[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 128 (Tuesday, September 9, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5461-S5464]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRATULATING BOOKER T. WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL
Mr. RUBIO. Madam President, I appreciate the opportunity to speak for
a few moments this evening before the Senate adjourns its workday.
I begin with a couple points of personal privilege. One is to
congratulate a local high school in Miami, FL, by the name of Booker T.
Washington. This is a school which has now won 29 consecutive games.
They were the national champions last year in high school football, and
I think they are headed to that again this year.
But what really impresses me about this program is the work they do
with these young men. These young men come from a very challenging part
of Miami, of Overtown, and have really overcome tremendous obstacles in
their personal lives to achieve both in the classroom and on the field.
What I am most impressed about, as I tell Coach Harris every time I
get to see him, is that it is not the kind of football players he has
made them--because they are excellent--but the kind
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of young men they are becoming. I think they are worthy of
congratulations.
I was at their game on Friday against another very good team from
South Florida, both ranked in the top 10 nationally in high school. I
assure my colleagues from States such as California and Texas that
while their football is good, our football is special.
Enough bragging on them. They are a great team, and we are fortunate
to be able to witness what they have been able to do over the last
couple of years.
Remembering Steven Sotloff
The second point, which is related to my comments here in a moment,
is toward the family of Steven Sotloff, who lost his life tragically in
the Middle East over the last few days. We are all familiar with that
horrific tale.
Steven actually lived in Miami, FL, with his family literally blocks
away from where I go to church, literally blocks away from where I
live. He was a member of our community.
As I said last week at his memorial service, Steven had dedicated his
life to revealing the suffering and the reality of what was happening
in some of the most dangerous areas of the world. And while he lost his
life tragically, I think it is both ironic and appropriate that in his
last act, as he lost his life he revealed the true nature of what we
confront in that part of the world and the true nature of the Islamic
State, who they are, and what they are all about. This was a young man
who, as I said, dedicated his life not just to journalism but to
journalism in the most dangerous part of the world and in so doing was
able to bring that reality to us even in the last moments of his life.
Constitutional Amendment
Intriguing, of course, is the debate which has occurred here over the
last couple of days on this very interesting political matter. There is
a lot of hyperbole being thrown around about the influence money has on
our political process. I have found there is plenty of money on both
sides of every issue, and certainly all of my colleagues here,
including those who support this amendment before us, have been the
beneficiaries of vast amounts of campaign spending. In fact, as some of
my colleagues pointed to earlier, the majority of the money being
raised and spent in political campaigns, including from Wall Street, is
on behalf of many of the same people who are now here condemning it. If
in fact it is so unseemly, as they say, then perhaps they should take a
unilateral pledge not to accept these sources of funds. Of course they
won't, but it is an interesting dynamic at a time when our Nation faces
so many struggles.
Economic Challenges
What I hope and wish is that more time in this Chamber would be
dedicated to the issues this country faces, the ones that threaten our
status as a special and unique nation.
When we look across the country today at the economic challenges our
people are facing, they are pervasive and they are real. We see that
the 21st century has brought extraordinary and rapid change to our
lives. The economy that once produced millions of jobs which allowed
people to make it to the middle class and achieve that American dream--
many of those jobs have been outsourced. They are automated. They have
gone away.
Millions of people who have worked their entire lives are now
struggling to find a job that allows them to keep pace with the cost of
living. People are stuck in low-wage jobs, and I will have more to say
about that later this week. People are working for $9 or $10 an hour
and cannot make ends meet, especially when the cost of living continues
to rise in every facet of our lives.
We have students who have gone to school, graduated with a degree,
have done everything they were told they needed to do to succeed, and
now cannot find a job with the degree they sought, but they potentially
owe tens of thousands of dollars in student loans--an issue I am both
sensitive to and familiar with because I myself owed well over
$100,000, including on the day I swore into the Senate. This is a real
strain on people.
Whatever it may be, there are millions of Americans who are starting
to doubt whether that fundamental promise of America--that if they work
hard, they can get ahead and achieve happiness as they define it--is
still true. We understand the reasons why, and this is something we
need to address, and we address it by addressing the core challenges of
our time, which are not the different issues I heard thrown around here
today.
The core challenges of our time are that, first and foremost, the
nature of our economy has changed rapidly. America faces more global
competition than ever for investment and for innovation. There are more
countries than ever competing with us for investment and for
innovation, and tragically we haven't kept pace with that change. We
still have policies in this country deeply rooted in the last century,
in an era that has come and gone. We continue to impose taxes and
regulations and a national debt and a health care law and all sorts of
other measures that put us at a competitive disadvantage.
I wish the No. 1 priority of the Senate was to make America once
again the single-best place in the world to invest and to innovate so
we could create millions of higher paying 21st-century jobs.
I wish that were our No. 1 priority, followed closely by our No. 2
priority, which is equipping people with the skills they need for the
jobs of the 21st century. It wasn't that long ago that someone could
come to this country or grow up in this country, not have a lot of
advanced education, and still make it to the middle class. My parents
did it. They worked service sector jobs. My mother was a maid and a
cashier at hotels, and my father was a banquet bartender. They never
made a lot of money. Yet they achieved the American dream.
The American dream has never been about how much money you make or
how many things you own; it is about achieving happiness. For them,
achieving happiness was giving us the chance to do all the things they
never could, and they were able to do that in the 20th century in
service sector jobs.
That is still possible in America for many people, but it is
increasingly more difficult. I wish we would address that because the
reason it has become more difficult is because almost all the higher
paying jobs of the 21st century require some sort of advanced skill
acquisition, and millions of our people simply don't have it. The
reason is because our educational system is not a 21st-century one. Why
have we stigmatized vocational education in America? Why have we told
people that if they want to be an electrician or a plumber or a
truckdriver or a welder or any other number of vocational professions--
why have we stigmatized that when we know there are jobs available in
those fields and we need people to fill them?
The second issue is, what about the people trapped in those low-
paying jobs--the single mother who works as a home health aide for $10
an hour, the receptionist at a law firm making $11 an hour, the people
working in a fast food restaurant for $9 an hour? There is nothing
wrong with those jobs, but I am sure that as time goes on they want
more, and we have to equip them with the skills to be able to do more
so that the home health aide can become an ultrasound technician or a
dental hygienist not making $12 an hour but making $30 an hour, so that
the young man who is on the unemployment line can become a welder or a
building specialist or some other 21st-century career or profession
that gives him the skills he needs for those better paying jobs. I wish
we were focused on that.
By the way, how about informing our college students about the true
value of their degrees? In America--a free country--you can study
anything you want, but before you borrow $50,000 to attain a major in
Greek philosophy, you deserve to know that the market for Greek
philosophers is tight and that it is going to be difficult to pay off
that loan. I think every student in America who is taking out student
loans has the right to know how much people make when they graduate
from their school with that degree so they can make informed and
educated decisions about whether they should borrow money to pay for
the specific degree they seek.
This is an important issue, and I wish that was our second top
priority here, that we would focus more on how to help people trapped
in low-paying jobs, how to help people who are struggling with the
challenges of the 21st century, how to help these people acquire the
skills they need for better paying jobs.
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We have seen virtually no conversations about those two issues here in
the last few days.
No wonder people are disgusted with Washington. We don't spend any
time here talking about what they are worried about. We spend very
little time talking about what they are concerned about. Our discourse
in this body is so irrelevant to their daily lives that they have
reason not just to be disgusted with politics but quite frankly to be
tempted to give up on us and our ability to address any of these
challenges.
World Events
There is a third 21st-century challenge and one I hope to speak about
in the moments I have remaining; that is, the reality that world events
have an impact on us greater than ever before. I am not saying world
events never used to matter. Of course they did. But we are
increasingly members of a growing global economy, which means that
today when there is instability on this planet, it isn't just our
national security that is threatened, it is our economic security as
well.
We are 6 percent of the world's population. In order to achieve more
prosperity, we have to sell more things to more people everywhere in
the world. But that depends on peace and stability across the planet,
and we can't have peace and stability when the world is in chaos. So I
would say today that foreign relations and foreign policy matter more
from an economic perspective than they ever have in the history of this
Nation. I wish there were more focus in this body on what is happening
all over the world because the world is in total chaos.
In the Asia-Pacific region, China is undergoing a dramatic
modernization of its military capabilities--increasingly challenging,
for example, U.S. air power in the region and increasingly acting out
on illegitimate territorial claims.
In Latin America we have seen an erosion of democratic order, the
rise of antidemocratic governments that threaten to erode almost two
decades of democratic progress in the region.
By the way, in this body we have endeavored to address one of those
challenges in Venezuela--an outrage, a place full of corruption and
human rights violations, an anti-American government that does
everything possible to undermine us and our interests, not just the
interests of their own people. We have been blocked in our efforts to
address it because somehow the Venezuelan Government, acting through
CITGO--a wholly owned company of the Venezuelan Government--got
lobbyists to come here to the Senate and lobby for blockage and
stoppage of a measure we were ready to pass by unanimous consent.
So I come to the floor to ask the majority leader to please schedule
a vote on these sanctions on Venezuela because it will pass
overwhelmingly. Do not allow lobbyists for the Venezuelan Government to
be able to come to Washington, DC, and impede action on this matter.
In Europe we see chaos too. Russia has invaded Ukraine. Maybe they
switched uniforms and have lied about it, but they have invaded
Ukraine, and NATO has been helpless to do anything about it. I hope we
will be more forceful in our response because the implications not just
for that region but for the world are very significant.
But the one I want to close on tonight is focused on--and this
relates to Steven Sotloff, as discussed a moment ago--what is happening
with ISIL.
Tomorrow night I believe the President will give the most important
address of his Presidency--perhaps the most important address of any
Presidency in the last decade. Tomorrow night I hope he comes before
the American people and explains to them what is truly at stake. I was
about to say that I thought he should have done this weeks ago, maybe
months ago, but I am glad he is doing this.
I would ask my Republican colleagues--all of my colleagues--that at
this time of such critical national security importance, we try as much
as possible to rally behind our efforts to address this challenge
because it is a real challenge. If and when this group comes after the
United States, both around the world or here at home, they will not be
coming after Republicans and they will not be coming after Democrats;
they will be coming after Americans; the threat we face is real.
We have a tradition in this government of rallying together and
acting in a nonpartisan way when it comes to national security. That is
not just something we do because it is polite; it is something we must
do because unity is important in order to address these challenges.
I have been critical of the President. I have been critical of the
slow response. I think it is valid to point out the mistakes he has
made so we can learn and so he can be held accountable. But I also
think it is important to look forward at what we can do now.
While I thought that what the President is about to do he should have
done weeks and months ago, I am glad he is finally doing it. Tomorrow
night's address to the Nation is an important one. I hope all Americans
tune in.
Here are the three points I hope the President will make: First, I
hope he clearly outlines to our fellow Americans what is at stake here.
ISIL is not just a collection of crazy terrorists. It is the single
most dangerous terrorist challenge this Nation has ever faced. We faced
some dangerous terrorists before. We are familiar with Al Qaeda and
their capability. We are familiar with some of the nation-states we
faced down in the past.
This group is uniquely dangerous for a number of reasons. First, it
is by far the best funded terrorist operation perhaps in all of human
history. They are generating millions of dollars a day alone just from
oil revenue. Second, they are replete with foreign fighters, including
thousands of foreign fighters that have visa waiver passports from
countries where all they have to do is buy a plane ticket to come to
the United States. Among those, by the way, are Americans, including
one who is from Florida who even came back to the United States for a
number of weeks and then returned and conducted a suicide attack on
behalf of this group.
Last but not least, they control territory. We know that in order to
carry out the 9/11 attacks Al Qaeda needed a safe haven in parts of
Afghanistan. These folks in the Islamic State--these lunatics--control
a vast space. Most of northern Syria and vast portions of Iraq are
under their control. This makes this group very significant and
dangerous with intentions not just on taking over Iraq but dominating
the region, ultimately moving into Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, and
other places, and conducting attacks against the United States.
It is simple. ISIL cannot fulfill its regional ambitions if it
doesn't drive the United States out of the Middle East, and the only
way they can draw us out of the Middle East is by terrorizing us out of
the Middle East. To terrorize us they will have to conduct terrorist
attacks against us both abroad and here in the homeland. Here we have
the most well-funded, most capable terrorist group in modern history
with a clear intention and desire to attack us in order to terrorize us
out of the region. This is a very serious national security threat, and
it is important for the President to clearly explain that to our fellow
Americans.
The second thing I hope we will do is outline a clear goal about what
we intend to achieve and that goal should be unequivocal: the complete
defeat and annihilation of ISIL. That goal is accomplished in three
steps: first, by stopping their continued spread; second, by eroding
their capability and control of territory; and ultimately by defeating
them as an organization--by eliminating them as an organization.
So after he has outlined who this group is and why it is in our
national interest to defeat them and he has outlined his goal to defeat
them, I hope the President will explain to the American people in as
much detail as possible--and clearly there are things he cannot share
for operational security purposes--but in as much detail as possible
how he intends to defeat them.
I think this is a multi-faceted process, but it should include the
continued air strikes in northern Iraq. Air strikes are most successful
when they are done in coordination with Kurds and Iraqi ground forces
there on the ground now--by continuing to supply and equip the Kurds by
giving them logistical support they need in order to take on the
supplies and get them out to the troops by hopefully working with the
new Iraqi government that was just formed to stand as a unified
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Iraqi government that is capable not just of supplying a government
that unites all of the people of Iraq but also one that is capable of
fielding security forces capable of conducting operations without
dividing the country along the Shia and Sunni lines.
We also need more cooperation from Arabs in the region because they
are immediately threatened. They are coming after the Crown in Saudi
Arabia; they are coming after the Crown in Jordan. They are eventually
going to move into Lebanon as well. They pose a real and present threat
to all the nations in this region and they must act. We need their
cooperation both militarily and diplomatically but also by using the
megaphone that the government and state-run media provides to
stigmatize this group by revealing them for who they truly are. There
should be nothing romantic about ISIL in the minds of any Arab, about
joining their ranks or their efforts. We need the government's help in
spreading that word and revealing that reality.
By the way, we also need to work with them and other regional
governments--especially the Turks--to help cut off ISIL's access to
funds and to fighters. The Turks need to step up and do a better job of
securing that border. Cutting off their funds requires us to go after
their most significant source of funds and that is the refinery
capacity in Syria. I will have more to say about that in a moment. We
should target that because the black market sale of oil in Syria is the
single and fastest growing source of revenue for ISIL, but it is also a
fuel for their terrorist operations.
But ultimately there is no way to defeat ISIL without defeating them
in Syria. Someone is going to have to confront them in Syria and defeat
them. It is my hope that it will be a combination of U.S. air power and
qualified, well-equipped, well-trained competent moderate rebel forces
within Syria, because here is the problem: If you eliminate ISIL but
you don't have some sort of capable moderate group left behind, then
all you are doing is replacing ISIL with al-Nusra or some other radical
Islamic group on the ground there. So it is important that we do both.
I know no one wants to get into another conflict. We have no choice.
We are going to have to deal with ISIL. The choice is not whether we
deal with them. The choice is do we deal with them now while they are
still growing or do we deal with them later when they have grown and
when they have controlled vast and larger territories than they do now,
when they have more fighters and are better funded. That is the choice
before us.
I submit to you that I know of no medical condition that is easier to
treat later rather than earlier. Every medical condition that I know--
ISIL has been compared to cancer--every cancer that I know is easier to
treat if you catch it earlier rather than later. I would say this is
true with this cancer, ISIL. If we deal with them sooner, it will not
be costless or fast, but it will be easier to deal with them then, than
if we wait until later. But to do so will ultimately require someone to
confront them and defeat them within Syria itself, and defeating them
in Syria alone is not enough. We have to ensure that there is some
group there on the ground, some moderate rebel force that can take over
not just from them but from the Assad regime.
There is collusion between Assad and ISIL. The refineries that ISIL
controls in Syria are former Assad refineries which he won't bomb
because he hopes to take them one day intact so he can use them. There
is collusion between them. If anybody has any illusions about who Assad
really is, I hope the President will outline this for us tomorrow. It
is important for us and for our future.
I will make one more point about why this is the most important
speech that the President will give. Because this threat will probably
outlive his Presidency. We have to be prepared for the fact that ISIL
may not be defeated in 24 months, that the next President of the United
States and many of us--whether it is serving here, whether it is
controlled by Republicans or Democrats--will have to remain committed
to this goal, because this threat in all likelihood will outlive the
Presidency of Barack Obama. It is important for him to put in place a
clear goal and a plan that can survive his Presidency so that we can
carry out this task. It is critical for our country.
I wish the President the best on his address tomorrow, and I hope we
can come together in a bipartisan way to confront and defeat this evil
before it is too late.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
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