Tact

US Government, Pentagon, members of the United States House and Senate, members of the American Armed Forces, FBI, CIA, NSA, UN, and international governments and military bodies, this blog is for you. Call Senators: 202-224-3121.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Congressmen Don't Read Most Laws They Sign?

If our Congressmen are not reading it, I am not being represented.

I demand a refund.

In lieu of cash, I'll take back all my rights.


" Help us pass the
“Read the Bills Act” (RTBA)

You can read the text of RTBA by clicking the Draft Legislation tab above, or you can start by reading a summary of the legislation below. Following that summary is a description of our strategy for passing RTBA, and then a call to action.

Part 1: What RTBA does and why

Most Congressmen are lawyers, and many others are businessmen. They know what “fiduciary responsibility” is. For Members of Congress, fiduciary responsibility means reading each word of every bill before they vote.

But Congress has not met this duty for a long time. Instead . . .

  • They carelessly pass mammoth bills that none of them have read. Sometimes printed copies aren't even available when they vote!

  • Often no one knows what these bills contain, or what they really do, or what they will really cost.

  • Additions and deletions are made at the last minute, in secrecy.

  • They combine unpopular proposals with popular measures that few in Congress want to oppose. (This practice is called “log-rolling.”)

  • And votes are held with little debate or public notice.

  • Oh, and once these bills are passed, and one of these unpopular proposals comes to light, they pretend to be shocked. “How did that get in there?” they say.

There's a basic principle at stake here. America was founded on the slogan, “No taxation without representation.”

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home