[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 114 (Wednesday, July 27, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5589]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAIRNESS AND JUSTICE FOR THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, it's a difficult time to talk because Ms.
Schakowsky has said just about everything that I was planning to say.
She said it extremely well and synopsized the issue.
It basically comes down to fairness and justice for the American
people. And the President, who has been burdened with problems caused
by the Republican Congress and the Bush years, wars in Iraq, wars in
Afghanistan not paid for, prescription drug bill not paid for, and Bush
tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans which have caused most of the
deficit and the problem with the debt ceiling, and now we're not
calling on them to make some sacrifice and to pay for it.
Most everybody in America knows about dieting. Most of us are a
little overweight. Michelle Obama will tell you that any day. We need
to watch our weight. But when you go to diet, you've got to reduce your
calories and you've got to exercise some more. Spend some calories,
reduce some calories. That's the way you diet. It's the same thing with
the budget.
If you had a problem at home with your budget, kind of having a
problem, well, maybe you think, I won't take that vacation and go to
Miami Beach and stay in that three-star hotel. I'll go to Fort Walton
and stay in a two-star hotel. And maybe I'll get another job or work
some more overtime. You increase your income, you decrease your
spending, and you get it together.
This Congress, though, has got the problem because of dealing with
this, and the debt ceiling's independent of all of it. Many Members of
Congress on the Republican side have pledged not to raise revenue.
Well, you've got to do both. You've got to cut some things, and you cut
some things that don't decrease your ability to increase jobs later on
or increase jobs now, and you increase revenue at the same time. You
have to do both.
Some of the Republicans have pledged never to do revenue. Well, that
means they've got one arm tied behind their backs--never increase
revenue.
You come to the table and you try to get a bargain. You negotiate in
politics. You've got to have both hands at the table, one give and one
take. Both sides have to come, open palms, friendship, no guns. Here we
are.
But they've got one hand tied behind their backs. That's the problem
we've got. So we're not being able to negotiate because one side comes
ill-equipped, unprepared, incapable.
Last week we had a new Member here from California (Ms. Hahn), and
the Speaker read to her and she repeated the oath of office: I pledge
to support, I swear I will support, the United States against all
enemies, foreign and domestic.
We've got a domestic enemy right now, and it's the idea that we're
not going to pay our debts: The full faith and credit of the United
States goes by, interest rates go up, jobs go down, credit card rates
go up, home mortgage rates go up, 401(k)s go down, stock market drops
10 percent. Yet we're not doing it. We're considering a pledge to some
third-party person that said, No new revenue, arm behind my back,
instead of, I will support the United States against all enemies,
foreign and domestic.
So that's the problem we've got.
I had a town hall last night on the telephone. My constituents can't
understand why we have the problem. I tried to explain it to them.
They're concerned about their Social Security checks coming or their
veterans check coming. They could be cut off if we don't get this done
and we don't have money to pay our debts.
People living simply on Social Security are endangered, and yet
millionaires and billionaires go on. Hedge fund guys, they earn
billions of dollars--millions at least, billions for some--pay 15
percent, something called carried interest on their income, 15 percent.
But the average person out there is paying 25, 26, 34 at the most; 15
percent for the richest guys in New York spending money outrageously
and the ones that almost brought this economy down.
Somebody asked me, Is this thing going to pass?
I don't know. But I'll tell you this: In my life, and I hope nobody
out here listening has had that situation, Mr. Speaker, I've had kidney
stones. They're easier to pass than this.
Mr. Speaker, I've got a pain in my side.
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