[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 129 (Wednesday, September 9, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H5856-H5857]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PILLOW FIGHT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Speier) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SPEIER. Mr. Speaker, like slumber parties and sleepovers, a
pillow fight doesn't sound like the type of activity that would leave
30 of our Nation's most promising future military leaders injured or
call into question the management practices of the Army's top academy.
Yet, that is exactly what happened.
We just learned that, on August 20, West Point freshman cadets got
together for an annual pillow fight, and according to press accounts,
they swung pillowcases packed with large, hard objects, thought to be
helmets. This fight badly injured 30 cadets, 24 of them diagnosed with
concussions. There were shoulders dislocated, one cadet diagnosed with
a hairline fracture of the cheekbone, some with broken noses and split
lips. Before the fight, upperclassmen commanders reportedly encouraged
the freshmen by telling them, ``If you don't come back with a bloody
nose, you didn't try hard enough.''
The American people deserve to know what happened here. West Point
and the Army have provided conflicting explanations, saying in one
instance, ``Many members of the plebe class spontaneously participated
in a pillow fight,'' while, in another, they suggested that a pillow
fight is a hallowed annual tradition, dating back to 1897. Well, which
is it?
West Point, apparently, doesn't know how to run this pillow fight
either.
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This rite of passage has a track record of similar injuries, followed
by ineffective attempts to make this event safer. Two years ago, for
example, the 2013 pillow fight was canceled after at least one cadet
placed a lockbox as a weapon in a pillowcase. Now it is back, and
according to reports, the helmets the cadets were using to give their
teammates concussions had been mandated as protection after injuries in
previous pillow fights.
May I remind everyone that this education is being paid for directly
by the taxpayers of this country. The U.S. Government funds everything
the Academy does to the tune of millions of dollars a year. It is
utterly irresponsible to think that a violent pillow fight is a way to
build camaraderie and create a professional military.
West Point has stated that all cadets are back on duty and that it is
pursuing an investigation, but Congress needs to know what kind of
investigation it is pursuing and when we will receive answers. As the
ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee's Subcommittee on
Oversight and Investigations, I am calling on the Army and the U.S.
Military Academy to provide a clear explanation of the incident and its
causes, as well as a full accounting of who was responsible and what
measures are being taken to prevent something like this from happening
again.
We will not create the world's most feared fighting force by hosting
a concussion-filled slumber party. We must ensure that the august
institution lives up to the exceptionally high standards that it
represents and that our future military leaders live up to the great
responsibility that rests on their shoulders. We can and we must do
better.
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