work -- (laughter) -- when we were in the
White House, and when Jimmy was Governor.'
But we've always done the things that we wanted to do and
the things that we enjoyed doing. And one of the things that
you'll find different, Mr. President, when you're out of office,
is that you'll have options.
You'll.be able to pick and choose the
things.that you want to work on; you won't have to take care of
everything at one time.
And whatever you undertake can be gratifying, we can assure
you of that.
We've had wonderful experiences, whether working in
the field of mental health, or with care-givers, or immunization
programs,. or visiting some of our. Carter .Center programs.
It's
gratifying, for. instance, to go into a village in Africa where
half of the population at least, and sometimes more, are lying
on mats on the ground suffering from Guinea worm disease and go
back maybe a year, maybe 15 months later, and nobody have a Guinea
worm.
And once we went into a village that still had Guinea worm, and
there was a ceremony and we were sittin~ under a shelter made from
sticks and palm fronds with a great crowd in front of us.
And I
looked out, and there was a little girl holding up a sign that said,
"Better go away Guinea worm, Jimmy Carter's coming."
(Laughter.)
Or visiting one of our agricultural programs and have the farmer
come running out with tears down his cheeks saying, "My sons have
come home from the city because now we can raise enough food to
feed all our family ri~ht here." Thatls not work, Mr. President.
Well, Jimmy and I have been -- have had great opportunities.
We've been very privileged.
The American people have given us
unlimited chances, unlimited opportunities, and we have wonderful
friends who support our programs here at the Carter Center 'and
make ~t possible for us to do things that we never would ever have
been able to do.
We thank all of them.
We're grateful to all of them.
again, for this honor.
(Applause.)
And we thank.you, Mr. President,
PRESIDENT CARTER:
That's the end of a beautiful program.
Thank you all very much.
We're going to leave now, and I want to
~xpress particularly my thanks to all of those who came from
Washington and other places to be with us this afternoon at what,
for me, is one of the most beautiful events of my life.
Thank you very much to you and to President Clinton.
END
(Applause.)
7:30 P.M. EDT
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9/21199
�Withdrawal/Redaction Marker
Clinton Library
DOCUMENT NO.
AND TYPE
00 I. statement
SUBJECTffiTLE
DATE
re: Draft President William Jefferson Clinton remarks at the
presentation of the Medal of Freedom to President James Earl Carter
and Rosalynn Carter (18 pages)
08/0811999
RESTRICTION
P5
COLLECTION:
Clinton Presidential Records
National Security Council
Speechwriting (Paul Orzulak)
OA/Box Number: 4023
FOLDER TITLE:
[Medal of Freedom] [Folder 3]
2008-0702-F
"m616
RESTRICTION CODES
Presidential Records Act- (44 U.S.C. 2204(a)(
Freedom of Information Act- IS U.S.C. 552(b)(
PI
P2
P3
P4
b(l) National security classified information !(b)(l) of the FOIA]
b(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of
an agency l(b)(2) of the FOIA(
b(3) Release would violate a Federal statute !(b)(3) of the FOIA(
b(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
information !(b)(4) of the FOIA(
b(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
. personal privacy !(b)(6) of the FOIA(
b(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement
purposes !(b)(7) of the FOIA(
b(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of
financial institutions !(b)(8) of the FOIA]
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Relating to the appointment to Federal office !(a)(2) of the PRA(
Release would violate a Federal statute !(a)(3) of the PRA(
Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or
financial information !(a)(4) of the PRA(
PS Release would disclose confidential advice between the President
and his advisors, or between such advisors !a)(S) of the PRA(
P6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy !(a)(6) of the PRA(
C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed
of gift.
PRM. Personal record misfile defined in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
2201(3).
RR. Document will be reviewed upon request.
�
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Speechwriting Office - Paul Orzulak
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National Security Council
Speechwriting Office
Paul Orzulak
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1999-2000
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<a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/show/36267" target="_blank">Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="http://catalog.archives.gov/id/7585791" target="_blank">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
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2008-0702-F
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<p>Orzulak served as speechwriter for President William J. Clinton and National Security Advisor Samuel R. Berger in 1999 and 2000.</p>
<p>Orzulak authored speeches for President Clinton concerning permanent normal trade relations with China; the United States Coast Guard Academy commencement; the role of computer technology in India; the defense of American cyberspace; the Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Award; the memorial service for Former Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi of Japan; the Charlemagne Prize in Germany; the presentation of the Medal of Freedom to President James E. Carter and Rosalyn Carter in Atlanta; the Millennium Around the World Celebration in Washington, DC; the Cornerstone of Peace Park in Japan; the role of scientific research and the European Union while in Portugal; sustainable development in India; armed forces training on Vieques Island, Puerto Rico; and the funeral services for Admiral Elmo R. Zumwalt, Jr. in Annapolis. Orzulak’s speechwriting for National Security Advisor Berger concerned Senator Joseph R. Biden, China’s trade status, Kosovo, and challenges facing American foreign policy.</p>
<p>This collection was made available through a <a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/freedom-of-information-act-requests">Freedom of Information Act</a> request. For more information concerning this collection view the complete finding aid.</p>
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Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
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82 folders in 7 boxes
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[Medal of Freedom] [Folder 3]
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Speechwriting Office
Paul Orzulak
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2008-0702-F
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Box 5
<a href="http://clintonlibrary.gov/assets/Documents/Finding-Aids/2008/2008-0702-F.pdf" target="_blank">Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="http://catalog.archives.gov/id/7585791" target="_blank">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
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Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
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7585791