[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 36 (Wednesday, March 1, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H1461]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HAPPY BIRTHDAY NEBRASKA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2017, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from Nebraska (Mr.
Fortenberry) for 30 minutes.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Mr. Speaker, for 150 years now, Nebraska has held a
special place in the history of America. We Nebraskans rightly pride
ourselves on the values of hard work, on the values of community life,
on the proper value of the good stewardship of our precious resources.
The mystique of the Great Plains, the nobility of the family farm, and
the vibrancy of our people create the conditions for the good life.
Our story is one of strength, it is one of dignity, and I am proud to
celebrate our 150th anniversary.
{time} 2030
Mr. Speaker, a number of years ago, a gift of land donation enabled
the expansion of the Homestead National Monument, which is near
Beatrice, Nebraska. Run by the National Park Service, their personnel
were kind enough to invite me to the dedication ceremony; and during
that event, a young woman who was from a seventh-generation farm
family--in high school at that time, as I recall--got up to speak. She
gave a beautiful talk about our Nebraska values, our connectedness to
the land, the deeper meaning of living on the plains, and the ideal of
maintaining the continuity of family life.
Her remarks, Mr. Speaker, moved me so much that I literally tossed my
own speech aside and spoke off the cuff, and I said something like
this: Perhaps it was on a day just like this where that settler family
came over the hill there, and they looked at the great expansion of the
plains before them.
Perhaps that day they felt the warm, spring sun on their cheeks, and
they heard the chirp of the western meadowlark in the air, and they
watched as the beautiful bluestem prairie grass swayed in the wind.
Perhaps it was then that they made their decision: We stay right here.
Nebraska will be our home.
Mr. Speaker, when I finished that, I was very proud of myself, so I
sat down. And then the next speaker came up, another political figure,
and he had this to say: Well, my family came here because they were
horse thieves. We all shared a little laugh, but really, Mr. Speaker,
Nebraska's colorful history and droll wit were simultaneously captured
in that moment.
Nebraska's official motto is ``Equality before the law,'' but our
unofficial motto is ``Nebraska nice.'' It is true. Nebraskans are
generally nice. But beneath that friendly veneer is an unmistakable,
unvarnished realism.
Nebraskans have a unique ability to look at a situation and size it
up accurately, if often humorously. ``Git r done'' is an often-used
phrase that I think can be safely attributable to us.
Now, sometimes, Mr. Speaker, Nebraska has been pejoratively described
in the popular imagination of our country, first as the ``Great
American Desert'' because it was thought that nothing would grow there.
Today, we have the largest amount of acreage under irrigation in the
country, including the fact that we are the largest grower of popcorn
in America. We are a leader in livestock production and multiple types
of commodity production, as well as specialty crops.
We were sometimes castigated as ``flyover country.'' I hear that
around here sometimes, that is, until you come to Nebraska and realize
that it is a wonderful place to live and to work and to raise a family
relatively free from crime, except even horse thieves, congestion, as
well as pollution.
Nebraska has, routinely, the highest graduation rate in the country
and the lowest unemployment rate in the country.
And, though, in true Nebraska fashion, self-effacing Cornhuskers
would cringe at the term, we have had our fair share of celebrities as
well, including Father Ed Flanagan, who founded Boys Town, now known as
Boys Town and Girls Town; Civil Rights pioneers, Chief Standing Bear
being one of the most prominent; Malcolm X; authors Mari Sandoz and
Willa Cather; professional athletes Bob Gibson and Gale Sayers; and
entertainers, Henry Fonda, Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, Johnny
Carson, and Dick Cavett.
Moreover, Mr. Speaker, our singular, unicameral legislature is a
model for bipartisanship and frugality. And I would be remiss if I
didn't say our run-it-up-the-gut offense with a few option twists, it
may not have been flashy, but it helped the University of Nebraska's
football team win five national championships.
I am proud to serve in the United States congressional seat once held
by Williams Jennings Bryan, who along with Senator George Norris
perhaps are the most famous, though controversial in some ways,
politicians in our State's history.
As we celebrate the 150th anniversary of Nebraska's admission to the
United States of America--by the way, the first State admitted after
the Civil War--I recall Representative Bryan's words from over 100
years ago. It is a quote that actually is outside of our football
stadium, known as Memorial Stadium, on Tom and Nancy Osborne Field. It
says this: ``Destiny is no matter of chance. It is a matter of choice.
It is not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved.''
And perhaps, Mr. Speaker, we can add to that quote today: And that
the choice to be good makes the destiny arrive well.
Happy birthday, Nebraska.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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