[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 106 (Wednesday, June 21, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H5041-H5042]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE TERROR
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Ms. Cheney). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 3, 2017, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Nebraska (Mr. Fortenberry) for 30 minutes.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Madam Speaker, last week, as we are all too aware, a
gunman opened fire on Members of Congress and staff assistants as they
were practicing for the annual bipartisan baseball game to raise money
for a Washington-based charity. Among those who were injured is my dear
friend and colleague, Congressman Steve Scalise, the House majority
whip.
As news of this event came in right before our weekly Nebraska
breakfast, a 74-year tradition--by the way, a bipartisan tradition in
which the entire Nebraska delegation gets together on a weekly basis
and invites anyone from our home State to gather with us. As that was
about to occur, I heard the news of the shootings. I felt bewildered,
shocked, and numb.
As further reports came in from my colleagues throughout the morning,
I heard that Steve was playing second base at the time of his shooting.
He crawled from the infield, leaving a trail of blood.
Mr. Speaker, this isn't a movie. These are not distant figures. These
are our friends and our colleagues, people who work right here in this
institution. Representative Scalise and I frequently interact on the
nuances of policy, and sometimes differences of policy. No matter what
our disagreements--and believe me, there are hard differences even on
one side of the political aisle. No matter what the differences might
be, Steve always has worked with me in a cordial, professional,
constructive, and, perhaps most importantly, gentlemanly manner. That
is just who he is. So regardless of what anyone may think of his
policies, of his political point of view, Congress, or the GOP, he did
not deserve to be shot.
As noted by Senator Rand Paul, who was also at the practice, were it
not for the courageous Capitol Hill Police officers who accompanied
Representative Scalise to events, this would have been a massacre. Were
it not for the first responders from the Alexandria Police Department
and Fire and Rescue, many of those injured, for them it could have been
much, much worse.
My heart goes out to Steve Scalise and the others who were injured in
this tragic event.
However, my words cannot stop here. For years now, across multiple
administrations and across party lines, we have seen accelerating
political rancor in our country that goes way beyond normal partisan
politics. It is hard to get your mind around some of the stuff that
people write. It is awful. It goes beyond just pointed language. It is
now so frequent, so violent, and so directly threatening that security
personnel are working overtime to keep up with it.
Madam Speaker, you know this. Many good men and women of differing
political perspectives work in the United States Congress. These are
people who have accomplished important things in their own home
communities and decided that their heart was calling them to serve in a
broader capacity.
{time} 1800
I fully recognize that Washington, D.C., can seem elitist and aloof,
but as you know, Madam Speaker, Members of Congress are real people,
with real families, from real places across our land. Sure, there may
be a disproportionate share of lawyers in the institution, but there
are also nurses, social workers, doctors, teachers, and small-business
owners.
In fact, one of the doctors, Representative Brad Wenstrup, a friend
of mine, happened to be at the baseball practice. He is an Iraq veteran
and surgeon. He attended to Steve Scalise's gunshot wound, thankfully.
Above all, all of these persons are Americans. Nevertheless, there is
a limit to what the human person, even a paid public servant, can
absorb. We can take the violent words, but when it spills into violent
action, it is too much. This country cannot continue to rip itself
apart like this.
Madam Speaker, there is one additional difficulty here that needs to
be unpacked. There is a real risk and vulnerability in what I call
regularizing this response, in making it like a ``new normal.''
In fact, within only a few hours of the shootings, certain national
media had begun to routinize the tragedy, as they returned to obsessing
on the latest crisis du jour in Washington, as if nothing fundamentally
destructive to all that we hold dear as Americans had just occurred.
And why not? As the media tells us, the assassin was a ``troubled
man,'' a ``lone wolf,'' with a ``history of violence'' and ``easy
access to guns,'' who was likely ``mentally ill.'' Nothing unique to
see here.
Madam Speaker, these were not our thoughts after the assassination
attempt on Ronald Reagan or the shooting of Democratic Arizona
Congresswoman Gabby Giffords of Arizona. When President Kennedy was
shot, I am told, it was as if the entire world came to a halt.
If we are now going to move beyond words and normalize the violent
targeting of people just because they
[[Page H5042]]
choose public service, hold views that are different from our own, or
speak in a style that is not to our liking, there is no country.
I find it particularly jarring that the widely praised theatrical
assassination of President Trump at a rendition of Julius Caesar in New
York City's Central Park--underwritten, by the way, by The New York
Times--continues to go on.
Madam Speaker, violence is violence. When it is here and it is
political, of course, it is particularly jarring.
Tragically, we also may be growing used to the idea of terror abroad.
Although its root causes are different than those of domestic political
attacks here on our own shores, the same thing is at stake: the very
principles of civilization itself.
Madam Speaker, let me digress for a moment, because this is
particularly notable.
After 9/11, crime all but vanished from the streets of New York City.
In other words, the shock and the horror caused a community to rally
together above any social discord in a spirit of true unity. We
glimpsed that same spirit of solidarity as a nation when Obama bin
Laden was finally confronted.
Just recently, a day after the terror attacks that rocked London a
few weeks ago, Richard Angell, a patron in a restaurant that had been
evacuated during the jihadist rampage, calmly returned to pay his bill.
In explaining his generosity, Angell told a reporter, ``These people
shouldn't win.''
The night before, several bartenders had risked their lives to defend
patrons in that particular establishment with bottles, chairs, tables,
anything they could find, as the terrorists tried to hack away their
customers with large knives. More lives would have been lost were it
not for their bravery.
Only a few weeks before that, at a concert attended mostly by young
girls, a homeless man, Stephen Jones, who slept most nights near the
stadium, helped several victims of that bombing to safety, even pulling
nails from the faces of young children.
The resolve and courage in the face of barbaric violence harkens back
to the passengers of United Flight 93 who sacrificed their own lives on
9/11 in order to take down a plane headed straight for Washington,
D.C., probably for the White House.
While we appropriately recognize those who act with courage, the
constant repetition of these scenes appear to be resulting, sadly, in
what I call ``terror fatigue.'' We go about the same tired ritual: the
requisite shock and horror; the 24-hour media coverage of victims,
heroes, and families; and the inevitable autopsy of what went wrong. By
this exercise, I am afraid we further enable what Hannah Arendt once
famously wrote, ``the banality of evil.''
Against this backdrop, I think it is important and useful to pull
back and contemplate the fundamental error in our analysis and
approach. In the West, we have a blind spot. We want to believe that if
we can only understand how a disordered person was raised, how his
parents treated him, if he was an orphan or poor or misunderstood or
abandoned or a victim of some real or imagined prejudice, then we can
understand what makes him kill. Armed with this soft understanding,
perhaps we can prevent further tragedy by ameliorating the conditions
that we think gave rise to barbaric deeds.
In many discussions of unpredictable and random attacks on bystanders
in Europe and America, we find a perverse unwillingness to accurately
identify the true motivations of the perpetrators, lest we close the
space to ``cure them'' of their zealotry.
In the current, highly polarized, oversensitized, and extremely
volatile climate, it is risky to call a thing for what it is. Instead,
again and again, we hear that these were just a few misguided
individuals--another mental health problem, another aberration, another
police problem; nothing to do with dark theology to notice here. Carry
on. We must just accept this as a new normal.
What makes these particular vicious actors different? In a study, the
Gallup organization basically finds that most people in the world want
similar things. Most people in the world want a good job: to be able to
take care of themselves; to be able to take care of their family; to be
able to use the creative talents of their personhood, whether it be
their intellect or their hands to make things for the benefit of others
and, in turn, receive an income that they can support themselves with.
However, as one of my Muslim friends has noted, Petro-Islam has
enabled and unleashed a narrow sect of men and women who often want for
nothing. Several of the terrorists on
9/11 were young men of both wealth and privilege, with world-class
educations. They weren't motivated by the allures of Western secular
materialism. They used those values to hide in plain sight. Rather,
they were in the grip of a dark, violent theology. They were willing to
die for its inherent irrationality.
This cannot continue. Even the Saudis, who have lived for too long
with the hyper hypocrisy of buying off Wahhabists while shopping in
Paris, recognize this is an unsustainable trend.
Madam Speaker, when I was in college, I remember the day when
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was assassinated. It was a hard day for
me. Shortly before, I had lived in that country on an exchange program.
I received the bountiful gift of hospitality and an invaluable source
of deep and reach cultural understanding.
Sadat died. Sadat gave his life because he made a reasoned choice to
reach across the divide to find peace. In another courageous move, just
a few years ago, in a little-known speech, the current Egyptian
President, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, said: ``Is it possible that 1.6
billion Muslims should want to kill the rest of the world's
inhabitants--that is, 7 billion--so that they themselves may live?
Impossible.''
Quite a courageous statement.
At this moment, Madam Speaker, we are on the verge of wiping out ISIS
militarily. But it is only the latest brand. We will only fully resolve
the thinking that leads to the embrace of dark theology through a
rebirth in reason, modeled through courageous leadership.
As we see in our battle against ISIS, when you call for evil to
happen on social media, in Main Street media and in art, eventually
someone in the real world takes it to heart. We must stop creating the
rhetorical conditions and the media cover for this politically
motivated violence or the grotesque twisting of mediums to encourage
terror. There is no rationalization that can justify it. This is not
about freedom of speech. It is about freedom from violence.
Ask yourself a question: Where would you like to live? Where people
lie, steal, and kill? Or where people are good, trustworthy, and free?
Madam Speaker, I will close with this because it is a hint of good
news.
Last week, the House of Representatives, in a private session,
Democrats and Republicans, had a family meeting and, with due candor,
spoke about the effect of escalating rhetoric and the responsibility
each of us must take in owning our share of it.
Importantly, the bipartisan Congressional Baseball Game went on as
planned last Thursday night. I took my younger staff. The game was
energetic and patriotically bipartisan. Madam Speaker, as you are
aware, my side lost, but I believe America won.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________