Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

U.S. Senator Zell Miller, D-GA Floor Statement on Homeland Security Legislation
U.S. Senator Zell Miller Official Web Site ^ | Septemer 25, 2002 | United States Senator Zell Miller (D)

Posted on 09/25/2002 1:56:34 PM PDT by Howlin

September 25, 2002

U.S. Senator Zell Miller, D-GA
Floor Statement on Homeland Security Legislation

We don't teach our children the lessons of Aesop's fables much any more. "The Cat in the Hat" and Sesame Street's wisdom have taken their place.

But there's one fable I learned as a boy at my mother's knee sitting around an open fireplace that I believe is pertinent to this debate on homeland security that has so divided this Senate along party lines. It goes like this:

A certain man had several sons who were always quarreling with one another, and, try as he might, he could not get them to live together in harmony. So, he was determined to convince them of their folly.

Bidding them fetch a bundle of sticks, he invited each in turn to break it across his knee. All tried and all failed; and then he undid the bundle, and handed them the sticks one by one, which they had no difficulty at all in breaking them.

"There, my boys," said he, "united, you will be more than a match for your enemies.

But if you quarrel and separate, your weakness will put you at the mercy of all those who attack you."

That is a lesson for the ages. That is a lesson for both Democrats and Republicans. For the Executive and the Legislative branches of government.

I'm one of the most junior members of this body and I don't have the experience and I haven't seen near the number of bills that most of the other members have, so my historical perspective admittedly is limited.

But in the short time I've been here, I've never seen such a clear choice as there is on this issue. For me, there are no shades of gray. It is clear cut.

Why in the name of homeland security do we want to take power away from the President that he possessed on 9/11?

Power that Jimmy Carter had. Power that Ronald Reagan had. Power that the first President Bush had and power that Bill Clinton had.

Have we lost our minds?

Do you really want to face the voters with that position, that vote writ large on your forehead, like a Scarlet letter? And even larger on a 36-inch television ad two weeks before election day?

We must give the president the flexibility to respond to terrorism on a moment's notice. He's got to be able to shift resources, including personnel, at the blink of an eye.

Why do we hold so dear a personnel system that was created in 1833 and that is as outdated as an oxcart on the expressway?

When the civil service system was established well over a century ago, it had a worthy goal: To create a professional work force that was free of cronyism.

Back then it was valid. But too often in government, we pass laws to fix the problems of the moment and then we keep those laws on the books for years and year without ever following up to see if they are still needed.

The truth of the matter is that a solution from the 19th Century is posing a problem in the 21st. Especially when this country is threatened in such a different and sinister way.

Presently, we're operating under a system of governmental and personnel paralysis.

It offers little reward for good workers and provides lots of cover for bad workers.

Hiring a new federal employee can take five months - five months. Firing a bad worker takes more than a year - if it's allowable at all - because of the mountains of paperwork and hearings and appeals.

A federal worker can be caught knee-walking drunk on the job and can't be fired for 30 days and then he has the right to endless appeals.

Productivity should be the name of the game and we lose productivity when bad folks hold onto jobs forever and when jobs go unfilled for months.

Don't we realize there is another disaster looming just around the corner where American lives are going to be lost? And another one after that? And that these attacks against Americans - against our country - will occur for the rest of our lives?

Would anyone dare suggest that is not going to happen? Would anyone suggest that 9/11 was some kind of isolated phenomenon never to happen on American soil again? Surely no one - even the most naive optimistic - believes that. Surely no one in this body believes that.

Over sixty-thousand terrorists worldwide have already been identified. And terrorist cells in some unlikely places like Lackawanna, N. Y. have been discovered. They are everywhere.

And when these other attacks come - as certainly they will - do you not think Americans throughout this great land are not going to look back at the last three weeks of dilly-dallying in the U. S. Senate?

And when they do, do you not think that some hard questions and some terrible second-guessing will follow?

I can hear them now. The talk show lines will be clogged. The blame will be heaped on this body. Why was the U. S. Senate so fixated on protecting jobs instead of protecting lives?

The U.S. Senate's refusal to grant this President and future presidents the same power that four previous presidents have had will haunt the Democratic Party worst than Marley's ghost haunted Ebenezer Scrooge.

Why did they put workers' rights above American lives? Why did that 2002 U.S. Senate - on the one year anniversary of 9/11 - with malice and forethought, deliberately weaken the powers of the president in time of war?

And then why did this Senate - in all its puffed up vainglory - rear back and deliver the ultimate slap in the face of the president by not even having the decency to give him and up or down vote on his bill? This is unworthy of this great body. It is demeaning and ugly and over the top.

What were they thinking of? What could have possessed them?

Don't ask then for whom the bell tolls, it will toll for … us.

Few leaders have understood the lessons of history as well as Winston Churchill. Because he was not only a soldier and a great political leader, he was also a Nobel Prize winning historian.

Perhaps, then, at this time we should remember the question Churchill framed to the world when he made that famous Iron Curtain speech in Fulton Missouri at Westminister College in 1946.

He first reminded his audience that "War and tyranny remain the great enemies of mankind." And then he asked this question, "Do we not understand what war means to the ordinary person? Can you not grasp its horror?"

The old soldier went on and said some other very sensible and thought-provoking things, like "War used to be squalid and glorious, now it's just squalid."

Churchill being so blunt did not go over very well. The American media did not want to hear that kind of talk. They called him a "war monger." And even the usually gutsy Harry Truman denied knowing in advance what was in the speech and even suggested Churchill should not have given it.

But I want to repeat the line that is at the heart of today's sermon: "Do we not understand what war means to the ordinary person? Can we not grasp its horror?"

Has scoring points with some labor boss become more important than the safety of our citizens? Can you not grasp its horror?

I wonder if you would feel the same way if the Golden Gate Bridge was taken down by terrorists and 95 cars loaded with families plunged into San Francisco Bay?

Could you then not grasp its horror? Would you then in the name of homeland security still want to take powers away from the President?

Or would you feel the same way if that
beautiful little city of New Roads, Louisiana, on the False River, so peaceful with its Spanish moss in the live oak trees, were to go up in a mushroom cloud. Could you then not grasp its horror?

We rev up our emotions so easily to fight to keep super highways from leveling ethnic neighborhoods.

So, it would seem to me that we should get up the same kind of rage when terrorists want to level entire cities like Baltimore, or Atlanta or East St. Louis or the manicured mansions of Newport, Rhode Island.

If those beautiful cities were the target of a terrorist attack, could you then not grasp its horror?

Or the Space Needle in Seattle, filled with tourists, crashing to the ground?
Or a small pox epidemic in days wiping out completely the Twin Cities of Minnesota, or spreading across the sparsely settled plains of South Dakota?

From the great Atlantic Ocean to the Wide Pacific shore, from the Blue Ridge of Tennessee to Beacon Hill in Massachusetts, I guarantee you then this country would grasp war horror.

And as sure as night follows day, when catastrophes occur, the U.S. Senate will be held accountable if we fail to give the President the tools to do his job.

Why are the people back home always ahead of the politicians? Because most politicians - especially at our level - don't get out among them anymore.

Oh, we think we do. A town hall here, a senior center there. A focus group or two, perhaps. But we don't really. We don't talk to real people anymore. We're too busy holed up in a room dialing for dollars. And the only horror we can grasp from that experience is some fat cat telling us they've already maxed out.

Why are we even in this debate? How will it be recorded in years to come when the historians write their accounts of these days in the U.S. Senate in September 2002?

How will our actions be judged by the people who go to the polls this year on November 5?

Frankly, I think it will be one of our sorriest chapters, certainly the worst in my short time here. A chapter where special interests so brazenly trumped national interests.

Herodotus, who lived in Athens in the 4th Century B.C., is usually called the father of history.

He wrote about the Persian Wars and about the Battle of Marathon, which later historians called the seminal event in the history of freedom.

Herodotus wrote that the Persians lost that battle - even though their army was bigger and better equipped - because the Persians committed the sin of hubris.

Hubris is best defined as "outrageous arrogance." And if you study the lessons of history, especially the lessons of the history of freedom, you will find that hubris would time and time again bring down many other powerful civilizations.

Hubris - outrageous arrogance - is so prevalent in this debate. The hubris of some pinch-minded labor bosses and their purchased partridges in a pear tree.

Outrageous arrogance. What else can you call it when the interests of the few are raised above the welfare of the whole country?

For the rest of our lives we will have to live with what we do on this issue. Will we choose to protect the special interests or will we choose to protect the lives of Americans?

Will we tie the hands of our President or give him the same unfettered flexibility other presidents have had before him?

Don't let this be one of those votes you'll look back on and ask yourselves for the rest of your lives, "What was I thinking of?"

For as we are reminded in "The Rubiyat of Omar Khayyam," "the moving finger writes and having writ moves on, nor all your piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel half a line, nor all your tears wash out a word of it."

I ask one last time, Do we not understand what war means to the ordinary person? Can you not grasp its horror?


TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: evildemocrat; homelandsecurity; zellmiller
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 101-120121-140141-160 ... 181-185 next last
To: Howlin
"The hubris of some pinch-minded labor bosses and their purchased partridges in a pear tree. --- Outrageous arrogance. What else can you call it when the interests of the few are raised above the welfare of the whole country?"

May God bless and protect this brave American patriot.

121 posted on 09/25/2002 4:47:51 PM PDT by Right_in_Virginia
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Right_in_Virginia
"What else can you call it when the interests of the few are raised above the welfare of the whole country?"

Business as usual?

122 posted on 09/25/2002 4:49:57 PM PDT by NittanyLion
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 121 | View Replies]

To: Howlin; SuzanneC
Thanks so much for posting this.

When I called Zell Miller's office to congratulate him on the speech, I told the guy who answered that republican senators didn't keep me on hold that long...he apologized and explained their phones were ringing off the hook. I told him, I joined those people in praising Senator Miller's speech. I also told him I had called Max Cleland's office to tell him Senator Miller could be the senior senator from Georgia if Cleland doesn't get on board.

(While on hold with Senator Miller's office, you listen to blue grass music...like it or not.)

123 posted on 09/25/2002 4:51:16 PM PDT by YaYa123
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NittanyLion
"Business as usual?"

Or...business before 9/11/01?

124 posted on 09/25/2002 4:53:15 PM PDT by Right_in_Virginia
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 122 | View Replies]

To: NittanyLion
We need to boot this commie out of office.
125 posted on 09/25/2002 4:53:51 PM PDT by Sir Gawain
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 122 | View Replies]

To: Aric2000
"Take away that D and replace it with an R, we will proudly welcome you into the fold of patriots!!"

Zell, welcome, Patriot.

Some people associate a "brand" with being right. Some people judge others from what they say, and do.

People who band together under a banner, proclaiming, "Those not under our banner are bad," are scary.

People who believe in Freedom, no matter what their brand, I will gladly walk with, and hope to have that same priveledge granted to me.

I don't blame you a bit for not joining the R party. I don't subscribe, either. I vote for whoever makes ths most sense, and your speech deserves to go down in history as one of the greatest.

Ignore the ankle-biters from all parties. Be yourself. I admire you and respect you. You are a true Patriot.

126 posted on 09/25/2002 5:09:23 PM PDT by MonroeDNA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 93 | View Replies]

To: Iscool
Yes, I'm sure there are people who don't believe it. I recommend you pick up the phone and speak to Sally Canfield, Director, Policy and Plans, Office of Homeland Security. I think you'll find that those agreements do not have such flexibility. And, I suppose there are many who don't believe that it takes 30-60 days to hire a new security worker and anywhere from 12-18 months to fire an incompetent.

I'll bet you cheered the fact that 2 airline pilots who show up drunk for work are canned within 48 hours. You, however, don't want the same for a federal employee directly impacting on national security who shows up in the same condition.

As for those who wouldn't be relocated in an emergency situation or otherwise "put out"....tell it to the FDNY workers who put in 16 hour days the weeks after 9/11.

You go ahead and sit in the Gore/Daschle camp. I'm sure you'll be quite proud of yourself when your community water supply is poisoned.

127 posted on 09/25/2002 5:10:24 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 114 | View Replies]

To: Congressman Billybob
That speach was a wander through a Great Books course, I doubt if most of the Rats knew what he was talking about, or quoting.
128 posted on 09/25/2002 5:14:32 PM PDT by Little Bill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Cultural Jihad
Check out the guy in #126 who thinks the President would lie in order to get a bit of management flexibility in the Office of Homeland Security. Interestingly enough, these folks are hard-pressed to point to a record on the part of this President of lying to the American people.

129 posted on 09/25/2002 5:29:29 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 127 | View Replies]

To: wattsmag2
Thanks for the link to Senator Miller. I sent him a very nice message and thanked him for being a statesman. I also suggested that perhaps he was in the wrong Party.
130 posted on 09/25/2002 5:29:56 PM PDT by Wait4Truth
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 92 | View Replies]

To: anniegetyourgun
Well said!! And you are absolutely correct, it practically takes an ACT OF CONGRESS to fire a federal employee. Even the rotten ones!! So much for being a progressive society!!

We have moved on a dime for this country on many occassions. While it doesn't happen with the frequency it does in the military, we still did that while working for the Federal Government. What a wimpy arguement that person had. "I have a feeling that inside one of those "Presidential Executive Orders" lies buried the authority to supercede any bargaining contract...Fact is, I know it's there..."

Oh sure ISCOOL knows!! I say he should PROVE IT!!

(Sheesh!!)

131 posted on 09/25/2002 5:51:00 PM PDT by Vets_Husband_and_Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 127 | View Replies]

To: Vets_Husband_and_Wife
Would you happen to know which occurred first. Daschle's nervous breakdown or Zell Miller's excellent sppech?
132 posted on 09/25/2002 5:55:17 PM PDT by jwalsh07
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 131 | View Replies]

To: jwalsh07
The breakdown.
133 posted on 09/25/2002 5:55:48 PM PDT by Howlin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 132 | View Replies]

To: MonroeDNA
You are a true Patriot.

I certainly hope you're not inferring that the rest of us aren't.

134 posted on 09/25/2002 5:57:15 PM PDT by Howlin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 126 | View Replies]

To: McGavin999
Fabulous! One of the most compelling speeches I've had the honor of hearing! (Email sent)

Thank you for posting this gem.
135 posted on 09/25/2002 5:57:52 PM PDT by Humidston
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 101 | View Replies]

To: Howlin
"Will we tie the hands of our President or give him the same unfettered flexibility other presidents have had before him?"

A very large "Thank-You" to Senator Zell Miller!

136 posted on 09/25/2002 5:58:08 PM PDT by Aracelis
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Howlin
The DEMS ALREADY have the "scarlet letter" on their foreheads...."O" for obstructionist.
137 posted on 09/25/2002 5:58:40 PM PDT by Moby Grape
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: NittanyLion
Zell is the LESSOR of evils.
138 posted on 09/25/2002 5:59:58 PM PDT by Moby Grape
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: jwalsh07
Yes, it was Daschles "nervous breakdown", then I believe simultaneously Gephardts "confusion" speech and Sen. Lotts "who ya calling the bad guy" speech.

Then Miller. Then Ari Fliescher... (though I could have these last two mixed up, thats how I remember today playing out)

:o)
139 posted on 09/25/2002 6:05:49 PM PDT by Vets_Husband_and_Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 132 | View Replies]

To: Howlin
There are very few Democrats I respect, let alone like. Only two come to mind: Gene Taylor of Mississippi, the only Democratic member of the House to vote to impeach Clinton, and Zell Miller.

Zell Miller was a GREAT governor of Georgia. He masterminded the Hope scholarship which pays for tuition and books to attend college in Gerogia for any student with a 3.0 average. Now that he is in the Senate, he is a breath of fresh air, wisdom, and old fashioned good common sense. He is the kind of man the Founding Fathers had in mind for the Senate, not the likes of Teddy, Hillary, or Tom!

140 posted on 09/25/2002 6:21:44 PM PDT by The Sons of Liberty
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 101-120121-140141-160 ... 181-185 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson