Thursday, February 18, 2016

We Simply Must Elect Ted Cruz

Remember, we are now facing the death of many of our liberties if Barack Obama is allowed to nominate another liberal to the United States Supreme Court.

We simply must elect Ted Cruz. There is no longer a choice. Rush Limbaugh says if you are a conservative, then Ted Cruz is your guy. He also said that Ted Cruz is the closest thing we have to Ronald Reagan in our lifetime.

May I add, Ted Cruz is that constitutional conservative we all prayed for ... we must unite behind Ted Cruz. I am merely echoing the sentiments of Dr. James Dobson, Thomas Sowell, Glenn Beck, Mark Levin, Marcus Luttrell, Dakota Meyer, and Taya Kyle, and so many more.

Today, I want to share Krista Branch's I Am America. It is a reminder of what we are fighting, and why I am so adamant that Ted Cruz must win. I will trust him to nominate good, strong constitutionalists faithful to the law instead of their politics.


Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Monday, February 15, 2016

Ted Cruz Goes Sun Tzu on Trump and Rubio


by Will Stauff
Conservative Report

"Here Jeff quotes Sun Tzu who wrote The Art Of War. Anyone paying attention realizes this is directed at Donald Trump. When Trump called Cruz a Pu#@y! days after the New Hampshire debate this tweet stood out in my mind. What most people don’t understand, especially Trump and his supporters, is that Cruz is so well versed in Sun Tzu tactics that they will not see Ted Cruz coming when he strikes.

"It’s interesting how so many Republicrat-Establishment types write Ted Cruz off in media circles. There’s one thing I notice from some left wing media sources. They understand Ted Cruz and they take him seriously. The media writes articles about Cruz as a means of warning the Democrats what they are really up against. They actually tell the truth about him because they recognize him as a threat.

“In both law and politics, I think the essential battle is the meta-battle of framing the narrative,” Cruz told me. “As Sun Tzu said, Every battle is won before it’s fought. It’s won by choosing the terrain on which it will be fought. So in litigation I tried to ask, What’s this case about? When the judge goes home and speaks to his or her grandchild, who’s in kindergarten, and the child says, ‘Paw-Paw, what did you do today?’ And if you own those two sentences that come out of the judge’s mouth, you win the case.

“So let’s take Medellín as an example of that,” Cruz went on. “The other side’s narrative in Medellín was very simple and easy to understand. ‘Can the state of Texas flout U.S. treaty obligations, international law, the President of the United States, and the world? And, by the way, you know how those Texans are about the death penalty anyway!’ That’s their narrative. That’s what the case is about. When Justice Kennedy comes home and he tells his grandson, ‘This case is about whether a state can ignore U.S. treaty obligations,’ we lose.

“So I spent a lot of time thinking about, What’s a different narrative to explain this case? Because, as you know, just about every observer in the media and in the academy thought we didn’t have a prayer. This is a hopeless case.”

"It’s interesting how the last debate fleshed out in South Carolina and how Ted Cruz has not reciprocated Trump’s attacks until that moment that made the difference. At the beginning of the debate I thought Trump was going to do what he normally does, play passive aggressive. Appear passive in the debates while he goes aggressive on twitter and at rallies. It finally didn’t work this time. Ted Cruz like Lieutenant Daniel Kaffee in the courtroom getting Colonel Nathan Jessup to admit that he gave the order to issue the “Code Red” Cruz forced Trump to admit his support for abortion." 

Read the rest of the article here.

Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Sunday, February 14, 2016

GOP Debate: Ted Cruz

You might think, "Of course she thinks Ted Cruz won the debate, she's a strong supporter and a member of Ted Cruz's Utah team. But let me explain a few things here. He stuck to the issues and the policies while Trump and Rubio figuratively ran around waving their hands in the air with little cartoon steam blowing out of their ears.

Ted Cruz told Donald Trump that he wants to federally fund Planned Parenthood. He didn't say anything about abortion, just Planned Parenthood. Although the bulk of their work is abortion and they do sell baby parts which is quite reprehensible. But Donald Trump does want to federally fund Planned Parenthood, Ted Cruz was not lying.



And Marco Rubio called Ted Cruz a liar because he said that Marco was refusing to deport the 12,000,000 illegal aliens we have in America, in effect, amnesty. Marco called him a liar and said, "He doesn't even know Spanish so I don't how he can know what I said" ... Ted Cruz then promptly answered him in Spanish, the language of his father.

I tried to find the Univision video where Marco Rubio said he wasn't going to deport 12,000,000 illegal aliens. I think I found it, but no subtitles on this one. And I don't speak Spanish, because I live in America and English is the language we speak. So I can't say what was said on this one.

Ted Cruz has the ability to remember everything that has been said. It is called an audiographic memory, and he has it in spades. So when people challenge him, they should remember that little thing about him. He really can remember everything you've said.

So last night both Donald Trump and Marco Rubio had multiple temper tantrums. They threw the words "liar, liar, liar" around with great frequency. The problem is, they were the ones lying. Donald Trump has defended Planned Parenthood, as you see above. Marco Rubio has promoted amnesty and Ted Cruz did not. In fact, the National Review reported:

"Senator Ted Cruz (R., Texas) offered an amendment that would have dramatically increased security along the southern border by, among other things, tripling the number of Border Patrol agents, quadrupling the number of sensors, cameras, drones, and other surveillance equipment, and fully implementing a biometric entry-exit system at land-border crossings. DHS would lose funding, and political appointees would have their salaries docked 20 percent, if these measures were not implemented within three years. The amendment was defeated by a 13-to-5 vote, with Senator Orrin Hatch (R., Utah) joining Flake and Graham in opposition. Cruz’s colleague from Texas, Senator John Cornyn, offered a similar amendment to require stricter border-security triggers; it was defeated 12 to 6." National Review, 10 May 2013

There is more to the matter, Newsmax also reported in regards to Cruz's amendment:

"My amendment was a one-page amendment that said anyone here illegally is permanently ineligible for citizenship," the first-term Texas senator told Greta Van Susteren on Fox News. "It was calling their bluff because what it did was revealed hypocrisy." Newsmax, 15 December 2014

So Marco Rubio lied about that too. Jeff Sessions, Steve King and Mike Lee all backed Ted Cruz up saying he fought against the Gang of 8 bill with them. So Marco not only lied, he looked right in the camera and lied.

I invite you to listen to Ted Cruz yourself and make your own judgement. He appeared on ABC's This Week with George Stephanopolous:


And Ted didn't shy away from any topic. He flat laid it out there. So South Carolina and Nevada, you have a choice to make. Choose the adult that was in the room last night or the 5-year old throwing a temper tantrum. That is what it boils down to ... it really is a two-man race for the Republican nomination. Choose the constitutional conservative, choose the adult.


Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Ted Cruz is Natural Born

Mark Levin explains why Ted Cruz is considered natural born:


Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Cut From the Same Cloth as Our Founders: Ted Cruz


Lloyd Marcus of American Thinker posted an article today. The first paragraph got me thinking:
As the New Hampshire primary fast approaches, I wish to remind voters that our next commander-in-chief must be of the highest character, cut from the rare cloth of our founders.
He was talking about Ted Cruz, and as I pondered this I began to realize that Senator Ted Cruz and Senator Mike Lee are both cut from the cloth of the Founding Fathers of our nation. We have a chance now, certainly our last chance, to pull America back from the brink and it will take those men and women cut from the same cloth of our founding generation.

Barack Obama has spent the last seven plus years trying to turn us into a socialist nation. We have fought back, building up the strength of the states so that we can stop him. Because he couldn't get things past Congress he decided to legislate with Executive Orders. But what is done by the executive pen can be promptly undone by the same executive pen. His executive overreach is the subject of many lawsuits right now, and the target of every GOP contender for president.

Ted Cruz is a man who is indeed cut from the same cloth of the Founding Fathers. He is strong on immigration, on restoring the U.S. Constitution, on 2nd Amendment rights, securing the border, protecting America, religious liberty, standing with Israel, family and marriage, the economy and reigning in Washington, D.C. And his flat tax plan is simply brilliant. While he is cut from the same cloth of James Madison, he also puts me in mind of the fiery Patrick Henry.

Our Founding Fathers created a republic, one with a smaller federal government, strong states' powers (10th Amendment), and the rest residing in the We the People. You see, America, we are the ones who can decide the future of our nation. Socialism and communism do not work, they have never worked. As Margaret Thatcher said, "eventually you will run out of other people's money".

The Grand Experiment that is America is one unique to the world. In America we know that our rights come from God, and the Founding Fathers recognized that. This republic they gave us was designed after great research, debate and arguing at the original constitutional Congress. 

Ted Cruz is a constitutional conservative, memorizing and defending the U.S. Constitution in high school:
"When he was 15, Ted Cruz was one of five Houston kids selected by the Free Enterprise Institute to tour the country and speak about the Constitution. Prior to graduating high school, Ted had delivered 80 speeches on such topics as economics, the Austrian economist von Mises, and the importance and meaning of the Constitution." The Blaze
He went on to Princeton to gain his undergraduate degree, and then on to Harvard for his law degree. Of his student, liberal lion professor Alan Dershowitz said,
“One of the sharpest students I had, in terms of analytic skills. I’ve had 10,000 students over my 50 years at Harvard. He has to qualify among the brightest of the students. Deeply principled. He thinks he’s doing the right thing. I saw that years ago when he was a student. He was not a compromiser. He was not somebody who tried to make friends by accepting what was then the political correctness of the day.” The Blaze
Being a liberal, Dershowitz could only say, "He thinks he's doing the right thing." Well, I'm here to tell you that Ted Cruz is doing the right thing. Conservative principles produce prosperity, liberal principles do not. Let me give you an example, with Ronald Reagan's conservative policies we had two decades of prosperity before Democrats got in there and destroyed it again. Over and over, a strong conservative president can turn things around, producing decades of prosperity. That is why we need Ted Cruz as Commander-in-Chief, as the next president of the United States of America. He is strong on the issues, policies and understands, brilliantly, how to pull us back from the brink of socialism and economic disaster.

Yes, I am on Utah's team for Ted Cruz. And yes, from the day Ted Cruz announced his presidential candidacy at Liberty University I was in his camp. But as I did with Senator Mike Lee, I researched Ted Cruz fully and realized he walked the walk and talked the talk of a true constitutional conservative.

So I ask America to please support him and recognize with Ted Cruz we can regain prosperity in America again. America can be strong again, and can regain our status as a world super power. Democrats hate that. But Republicans understand that without a strong America the world burns.

Senator Ted Cruz is the last chance America has ... we either pull back from the brink of socialism with Senator Cruz, or we fall and life will get much, much worse. As I said, socialism and communism flat don't work.

Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Dinesh D'Souza v. Bill Ayers

Bill Ayers hates the FBI. He hates the police. He thinks America is evil. Dinesh loves America. Here is the great debate of a communist versus a conservative.


The Convention of Statesmen is featuring Dinesh D'Souza. Buy your tickets now.

Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Ted Cruz: The Four-Part Series

This compiled by Glenn Beck's team. Very impressive.

A couple of things that stood out were these:

When he was 15, Ted Cruz was one of five Houston kids selected by the Free Enterprise Institute to tour the country and speak about the Constitution. Prior to graduating high school, Ted had delivered 80 speeches on such topics as economics, the Austrian economist von Mises, and the importance and meaning of the Constitution.
-- and --

One of Ted’s law professors — liberal lion lawyer Alan Dershowitz — said this of his student:

“One of the sharpest students I had, in terms of analytic skills. I’ve had 10,000 students over my 50 years at Harvard. He has to qualify among the brightest of the students. Deeply principled. He thinks he’s doing the right thing. I saw that years ago when he was a student. He was not a compromiser. He was not somebody who tried to make friends by accepting what was then the political correctness of the day.”

You can read the entire thing here.


Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

A Stronger Congress, A Healthier Republic

By Mike Lee & Jeb Hensarling — February 2, 2016

"All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives." – Article I, Section 1, U.S. Constitution

The federal government is broken. And while there is plenty of blame to go around, only Congress can fix it.

We don’t mean this as an indictment of any one leader or party, because the dysfunction in Washington today has accreted over decades, under Houses, Senates, and presidents of every partisan combination, as well as the many different justices of the Supreme Court.

To be sure, not every misguided, dysfunctional federal policy is a direct act of Congress. But that points toward the root problem.

The stability and moral legitimacy of America’s governing institutions depend on a representative, transparent, and accountable Congress to make its laws. For years, however, Congress has delegated too much of its legislative authority to the executive branch, skirting the thankless work and ruthless accountability that Article 1 demands and taking up a new position as backseat drivers of the republic.

So today, Americans’ laws are increasingly written by people other than their representatives in the House and Senate, and via processes specifically designed to exclude public scrutiny and input. This arrangement benefits well-connected insiders who thrive in less-accountable modes of policymaking, but it does so at the expense of the American people — for whose freedom our system of separated powers was devised in the first place.

In short, we have moved from a nation governed by the rule of law to one governed by the rule of rulers and unelected, unaccountable regulators.

Congress’s abdication, unsurprisingly, has led to a proliferation of bad policy and to the erosion of public trust in the institutions of government. Distrust, also unsurprisingly, is now the defining theme of American politics.

For conservatives, Congress’s dereliction represents something of a crisis. First, because conservatives believe in constitutionalism as a bulwark of freedom and justice in our society. And second, because the transfer of lawmaking power from Congress to the executive branch tends to thwart the kinds of policies that conservatives often advocate — namely those that limit the size, ambitions, and influence of the federal government.

It’s no wonder Congress’s job-approval ratings are at historic lows. Oftentimes we’re not even doing our job, and — just look around — the American people are paying the price.

Congress’s reclamation of its constitutional authority is a necessary first step toward real reform, within Washington and around the country.

That is why we have joined with eight colleagues in the House and Senate to develop and promote a new agenda of structural reforms that will strengthen Congress and reassert its vital role in our society. We call it the Article 1 Project (A1P).

Specifically, A1P will focus on restoring congressional power in four key areas at the core of Washington’s — and America’s — broken status quo.

First, Congress must reclaim its power of the federal purse. Our formal budget process, which dates to 1974, has fallen apart, and we must restructure it for a post-earmark world. We need to bring entitlement programs back onto the actual budget and bring self-funding federal agencies back under annual appropriation.

Second, we need to reform legislative “cliffs” that loom behind expiring legislation — at the end of the fiscal year and when the federal debt nears its statutory limit — to realign the incentives of the American people and their government.

Third, Congress must take back control of actual federal lawmaking. Today, the vast majority of federal laws are unilaterally imposed by executive-branch agencies. The bureaucrats in these agencies then serve as police, prosecutors, and courts in the ensuing cases. All major regulations should be affirmatively prioritized and approved by a vote of Congress.

Finally, we must clarify the law governing executive discretion, which right now allows presidents and federal bureaucrats to ignore or rewrite federal statutes, so long as they have a clever enough reason. Reform in these four areas would put Congress back in charge of federal lawmaking and put the American people back in charge of Washington — just as the Founders intended.

With political attention now fixated on the presidential race, little hope for major legislative breakthroughs in President Obama’s final year in office, and the American people furious at Washington’s indifference and dysfunction, now is the perfect time for Congress to begin thinking about what a re-constitutionalized federal government would look like.

Such a government would not deliver either party or any citizen everything it wants. But it would give the American people a more representative and responsible government, and in turn, a healthier, freer society. All that stands between Americans and the government of, for, and by the people that the Founders bequeathed us is the will of the Congress to finally step up and do its job.

— Mike Lee represents Utah in the U.S. Senate. Jeb Hensarling represents Texas’s fifth district in the U.S. House of Representatives.


Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Movie Corner: 13 Hours


I found $5 in a coat I hadn't worn in a year. I took that $5 and went to see 13 Hours. First, may I just say, everyone who gave a stand down order and refused to send support, should be shot. This movie is as heartbreaking as anything can get. I knew the day the attack happened was September 11, 2012. As the days ticked down to that day, I knew what was coming. But it hit me so hard. Four American lives lost: Ambassador Chris Stevens, Captain Sean Smith, and retired Navy S.E.A.L.s Glenn Dougherty and Tyrone Woods. Others were maimed from one missile after another hitting the C.I.A. compound. While no support came from America. No bombers. No F-16s. Absolutely nothing. They were left to fight this on their own.

  
The C.I.A. Chief there wouldn't allow G.R.S. (the special forces team at the C.I.A. Compound) to go help until they finally disobeyed orders and headed over there anyway. It was a hellish fight with craven cowards. What I hadn't realized is how many of these terrorists from Ansar Al Sharia that this team managed to kill. I was quite pleased with the high costs those bastards had to pay. When their wives were weeping over their bodies at the end of the movie all I could say is they brought it on themselves and weren't worth crying over.

This movie, 13 Hours, is perhaps one of the most powerful indictments against Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama that ever could have been made. I thank Michael Bay for making this movie. Clinton and Obama blamed it on a protest and an anti-Islam YouTube video. Neither of which were true. They lied to the American people over and over and over. How on God's green earth Hillary Clinton garnered 49.9% of the vote in Iowa shocks me. Do these Democrats not know what she has done?

This special forces team was one of the bravest I have ever seen. They were led by Tyrone Woods. Glenn Dougherty and his team joined them toward the end of the 13 hours and they were hit with a missile and both killed. It literally breaks my heart to see the callousness from Clinton and Obama. I recall Glenn Dougherty's sister saying that Hillary Clinton told them as they were waiting for his body that, "They should feel sorry for the Libyan people."

Yes, over one hundred thousand held a rally apologizing for what happened and for the deaths which occurred. But that night the Libyan security, which Hillary Clinton said was good enough, ran away. The police ran away. Ambassador Chris Stevens, which they did not show in the movie thank goodness, was tortured and dragged through the streets before being returned to the compound where a group of Libyans found him and took him to the hospital. He was D.O.A.

This movie is a must see and easily garners 5 Stars, and if I had a higher scale I would rate it higher. Every American should see this movie and realize just exactly what Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton did to this special forces team and the Americans inside Libya.

Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.

Lee Calls For State Approval Of Monument Designations

Mr. President, if there’s one thing we know about American politics today – if there’s one thing we’ve learned from the 2016 presidential race thus far – it’s that there is a deep and growing distrust between the American people and the federal government.

This institution – Congress – is held in shamefully low regard by the people we were elected to represent. But so too are the scores of bureaucratic agencies that are based in Washington, D.C., but extend their reach into the most remote corners of American life.

In my home state of Utah, the public’s distrust of Washington is rooted not in ideology, but experience... in particular the experience of living in a state where a whopping two-thirds of the land is owned by the federal government and managed by unaccountable agencies that are either indifferent, or downright hostile, to the interests of the local communities they are supposed to serve.

I’ve lost track of the number of stories I’ve heard from the people of Utah about their run-ins with federal land-management agencies.

But there’s one story that nearly every Utahn knows: President Bill Clinton’s infamous use of the Antiquities Act in 1996 to designate as a national monument more than 1.5 million acres of land in southern Utah – what would become known as the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.

What Utahns remember about this episode is not just what President Clinton did, but how he did it.

Signed into law in 1906, the Antiquities Act gives the president the power to unilaterally designate tracts of federal land as “historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest.”

The purpose of the law is to enable the Executive to act quickly to protect archeological sites on federal lands from looting, destruction, or vandalism.

But the Antiquities Act is not a carte blanche for the president. Quite the opposite, in fact. The language of the law is clear: it instructs the president to restrict the designation of national monuments to the “smallest area compatible with proper care and management of the objects to be protected.”

So you can imagine the surprise – and the indignation – across the state of Utah following President Clinton’s decision to annex a stretch of land roughly one-and-a-half times the size of Delaware... and then to give control over that land to a federal bureaucracy that routinely maintains a maintenance backlog that is several billion dollars higher than its multi-billion annual budget.

Even worse than the enormous size of the designation was the Clinton administration’s hostility toward the people of Utah and the communities that would be most directly affected by his decision.

Not only did President Clinton announce the monument designation in Arizona – over one hundred miles from the Utah state border – but he refused to consult, or even notify, Utah’s congressional delegation until the day before his announcement.

Consulting with the people who live and work in the communities around a potential national monument area isn’t just a matter of following political etiquette – it’s a matter of ensuring that federal land policy does not rob citizens of their livelihood.

Which is exactly what happened as a result of the Grand Staircase designation.

Utah’s economy is built on the farm and agriculture industry. And livestock is the state’s single largest sector of farm income. But of the 45 million acres of rangeland in Utah, nearly three-quarters is owned and managed by the federal government.

Since the 1940s federal agencies have slashed livestock grazing across the Utah landscape by more than 50 percent – a policy of economic deprivation that accelerated after 1996 on rangeland within the Grand Staircase monument. And even today the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) shows no sign of relenting.

Now for most people, the Grand Staircase episode is a case study in government-sponsored injustice and bureaucratic tyranny.

For me, it brings to mind the line from America’s Declaration of Independence, in which the colonists charge that the King of Great Britain “has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance.”

But for President Obama – and for the radical environmental groups that have co-opted federal land-management agencies – it is the textbook model for the application of the Antiquities Act.

In fact, it appears that President Obama is considering using his final year in the White House to target another vast tract of land in southern Utah for designation as a national monument.

Covering 1.9 million acres of federal land in San Juan County, this area – known as Bears Ears – is roughly the same size as the Grand Staircase; both are situated near the southern edge of the state; and both possess an abundance of natural beauty unrivaled by any other place in the world.

But the similarities don’t end there.

Each area is also home to a group of Utahns deeply connected to the federal land targeted by environmental activists for national-monument designation. In the case of the Grand Staircase, it’s the ranchers. And in Bears Ears, it’s the Kaayelii band of the Navajo tribe.

The Kaayelii believe that a national monument designation in Bears Ears, their ancestral home, would threaten their livelihood and destroy their way of life.

Their concerns are well founded. In the 1920s and 30s hundreds of Navajo families settled on homesteads located in national monuments, only to find themselves steadily pushed out by imperious federal agencies all too eager to eradicate private use of public lands.

So it should come as no surprise today that the Kaayelii are protesting the unilateral federal takeover of Bears Ears and calling on the Obama administration to forgo the highhanded approach to land conservation employed by President Clinton in 1996.

The Kaayelii are not opposed to the protection and conservation of public lands. They care about the preservation of Bears Ears just as much as anyone. To them, the land is not just beautiful – it’s sacred. They depend on it for their economic and their spiritual survival.

Which is why all they’re asking for is a seat at the table, so that their ancestral land isn’t given over – sight unseen – to the arbitrary and arrogant control of federal land-management agencies.

I agree with the Kaayelii: the president of the United States has no business seizing vast stretches of public land to be micromanaged – and mismanaged – by federal agencies, especially if the people who live, work, and depend on the land stand in opposition to such a takeover.

And there’s no denying that the people of San Juan County reject the presumption that they have no say in the management of the land in their community.

The truth is, most of those who have mobilized to support a monument designation at Bears Ears – including several Native American groups – live outside of Utah, in states like Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona.

By contrast, the people of San Juan County – the people whose lives and livelihoods are intricately tied to Bears Ears – stand united in their opposition to a monument designation.

That’s why I have introduced this amendment – number 3026 – which would update the Antiquities Act in order to protect the right of the Kaayelii and their fellow citizens of San Juan County to participate in the government’s efforts to protect and conserve public land.

Here’s how my amendment works: it preserves the president’s authority to designate tracts of federal land as national monuments.

But it also reserves a seat at the table for the people who would be directly affected by such an executive action. It does so by opening the policymaking process to the people’s elected representatives, at the state and federal level, so they can weigh in on monument designations.

Under my amendment, Congress and the legislature of the state in which a monument has been designated have three years to pass resolutions ratifying the designation.

If they fail to do so, the national monument designation will expire.

Some critics claim that this amendment takes unprecedented steps to curtail the president’s monument-designation authority under the Antiquities Act.

This is nonsense.

The truth is that Congress has twice passed legislation amending the Antiquities Act.

In 1950, Congress wholly prohibited presidential designation of national monuments under the Antiquities Act in the state of Wyoming. Some thirty years later, Congress passed another law requiring congressional approval of national monuments in Alaska larger than 5,000 acres.

If you’ve ever visited Wyoming or Alaska, you know that these provisions have not led to the parade of horribles conjured up by radical environmental activists who seem intent on achieving nothing short of iron-fisted federal control over all public lands.

In reality, the states of Wyoming and Alaska have proven that national-monument designations are not necessary to protect and conserve America’s most beautiful, treasured public lands.

So why should the people of Wyoming and the people of Alaska enjoy these reasonable, commonsense protections under the law, while the people of Utah – and, indeed, of every other state in the Union – do not?

There’s no good answer to this question… except the passage of my amendment.

And to anyone who might suggest that the people of these communities in and around national monuments are not prepared to participate in the policy process, I invite you to visit San Juan County in southeastern Utah.

You’ll see a community that is not only well informed about the issues and actively engaged in the political process, but genuinely dedicated to finding a solution that works for everyone.

The people of San Juan County – from the Kaayellii to the County Commissioners – have the determination that’s necessary to forge a legislative solution to the challenges facing public lands in their community.

And that’s exactly what you’d expect.

San Juan is a hardscrabble community – one of the most disadvantaged in the entire state. But you wouldn’t know it from the people there. The citizens of San Juan County are hardworking, honest, decent people.

Yet for far too long federal land-management agencies have given the people of San Juan County – and the people all across America – little reason to trust in the federal government.

My amendment gives us an opportunity to change that.

If Congress wants to regain the trust of the American people, we’re going to have to earn it.

Passing this amendment, and giving all Americans a voice in the land-management decisions of their community, would be a meaningful and important step toward earning back that trust.

I urge my colleagues to lend their support to this amendment and the vital public trust that it will help us rebuild.

I yield the floor.


Copyright 2016. All rights reserved by Candace E. Salima.