[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 153 (Thursday, October 13, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H6864-H6865]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INVESTING IN AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, thank you very much for
yielding to me this morning.
I wanted to share with my colleagues an important challenge that we
have. And I think some would say how obvious with 9 percent
unemployment, which I think we should be honest with ourselves and
realize that it has been an accident that has been long in coming.
Almost as if one slowed down on a rainy day and looked as if one was
following the prudent rules of the road and decided to, in a moment's
notice, not only speed but speed through a stop sign, an accident
waiting to happen. We have of course, had spending without
accountability in two wars, Iraq and Afghanistan, preceding this
administration; and, of course, tax cuts for the top 1 percent of the
population, many of whom acknowledge that where there is opportunity
and benefit, there must be sacrifice and contribution.
And if we were to engage them in a reasoned discussion, we would find
out, of course, that they would be willing to invest in America. I
don't call it taxation. None of us enjoy getting that bill that deals
with taxes, but we do understand the value of investing in America.
{time} 1040
Yesterday, we debated three trade bills. All of them are my friends.
I have had the opportunity to engage with the communities represented
by South Korea, Panama, and Colombia. Let me say in particular on
Panama, my grandfather worked on the Panama Canal. The evidence is not
his words to me, since he died before I was born, but it is the
evidence of his name being printed in the annals of the Panamanian
history of the canal right there at the canal site that I have visited
on many occasions. What an emotional moment to see his name arise as
one who helped construct and build in the 1900s amongst all the
devastation, the mosquitoes, and disease. He survived and helped build
the Panama Canal. So we have a longstanding relationship with them. We
have a longstanding relationship with the canal.
But the trade bills, for me, should answer one question--and I
respect those who voted for it: Will it have an infusion of opportunity
for those who have lost their jobs? Unlike some comments by
Presidential candidates running for this job, I don't believe if you're
unemployed and if you are not rich, it is your fault. There are college
graduates who are unemployed today. There are skilled artisans and
those who are in the trades who are unemployed today. There are
returning veterans--young men and women--who led almost multinational
companies in terms of the jobs that they had in the military in Iraq
and Afghanistan. How do I know? Because I have visited them and seen
them in operation. If you are over the logistics of moving equipment
and moving men and women, and you're 25 years old, I can assure you
that you know how to work in a large corporation.
There's no evidence that these bills being passed at this time will
in fact bring down the unemployment. I believe our chief responsibility
is to find work for the American people.
One of the challenges of the language of the trade bill is the
question of protecting our intellectual property. Intellectual property
creates jobs. It protects the genius of America. Of course, all of us
through our history books have known about the origins of the telephone
and we know the origins of the lightbulb and some of the geniuses that
we've known in our early history. Many of us have heard of George
Washington Carver, who did a lot with the peanut.
America knows how to invent. We know how to do research. I have the
privilege of having in my jurisdiction and surrounding areas the Texas
Medical Center, where some of the most outstanding research is being
done on cancer, which seems to be an epidemic in this country.
[[Page H6865]]
So I argue we did not have sufficient protections for intellectual
property. But here is the key. In addition to not having a direct
correlation and an oversight on the passage of these bills which passed
in the Senate last night and the creation of jobs that our population,
our citizens, those that we are here to protect, those who we're here
to create a pathway of economic opportunity for--a nexus of jobs,
that's what you need to prove to me. And so I believe that we are
missing a manufacturing strategy. It is interesting that we consider
that old stuff and how proud we were of the Model T.
I believe that we cannot go forward on trade bills, Mr. Speaker,
until we focus on manufacturing in America, make it in America, and
putting people back to work at all levels of education. That's going to
be my cause for now and forever and ever. I want America back to work.
It's a great Nation. It's the greatest country in the world. Let us
focus on our folks getting jobs and getting our folks back to
manufacturing, making things, selling things, and America continues to
serve this world as the greatest democracy and the greatest country in
the world.
____________________