[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 78 (Thursday, June 2, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H3920]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PENNY-WISE AND POUND-FOOLISH ON AMERICAN SECURITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, we've learned a lot over the last several
days about the Republican commitment to both national security and
fiscal responsibility. Last week, after the party of limited government
spending passed the $690 billion defense authorization bill loaded with
Pentagon pork, they jammed through a 4-year extension of key provisions
of the USA PATRIOT Act. With a last-minute rushed vote with virtually
no debate, the party of small government authorized more wiretapping
and more poking through Americans' personal records.
{time} 1030
Now today, our ongoing debate over fiscal year 2012 Homeland Security
appropriations shows us that the majority's penny-wise, pound-foolish
approach is in all of its glory. This bill breaks faith with first
responders, underfunding key firefighter assistance grants and State
Homeland Security grants that primarily train and equip first
responders. Important programs will be rolled into a block grant so
that localities will be competing for dwindling Federal Homeland
Security grants, this and more undermining our communities' ability to
deal with all kinds of hazards, including potential nuclear, chemical,
and biological attacks.
The bill cuts Homeland Security research and development programs by
40 percent, Mr. Speaker. So while terrorist organizations are busily
mastering technologies, we will be eliminating very important research
projects in biological and explosives detection and advanced
cybersecurity. Shame on us.
Homeland Security already took a hit in fiscal year 2011. The
majority, which claims to care about nothing more than the safety and
security of the American people, wants to cut more than a billion
dollars from last year's funding levels, and provides $2 billion less
than what the President has proposed.
Meantime, while we are nickel and diming our first responders, we are
throwing $10 billion every month, $10 billion every month at a war in
Afghanistan that is killing Americans, while doing very little, if
anything, to advance our national security. Where are the budget
cutters when it comes to appropriating that money? Where are all the
hard questions and the tough scrutiny when it comes to funding a
decade-long military occupation of Afghanistan that has failed in every
conceivable way? Ten billion dollars a month on Afghanistan. For the
price of about 6 days of fighting the war in Afghanistan, we could make
up the difference between the President's Homeland Security request and
the allocation in this bill. Six days.
The majority clearly has one set of standards for important domestic
programs and quite another for military adventures abroad. If you want
to wage a war, no questions asked. But if you want to support first
responders, or educate small children, or preserve Medicare, you better
duck, because the budget axe is aimed at the people's priorities.
I remind my friends in the majority that terrorists would strike us
here on our shores, in our homeland, in our capital. An enormous
military footprint that is stomping down in a sovereign country
thousands of miles away, a country where Osama bin Laden wasn't hiding
and al Qaeda is barely active, is not where we need to be putting our
efforts.
Let's do the smart thing. Let's fully fund Homeland Security and
let's save money and lives by bringing our troops home.
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