[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 108 (Tuesday, June 22, 2021)]
[House]
[Pages H2992-H2998]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WOKENESS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 4, 2021, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Roy) is recognized for
60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Mr. ROY. Madam Speaker, I rise today to talk about the state of
affairs here in the people's House and the extent to which the majority
has been using the time on the floor of this valuable body, the
people's House, to promote wokeness first rather than America first.
And this is what we see every single day.
Madam Speaker, I have a few of my colleagues here tonight with me
because this is such an important time in our country's history. We
have so many important issues we need to be addressing, ought to be
addressing, and yet, the people's House is not addressing them. And
instead, the people's House is focusing on advancing wokeness first
instead of America first.
I have got a number of things I am going to get into and talk about
addressing these particular issues, but I would just note that my good
friend's--and someone I admire a great deal--birthday is tomorrow, and
that is Justice Clarence Thomas.
And for those who know his story and have read his biography, his
autobiography, written through the eyes of his relationship with his
grandfather--``My Grandfather's Son''--Justice Thomas, I think
represents all that is great and good about this country.
He represents all that is great and good about overcoming the
devastating impact of Jim Crow laws in the South, the discrimination
that we saw rampant in his native hometown of Savannah, and watching
his life story and walking through his life story, and the progression
of what that meant and where he ended up and what he achieved.
And then what we witnessed in that fall of 1991 with the obscene,
absurd actions by the Senate Committee on the Judiciary--chaired, by
the way, by then-Senator Joe Biden--attacking this good man, Clarence
Thomas, attacking his integrity, attacking his character.
And yet, what do we see out of the life and service of Clarence
Thomas but the embodiment of the fulfillment of the American Dream and
a recognition of what you can achieve when you fight for it, when you
work for it, and you overcome the odds against you. And what a
beautiful story it is.
And why do I raise that now? Because in a world of wokeness, in a sea
of wokeness, all driving an agenda--purposeful, by the way, by my
colleagues on the other side of the aisle--to divide this country by
race, to divide this country, and to highlight issues of division and
separation, as Justice Roberts fairly eloquently stated, he said:
``It's a sordid business, this divvying us up by race.'' And we see it
every single day. And it is highlighted by this body. I am going to go
through that in a minute.
Madam Speaker, every single thing this administration, every single
thing this Democrat-led House of Representatives, everything that the
Democrat-led United States Senate is doing, is designed very purposely
to divide us by race, and we should be better than that.
And I think there are things that we all know that are on the minds
of the American people, whether it is increasing prices, because we
spent $6 trillion and lumber prices are going up, and housing prices
are going up. We have a border that is under assault; cartels who run
our border. And we are turning the keys of the kingdom over to Iran and
China instead of siding with Israel. And we are flooding the economy
with dollars and driving up inflation, but also racking up mountains of
debt. All of these things are occurring.
And the regulations that my friend from Texas, Mr. Crenshaw, was just
talking about, the regulation-strangling business, we are paying people
more not to work than to work.
And all of our small businesses are at home going, ``stop it. Please
stop it.'' I have introduced legislation set up to end those
unemployment benefits.
Will we debate those here in this Chamber?
No. No, sir.
Why? Because we are going to advance woke legislation. We are going
to talk about woke bills. We are not going to talk about all the small
businesses--by the way, often owned by minorities, often owned by
people who need to be able to hire people and they can't because this
institution spent $6 trillion and doled it out to destroy the American
Dream by paying people more to work than to not work. It is absolutely
astounding.
And that is what we have. This Chamber is empty. What have we done
today? We have voted on a couple of random bills--I don't know if they
are suspension bills or what we did today. What are we even going to do
this week? The American people don't know, because we are not doing
anything. They're looking at this Chamber and they are saying: What are
you doing?
We have an obligation to fight and defend the American people and to
do
[[Page H2993]]
our job, and I am delighted to have my friends from Texas here.
Madam Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Babin).
Mr. BABIN. Madam Speaker, I thank the gentleman for having this
Special Order on such a crucial time in our history.
You don't have to look hard to see the devastation left behind from
the wokeism movement currently plaguing our beloved country. Our
schools and our universities, our esteemed and feared military, our
government on every level, and our history itself are being
contaminated by those pushing socialism and division under the guise of
being morally woke.
{time} 2000
Webster's dictionary defines the word ``woke'' as being ``aware of
and actively attentive to imparted facts and issues, especially issues
of racial and social justice.''
Well, I can tell you with absolute certainty that I am woke to the
following:
First, I am woke to the fact that innocent men, women, and children
across the country are being hurt and killed because of the left's call
to defund the police around this Nation.
I am woke to the fact that Democrats are more than willing to spend
your hard-earned tax dollars on housing and free handouts for illegal
aliens, but cannot be bothered to care for our homeless and our
veterans.
I am woke to the fact that the Critical Race Theory is racist in
itself.
And, lastly, I am woke to the fact that painting America as a racist
nation is wrong on every level and a slap in the face to those of every
color, every ethnicity, and creed who courageously paid the ultimate
sacrifice so Old Glory could wave boldly and freely for years to come.
Now I am hearing calls from the far left and those who are woke to
replace our beloved Old Glory.
Where has common sense gone?
If the left truly wants to discuss social justice, I encourage them
to talk to the countless minority business owners who watch their
life's work be looted and burned in front of their very eyes last year
because of woke ideologies.
Go talk to the engineer who was fired and can't pay his bills now
because President Biden has foolishly blocked the Keystone pipeline. Go
talk to the migrant woman who was assaulted and raped during her trek
to the southern border of the United States because Joe Biden and
Kamala Harris told her to come here and invited her here.
I could go on, but here is the bottom line: If we don't stand firmly
against this movement, America, whose mighty wings have fought to
defeat evil tyrants, communism, and Nazism in order to lift freedom-
loving people out of the hands of oppressors all over this world, could
soon be a socialist dictatorship herself and completely unrecognizable
to all who love her and fought for her and died for her. And a world
without a free America is a dark world indeed.
Mr. ROY. Madam Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Madam Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Texas, and I appreciate his
remarks and his comments very much.
Madam Speaker, in just a minute I am going to turn it over to the
other gentleman from Texas--in just a minute--and I know he has got
some issues he wants to talk about involving border security.
Because, as three representatives from Texas here, I think I can
speak on behalf of the entire delegation, at least the Republican side
of the delegation, that our State is under siege. Our State is under
siege in a way that it has not been for upwards of almost 180 years.
And you think about what is happening at the border and the extent to
which cartels have operational control of our border, the extent to
which we have attacks on American citizens, ranchers who are getting
their fences torn down, ranches that are being ransacked.
We have people who are struggling. We have migrants who are dying in
these ranches, migrants who are dying on the rivers. We have migrants
who are being abused on the journey. We have little girls who are being
abused.
If you spend a minute, a minute on the Rio Grande, instead of
pontificating in this godforsaken Chamber, and you go talk to these
migrants who are coming across the Rio Grande, then you see what is
actually happening to these human beings all in the false name of
compassion.
Madam Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Sessions),
and I would ask what his views are about the current state of things
with respect to the border.
Mr. SESSIONS. Madam Speaker, I thank Congressman Roy for not only
standing in tonight to speak forthrightly to the American people, but
also including other Members of the Texas delegation to have
conversations with the American people not just about the topic of
being woke, but actually the things that are actually happening to the
United States of America.
The Congressman is exactly right, there is a crisis in America today.
There is a crisis that takes place because of such a rapid and swift
transition to the ultraleft. The transition that has taken place began
immediately upon President Biden accepting the oath of office and
walking, driving, going back to the White House after he had taken an
oath of office, where he raised his hand and he repeated, among the
other words, to ``well and faithfully execute the laws of the United
States.''
Well, there is a little bit more than just ``well and faithfully
execute the laws of the United States.'' I believe the American people
want and need a stable person who will recognize that they need someone
to work in their best interest, in the best interest of their
community, in the best interest of their job, in the best interest of
safety, in the best interest of trying to give every single person in
this country a better opportunity to have a better life. That is what I
believe is behind the ``well and faithfully execute the laws of the
United States.''
In fact, what has happened is there is a sweeping revolution that is
going on in the United States of America by the elected officials.
Elected officials who have turned a blind eye to the things in the past
that were seen as stable, as reasonable, and something that was in the
best interest to protect the people that they represent.
Day after day we have watched what happened down at the southern
border of this country. I, too, went down. I am no stranger to the
border. I previously lived in El Paso, Texas, for a number of years. My
father served as the chief judge of the Western District of Texas and
had to deal with not just the crime, but some of the circumstances that
happened along the border. They came home to roost, so to speak, within
the United States of America.
And as a Federal district judge, he tried his best to deal favorably,
fairly, with people who violated the law. But where there were people
who were criminals, who were not here to serve in the best interest of
the United States of America, those who would become enemies of the
State because what they did is they would import drugs, drugs which
would kill Americans.
We have just been through a terrible epidemic in this country of
opioid abuse. Opioid abuse that we all recognize, much of it was
inherently begun and started here in the United States, but that has
taken hold with other drugs now, fentanyl, methamphetamines, heroin,
cocaine.
And in that process, we look to where this comes from. This comes
from other countries, by and large, other countries who have people who
want to kill and make money off the demise of the American people.
Yet the President of the United States, at the time he served as Vice
President--because I know because the Drug Enforcement Administration
senior officials have repeatedly said that the intelligence that was
given to the then-Vice President, now President of the United States,
they understood firsthand the danger that came from an open border.
The dangers that came when we did not have active law enforcement and
intelligence would cause the deaths of thousands of Americans because
of the illicit drugs. Illicit drugs that not only are addicting, but
many times mixed in a way that a user never knew they were taking them.
The availability of fentanyl, as an example.
Yet the President of the United States, with this vast knowledge of
understanding from his service to the
[[Page H2994]]
country as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, as chairman of
the Foreign Affairs Committee, as Vice President of the United States,
he already knew the story.
The story that he wanted to project was that he is a kid from
Pennsylvania, who knew what real America is. But what has happened is
that he personally, and the radical left, have created a circumstance
in this country that, we, as Republicans, are talking about tonight.
That we are supposed to be woke to understanding the social
implications. The enormous implications to people that we represent.
Yet, seemingly, it is the police that are the problem. Seemingly, it
is the border that is the problem by enforcing the law. Seemingly, it
is the ability that they want for criminals to run rampant throughout
not just our neighborhoods, but across this country.
Madam Speaker, I would say to the young Congressman from Texas that
we need his voice, his voice of compassion, his voice of common sense
that says we need to move this country back to where it was simply a
few months ago. Where we respect members of law enforcement, men and
women of law enforcement who make house calls because they are asked to
come and make dispute resolution many times, and then to take care of
the law as it applies to a circumstance.
We need to get back to where we understand that the men and women of
not just the U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Border Patrol
are back on their job instead of being moved over to take care of 1
million people who, in the first 6 months, have come through illegally.
We need to go back to elected officials who actually understand that
the people who elected them aren't for woke. What they are for is this
body to come together to where we understand that we have an obligation
to protect the men and women and children and seniors and disabled
people of this country. We have an obligation to stand behind our law
enforcement and to provide them with better training and the things
that they need, equipment, to properly do their job.
Instead, we are watching our country, whether it is Chicago or Los
Angles or New York City where criminals run rampant because of woke,
that says we are supposed to defund the police department. We are
supposed to defund those activities that would offer safety and
security and opportunity for the most vulnerable of our society, and
then blame others when people of color or of different races are harmed
by criminals and thugs.
I watched this morning on TV of the murder that took place in Chicago
of the young couple that came to a stoplight and were accosted and
killed by thugs, criminal thugs.
I watched about a young man walking down the street in broad daylight
in New York City and was stabbed repeatedly by a criminal this weekend.
No wonder this happens. We have already run the police out of town.
We have already run people out of town who legitimately can stand up
and have that obligation.
Madam Speaker, I come here tonight to join my two Texas colleagues to
say, woke may be a term that we are supposed to get about enlightenment
that we need to be good and better to each other, that we need to
understand that there are people who might not agree with me, and I
might not agree with them.
{time} 2015
But ``woke'' has taken on a different theme. It has taken on a theme
of taking on responsibility and respect. It has taken away the ability
that we have in this body to effectively even be heard by each other.
It has taken away the ability of millions of Americans to where they no
longer feel the safety and security of their own home, of their own
city street, or even their ability to stand up to those who have a
different opinion.
Madam Speaker, I think what Congressman Roy is doing tonight is more
than just standing up and expressing an opinion. It actually is an
opinion that I believe millions of Americans support and respect by
this gentleman doing this Special Order tonight.
I would call on this House of Representatives and all of its Members
to understand that this phase we are going through will have a very
difficult, difficult conclusion for many people who cannot effectively
get through what is happening to them, to people who live in cities
where police will no longer be, to small businesses that are burned to
the ground, and to judges who are no longer judging based upon the rule
of law but rather fear.
Madam Speaker, we as the Republican Party are not standing up and
yelling and screaming. We have much resolve to us. But we ask tonight
that the American people hear us that we condemned what happened on
January the 6th. We condemn what is happening when people take
advantage of law enforcement, take advantage of people, and take
advantage of this great country.
Let us hope that tonight in our resolve of speaking forthrightly and
honestly that we want to be that great country with shining cities on
the hill where people work together, where people have a common
interest and goals for their communities, and generations of people can
work together whether you be a retired senior citizen, Madam Speaker,
or whether you be a young child who knows not except that you live in a
great country.
We need to speak plainly, but we are not yelling and screaming. We
are not blaming someone else for the problems. But we will say this:
The Republican Party of this House of Representatives stands for people
to be safe in their own homes, for women who are in their own homes
with their own children who will not be taken advantage of because they
do know they have a backup and that is the police departments, that
they know that the rule of law will effectively provide them with the
needs that they have to live in the greatest country in the world, that
our law enforcement agencies will know that they can continue to evolve
into professionalism, that they will be able to effectively heal
themselves and make the changes.
I call on law enforcement to continue to make these changes. My
Republican Party has these conversations with law enforcement every
day. But I call on the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Christopher Wray, just as when my father, Judge William Sessions, was
Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to stand up for law
enforcement and expect them and want them to become professional.
Madam Speaker, we must heal what has happened.
Sunday, at church, I heard no less than 50 times the word redemption,
the words that we are sinners, that we make mistakes, that we need to
look at each other with the faithfulness of a great nation. I heard
words of love and respect for those even that we disagree with.
But, Madam Speaker, we are not down pounding on tables tonight. We
are simply trying to say what we believe is true, and that is that I
believe that there are tens of millions of Americans who want and need
this country to be safe. They want and need our elected officials,
whether they be Republican or Democrat, that they need their elected
officials to understand that their life and their family are important,
and that until we get back to the standards of performance of
expectations where law enforcement is allowed to effectively and
professionally be there as the backup, where our military knows that we
are there to support them and that our elected officials will stand on
the side of righteousness, we are going to continue to wander through
this terrible time that I call chaos.
It is my hope, as we drop to our knees this evening, that we do offer
a prayer for our President, President Biden. I know him, and I know he
has been through difficult times in his life. But, Madam Speaker, I
would ask tonight that we give respect and prayer and ask that the
President please understand that the most vulnerable who are there
still need others to be of assistance, and we need to make sure that
this country heals itself with love, respect, and admiration for each
other.
I want to thank the young Congressman for tonight, for his bringing
forth this opportunity to speak about where our country is. I want him
to know that I personally admire him, respect him, and appreciate his
sound call for a voice of reason and opportunity for America's future.
May God bless our country.
Madam Speaker, I thank the gentleman for allowing me to speak.
[[Page H2995]]
Mr. ROY. Madam Speaker, I thank my friend from Texas. I particularly
thank him for referring to me as young. I will take it.
Interestingly, and I will probably have more to say about this, but
it was 10 years ago in July that I was diagnosed with Hodgkin's
lymphoma, with a 4-month-old daughter and a not quite 2-year-old son,
not 100 percent sure whether I was going to be able to do like I did
last weekend and go see my son play Little League baseball and see my
daughter go off to camp last week.
Madam Speaker, that will shift your world view a little bit, as they
say, about what is important and what is not important. I can tell you,
Madam Speaker, that my dedication to public service was fully renewed
after getting through that.
I was very blessed that I got through cancer-free in a matter of
months, and Lord willing, I am still cancer-free. There is plenty of
wood around here, but I knocked on my head instead.
I am honored the gentleman took the time to come down here and join
me and say such nice things. I know the gentleman knows that part of
the purpose here is our collective desire in this body to do what is
right for this country.
What I cannot for the life of me understand is why my Democratic
colleagues continue to insist on using this body to stoke division and
to separate us by race, by sex, and by wherever we come from--all the
different ways they could possibly come up with to divide us rather
than finding ways for us to unite together to protect, defend, secure,
and advance this country going forward.
My colleagues from Texas know--I know my friends from Texas know--it
has been a full 90 days since the Vice President of the United States
was tapped by the President of the United States to be in charge of the
border, yet the Vice President has not taken a second to come to the
Rio Grande, to come to the Rio Grande Valley, to come to the border.
Now, it wouldn't be enough just to come. By the way, if the Vice
President is listening, it is not enough just to go. But it sure would
be nice if she could find the southern border on a map, get in her
taxpayer-funded airplane, take a direct flight down to the border, and
go take the time to meet with Texans, to go take the time to meet with
migrants, to take the time to meet with local leaders, and to see what
is actually happening in real time at the border.
I know the gentleman knows full well that we just had 180,000
apprehensions in May. We have had over 700,000 apprehensions this year,
and we have had over 200,000 got-aways. The Border Patrol estimates
1,000 got-aways every single day coming through between the ports of
entry because our Border Patrol is now running processing centers in
McAllen.
We all know this. I believe the Vice President knows this. I sent the
Vice President a memo outlining this just in case she doesn't know.
But it is happening to us in real time. It is happening to migrants
in real time, and it is happening to ranchers in real time. I know my
friends from Texas know that we have had 7,500 pounds of fentanyl that
have been intercepted by Border Patrol. Fentanyl is killing our
children.
What are we going to vote on this week? What are we going to do this
week? I don't even know.
I flew back here from Texas, and I have half my colleagues still
voting by proxy even though we are not wearing masks. We are still
voting by proxy by saying: I am voting proxy because of the pandemic.
We are not even having half of our committee meetings because we are
doing them virtually. We are doing them when we are home in our work
periods.
Why aren't we here? Why aren't we here when there are 7,500 pounds of
fentanyl pouring into our border? That is just the stuff we are
capturing, by the way.
Do you know how many children are dying with marijuana that has been
laced with fentanyl? It is happening right now, Madam Speaker.
You hear about the 80,000, 90,000 opioid deaths last year. Madam
Speaker, do you know where this stuff is coming from?
Why did Governor DeSantis send resources to Texas to help secure our
border? People said: Why would you do that? That is Texas. Because the
map and the drugs that are coming into Florida are coming through the
Southwest border, and anybody who follows it knows that to be true.
Why is that? Because the cartels that are now running the border
profit immensely by moving human beings for profit and by moving
fentanyl for profit.
The Cartel Jalisco New Generation just absorbed the Laredo faction
and just absorbed the Cartel del Noreste of Los Zetas in Nuevo Laredo.
They now have operational control of Tamaulipas. That is a dangerous
cartel.
They are moving fentanyl for profit and moving human beings for
profit, millions of dollars a day. We know this to be true. We know
this from law enforcement agents on the ground--Texans, Federal
authorities, Border Patrol, and ICE.
But they are not able to do their job because they are running
processing facilities, processing facilities for human beings who we
say we are helping because we are saying that we are giving them
asylum. By the way, they are not claiming asylum under the statute that
the asylum laws were meant to provide.
They come across the river, and there is a sign on trees at the Rio
Grande.
By the way, the Vice President and my colleagues on the other side of
the aisle would know this if they bothered to go to the Rio Grande.
If you walk down to the river, Madam Speaker, there is a sign. It
says ``asilo'' with an arrow, and it points to a bunch of bright lights
sitting under the bridge, saying go over there.
When I was at the river, I met about 50 migrants at about midnight.
There was a group of them, and they were lost. They were going around
in circles. So, I drove my truck down the path so they would have light
in the dark, so they could get to the processing center.
These are good people seeking a better life. Ask every single one of
them why they are coming here, and it is for a job and opportunity. It
wasn't for asylum under our laws. We are making a mockery of our laws
by saying that anyone who wants to come to our country for
opportunity--God bless them, I understand why; I probably would too. If
you look at the opportunity you have here, Madam Speaker, as opposed to
El Salvador, Guatemala, or Honduras right now, I understand. But we are
turning our laws upside down. That is not what asylum laws are for.
Why don't we just sit down and figure it out? Madam Speaker, you
can't just say wide-open borders. You can't. It is irresponsible.
Listen to the leaders of Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador. They
say it is irresponsible because it is devastating their own countries.
People say: Why don't they fix it? We should have policies to work
with them to try to fix it.
But do you know what would fix it the most, Madam Speaker? If we
didn't have a wide-open border. If we actually stood up and said:
Sorry, you can't just come in unless you actually qualify under our
asylum laws, which is a fraction, a tiny fraction, of the 700,000-plus
apprehensions that we have apprehended since January 1.
But why aren't we here debating that? Why aren't we coming up with a
solution to this problem so that migrants aren't being abused as I
speak by cartels so they can make money?
{time} 2030
This is the greatest country in the history of the world, but we
allow that to occur. We allow that to occur, and we do so in the name
of compassion. We do so when people stand up and say: Oh, well, we want
to make sure these folks will get here.
Meanwhile, we have people screaming: Kids in cages.
Anybody remember that? Anybody remember the kids in cages? How many
of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle ran to the cameras, sat
in hearings, and screamed: Kids in cages?
The very structures put in place by the Obama-Biden administration.
It is a fact. Everybody knows that that is who created the chain-link
barriers in these facilities at the border. Nobody blamed Obama and
Biden for doing that.
Air flow, ability to see the migrants, protect them. Oh, no,
everybody went out and said: Kids in cages.
[[Page H2996]]
Why?
Because we had a massive influx.
But they said: Oh, they are drinking out of toilets.
It was a lie. They weren't drinking out of toilets. They were
drinking out of a device that had the water fountain on the top with
the toilet down below. We have them in facilities all over, in prisons
facilities, where we have people coming in. The water supply in the
bathroom right off of this floor is connected to the same water supply
between the toilet and the sink. It is a pipe behind the drywall.
Yet they went around saying: Kids drinking out of toilets.
It is shameful. We can't have a rational conversation about what is
actually happening in Texas. It is bad. There are children in stash
houses right now.
Why are we sitting here doing nothing? Why are we going to have a
vote this week on two suspension bills in a quest to go after more
wokeness for, I think it is, some LGBTQ small business bill or
something on a suspension that failed to get through on the two-thirds
vote?
Okay. Debate that. Have it out. They tried to get it through on
suspension. It didn't get through. So we are going to do a rule. We
won't have any real debate on it, by the way. Everything that the
American people see in here is all a sham. There is no actual debate on
the floor of this body. And anybody who wants to come debate me on
that, I am happy to debate it. There is no debate on the floor of the
people's House, ever.
We haven't had an amendment on the floor of the House of
Representatives, the people's House, since May of 2016, that was in
order on open debate on the floor of the House so that any one of my
colleagues could walk down here and say: Hey, I have got an idea. There
is a bill. You know what I would like to do? I would like to change
something in the bill. Here is an amendment. I would like to send it to
the desk, offer my amendment. Hey, what do you think about my
amendment? It might make the bill better.
Do you know when I would have liked to have had a debate on that?
Last Friday.
I would have liked to have had a debate on the Juneteenth bill.
Why?
Because the purpose of that bill was excellent. The fulfillment of
the Declaration of Independence with the ending of slavery, which we
recognize in Texas because of Juneteenth, I didn't support the bill
because I didn't think the title was good. There were some other
factors. But I didn't support it, and I would have liked to have
amended it. Never got a chance to do it, ever. I would have liked to
have had the ability to amend it, but couldn't do it.
All right. So you are forced with an up or down vote. We have 2,000-
page bills that are $2 trillion. They are dropped on the floor and they
say take it or leave it. And I say, you know what? I would like to cut
something or add something. Can't do it.
I can go up to the Rules Committee and say: Here is my thing. And it
gets voted down in the Rules Committee.
If you see amendments on the floor of the House, it is all a fraud.
It is all a fraud. They are hand-picked amendments designed to make it
look like we are amending, but we are not.
You know, 15 amendments from the majority, 5 amendments from the
minority, bam. Hey, look at that. That is debate. We are killing our
country by partisan dropping of bills, no matter who is in the
majority, by the way.
I said that we haven't had an amendment on the floor since 2016.
Guess who was in control of the House for 2 years of that?
Republicans.
When are we actually going to sit down and debate this stuff and do
the things that matter?
Again, I go home to Texas and everybody is saying: How can you
possibly be allowing this to be occurring on our border?
It is the fundamental duty of the Federal Government to secure the
border of the United States, yet we have fentanyl pouring in. We have
cartels who run the border. We have Mexico becoming a narco-terrorist
state. We have danger to citizens in our country actually occurring.
We have human trafficking and sex trafficking occurring in San
Antonio, Austin, all the way up I-35, going over to Houston. We stopped
cars in the San Antonio suburbs that have nine immigrants in them going
to a stash house in Houston, driven by an American citizen employee of
a cartel.
I offered an op-ed explaining that to the San Antonio Express-News,
along with the district attorney of Kendall County, Texas, and the San
Antonio Express-News wouldn't print it, a fact-based op-ed. We ended up
printing it in National Review or someplace online.
Who wants to have a conversation about this stuff?
The American people do. Everybody I talk to in Texas knows this is
real. But here we are, and we have a House body and, frankly, an
administration that is more interested in advancing wokeness every
single day than addressing a wide open border that endangers us and the
migrants who seek to come here.
I can't emphasize that enough: a wide open border that endangers
American citizens, endangers our children, and endangers the migrants
who seek to come here, which my colleagues on the other side of the
aisle pat themselves on the back in the false name of compassion that
open borders is somehow good for migrants. And it is a lie. It is a
blatant lie.
Instead, what are we going to get?
We are going to get a so-called infrastructure bill next week, which
will come through here on partisan lines. And what are we going to have
in there?
There are the provisions and programs that prioritize funding based
on race, ethnicity, gender, and socially disadvantaged status. One
provision, it finds that race and gender-neutral efforts alone are
insufficient.
The bill includes a study on how Federal infrastructure planning
exacerbated systemic racial, regional, social, environmental, and
economic injustices.
We have a bill that establishes 41 new Federal programs, $20 million
a year for implicit bias research and training grants related to racial
profiling; $5 million a year for a program to increase transportation
job awareness and diversity; a carbon pollution reduction program.
On the international stage, what do we see?
Our own diplomats are undermining the greatness of America. We have
got Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the Ambassador to the United Nations, who
said that racial equity is her top focus, and that white supremacy is
woven into our founding documents and principles.
Our adversaries, like Russia and China, are weaponizing the leftist
agenda. At the summit in Alaska, Secretary Blinken brought up China's
imprisonment of millions of Uighur Muslims, and China responded by
arguing that the U.S. is not much different, mentioning Black lives
matter. The Uighurs.
Military and veterans: Instead of working to develop a lethal,
battle-ready force that will kill people and destroy things when called
up to do so, which is the purpose of a military, under the guise of
reviewing extremism within the ranks of the military in March, Special
Operations Command hired its first chief diversity and inclusion
officer.
We have seen examples of West Point cadets forced to attend critical
race theory presentations. A Space Force officer was fired for saying,
``The diversity, inclusion and equity industry and the trainings we are
receiving in the military . . . is rooted in critical race theory which
is rooted in Marxism.''
The Biden VA will now be using American taxpayer dollars to cover sex
reassignment surgery.
I had multiple parents of the kids that I was able--or 18-year-olds I
was able to nominate to go to academies, and we had a celebration in
San Antonio, and every single one of the parents were coming up to me
and showing me these videos from the Air Force Academy, West Point
Academy, talking about, you know, people having two moms and two dads
and all of this woke training. For heaven's sake, it is the military.
I mean, China and Russia is just looking at us and saying: What in
the world? Well, they are licking their chops.
You have got critical race theory in education. We are seeing a
large-scale effort to impose tyranny over the minds of our children
through taxpayer-funded indoctrination.
In Evanston, Illinois, students listened to ``Not My Idea: A book
about
[[Page H2997]]
Whiteness,'' which states that ``whiteness is a bad idea,'' and
``always was,'' and that ``you can be white without signing onto
whiteness.''
In Cupertino, California, third graders were required to deconstruct
their racial identities and then rank themselves according to their
``power and privilege.''
In Oregon, ``ethnic standards'' will require kindergartners to
``understand their own identity groups, including but not limited to
race, gender, family, ethnicity, culture, religion, and ability.''
An advisory board linked to Virginia's Loudoun County Public School
District demanded that teachers be dismissed if they criticize the
district's equity training, inspired by critical race theory.
We saw the fellow who was removed or told that he had to be suspended
in Loudoun County--I think he was finally restored--because he dared to
speak up about this.
Meanwhile, we have got woke corporations all across America and their
corporate boards moving the Major League Baseball All-Star Game from
Atlanta, Georgia, which is 50 percent Black, to 10 percent Denver. I
bet all of those White Coloradans driving around in their Subarus,
patting themselves on the back when they go hiking with a rainbow flag
on the back of their car or something, feel good about themselves,
instead of celebrating Hank Aaron in Atlanta, Georgia.
Why?
Because Georgia was moving an election reform bill with laws that
were almost identical to Colorado.
The Major League Baseball said: Oh, no, we are going to go join the
woke brigade and we are going to go forward and we are going to move
everything to Colorado.
Nothing was proved by that other than Major League Baseball's
wokeness.
I talked about border security because it is so critical to the
people of Texas. We can talk about the other things that are critical,
all of these programs I just talked about.
People asked: Well, Congressman Roy, why do you come down here and
often vote ``no''?
Because every single bill dropped on the floor of this House spends
money we don't have, adds regulations that are going to kill small
businesses, divides us by race, or adds more laws to the books.
Does anybody think we need more laws, more spending when we are $30
trillion in debt?
I just once would like to see an actual debate with the 435 Members
representing the American people in this Chamber about what in the
world we are going to do about $30 trillion in debt.
But we got nothing. We have got an empty Chamber. The American people
can hear my voice echoing. We are not going to actually have a debate
about it. We are just going to spend more money. It is just a race to
see who can spend more money.
Does anybody have any belief that we are not endangering our kids and
grandkids?
I mean, if somebody wants to come down here and expound on modern
monetary theory about how spending all this money is absolutely fine, I
am happy to listen. Most people in America don't believe it. We will
have $30 trillion in debt soon; $6 trillion spent in the last year.
Do you know how much it cost to win all of World War II?
It was $4.1 trillion in current dollars.
We just spent $6 trillion in a year--appropriated. We will spend it
out in a little over a year; $6 trillion.
We are shutting down small businesses, closing our schools. We have
100,000 small businesses closed, 100,000. And now we are paying people
more not to work than to work.
Why do you suppose the Vice President of the United States refuses to
come to the southern border? Why do you suppose the Vice President of
the United States, or the President, refuses to go to the southern
border and refuses to take me up on my offer to debate the Vice
President anywhere, any time about the border?
Because she knows and the President knows they have zero defense for
our current border policies. There is literally no ability to defend
the current border policies of the United States. It is laughable. A
high school debate team would destroy the President or the Vice
President in a debate about our current border because it is so
unbelievably unforgivable to turn our borders over to cartels.
But that is what this administration has done. And, again, look, it
is all tied back together. This is all in the name of supposed
compassion for people and a continued desire to try to drive a wedge
and say: Oh, Republicans just don't want those Brown people to come
here across our river. That is what it is about. That is the purpose of
the fight and the divide.
Meanwhile, ask any Border Patrol agent, ask anybody along the Rio
Grande, ask anybody who is being affected by it, ask any of the
migrants about what is happening, how it is happening, about the
journey. I am not saying the migrants who come here don't want to be
here. They do.
But look in the eyes of the little 7-year-old girl on the border that
I looked into, who had no mom, no dad, no uncle, no aunt, no brother,
no sister, nobody with her. But we don't care. It is all fine. It is
all fine for us to have a system in which a 7-year-old girl takes a
journey by herself from Guatemala through Mexico in the hands of the
cartels to get to our border. We say that is fine.
{time} 2045
I can't state enough--and the reason I am using this time, and I went
a little longer than the time I thought I was going to use, is because
my friend from Texas used a little more time, and I appreciated his
being here.
Every single person I talk to in Texas views this through the lens of
an existential crisis, and yet it is absolute silence from the
administration and this body.
People wonder why Governor Abbott is starting to say he is going to
take it upon himself and the State to build a wall or to fund resources
at the border.
We have had to do it for years, by the way. Basically, a billion
dollars a year, or at least per session, Texas has been funding
technology.
Do you know how often the Border Patrol is using technology funded by
Texans? Cameras--because their Border Patrol cameras weren't working--
radios. Now the Governor is going down there saying he is going to do a
lot of this, and Texas has got to figure out how to fund it.
It is our border; they are our communities. Yet crickets, absolute
crickets, devastating crickets, from the Democrat-led House of
Representatives and the Democrats in the White House, President Biden
and Vice President Harris, who refuse to even come to the border.
I don't know, the longer this goes on--I get why the Vice President
won't go to the border. How can you look any American in the eye and
say you are doing your constitutional duty to defend the United States
of America and secure our borders?
Does anybody understand in this Chamber and comprehend how bad it is
for our future and the future of our neighbors to the south to empower
cartels the way we are empowering them?
Instead of being able to compete with China, by having a robust free
trade throughout the Western Hemisphere, to be able to have a strong
Mexico that isn't a narco-terror state, that we can partner with, that
we can partner with countries throughout the Western Hemisphere and
compete against China and not have this pressure valve coming to our
border; instead, we are damaging these countries and empowering the
narco-terror state in Mexico, empowering cartels, weakening our
country, and endangering Americans.
My friend from the House Judiciary Committee is here, and I am about
to give my time up. I will give you a little warning here. In a couple
of minutes, I am about to yield.
I appreciate the work that he is doing, with my friend from Colorado,
trying to navigate the complexity of antitrust laws with respect to the
size of massive companies, particularly massive big tech companies. We
are going to have a pretty robust day tomorrow in the House Judiciary
Committee. I do want to thank him, since we are here in the Chamber
together, for the work that he is doing to try to address that.
I don't know if I will agree with every bill tomorrow. I know I am
going
[[Page H2998]]
to support at least one or two. We will see what happens during the
process of amending and debating.
What I would say to my friend is that it would be great if we could
address every issue with both sides of the aisle engaging and offering
amendments and restore regular order so that we can try to get to the
heart and the truth of these issues.
We are never going to deal with our spending issues in this country
if we don't sit down and roll our sleeves up, like a family or small
business has to do. We are never going to address something like the
border if we don't sit down and give and take and offer solutions that
will work. We are never going to solve healthcare; we are never going
to be able to have a strong national defense, without, by the way,
being involved in endless conflicts.
I joined with my Democrat friends last week on a measure involving
our presence in Iraq. I think we can find agreement at times if we will
sit down and do it. But we can't bury our head in the sand and ignore
existential crises and hope that they will just go away.
I will just close by renewing my call to my colleagues on the other
side of the aisle, the Vice President and the President. Let's actually
focus on these crises like the border, and let's actually do our job
and our constitutional duty to address them. Let's actually do what we
said we were going to do when we took our oaths to the Constitution of
the United States, and we said we wanted to be a part of the people's
House to debate, to amend, to vote.
I am not afraid of what we are going to do tomorrow. To my friend, we
are going to offer bills, we are going to debate, we are going to
amend, and we are going to vote. We should do that on the floor of this
House, Madam Speaker. We should do that on the floor of this House.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________