[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 122 (Wednesday, July 19, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H5983-H5984]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VOTE ON LIFESAVING LEGISLATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Illinois (Ms. Kelly) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KELLY of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I rise, yet again, to beg this
House for action. Let us have a vote on lifesaving legislation.
Just this weekend, 57 Americans were shot in just one U.S. city.
Tragically, 11 of them passed away, including a 10-year-old boy and a
revered community activist who worked to create jobs for at-risk kids.
The violence did not take a rest after the weekend. On Monday, 13
more people were shot and 3 were killed.
Mr. Speaker, what are we doing here?
People, Americans, American kids are dying every day in every
community, in every State, in every district, yet this House, the
people's House, continues to do nothing.
Why, Mr. Speaker? Why is that?
Well, I think greed and dollars.
My 101st victim I want to share with you is Gustavo Garcia, who was
10 years old. Mr. Speaker, Gustavo would have turned 11 next month. He
would have started fourth grade at Arnold Mireles Academy next month.
Instead, he was murdered in the back seat of an SUV by an assault
weapon, a weapon of war that this House has allowed to be legal and
spill blood on our city streets.
These weapons have one purpose: killing people. They are not for
sportsmanship. They are not for personal defense. They are for theaters
of war. They are designed to devastate, maim, kill, and destroy. That
is why assault weapons were banned from our streets until this House,
poisoned by NRA dollars, allowed the bill to expire.
Mr. Speaker, Gustavo Garcia was 10 years old. He had an entire
lifetime ahead of him. Mr. Speaker, the operative word in that sentence
is ``had.'' Now he has become ``Dollar NRA No. 101.''
[[Page H5984]]
$102, William ``Willie'' Cooper, who was 58 years old. Willie was
working to change Chicago and give our children a future. He founded
the Lilydale Outreach Workers for a Better Community and helped mediate
more than 50 conflicts that could have turned deadly.
Willie was everything you could want in a neighbor, a community
leader, and a friend. He was kind, concerned about others in his
community, someone who truly loved all of his fellow men. Now he is
``$102.'' He was assassinated also with an assault weapon in front of
the nonprofit he founded to help young people find jobs.
Time and time again I hear from the other side of the aisle that work
is transformative, it gives people purpose and direction in life. I
could not agree more.
Mr. Speaker, nothing stops a bullet like an opportunity. What Chicago
needs is jobs for our young people, not guns flooding from States likes
Wisconsin and even the Vice President's home State of Indiana.
Mr. Speaker, it is about jobs. So I join Senators Dick Durbin and
Tammy Duckworth to introduce three pieces of legislation directly
targeted to support at-risk youth and the amazing businesses that take
a chance on them to change their lives. To date, these bills have
simply been referred to committee.
Mr. Speaker, when is the agenda of this House going to turn to the
actual issues devastating American families?
This Congress has voted to allow companies to poison our air and
water. We passed a bill that stripped 23 million Americans of their
health insurance. We even passed a bill that lets dangerously mental
ill people buy a firearm. Shameful.
We have not had one single debate, not passed one bill, nothing,
zero, zilch, to save American lives. I guess some things just aren't
worth the price.
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