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Thomas D. Segel
How to Hide the Truth...Washington Style
August 24, 2009
We have all seen that motion picture and televised legal dramas. One
side is seeking important information and the other is attempting to
keep that same information hidden. The court orders full
disclosure...and what happens? The side wanting to keep a particular
topic hidden provides the opponent with thousands and thousands of pages
containing useless information. The important words are hidden deep
inside everything that was placed on the table.
Isn’t this the same tactic being used by Congress today? A healthcare
reform bill, renamed a healthcare insurance reform bill is offered to
the public that is 1117 type written pages long. Since the average type
written page contains about 250 words that means the bill before any new
amendments are added is already more than 280,000 words long. Those
searching for its true meaning must dig deep into the pages to locate
where the essence of the bill lies hidden, before they can make rational
decisions.
It is estimated that the average person writing technical papers can
generate between 1,000 and 1,500 written words a day of good researched
text. We all know that Congress spends as little time as possible in
Washington. It would be generous to say they have spent 150 days at work
since the new Administration was formed in January of this year. With
that as a base point, Congress would need to have generated more than
1800 words a day of well researched text to create the current bill
being circulated. That would mean the Democrat majority, since
Republicans were not invited to participate, would have been required to
contribute all 280,000 well researched words to make up this grand
total. Considering the average number of good researched word work that
can be generated, this would mean the Democrats in the House of
Representatives would have been required to spend 186 to 280 days of
work since January doing nothing but healthcare research and development
of text. And they didn’t put that much time on the job. If you believe
they spent all of their working days doing nothing but healthcare...you
deserve anything they can pass into law.
Any thinking individual will realize this massive text is the combined
work of lobbyists, lawyers, unions, pharmaceutical groups and other
special interests that feel they can profit from nationalized healthcare
legislation.
Congressmen and women, who spend little time reading anything and less
time writing their own copy, did not assemble it. It was put together
with cut and paste input by an army of staff personnel, each of whom has
had the opportunity to mold the words in the particular direction he or
she desire.
Americans, before accepting this 1117 page monstrosity would do well to
reflect on some of the very important documents that impact their lives.
The Constitution of the United States of America was created through the
input of 55 delegates from the 13 states in a Constitutional Assembly
that met for 116 days from May 25 to September 17, 1787. It contains
just 4543 words, which would average out to less than 83 words per
delegate and we know many of them had little input on the final
document.
Even the most significant document in the history of our nation was very
short for having a message of such significance. The Declaration of
Independence is the reason we are all here today as Americans, yet it is
only 1458 words in length.
Those who believe in the Word of God as the ultimate law could also
remind us that The Ten Commandments, written in the English language,
contains only 331 words.
With so
much at stake, do we really need to accept this massive healthcare
reform/healthcare insurance reform legislation designed to confuse and
deceive, rather than protect and serve the American people? Most would
answer...no. Good, meaningful legislation should always be clear,
concise and in a form the average American can readily understand. |