[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 7 (Wednesday, January 19, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H329]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1840
DISTORTING THE DREAM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Woolsey) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Earlier this week, Mr. Speaker, we recognized the 82nd
birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., perhaps the greatest moral and
spiritual leader in our Nation's history. Each of us in our way
reflected on Dr. King's teaching, and his message had more relevance
than ever in light of the tragic shootings in Tucson.
It's a sign of progress that a man whose ideas were considered
revolutionary during his life has achieved mainstream iconic status in
death. But as we all share his legacy, there is a very real danger that
some people will, in a self-serving way, distort King's vision to
justify the very policies he gave his life opposing. In fact,
Department of Defense General Counsel Jeh Johnson has a bizarre,
unsettling interpretation of Dr. King's dream.
In a speech last week, Mr. Johnson suggested that this great agitator
for peace would have endorsed the war in Afghanistan. And I quote him,
he said, ``If Dr. King were alive today, he would recognize that our
Nation's military should not and cannot lay down its arms and leave the
American people vulnerable to terrorist attack.''
Mr. Speaker, this strikes me as a presumptuous and manipulative
distortion of everything Dr. King represented. He was fierce; he was
resolute in his opposition to the Vietnam War. It was a courageous,
controversial stand that cost him friends and allies.
He believed nothing as strongly as the idea that nonviolence was the
only route to social change. He left little ambiguity about his
feelings on war: ``The chain reaction of evil wars producing more wars
must be broken,'' Dr. King once said, ``or we shall be plunged into the
dark abyss of annihilation.'' I don't know how you get much clearer
than that, Mr. Speaker.
Violence, he preached, ``is a descending spiral, begetting the very
things it seeks to destroy. Through violence you may murder the hater,
but you do not murder the hate. In fact, violence merely increases
hate. Returning violence for violence multiplies violence.''
Mr. Speaker, we've seen exactly this in our misguided struggle to
defeat terrorism through warfare. Killing one Taliban or al Qaeda
insurgent emboldens the movement and simply creates more terrorists.
Dr. King added that ``a nation that continues to spend more money on
military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching a
spiritual death.'' These are the words we ought to reflect on as we
continue a debate about Federal budget priorities.
Far from supporting the war in Afghanistan, I believe Dr. King would
be much more likely to embrace the principles of the SMART security
platform that I've spoken of from this podium many, many times. It
calls for cooperation, not conquest; dialogue, not destruction;
engagement, not invasion. It pursues the goal of global peace and
security by focusing on our common humanity. It is an agenda that
respects human rights, that seeks to empower and lift up the poor
people of the world instead of dropping bombs on their villages and on
their communities.
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Johnson of the Pentagon couldn't be more wrong about
the lessons of Martin Luther King's life. I have every confidence that,
were he alive today, Dr. King would join me in a loud and unmistakable
call to bring our troops home.
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