[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 113 (Tuesday, July 26, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5494-H5495]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LAST BEST HOPE OF EARTH
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
``Fellow-citizens, we cannot escape history.
``We of this Congress and this administration will be remembered in
spite of ourselves. No personal significance, or insignificance, can
spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass will
light us down, in honor or dishonor, to the latest generation. We, even
we here, hold the power and bear the responsibility.
``We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last best hope of Earth.''
Lincoln, of course, was talking about the state of a Nation in peril
on December 1 in his address to Congress in 1862.
But if this Nation had not the leadership of that magnitude, who
knows where we would be today. They faced terrible consequences and yet
still had the extraordinary foresight and fortitude to charge ahead.
Today, we too face consequences. We face consequences of
international economic impact, environmental and ecological
destruction.
We consider this week a debt limit crisis that has brought out the
best and worst amongst men and women I respect both here on this House
floor and on the other side of this Capitol building and on cable news
stations across the country.
We are also considering here in this House an Interior and
Environment appropriations bill that simply says to our children: You
clean it up; we don't care to bear the burden. This bill does
irreparable damage to programs that keep our air clean, our water
drinkable, and that protect our national and natural heritage. These
are not dollars spent without thought, nor are they investments of a
trivial nature as some would have us believe.
Simply put, these are science-based, pragmatic investments in public
health. These cuts, all told, will not save the country a penny. The
policy riders included in this bill will cost tens of thousands of
lives. The bill will expose our children, families, and communities to
unnecessary illness and degrade our irreplaceable natural resources.
But this week we are not stopping at a debt ceiling quagmire and an
Interior and Environmental appropriations abhorrence. We will continue
to consider a measure that would deem congressional approval for the
Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. The Keystone would flow from Alberta
down to the gulf coast, threading right through the vast Ogallala
Aquifer, the main drinking water source for the Midwest.
You can ignore the dozen leaks the Keystone ``one'' system has had in
the last year, stoking fears of a spill in the aquifer from the
proposed expansion pipeline. You can ignore the 42,000 gallons that
seeped from an ExxonMobil pipeline into the Yellowstone River in
Montana earlier this month, under which Keystone XL would also run. You
can ignore the science that says that the high energy process of
production of tar sands increases greenhouse gas emissions, pollutes
water sources, and harms the proposed region's boreal forests. And you
can ignore the fact that testimony of TransCanada officials to Canadian
regulators included the fact that the pipeline would drive gasoline
prices in the Midwest higher, not lower.
But let's forget all that.
On procedure alone, this Congressional consideration of a bill that
is currently under review by the Department of State is unnecessary and
unprecedented, potentially negatively affecting our national security
and safety.
This proposed pipeline needs no congressional approval. In fact, this
proposed expansion need not be approved at all. It has drawn criticism
from the Environmental Protection Agency, who suggested that the State
Department should consider how construction would affect wetlands,
migratory birds, and communities through which it passes.
So we stand here today to consider approving a project expansion that
has been deemed mediocre at best. We stand here today to consider an
environmental appropriations bill that has been deemed the worst we
have ever seen. And we stand here today while everyone around us fights
against a compromise that might keep our standing in the international
economy
[[Page H5495]]
from dipping further than we have already seen it fall.
Indeed, ``We cannot escape history. We hold the power, and bear the
responsibility. We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last best hope
of Earth.''
President Lincoln, truer words were never spoken.
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