[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 154 (Tuesday, November 30, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H7749-H7754]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GETTING BACK TO OUR CONSTITUTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2009, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Gohmert) is recognized
for 60 minutes.
Mr. GOHMERT. Mr. Speaker, I have so much respect and abiding love and
appreciation for my dear friend from Arizona, as well as my friend from
Colorado and my friend who was here earlier from Iowa, my dear friend
Steve King. Congressman King and I were down in Guantanamo together,
and I heard him earlier talking about pulling back the privileges and
punishing assaults at Guantanamo Bay against our own servicemembers.
{time} 2150
I did recall something that he may not have recalled. There is
another severe form of punishment when such an assault is committed on
our guards at Guantanamo, which apparently is pretty customary down
there, of throwing urine or feces on our guards. They have to come up
with creative ways to do that, and do so.
One of the other ways--and it's the only other way in addition to
taking some of their outdoor exercise time down to 2 hours. The other
thing that they have been known to do in order to really punish them,
to actually torture them, is to take away some of their movie-watching
time during the day. It's just devastating, you know, to the Guantanamo
detainees to have some of their movie-watching privileges taken away
because they threw feces or urine on one of our gallant servicemen or -
women. You've got to take away some of their movie-watching. It really
teaches them a lesson. It just shows them we're not going to be messed
with. If you mess with us, you won't get to watch as many movies today
as you would have otherwise. We'll show 'em.
I was also hearing on the news today that Uyghurs, Chinese Muslims
who have been transferred out of Guantanamo, had given interviews,
indicating, actually, they were a lot better treated in Guantanamo than
they were at home in China. So, despite the way some people have tried
to characterize the prison in Guantanamo, it is not quite as bad--in
fact, not by a long shot. It provides better living conditions than
many of these people have ever had in their lives.
[[Page H7750]]
Then again, some of them wanted to blow themselves up, and they
haven't had that opportunity down there. So, if their version of a
great, abundant life is to blow themselves up and to kill a lot of
innocent people, then, yes, they have not had that kind of abundant
life of blowing themselves up and killing innocent people in Guantanamo
Bay.
But the messages that are coming out of this administration are
particularly worrisome. When our own enemies perceive weakness in the
President of this country or his administration, it propels them into
action. It propels them into actions that harm the United States that
they would otherwise be afraid to move forward with. In fact, when one
thinks about President Bush, with support from Democrats and
Republicans alike, going into Iraq, one of the things that came out of
that was a country teetering once again on the edge of nuclear
proliferation, a nuclear program going forward.
When President Bush ordered our troops into Iraq, the potential
terrorist-harboring state of Libya realized, uh-oh, this President is
quite serious. He is willing to commit American troops into harm's way
to take out a ruthless leader who at least says he supports terrorism
and supports threatening the United States. ``Maybe I'd better cancel
our nuclear program and make peace with the United States.''
One of the byproducts of the invasion of Iraq was a message that, at
that time at least, there was a President who would step up and who was
not afraid to take action when someone continued to try to threaten the
United States.
A friend who publishes in the Jerusalem Post--and I've had the
opportunity, honor and privilege to read some of Caroline Glick's
writing here on the House floor before--has great insight so often into
areas of foreign policy, not only with regard to Israel but with regard
to the United States and our place in international stability when we
do show that we can and will be strong. There was an article that was
published in the Jerusalem Post, written by Caroline Glick on November
26, 2010. Caroline's perspective and the things she has to say, I
think, are important enough to read into our Record, Mr. Speaker, for
anyone who may not otherwise have been privy to her observations. This
is her article.
It begins, ``Crises are exploding throughout the world. And the
leader of the free world is making things worse.'' I'm quoting from
Caroline Glick.
``On the Korean Peninsula, North Korea just upended 8 years of State
Department obfuscation by showing a team of U.S. nuclear scientists its
collection of thousands of state-of-the-art centrifuges installed in
its Yongbyon nuclear reactor.
``And just to top off the show, as Stephen Bosworth, U.S. President
Barack Obama's point man on North Korea, was busily arguing that this
revelation is not a crisis, the North fired an unprovoked artillery
barrage at South Korea, demonstrating that, actually, it is a crisis.
``But the Obama administration remains unmoved. On Tuesday, Defense
Secretary Robert Gates thanked his South Korean counterpart, Kim Tae-
young, for showing `restraint.'
``On Thursday, Kim resigned in disgrace for that restraint.
``The U.S. has spoken strongly of not allowing North Korea's
aggression to go unanswered. But in practice, its only answer is to try
to tempt North Korea back to feckless multilateral disarmament talks
that will go nowhere because China supports North Korean armament.
Contrary to what Obama and his advisers claim, China does not share the
U.S.'s interest in denuclearizing North Korea. Consequently, Beijing
will not lift a finger to achieve that goal.
``Then there is Iran. The now inarguable fact that Pyongyang is
developing nuclear weapons with enriched uranium makes it all but
certain that the hyperactive proliferators in Pyongyang are involved in
Iran's uranium-based nuclear weapons program. Obviously, the North
Koreans don't care that the U.N. Security Council placed sanctions on
Iran. And their presumptive role in Iran's nuclear weapons program
exposes the idiocy of the concept that these sanctions can block Iran's
path to a nuclear arsenal.
``Every day, as the regime in Pyongyang and Teheran escalate their
aggression and confrontational stances, it becomes more and more clear
that the only way to neutralize the threats they pose to international
security is to overthrow them. At least in the case of Iran, it is also
clear that the prospects for regime change have never been better.
``Iran's regime is in trouble. Since the fraudulent Presidential
elections 17 months ago, the regime has moved ferociously against its
domestic foes.
``But dissent has only grown. And as popular resentment towards the
regime has grown, the likes of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, supreme
dictator Ali Khamenei and their Revolutionary Guards have become
terrified of their own people. They have imprisoned rappers and
outlawed Western music. They have purged their schoolbooks of Persian
history. Everything that smacks of anything non-Islamic is viewed as a
threat.
``Members of the regime are so frightened by the public that, this
week, several members of parliament tried to begin impeachment
proceedings against Ahmadinejad. Apparently, they hope that ousting him
will be sufficient to end the public's call for revolutionary change.
{time} 2200
But Khamenei is standing by his man, and the impeachment proceedings
have ended as quickly as they began. The policy implications of all
this are clear.
``The U.S. should destroy Iran's nuclear installations and help the
Iranian people overthrow the regime, but the Obama administration will
have none of it.
``Earlier this month, Gates said, `If it's military solution, as far
as I'm concerned, it will bring together a divided nation.'
``So in his view, the Iranian people, who risk death to defy the
regime every day, the Iranian people who revile Ahmadinejad as `the
chimpanzee' and call for Khamenei's death from their rooftops every
evening, will rally around the chimp and the dictator if the U.S. or
Israel attacks Iran's nuclear installations.''
Continuing with Caroline Glick's article, she says, ``Due to this
thinking, as far as the Obama administration is concerned the U.S.
should stick to its failed sanctions policy and continue its failed
attempts to cut a nuclear deal with the mullahs.
``As Michael Ledeen noted last week at Pajamas Media, this
boilerplate assertion, backed by no evidence whatsoever, is what passes
for strategic wisdom in Washington as Iran completes its nuclear
project. And this U.S. refusal to understand the policy implications of
popular rejection of the regime is what brings State Department wise
men and women to the conclusion that the U.S. has no dog in this fight.
As State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told The Wall Street Journal
this week, the Parliament's bid to impeach Ahmadinejad was nothing more
than the product of `rivalries within the Iranian Government.'
``Then there is Lebanon. Since Ahmadinejad's visit last month, it is
obvious that Iran is now the ruler of Lebanon and that it exerts its
authority over the country through its Hizbullah proxy.
``Hizbullah's open threats to overthrow Prime Minister Saad Hariri's
government if Hizbullah's role in assassinating his father in 2005 is
officially acknowledged just make this tragic reality more undeniable.
And yet, the Obama administration continues to deny that Iran controls
Lebanon.
``A month after Ahmadinejad's visit, Obama convinced the lame duck
Congress to lift its hold on $100 million in U.S. military assistance
to the Hizbullah-dominated Lebanese military. And the U.S. convinced
Israel to relinquish the northern half of the border town of Ghajar to
U.N. forces despite the fact that the U.N. forces are at Hizbullah's
mercy.
``In the midst of all these crises, Obama has maintained faith with
his two central foreign policy goals: forcing Israel to withdraw to the
indefensible 1949 armistice lines and scaling back the U.S. nuclear
arsenal with an eye towards unilateral disarmament. That is, as the
forces of mayhem and war escalate their threats and aggression, Obama's
central goals remain
[[Page H7751]]
weakening the U.S.'s most powerful regional ally in the Middle East and
rendering the U.S. incompetent to deter or defeat rapidly proliferating
rogue states that are at war with the U.S. and its allies.
``Having said that, the truth is that in advancing these goals, Obama
is not out of step with his predecessors. George H.W. Bush and Bill
Clinton both enacted drastic cuts in the U.S. conventional and
nonconventional arsenals. Clinton and George W. Bush adopted
appeasement policies towards North Korea. Indeed, Pyongyang owes its
nuclear arsenal to both Presidents' desire to be deceived and do
nothing.
``Moreover, North Korea's ability to proliferate nuclear weapons to
the likes of Iran, Syria and Venezuela owes in large part to then-
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's insistence that Israel say
nothing about North Korea's nuclear ties to Iran and Syria in the wake
of Israel's destruction of the North Korean-built and Iranian-financed
nuclear reactor in Syria in September 2007.
``As for Iran, Obama's attempt to appease the regime is a little
different from his predecessors' policies. The Bush administration
refused to confront the fact that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are
to a large degree Iranian proxy wars.
``The Bush administration refused to acknowledge that Syria and
Hizbullah are run by Teheran and that the 2006 war against Israel was
nothing more than an expansion of the proxy wars Iran is running in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
``Obama's failed `reset' policy towards Russia is also little
different from his predecessors' policies.
``Bush did nothing but squawk after Russia invaded U.S. ally Georgia.
The Clinton administration set the stage for Vladimir Putin's KGB state
by squandering the U.S.'s massive influence over post-Soviet Russia and
allowing Boris Yeltsin and his cronies to transform the country into an
impoverished kleptocracy.
``Finally, Obama's obsession with Israel land giveaways to the PLO
were shared by Clinton and by the younger Bush, particularly after
2006. Rice, who compared Israel to the Jim Crow South, was arguably as
hostile toward Israel as Obama.
``So is Obama really worse than everyone else or is he just the
latest in the line of U.S. Presidents who have no idea how to run an
effective foreign policy? The short answer is that he is far worse than
his predecessors.
``A U.S. President's maneuver room in foreign affairs is always very
small. The foreign policy establishment in Washington is entrenched and
uniformly opposed to bending to the will of elected leaders. The elites
in the State Department and the CIA and their cronies in academia and
policy circles in Washington are also consistently unmoved by reality,
which as a rule exposes their policies as ruinous.
``The President has two ways to shift the ship of state. First, he
can use his bully pulpit. Second, he can appoint people to key
positions in the foreign policy bureaucracy.
``Since entering office, Obama has used both these powers to ill
effect. He has traveled across the world condemning and apologizing for
U.S. world leadership. In so doing, he has convinced ally and adversary
alike that he is not a credible leader; that no one can depend on U.S.
security guarantees during his watch; and that it is possible to attack
the U.S., its allies and interests with impunity.
``Obama's call for a nuclear-free world combined with his aggressive
stance toward Israel's purported nuclear arsenal, his bid to disarm the
U.S. nuclear arsenal, and his ineffective response to North Korea's
nuclear brinksmanship and Iran's nuclear project have served to
convince nations from the Persian Gulf to South America to the Pacific
Rim that they should begin developing nuclear weapons. By calling for
nuclear disarmament, he has provoked the greatest wave of nuclear
armament in history.
``Given his own convictions, it is no surprise that all his key
foreign policy appointments share his dangerous views. The State
Department's legal advisor, Harold Koh, believes the U.S. should
subordinate its laws to an abstract and largely unfounded notion of
international law. Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, Michele
Flournoy, believes terrorists become radicalized because they are poor.
She is advised by leftist extremist Rosa Brooks. Attorney General Eric
Holder has decided to open criminal investigations against CIA
operatives who interrogated terrorists and to try illegal enemy
combatants in civilian courts.
``In all these cases and countless others, Obama's senior appointees
are implementing policies that are even more radical and dangerous than
the radical and dangerous policies of the Washington policy
establishment.
{time} 2210
Not only are they weakening the U.S. and its allies, they are
demoralizing public servants who are dedicated to defending their
country by signaling clearly that the Obama administration will leave
them high and dry in a crisis.
``When a Republican occupies the White House, his foreign policies
are routinely criticized and constrained by the liberal media. Radical
Democratic Presidents like Woodrow Wilson have seen their foreign
policies reined in by Republican congresses.
``Given the threats Obama's radical policies are provoking, it can
only be hoped that through hearings and other means, the Republicans in
the Senate and the House of Representatives will take an active role in
curbing his policies. If they are successful, the American people and
the international community will owe them a debt of gratitude.''
That was as published in the Jerusalem Post posted November 26, 2010.
Interesting.
It is quite disconcerting when we realized that this administration
is sending out signals we won't stand by our friends and thinking that
if we send a message out that we will embrace those who want to destroy
our way of life, destroy our country and have pledged to do so; if we
just show that we're willing to be compassionate, they'll be deeply
moved and they'll come around to our side. Hardly.
History teaches us very clearly that when people who despise another
nation get messages that that nation they despise is weak or will not
defend itself, then they are provoked to action to destroy it, to take
it over. Now, hopefully we're a long way from that happening because
there are enough people here in Washington that believe that strength
and a showing of strength and a showing of willingness to do what it
takes to keep our oath to provide for the common defense of this
country, that that is what keeps us at peace, that is what helps
prevent wars. I believe it was Reagan who used to talk about no one was
ever attacked because people believed they were too strong. They attack
because they think there is a weakness they can take advantage of.
That's why after we pulled out of Vietnam and that footage remains
being shown to Muslims in an attempt to radicalize them, see, America
flees in the face of danger. See what happened in 1983 after the Marine
barracks was blown up and nearly 300 Marines were killed? They left
Beirut. See what happened back in 1979 when an act of international
law, what international law would say was an act of war, American soil
was attacked when our embassy was attacked, hostages taken. We did
nothing but beg for Tehran to let them go for over a year. That was
another sign of weakness.
When another act of war on the USS Cole was committed, we responded
by lobbing some rockets doing virtually no damage to people who were at
war with us.
So what are our enemies who want to see the United States destroyed,
who have sworn to destroy this country and our way of life, what are
they to think when repeatedly we show weakness and we show that those
who have nothing but hate, disdain, and contempt for this country will
be met with a warm embrace? What are they to think but to have more
contempt for this country?
Now Caroline Glick mentions international law and that this President
is advised by people who believe the U.S. should subordinate its laws
to an abstract and largely unfounded notion of international law. I
took a course in international law at Baylor Law School under a
visiting professor from Japan. I did a research paper. Got an A on it
by the dean of a Japanese law school who was visiting Baylor for that
year.
[[Page H7752]]
And in having a conversation with him after the course was over, I
said, For all of the reading we've done, all of the studying, the
discussion, the debate, I come back to the conclusion that basically in
short international law is whatever the strongest nation around says it
is. And he says in essence, you have learned from this course well.
That's exactly right. International law is whatever the strongest
nation around says it is.
And yet in response to attacks, threatened attacks, threatened
efforts to destroy our way of life, what we have seen is an effort to
bow before those who want to destroy us, those who are not our friends.
I filed in the three Congresses that I have been in office here, and
I will file in the fourth one next year, the U.N. Voting Accountability
Act that says a nation that votes against us more than half the time in
the U.N.--they're sovereign nations; they can do what they want to.
We're not going to tell them how they have to vote, but any nation that
votes against our position more than half the time will not get a dime
of financial assistance from this country for the following year. As I
said, you don't have to pay people to hate you. They'll do it for free.
And it's still true.
America, the United States of America is truly the greatest nation in
the history of mankind. There are more liberties and more freedoms in
this country than have ever been observed by the citizens of any
country. As great as Solomon's Israel was, it didn't have the liberties
for the people that this Nation has.
This is a nation that is supposed to be governed by the people who,
on Election Day, go out and actually hire people to do their bidding
for the subsequent years. For too long, not enough people have come on
hiring day to make sure that the best people got hired. For too long
people have not studied the applications, the resumes, done the
interviews of those who are seeking to be hired as the servants to go
do their bidding as the people are the government.
And so as the old adage goes, democracy ensures people are governed
no better than they deserve. So we've gotten what we've deserved
whether anyone likes it or not; whether anyone likes the prior
President, the Nation got what we deserved; whether anyone likes this
President or not, the Nation got what we deserved.
And absolutely a truism that you can take to the bank, Madam Speaker,
is that in 2012's elections, we will have a President elected or
reelected who's no better than the Nation deserves.
Now, there is one area of tremendous ignorance in this country. And
there is nothing wrong with ignorance in an area of someone's knowledge
unless they persist in that ignorance and refuse to learn and fill that
void.
We are told by our President that this is not a Christian nation, and
I will not debate that. Maybe we're not. But I know how the Nation was
founded, and I know enough history. And there are so many wonderful
books. This is another one by William Federer, America's God and
Country. And I have read all of the things that I am about to enter
into here in different areas as I studied history, was a history hanger
major at Texas A&M. But Federer has put these together succinctly to
help illuminate how we got started.
So in going back to July of 1776--hopefully most people in America
would know July of 1776 is when the Declaration of Independence was
signed, made public.
{time} 2220
But in July of 1776, Benjamin Franklin was appointed part of a
committee to draft a seal for the newly United States which would
characterize the spirit of the Nation. Now, this was not adopted, but
this was Benjamin Franklin's proposal. He proposed, and this is a
quote, ``Moses lifting up his wand and dividing the Red Sea, and
Pharaoh in his chariot overwhelmed with the waters. This motto:
`Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.' '' That was Benjamin
Franklin's proposal for our national seal.
Of course what we ultimately had, going back to 1776, the Great Seal,
two-sided seal, is reflected on the back of every dollar bill. On the
one side the eagle with the ribbon through his mouth with the Latin
words E Pluribus Unum, meaning out of many, one. We come from all over
the world, immigrants loving immigration, immigrants coming from all
over the world, come here to the United States and become one. One in
language, one in tradition, one in our history, one strong American
people. The intent was, back then as they came from all areas of the
world, that there would be no hyphenated Americans.
When you came here, whether it was Europe, Africa, Asia, you came
here, you were no longer African, European, Asian, South American, you
were American. You were brothers and sisters together in this land. And
although you celebrate traditions of your rich culture from wherever
your immigrant ancestors had come from, still you would be here and
become one people.
Well, in a letter that Ben Franklin wrote in March of 1778, Ben
Franklin is attributed with this writing. ``Whoever shall introduce
into public affairs the principles of primitive Christianity will
change the face of the world.''
Another quote from Benjamin Franklin was, ``A Bible and a newspaper
in every house, a good school in every district--all studied and
appreciated as they merit--are the principal support of virtue,
morality, and civil liberty.''
In Ben Franklin's pamphlet entitled ``Information to Those Who Would
Remove to America,'' which was written to Europeans who were
considering the move to America, or intending to send their young
people to seek their fortune in this land of opportunity, Ben Franklin
wrote the following: ``Hence, bad examples to youth are more rare in
America, which must be a comfortable consideration to parents. To this
may be truly added, that serious religion, under its various
denominations, is not only tolerated, but respected and practiced.''
Ben Franklin went on to say, ``Atheism is unknown there,'' talking
about America, ``infidelity rare and secret; so that persons may live
to a great age in that country without having their piety shocked by
meeting with either an atheist or an infidel.'' Further with Ben
Franklin's quote, ``And the Divine Being seems to have manifested his
approbation of the mutual forbearance and kindness with which the
different sects treat each other; by the remarkable prosperity with
which he has been pleased to favor the whole country,'' unquote from
Ben Franklin. He was talking about the sects, s-e-c-t-s, and
denominations. These were Christian denominations he was talking about.
In a letter to Robert R. Livingston, 1784, Ben Franklin wrote this:
``I am now entering on my 78th year. If I live to see this peace
concluded, I shall beg leave to remind the Congress of their promise,
then to dismiss me. I shall be happy to sing with old Simeon, `Now
lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy
salvation.' '' In another letter that Ben Franklin wrote, April 17,
1787, he said, ``Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As
nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters.''
Then on June 28, 1787, Ben Franklin delivered a powerful speech to
the Constitutional Convention, which was embroiled in a bitter debate
over how each State was to be represented in the new government. The
hostile feelings created by the smaller States being pitted against the
larger States was so bitter that some delegates actually left the
convention. Ben Franklin, being the president (governor) of
Pennsylvania, hosted the rest of the 55 delegates attending the
convention. Being the senior member of the convention at 81 years of
age, he commanded the respect of all present. And as recorded in James
Madison's detailed records, he rose to speak in this moment of crisis.
This is from Federer's book. But this speech that Ben Franklin gave
in 1787 at the Constitutional Convention truly was given at a moment of
crisis. They had been going for nearly 5 weeks, and nothing but anger
and bitterness had persisted in the convention. They were nowhere close
to coming to any kind of agreement on anything, much less a
Constitution.
Now, I was taught in school that Benjamin Franklin was a deist, that
he believed some deity, some power, some something created the
universe, created the nature that we have come to know, and then steps
back and never
[[Page H7753]]
intercedes, never lifts a finger, never does anything to interfere with
the ways of man. Yet when you read his own words, you read letters he
wrote, things he said, it's quite clear a deist he was not. Here he was
about 2 years away from meeting his maker. He was suffering from gout
at the time. He had, as the senior delegate, governor, president,
whatever you wish to call him from Pennsylvania at the convention and
considered the host, he still had to be helped in. He was not doing
well physically. But mentally he was sharp as ever. His wit was amazing
as ever.
And this is the speech that Ben Franklin gave up in this time of
critical crisis in the Constitutional Convention in 1787. He was
addressing the president of the Constitutional Convention, President
Washington--not President of the country yet because there was no
Constitution, so there was no President under that--but the president
of the convention was addressed. And he said, ``Mr. President, the
small progress we have made after 4 or 5 weeks close attendance and
continual reasonings with each other--our different sentiments on
almost every question, several of the last producing as many noes as
ayes, is methinks a melancholy proof of the imperfection of the human
understanding. We indeed seem to feel our own want of political wisdom,
since we have been running about in search of it. We have gone back to
ancient history for models of government, and examined the different
forms of those republics which, having been formed with the seeds of
their own dissolution, now no longer exist. And we viewed modern States
all around Europe, but find none of their Constitutions suitable to our
circumstances.
{time} 2230
``In this situation of this Assembly, groping as it were in the dark
to find political truth, and scarce able to distinguish it when
presented to us, how has it happened, Sir, that we have not hitherto
once thought of humbly applying to the Father of lights to illuminate
our understanding?
``In the beginning of this Contest with Great Britain, when we were
sensible of danger, we had daily prayer in this room for Divine
protection. Our prayers, Sir, were heard, and they were graciously
answered. All of us who were engaged in the struggle must have observed
frequent instances of a superintending Providence in our favor.
``To that kind Providence we owe this happy opportunity of consulting
in peace on the means of establishing our future national felicity. And
have we now forgotten that powerful Friend? Or do we imagine we no
longer need His assistance.''
Ben Franklin goes on and says, ``I have lived, Sir, a long time, and
the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth, that
God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the
ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise
without His aide?
``We have been assured, Sir, in the Sacred Writings that, `except the
Lord build the House, they labor in vain that build it.' ''
Franklin then says, ``I firmly believe this, and I also believe that
without His concurring aid we shall succeed in this political building
no better than the Builders of Babel. We shall be divided by our
partial local interests, our projects will be confounded, and we,
ourselves, shall become a reproach and bye word down to future ages.
``And what is worse, mankind may hereafter from this unfortunate
instance, despair of establishing governments by human wisdom and leave
it to chance, war and conquest.
``I therefore beg leave to move, that henceforth prayers imploring
the assistance of Heaven, and its blessing on our deliberations, be
held in this Assembly every morning before we proceed to business, and
that one or more of the clergy of this city be requested to officiate
in that service.''
Franklin sat down. Federer notes, ``The response of the convention to
this speech by Benjamin Franklin was reported by Jonathan Dayton, the
delegate from New Jersey.''
Delegate Jonathan Dayton from New Jersey wrote these words. When he
says ``the Doctor,'' he is talking about Benjamin Franklin, as some
affectionately called him.
Dayton said, `` `The Doctor sat down; and never did I behold a
countenance at once so dignified and delighted as was that of
Washington at the close of the address; nor were the members of the
convention generally less affected. The words of the venerable Franklin
fell upon our ears with a weight and authority, even greater than we
may suppose an oracle to have had in a Roman senate.'
``Following Franklin's historical address, James Madison moved,
seconded by Roger Sherman of Connecticut, that Dr. Franklin's appeal
for prayer be enacted. Edmund Jennings Randolph of Virginia further
moved:
`` `That a sermon be preached at the request of the convention on the
4th of July, the anniversary of Independence, and thenceforward prayers
be used in ye Convention every morning.'
``The clergy of Philadelphia responded to this request and effected a
profound change in the convention when they reconvened on July 2, 1787,
and Jonathan Dayton again records these words:
`` `We assembled again, and every unfriendly feeling had been
expelled, and a spirit of conciliation had been cultivated.'
``On July 4th, the entire Convention assembled in the Reformed
Calvinistic Church, according to the proposal by Edmund Jennings
Randolph of Virginia, and heard a sermon by Rev. William Rogers. His
prayer reflected the hearts of the delegates following Franklin's
admonition:
`` `We fervently recommend to the fatherly notice . . . our Federal
convention . . . Favor them, from day to day, with thy inspiring
presence; be their wisdom and strength; enable them to devise such
measures as may prove happy instruments in healing all divisions and
prove the good of the great whole . . . that the United States of
America may form one example of a free and virtuous government . . .
May we . . . continue, under the influence of republican virtue''--and
that's with a little ``r,'' not this Republican Party--``to partake of
all the blessings of cultivated and Christian society.' ''
With that prayer, Rev. William Jennings concluded, as requested, by
the gentleman from Virginia, Edmund Jennings Randolph. And as a result
of Franklin's speech, as a result of following through on Franklin's
request to begin with prayer, as followed by Randolph's request for a
sermon, and ending with a powerful prayer, we got a Constitution,
although it's certainly ignored around this town so often.
And even by the Supreme Court, as they did when they ignored the
bankruptcy law and the Constitution to allow the travesty of the GM and
Chrysler debacle to become law, as unconstitutional and illegal as it
was, we still have a Constitution that we have got to get back to.
We still have a situation that Franklin noted, that so many in our
early days noted, can sustain us if we continue with the prayer, as
Franklin sought, if we continue to hold to those values in which this
Nation was founded.
But a Nation in which you destroy the family, destroy the nuclear
family, you've destroyed the building block for any great, truly great
society. That has been broken down. You enslave people, basically, or
make them indentured servants, by doling out money from Washington,
luring young people into ruts from which they can never rise. It's
disgraceful. It's immoral.
This Congress, this city, this government should be propelling young
people, encouraging, invigorating, incentivizing people to reach their
God-given potential, for heaven's sake, not luring them into ruts from
which they can never rise, not luring them into ruts from which they
can only clamor and beg for more help from Washington.
{time} 2240
They are to be empowered, empowered with opportunity, not with
handouts but with opportunity to reach their own God-given potential. A
mother eagle does not continue to feed her babies indefinitely. The
little hatchlings are not fed for the rest of their lives. They are
nurtured, they are taught, and then they are given the opportunity to
spread their wings and fly.
It drove me from the bench as a judge to have seen repeatedly what
this Congress' laws had done to lure people into holes and give them no
way out. That
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was never the intention of the Founders. That should never be the
intention of a moral society. You help those who truly cannot help
themselves. But for those that can, you don't keep telling them to get
in the wagon and continue to make fewer and fewer people pull the wagon
until they can no longer bear the load and the whole system collapses
of its own weight. You can't keep doing that.
We have done so much damage to this Nation, 1 trillion 5, $1.6
trillion deficit last year, $1.3 trillion projected for this year, $3
trillion in 2 years? Incredible. Do people not know even modern
history? The Soviet Union didn't even spend that kind of equivalent,
but they spent quickly enough trying to keep up with our defensive
posture through the defense system, and with their own socialistic
programs, they could not get anyone to loan them more money. Gee, does
that sound familiar? We are having to buy our own debt. We are not
having to, we just won't quit spending. It's immoral. It's just so
irresponsible.
And I hear people saying, but it's just so hard to make these
difficult cuts. It isn't. As a freshman here in 2005, in 2006, standing
on this side of the aisle, I heard people rightfully on the other side
of the aisle saying, you guys are running a deficit budget, between 100
and $200 billion, that's irresponsible. And the Democrats who said that
were right. We should not have been running a deficit budget in 2005
and 2006. It was irresponsible. It needed to stop. Friends on that side
of the aisle said, you put us in the majority, we'll end this crazy
spending in such a deficit form. And yet, when the gavel was handed to
Speaker Pelosi in January of 2007, what we began to experience was
spending like this Nation has never known, until January of 2009, when
the spending went on steroids, and instead of having a $100 to $200
billion deficit, in 1 year, we went to having nearly between a $1 and
$2 trillion deficit in 1 year.
How long before we face the same consequence that the Soviet Union
faced when countries around the world said, look, we have been warning
you that if you didn't get your spending under control we wouldn't loan
you any more money? We won't. We're done. You're on your own. And then
the Nation realizes, you can't print enough money to pay your way out
of the debt the Soviet Union had created and the very kind of debt we
are creating now. So they had to announce, we're out of business. The
States are on their own.
It can happen here. It has got to stop. And it's not that hard. All
we have to do is go back to the budget of 2006 or even 2007, the
Republican Congress created, and say, do you know what? We as Democrats
condemned the Republicans for spending too much in the 2006, 2007
budget, and so let's go back to that budget. We condemn them for
spending too much in 2006 and 2007, let's go back to that budget. Let's
use that budget. And let's stop these automatic increases every year.
I've been filing that bill every Congress. It's time it passed.
I brought it to the attention of our leaders in 2006, in January,
February, 2006, yet no action was taken by the Republican Congress, and
obviously the last two Democratic Congresses haven't, a zero baseline
budget bill, no automatic increases. Go back to 2006, 2007, no
automatic increases, we get the spending under control, we get
credibility around the world, we took care of our indebtedness. And we
are still strong and even stronger. That's where we need to go. And
then we send a message loud and clear, and I hope that Speaker Boehner
will do as I have encouraged to be done, invite Prime Minister
Netanyahu to come stand at that podium, address a joint session so the
world can see both sides of this aisle standing and applauding the
leader of our great friend and ally in the Middle East, Israel. Let the
nations see that, and then that symbolism be followed by action where
we don't reward our enemies and the enemies of our dear friend, Israel,
and we don't punish our dear friends and dear allies. If you're our
friend and ally, we work with you. If you're not, good luck. You're on
your own. We're not going to keep propping up countries that hate us.
It's irresponsible as well.
There are so many lessons to be learned from history, both ancient,
both our own Nation and foreign and current history. And may God have
mercy on us if we do not learn those lessons.
And with that, Madam Speaker, I yield back.
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