[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 148 (2002), Part 10] [House] [Pages 13074-13075] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]JOHN WALKER LINDH NOT A ``GOOD BOY'' The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the order of the House of January 23, 2002, the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Foley) is recognized during morning hour debates for 5 minutes. Mr. FOLEY. Mr. Speaker, today, as most Americans awoke, they were greeted with headlines like the one I saw in my hometown Palm Beach Post: ``Lindh's Dad Says Son a Good Boy.'' John Walker Lindh being described by his father as a good boy. While I ran on the Mall this morning, I was listening to NPR, and I was listening to the defense attorney for that good boy, John Walker Lindh, describe his client as a slightly misguided youth who was actually in Afghanistan fighting the cocaine traffickers and the poppy growers and the drug lords. John Walker Lindh, a good boy. It was difficult yesterday, because I received calls from two of my constituents, Ed and Maureen Lunder, whose son Christopher, at the age of 33, perished in the World Trade Center; and Stanley and Carol Eckna, whose son Paul perished in the World Trade Center at the age of 28. John Walker Lindh, the good boy, will celebrate his birthdays in a Federal prison; and when he turns 41, he will celebrate his birthdays outside in the free world. Christopher and Paul do not get any birthdays any more. They do not get any anniversaries. They do not get to see their kids grow up. But John Walker Lindh is a good boy. Maybe it does not startle people that the ethics of this Nation are collapsing. I remember when our President and chief executive officer of this Nation lied to a grand jury and lied to the American people. And at that time I heard from my colleagues who said, hey, listen, the economy is good, do not worry about it; it is his personal business. Now we have companies like Endrun, formerly known as Enron, and WorldCon, formerly WorldCom, stealing money out of the till and enriching themselves at the cost of the consumer, taxpayer, and investor. And now we have John Walker Lindh described as a good boy. Where are the ethics of this Nation? What about those 3,000 lives that were lost in the World Trade Center in New York and Washington, D.C. at the Pentagon, and in that airplane in Pennsylvania? Collaborating with the enemy, to me, was always treasonous. No matter how you describe it, no matter how you tie a bow on that package, John Walker Lindh has committed treason against the common good and purpose of this country. He violated our constitutional premise. He violated the sacred oath we have as citizens to protect one another. And he aided and abetted the enemy. Now, in trying to comfort my constituents who lost their children, I said, well, maybe we did not have enough evidence, maybe we did not have enough to really secure a solid victory, so we took what we could get. I hope in the coming days the administration and others talk to us with clarity about why this deal was struck, how 10-year sentences can ever be equal to the damage suffered by my constituents. We have to establish the right principles in this Nation if we are in fact to beat terrorism. We have to establish right from wrong, and we have to set a clear moral authority. In the last couple of days, of course, the Democrats have seized on a lot of issues and tried to portray the President as not having ethics. Well, I challenge them to at least focus on some of the issues that face Americans, that face citizens like my constituents, who lost children; to face the issues of fighting the common problems with our economy; and not to point fingers but to find solutions. Politics is beautiful. Politics is great. We have a chance to debate and [[Page 13075]] to bring clarity to the issues. But oftentimes we muddle ourselves in the acrimony of fingerpointing, name calling, and attempting to malign other people. I am proud of our President, and I think he has spoken with clarity on so many issues. There is not a scandal out of the White House any longer. There is a proud leader of the American people trying to clear the way so we can beat and combat terrorism. We have a lot to do on the economy, and I join my colleagues in looking for tougher standards. I honestly believe those who stole from the shareholders should go to jail. We take the cars of prostitutes and Johns, we take the ill-gotten gains of drug dealers and others as we combat the war on drugs. We should combat the war against deceitful CEOs by doing the same things. Today, let us at least put John Lindh behind us, never to think of him as a good boy. Let him spend the 20 years in prison thinking about what he has done to his American colleagues. Maybe he will find justice somewhere. Maybe God will forgive him. But it is very, very difficult for me to forgive a traitor of this country. ____________________