Which is also true of Central America as well as Mexico.
Senator Collins, you suggested this, quite disturbingly, that homegrown radicalized threat, self-radicalized threat, still persists.
There are some who fear regulation being too burdensome. Others fear a loss of civil liberties.
Our success in preventing further terrorist attacks is owed largely to our own intensive intelligence collection efforts worldwide and at ho...
Our domestic intelligence collection, although not optimized, certainly has been a remarkable success.
I have grown to believe over time that the Hippocratic Oath is the first thing we should observe: First, do no harm.
My confidence in the Department of Homeland Security to be the lead agency is extremely limited.
The Mexican people, with some justification, believe that the United States is the destination.
We need to figure out how to be successful in this next threat that we face, growing threat that we face, and that is cybersecurity.
What is the 80/20 rule, Michael? Several years ago, I was talking about him and Senator Kennedy working so well together, and he said, 'Ted ...
It is my understanding that the price of an ounce of cocaine on the street in any major city in America has not gone up one penny.
Doesn't it also indicate that we still have significant problems with border security?
Should we have a conversation in the United States about the demand for drugs?
That brings us back to the Colombian experience under President Pastrana.
And the corruption.
It is offensive to me that somebody was picked to win and the other people were picked to lose.
What does that look like to the people who pay for all this, the American taxpayers? It is pathetic.
We are not talking, by the way, gentlemen, about union jobs and non-union jobs, Republican jobs and Democrat jobs; we are talking about Amer...