Democratic Underground Latest Greatest Lobby Journals Search Options Help Login
Google

Zell Miller's Keynote Speech: New York, July 13, 1992

Printer-friendly format Printer-friendly format
Printer-friendly format Email this thread to a friend
Printer-friendly format Bookmark this thread
This topic is archived.
Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU
 
Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-02-04 11:40 AM
Original message
Zell Miller's Keynote Speech: New York, July 13, 1992
Edited on Thu Sep-02-04 11:57 AM by Q
Zell Miller's Keynote Speech:
'Listen To This Voice'

---

NEW YORK, July 13, 1992

Here is the prepared text of the
keynote address of Monday night
by Georgia Gov. Zell Miller's to
the Democratic National Convention:


Listen to this voice.
It's a voice flavored by the Blue Ridge ... a voice
straight out of a remote valley hidden among the peaks and
hollows of the Appalachian Mountains ... a voice that's been
described as more barbed wire than honeysuckle.
That this kind of voice could travel here from a forgotten
corner of Appalachia is a testament to the grace of God and the
greatness of the Democratic Party.
This week we are gathered here to nominate a man from a
remote, rural corner of Arkansas to be president of the United
States of America.
That is powerful proof that the American dream still
lives... at least in the Democratic Party.
Bill Clinton is the only candidate for president who feels
our pain, shares our hopes and will work his heart out to
fulfill our dreams.
You see, I understand why Bill Clinton is so eager to see
the American dream kept alive for a new generation.
Because I, too, was a product of that dream.
I was born during the worst of the Depression on a cold
winter's day in the drafty bedroom of a rented house, and I was
my parent's hope for the future.
Franklin Roosevelt was elected that year, and would soon
replace generations of neglect with a whirlwind of activity,
bringing to our little valley a very welcome supply of God's
most precious commodity - hope.
My father, a teacher, died when I was two weeks old,
leaving a young widow with two small children.
But with my mother's faith in God - and Mr. Roosevelt's
voice on the radio - we kept going.
After my father's death, my mother with her own hands
cleared a small piece of rugged land.
Every day she waded into a neighbor's cold mountain creek,
carrying out thousands of smooth stones to build a house.
I grew up watching my mother complete that house from the
rocks she'd lifted from the creek and cement she mixed in a
wheelbarrow - cement that today still bears her hand prints.
Her son bears her hand prints, too.
She pressed her pride and her hopes and her dreams deep
into my soul.
So, you see, I know what Dan Quayle means when he says it's
best for children to have two parents.
You bet it is!
And it would be nice for them to have trust funds, too.
But we can't all be born rich, handsome and lucky ... and
that's why we have a Democratic Party.
My family would still be isolated and destitute if we had
not had FDR's Democratic brand of government.
I made it because Franklin Delano Roosevelt energized this
nation.
I made it because Harry Truman fought for working families
like mine.
I made it because John Kennedy's rising tide lifted even
our tiny boat.
I made it because Lyndon Johnson showed America that people
who were born poor didn't have to die poor.
And I made it because a man with whom I served in the
Georgia Senate - a man named Jimmy Carter - brought honesty and
decency and integrity to public service.
But what of the kids of today?
Who fights for the child of a single mother today? Because
without a government that is on their side, those children have
no hope. And when a child has no hope, a nation has no future.
I am a Democrat because we are the party of hope.
For 12 dark years the Republicans have dealt in cynicism
and skepticism. They've mastered the art of division and
diversion, and they have robbed us of our hope.
Too many mothers today cannot tell their children what my
mother told me - that working hard and playing by the rules can
make your dreams come true.
For millions, the American dream has become what the poet
called ''a dream deferred.''
And if you recall those words, he warned us that a dream
deferred can explode.
Robbed of hope, the voices of anger rise up, rise up from
working Americans, who are tired of paying more in taxes and
getting less in services.
And George Bush doesn't get it?
Americans cannot understand why the rich can buy the best
health care in the world, but all the rest of us get is rising
costs and cuts in coverage, or no health insurance at all.
And George Bush doesn't get it?
Americans cannot walk our streets in safety, because our
''tough-on-crime'' president has waged a phony war on drugs,
posing for pictures while cutting police, prosecutors and
prisons.
And George Bush doesn't get it?
Americans have seen plants closed down, jobs shipped
overseas and our hopes fade away as our economic position
collapses right before our very eyes.
And George Bush does not get it!
Four years ago, Mr. Bush told us he was a quiet man, who
hears the voices of quiet people.
Today, we know the truth. George Bush is a timid man who
hears only the voices of caution and the status quo.
Let's face facts: George Bush just doesn't get it.
He doesn't see it; he doesn't feel it, and he's done
nothing about it.
That's why we cannot afford four more years.
If the ''education president'' gets another term, even our
kids won't be able to spell potato.
If the ''law and order president'' gets another term, the
criminals will run wild, because our commander-in-chief talks
like Dirty Harry, but acts like Barney Fife.
If the ''environmental president'' gets another term, the
fish he catches off Kennebunkport will have three eyes.
And folks, after January, George Bush is going to have
plenty of time to go fishing.
So much for the millionaire.
But we've still got ourselves a billionaire ... a
billionaire!
He says he's an outsider who will shake up the system in
Washington.
But as far back as 1974 he was lobbying Congress for tax
breaks. He tried to turn $55,000 in contributions into a
special $15 million tax loophole that was tailor-made for him.
Sounds to me like instead of shaking the system up, Mr.
Perot's been shaking it down.
Ross says he'll clean out the barn, but he's been knee deep
in it for years.
If Ross Perot's an outsider, folks I'm from Brooklyn.
Mr. Perot's giving us salesmanship, not leadership. And
we're not buying it.
And so the choice in this election is clear - we've got us
a race between an aristocrat, an autocrat and a Democrat.
I know who I'm for.
I'm for Bill Clinton because he is a Democrat who does not
have to read a book or be briefed about the struggles of
single-parent families, or what it means to work hard for
everything he's ever received in life.
There was no silver spoon in sight when he was born, three
months after his father died.
No one ever gave Bill Clinton a free ride as he worked his
way through college and law school.
And the people at Yale couldn't believe it when he turned
down a good job in Washington to return to Arkansas and teach.
Bill Clinton is a Democrat who has the courage to tell some
of those liberals who think welfare should continue forever,
and some of those conservatives who think there should be no
welfare at all, that they're both wrong.
He's a Democrat who will move people off the welfare rolls
and onto the job rolls.
Bill Clinton is a Democrat who has the courage to lead a
real war on crime here at home.
And around the world he will be the kind of
commander-in-chief this old Marine sergeant would be proud to
follow. That either one of us was able, one growing up in an
Appalachian valley and the other in rural Arkansas, to
eventually become governors of our states is a tribute to the
American dream and yes, the Democratic Party that makes it a
reality.
When I was growing up back in the mountains, whenever I
felt like one of life's losers, my mother used to point to the
one and only paved road in our valley - a narrow little strip
that disappeared winding its way through a distant gap - and
she'd say, ''You know what's so great about this place? You can
get anywhere in the world from here.''
Thanks to her and to God, the United States Marine Corps
and the Democratic Party, I did go somewhere.
But I've never really left that mountain valley.
Shirley and I, our children and their children still live
in the Appalachian town of Young Harris, Ga. And tonight, one
of my sons is sitting in front of the television set in the
living room of that same rock house my mother and her neighbors
built so many years ago.
Tonight, let our message be heard in every living room in
every home in America.
Wherever families and friends are gathered, let them know
this. We have a leader and a party and a platform that says to
the everyday working people of this country:
We will fight your fight.
We will ease your burden.
We will carry your cause.
We will hear all the voices of America, from the silky
harmonies of the Gospel choirs to the rough-edged rhythms of a
hot country band, from the razor's edge rap of the inner city
to the soaring beauty of the finest soprano.
We hear your voice, America.
We hear your voice.
We will answer your call.
We will keep the faith.
And we will restore your hope.
Thank you. God bless you. And God bless America.


----------- End of text ------ Miller, 7/13/92 p.m. ------------------

http://sunsite.tus.ac.jp/pub/academic/political-science/speeches/demo-conv/zellmiller.txt
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
RandomKoolzip Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-02-04 11:45 AM
Response to Original message
1. So...why isn't he being called on his "flip-flop," then?
Gee..I wonder. :eyes:
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Cleita Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-02-04 11:50 AM
Response to Original message
2. I guess racism and old-time religion
Edited on Thu Sep-02-04 11:51 AM by Cleita
makes you forget all the principles you once held and the background you came from. However, I'm beginning to wonder if the rags to riches story wasn't just a lot of bull.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
ecoalex Donating Member (718 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-02-04 11:54 AM
Response to Original message
3. 'Ol Zell
In Georgia, 'Ol Zell is known as Zig - Zag Zell. he's obviously loonier than a goon.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
DU AdBot (1000+ posts) Click to send private message to this author Click to view 
this author's profile Click to add 
this author to your buddy list Click to add 
this author to your Ignore list Thu May 02nd 2024, 12:24 PM
Response to Original message
Advertisements [?]
 Top

Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU

Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.1 Copyright 1997-2002 DCScripts.com
Software has been extensively modified by the DU administrators


Important Notices: By participating on this discussion board, visitors agree to abide by the rules outlined on our Rules page. Messages posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums are the opinions of the individuals who post them, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Democratic Underground, LLC.

Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals |  Store  |  Donate

About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.

© 2001 - 2011 Democratic Underground, LLC