[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 103 (Tuesday, July 12, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H4860]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Jones) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JONES. Madam Speaker, on the floor today I think America and all
of us in Congress are certainly concerned about the debt ceiling issue
and what we are going to do and how we are going to be able to resolve
it. But like many of my colleagues on the Democratic side, I am here
today to talk about the war in Afghanistan.
Madam Speaker, I have beside me a really profound photograph of a
wife in tears and a little girl sitting on her knee, who is too young
to understand that her father, United States Army Sergeant Jeffrey
Sherer, is laid under the flag that is now folded, being presented to
the wife.
This is the pain of war, and I do say to Ms. Woolsey, thank you very
much for what you have done to try to wake up the Congress and the
American people.
Ten billion dollars a month going to Afghanistan. We can't even fix
the bridges, we can't fix the roads, we are cutting children's
programs, we are cutting senior programs. And yet Mr. Karzai, who is
known as a corrupt leader of Afghanistan, is going to get his $10
billion a month while these programs that we are going to cut are going
to be denied $10 billion a month. It doesn't make any sense, Madam
Speaker.
That brings me to an article written by A.C. Snow. He is well-known
in North Carolina, where I am from, for his writings in The News and
Observer, which is a State paper in Raleigh, North Carolina. This past
July 4th, his article was titled ``Time to Bring Them Home, Let Them
Live.''
``Time to Bring Them Home, Let Them Live.''
Let this little girl's father live. Obviously, he will not live. He's
dead. But how about the next little girl or little boy, or the wife
and, in some cases, the husband?
Let me share with the House from A.C. Snow's writing, ``Time to Bring
Them Home, Let Them Live'':
``It seems we never run out of wars. It is as if one small country
after another sends out engraved invitations reading: `We're having a
war. Please come.' And Uncle Sam goes, lugging borrowed billions and
thousands of young men and women to sacrifice on the altar of so-called
freedom or `nation building.' ''
Snow closes his comments by quoting lyrics from ``Les Miserables'':
``He is young. He is only a boy. You can take, you can give, Let him
be, Let him live. Bring him home, Bring him home.''
Snow further writes, ``It's way past time to stop playing politics
with the lives of America's youth. Bring them home. Let them live. Not
just 30,000 of them. All of them.''
Madam Speaker, I sit here day after day, in committees and on the
floor of the House, listening to debate, sometimes being part of the
debate. I just hope that the American people will understand that in
this discussion at the White House with the leadership of the House and
the leadership of the Senate, we could save $100 billion. That's what
it costs per year to be in Afghanistan.
Madam Speaker, I have Camp Lejeune Marine Base in my district. I have
over 60,000 retired military. I listen to them. No, I did not serve,
but I listen to those who are serving and those who did serve.
And like my colleagues, I go to Walter Reed, I go to Bethesda. I see
the broken bodies, the amputated legs, the paralyzed; and I have
written over 10,300 letters to families like Sergeant Sherer's to say
to the families, I regret that I voted to send our kids into Iraq. It
was a lie that got us there, and we never should have gone.
So I join my colleagues in both parties to do my part to say let's
bring them home from Afghanistan. Let's bring them home before 2014 or
2015.
And, Madam Speaker, may God bless our men and women in uniform, and
may God bless America.
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