[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 5 (Tuesday, January 19, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H170]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INVESTING IN SMART SECURITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Woolsey) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Madam Speaker, President Obama is certainly doing the
right thing when it comes to the humanitarian crisis in Haiti. He's
responded quickly, he's responded effectively, and he's pledged that
the United States will do all that we can do to alleviate the suffering
of the Haitian people and to help them rebuild their lives. President
Obama has shown that America stands for hope, decency, and human
rights, which is, of course, the kind of moral leadership that the
President of the United States must always show. But while the
administration is getting it right in Haiti, we still have a lot of
work to do in Afghanistan, where the President plans to ask Congress
for $33 billion in emergency funding to pay for the escalation of the
war there.
Madam Speaker, we do need to appropriate more funds for Afghanistan,
but not for more troops, because there is no military solution to the
problem there. Sending more troops makes us look like occupiers, which
will surely help the Taliban recruit more violent extremists, who will
attack their own Afghani neighbors and the United States. So instead of
investing in the military in Afghanistan, we need to invest in SMART
security, which means investing in economic development, health,
infrastructure, humanitarian aid, better law enforcement and
governance. SMART security also includes helping the Afghan people to
build schools so girls and women can be offered an education as well as
the boys.
Madam Speaker, General McChrystal, our commander in Afghanistan,
recently said that the Taliban looks for young people with no education
when they are looking for new recruits. That's why I believe that
investing in books, not bombs, is the way to stop violent extremism in
Afghanistan and actually in every other part of the world as well. We
also need to invest in our own economy and our own people right here at
home, because we can't keep our country safe unless we have a strong
economy, well educated, and with everybody having jobs that they can
afford to support their families on.
So that's why we must invest in jobs. We must invest in housing. We
must invest in child care and health care. And we must especially be
concerned about those facing their own humanitarian crisis in our
communities.
So just consider some of these facts, Madam Speaker: one in every 50
Americans is living in a household where food stamps are the only
source of income. The effective unemployment rate today is really over
17 percent. And middle class families are now earning less than they
did a decade ago, adjusted for inflation.
The economic disaster right here in our own country is unprecedented
in American history. Unfortunately, the Congress will soon be presented
with a record Pentagon budget, however, for the next fiscal year. I
would suggest that instead of increasing the Pentagon budget, we should
reduce it by cutting out funds for useless Cold War weapons, which
would slash the defense budget by 25 percent. Isn't that amazing? We
could slash the defense budget by 25 percent if we would just stop
building useless Cold War weapons. We can make those dollars available
to invest right here at home to put SMART security to work in
Afghanistan as well.
Madam Speaker, the best way to keep our country safe is to stick to
our fundamental American values of peace and compassion for the people
of the world. We must put these values to work in Haiti, in
Afghanistan, and right here at home. I urge all of us and our President
to do just that.
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