[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 102 (Thursday, June 15, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H4920-H4921]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REFLECTING ON YESTERDAY'S HORRIFIC INCIDENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, yesterday, I indicated to all those who
would ask that it was a day of reflection and prayer, to give comfort
to those who needed to have comfort, and to reassert over and over
again that when tragedy strikes, we are family.
When tragedy strikes Americans from the East to the West Coast, to
the North to the South, whether it be manmade or natural disasters,
hurricanes or tornadoes, terrible floods that we have experienced in
different regions of the country, mass shootings, the horrific loss of
life of children in Connecticut, the tragic Sandy Hook story that will
live forever, the Pulse Nightclub, Virginia Tech, Columbine, and places
beyond, San Bernardino, that, in actuality, we recognize that we are,
in fact, family.
So I think it is important to raise up those who are still in the
hospital, and the staff member who was released, in prayer, and to be
able to explain to the American people how precious our democracy is.
Before I do that, I do want to praise our Capitol Police, Officers
Griner and Bailey, and I want to express my deepest prayers for
Majority Whip Scalise, who is a neighbor. Those of us in the southern
region, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, and beyond, we are neighbors. We
have that southern thing going on. Texas might argue a little bit that
they have got a little western thing going on, but we are neighbors.
{time} 1015
So many of our constituents travel back and forth between Louisiana
and Texas--particularly, my city of Houston--and we welcome them. We
wish our deepest prayers and a hardy and speedy recovery for Majority
Whip Scalise, and we thank him for his service to the Nation.
We also recognize two that are wounded--a staff member and
volunteer--who just came to be helpful. That
[[Page H4921]]
is the way we perform here. People who say: Send me. I will help you do
this. You have got an event; I will come over and help.
That is the preciousness of this country and what is admired by
people around the world. But I think it is also important to explain
democracy.
Democracy generates great passions by Members of Congress, House, and
Senate. If we went back over the ages and we were able to read the
papers of those who were on this floor when we were a much smaller
country, it was high and shrill because of their passion about
democracy, because they wanted to put together a country that would
respect people because they fled persecution, and they didn't want us
to be a nation that would persecute.
So I think as we go forward, it is important to engage our
constituents in the beauty of democracy and in the beauty of
disagreement without being disagreeable and let them know that we
welcome acting on their behalf. But violent acts or taking things into
your own hands, let us calm our communities all over the Nation. Let us
give them a sense of the beauty of our disagreement, because we have
managed to keep this democracy sacred for so many years.
Let us not allow our good friends in the media, whom I respect with
the highest esteem because they are a product of the First Amendment,
let us not jump immediately into blaming this one or that one.
So many of us have seen the tragedies of the assassination of John F.
Kennedy, the assassination of Martin Luther King, and the terrible
tragedy of Gabrielle Giffords, who maintained her dignity and love of
the institution and has taken on a cause that she believes in and is
still fighting as an American.
So now we have the opportunity not to raise up who this person was
who is now deceased--we don't know his mental state, what his condition
was, or why he was out. That it one issue. Let the investigation go
forward. And whatever it is, let us still come together and say that we
will disagree and not be disagreeable, and we will not encourage or
rise up or try to not explain what democracy and love is all about.
Mr. Speaker, I leave this podium by saying: Love prevails over hate;
and I know that the love that is being generated toward those who are
wounded and being cared for is going to cause them to have, I pray to
God, a speedy recovery.
And I say today: God bless all of you, and God bless the United
States of America.
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