A wall wont solve Americas border problems Will Hurd

Anne Milgram: Congressman,
I was about to introduce you

and say a little more –

Will Hurd: Hey, Anne. How are you?

AM: Hi, how are you doing?
Thank you so much for joining us tonight.

We’re so lucky to have you here with us.

I’ve already explained
that you’re actually in Washington

because you’re working.

And I was about to tell folks

that you represent
the 23rd district of Texas.

But maybe you could tell us
a little bit about your district

and describe it for us.

WH: Sure, my district in Southwest Texas
is 29 counties, two time zones,

820 miles of border
from Eagle Pass, Texas

all the way to El Paso.

It takes 10 and a half hours to drive
across my district at 80 miles an hour,

which is the speed limit
in most of the district.

And I found out a couple of weekends ago,

it’s not the speed limit
in all the district.

(Laughter)

It’s a 71-percent Latino district,

and it’s the district that
I’ve been representing

for now my third term in Congress.

And when you think
about the issue of the border,

I have more border
than any other member of Congress.

I spent nine and a half years
as an undercover officer in the CIA,

chasing bad people all across the country.

So when it comes to securing our border,

it’s something I know a little bit about.

AM: One of the things I learned recently
which I hadn’t known before

is that your district
is actually the size, I think,

of the state of Georgia?

WH: That’s right.

It’s larger than 26 states,
roughly the size of the state of Georgia.

So it’s pretty big.

AM: So as an expert in national security

and as a member of Congress,

you’ve been called upon
to think about issues

related to immigration,

and in recent years,
particularly about the border wall.

What is your reaction
to President Trump’s statement

that we need a big, beautiful wall
that would stretch across our border,

and at 18 to 30 feet high?

WH: I’ve been saying this since I first
ran for Congress back in 2009,

this is not a new topic,

that building a 30-foot-high
concrete structure

from sea to shining sea

is the most expensive
and least effective way

to do border security.

There are parts of the border

where Border Patrol’s
response time to a threat

is measured in hours to days.

If your response time
is measured in hours to days,

then a wall is not a physical barrier.

We should be having technology
along the border,

we should have operation
control of our border,

which means we know everything
that’s going back and forth across it.

We can do a lot of that with technology.

We also need more folks
within our border patrol.

But in addition to doing all this,

one of the things we should be able to do
is streamline legal immigration.

If you’re going to be
a productive member of our society,

let’s get you here as quickly as possible,

but let’s do it legally.

And if we’re able to streamline that,
then you’re going to see

some of the pressures
relieved along our border

and allow men and women in Border Patrol
to focus on human trafficking

and drug-trafficking
organizations as well.

AM: Congressman,

there’s also been a conversation
nationally about using emergency funds

to build the border wall

and taking those funds
from the United States military.

What has your position been on that issue?

WH: I’m one of the few Republicans up here
that has opposed that effort.

We are just now rebuilding our military,

and taking funds away from making sure

that our brothers and sisters,
our wives and our husbands

have the training and equipment they need

in order to take care of us
in far-flung places –

taking money away from them
is not an efficient use of our resources,

especially if it’s going to build a …

you know, I always say
it’s a fourth-century solution

to a 21st-century problem.

And the reality is,
what we should be focusing on

is some of the other root causes
of this problem,

and many of your speakers today
have talked about that.

Some of those key root problems
are violence, lack of economic opportunity

and extreme poverty,

specifically, in the Northern Triangle:
El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

We should be working –

AM: I was going to ask
what you would recommend

United States government does
to address the underlying,

what we call push factors, or root causes

in those three countries
in Central America?

WH: One of the things I learned
as an undercover officer in the CIA

is be nice with nice guys
and tough with tough guys.

And one of the principles
of being nice with nice guys

is to strengthen our alliances.

We have a number of programs
currently in these three countries

that USAID and the State Department
is doing to address this violence issue.

And we know, in El Salvador,

one of the problems was
that the police were corrupt.

And so we’ve worked with the Salvadorians
to purge the police,

rehire new folks,

use community policing tactics.

These are tactics the men and women
in the United States of America

and police forces

use every single day.

And when we did this
in certain communities,

guess what happened?

We saw a decrease in the violence
that was happening in those communities.

And then we also saw

a decrease in the number of people
that were leaving those areas

to try to come
to the United States illegally.

So it’s a fraction of the cost
to solve a problem there,

before it ultimately reaches our border.

And one of the reasons
that you have violence and crime

is political corruption

and the lack of central governments
to protect its citizens.

And so this is something
we should be continuing to work on.

We shouldn’t be decreasing
the amount of money that we have

that we’re sending to these countries.

I actually think
we should be increasing it.

I believe the first thing –
we should have done this months ago –

is select a special representative
for the Northern Triangle.

That’s a senior diplomat

that’s going to work to make sure
we’re using all of our levers of power

to help these three countries,

and then that we’re doing it
in a coordinated effort.

This is not just a problem
for the United States and Mexico,

this is a problem for the entire
western hemisphere.

So, where is the Organization
of American States?

Where is the International
Development Bank?

We should be having a collective plan
to address these root causes.

And when you talk about violence,

a lot of times, we talk
about these terrible gangs like MS-13.

But it’s also violence like
women being beaten by their husbands.

And they have nobody else to go to,

and they are unable to deal
with this current problem.

So these are the types of issues

that we should be increasing
our diplomacy,

increasing our economic development aid.

AM: Please, I want to take you now

from thinking about the root causes
in Central America

to thinking about the separation
of children and families

in the United States.

Starting in April 2018,

the Trump administration began
a no-tolerance policy

for immigrants, people seeking
refugee status, asylum

in the United States.

And that led to the separation
of 2,700 children

in the first year
that that program was run.

Now, I want to address this with you,

and I want to separate it up front
into two different conversations.

One of the things
that the administration did

was file legal court papers,

saying that one of the primary
purposes of the separations

was to act as a deterrent

against people coming
to the United States.

And I want to talk for a moment
about that from a moral perspective

and to get your views.

WH: We shouldn’t be doing it,
period. It’s real simple.

And guess what, it wasn’t a deterrent.

You only saw an increase
in the amount of illegal immigration.

And when you’re sitting,
debating a strategy,

if somebody comes up with the idea

of snatching a child
out of their mother’s arms,

you need to go back to the drawing board.

This is not what the United States
of America stands for,

this is not a Republican
or a Democrat or independent thing.

This is a human decency thing.

And so, using that strategy,

it didn’t achieve the ultimate purpose.

And ultimately, the amount
of research that is done

and the impact that
the detention of children has –

especially if it’s over 21 days –

has on their development and their future

is disastrous.

So we shouldn’t be trying to detain
children for any more than 21 days,

and we should be getting children,
if they’re in our custody,

we should be taking care of them humanely,

and making sure they’re with people

that can provide them a safe
and loving environment.

AM: I would challenge you
even on the 21-day number,

but for the purposes of this conversation,

I want to follow up
on something you just said,

which is both that it’s wrong
to detain children,

and that it’s not effective.

So the question, then, is why
does the administration continue to do it,

when we’ve seen 900 additional children
separated from their parents

since the summer of 2018?

Why is this happening?

WH: Well, that’s something
that you’d have to ultimately

ask the administration.

These are questions that I’ve been asking.

The Tornillo facility is in my district.

These are buildings that are not
designed to hold anybody

for multiple days,

let alone children.

We should be making sure
that if they are in our custody –

a lot of times for
the uncompanied children,

we don’t have a …

we don’t know of a patron or a family
member in the United States,

and we should make sure
that they’re in facilities

where they’re able to go to school

and have proper food and health care.

And if we’re able to find
a sponsor or family member,

let’s get them into that custody,

while they’re waiting
for their immigration court case.

That’s the other issue here.

When you have a backlog of cases –

I think it’s now 900,000 cases
that are backlogged –

we should be able to do
an immigration hearing

within nine months.

I think most of the legal community
thinks that is enough time

to do something like this,

so that we can facilitate
whether someone, an individual,

is able to stay in the United States

or they’re going to have to be returned
back to their home country,

rather than being in this limbo
for five years.

AM: If we think about
the asylum system today,

where people are coming and saying
that they have a credible threat,

that they will be persecuted back home,

and we think about the fact
that on average,

it’s about two years for someone
to get an asylum hearing,

that many people are not represented
as they go through that process,

it makes me think about something

that they say in the health care
space all the time,

which is that every system
is perfectly designed

to get the results it gets.

And so as you think about this

and think about how we would
redesign this system

to not do what we’re doing,

which is years and years
of detention and separations and hardship

for people seeking –

and again, asylum being a lawful
United States government process –

for people seeking
to enter our country lawfully.

What should we do?

WH: I tried to increase
by four billion dollars

the amount of resources that HHS has

in order to specifically deal,
ultimately, with children.

I think we need more immigration judges
in order to process these cases,

and I think we need to ensure
that folks can get representation.

I’ve been able to work with a number
of lawyers up and down the border

to make sure they are being able
to get access to the folks

that are having these problems.

And so this is something
that we should be able to design.

And ultimately, when it comes to children,

we should be doing everything we can
when they’re in our custody,

in order to take care of them.

AM: So I have two more questions for you

before I’m going to let you
go back to work.

The first is about our focus
in the United States

on the questions of immigration.

Because if you look
at some of the statistics,

you see that of people
who are undocumented

in the United States,

the majority of people
have overstayed on visas,

they haven’t come through the border.

If you look at the people
who try to enter the country

who are on the terrorist watch list,

they enter overwhelmingly
through the airports

and not through the border.

If we look at drugs
coming into the United States,

which has been a huge part
of this conversation,

the vast majority of those drugs
come through our ports

and through other points of entry,

not through backpacks
on people crossing the border.

So the thing I always ask

and I always worry about with government,

is that we focus so much on one thing,

and my question for you
is whether we are focused

in this conversation nationally
about the border,

every day and every minute of every day,

whether we’re looking
completely in the wrong direction.

WH: I would agree with your premise.

When you have –

let’s start with the economic benefits.

When you have 3.6 percent unemployment,

what does that mean?

That means you need folks
in every industry,

whether it’s agriculture
or artificial intelligence.

So why aren’t we streamlining
legal immigration?

We should be able
to make this market based

in order to have folks come in

and be productive members of our society.

When it comes to the drug issue
you’re talking about,

yes, it’s in our ports of entry,

but it’s also coming in to our shores.

Coast Guard is only able to action

25 percent of the known
intelligence they have

on drugs coming into our country.

The metric that we should
be measuring [is]

are we seeing a decrease of deaths
from overdose from drugs overseas,

are we seeing a decrease
in illegal immigration?

It’s not how many miles of fencing
that we have ultimately built.

And so we have benefited

from the brain drain
of every other country

for the last couple of decades.

I want to see that continue,

and I want to see that continue
with the hardworking drain.

And I can sell you this:

at last Congress, Pete Aguilar,
a Democrat from California, and I

had a piece of legislation
called the USA Act:

strong border security,
streamline legal immigration,

fix DACA – 1.2 million kids who have
only known the United States of America

as their home –

these kids, or I should say
young men and women,

they are already Americans,

let’s not have them go through
any more uncertainty

and make that ultimately happen.

We had 245 people that were willing
to sign this bill into law,

it wasn’t allowed to come forward
under a Republican speaker,

and also the current Democratic speaker
hasn’t brought this bill

through in something
that we would be able to pass.

AM: So I want to close,

and you are, perhaps, most famous –
I don’t know if that’s fair –

but you took a road trip
with Beto O’Rourke

from your district to Washington, DC,

and you’ve become known
for reaching across the aisle

and engaging in these
bipartisan conversations.

And one of the things
I’ve seen you say repeatedly

is to talk about how we are all united.

And I think, when we think
about the language of immigration

and we start hearing words
about enemies and militarization,

I think the real question is:
How do we convince all Americans

to understand what you say
that more unites us than divides us?

WH: Crisscrossing a district like mine
that’s truly 50-50 –

50 percent Democrat,
50 percent Republican,

it’s been very clear to me
that way more unites us than divides us.

And if we focus on those things
that we agree on,

we’ll all be better off.

And I’m not going to get
a perfect attendance award

for going to church,

but I do remember when Jesus
was in the Second Temple

and the Pharisees asked him
what’s the most important commandment,

and he said to “Love thy Lord God
with all your heart, mind and soul.”

But people forget he also said,
“Equally as important,

is to love thy neighbor like thyself.”

And if we remember that
and realize what it would mean,

and what you would
have to be going through

to be living in a situation

that you may send your child
on a 3,000-mile perilous journey,

because that’s what you think
the only thing for their future,

the only thing that you can do
to make sure their future is bright,

if we all remember that situation,

and think what we would do
in that situation,

I think we’d also be better off.

AM: Thank you, Congressman.
Thank you so much for joining us tonight.

(Applause)

安妮·米尔格拉姆:国会议员,
我正要介绍你

并再说一点——

威尔·赫德:嘿,安妮。 你好吗?

AM:嗨,你好吗?
非常感谢你今晚加入我们。

我们很幸运有你和我们在一起。

我已经解释
过你实际上在华盛顿

是因为你在工作。

我正要告诉人们

,你代表
得克萨斯州第 23 区。

但也许你可以告诉
我们一些关于你所在地区的信息

并为我们描述一下。

WH:当然,我所在的德克萨斯州西南部地区
有 29 个县,两个时区

,从德克萨斯州鹰山口

一直到埃尔帕索的边界 820 英里。


每小时 80 英里的速度穿过我所在的地区需要 10 个半小时,

这是
该地区大部分地区的限速。

我在几个周末前发现,

这不是
所有地区的限速。

(笑声)

这是一个 71% 的拉丁裔

选区,这是

我第三个任期以来一直代表的选区。

当您
考虑边界问题时,

我的边界
比任何其他国会议员都多。


在中央情报局做了九年半的卧底,

在全国各地追捕坏人。

所以当谈到保护我们的边境时,

这是我知道的一点。

AM:我最近了解到的一件
我以前不知道的事情

是,我认为您所在的
地区实际上

是乔治亚州的大小?

WH:没错。

它大于 26 个州,
大致相当于乔治亚州的面积。

所以它相当大。

AM:因此,作为国家安全专家

和国会议员,

您被
要求考虑与移民有关的问题

,近年来,
特别是关于边界墙的问题。

对于
特朗普总统

关于我们需要一堵
横跨我们边境

、18 到 30 英尺高的美丽大墙的声明,你有何反应?

WH:自从我 2009 年第一次竞选国会以来,我就一直这么说

这不是一个新话题

,建造一座 30 英尺高的
混凝土结构

从大海到闪亮的大海

是最昂贵
和最不有效的

方式 边境安全。

在边境的某些地区

,边境巡逻队
对威胁的响应时间

以数小时到数天为单位。

如果您的响应
时间以数小时到数天为单位来衡量,

那么墙就不是物理障碍。

我们应该
在边境拥有技术,

我们应该
对我们的边境进行操作控制,

这意味着我们知道
来回穿越边境的一切。

我们可以用技术做很多事情。

我们的边境巡逻队还需要更多的
人。

但除了做这一切,

我们应该能够做的一件事
就是简化合法移民。

如果你想
成为我们社会的一个有生产力的成员,

让我们尽快把你送到这里,

但让我们合法地去做。

如果我们能够简化这一点,
那么您将看到

边境沿线的一些压力得到缓解,

并允许边境巡逻队的男性和女性
也专注于人口贩运

和贩毒
组织。

AM:国会议员,

全国范围内也有关于使用紧急

资金建造边界墙


从美国军方获取这些资金的对话。

你在这个问题上的立场是什么?

WH:我是少数几个
反对这一努力的共和党人之一。

我们刚刚在重建我们的军队,

并从

确保我们的兄弟姐妹、
我们的妻子和我们的丈夫

拥有他们需要的训练和设备


在遥远的地方照顾我们——

拿走钱——拿走资金 从他们那里获取
资源并不能有效利用我们的资源,

特别是如果它要建立一个……

你知道,我总是说
这是解决 21 世纪问题的 4 世纪解决方案

现实情况是,
我们应该关注的

是这个问题的其他一些根本原因

,你们今天的许多发言者
都谈到了这一点。

其中一些关键的根本问题
是暴力、缺乏经济机会

和极端贫困,

特别是在北三角:
萨尔瓦多、危地马拉和洪都拉斯。

我们应该努力——

AM:我想问
一下,你会建议

美国政府做什么
来解决中美洲这三个国家的潜在

因素,我们所说的推动因素或根本原因

WH:
作为一名中央情报局的卧底警官,我学到的一件事

就是对好人要友善
,对硬汉要强硬。

与好人相处的原则之一

是加强我们的联盟。

目前

,美国国际开发署和国务院
正在这三个国家开展一些项目来解决这一暴力问题。

我们知道,在萨尔瓦多,

问题之一
是警察腐败。

因此,我们与萨尔瓦多人
合作,清洗警察,

重新雇用新人,

使用社区警务策略。

这些是美利坚合众国的男女

和警察

每天都在使用的策略。

当我们
在某些社区这样做时,

猜猜发生了什么?

我们看到
这些社区发生的暴力事件有所减少。

然后我们还

看到离开这些地区

试图
非法进入美国的人数有所减少。

因此

在问题最终到达我们的边界之前,解决那里的问题只是成本的一小部分。

你有暴力和犯罪的原因之一

是政治腐败

和缺乏中央政府
来保护其公民。

所以这是
我们应该继续努力的事情。

我们不应该

减少我们发送给这些国家的资金数额。

我实际上认为
我们应该增加它。

我相信第一件事——
我们应该在这个月前做的——

是为北三角选择一名特别代表

那是一位高级外交官

,他将努力确保
我们正在利用我们所有的力量

来帮助这三个国家,

然后我们
正在协同努力。

这不仅
是美国和墨西哥

的问题,也是整个西半球的问题

那么,
美洲国家组织在哪里?

国际
开发银行在哪里?

我们应该制定一个集体计划
来解决这些根本原因。

当你谈论暴力时

,很多时候,我们谈论的
是像 MS-13 这样的可怕团伙。

但这也是一种暴力,比如
女性被丈夫殴打。

而且他们没有其他人可以去

,他们无法
处理当前的问题。

因此,这些

是我们应该
增加外交、

增加经济发展援助的问题类型。

AM:拜托,我现在想带你

从思考中美洲的根本原因
到思考美国

儿童和家庭

的分离。

从 2018 年 4 月

开始,特朗普政府开始

对移民、寻求
难民身份的人、

在美国的庇护采取不容忍政策。

这导致该计划运行的第一年
有 2,700 名儿童分离

现在,我想和你谈谈这个问题

,我想把它
分成两个不同的对话。

政府所做的一件事

是提交法律法庭文件,

称分居的主要
目的之一

是对

来到美国的人起到威慑作用。


想从道德的角度谈一谈,

并听取你的意见。

WH:我们不应该这样做,
期间。 这真的很简单。

你猜怎么着,这不是一种威慑。

你只看到
非法移民数量的增加。

当你坐下来
讨论策略时,

如果有人想出把

孩子
从母亲怀里抢走的想法,

你需要回到绘图板上。

这不是美利坚
合众国所代表的,

这不是共和党
、民主党或独立的东西。

这是人情世故。

所以,使用这种策略,

并没有达到最终目的。

最终
,已完成的研究数量


对儿童的拘留(

尤其是超过 21 天

)对他们的发展和他们的未来的影响

是灾难性的。

所以我们不应该试图将
儿童拘留超过 21 天

,我们应该得到孩子,
如果他们在我们的监护之下,

我们应该人道地照顾他们,

并确保他们与

那些 可以为他们提供一个安全
和充满爱的环境。

AM:
即使是21天的数字,我也会挑战你,

但为了这次谈话的目的,

我想
跟进你刚才所说的事情,

即拘留儿童是错误的

而且它没有效果。

那么问题
来了,

当我们看到自 2018 年夏天以来又有 900 名儿童
与父母分离时,政府为什么还要继续这样做

为什么会这样?

WH:嗯,这
是你最终必须

询问政府的事情。

这些是我一直在问的问题。

Tornillo 设施在我所在的地区。

这些建筑物的
设计目的是不能容纳任何

人多日,

更不用说儿童了。

我们应该
确保如果他们在我们的监护下

——很多时候
对于无人陪伴的孩子,

我们没有……

我们不知道美国的赞助人或家庭
成员,

并且 我们应该确保

他们在能够上学

并获得适当食物和医疗保健的设施中。

如果我们能够
找到担保人或家庭成员,

让我们


他们等待移民法庭案件的同时将他们拘留。

这是这里的另一个问题。

当你有积压的案件时——

我认为现在有 900,000 件
积压的案件——

我们应该能够在九个月
内举行移民听证会

我认为大多数法律界
都认为有足够的时间

来做这样的事情,

这样我们就可以促进
某人,个人

是否能够留在美国,

或者他们将不得不
返回他们的国家。 祖国,

而不是在这种困境中
呆五年。

AM:如果我们考虑
今天的庇护制度,

人们来这里并
说他们有可信的威胁

,他们将在国内受到迫害

,我们考虑这样一个事实
,平均而言,

一个人大约需要两年时间
才能得到 庇护听证会

,很多人在
经历这个过程时没有代表,

这让我想起

了他们一直在医疗保健领域所说的
话,

那就是每个系统
都经过完美

设计,可以得到它得到的结果。

因此,当您考虑这一点

并考虑我们将如何
重新设计该系统

以不做我们正在做的事情时,对于寻求庇护的人来说,

这是多年
的拘留,分离和困难

再一次,庇护是合法的
美国 政府程序——

适用于寻求
合法进入我国的人。

我们应该做什么?

WH:我试图

将 HHS 的资源数量增加 40 亿美元

,以便
最终专门处理儿童问题。

我认为我们需要更多的移民
法官来处理这些案件

,我认为我们需要
确保人们能够获得代表权。

我已经能够与
边境上下的许多律师合作,

以确保他们
能够接触

到有这些问题的人。

所以这
是我们应该能够设计的东西。

归根结底,当涉及到孩子时,

我们应该
在他们被我们监护

时尽我们所能来照顾他们。

AM:所以在让你回去工作之前,我还有两个问题要问你

首先是关于我们
在美国

对移民问题的关注。

因为如果你
看一些统计数据,

你会看到在美国
没有证件

的人,大多数
人签证过期,

他们没有通过边境。

如果你看看
那些试图进入

恐怖分子观察名单上的国家的人,

他们绝大多数是
通过机场

而不是通过边境进入的。

如果我们看看
进入美国的毒品,

这一直是这场对话的重要组成部分

,绝大多数毒品
是通过我们的港口

和其他入境点进入的,

而不是通过
过境人员的背包。

所以我一直

问我一直担心政府的事情

是,我们如此专注于一件事

,我的问题
是我们是否专注

于全国范围内
关于边境的对话,

每一天,每一天的每一分钟 ,

我们是否
完全看错了方向。

WH:我同意你的前提。

当你有 -

让我们从经济利益开始。

当你有 3.6% 的失业率时,

这意味着什么?

这意味着你需要
每个行业的人,

无论是农业
还是人工智能。

那么为什么我们不简化
合法移民呢?

我们应该能够
以这个市场为基础

,以便让人们进入

并成为我们社会的生产成员。

当谈到你所说的毒品问题时

是的,它在我们的入境口岸,

但它也正在进入我们的海岸。

海岸警卫队只能

对进入我国的毒品采取已知情报的 25%。

我们应该衡量的指标
[是

] 我们是否看到海外吸毒过量导致的死亡人数有所减少

,我们是否看到
非法移民人数有所减少?

这不是我们最终建造了多少英里的围栏

因此

,在过去的几十年里,我们从其他所有国家的人才流失中受益。

我希望看到这种情况继续下去

,我希望看到这种情况
随着努力工作的流失而继续下去。

我可以卖给你这个:

在国会上,
来自加利福尼亚的民主党人皮特·阿吉拉尔和我

制定了一项
名为《美国法案》的立法:

加强边境安全、
简化合法移民、

修复 DACA——120 万
只知道 美利坚合众国

作为他们的家——

这些孩子,或者我应该说
年轻男女,

他们已经是美国人了,

让我们不要让他们
经历更多的不确定性

并最终实现这一点。

我们有 245 人愿意
将这项法案签署成为法律,

在共和党议长的领导下不允许提出,

而且现任民主党议长
也没有

以我们能够通过的方式通过这项法案

AM:所以我想结束

,也许你是最有名的——
我不知道这是否公平——

但你
和 Beto O’Rourke

从你所在的地区到华盛顿特区进行了一次公路旅行,

而你' 我们
以跨越过道

和参与这些
两党对话而闻名。

我看到你反复说的其中一件事

是谈论我们如何团结一致。

我认为,当我们
想到移民的语言

并开始听到
关于敌人和军事化的言论时,

我认为真正的问题是:
我们如何说服所有

美国人理解你所说
的更能团结我们而不是分裂我们?

WH:像我这样一个真正 50-50 人选区

——50% 的民主党人,
50% 的共和党人,

我很清楚
这种方式更能团结我们而不是分裂我们。

如果我们专注于
我们同意的那些事情,

我们都会过得更好。

而且我不会因为去教堂而
获得全勤奖

但我确实记得当
耶稣在第二圣殿时

,法利赛人问他
最重要的诫命是什么

,他说:“全心全意地爱你的主
上帝 你的心、思想和灵魂。”

但是人们忘记了他也说过,
“同样重要的

是爱你的邻居像你自己一样。”

如果我们记住这一点,
并意识到这意味着

什么,以及你必须经历什么

才能生活在这样一种情况下

,你可能会让你的孩子
踏上 3000 英里的危险旅程,

因为那是你
认为唯一的事情 他们的未来

,你唯一能做的
就是确保他们的未来是光明的,

如果我们都记得那种情况

,想想
在那种情况下我们会做什么,

我想我们也会过得更好。

AM:谢谢你,国会议员。
非常感谢你今晚加入我们。

(掌声)