The day before the anniversary of D-Day, we lost a man who was equaled by few and surpassed by none as a leader in the cause of freedom: Ronald Reagan.
From Mac Thornberry
We should restore a proper balance in environmental regulation and energy production that is based on common sense, not political agendas.
The challenge we have in the war on terrorism is looking around for those pieces that matter and trying to fit them together.
Mr. Speaker, I agree with those who say that the Global War on Terrorism is actually a Global War of Ideas and that terrorism is one of the tactics used in that War.
No other date on the calendar more potently symbolizes all that our nation stands for than the Fourth of July.
We should start by allowing drilling in Alaska's National Wildlife Refuge. It can provide billions of barrels of recoverable oil and trillions of cubic feet of recoverable natural gas.
And to stick our head in the sand and pretend that we are somehow safer if we do not know or to pretend we are somehow safer if we limit our options seems to me not only foolish but actually dangerous.
We must continue research into new forms of energy and into more efficient use of existing energy sources.
Energy is necessary for economic growth, for a better quality of life, and for human progress.
Now, forty years after his passing, Winston Churchill is still quoted, read, revered, and referred to as much, if not more, than when he was alive.
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