[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 140 (Wednesday, October 9, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6415]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LEAVING THIS WORLD A LITTLE BETTER THAN YOU FOUND IT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, ``Try and leave this world
a little better than you found it.'' Those were the parting words of
Robert Baden Powell, a soldier, writer, and founder of the world
scouting movement. This was a message to all Scouts that was found
among his papers after Powell's passing in 1941.
I am a scouter, Mr. Speaker. It is part of who I am, both as an
American and an elected official proudly representing Pennsylvania's
Fifth Congressional District. Scouter Powell's words today are part of
scouting's principles, to always leave the campsite cleaner than when
you found it. It is into service, serving others, and making the world
a better place. They also ring true in the debate taking place now in
Washington.
Today we are saddling future generations with mountains of debt. We
have made promises we cannot keep. We are leaving the next generation
worse off than our own. We face a Nation with grave challenges,
challenges that aren't being addressed. The fact of the matter is that
Congress has yet to deal with the real drivers of our debt, a large
portion of which is health care costs.
Mr. Speaker, I don't care who won the White House or which party
holds the majority in Congress. Why? Because not until we actually
tackle the tough issues, the tough challenges, can we honestly say that
Congress or the White House is doing what is right for the country.
Right now we aren't making necessary progress, not on our budget and
deficits, not on our long-term debt, not on bringing down the cost of
health care. Though we have made some progress on spending, we are
nowhere near where we need to be.
We are also leaving the health system worse than where we found it.
Here are just two letters from my constituents that my office has
received.
Tina, from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania, writes:
Please do not vote in any way to continue funding the
Affordable Care Act. It in no way improves the situation of
the average American. Yes, it provides another option for
health insurance, but the rates are no more affordable than
the private insurances; and therefore, if a person cannot
afford the private insurance, there is no way they will be
able to afford the government plan. In addition, the act
places further strain on the system and will cause the
shutdown of more hospitals, cause more physicians to leave
the system, and further crowd our Nation's emergency
departments.
Catherine from DuBois wrote:
I am fortunate to have good insurance through my employer.
However, I found out from them that they may provide a lesser
form of health care due to the no-Cadillac plan. They
understandably want to avoid a penalty for providing a good
plan. This seems unfair to me, as if we are being penalized
for working and having a good employer. If they are willing
to provide a good health plan, why should they be penalized
and why should they have to lessen our coverage? I am very
distraught about many layers of the health care plan that are
starting to come to light. I don't know if anything can be
done.
I cannot stand idle as Congress acts like it is solving problems
when, in fact, it is failing to tackle the tough issues, health being
one of them. Let me be clear that a government shutdown is
unacceptable. However, each day we stall and fail to deal with these
challenges, the worse it gets for the next generation.
The real debate needs to be about how we get our fiscal house in
order and set a course of long-term job growth. Not until then will I
be satisfied. It should be about addressing the challenges the people
elected us to solve. Again, not until then will I be satisfied. It is
about trying to ``leave this world a little better than you found it.''
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