[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 8 (Thursday, January 20, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H360]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LOOKING AT THE VIOLENCE IN TUCSON
(Mr. YARMUTH asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute.)
Mr. YARMUTH. Madam Speaker, in the wake of the tragedy in Tucson 10
days ago, there has been a lot of soul searching, a lot of
introspection, and a lot of commentary about what was behind the
tragedy there and what motivated Jared Loughner to take the action he
did.
It's become the judicious and kind of the politically correct thing
to say, Oh, it was just one madman doing something. We can't ascribe
responsibility to anything else.
I think that's too easy. I think that's a cop-out.
The fact is that Jared Loughner did not try to attack the community
college that threw him out, any of the employers who had fired him, or
anybody in his family. He singled out Gabrielle Giffords, an elected
official of the United States Government. And one has to wonder whether
all of the talk in recent years about tyrannical governments and the
demonization of politicians did not in some way guide that madman to
her instead of another target.
I think we need to not just write this off as a senseless tragedy and
an inexplicable one. We need to delve into it more deeply and decide
whether the rhetoric that's out there in the media environment had
something to do with this tragic event.
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