[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 136 (Friday, October 4, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6238]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FIGHTING ON BEHALF OF THIS GREAT COUNTRY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Meadows) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MEADOWS. Mr. Speaker, I come here today to speak from the heart
of a true story that's happening really right now in my district. It's
a story of an innkeeper, Bruce O'Connell, who's operated the Pisgah Inn
since 1979. It's an inn on the Blue Ridge Parkway, and that inn has
been operated really at no cost to the Federal Government for years and
years and years. In fact, as he operates it, he sends money to the
Federal Government. So this government shutdown shouldn't have anything
to do with the Pisgah Inn. The Blue Ridge Parkway is open for business.
It continues to allow cars to go both ways on the parkway. But yet what
we see is under the direction of this administration, the edict has
come out to close the inn down.
Yesterday, they had to close it down at 6 clock. So I got a call this
morning from Bruce, and he says Congressman Meadows, I just want to let
you know that I'm going to open my inn back up.
Now I expected to hear all kinds of just heartfelt hurt and concern
from Bruce. But what he said is that you're fighting for the right
thing. You're fighting for our future. You're fighting for our
children. You're fighting for our grandchildren. And I'm going to open
back up knowing that the cost of this particular thing may cost me a
business that I've had for many, many years. But you know, Congressman
Meadows, it is the right thing to do, that we must stand together and
fight. We must make sure that what we do is, our voice is heard. So I
want to say thank you to a patriot who is willing, at great cost to
himself, stand and fight for what he knows is right.
And I'm going to close with this because this fight is not a new
story. On the back of the Delaware quarter is a horse and rider. Many
people think it's Paul Revere, but indeed it is not. It is an unknown
or little-known patriot by the name of Caesar Rodney. His statue is in
this very building. It's on the back of a quarter commemorating what he
did because, actually, he got on a horse when the founding of our
Nation was there, he got on a horse and rode through the night, through
driving storms, to arrive in Philadelphia to cast the deciding vote
that created this great country.
Now why do I share this story? Because across his face was a green
scarf that covered a cancer that could be best operated on back in
England. So he knew that by signing that document, he potentially was
signing his death warrant.
It is that kind of patriotism, Mr. Speaker, that we are seeing day in
and day out. It is exemplified by the men and women across this
country--World War II veterans who have come in and crossed a
barricade. They fought, and many patriots died, for the cause of
freedom. And I just want to say thank you to the patriots across this
great land that are standing up to fight on behalf of this great
country.
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