Mr. Chairman, I was just listening to my friend from New York, and I would like just sort of a little consistency. At one point we talk about job growth and the desperate need for more job growth, but then how many have come behind the microphones today and talked about a little technical problem we have. We are shedding-- closing--more small businesses than we are opening, and this has been going on for years now. So those of us who were involved in the JOBS Act a few years ago--and remember, it was a bipartisan discussion saying we desperately need to find ways to move capital to the little businesses that are just trying to find some cash, some way to grow, some way to expand. And then you look at a piece of legislation like this, and let's be brutally honest with each other, these are little tiny things that do good, but this isn't necessarily a revolution of Dodd-Frank. It is not a revolution of the capital markets. These are silly--excuse me, these are simple-- simple--logical, obvious steps. Let's take a look at some of the small offerings. If I am reaching out to people who know me, know my business, it is limited to, what, 35? That is somehow a risk to the financial stability of the country that I am a small entrepreneur and I may be able to reach out to people who know me and my business and ask them to invest in my capital formation so I can grow and create those jobs and expand the business as I desperately need?…
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Mr. Speaker, sometimes I come behind these microphones and often what I share, what I need to share--it is my therapy--is a bit dour, and it is sometimes fun to listen to someone who actually is happy and joyous. Now that the uplifting…
Mr. Speaker, first, I am going to ask everyone's--let me extend an apology. I have fairly severe asthma and just got off an attack, so I am pumping down some inhaled steroids, just routine. Also, last weekend, I lost my voice. Should I be…
Mr. Speaker, first, is there a chance to get the amount of time that we are splitting so we have a sense of the run time here? The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman has 36\1/2\ minutes.
Madam Speaker, I may have a slightly different experience. Bill was my senior Democrat for my subcommittee. You actually could not stop yourself from at least liking him because he was just brutally honest with you. He would say: David, I…





