[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 162 (Wednesday, October 26, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7128-H7129]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE OCCUPY MOVEMENT: WE'D BETTER PAY ATTENTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Brooks). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rush) is
recognized for 30 minutes.
Mr. RUSH. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker, I would like to express my outrage and my disappointment
at the Oakland, California, Police Department, which reacted with
brutality to those peacefully protesting. Mr. Speaker, I want to remind
our Nation's law enforcement authorities all across the land that civil
disobedience is as American as American pie. It is the act through
which our great Nation was conceived. It required great courage to do
what they did at the Boston Tea Party. It required great courage for
the great American, Henry David Thoreau, to refuse to go to war against
Mexico in 1849, an act that gave birth to the anti-war movement that
continues today.
The equalities that we as Americans enjoy today are the result of
those great, courageous Americans that fought for our liberties, Mr.
Speaker. The women's suffrage movement went from 1848 to 1920.
Generations of courageous women marched, they fasted, and they were
arrested. Finally, in 1920, the 19th Amendment gave women the right to
vote. It took more than seven decades of civil disobedience to achieve
the change that they sought.
Let's not forget, Mr. Speaker, that the abolition of slavery, the
labor movement and the eradication of child labor, the civil rights
movement, and the environmental movement all used civil disobedience as
a powerful and peaceful weapon to change laws and to protect all of our
liberties.
Members of the Occupy Movement now emerge as yet another generation
of courageous Americans voicing a general frustration that many
citizens feel: It was a money-driven elite that mismanaged the American
economy. They are challenging us, this Congress, our government, to
reform not only Wall Street but reform a culture of selfishness and
greed that has distorted who we are and made the American Dream appear
unattainable. We are losing ground as a result of these individuals,
this grotesque, American, greedy and avaricious elite.
The Occupy Movement, Mr. Speaker, embodies a sense of growing
disillusionment with the direction of our country. I, for one,
understand that feeling. With deadlock a daily occurrence in this very
House, it is hard for the American people not to feel a sense of utter
frustration. They see their elected representatives unable to govern at
this crucial time.
Mr. Speaker, a betrayal of American values occurred last night in
Oakland, California, when police fired tear gas on those peaceful
demonstrators. It occurred in New York City when police maced and beat
protesters. Government violence against our own people? Is this not the
very thing that we condemn in other places all around the world? How
dare we denounce an action when committed abroad but yet remain silent
when it happens in our own, very own--our own backyards.
{time} 1930
I, for one, cannot remain silent. History teaches us that a violent
response
[[Page H7129]]
to civil disobedience never, ever works. It makes people angrier and
turns public opinion against law enforcement, against the police. It is
counterproductive, and it never achieves the goals of those who are
trying to impose order.
Getting arrested is a fundamental part of civil disobedience. The
Occupy Movement demonstrators expected to be arrested. Civil
disobedience participants all expect to be arrested, but they should
also expect that the police will conduct themselves with professional
understanding and a sensitivity of the power that they possess and of
the government they represent. They carry weapons. They have the power
to maim, to kill, to wound, and to arrest.
With that great power comes an even greater responsibility. That
greater responsibility includes the freedoms that were promised to all
American citizens in that great document, the preamble to the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights, which is the freedom from
``unreasonable searches and seizures'' as promised in the Fourth
Amendment of the Constitution; the freedom from ``cruel and unusual
punishments'' as promised in the Eighth Amendment; finally, Mr.
Speaker, and perhaps most importantly, the freedom enshrined in the
First Amendment, which guarantees ``the right of the people peaceably
to assemble and to petition the government for a redress of
grievances.''
It is the job of law enforcement to uphold these freedoms, to uphold
our Constitution, to uphold justice even in the most difficult of
situations. Beatings and mace and tear gas against our own people
exercising their constitutional rights? That is unacceptable. More
importantly, it is un-American.
I do sympathize with the tough job our Nation's police officers face
now and have faced, and I can understand why they may feel intimidated
by the sheer numbers or may mistake the demonstrators' passion for
aggression. However, in a humble way, I ask the police officers who are
monitoring these protests to act with a rational head, with soberness,
with restraint. Violence only breeds violence. Such unwarranted crowd
control methods will only serve to create mutual contempt between
protesters and the police alike, dividing Americans against Americans
and citizens against the police. We don't want that. This is not a
nation that supports and encourages that type of activity.
It was only last week, Mr. Speaker, that we--this Nation, the
citizens of the greatest country in the history of the world--dedicated
a memorial to a man who was the embodiment, the living proof, of the
power of civil disobedience and nonviolence. It is those who marched
peacefully in the face of fire hoses, in the face of dogs attacking
them, of police batons striking them all over their bodies, including
their heads, who changed America.
Now a new generation follows boldly and audaciously with an American
audacity. They follow in the footsteps of those American patriots who
dared to disobey the law of the land as a matter of conscience and
priority, as a matter of conscience that created this great civil
society called the United States of America. They made our Nation
better back then, and I believe the Occupy Movement challenges us to
make America better now.
Yes, it can be done. America can be better. America must address the
issues that those who are now demonstrating peacefully across the land
are raising. They are only trying to peacefully redress their
grievances. It is their constitutional right. How dare dogs, how dare
tear gas, how dare police attack them in the wee hours of the morning.
Mr. Speaker, the mayor of Oakland, California, Mayor Jean Quan, owes
the Occupy Movement a sincere, heartfelt apology. Mayor Quan owes the
American people a sincere, heartfelt apology. At 3 a.m. yesterday, the
Oakland Police invaded the park where the protesters were assembled.
Forty-five years ago in the same city, 45 years ago this very week,
an organization that I became a member of, the Black Panther Party, was
founded in Oakland, California, as a result of the police brutality of
the Oakland Police Department. Forty-five years later, I as a Member of
this esteemed body, the House of Representatives, am ashamed to bear
witness once again to the same Oakland Police Department violating and
attacking and brutalizing innocent citizens who are protesting,
bringing their deep-felt grievances to the forefront and engaging in
acts of civil disobedience.
{time} 1940
Police batons, tear gas, mace, no matter what the weapon is, no
matter what the strategy is, they cannot kill this movement. They
cannot stop this movement. This occupy movement is going to move
forward. It's going to move forward with an accelerated pace because of
the actions of the police department in Oakland and in other cities
across this Nation.
They have a right to protest. They have a right to make their voices
heard. They have a right, as called for in the gospel of Jesus Christ
in the Bible, to make their bodies a living sacrifice. These
individuals, they are epitomizing the greatness in this hour. It's a
thing that we celebrate all across the land.
We celebrated it in Tunisia, we celebrated it in Egypt, we celebrated
it in Libya, we celebrated it in Yemen, we celebrated it in China, we
celebrated it in other places all across the world. How can we be so
hypocritical? How can we be so insensitive? How can we be so arrogant
to celebrate civil disobedience in other places across the world and
attack the same, the very same actions and attitude here in our Nation
when our citizens engage in civil disobedience?
Mr. Speaker, I say that those who are involved in the occupy
movement, you are just lighting the first spark in a prairie fire of
peaceful demonstrations across this land. Don't give up, don't give
out, and please don't give in.
Godspeed to you. We need you. You're doing the right thing at the
right time for the right reasons. Keep doing what you're doing. Stand
up for what you believe in. Stand up for what you believe in.
It's high time now that the American people stand up for what they
believe in and take to the streets to demonstrate to all that we're
sick and tired of being sick and tired. We're sick and tired of home
foreclosures. We're sick and tired of unemployment. We're sick and
tired of being sick and tired, as Fannie Lou Hamer once said.
We're just sick and tired. We're sick, yes, of the rising cost of
health care. We need to demonstrate and protest the rising cost of
health care.
We're sick and tired of the rising gap between those who are sitting
high on the hog, the wealthy, the elite, and those who are at the
bottom; the rising gap between those who are unemployed and
underemployed, who are chronically unemployed and the 1 percent who are
reaping all the wealth of this Nation and telling the rest of us that
they have a right to the wealth of the Nation, but yet we as American
citizens don't have a right to a decent job. We as American citizens
don't have a right to decent housing, that we as American citizens
don't have a right to a decent education, that we as American citizens
don't have a right to decent health care.
How can they look down on us and tell us that we don't have a right
to the same opportunities and to the same life-style and to the same
benefits? How can they tell the dwindling, disappearing American middle
class that they don't have a right to demonstrate?
These are our children, and they want a better future. These are our
children, and they are willing to fight for a better future.
These are our children, and they have the courage to stand up against
the government, to stand up against the elite, to stand for their
rights. And I am proud that our children are standing up and standing
for something to try to get some meaning into their lives and try to
make this Nation a better Nation.
I'm proud of them and, again, I say to them, don't give up, don't
give out, and please don't give in. Godspeed to you.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time
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