[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 183 (Thursday, November 9, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H8685-H8690]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                           ISSUES OF THE DAY

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Francis Rooney of Florida). 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. Mr. Speaker, I just want to start out echoing what my 
friend, Congressman Rick Nolan, was saying: We should not be about the 
rich getting richer.
  There are different strategies to try to accomplish fairness in a 
free country. If it is truly free, people are going to have to have the 
opportunity to fail as well as succeed. The only other alternative is 
the government kills any incentives to be more productive and just 
says: We are going to flatline everybody across the board, no matter 
how much you produce.
  We have seen, over and over throughout history, that never works. 
Income redistribution never works. You kill the incentives. And, as I 
was told back in the summer of 1973, in an exchange program at the 
Soviet Union, by a bunch of farmers who were sitting in the shade mid-
morning in the middle of the summer, I asked--and I tried to use my 
best Russian: When do you work out in the field? I couldn't tell what 
was cultivated and what wasn't. It all looked terrible.
  They all laughed. I thought maybe I had translated something wrong. 
But one of the farmers, in Russian, said: I make the same number of 
rubles if I am out there in the field, or in the Sun, or here in the 
shade, so I am here in the shade. That is why socialism doesn't work.
  So there have been many different strategies that have been utilized

[[Page H8686]]

throughout this Nation's history, and throughout the history of the 
world, to try to create--sometimes it is not an effort to create 
fairness in this country. It has normally been, thank God. But under 
the Obama administration's efforts to redistribute income, it brought 
about, for the first time in our Nation's history, that the top 1 
percent of our Nation made 95 percent of the income.
  I just was staggered. But that happened under the Obama 
administration. And, obviously, that tells us that the strategy for 
encouraging success, financial success, was an abysmal failure. Under 
the 8 years of Commander in Chief Obama, as he commanded over the 
economy, he made sure--I don't think it was intentional--but his 
efforts made sure that the very richest in the country became much 
richer and the rest of the country suffered.
  And those on food stamps skyrocketed to the highest level ever. I 
think over 50 million. We had 95 million Americans, for the first time 
in our history, who got so tired of applying for jobs, unsuccessfully, 
they quit even applying.
  And so how does the Obama administration respond? They responded by 
not counting those 95 million in the unemployed numbers because they 
were no longer looking for jobs. The economy, it really hasn't 
recovered. People have been flatlined, or less, when adjusted for the 
little inflation we have had.
  So it is time to try something different than the Obama efforts that 
put 95 percent of the Nation's income in the top 1 percent's pockets. 
We are already seeing that change, and I am hoping that our efforts, 
especially in creating tax cuts, will cause the economy to just 
skyrocket, the way it did after the 30 percent tax cut kicked in under 
President Reagan by 1983.
  I do want to touch on something that came out in the last week. This 
article from The Hill says: ``Early Comey draft accused Clinton of 
gross negligence on emails.'' It turns out--we find out now--that FBI 
Director Comey started drafting months before Hillary Clinton was 
interviewed, and months before discussion with Cheryl Mills and the 
other potential targets of the criminal investigation over the 
destruction of Hillary Clinton's emails.
  It should have been obstruction of justice. That is not gross 
negligence when you tell somebody to go destroy your phone with a 
hammer, and you have them use BleachBit to take out everything in your 
phone or in your computer. That is not gross negligence, that is 
intentional obstruction of justice, when you know that there is a 
subpoena after the things you are destroying.
  But FBI Director Comey decided to play politics instead of law and 
order. Maybe that would make a good new series on television or 
Netflix--not ``House of Cards,'' but ``House of Injustice''--where we 
play politics with justice, instead of trying to do justice, trying to 
fulfill the oath to pursue justice.
  In any event, he had ``gross negligence,'' as the term he attributed 
to Hillary Clinton, in that first draft. But, apparently, when he 
realized that gross negligence would be a crime, he eliminated what 
would clearly have been a complete accusation of a crime having been 
committed by Hillary Clinton.
  So, interesting, just more information coming out about why James 
Comey should not--well, he should be considered someone worthy of 
investigation himself. He admitted to leaking information in order to 
manipulate the Justice Department, not by being up front and 
recommending a special counsel--oh, no. He wanted to create a special 
counsel, just like he did when he told John Ashcroft to recuse himself.
  Ashcroft, obviously, not knowing what Comey had in mind, but he was 
going to appoint his child's godfather to be special counsel--Patrick 
Fitzgerald--and let him go on a witch hunt trying to get Karl Rove or 
Vice President Cheney--unsuccessful. So he manipulates and creates a 
case against Scooter Libby, so he could at least have a scalp to show 
for the millions and millions of dollars that were wasted.
  But from Comey's standpoint, his child's godfather made a lot of 
money, and Comey got to lash out at the Bush administration, so 
probably from their standpoint it worked out real well.
  But it also points to the fact that since James Comey has been 
involved up to his eyeballs in what is going on as FBI Director, 
whoever were to be special counsel, if anyone, they would need to be 
someone who is not close friends with James Comey. And, as Comey 
apparently pointed out to the Washingtonian, when they were doing a big 
article on him back in 2013, basically, Bob Mueller--if the world were 
on fire, Bob Mueller would be the one standing there with him to defend 
him at the end.

  So, clearly, Mueller, if he were interested in ethics, would have 
refused--and actually interested in following the law himself--he would 
have refused to be appointed special counsel. But we now know that 
since Mueller, as FBI Director, was involved in the investigation of 
Russia's efforts to gain United States uranium, to try to corner the 
market on uranium, and they were apparently committing crimes in their 
efforts paying bribes, whatever is necessary, to try to acquire United 
States uranium, the investigation went on apparently for 3 or 4 years, 
as an undercover person.
  Well, Mueller and the U.S. attorney in charge of the investigation, 
named Rod Rosenstein, actually the guy who appointed Mueller to be 
special counsel, they ended up ensuring that the records of that long-
term investigation would be sealed, and they even went to court and got 
a court order to seal it.
  And whose name was on the motion to seal those documents? Rod 
Rosenstein. He did have a deputy sign on his behalf, but Rod Rosenstein 
was sealing the records so people couldn't know that Russia was 
committing crimes while they were trying to acquire U.S. uranium.

                              {time}  1230

  If people saw that the FBI and the Justice Department knew that 
Russia was committing crimes, paying bribes trying to acquire U.S. 
uranium, then they would have been complicit with the effort to approve 
the sale of uranium to a country that was committing crimes to get it. 
If they had not approved that, then it is doubtful that the Clintons 
would have struck the megamillions Russian lottery the way they did, 
and their foundation.
  So the last two people in the country that should have been involved 
in an investigation into potential Russian collusion should be a person 
named Rod Rosenstein and another person named Robert Mueller.
  I have great respect for his valiant service to our country in 
Vietnam. This isn't about Vietnam. This is about manipulating the 
justice system. It is about sealing an ongoing investigation that 
showed crimes being committed to put our national security at risk, and 
not speaking up against the sale of 20, 25 percent or so of America's 
uranium to an entity that would provide it to Russia.
  We now know that that uranium did not stay in the United States, as 
some had said. Well, when you are going to sell uranium to people who 
have been paying bribes, acting illegally, is it any surprise that if 
they are willing to violate the law, that they would be willing to 
violate the terms of an agreement or other laws regarding that uranium?
  So I am still hoping--and, yes, I believe in prayer, so I am hoping 
and praying that justice will be done, that those who should not be 
investigating will step out of the picture or be forced to step out of 
the picture, and we can have a fair investigation into potential 
crimes.
  Another very important piece of information that has come out about 
the shooter in the Sutherland Springs massacre has been this scream, 
this cry for more gun control, and that is immediately after we had a 
radical Islamist terrorist screaming ``Allahu Akbar.'' Even on FOX they 
said that means ``praise be to God.'' No. It means ``praise be to 
Allah.''
  If you want to look for ``praise be to God,'' you can look for 
somebody to actually say in English, ``Praise be to God;'' or you could 
look on top of the Washington Monument, where American leaders had 
inscriptions on all four sides of the metal capstone on top of the 
Washington Monument; but on the side facing the U.S. Capitol, they had 
inscribed in Latin, ``Laus Deo,'' meaning ``praise be to God;'' not 
``praise be to Allah,'' but ``praise be to God.''

[[Page H8687]]

  The reason they had ``Praise be to God'' facing the Capitol is that 
this is east of the Washington Monument, and what they aspired to have 
was the first rays of God's sun every morning striking ``Praise be to 
God,'' enlightening those words before anything else in our Nation's 
Capital was lit; ``Praise be to God,'' then the rest of the Capital 
City would be lit. That is why it is there.
  It turns out that the New York killer, the radical Islamist, he came 
to the U.S. under the diversity visa lottery program that was started 
because apparently some Senators and a few Democratic House Members 
believed that we were having too many Hispanics come in and we were not 
having enough Irish come in. So they created this program so immigrants 
like Irish, who were not being properly represented in the numbers, 
could have a chance to come into the U.S. the way so many Hispanics 
were.
  Well, I didn't think we cared about national origin that we needed a 
special program to give some other countries a chance that Hispanic 
countries would not have, but apparently some thought that was going to 
be appropriate.
  It is high time to get rid of the program. We have known for years 
terrorists have been trying to win the lottery, and terrorists have won 
the lottery.
  My friend, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Bob Goodlatte, 
had a terrific op-ed in The Hill, entitled: ``Visa lottery program is 
too much of a gamble for our nation and needs to end.''
  Republicans in the House voted to end the diversity visa lottery back 
in 2005. The Senate wouldn't take it up. Senators were still there that 
helped start the program, like Senator Schumer. Then Democrats had the 
majority for the next 4 years after 2006. They certainly weren't going 
to end the diversity visa lottery program. They are the ones who wanted 
it.
  Then, in 2012, in the session after we got the majority back, we 
voted again to end the lottery, but the Senate, again, wouldn't take it 
up.
  In the last session, we didn't get it voted out, but I am grateful to 
the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Bob Goodlatte, for pushing, as 
he has, and I am hoping we can get that bill to the floor that will 
allow us to end it.
  In that op-ed, Chairman Goodlatte says: ``The visa lottery, which was 
enacted 10 years prior to 9/11, is foolish in the age in which we live. 
Those in the world who wish us harm can easily engage in this 
statistical gamble with nothing to lose. The Office of the Inspector 
General at the State Department has found that it poses significant 
national security risks. In fact, Saipov``--the New York City radical 
Islamic terrorist--'' is the fifth person who has been accused or 
convicted in connection with terrorism plots to have come here through 
the visa lottery.
  ``In another instance, Hesham Hadayet, an Egyptian terrorist who 
killed two and wounded several others at Los Angeles International 
Airport on July 4, 2002, was a lawful permanent resident who received 
his green card through the program''--the diversity visa lottery 
program--``since his wife was a visa lottery winner.''
  So this Egyptian terrorist was a lottery winner, or his wife was, and 
the two people who he killed in L.A. Airport and those he wounded were 
the losers of that lottery.
  Chairman Goodlatte goes on to say: ``Additionally, in August of 2002, 
Pakistan national Imran Mandhai pleaded guilty to conspiring to wage 
jihad by plotting to destroy electrical power stations, the Israeli 
consulate, and other south Florida targets. He entered the United 
States with his parents, who had won the visa lottery, in 1998.

  ``Similarly, in August 2002, two diversity lottery winners from 
Morocco--Ahmed Hannan and Karim Koubriti--were indicted as members of 
an alleged terrorist `sleeper' cell in Michigan. In June 2003, a jury 
convicted Koubriti of conspiring to provide material support or 
resources to terrorists, and Hannan of possessing false documents.''
  So visa lottery applicants, some of them--many of them submit several 
applications under different names in order to increase their chances 
of winning the visa lottery.
  Chairman Goodlatte continues: ``And marriage fraud is rampant in the 
program. `Pop-up' spouses often appear in between the time that the 
applicant registers for the lottery and the time when the applicant is 
interviewed by the State Department. These `spouses' pay the applicant 
in order to be part of the applicant's green card winnings.''
  Winnings from the visa lottery.
  Chairman Goodlatte continues: ``The United States has the most 
generous immigration system in the world, admitting more than 1 million 
legal immigrants each year.''
  There is no country in the world that allows that many people to come 
into their country legally. We are far from being the largest country 
either geographically or population-wise, yet we are the most generous 
country in the world in allowing people into our country legally.
  Chairman Goodlatte goes on: ``Eliminating the visa lottery does not 
negate our Nation's generosity, but makes our immigration system 
smarter and safer for the age in which we live. Our immigration policy 
should be based primarily on our national needs, security, and 
economics, as opposed to an arbitrary system. The visa lottery is too 
much of a gamble for our Nation to make with today's ongoing threat of 
terrorism and must come to an end.''
  There is no other country in the world that is so stupid regarding 
its own national security and national interests that it allows a 
lottery to determine who would get a visa to come into their country. 
It, hopefully, will be ending soon.
  That is why there was this article in The Daily Caller: ``GOP 
Senators Distance Themselves from Diversity Visa Program They Helped 
Create.''
  There are some who helped create the diversity visa lottery program 
in the Senate who are saying: You know what? Maybe it is time to get 
rid of it.
  I hope we will.
  Yesterday, though, in the House Judiciary Committee, we did have a 
bill come up. It is being urged by law enforcement, Federal law 
enforcement, by the Justice Department, FBI, the National Security 
Administration, CIA, our intelligence folks. They are saying: We have 
got to have this 702 program reauthorized that will end on December 31 
of this year.
  Well, we know that the system has been abused. We were assured when I 
was here early on in Congress that: Gee, just reauthorize this, because 
there are no Americans who are going to be harmed by allowing these 
warrantless wiretapping situations. The only way an American could be 
caught up in this wiretapping would be if they are talking to a known 
foreign terrorist or a member of a known foreign terrorist 
organization.
  So that gave me some security. And back then--some years back when we 
were authorizing the program, I said to my friends that were against 
the program because they were afraid an American would be caught up: 
Well, if they are afraid of being caught up in this wiretapping or this 
tapping into phone calls, then just make sure that their foreign 
terrorist friends call them on somebody else's phone.
  That was glibly said. Little did I know that it is not just known 
foreign terrorists and it is not members of known terrorist 
organizations; it has gotten so far afield that even if a Member of 
Congress has an innocent visit with a diplomat or an ambassador from a 
foreign country, that can be--and apparently, we are told, has been--
used to listen in and monitor conversations. But we were assured there 
is a great safeguard, because if an American is picked up under this 
monitoring of foreign terrorists, then the American name will be masked 
so nobody will know who it was.
  So through the Fourth Amendment, we will protect them from having a 
warrantless search of a conversation without a warrant from a judge, 
which requires that they are proving probable cause to believe that the 
individual is involved in a crime, has committed a crime. And then with 
that probable cause being proved--as a judge, I signed felony warrants 
for searches, for seizures, for arrests, but you had to have probable 
cause.

                              {time}  1245

  But you had to have probable cause. This allows them to grab those 
conversations without probable cause.
  So with all that we have begun to learn, and especially when we found 
out how liberal the Obama administration was with unmasking American

[[Page H8688]]

names and that we had people who have shown themselves to be extremely 
political in their decisions and activities, even being willing to go 
on Sunday morning television shows six times in 1 day and lie 
intentionally to the American public about the Benghazi matter, that 
that same political person would be unmasking American names right and 
left, and although I know there is one Republican who said, ``Oh, I 
talked to her, and I'm convinced that she's fine,'' well, I am not. We 
need that being thoroughly investigated, as well as the other 
unmaskings being properly and thoroughly investigated by people who are 
not so gullible.
  This is serious stuff. When we in Congress allowed this loophole 
around the Fourth Amendment requirement for warrants in order to seize 
or obtain evidence, we anticipated that it would be carefully and 
strictly adhered to. And then we see the unmasking has been so 
liberally done, and there certainly seems to be a prima facie 
indication, when you look at who unmasked and the people who were 
unmasked, that you have one political party in power investigating 
their political opponent for political gain. And, once again, thank God 
it didn't end up the way they hoped.
  But this is still quite serious, and that is why I applauded my 
friend, another fellow felony judge in our background. Former Judge Ted 
Poe and Zoe Lofgren from California, Democrat, had a good amendment in 
my opinion, and it was going to require that before law enforcement--
once they obtained these American names and numbers, well, law 
enforcement, apparently, once they have obtained these American names 
and numbers and phone numbers and conversations, and obtained them 
without probable cause in compliance with the Fourth Amendment, there 
are countless numbers of queries being made into the database on that 
individual or on the phone number just doing phishing expeditions, and 
then, if they find something, seeing if they can use that information 
to help prosecute them on another matter. Those are truly phishing 
expeditions. They should not be allowed without a warrant.
  Okay. We will say you obtained the information legally, even though 
you did it in violation of the Fourth Amendment. But if you are going 
to go back and research that database, you should have probable cause 
before you start being allowed to basically listen in on conversations 
or follow up on all kinds of activity that was gathered without any 
probable cause.
  This is what the government does that the Founders were afraid of. 
They didn't know that there would be cell phones some day or the highly 
technically proficient ability to communicate we have now. But they 
knew that mankind would not change. It has not changed. There has 
always been evil. There will always be evil in this world, and we have 
to guard against becoming part of the problem when we are in the 
government.
  The Founders' safeguards, all of those amendments, basically, were 
safeguards, whether it was the First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, 
Tenth, I mean, those are critically important--Sixth Amendment. Those 
are all important to preserving our rights. So I was saddened that that 
amendment failed: 12 voting for it, 21 voting against it.
  I appreciate the chairman and the ranking member, Mr. Conyers, 
agreeing to an amendment that Mr. Cicilline made, my Democratic friend. 
And, in fact, I had an identical amendment I was going to make, except 
mine added two other safeguards, two other laws.
  My friend and neighbor--office neighbor, that is--agreed to accept my 
friendly amendment, to add those other two laws, to ensure that when 
the U.S. Government went after and examined and queried this 702 
material--the warrantless wiretapping, as The Hill calls it--that these 
laws would apply to those queries to hopefully increase the concern by 
those making the queries that they could be punished.
  But this article goes on and says: ``The current law allows Federal 
investigators to search collected data belonging to American citizens, 
an authority critics say circumvents Fourth Amendment protections 
against unlawful search and seizure.
  ``The Liberty Act would require criminal investigators to obtain a 
court order before viewing the content of any American's communications 
collected under the NSA program--but would not require a warrant to 
search the database in the first place.''
  So the Liberty Act it is referring to actually was used as the 
amendment to that bill.
  Anyway, I know Mr. Conyers is quoted in the article, saying: ``We 
have been assured in explicit terms that if we adopt this amendment 
today''--talking about the Poe-Lofgren amendment--``leadership will not 
permit this bill to proceed to the House floor.''
  And that was also a concern mentioned by our friend from New York, 
Jerry Nadler.
  But I would submit that we should not be afraid of Republican 
leadership doing the wrong thing. At least, it doesn't hurt, I guess, 
to have a healthy fear because that certainly has happened. But we 
still ought to be pushing to do everything we can to ensure that the 
U.S. Constitution is properly followed and we don't continue to have 
loopholes around it.
  So that is an ongoing fight, and the Senate has got to take it up. 
But there are concerns that the Senate is just going to rubberstamp 
what the NSA wants. They are not going to have any of the safeguards 
that we put in the bill as it is already, which I still don't feel is 
enough, and that is why I voted against it, as did the man who sits 
next to me in the Judiciary Committee, Jim Jordan. Andy Biggs voted 
against it as well.
  So there were a number of us who voted against the bill because the 
proper protections, in our opinion, are not there. We have just got to 
continue to advocate for that.
  I also want to mention a bit of fake news that came from the 
Huffington Post.

  I have met Ms. Huffington. She could not have been more congenial. 
When I was at ABC, going to be on the Stephanopoulos show Sunday 
morning, she was a delight to talk to, but the stuff coming out of her 
publication sometimes is rather astounding.
  We had a debate in the Natural Resources Committee. We were voting on 
some bills, and a comment I made that was not necessarily central to 
the discussion but I thought might be interesting--I mean, if they 
would look at my full comments and comments I have made and continue to 
make, as I have said before, British Petroleum should never have been 
allowed to keep operating their drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico 
called Deepwater Horizon. They had hundreds of egregious safety 
violations when other companies had one or two.
  The only reason we can find that the Obama administration allowed 
British Petroleum to continue to drill with such egregious safety 
violations, with such complete, utter disregard for the safety and 
well-being of those on the platform and of wildlife in the Gulf of 
Mexico and those bordering the Gulf of Mexico, all we can find is they 
were about to come out and endorse the President's cap-and-trade 
program, something that Speaker Pelosi desperately wanted.
  I had read an article that indicated they even had BP representatives 
in the office of Senator John Kerry trying to work out when they would 
do the big rollout of this big oil company that was going to support 
cap-and-trade. Basically, they would have an inside deal and would have 
made billions of dollars that other oil companies would not have made 
because they didn't have the inside track like the Obama administration 
was going to give BP.
  But that is when the Deepwater Horizon blew, from what I understood, 
and so that is why the Obama administration was so slow to respond. 
They kept hoping this was going to go away and it wasn't going to be as 
serious, because BP was assuring them: Oh, it's not that bad. We have 
got it under control.
  They didn't have it under control. They should never have been 
allowed to have been drilling when that blowout occurred. It did have 
an adverse effect on the Gulf. It did have a very adverse effect on so 
many things.
  But the comment that the Huffington Post wanted to create some fake 
news, latched onto, is I was really upset and concerned about the 
damage that BP had caused.
  I have to go back and look. It wasn't that long after this happened, 
but I

[[Page H8689]]

drove hundreds of miles along the beach, and I kept getting out with my 
high-def camera expecting to be able to find a lot of oil on the 
beaches. I know I had read and seen there was a spot south of New 
Orleans, and, apparently, I didn't start close enough to that.
  I understood it was really ruining the beaches of Florida, and I went 
along the Miracle Coast and along the Mississippi and Alabama coast 
there. Everywhere I went, I would maybe find a few drops of oil like we 
have on our Texas beaches quite often, but it is just a drop or two 
here or there. I was going: Where's all the oil?
  Everybody said: Well, it is, like, 5, 10 miles up the coast.
  So I kept going up, looking for this big oil spill on the beach. And 
I knew there were people who were undertaking heroic efforts, you know. 
I had seen those on the news. I had talked to people who were doing it.
  Kevin Costner had a great idea, it appeared, for sopping up the oil 
to keep it from getting to the coast. So there were Herculean efforts 
being made to stop the oil. But there should have been more oil on the 
beach.
  So they want to make it sound like I am just oblivious to any oil 
ever coming ashore because I did say what is absolutely true, that it 
is amazing the way nature seems to take care of problems, and we know 
that because there is ongoing oil seepage every day.
  I don't want oil on our beaches. I hate oil on the beaches.

                              {time}  1300

  Really, it is infuriating when you are walking along the beach and 
you step on an oil bubble and then you have to spend a bunch of time 
trying to get that oil off your foot, even a small drop. But you could 
go to southern California, off the coast, and find drops of oil here 
and there from natural seepage.
  The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, you can go to 
their website, and they talk about natural oil seeps. They said: ``A 
2003 report from the National Research Council estimates that, on 
average, approximately 160,000 tonnes''--and it is spelled t-o-n-n-e-s; 
apparently metric tons--``of petroleum enter North American waters 
through natural seeps each year.''
  Apparently, 1 ton is about 7.33 barrels per ton, or 307.86 U.S. 
gallons per metric ton. So if you multiplied 307--or 308, if you want 
to round it; multiply 160,000 tons by 308, then you could get an idea 
of how many gallons of oil seep out just through cracks in the Earth's 
surface and come up through the waters.
  They are hard to find, although sometimes you can see them from 
satellites or from aircraft. You can see the oil shimmering on top of 
the water since it is lighter than water. It floats up through the 
seawater and comes to the surface.
  Anyway, just more fake news trying to create a big deal where there 
wasn't any. But you can go online to Woods Hole Oceanographic 
Institution. They have a good article on the natural oil seeps. It 
says: ``As much as one-half of the oil that enters the coastal 
environment comes from natural seeps of oil and natural gas. These 
geologic features are known to occur in clusters around the world, such 
as off the southern coast of California and in the Gulf of Mexico, but 
are still relatively unstudied. In recent years, advances in remote 
sensing have enabled more accurate detection and estimates of natural 
oil flows into the ocean.
  ``In locations where seeps are found, oil flows slowly up through 
networks of cracks, forming springs of hydrocarbon similar to the La 
Brae tar pits on land. Lighter compounds rise buoyantly to the water's 
surface and evaporate or become entrained in ocean currents; others 
fall the seafloor and collect over hundreds or thousands of years.''
  So if you multiply 308 times 160 tons, and then multiply that times 
thousands of years, you will get an idea as to how much natural seepage 
there has been of crude oil into the ocean.
  But at least the Huffington Post article points out that--and this 
was from the Deepwater Horizon blowout--``About 24 percent is believed 
to have evaporated or dissolved. The remaining 35 percent was 
`naturally dispersed' or persisted in the environment.'' And it says 
only ``41 percent was directly or chemically recovered, burned or 
skimmed.''
  So they only got 41 percent. That is pretty good. It is not good 
enough. We need to be better at doing that. But it really is amazing 
how nature seems to respond to catastrophes, but we are supposed to 
tend the garden, and that means we do the best we can to keep the 
garden clean.
  Mr. Speaker, I want to return to the issue about the shooting down in 
Sutherland Springs. The President, I think, appropriately pointed out 
when he was asked about it. He said: I think that mental health is your 
problem here.
  People are screaming for more gun control. Yet every time it seems 
that more gun control is pled for, our people that mean well stand up 
and scream: Oh, you got to do something. I don't care if it is wrong. 
Just do something.
  Well, it may be well-intended, but that is extremely foolish. You can 
do more harm by doing something even if it is wrong. It is often 
tragedies that lead to the worst legislation because people in Congress 
feel like we have got to do something. We have got to do something 
quick, even if it is wrong, so that the American people think we are 
dealing with it.
  Jefferson was not at the Constitutional Convention, but I understand 
he suggested that potentially a good amendment would be that you could 
not pass a bill here in Congress until it had been on file for a year.
  Obviously, that has never made its way into the law, but some of our 
worst legislation comes too quick as an overreaction to some tragedy, 
some failure when we don't have adequate time to see what would be the 
best thing to do.
  As it turns out in the Texas shooting, the gun laws were entirely 
adequate to prevent that from happening, but for those who put their 
faith in the government keeping us protected, which our Founders did 
not do--that is why we have a Second Amendment--you have to look no 
further than this tragic massacre to understand the government is not 
likely going to be there to protect you.
  It turns out the shooter, a man full of evil, was convicted of a 
crime that should have prevented him from even having a gun. Yet the 
Air Force failed to get the conviction into the databank so that when 
searches were done, background checks didn't pick it up.
  So when the government fails, the Founders expected that by having a 
Second Amendment where, not the military of the United States, but 
actually militia groups that form up, they would be able to have 
weapons. Those were rank and file citizens who were not hired by the 
government. They were simple citizens of the United States who would 
respond to suppress any outrage that the government might try to 
impose.
  That is what happened when Patrick Henry got 5,000 people to come out 
when the British Government, that was the law of the land, started 
going through their homes and taking whatever they wanted.
  They responded with guns, citizens coming out of their homes. No, I 
am not advocating for those who want to create more fake news. I am not 
advocating for a revolution. We have, fortunately, a Constitution in 
place that they didn't have in 1775, that allows us to fix things 
without having to have a revolution.
  But the answer is not more gun control laws. This guy was full of 
evil. He had mental health problems. The system should have prevented 
him from having a gun. The laws that were in place should have 
prevented that, and I am grateful that the State of Texas did its part.

  He applied for a concealed carry permit, and even though the Air 
Force conviction wasn't there, there was enough evidence to prevent him 
from getting a concealed carry permit in the State of Texas. But the 
other laws, where the Federal Government is supposed to protect us, 
failed to work because the government often fails to do its job.
  The thing that really, to me, became an outrage--and it is something 
that our Founders feared perhaps more than anything else when they were 
trying to set up a good governing document--was persecution of 
Christians. That is why so many people came to this country in its 
earliest days.
  Christians were being persecuted, as has happened for over 2,000 
years. They thought if they came to America and

[[Page H8690]]

they could have a country where they could be free to practice their 
Christian beliefs without government prosecuting and persecuting them, 
that it would be just a little slice of heaven on Earth, as much as you 
could get while there is still so much evil in the world.
  Now, as this country, led by its Supreme Court, others like the ACLU, 
and Freedom From Religion groups, they--we have already been told, you 
can't mention God. You can't pray. You can't mention your religion. 
Well, that is certainly not what was the feeling of those who were the 
predominant Founders and those who made the best improvements in 
America.
  It was a Great Awakening, a huge revival in America. Before the mid-
1700s, so much of the country turned to God, had Christian beliefs, 
Biblical beliefs, and their children--children like Sam Adams--grew up 
having such profound faith in God, profound faith in the Bible.
  I was looking down the hall in what is right below the rotunda and 
one of the signs up there mentioned Sam Adams. Sam Adams was called the 
Father of the American Revolution. He was a product of the Great 
Awakening in the 1700s.
  He was so moral. I guess many people knew that he knew how to make 
good beer. But he also had profound belief in the Bible, in God, in 
nature's God, and that is what drove him to push for a country where 
there could be equality; where people could practice their religious 
beliefs, whether they were atheists, Buddhists, Confucianists, Orthodox 
Jews, Muslim, only so long as they did not believe that their religion 
should overtake and supplant the U.S. Constitution, which is what 
radical Islamists believe.
  We have now come to a place where Christians are being so vilified 
and belittled and besmirched that this country is beginning to look 
like the places that the Christians that fled to America had to leave 
to avoid persecution.
  So we get these Twitter comments that say--an article from the 
Huffington Post, naturally--playing up the ridicule of Christians.
  One tweet from Rosanne Cash says: ``They were in a church that was 
full of prayers. They need a government that will enable commonsense 
gun laws.''
  Karen Tulmulty said: ``Thoughts and prayers for people who were mowed 
down in a church sounds especially hollow.''
  Michael McKean said: ``They were in church. They had the prayers shot 
right out of them. Maybe try something else.''
  Keith Olbermann said: `` `Thoughts and prayers' again . . . idiot? 
These people were in CHURCH. They WERE praying.''
  Katie Mack said: ``At this point, `thoughts and prayers' just means 
`shut up and take it.'''

                              {time}  1315

  Wil Wheaton said: ``The murdered victims were in a church. If prayers 
did anything, they would still be alive, you worthless sack of'' S-dot-
dot-dot.
  Chris Evangelista: ``They were already in a church . . . it's almost 
like prayers do absolutely nothing and actual reform is needed.''
  Marina Sirtis said: ``To all those asking for thoughts and prayers 
for the victims . . . it seems that your direct line to God is not 
working.''
  Josh Gad: ``Terror attack that kills six gets travel bans same day. 
Deadliest mass shooting and deadliest church shooting ever get prayers 
and too soon to talk.''
  Roxane Gay: ``After a mass shooting in a church, the phrase `thoughts 
and prayers' from the mouths of useless politicians becomes even more 
asinine.''
  Robert McNamara: ``We need more than prayers. . . . Today's victims 
were at church praying. We need sensible gun regulation and a ban on 
AR-15 weapons.''
  By the way, if there were a ban on AR-15s, then the shooter would 
have been allowed to continue shooting, and he probably would have 
killed everybody in the church because the guy that stopped him, thank 
God, had an AR-15 that he used to shoot him and get the carnage to 
stop.
  Sara Bonaccori says: ``Clearly your prayers aren't working if a mass 
shooting can take place in a church. Maybe we can try a legislative 
solution now?''
  Mr. Speaker, it just goes on and on belittling Christians and 
belittling people who believe in the power of prayer.
  Then we had an article from The Hill today. Representative Jared 
Huffman in a news interview says that he thinks there is too much 
religion in politics. Huffman told The Washington Post that he has for 
years not answered questionnaires that ask him about religious beliefs 
instead putting: unspecified or none of your business. I don't believe 
in religious tests.
  I don't either. Although if somebody says they are a Christian and 
they come before our committee and they keep making a big deal about 
how I am a Christian, then, as we know even in court, credibility is 
always an issue. If you say under oath you are one thing and it turns 
out you are not, then you are not really a Christian, you don't have 
Christian beliefs, and that is worth knowing.
  You say you are a Christian? What does that mean? I will not hesitate 
to ask that if it is going to reflect not on their religious beliefs. I 
am not going to hold those against anybody. But if you say you are one 
thing and you are lying, that is important to find out.
  Anyway, more of the same. There is a great article in National Review 
by David French, dated November 6: ``In the Face of Evil, Prayer Is the 
Most Rational and Effective Response.''
  He points out that: ``While I disagree with atheists, my quarrel 
right now isn't with their disbelief, it's with their choosing this 
moment to not only mock Christians but to also display their ignorance 
of basic Christian theology.
  ``You see, the presence of evil--especially the increasing presence 
of evil--demands a prayerful response. Scripture is full of examples of 
God's people crying out to Him in great distress. Jesus cried out to 
God in His great distress. Time and again God responds in ways that 
bring healing and restoration to broken people and broken nations. He 
always responds in some way--often not the way we ask or demand.''
  If He were to intervene and stop all evil, then it means we become 
robots; we don't have free choice. We become basically robots. As any 
parent knows, you can order your child to love you or to hug you, but 
there is nothing that means more to your heart and soul than a sweet, 
little child running up to you voluntarily, throwing their arms around 
you, and saying, ``I love you, Daddy'' from the heart.
  If we have a Heavenly parent, doesn't it make sense that that 
Heavenly parent would want us free to choose to love the Heavenly 
parent?
  The article says: ``Progressives always respond to mass shootings 
with a series of proposals that wouldn't have stopped the mass 
shooting.''
  Mr. Speaker, it is happening again. It is happening again. This 
shooter in Sutherland Springs, Texas, could not have lawfully possessed 
his weapons, but he ignored existing gun laws. So who follows the laws 
if you pass laws to take away guns? The honest people, the ones who are 
victims in a shooting like this. That is who follows.
  There are laws in Texas that enable a church to be a gun-free zone, 
and apparently too many people assume every church is gun-free. If 
someone had had a gun in that church, there would not have been 25 
people killed.
  So, Mr. Speaker, my thoughts and prayers are with the country, and I 
hope and pray others will join.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.

                          ____________________