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From: "Lloyd Miller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Helen Chenowith-Hage: A Must Read Speech
Date: Wednesday, October 11, 2000 7:49 PM

http://www.sierratimes.com/arhch101100.htm

The Four Cornerstones Of My Season In The Congress
(House of Representatives - October 06, 2000) [Page: H9456]
Speech by Helen Chenoweth-Hage - Posted: 10.11.00

The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Smith of Michigan). Under the Speaker's announced policy 
of January 6, 1999, the gentlewoman from Idaho (Mrs. Chenoweth-Hage) is recognized for 
60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.

Mrs. CHENOWETH-HAGE. Mr. Speaker, I rise on this occasion to give a very special sort 
of address. I am not here today to talk about a specific piece of legislation or to 
discuss any one thing in particular that the administration is doing or failing to do, 
but my message here today is both personal in nature and something that I hope that my 
colleagues and future Members of this great body will find useful in times to come.

Mr. Speaker, I am here to talk about the experience that one very average American 
citizen has had over the course of the past 6 years in being a part of what has been 
termed the greatest deliberative body on earth: The United States Congress. And 
although people call me Congressman, or sometimes Congresswoman, I am very much simply 
an average American citizen, an American citizen who took leave from her ordinary, 
average American life to serve for a time as an advocate for over half a million 
people in a State 2,000 miles away. And that can only happen in America.

Now, after serving here for 3 terms, I am fulfilling a pledge that I made in 1994, and 
I am leaving this body of my own will, returning to a life of an average American 
citizen to live under the laws that I hope that we have made a little bit better here.

I want to share with my colleagues and for the record some of my observations about 
this great government of ours, the daunting responsibilities we hold here, and my hope 
for the future. So I want to talk about several things.

I want to discuss the purpose of this mighty Congress and what its proper role is in 
the lives of ordinary Americans. I want to discuss how certain matters become very 
real and very practical matters in our everyday life, matters that may have at one 
time been theory but have become reality. And I want to raise some real questions and 
concerns about the future.

First, however, I would like to say a few words about some of the people who have 
worked for me and assisted me over the years. I feel that I have an extraordinary 
staff. I have been blessed, not through my own skill but I think it was just a 
blessing, that I was able to pull together a staff that I think are unusually 
brilliant and unusually fine Americans and who, within themselves individually, the 
flame for liberty and freedom beat within their hearts and, therefore, we were able to 
accomplish much together, this Chenoweth team.

My staff consisted of: Lois Anderson, Judy Boyle, Chris Caron, Doug Crandall, Georgia 
Golling, Ann Heissenbuttel, Chad Hyslop, Dave Kroeger, Dean Lester, Lisa Lovell, Matt 
Miller, Linda Mullin, Nathan Olsen, Karen Roetter, Keith Rupp, Valerie Schatz, 
Elizabeth Schwarzer, Tereasa Sinigiani, and Rhonda Tilden. And to all of them I just 
want to say thanks so much for the wonderful job.

There is a great deal of personal affection and admiration that I hold for my office 
staff, and there is among all of us the thing that has always bound us together and 
given purpose to our days here on Capitol Hill, which has been our shared commitment 
to a vision, a vision of our Nation and our government here in America. Let me tell my 
colleagues a little bit about that vision.

My vision as a Congressman for the first district of Idaho has been that America would 
continue to be a land where people live in peace with one another; that they respect 
each other's individual rights and property; and that people are free to advance as 
far as their individual talents and commitments to work hard will take them.

I believe that the rights of the people are not derived from government but, rather, 
the inalienable rights of the people to life, liberty, property and the pursuit of 
happiness are God-given rights that existed prior to the formation of any government. 
It is because these rights exist that governments are created by the people to help 
protect these rights that are God given. My vision is for a government that is keenly 
aware of this relationship between the governed and the governors, and which views its 
primary role as a protector of people's rights as opposed to a protector of people's 
persons or what they may think, and which views itself as the servant of the people 
and never the people's master.

I envisioned a congressional office staff which recognized the primacy of the citizens 
over the government, and I insisted that my staff recognize that they work for the 
constituents in Idaho's first district and across America, not the government; and 
that advancing the vision of freedom and individual liberty and providing service to 
constituents is the first priority in our office.

Most people who serve in this institution, I daresay, have a vision for the country 
and for their constituents. Those visions must be larger than our own personal 
ambitions and they must spring from a sense of purpose not necessarily for ourselves 
at all but for our fellow Americans and future generations. But what is the source of 
that purpose? To ponder that question is to ponder the purpose of government itself.

Since the beginning of time, man has wondered how to live together in harmony. Volumes 
have been written about it. It certainly has never been easy to figure out. There has 
always been a tendency for people to equate might with right. The philosopher Thomas 
Hobbes famously argued that man tends to be self-serving and to have a natural 
tendency to strive against and to plunder his fellow man. This is the basis of why we 
have government. People exist, people are born with certain natural rights. They have 
a right to continue to exist, and no one has a right to harm or kill another.

Mr. SMITH of Michigan. Mr. Speaker, if the gentlewoman would yield for just a moment, 
I just wanted to say, on behalf of many of us in the United States House of 
Representatives, I would like to thank the gentlewoman for her very diligent and hard 
work not only in representing the gentlewoman's district but in helping the United 
States of America. It is not easy. The gentlewoman has sacrificed, like many of us, a 
great deal.

So I thank the gentlewoman very, very much for her tremendous contribution that she 
has made in the last 6 years.

Mrs. CHENOWETH-HAGE. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Michigan, and I will 
always have very fond memories of landing in the gentleman's office and asking him to 
help me go over an appropriations bill and help untangle the mystery of the 
appropriating process here. The gentleman has been a great teacher.

I want to remind my colleagues, Mr. Speaker, that liberty is something that people 
have a right to their own freedom and they may not be held in bondage to one another. 
That is what liberty means. It is so important that we remember people's property 
rights. People simply do have a right to own things, and we have a responsibility to 
make sure that we respect the ownership rights of others.

The philosopher John Locke expounded on this notion when he said labor, in and of 
itself, is the origin and justification of property, according to Locke. And whatever 
a man `mixes his labor with' is his to use. It is his property. So in the state of 
nature, men have a right to protect their natural rights and to punish transgressors. 
So civil society arises when men agree to delegate this job of protecting their rights 
to an unbiased entity: A government. So because men establish this entity, government, 
they have the right to set limits on its authority, to modify it, or even to dismantle 
it should the need arise.

Now, a century later, this served as the rational foundation for our own Declaration 
of Independence. It is that very doctrine that gave us Americans the very moral 
authority to rebel against the tyranny of the British Crown. Why, my colleagues might 
ask, am I going over all this ancient history? Well, it is very simple, Mr. Speaker. 
It is because people forget. People forget across this Nation, but people forget in 
this body as well.

Mr. Speaker, if during one of my colleagues' town hall meetings that we all hold in 
our respective districts, they were to ask their constituents why we have a 
government, people would be likely to stare at them like a tree full of owls and they 
would probably experience an uncomfortable silence. Then, suddenly, some wiseacre 
might pipe up and say that he has been trying to figure that out all of his life. But 
then, usually, someone will say, well, we have government because we need to provide 
for the national defense. Well, they are on the right track, but that is not all there 
is to it.

Seldom will we hear one of our constituents recite those vitally important words of 
Thomas Jefferson, those words that he wrote in the Declaration of Independence, which 
states: `We hold these truths to be self-evident: That all men are created equal, and 
that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, rights that 
among us are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. And that to secure these 
rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the 
consent of the governed.'

Oh, I hope that that will become emblazoned indelibly on our souls and our spirits and 
our minds; that government receives its just power from those who are governed. But to 
secure the rights of government, governments are instituted among men, and the reason 
our government exists is to secure the inalienable rights of the American people. No 
more, no less.

That has been my message over the past 6 years. It is very simple, it is very old, but 
it works for freedom and liberty. And while I am certain that a poll of our colleagues 
would find universal agreement and sentiment for that very sentiment that I just 
expressed, we have differing opinions on how we turn those eloquent words into action. 
It has been my experience that turning those values into real action seems to be one 
of the hardest things for some people to really, truly understand.

Sometimes my colleagues seem to think that little things are unimportant. But, Mr. 
Speaker, the little things are so vitally important. I think every schoolchild has 
heard the poem about the importance of little things by George Herbert when he wrote 
that: `For the want of a nail, the shoe was lost; For the want of a shoe, the horse 
was lost; For the want of a horse, the rider was lost; For the want of a rider, the 
battle was lost; For the want of a battle, the kingdom was lost!'

Yes, Mr. Speaker, little things matter. Little nails in horses hooves matter. They 
matter to all of us. And these little things are very important in the fight and the 
maintenance of our freedoms.

Some of my colleagues have certainly scratched their heads in wonder over some of the 
positions that I have taken over these years, and they wonder why I make such a big 
deal about language affecting private property rights or over some language that some 
might consider obscure issues, like the primacy of State water rights. My insistence 
that these rights be protected has certainly inconvenienced some Members of this House 
and served to annoy some Members and their staffs. And though it is sometimes an 
inconvenience, I hope that all who love freedom can understand how much more 
inconvenient it would be if we carelessly neglected the little nails and just began to 
give away our freedoms and liberty.

If the first job of government is to protect the rights of the freedoms of its 
citizens, then that is the standard by which we must first measure every single act we 
undertake.

I would like to discuss how I have attempted to apply these ideals to certain 
legislation in the hope that it might help some understand the importance of these 
issues, and perhaps some of my colleagues might take up this banner and continue to 
carry it forward as I leave this fine institution.

There are four areas in which I have seen the struggle most closely and I felt it most 
deeply. These have been the four cornerstones of my work here in Congress; and that is 
protecting the Constitution and protecting the rights of citizens, protecting our 
property and the wealth of our people, and protecting our national sovereignty.

Mr. Speaker, each of us swears an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States 
of America and to protect it. But, Mr. Speaker, there are so many Americans, and I 
daresay a few of our colleagues here in this House, who seem to think that this is a 
matter of evolving and galloping interpretation.

But I remember when I first came to Congress in 1995, during those heady days of the 
Contract with America, one of the first matters that was considered in the Contract 
with America was granting the President line item veto authority. The power, in 
effect, would grant to the President the power to rewrite our legislation by 
eliminating certain specific provisions in the bills that we sent to him and then 
immediately signing that legislation into law.

I felt that that was unconstitutional. But this was an issue that had been championed 
by the people, especially Republicans, and it was a proposal favored by my favorite 
President, Ronald Reagan.

But I broke ranks with the leadership of my own party to oppose the line item veto. I 
did oppose it. I did vote against it because I believed that it constituted an 
unconstitutional shift away from legislative power to the administration.

So, Mr. Speaker, I can remember that it was difficult to go home after that vote, and 
I can remember a lot of my fellow Republicans criticizing me for that position. Who 
was I but a freshman Member, just an ordinary woman from Idaho, from a small western 
State, to oppose this kind of gigantic reform.

But I must confess that it gave me some small degree of satisfaction when the United 
States Supreme Court ruled that it was, indeed, unconstitutional for the President to 
have the power to rewrite legislation by vetoing part of it and struck down the line 
item veto.

Likewise, I have always thought that one aspect of the Endangered Species Act was 
especially silly, and I have fought against the ramifications of the Endangered 
Species Act since I first came to Congress.

But it was a legal tradition that held under the Endangered Species Act in and of 
itself that people did not have legal standing under the Endangered Species Act.

In fact, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that humans are not within the realm 
of jurisdiction under the Endangered Species Act. So if your private property was 
taken under the Endangered Species Act, you had absolutely no recourse for the 
damages. The only way a person could be an advocate in court under the Endangered 
Species Act, according to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, was if they went in 
there and sued on behalf of an endangered species. They had to represent the species, 
not the human.

So, Mr. Speaker, I offered legislation to correct this obvious flaw in the law. And my 
colleagues should have heard some of the hoots offered up when I did that. Some people 
assumed that I was being facetious when I argued that people should have at least the 
same legal rights as the bugs and the snails and the animals and the plants.

But while my bill was working its way through the system, the United States Supreme 
Court beat me to the punch and ruled that, yes indeed, people do have legal standing 
under the Endangered Species Act. So, once again, I felt vindicated by the United 
States Supreme Court.

Mr. Speaker, I want to remind my colleagues that the genesis of the Constitution has 
been proven by the test of time as well as the genius of that great document. It has 
succeeded when others have failed. The United States is now the longest running 
democracy in the history of the world, but it will only continue to be so if we 
jealously guard and protect the Constitution and if we do not give in to the political 
expediency of the day and begin to weaken it.

I think about the political correctness that is now beginning to drive public policy 
in this Nation, and I have to remember what Charlton Heston just recently said, and 
this was that `political correctness is simply

tyranny with manners. Oh that we would have the courage to do that which is unpopular 
but that which we feel is right and constitutional.'

Heston went on to say that `political correctness is today's pocket change, but that 
courage is the currency of history.'

So if we give in to political expediency, we will be crying out in this Nation for the 
want of another nail, the little things that can bring down a nation. Which brings me 
to the second issue, protecting the rights of our citizens.

The Constitution is the document free men wrote with the central purpose in mind of 
protecting God-given rights. And let us never weaken in that defense. Because the most 
important of these rights to be protected by government is the right to life.

And this is why have I been such a staunch defender of the rights of the unborn 
children. That child, that weakest citizen among us, is the most important and most 
needy when it comes to having a fair and impartial government to protect his or her 
life.

Simply put, that is why I speak out in defense of the unborn. And if you believe that 
life begins before birth, then government has a responsibility to protect that life. 
It is the first rule of law.

Mr. Speaker, I am also a very outspoken defender of the second amendment. I am a 
defender of all of the Bill of Rights, but it seems to me that the second amendment is 
the one that is actually under political attack most often. It is under political 
attack through political correctness, through massive marches, and just through the 
sheer emotionalism that is reigning today.

No American takes lightly the threat of violence, and no American can ignore the issue 
of crime and personal safety. No American can dismiss the violence that has erupted in 
our schools. But to say the problem with crime and violence is the availability of 
guns is to cop out with an easy answer.

The problem is not the inanimate or the things or the guns or the knives or whatever 
else, it is a person who will casually use these objects to plunder or hurt or kill 
other persons.

To diminish our right to keep and bear arms by entangling us in more gun control is to 
want to lose yet another nail that may ultimately destroy our Nation.

It was precisely that danger that George Mason in 1788 wrote about and addressed this 
Nation when he addressed the Congress then and he said, `When the resolution of 
enslaving America was formed in Great Britain, the British parliament was advised by 
an artful man, who was governor of Pennsylvania, to disarm the people, that it was the 
best and most effectual way to enslave them, but that they should not do it openly but 
just weaken them and let them sink gradually.'

Well, is that not the picture of gun control? But addressing the human factor is much 
more difficult than taking things away.

I find it amazing, for instance, that some of these same people who make the most 
noise about limiting their fellow American's second amendment rights are those same 
entertainment industry leaders who produce music, movies, and video games that glorify 
violence and debase our values. They, in essence, pit one basic right, one freedom of 
expression against another.

I find it amazing, Mr. Speaker, and I find it amazingly cynical. And yet where is the 
outrage over this? Rather than simply control themselves, the Hollywood moguls and the 
product they produce, they want to take the constitutionally guaranteed rights away 
from all their fellow men. It is cynical. It is selfish. It is short sighted, Mr. 
Speaker.

Let us seek solutions to our problems, but let us do it in a way that respects the 
rights of all of our citizens. Those rights are so essential.

Another early debate in which I became involved is centered around the efforts to 
reform the writ of habeas corpus and the rights under habeas corpus, that great writ.

It pained me, Mr. Speaker, to take a position in opposition of some of those great 
committee chairmen, some of my colleagues for whom I have enormous respect. But I 
fought against a proposal that sought to punish terrorists but which would cause 
ordinary citizens to lose their constitutionally guaranteed rights against search and 
seizure.

So the rights to speak and assemble freely, to be ensured of due process of law, and 
to be protected against false imprisonment belong to all Americans. We cannot allow 
ourselves to be frightened by one issue into giving up all of these freedoms or taking 
them away from our citizens.

So what Thomas Paine said in 1795 is as true today as it ever was before. Thomas Paine 
said, `He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from 
oppression.'

I remembered that expression by Thomas Paine when I joined my colleagues on the other 
side of the aisle to protect this profoundly important right of Americans.

To protect our rights, we give the government very powerful law enforcement powers. 
These powers are what enables society to move away from the concept of making might 
right.

A fair and responsible authority is supposed to act to protect our rights and to 
punish transgressors. But what happens when these law enforcement agencies themselves 
abuse the law or act in ways that cause distrust in the minds the very people they are 
supposed to be serving and protecting?

And this is what happened in a remote part of my district shortly before I was 
elected. It happened in a place called Ruby Ridge. Men who were supposed to protect 
people's rights and their lives instead perverted their mission into a bizarre siege 
of a man and his family.

Admittedly, the man held some unpopular opinions. But in a land where a person's right 
to his own opinion constitutes the first amendment, that is no justification for the 
killings of Randy Weaver's young son and the killing of his wife, Vicky, who held 
nothing more threatening in her arms than her infant 10-month-old daughter.

Mr. Speaker, this was a sad day in America; and this is an outrageous abuse of law 
enforcement power. And it did much more damage to us than the personal tragedies of 
the killings in this incident. It began to kill the trust and the respect that many 
Americans had for their government, and we reaped the whirlwind in the years that 
followed.

I think of Waco and I think of the seizure of Elian Gonzales, and it all amounts to 
the fact that we are beginning to numb America's senses to the outrage against the 
intrusion of Federal law enforcement in our homes and the security of our properties.

In the years ahead, Mr. Speaker, it is one of my most fervent hopes that my colleagues 
will continue to be ever vigilant against the possibility of anything like that ever 
happening again.

Mr. Speaker, as important as it is to protect the rights of our people, it is also 
important to protect their property. The right to own property, to keep that for which 
you labor, is perhaps the essence of a really truly free society. And it is one of the 
most essential roles of government, to protect private property. In fact, John Adams 
said that property is as sovereign as the laws of God, and that there must be a force 
of law and justice to protect property. Without property, Adams said, liberty cannot 
exist. And now with this Nation owning or controlling in the 40 percentile of this 
entire land base, we have to ask in this generation what has happened to our property 
rights? To own our property has been something that has allowed America to grow, to 
become a Nation that has been able to produce for its people the greatest standard of 
living in the history of civilization.

Over the centuries, many students of human nature have commented on the tendency of 
man to ignore other people's property rights if it suits his own individual interests. 
One of the philosophers whom I most admire was a Frenchman named Frederick Bastiat. If 
one of the signs of genius is to be able to distill complex ideas into a short, easily 
understandable form, then Bastiat was, by definition, a genius because in 1850 he 
published a little book, it is only 75 pages long, called `The Law.' It is such an 
influential and important work that I actually require anyone who wants to work in my 
congressional office to read this book and to write an essay or a book report on their 
reactions to it so I can read their essay before I interview them. Bastiat was able to 
distill what the relationship between the governed and the governors really should be.

With regards to property, Bastiat wrote this:

`Man can live and satisfy his wants only by ceaseless labor; by the ceaseless 
application of his faculties to natural resources. This process is the origin of 
property.

`But it is also true that a man may live and satisfy his wants by seizing and 
consuming the products of the labor of others. This process is the origin of plunder.

`Now, since man is naturally inclined to avoid pain --and since labor in and of itself 
is pain--it follows that men will resort to plunder whenever plunder is easier than 
work. History shows this quite clearly. Under these conditions, neither religion or 
morality can stop it.'

Bastiat continues:

`When, then, does plunder stop? It stops when it becomes more painful and more 
dangerous than labor.

`It is evident, then, that the proper purpose of law is to use the power of its 
collective force to stop this fatal tendency to plunder instead of work. All the 
measures of the law should protect property and punish plunder.

`But, generally, the law is made by one man or one class of men. And since law cannot 
operate without the sanction and support of a dominating force, this force must be 
entrusted to those who make the laws.

`This fact, combined with the fatal tendency that exists in the heart of man to 
satisfy his wants with the least possible effort, explains the almost universal 
perversion of the law. Thus it is easy to understand how law, instead of checking 
injustice, becomes the invincible weapon of injustice. It is easy to understand why 
the law is used by the legislator to destroy, in varying degrees among the rest of the 
people, to destroy their personal independence by slavery, to destroy their liberty by 
oppression, and to destroy their property by plunder.

`This is done by the person who makes the law, and in proportion to the power that he 
holds.'

Well, those were very interesting words by Bastiat, words that really go deep in my 
soul. And so you see in a representative democracy such as ours, we are more insulated 
from the whims of a single person or a single class of people than were the citizens 
of France in the mid-19th century. Yet I think it is foolish if we ignore human 
nature, and I think it is even more foolish if we ignore the nature of government to 
by nature grow more powerful and bigger and more oppressive. There are certain classes 
of citizens who, still today, seek to gain political power in order to take advantage 
of the labor of others, and they use the power of big government to do just exactly 
that.

Bastiat goes on to argue that men naturally rebel against the injustice of which they 
are victims. `Thus,' he says, `when plunder is organized by law for the profit of 
those who make the law, all the plundered classes try somehow to enter, by peaceful or 
revolutionary means, into the making of laws. According to their degree of 
enlightenment, these plundered classes may propose one of two entirely different 
purposes when they attempt to obtain political power: One, either they must wish to 
stop lawful plunder; or, two, they may wish to share in it.

`Woe to the Nation when this latter purpose prevails.'

Mr. Speaker, we see today American citizens being plundered by other American citizens 
for a wide variety of purposes. We see Americans paying higher cumulative taxes than 
ever before to sustain programs that channel wealth from one class to another, or from 
one person to another. We see some of the leaders of this Nation proclaiming that some 
Americans are just too wealthy and that they do not deserve to be treated fairly and 
equitably under the law. We see class warfare motivated by personal envy. We see some 
citizens who live in populous parts of the country decide they want to take land from 
some people in the less populous western States and they argue that they want this 
land not for personal wealth but for aesthetic purposes or aboriginal purposes. But 
the end result is still the same: They are actually taking something from someone else 
and they are locking other Americans out of their beloved land.

We see a concerted, shortsighted effort on the part of some to seemingly attack the 
sources of original wealth in this Nation. And we know that it is a combination of 
land, labor and capital, only land, labor and capital, that creates original wealth. 
Yet that is being exploded apart with the seizure of our land.

In a time in which the new economy provides fabulous wealth overnight based on the 
trading of information, we are forgetting that all original wealth originates in the 
land. Wealth is created by the proper combination of land, property, and labor and 
capital, no more, no less. Wealth comes first from the things that we mine or mill or 
harvest, and without those things there can be no stock markets and no information 
superhighways and no bridges to the future.

But, Mr. Speaker, we are today turning our backs on this original wealth. To hear the 
way some would talk, you would think that mining minerals from the Earth or harvesting 
crops, including timber and raising livestock, are somehow morally reprehensible and 
wrong. Instead, our natural resources are the sources of our economic strength which 
built this country, which in turn became magnified and powerful through the strength 
of our economy.

President Theodore Roosevelt, commonly referred to as the father of today's 
environmental movement, said in a speech to the American Society of Foresters way back 
in 1903:

`First and foremost,' Roosevelt said, `you can never afford to forget for one moment 
what is the object of our forest policy. That object is not to preserve the forests 
because they are beautiful, though that is good in and of itself, nor because they are 
refuges for the wild creatures of the wilderness, though that, too, is good in itself; 
but the primary object of our forest policy, as of the land policy of the United 
States of America, is the making of prosperous homes. It is part of the traditional 
policy of home-making of our country. Every other consideration comes as secondary. 
The whole effort of the government in dealing with the forests must be directed to 
this end, keeping in view the fact that it is not only necessary to start the homes as 
prosperous but to keep them so.'

He went on to say, `Your attention must be directed to the preservation of the forests 
not, as an end in and of itself, but as a means of preserving and increasing the 
prosperity of this Nation. Forestry is the preservation of forests by wise use of the 
forests.'

But those who call themselves environmentalists today would have turned their backs on 
Roosevelt's vision. What has happened when we impose an extreme and narrow political 
policy on our natural resources? We have this year experienced catastrophic wildfires, 
burning more board feet this year of timber than we have ever logged off our national 
forests. That is sheer waste. That is sheer destruction.

We must not cut off our noses to spite our face, Mr. Speaker. We must responsibly use 
and promote these industries. We must be wise stewards of our Earth and our resources. 
But those resources are there for us to use.

Just as there are some citizens who would plunder other citizens, there are other 
nations in this world who would seek unfair advantages from us, this great Nation. We 
must protect our Nation's interests and our national sovereignty. Sovereignty forms 
the fourth cornerstone of the policies that I have advocated. Just as with any 
community, there is a global community, and we should and do try to be a good and 
responsible neighbor in that community. Yet there are those who would argue that we 
are such a part of this global community that we can lose our identity and that people 
in other nations should have a voice in such matters as our own land policies or 
consumer protection laws or our judicial systems. That goes beyond being a good 
neighbor into becoming the neighborhood's doormat. Let America never become the global 
doormat.

That is why I and some of my colleagues put up such a fight over such seemingly small 
issues as World Heritage Site designations and the Man in the Biosphere programs of 
the United Nations. These are the neighborhood's busybodies, offering their opinions 
on the state of our yards and gardens. Everyone welcomes praise, but when the praise 
starts to turn into a sanctioning of what we may and may not do, a bright line has 
been crossed, a bright line has been crossed and an invasion into our sovereignty.

In the recent film about the American Revolution entitled `The Patriot,' I saw that 
and I think everyone, Mr. Speaker, in this body should view the movie `The Patriot.' 
It would remind everyone here in this body why we are here. The main character in that 
film rose and asked a body of his compatriots, `Would you be ruled by one tyrant 3,000 
miles away or by 3,000 tyrants one mile away?'

Mr. Speaker, we now seem to face the prospect of thousands of would-be tyrants trying 
to rule us from all around the world. Nowhere is the fight to preserve our national 
sovereignty more important than in preserving our national security. I have often said 
that in my heart of hearts I really am a dove. But I want America to be the best armed 
dove on the planet. George Washington said it more eloquently when he said, `To be 
prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving the peace.' And 
Ronald Reagan carried that out effectively.

Sadly, we have allowed the readiness of our military to deteriorate badly. Training 
missions are compromised by tight budgets, we have military families eligible for food 
stamps, and retention levels are becoming difficult to maintain. And we often fail to 
meet our duty to our past warriors, our veterans, those great Americans. We provide 
them with inadequate health services. We dishonor them with neglect. In my home State 
of Idaho, we have not even provided them with a specific field of honor in which to 
lie when they pass on to the next world.

I am very pleased to report, Mr. Speaker, that as one of my proudest accomplishments, 
it does look like we will have that field of honor for our brave military veterans 
soon under construction at a place in Idaho just outside of Boise.

But we must be very careful that we do not trade away our national sovereignty in some 
ill-considered effort to become popular with the rest of the world. Our military 
exists to protect American land and vital American interests. We cannot bully the rest 
of the world into behaving like we do. But I just cringe when I think of American 
soldiers serving under foreign command, and I think that should never, never happen.

And when it comes to protecting our sovereignty, we must not compromise our internal 
laws to suit foreign interests, nor must we allow our thirst for trade with other 
nations to allow us to ignore the aggressive and threatening natures of some of our 
other neighbors in this global community. And we certainly must not casually give away 
any more of our important strategic assets, whether they be the secrets to our most 
powerful weapons, or important avenues for commercial and military traffic, such as 
the Panama Canal, which is now being run by the Red Chinese in violation of the Panama 
Canal Treaty. The Red Chinese are now piloting our ships through the Panama Canal.

Mr. Speaker, it is my belief and has been my work for the past years and will continue 
after I leave Congress, to defend these four cornerstones of freedom. This is the most 
important job that we have as legislators, to preserve the lives, the liberty and the 
property of our fellow citizens, and to protect our national sovereignty.

There has, however, been an almost inexorable trend against those unalienable rights. 
There is no mistake in my mind that those rights have weakened as our Federal 
Government has grown bigger and stronger. The efforts that work against those rights 
often come clothed in garments of good intentions.

When we seek to remedy some problem through the expansion or consolidation of power 
into a smaller set of hands, remember the words of Lord Acton, that power corrupts, 
and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

That corruption will twist and bend the law away from what our Founding Fathers 
intended and into something future generations will regret and future generations 
would suffer under.

So, Mr. Speaker and my fellow Members of Congress, it has been a great privilege to 
serve in this body, this great body representing this great land, this powerful 
government of the people, by the people and for the people. I hope that you will 
remember my words, and I hope that you will remember the lofty, yet very simple reason 
that we are here. And years hence, when some colleague takes the floor of this 
magnificent Chamber and speaks out for the cause of freedom and liberty, I hope that 
you will take those words to heart.

http://www.sierratimes.com/arhch101100.htm

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Lloyd Miller, Research Director for A-albionic Research a ruling
class/conspiracy research resource for the entire political-ideological
spectrum. **FREE RARE BOOK SEARCH: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> **
   Explore Our Archive:  <http://a-albionic.com/a-albionic.html>

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