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ADDRESS AT MOSCOW STATE UNIVERSITY (May
31, 1988)

Before I left Washington,
I received many heartfelt letters and telegrams asking me to carry here
a simple message, perhaps, but also some of the most important business
of this summit. It is a message of peace and goodwill and hope for a growing
friendship and closeness between our two peoples.
First, I want to take
a little time to talk to you much as I would to any group of university
students in the United States. I want to talk not just of the realities
of today, but of the possibilities of tomorrow.
You know, one of the
first contacts between your country and mine took place between Russian
and American explorers. The Americans were members of Cook's last voyage
on an expedition searching for an Arctic passage; on the island of Unalaska,
they came upon the Russians, who took them in, and together, with the
native inhabitants, held a prayer service on the ice.
The explorers of the
modern era are the entrepreneurs, men with vision, with the courage to
take risks and faith enough to brave the unknown. These entrepreneurs
and their small enterprises are responsible for almost all the economic
growth in the United States. They are the prime movers of the technological
revolution. In fact, one of the largest personal computer firms in the
United States was started by two college students, no older than you,
in the garage behind their home.
Some people, even
in my own country, look at the riot of experiment that is the free market
and see only waste. What of all the entrepreneurs that fail? Well, many
do, particularly the successful ones. Often several times. And if you
ask them the secret of their success, they'll tell you it's all that they
learned in their struggles along the way -- yes, it's what they learned
from failing. Like an athlete in competition, or a scholar in pursuit
of the truth, experience is the greatest teacher.
We are seeing the
power of economic freedom spreading around the world -- places such as
the Republic of Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan have vaulted into the technological
era, barely pausing in the industrial age along the way. Low-tax agricultural
policies in the sub-continent mean that in some years India is now a net
exporter of food. Perhaps most exciting are the winds of change that are
blowing over the People's republic of China, where one-quarter of the
world's population is now getting its first taste of economic freedom.
At the same time,
the growth of democracy has become one of the most powerful political
movements of our age. In Latin America in the 1970's, only a third of
the population lived under democratic government. Today over 90 percent
does. In the Philippines, in the Republic of Korea, free, contested, democratic
elections are the order of the day. Throughout the world, free markets
are the model for growth. Democracy is the standard by which governments
are measured.
We Americans make
no secret of our belief in freedom. In fact, it's something of a national
pastime. Every four years the American people choose a new president,
and 1988 is one of those years. At one point there were 13 major candidates
running in the two major parties, not to mention all the others, including
the Socialist and Libertarian candidates -- all trying to get my job.
About 1,000 local
television stations, 8,500 radio stations, and 1,700 daily newspapers,
each one an independent, private enterprise, fiercely independent of the
government, report on the candidates, grill them in interviews, and bring
them together for debates. In the end, the people vote -- they decide
who will be the next president.
But freedom doesn't
begin or end with elections. Go to any American town, to take just an
example, and you'll see dozens of synagogues and mosques -- and you'll
see families of every conceivable nationality, worshipping together.
Go into any schoolroom,
and there you will see children being taught the Declaration of Independence,
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights
-- among them life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, that no government
can justly deny -- the guarantees in their Constitution for freedom of
speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion.
Go into any courtroom
and there will preside an independent judge, beholden to no government
power. There every defendant has the right to a trial by a jury of his
peers, usually 12 men and women -- common citizens, they are the ones,
the only ones, who weigh the evidence and decide on guilt or innocence.
In that court, the accused is innocent until proven guilty, and the word
of a policeman, or any official, has no greater legal standing than the
word of the accused.
Go to any university
campus, and there you'll find an open, sometimes heated discussion of
the problems in American society and what can be done to correct them.
Turn on the television, and you'll see the legislature conducting the
business of government right there before the camera, debating and voting
on the legislation that will become the law of the land. March in any
demonstrations, and there are many of them -- the people's right of assembly
is guaranteed in the Constitution and protected by the police.
But freedom is more
even than this: Freedom is the right to question, and change the established
way of doing things. It is the continuing revolution of the marketplace.
It is the understanding that allows us to recognize shortcomings and seek
solutions. It is the right to put forth an idea, scoffed at by the experts,
and watch it catch fire among the people. It is the right to stick - to
dream - to follow your dream, or stick to your conscience, even if you're
the only one in a sea of doubters.
Freedom is the recognition
that no single person, no single authority of government has a monopoly
on the truth, but that every individual life is infinitely precious, that
every one of us put on this world has been put there for a reason and
has something to offer.
America is a nation
made up of hundreds of nationalities. Our ties to you are more than ones
of good feeling; they're ties of kinship. In America, you'll find Russians,
Armenians, Ukrainians, peoples from Eastern Europe and Central Asia. They
come from every part of this vast continent, from every continent, to
live in harmony, seeking a place where each cultural heritage is respected,
each is valued for its diverse strengths and beauties and the richness
it brings to our lives.
Recently, a few individuals
and families have been allowed to visit relatives in the West. We can
only hope that it won't be long before all are allowed to do so, and Ukrainian-Americans,
Baltic-Americans, Armenian-Americans, can freely visit their homelands,
just as this Irish-American visits his.
Freedom, it has been
said, makes people selfish and materialistic, but Americans are one
of
the most religious peoples on Earth. Because they know that liberty,
just as life itself, is not earned, but a gift from God, they seek
to share
that gift with the world. "Reason and experience," said George
Washington in his farewell address, "both forbid us to expect that
national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle. And
it is substantially true, that virtue or morality is a necessary spring
of popular government."
Democracy is less
a system of government than it is a system to keep government limited,
unintrusive: A system of constraints on power to keep politics and government
secondary to the important things in life, the true sources of value found
only in family and faith.
I have often said,
nations do not distrust each other because they are armed; they are armed
because they distrust each other. If this globe is to live in peace and
prosper, if it is to embrace all the possibilities of the technological
revolution, then nations must renounce, once and for all, the right to
an expansionist foreign policy. Peace between nations must be an enduring
goal -- not a tactical stage in a continuing conflict.
I've been told that
there's a popular song in your country -- perhaps you know it -- whose
evocative refrain asks the question, "Do the Russians want a war?"
In answer it says, "Go ask that silence lingering in the air, above
the birch and poplar there; beneath those trees the soldiers lie. Go
ask
my mother, ask my wife; then you will have to ask no more, 'Do the Russians
want a war?'"
But what of your one-time
allies? What of those who embraced you on the Elbe? What if we were to
ask the watery graves of the Pacific, or the European battlefields where
America's fallen were buried far from home? What if we were to ask their
mothers, sisters, and sons, do Americans want war? Ask us, too, and you'll
find the same answer, the same longing in every heart. People do not make
wars, governments do -- and no mother would ever willingly sacrifice her
sons for territorial gain, for economic advantage, for ideology. A people
free to choose will always choose peace.
Americans seek always
to make friends of old antagonists. After a colonial revolution with Britain
we have cemented for all ages the ties of kinship between our nations.
After a terrible civil war between North and South, we healed our wounds
and found true unity as a nation. We fought two world wars in my lifetime
against Germany and one with Japan, but now the Federal Republic of Germany
and Japan are two of our closest allies and friends.
Some people point
to the trade disputes between us as a sign of strain, but they're the
frictions of all families, and the family of free nations is a big and
vital and sometimes boisterous one. I can tell you that nothing would
please my heart more than in my lifetime to see American and Soviet diplomats
grappling with the problem of trade disputes between America and a growing,
exuberant, exporting Soviet Union that had opened up to economic freedom
and growth.
Is this just a dream?
Perhaps. But it is a dream that is our responsibility to have come true.
Your generation is
living in one of the most exciting, hopeful times in Soviet history. It
is a time when the first breath of freedom stirs the air and the heart
beats to the accelerated rhythm of hope, when the accumulated spiritual
energies of a long silence yearn to break free.
We do not know what
the conclusion of this journey will be, but we're hopeful that the
promise
of reform will be fulfilled. In this Moscow spring, this May 1988, we
may be allowed that hope -- that freedom, like the fresh green sapling
planted over Tolstoys grave, will blossom forth at least in the
rich fertile soil of your people and culture. We may be allowed to
hope
that the marvelous sound of a new openness will keep rising through,
ringing through, leading to a new world of reconciliation, friendship,
and peace.
Thank you all very
much and da blagoslovit vas gospod! God bless you.
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