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[Pages S2747-S2748]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROTESTS
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, all across our Nation, the past few
days have seemed to mark a turn for the better.
On Friday morning, new data showed that the economic fallout from
this pandemic may have bottomed out and begun to turn around weeks
earlier than had been predicted. Instead of losing millions more jobs
in the month of May, our Nation had already begun adding back millions
of jobs. Lockdowns are easing, and businesses are reopening. The
greatest country in world history is coming back online, and our
citizens are getting their jobs back by the millions.
Now, there is no question our national comeback is just beginning.
The coronavirus is still with us. We have a long way to go to rebuild
and recover from the historic layoffs of this spring, but already, even
in these early days of our careful reopening, the American people are
trouncing the predictions and starting to come back strong.
What is more, this weekend saw millions of Americans, once again,
take to the streets and town squares to protest the deaths of George
Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other Black Americans at the hands of law
enforcement. Yet, unlike what our Nation faced about a week ago, this
weekend's demonstrations seemed to have been almost entirely peaceful--
no more rampant looting, no more police precincts set on fire. By and
large, there had been just peaceful protests in our great American
tradition.
In my home State of Kentucky, in Louisville, just like around the
Nation, hundreds gathered to remember Breonna Taylor on what would have
been her 27th birthday and to continue to call for answers. In
Lexington, a moment of silence was held at an historic former slave
market. Then a group marched to police headquarters. Police officers,
including the chief, came out and met them in civil discourse. And,
while a lot of ink has been spilled recently about our big cities, we
cannot miss that this moment is echoing throughout smalltown America as
well.
In Henderson, in western Kentucky, 200 people--protesters, law
enforcement, and local leaders alike--gathered for an interfaith prayer
vigil. In southeastern Kentucky, in Corbin, more than 100 gathered for
a peaceful demonstration that included a prayerful moment of silence.
The police officers keeping watch joined in. In Hazard, a town of about
5,000 people in eastern Kentucky, citizens gathered for what they
called a ``march of love.'' It was the same story in Benton, in
Danville, in Morehead--all around the Commonwealth and all around the
country. Our
[[Page S2748]]
country has remembered that peace and protest can and must coexist.
The vast majority of the men and women in law enforcement across our
country are not evil, are not racist, do not wake up every morning
looking for violence. We are reminded of their bravery every time a
citizen needs to dial 9-1-1, and they rush toward danger. We were all
reminded again this past weekend, as these professionals bravely kept
watch over demonstrations, including ones where they themselves had
been called racist or evil or were denigrated in the worst ways because
of their uniforms and their badges.
So, if peaceful protesters rightly do not want to be lumped in with a
subset of looters and rioters who seek destruction, then the vast
majority of brave police officers cannot be lumped in with the very
worst examples of heinous behavior. It is that simple. But, instead, we
are already seeing outlandish calls to defund the police or to abolish
the police take root within the leftwing leadership class. The
president of the City Council in Minneapolis has proclaimed she can
``imagine a future without police.'' One of her fellow council members
put it even more clearly: ``This council is going to dismantle this
police department.''
To be clear as to what this effort is about, one of the local groups
informing this push in Minnesota has literally stated that arts
programs and mental health resources will be more effective at stopping
crime than will be armed cops. Instead of ``strangers armed with
guns,'' they say other professionals like social workers should be the
ones to ``respond to crises in our community.''
I am all for social work and mental health, but call me old-
fashioned--I think you may actually want a police officer to stop a
criminal and arrest him before we try to work through his feelings.
Well, even if some leftwing leaders fall for this nonsense, I have a
feeling the American people are too smart for that. They know that what
happened to George Floyd was totally abhorrent. They also know that
riots and looting are unacceptable. They also know that well-trained
law enforcement officers are an important part of creating safe
communities, not something to defund or abolish.
So I am proud that Americans across the country can protest in safety
and peace. I am proud that their neighbors continue to answer the call
to protect and to serve, and I am hopeful that, with unity and mutual
respect, we can continue this important national discussion to ensure
justice and equal protection under the law
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