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Streamlining laws

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-06 16:04

Every year new laws and bills are created.  Many stay with us for decades until a conflict or discrepancy draws attention to them.  Others have complex loopholes or work negatively in combination with other bills.  Those involved in Law must study and memorize countless volumes of laws that accumulate each year.

Why can't the government take a step to streamline their backlog of laws and bills, taking out redundancies and obsolescence.  The more bills that get added, the more government turns into a manipulative bureaucracy of stagnant tedious paperwork.  Like Canada.

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-06 19:30

This would be one of the core ideas behind a well-functioning socialist government of the future. Decades from now, intellectuals will be saying "how could people believe they had rights in a country where they knew not their rights nor their limitations?" or some shit.

But before we address such gargantuan issues like law inorganization, it would probably be best to tackle shit like- I don't know, unilateral insurrections upon unthreatening foreign countries and human rights violations on a massive scale?

You won't see this idea executed within a really capitalist country like the US, but probably smaller ones with a lot of government control and high taxes who focus more on the people and the state than like missile dev and property value. The US doesn't have time to fuck with its lawbooks. When it starts caring more about that than economics, it'll go under within years and will cease to be what is now known as the US.

But you're not alone. If you develop that idea and publish it, maybe it will be the basis for a government in the future.

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