[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 155 (Wednesday, September 25, 2019)]
[House]
[Page H7908]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                       PARKRIDGE PREGNANCY CENTER

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Texas (Mr. Arrington) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Madam Speaker, I rise today to recognize the good 
people at Parkridge Pregnancy Medical Clinic in Lubbock, Texas.
  Parkridge, a nonprofit pregnancy center, is celebrating 26 years of 
providing compassionate care to mothers throughout their pregnancies, 
and often in the most difficult of circumstances.
  By providing ultrasounds, medical services, material assistance, and 
even ministering to mothers' deeper emotional and spiritual needs, the 
people at Parkridge are truly and literally saving lives.
  You see, Madam Speaker, they believe, like I do, that all life is a 
gift from God. They believe in the words etched into our Declaration of 
Independence, our founding principle and fundamental belief that all of 
us are created equally by God and endowed by our creator with the right 
to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
  But for nearly 50 years now, we have fallen short of that national 
ethic. Ever since the Supreme Court erred in Roe v. Wade, we have 
failed to protect the sacred right for the most vulnerable among us, 
rejecting the notion that life at every stage is equally valuable, 
equally precious, not only in light of the Constitution, but in the 
eyes of God.
  Since then, over 60 million lives have been terminated through the 
practice of abortion in these United States. And yet even in the shadow 
of this darkness, we can see rays of hope shining through.
  Because of places like Parkridge, I believe the tide is finally 
turning, and in the direction of life. All across our country, the 
growing momentum for a culture of life is palpable.
  Last week, we learned that the abortion rate in America has dropped 
to its lowest level at any point since 1973 and Roe v. Wade.
  We have seen States throughout the country taking bold action to 
defend the inherent dignity of every human life, especially those who 
can't speak up for themselves.
  I am proud to have supported every single pro-life measure considered 
in this Chamber, from the Heartbeat Protection Act, to the pain-capable 
protections, to defunding Planned Parenthood, to the recent born-alive 
protection legislation.
  I stand behind our President 100 percent in his efforts to reshape 
the courts so that judges adhere to the Constitution and to the 
independent and interpretive role that they are supposed to play, 
rather than legislating from the bench and imposing their policy 
preferences on the American people.
  This is one of the most important and certainly lasting legacies of 
this President, and I am proud to say and excited to say the Senate has 
recently confirmed President Trump's 150th judicial nominee.
  But I also recognize that in order to build a lasting culture of 
life, we are going to need to do more than just change laws. We are 
going to have to change hearts.
  In the debate over abortion, the late Pennsylvania Governor Bob Casey 
said:

       The real question is not when life begins, but when love 
     begins.

  For 26 years now, the people of Parkridge Pregnancy Center have been 
coming alongside these young mothers not in judgment, but in joy, not 
in condemnation, but to comfort, praying with them, loving them, and 
ministering to them and meeting their deepest needs in their darkest 
hours.
  Thanks to the good and godly work that they are doing, along with 
countless organizations like them across America, I hope, pray, and I 
believe that we will soon see a day in our country when every child is 
loved and every life, born or unborn, is celebrated, cherished, and 
protected.

  Madam Speaker, may God bless the Parkridge family, may He bless their 
mission to protect life and promote love, all to the praise of God, the 
author of both life and love.
  Go west Texas.
  Madam Speaker, may I inquire how much time I have remaining?
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Texas has 1\1/4\ minutes 
remaining.


We Should be More Responsible in Carrying Out Our Constitutional Duties

  Mr. ARRINGTON. Madam Speaker, I would like to say that I feel like it 
is incredibly irresponsible and premature and careless for this body, 
led by our Speaker and the Democratic Party, to rush to this conclusion 
and allege that our President has committed high crimes.
  I don't believe this is under the auspices of pursuit of justice and 
truth. I think it is placating a certain group in the Democratic Party.
  I think this is more of the bloodlust for impeaching our President, 
not because of high crimes, but because they hate him, they hate his 
personality, they hate his policies, but that is no justification.
  We are better than that as a country. We should be more responsible 
in how we faithfully carry out our constitutional duties.
  So I look forward to reading the transcript. I look forward to 
getting the facts.
  Republican or Democrat, Madam Speaker, we ought to look at the facts 
and we ought to be very judicious and careful and certainly responsible 
when wielding our constitutional oversight, and certainly that 
provision of impeachment.
  So that is what I am going to do on behalf of the good people of west 
Texas and my beloved countrymen across the United States.

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