Thursday, December 15, 2011

What do you think of this proposed legislation?

Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia is co-sponsoring legislation that would require all proposed legislation to be posted for 72 hours on the internet before Congress votes on it. Looks to me as if the Republicans are actually trying to do what Obama only "promised" to do.|||I can live with that, but I want the "Cliff-Notes" version...|||the only real transparency we are going to get from Obama is just his words...|||Wow, had he only done this when his party was in power instead of waiting until now. We'll see how many of his fellow Republicans sign on with him and get this thing passed, like they did sending troops to Iraq.|||Yeah, really...it's really BRAVE to stand up and propose it when he knows it won't pass because he's in the minority. He doesn't REALLY want it. He's just doing it because he knows it won't pass, but he can look like a hero for "proposing". you notice he didn't propose it when the Republicans had control and could have voted it in.|||Haven't you learned by now, that anything a Republican attempts to accomplish is only going to be sneered at by Demolemmings?





Hats off to Senator Chambliss for the attempt, because the Democrooks certainly won't go along with it.|||Wow, if only that were possible giving people a chance to see the ongoing deception in these so-called proposed bills. That would be so cool, up close and personal on the web.





I don't get it, this most secret Congress prefers to do these dirty deeds in the dark, never in the light so that all will know them to be most corrupt.|||I think it's a great idea. I'd even like to see more time than just 72 hours. You'd have to read 14 pages of government speak every hour non stop in order to get through a 1000 page bill. But at least it's better than not having any idea (except what the politicians and the corrupt media want you to know) of what's being voted on.


Some are wondering why it wasn't proposed in earlier Congresses. I think it's because it wasn't really such a big issue. It's only recently that huge, society changing legislation is being sold to the public as if Congress was a used car lot.

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