[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 119 (Wednesday, September 11, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H5482]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
9/11
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Florida (Mr. Yoho) for 5 minutes.
Mr. YOHO. Mr. Speaker, today, on September 11, I want to take a
moment to reflect on that fateful event on the day of 2001 at the World
Trade Center, the Pentagon, the fields of Pennsylvania, and again in
Benghazi in 2012, and ask that we always remember the resilience and
strength of the greatest Nation on Earth.
Mr. Speaker, there are moments in time when we cease to be
Republicans and Democrats; politics and punditry melt away, divisions
close and differences fade. We come together as Americans, regardless
of race, creed, or religion. September 11, 2001, and again in 2012 were
and will always be such occasions.
On those days, our Nation came together. That is what makes our
Nation great and unique. Not only do we come together to celebrate in
triumph, but we stand together in tragedy.
{time} 1030
It is in the face of adversity when our resilience is truly tested,
and as Americans, time and time again, throughout history, we have
passed that test.
Throughout the course of those days heroes ran into buildings and
stormed a cockpit, went into burning embassies. They donated blood when
it was needed and the clothes off their back.
That, Mr. Speaker, is the true America. Not partisan gridlock, not
tension-building punditry, not games of ``gotcha'' or smoke-and-mirrors
legislation.
The rallying cry of that day was simple in phrase but monumental in
meaning: ``U-S-A.''
Country was first. Everything else was second.
As we tackle the monumental challenges that lie ahead, I ask my
colleagues to remember the spirit of that day; to do what is right for
America, not for one party over another.
The heroes of that day did what they did not because of any political
party but because it was simply the right thing to do. It was the
American thing to do.
Americans, regardless of who they voted for, feel the consequences of
our decisions each and every day. Today, of all days, let us all
remember to put our country first and act as true representatives for
the will of all the people.
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