[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 163 (Tuesday, December 18, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H6834]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SIMPLE RESPECT FOR OUR VETERANS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AND THE
U.S. TERRITORIES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
the District of Columbia (Ms. Norton) for 5 minutes.
Ms. NORTON. Madam Speaker, as we end the 112th Congress, we are faced
with two crises: the fiscal cliff crisis; and now a gun crisis and a
mental health crisis, that comes to us from Newtown, Connecticut. When
you consider that this is a Congress which has not been able to handle
even minor issues, much less crises, one begins to wonder whether we
will live up to what is required of any person who is a Member of the
United States Congress.
{time} 1050
This morning, I come for something less than a crisis for the
country, something far easier to solve. I am calling on the Defense
Authorization Conference Committee to solve a simple noncrisis problem,
a problem, though, that casts shame on our treatment of our active-duty
military, our veterans, and their families.
Thanks to Chairman Buck McKeon and Ranking Member Adam Smith, the
House passed Defense Authorization bill contains a simple provision.
That provision says that when you raise the flags of the 50 States at
military ceremonies, if you're raising or displaying the flags of the
50 States, you must also display the flags of the District of Columbia
and the five territories.
The territories and the District have always served
disproportionately in war, but what we are asking for today and what
the House bill provides is the simple respect that anyone who wears the
uniform and any family member of that active military person or veteran
is entitled to.
I thank the House for recognizing that in some matters all of us are
certainly equal. We are all equal in according respect for members of
our military. I've spoken with Senator Levin, the chair of the Defense
Authorization Committee, and am convinced that he is for this
provision. I have spoken to the White House at the highest levels, and
I have asked all concerned to simply recede to the House provision.
For reasons that escape us all, the Senate removed this provision
when the House, last year, put it in the Defense Authorization bill. It
would be impossible to remove this provision if the Members of the
Senate, who are responsible for doing so, could have heard from our
veterans who went to speak to the staff of Senator McCain and Senator
Levin and told of their own experience. There was the colonel who said
that when he was welcomed home from the Gulf War, the flag of every
State was raised, but not the flag of the District of Columbia. There
was the mother who wrote me, Tomi Rucker, to say that she and the
father went to the graduation of her son from Navy boot camp Great
Lakes Naval Station full of pride, and as each graduate's name was
called, the home state flag was raised, but no flag for Jonathan Rucker
of the District of Colombia when his name was called. The colonel's
son, who came back three times from war, a combat veteran in Iraq, and
each and every time the flag of the District of Columbia was not raised
as the flags of others were.
And my colleagues from the territories have come forward with equally
heartbreaking stories. This, my colleagues of the House of
Representatives, you can solve, you can solve this very day, and my
colleagues in the other body need only follow your lead.
The Defense Department some months ago issued a memorandum that said
that raising the flags should be done at the discretion of the
commander. Well, it wasn't at the commander's discretion that our young
men and women volunteered to risk their lives for their country. And
would such a memorandum have been put forward to say that the commander
could decide whether to honor the flag of Virginia or Maryland, to take
my closest neighbors, when their veterans came home? What is the
difference between their veterans who have gone to war and the veterans
of the District of Columbia?
There are very few ways to honor our veterans. We honor foreign
dignitaries by raising their flag. The least we can do is to honor our
own military, our veterans and their families, by raising the flags of
their home district or territory.
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