[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 123 (Wednesday, September 18, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H5595]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                          A SAD DAY IN AMERICA

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Missouri (Mr. Cleaver) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. CLEAVER. Mr. Speaker, I probably don't need 5 minutes to say what 
I would like to say.
  This is a very sad moment for the most powerful Nation in the history 
of this planet. We are on the verge of a government shutdown over 
ideology. I can remember in 1995, I was the mayor of Kansas City when 
the government shut down and the impact was Herculean, not just here in 
Washington, but around the country and around the world. And if we are 
proud to be Americans, it means that we pay our bills.
  We are the only nation that still allows a vote by a legislature on 
paying our bills. Most countries won't do that because they don't need 
any disruption in paying their debts. We are close to declaring to the 
whole world that we don't pay our bills.
  The other part that's troublesome is this whole issue of SNAP, or 
food stamps. And there are so many myths that roll around that it just 
turns my stomach.
  I lived in a house with no running water or electricity until I was 7 
years old. We moved into public housing. My father worked three jobs. 
He eventually was able to buy a home.
  I know what it's like to be poor. I know what it's like to struggle. 
My father was able to send my mother to college when I was in the 
eighth grade, and then all four of his children graduated from college, 
too, with postgraduate degrees. So I am always insulted when I hear all 
of these irreverent and nasty comments about poor people. And we spread 
this stuff around the country to the point of absurdity.
  We spread lies. ``Well, people go into stores and they buy alcohol 
with food stamps.'' Well, we don't have food stamps anymore. We have 
cards, Economic Benefit Transfer cards. And in spite of the lies that 
people tell, you can't buy alcohol with cards. You cannot buy lottery 
tickets. I heard Members of Congress--this Congress--tell people that 
they know that people in prison are getting food stamps, and they've 
seen people buy alcohol with food stamp cards. It doesn't work. And it 
divides and damages this Nation.
  The other lie, over 70 percent of the people receiving SNAP benefits 
are the elderly, the disabled, and children. And we are against helping 
them? Another 25 percent are people who work every day, it's just that 
they can't make enough to survive.
  I remember growing up and my mother would say, Eat everything on your 
plate; there are starving kids in Africa. Well, I'm not sure how eating 
everything on my plate helped them--I'm still struggling with that--but 
there are starving people not far from here, and the government of the 
United States is saying we'd rather shut down than to have a program 
that deals with the people who are in trouble.
  I just heard a few moments ago about a 101-year-old person whose 
daily Meals on Wheels had been reduced. 101 years old, and people are 
celebrating that, Mr. Speaker? This is a sad, sad day. And by the end 
of next week, when we are shut down, it's going to be much sadder.

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