Ron Paul
in the US House of Representatives, November 13, 2002
Mr. Speaker,
when the process of creating a Department of Homeland Security
commenced, Congress was led to believe that the legislation would
be a simple reorganization aimed at increasing efficiency, not
an attempt to expand federal power. Fiscally conservative members
of Congress were even told that the bill would be budget neutral!
Yet, when the House of Representatives initially considered creating
a Department of Homeland Security, the legislative vehicle almost
overnight grew from 32 pages to 282 pages and the cost
had ballooned to at least $3 billion. Now we are prepared to vote
on a nearly 500-page bill that increases federal expenditures
and raises troubling civil liberties questions. Adding insult
to injury, this bill was put together late last night and introduced
only this morning. Worst of all, the text of the bill has not
been made readily available to most members, meaning this Congress
is prepared to create a massive new federal agency without even
knowing the details. This is a dangerous and irresponsible practice.
The last
time Congress attempted a similarly ambitious reorganization of
the government was with the creation of the Department of Defense
in 1947. However, the process by which we are creating this new
department bears little resemblance to the process by which the
Defense Department was created. Congress began hearings on the
proposed Department of Defense in 1945 two years before
President Truman signed legislation creating the new Department
into law! Despite the lengthy deliberative process through which
Congress created that new department, turf battles and logistical
problems continued to bedevil the military establishment, requiring
several corrective pieces of legislation. In fact, Mr. Speaker,
the Goldwater-Nicholas Department of Defense Reorganization Act
of 1986 was passed to deal with problems steaming from
the 1947 law! The experience with the Department of Defense certainly
suggests the importance of a more deliberative process in the
creation of this new agency.
HR 5710 grants
major new powers to the Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) by granting HHS the authority to "administer"
the smallpox vaccine to members of the public if the Department
unilaterally determines that there is a public health threat posed
by smallpox. HHS would not even have to demonstrate an actual
threat of a smallpox attack, merely the "potential"
of an attack. Thus, this bill grants federal agents the authority
to force millions of Americans to be injected with a potentially
lethal vaccine based on nothing more than a theoretical potential
smallpox incident. Furthermore, this provision continues to restrict
access to the smallpox vaccine from those who have made a voluntary
choice to accept the risk of the vaccine in order to protect themselves
from smallpox. It is hard to think of a more blatant violation
of liberty than allowing government officials to force people
to receive potentially dangerous vaccines based on hypothetical
risks.
While this
provision appears to be based on similar provisions granting broad
mandatory vaccination and quarantine powers to governors from
the controversial "Model Health Emergency Powers Act,"
this provision has not been considered by the House. Instead,
this provision seems to have been snuck into the bill at the last
minute. At the very least, Mr. Speaker, before Congress grants
HHS such sweeping powers, we should have an open debate instead
of burying the authorization in a couple of paragraphs tucked
away in a 484-page bill!
HR 5710 also
expands the federal police state by allowing the attorney general
to authorize federal agency inspectors general and their agents
to carry firearms and make warrantless arrests. One of the most
disturbing trends in recent years is the increase in the number
of federal officials authorized to carry guns. This is especially
disturbing when combined with the increasing trend toward restricting
the ability of average Americans to exercise their second amendment
rights. Arming the government while disarming the public encourages
abuses of power.
Mr.
Speaker, HR 5710 gives the federal government new powers and increases
federal expenditures, completely contradicting what members were
told about the bill. Furthermore, these new power grabs are being
rushed through Congress without giving members the ability to
debate, or even properly study, this proposal. I must oppose this
bill and urge my colleagues to do the same.