[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 75 (Tuesday, June 13, 2006)]
[House]
[Pages H3795-H3796]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HATE CRIMES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the order of the House of
January 31, 2006, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Gonzalez) is recognized
during morning hour debates for 2\1/2\ minutes.
Mr. GONZALEZ. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to address the House on an
important issue that has already been addressed by my colleague Mr.
Baca, and that is the power of words. And that is all we really have
here in this chamber, and that is to address one another in a
respectful manner and engage in a good faith debate about the merits or
demerits of any particular issue.
Unfortunately, words can be harmful and they can incite and be
counterproductive, and to be a disservice not just to this institution
but to the
[[Page H3796]]
American people who are waiting for a good faith debate on the
important issue of immigration.
However, this debate has been framed in a certain manner, to appeal
probably to that rather unattractive underbelly that is out there in
society, and that is bigotry and racism. And that is a true danger. And
when I say it is a disservice to this country, it is beyond a
disservice. It is going back in time.
A recent article that appeared this Sunday regarding this debate
pointed out as follows, and this is so important that it cannot be
adequately emphasized:
Most Americans who are in favor of stricter border enforcement are
not bigots. Far from it. But some politicians and other public figures
see an opportunity to foment hate and hysteria for their own profit.
They are embracing a nativism and xenophobia that recall the 1920s when
a State Department warning about an influx about filthy and
unassimilable Jews from Eastern Europe led to the first immigration
quotas, or the 1950s hey-day of Operation Wetback when illegal Mexican
workers were hunted down and deported.
We are a better Nation than we were in the 1920s, we are a better
Nation than we were in the 1950s, but only if we respect what this
institution is all about, and that is a good faith based debate on the
facts and the figures, and not to appeal to an emotional part of the
human spirit that is not to be admired or promoted.
At this time I yield to my colleague, Mrs. Napolitano, from the great
State of California.
Mrs. NAPOLITANO. Mr. Speaker, I thank my esteemed colleague, Joe
Baca, for taking the lead on this very important issue, and to the
gentleman from Texas, Charlie Gonzalez, for yielding to me.
I also find it very disturbing that extremists are using the
immigration debate to stir up racial division and hatred. Whether it is
in the form of violent anti-immigrant video games, in hate speeches, in
racial slurs, in graffiti, in our schools, or in political debate, it
is wrong.
I am here to ask you to ask our countrymen to say enough is enough.
It is not a moral nor a decent way to treat or speak about our fellow
human beings. Along with many of my colleagues, I implore individuals,
families, and communities all over the country to stand up against this
hatred.
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