[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 16 (Tuesday, January 31, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H803-H808]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRUMP'S REFUGEE ACTIONS
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Ms. Cheney). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 3, 2017, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Gohmert) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. GOHMERT. Madam Speaker, I might say it is great seeing you in the
chair. You are a natural fit. Maybe we can do something about that at
some point.
It is an honor to speak in this hallowed Hall. There has been much
ado made about contrived misrepresentations about what has gone on with
President Trump's executive order regarding seven countries that the
Obama administration designated as being problems when it comes to
refugees coming from those countries.
It has been absolutely incredible. And I think some of us were
talking that it really exemplifies why networks like CNN--that was the
one, the only 24-hour cable news network--have lost so much to other
networks. MSNBC, CNBC, and even Fox News got caught up in some of the
misrepresentations, and I couldn't believe that they were spending the
kind of time talking about a contrived issue.
Now, there was a problem in some innocent people being delayed and
improperly handled, people who didn't deserve that. I am familiar with
how that feels because I deal, like most of us do in this body, with
TSA on virtually a weekly or even sometimes more often basis.
There is a great article here by John Hayward from January 29. Mr.
Hayward says:
``The sober and logical reasons for President Donald Trump's
executive order on refugees and visitors are rising above the noise
after an evening of hysterical over-reactions and emotional meltdowns
on the Nation's TV networks.
``Advocates of sane, secure immigration policy have long noted that
it's almost impossible to have a reasonable discussion of the refugee
and immigration issues, because it's been sentimentalized and
politicized beyond the realm of rational thought.
``This weekend brings them another superb example of media-magnified
shrieking about fascism, bleating about `white nationalists,' howling
about `religious persecution,' false invocations of the Constitution,
and theatrical sobbing on behalf of the Statue of Liberty.''
We do have that water coming off the Statute of Liberty being
analyzed, so that we can determine whether or not it is tears or
something else.
``For readers who want to wallow in the emotion, examples can be
found in this handy dossier of hysteria compiled by the Washington
Post. But clear-eyed adults prefer to examine plain facts about Trump's
executive order:
``1. It is NOT a `Muslim ban.' ''
I have the executive order here. Unlike those in the Senate and those
in the media, who were just excoriating President Trump and anyone
involved in this executive order, I actually read it, unlike those
people. I read the executive order.
{time} 1745
And because I read the executive order, I understood there was no ban
against Muslims, no ban against Islam. It was very straightforward. And
Hayward's article points that out.
He said: ``You will search the executive order in vain for mentions
of Islam, or any other religion. By Sunday morning, the media began
suffering acute attacks of honesty and writing headlines such as
`Trump's Latest Executive Order: Banning People From 7 Countries and
More.''
And that was from CNN. And, Madam Speaker, I am very pleased that CNN
finally got around to having a more truthful headline.
``Granted, CNN still slips in the phrase `Muslim-majority countries'
into every article about the order, including the post in which they
reprinted its text in full, but CNN used the word `Muslim,' not Trump.
The order applies to all citizens of Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Somalia,
Sudan and Yemen. It does not specify Muslims. The indefinite hold on
Syrian refugees
[[Page H804]]
will affect Christians and Muslims alike,'' not to mention people of
every other religion and people of no religion.
``As Tim Carney at the Washington Examiner points out, the largest
Muslim-majority countries in the world are not named in the Executive
Order.
``More countries may be added to the moratorium in the days to come,
as the Secretary of Homeland Security has been instructed to complete a
30-day review of nations that don't provide adequate information for
vetting applicants.
``It is also noteworthy that the ban is not absolute. Exceptions for
`foreign nationals traveling on diplomatic visas, North Atlantic Treaty
Organization visas, C-2 visas for travel to the United Nations, and G-
1, G-2, G-3 and G-4 visas' are expressly made in the order. The
Departments of State and Homeland Security can also grant exceptions on
a `case-by-case basis' ''--that is all in the executive order--``and
`when in the national interest, issue visas or other immigration
benefits to nationals of countries for which visas and benefits are
otherwise blocked.'
``There is a provision in the Executive Order that says applications
based on religious persecution will be prioritized `provided that the
religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual's
country of nationality.' ''
And so it is important to note here, I think from the executive
order, that it says applications based on religious persecution. That
means that people that have applied for visas or immigration benefits
to come into the United States who, themselves, raise their religion as
a reason to let them into the United States, those need to be
prioritized based on whether or not their religion is actually being
persecuted, those holding those religious beliefs are actually being
persecuted. And I think that is a rather intelligent way to approach
things.
But in those cases, it would be the applicant that would raise the
issue of religion, not the Trump administration, not the State
Department, not Homeland Security. It would be the foreign applicant
trying to come into the United States who would be the one to raise
that issue.
Now, the article goes on: ``This has been denounced as a `stealth
Muslim ban' by some of the very same people who were conspicuously
silent when the Obama administration pushed Christians--who are the
most savagely persecuted minority in the Middle East, with only the
Yazidis offering real competition--to the back of the migration line.''
So it is important to note that, for years, this administration has
been part of the discrimination and persecution against Christians in
the world against whom there has been a genocide in progress.
So when the head of the U.N. was in charge of the refugee program and
was asked why is there not a similar percentage of Christians coming in
as refugees to other countries to the percentage that Christians make
up in that nation they come from, basically, the man who is now head of
United Nations said, well, it is important to leave them where they
have this historical presence, basically.
So in other words, yes, there is a genocide going on. They want to
kill off every Christian in those areas, every Christian in the Middle
East, and so the U.N. now Secretary General says let's leave them in
the area where they are being wiped off the map, brutally killed. Let's
leave them there until we can say this place where they were
historically has now shown there are none there. They have all been
brutally murdered as the U.N. watched and didn't help. It is outrageous
how uncivilized this United Nations has become.
I filed a bill, and I still think we should bring it to the floor,
that would require a complete defunding by the United States of the
United Nations until such time as they withdraw the resolution of the
Security Council that condemned Israel.
I mean, it is like a teacher of mine in the fifth grade after I got
beat up by a bully who had been held back two grades, was about 18
inches taller. She pointed to the class and said: This is what happens
when little boys try to play with the big boys.
Well, that is basically what the Obama administration had been doing.
It is basically what the U.N. had been doing. They took the side of the
mean bullies that had been devastating the Christians in the area.
Having talked to so many Christians who were living in Syria and who
the mainstream press say, oh, yeah, they are big Assad fans--no, they
were not big Assad fans. They knew that he could be quite brutal, but
their only point that the mainstream media in the United States and
most of the world was missing is that Assad prevented Christians from
being the victims of a genocide; and as Assad was weakened, the
assaults and the murders and the rapes of Christians increased
exponentially.
I do think that the United States may still be held to account in the
ledger of world history--what I would submit is God's ledger--for
having the power and the moral right to stop a genocide of Christians
in the Middle East and we participated in leaving them where they were,
as did the U.N., so that they could be brutally murdered.
I am going back to Mr. Hayward's article.
``2. The order''--talking about the executive order of Donald Trump.
``The order is based on security reviews conducted by President Barack
Obama's deputies.''
And, Madam Speaker, for those in the mainstream media, I think it is
important to repeat that line. President Trump's executive order that
didn't ban Muslims but that ordered a temporary pause on people from
certain countries from whom we had no information or inadequate
information to vet the people that were coming in, it was based on
security reviews conducted by President Barack Obama's deputies.
``As White House counselor Kellyanne Conway pointed out on `Fox News
Sunday,' the seven nations named in Trump's executive order are drawn
from the Terrorist Prevention Act of 2015. The 2015 `Visa Waiver
Program Improvement and Terrorist Travel Prevention Act of 2015' named
Iraq, Iran, Sudan, and Syria, while its 2016 update added Libya,
Somalia, and Yemen.
`` `These are countries that have a history of training, harboring,
exporting terrorists. We can't keep pretending and look the other way,'
said Conway.
``3. The moratorium is largely temporary. Citizens of the seven
countries''--and by the way, in this executive order that President
Trump signed, there is no mention of the countries. It refers to what
President Obama signed declaring, first, the four countries, and then
the three countries.
It just refers to that that President Obama signed. He doesn't single
out or name the countries; and I can't help but think, as intelligent
as some of the people are that are assisting President Trump, that they
showed a massive amount of naivete because it appears that they
thought, if in the executive order President Trump refers to documents
that President Obama signed designating these countries as countries
where we didn't have adequate information, then even the mainstream
media would have to go back to President Trump's and look above his
signature and see that these are places that President Obama said were
threats.
And then they would--having some semblance of a conscience--have to
point out that actually Trump is just putting in an executive order of
what basically Obama signed off on but didn't go ahead and carry out
what needed to be done based on that law.
But, as I say, these folks were rather naive. And as the saying goes
in Washington, no matter how cynical you get, it is never enough to
catch up in this town. And so the Trump administration, the Trump
advisers have a lot of growing to do to understand just how unfair the
media can be. It is a valid presumption that if you don't name the
countries, you make the mainstream media go back and look at what
President Obama signed that they will understand, oh, this is what
President Obama proclaimed that he is basing this on, so we can't be so
mean to President Trump.
Well, it didn't turn out that way, and they are learning that just
because it would make great sense, be common sense in most areas of the
country--that is areas that are not the fringe
[[Page H805]]
that voted for Hillary Clinton, but most of the country would say it is
common sense. It isn't common within the original 10-by-10 mile
boundaries of the District of Columbia, which are no longer 10 by 10
after ceding the land west of the Potomac to Virginia back in the
1840s.
But number four in this Hayward article: ``Obama banned immigration
from Iraq, and Carter banned it from Iran.
`` `Fact-checking' website PolitiFact twists itself into knots to
avoid giving a `true' rating to the absolutely true fact that Jimmy
Carter banned Iranian immigration in 1980, unless applicants could
prove they were enemies of the Khomenei theocracy.
``One of PolitiFact's phony talking points states that Carter `acted
against Iranian nationals, not an entire religion.' As noted above,
Trump's Executive Order is precisely the same--it does not act against
an `entire religion,' it names seven countries.''
But, you know, I had some personal experience with PolitiFact. I used
the word earlier today, ``hack,'' ``political hack,'' in an interview,
and that is what I think of PolitiFact. They shouldn't be called
PolitiFact. They ought to be called ``PolitiHack.''
{time} 1800
I know I was speaking here on the House floor--I think it was last
year--and I made a statement based on data received by the Senate on
the percentage of American citizens and the percentage of noncitizens--
non-American citizens--who were in Federal prison for possession of a
controlled substance. The reason I singled out possession was because
President Obama has tried to make it appear that people in Federal
prison have gotten such a bad rap because they really--just simple
possession--they didn't deserve to be in prison so long. There is this
whole intimation that, gee, there are people in Federal prison for
possession of controlled substances who should have been let out a long
time ago, and that is why we needed to have our laws changed.
Well, since the President had mentioned people in Federal prison for
possession, I singularly pointed out that the huge majority of people
in Federal prison for simple possession were not American citizens. I'm
going from my memory, but, apparently, PolitiFact wanted to do as they
normally do and cover for the Democrats and try to do a hatchet job on
a Republican since they are not political fact, they are political
hack. So my communications person gets an email from ``PolitiHack''
that uses the name PolitiFact and wanted to know the source of my
information because they were going to rate my statement. She provided
the facts as provided by this administration to the Senate.
Clearly what I had said was exactly true. I had quoted specifically
from the data from the Obama administration, and it was 100 percent
accurate. So then they come back--they thought they would catch me in
not having proper information, and they come back to my communications
person and said: Well, we have got information from the Bureau of
Prisons that showed that if you look at all offenses that involved
controlled substances, the percentage of noncitizens is not nearly that
high. So why would he use just possession?
The point was because President Obama had used simple possession to
try to make it look as if people in Federal prison were not there for
very serious crimes, and there is certainly a smaller number of people
in Federal prison for possession than for dealing drugs and other
charges.
So in the end, after all the back and forth, they basically
perpetuated a fraud upon the American people, PolitiFact--a bunch of
political hacks--by not being willing to say that my statement was 100
percent true because they, in some contorted manner, did not want to
point out that my statement was exactly true. They refer basically to,
oh, that the number wasn't near that high of people involved in
controlled substance. I didn't mention everybody with controlled
substance.
So that is just a parenthetical in Hayward's article for me because I
know personally PolitiFact is a political joke if what they were doing
was not so serious in harming the American people by misrepresenting
the true facts of what is going on. I hope that at some point being
still remaining an entrepreneurial country for a little longer--at
least we have got nearly 4 years to go that we can be assured of as an
entrepreneurial country--at least in that time perhaps we will have an
entrepreneurial group that will rise up and start scoring PolitiFact to
show just how unfair they are, and, on occasion, when they are actually
fair, show that as well so the American public can actually score the
illegitimate scorers.
But going back to this article, it says: ``As for Barack Obama, he
did indeed ban immigration from Iraq, for much longer than Trump's
order bans it from the seven listed nations, and none of the people
melting down today uttered a peep of protest. Richard Grenell summed it
up perfectly in a Tweet: `Obama took 6 months to review screening for 1
country. Trump will take 3 months for 7 countries. . . . ' ''
This article goes on: ``5. Trump's refugee caps are comparable to
Obama's pre-2016 practices: David French, who was touted as a spoiler
candidate to keep Donald Trump out of the White House during the
presidential campaign--in other words, not a big Trump fan--wrote a
lengthy and clear-headed analysis of the Executive Order for National
Review. He noted that after the moratorium ends in 120 days''--and that
is one section. It ends in 120 days, the other section is 90 days,
another part says they will have 30 days to produce a report.
But it goes on to say: ``Trump caps refugee admissions at 50,000 per
year . . . which is roughly the same as President Obama's admissions in
2011 and 2012, and not far below the 70,000 per year cap in place from
2013 to 2015.
``Obama had fairly low caps on refugees during the worst years of the
Syrian civil war. He didn't throw open the doors to mass refugee
admissions until his final year in office. Depending on how Trump's
review of Syrian refugee policy turns out, he's doing little more than
returning admissions to normal levels after a four-month pause for
security reviews.
``6. The Executive Order is legal: Those invoking the Constitution to
attack Trump's order are simply embarrassing themselves. The President
has clear statutory authority to take these actions. As noted, his
predecessors did so, without much controversy.
``Most of the legal arguments against Trump's order summarized by USA
Today are entirely specious, such as attacking him for `banning an
entire religion,' which the order manifestly does not do. Critics of
the order have a political opinion that it will in effect `ban
Muslims,' but that's not what it says. Designating specific nations as
trouble spots and ordering a pause is entirely within the President's
authority, and there is ample precedent to prove it.
``It should be possible to argue with the reasoning behind the order,
or argue that it will have negative unintended consequences, without
advancing hollow legal arguments. Of course, this is America 2017, so a
wave of lawsuits will soon be sloshing through the courts.
``7. This Executive Order is a security measure, not an arbitrary
expression of supposed xenophobia. Conway stressed the need to enhance
immigration security from trouble spots in her `Fox News Sunday'
interview. French also addressed the subject in his post:
``When we know our enemy is seeking to strike America and its allies
through the refugee population, when we know they've succeeded in
Europe, and when the administration has doubts about our ability to
adequately vet the refugees we admit into this nation, a pause is again
not just prudent but arguably necessary. It is important that we
provide sufficient aid and protection to keep refugees safe and healthy
in place, but it is not necessary to bring Syrians to the United States
to fulfill our vital moral obligations.''
The article goes on. It is well written, points are well made, and I
would humbly submit, Madam Speaker, that we had the statistics last
year that showed that for the cost of bringing one Syrian refugee to
the United States for 1 year, we could help take care of 12 Syrian
refugees in place in a safe zone over near their home.
[[Page H806]]
Now, I am very encouraged that even though President Obama simply
would not ever agree or strive to have a safe zone in areas near the
refugees' homes so we can take care of 12 times more than we can
possibly bring to our country for the same cost, and he is working on
that, and he has got some agreements, and it looks like that may be a
possibility. We give air cover, help create safe zones in areas there
in the Middle East so the refugees can live without being killed and
horribly brutally murdered and abused. That makes more sense. It
appears that the President has worked with or talked with the Saudi
authorities and perhaps will be able to get something like that worked
out.
There were people just quite emotional over the fact that Saudi
Arabia was not mentioned and Egypt was not mentioned. Actually, the
order did not mention any nations by name. The Trump executive order
simply referred to what President Obama signed off on which included
seven countries. These are seven countries where it shouldn't even be
arguable among people of common sense that we do not have, have not
received, and cannot get adequate information from which to determine
whether people wanting to come into the United States are actually
refugees or if they are part of al Qaeda, al Nusra, and ISIS, and they
want to come kill Americans and end our freedoms and our way of life.
That is why such an executive order was entirely appropriate.
Although I supported a different candidate for President for over a
year, I applaud President Trump in caring so deeply about the American
public that he would take the honorable and appropriate steps to
protect Americans that the last administration would not take.
A great article in Townhall from Matt Vespa is entitled: ``Friendly
Reminder: Obama Selected The List Of Seven Countries in Trump's
Executive Order.'' That certainly should be noted yet again.
Another great article here by Seth Frantzman says: ``Obama's
Administration Made the `Muslim Ban' Possible and the Media Won't Tell
You.'' It is a good article there.
I think this article from John Hayward from January 27 on Breitbart
may give us insight as to why there is so much howling by CAIR and CAIR
associates because there were implications of people involved with CAIR
in the Holy Land Foundation trial.
{time} 1815
One just merely need to go look at the pleadings. Here in Congress,
since Eric Holder and Loretta Lynch went through their entire terms as
Attorneys General and continued to refuse to provide the discovery
documents in the Holy Land Foundation trial that were provided in
pretrial to the convicted terrorist supporters, it is pretty
incomprehensible for some of us.
On one occasion, when Attorney General Holder pointed out that, well,
there may be some classified issues involved, I pointed out to him--
apparently, it went right over his head and he couldn't discern--the
fact that the Justice Department gave the documents I am requesting to
people that were then convicted of supporting terrorism.
If Justice could give them to the terrorists without concern about
being classified, surely they could give them to Members of Congress.
Although some of us may argue in such ways that it terrifies some
people, we are not terrorists and we are authorized to receive
classified information. We should have been authorized in Congress to
receive the same documents that the Justice Department provided to the
terrorist supporters who were convicted.
This article from John Hayward, January 27, points out that:
``According to Reuters, a `factional' debate is under way within the
Trump administration over adding the Muslim Brotherhood to the State
Department and Treasury lists of foreign terrorist organizations.
``This is a measure often called for by critics of the Brotherhood as
Center for Security Policy President Frank Gaffney, who once again
recommended an official terrorist designation on Wednesday's edition of
Breitbart News Daily.
``A source in the Trump transition team told Reuters the effort to so
designate the Muslim Brotherhood is led by National Security Adviser
Michael Flynn. The source was personally in agreement with Flynn.
``In Congress, a bill to add the Muslim Brotherhood to the official
terrorist list was introduced this month by Senator Ted Cruz and
Representative Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida. Secretary of State nominee
Rex Tillerson denounced the Muslim Brotherhood as an `agent of radical
Islam' during his confirmation hearings, but he has not made public
statements regarding adding them to the foreign terrorist organization
list.
However, other Trump advisers, and members of the intelligence and
law-enforcement communities, argue the Brotherhood has `evolved
peacefully in some countries,' Reuters claims.
``They also expressed the pragmatic concern that going hard on the
Muslim Brotherhood could complicate diplomatic relations with nations
such as Turkey. It would unquestionably, however, please such U.S.
allies as Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia, although
there have been signs the Saudis might be softening on the Brotherhood
as they search for allies against ISIS in Iran.
``One official familiar with the State Department's deliberations
conceded that the Muslim Brotherhood's ideology has influenced such
terrorist groups as Hamas, but since it is a large, loose organization
spread over several nations, it could be legally difficult to apply the
terrorist designation. Allied nations such as Britain have also
expressed suspicions about the Brotherhood's influence, while stopping
short of a formal terrorist designation.''
So this is important to note. It is a good article. But I can't help
but wonder if the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR, may
be getting quite concerned about the potential for designating their
friends in the Muslim Brotherhood.
There may be a mutual relationship there. There may be people that
are part of both groups. No doubt, CAIR is getting quite concerned
about heightened talk about naming the Muslim Brotherhood as the
terrorist organization they are. It is just that they don't use
terrorist tactics, as some of them have indicated before, when they are
making great progress without terrorism, but knowing that eventually,
after they get as far as they can with peaceful methods, they will
ultimately be resorting to terrorism to bring the United States and
other Western civilizations, countries into the international
caliphate, wherein we are ruled by a caliph.
So it is interesting times. Here, tonight, in perhaps an hour and a
half or so, our new President will name the nominee to fill the
Honorable Antonin Scalia's spot on the Supreme Court. He is still
greatly missed. He was a great man. He was a great jurist. He was a
great patriot and he was great for America and our freedoms. So we will
look forward to hearing that.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from South Carolina (Mr.
Sanford).
Privacy Protection
Mr. SANFORD. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Texas for the
way that, on a nightly basis, he comes down to the well and helps
inform people. Jefferson, in the writings of our Founding Fathers,
talked about how important it was to have an informed electorate.
I just really appreciate the way the gentleman gives people clarity
and information that they can then digest and make their decisions
with. That process of informing is, I think, a vital part of the
politic. He does it on the daily basis, and I appreciate it. His doing
so matters to me and to the people that I represent.
I appreciate so much the gentleman's yielding because I want to talk
just a couple of minutes about a bill that I introduced today entitled
the REAL ID Privacy Protection Act.
It is a bipartisan bill. It is supported from the Republican side by
people like Mark Meadows. It is supported on the Democratic side by
Democrats like Chellie Pingree from Maine. I think they do so because
it is a commonsense bill that gets at some of the deficiencies that one
can find in REAL ID.
Quite specifically, what it does is eliminate the requirement that
your personal documentation and documents be held and archived, in
essence,
[[Page H807]]
in warehouses for 10 years. It will not require your stuff to be out in
government databases for 10 years. Secondly, it eliminates the
requirement that the DMV databases be co-linked. Thirdly, it creates
uniformity with regard to the way in which extensions are granted.
So the bottom line is your driver's license could still be used to
get you in the Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort or it could be used to
go into Joint Base Charleston or a whole host of other facilities
around this country. More significantly, for the average flying public,
you could still use your driver's license next year to be able to get
on a plane in the United States of America.
Why is all this important?
It is important because individual privacy matters. It is important
because equal treatment under the law matters. It is important because
the 10th Amendment really matters. States have a role in which the
Founding Fathers intended the Federal Government to fit with the State
government, to fit with local government, and to fit with individual
prerogative.
Now let's examine each one of those couple of things. One, if you
look at South Carolina driver's licenses, just as an example, they are
secure. We have holograms. We have barcodes. We have a whole host of
different things that create security.
Yet, in the wake of 9/11, what the Federal Government, Homeland
Security, and others decided at that time was that, in essence, what
they wanted was a de facto national ID card and for the Federal
Government to, in essence, federalize what had previously been a State
function, with State's issuing driver's licenses.
There is not a Federal driver's license. Texas has driver's licenses,
South Carolina has driver's licenses, Florida has driver's licenses.
Each State may have a little bit different way of doing so, but it was
a state prerogative.
In the wake of that Federal requirement--I was wearing a different
hat at the time; I was wearing a Governor's hat--I joined with, for
instance, Governor Schweitzer from Montana in saying: Wait, this
doesn't make sense. The States still have a vital role here. This role
does not need to be federalized. We pushed back and, long story short,
we were successful with many others in that effort. Yet, what is
happening is many of those deadline requirements are now reemerging and
approaching.
The question we have to ask ourselves in Congress is: What are we
going to do about it? Are we going to push back again? Or are we going
to try and slow this again? Or are we just going to let the Federal
Government come in and steamroll what has been a State function?
I think it is important that we act, and that is why we introduced
this bill. It, again, gets at three important things. One, privacy
matters. Quite simply, if government doesn't need your stuff, they
don't get your stuff. I think that is a simple premise. Again, let me
say it again. If government really doesn't need your stuff, it
shouldn't get your stuff.
What do I mean by that?
What I mean is, if the requirement, as is now the case, is that the
Federal Government take your personal information and they archive it
for the next 10 years, do you really feel that you are more secure?
I would argue that is not at all the case. I would argue that it is
much better to have a system that, when you take your birth
certificate, you take your marriage license, you take your divorce
papers, you take your citizenship papers, whatever it is that you have,
take it all, let folks at the government level decide whether you are
who you are or whether you are not who you are, and then give your
stuff back to you. They don't need to house it for the next 10 years.
That is all this bill does. If you house it for the next 10 years, in
fact, there is a considerable cost. The unfunded mandate to States is
$17 billion.
So what we are saying is make the determination. Take, again, all
your stuff, look at it, but then give it back, rather than requiring
States to archive this stuff for the next 10 years.
It also matters because, again, of individual human privacy. Whether
it is a divorce decree, whether it is a marriage license, whether it is
citizenship papers, whatever it is, we have been in hearings over the
last couple of weeks where it was proven that the Russians were quite
involved in hacking of American databases.
Why do we want to open that up to Chinese hackers, Russian hackers,
to whoever it is, if it isn't required and necessary from the
standpoint of security?
Two, this bill simply gets at the notion that States matter. The 10th
Amendment matters. Patton was once attributed with saying that, if you
tell a soldier to take a hill, tell them to take the hill. Don't tell
them how to attack the hill.
The same is true of the Federal Government as it relates to States.
Give us a secured requirement, but then allow Texas to go about their
way of taking the hill and South Carolina to come with its way of
attacking the hill, as long as we take the hill, which is the necessary
security requirement.
I think it is also important from the standpoint of security that one
thing we have learned over time is that centralization of data does not
make data more secure. We have a host of different breaches that have
occurred at the Federal level that prove this point.
I think that one of the things that is interesting about Pearl Harbor
is that the boats were in one spot and it was one-stop shopping for the
Japanese. So, in fact, what we have seen in terms of military strategy
going forward is people spread assets out. They don't want them
congregated all in one spot so that an attacker would be able to take
down a multitude of different assets with one particular raid. I think
the same is true in the information age, as it relates to databases.
Finally, this bill is about equal treatment under the law. I think
that what many States--South Carolina would be among them--are
concerned about is: Is this too subjective? If you happen to be a blue
State versus a red State, does that have some degree of determination
in the way in which you get an extension or you don't get an extension?
{time} 1830
Eighteen States and territories have been granted extensions. Seven
States have been granted very limited extensions. All this bill does is
say, Let's make that process transparent so that States can look one to
the other and say, How was it that you got an extension but I didn't? I
think that that level of uniformity would make sure that nobody
suspects this system of being arbitrary or capricious by nature.
That is in simple form what the bill does. Again, it is about your
privacy. We have had a long debate over the course of our country on
security versus freedom, and what we don't want to do is give up
certain, in essence, soul conditions, if you will, for freedom,
including this notion of federalism, in our efforts to be secure. It is
about recognizing that States are not wards of the Federal government,
that a $7 billion unfunded liability really does matter to the
taxpayers of different States. Finally, it is about equal treatment
under the law.
Again, the bill is called the REAL ID Privacy Protection Act. I would
ask Members to join us on that bill. I would ask folks out there
listening to talk to their House Member about that bill because I think
it is one that makes a whole lot of sense.
I would say, again, how much I appreciate the gentleman from Texas
yielding. Most of all, I thank him for the way he comes down to the
well on such a regular basis to inform the American public.
Mr. GOHMERT. I thank the gentleman from South Carolina not merely for
the bill, but this gentleman's bills, just like the reasoned argument
made here in this Chamber, well reasoned, well thought out. Having sat
and listened to so many lawyers during my years on the bench, both
trial bench and appellate bench, I would have welcomed the opportunity
to hear from my friend from South Carolina in any courtroom where I was
sitting. Well reasoned, a lot of good research in trying to solve
problems. I look forward to a lot of us reading that bill and finding
out because there is no doubt it involved just as good reasons as were
used in your argument here today.
Also, we heard from another colleague of ours, the Honorable Don
Young from Alaska. I am actually optimistic about so many things with
this
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President in the Oval Office now, and one of them is that our friend,
Don Young from Alaska, may finally get some help.
President Carter had identified an area that really didn't have any
wildlife to speak of. Yes, it was part of the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge, but it was an area that really didn't have wildlife to speak
of. As I understand it, there are some caribou that may walk across
there from time to time, but they can't stay because there is not
enough to sustain them. But President Carter, as anticarbon energy as
he was, realized that is an area that we can agree ought to be drilled
for the production of oil and gas, and it has been fought over and
over.
Who stands to gain?
Well, actually, the American public. But since so much oil has now
been found out in my friend Mike Conaway's district in west Texas, up
in the Dakotas, we are not as needful of that as we were. But the
people who will really benefit are the people of Alaska, and then
additional beneficiaries will be the people of the United States and
the people who want to get out from under the iron fist of Russia
rising. We will be able to help them with that by not only becoming
energy independent; but after energy independent, exporting oil and gas
to other nations so they don't feel the pinch that nations like China
and Russia are putting on them.
I thank my friend, Mr. Young from Alaska, and my friend, the former
Governor of South Carolina, Mr. Sanford.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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