[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 193 (Thursday, December 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8969-H8970]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BILL OF RIGHTS' 220TH ANNIVERSARY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Broun) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BROUN of Georgia. Madam Speaker, today I rise to commemorate the
220th anniversary of the adoption of the Bill of Rights to our U.S.
Constitution. Some of our most basic freedoms and governing principles
are laid
[[Page H8970]]
out in this precious document. The amendments listed were meant to
protect our individual liberties and our private property. They serve
as a constant reminder that our Nation was meant for its citizens to
have liberty, with very little government intrusion into their lives.
Today's modern government has, sadly, strayed very far away from the
vision that our Founding Fathers had when they ratified the Bill of
Rights. It seems like every day we lose a little bit more of our
freedom to the ideals of Big Government and to the standards of
socialism.
In Hosea 4:6, God says, ``My people are destroyed from a lack of
knowledge.''
We have a tremendous lack of knowledge in this Nation about the
principles that our Founding Fathers gave us in the U.S. Constitution
and the Bill of Rights, and we are being destroyed because those
foundational principles are being eroded day by day here in Congress,
by Presidents, and by the Federal court system.
Please read the U.S. Constitution. Read the Bill of Rights. Teach
them to our children and to our grandchildren so that we can come
together and demand a constitutionally limited government, as our
Founding Fathers intended. We need to begin to rebuild the principles
that have made this Nation the greatest in history, the greatest
political experiment in the history of mankind. Those principles are
what have made this country so great, so powerful, and so successful;
and the only way that we will retain that is if we become knowledgeable
and start demanding a constitutionally limited government, as our
Founding Fathers meant it.
So please read the Constitution. Please read the Bill of Rights. Read
what our Founding Fathers said about it. Demand that kind of governance
from our elected representatives all across this country, at all levels
of government. Our freedom and liberty depend upon it.
Thank you. God bless you. God bless America.
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