[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 55 (Thursday, April 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H2672]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FUTURE OF MEDICARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Kissell) for 4 minutes.
Mr. KISSELL. Madam Speaker, from the time that I first came to
Congress, I have continued to be a strong supporter of our seniors'
issues and standing by our seniors. Today, I rise in support of another
issue that our seniors are facing today, the issue of the future of
Medicare.
We must stand by those who have stood by us as they enter into their
senior years, and we must be strong in making sure that Medicare stays
as a solid medical safety net for our seniors.
Madam Speaker, we have heard a lot about the Greatest Generation,
that generation that fought World War II and worked in industries and
raised families and came back and did so much to make America the great
Nation as we know today. But, Madam Speaker, America is a great Nation,
has been for many years, and will be for many years to come. And there
is not just one Greatest Generation; there is a continuum of great
generations.
I grew up in a very small town in North Carolina, and my heroes were
those people--many of whom had fought in World War II--those teachers
and those storekeepers and those people in a small town that raised
many of my friends and myself and looked after us, whether in the
school or church or wherever it might be. As these people that took
care of us become seniors and they continue this throughout the Nation
for generations to come, we must take care of those that took care of
us.
I was a high school history teacher for 7 years before coming to
Congress, and I always told my students that you're not studying
history by looking at pages in a book or looking at old pictures or
paintings or whatever it might be; you are studying about people that
have a story. As we talk today about our seniors and Medicare, we
cannot forget that these are the people who took care of us. They
cannot become just political bargaining chips and political theories.
They are real people. They have real stories.
I want to talk briefly about two people that are especially important
to me--my mom and dad. My dad grew up in that same small town that I
did in North Carolina, fought in World War II, won a Bronze Star, came
back, worked in the post office, and was happy just to be a part of
helping in those ways that I talked about before. My mom grew up in
Carroll County in Huntingdon, Tennessee, and came to North Carolina as
a teacher and taught many generations. She is 96 years old, her
birthday being last March 18. These are the heroes. These are the
stories that we know, that all of us have. Whether our parents or
grandparents, great-grandparents, aunts and uncles, whatever they may
be, we cannot forget about them as individuals; we cannot forget about
their stories, and we cannot let them become just political bargaining
chips.
The question that we must ask, Madam Speaker, is: Why did we need
Medicare in the first place? What in our system didn't work, that
didn't take care of our seniors, that required Medicare to come into
being? We know the answer to that. And we must continue to have that
guarantee of a strong support structure when our medical needs for our
seniors must be met this way. We must stand by our seniors.
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