House Appropriators May Limit Public Availability of Pending Bills
Attila Dimedici writes "The House Appropriations Committee is considering a draft report that would forbid the Library of Congress to allow bulk downloads of bills pending before Congress. The Library of Congress currently has an online database called THOMAS (for Thomas Jefferson) that allows people to look up bills pending before Congress. The problem is that THOMAS is somewhat clunky and it is difficult to extract data from it. This draft report would forbid the Library of Congress from modernizing THOMAS until a task force reports back. I am pretty sure that the majority of people on Slashdot agree that being able to better understand how the various bills being considered by Congress interact would be good for this country."
The Gingrich Revolution is too far to the left for the current House of Representatives.
Fugue for Aaron Swartz
How the talking point is less government, except for situations where all they propose is more government
A move to restrict public visibility into the legislative process seems like a bad idea in an election year. If only the minority party in the House had the balls to exploit this...
[Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
THOMAS may only allow 1 bill at a time, but there are only so many bills before Congress. Download them one at a time and make an external database. Host that site yourself.
The government SHOULD do this, but if they refuse, simply go around them. This is how governments should always be treated: Encouraged when useful, bypassed when not.
Great warrior...hrmph! Wars not make one great.
The busy little beavers who track bills now include committee hearings. For example, here's some of the debate on the Copyright Act, C-11
--dave
davecb@spamcop.net
(for Dick Nixon and Dick Cheney)
Since the author of TFA was too lazy to Google for this and paste in a hyperlink, here is the current membership of the House Committee on Appropriations. If one of these jackass^H^H^H^H fine public servants represents your district, you might want to let him/her know what you think of this report.
[Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
Not only do congress regularly pass bills that most of them haven't read (https://secure.downsizedc.org/etp/rtba/), they want to make sure that no-one else can read them first either!
blog.sam.liddicott.com
Don't you sometimes wish that a summary on Slashdot could provide both sides of an issue, rather than telling you what to think in the last sentence?
They're not limiting access to the text of the bills, just implementation of a bulk download functionality which doesn't currently exist. Once again, Slashdot creates controversy where there is none to begin with.
Forgive me, but refusing to fund an upgrade is not the same as forbidding bulk downloads. Bulk downloads are not presently possible. They are not allocating funds to make it possible right now.
You may have noticed that we have some financial issues. Not pouring funds, that we don't have, into a project that you know well will be a disastrous waste of money(like most Federal IT projects) seems prudent at this time of financial crisis.
I don't think that, due to this decision, anyone's freedom is at risk or that the government is trying to lock the constituents out of the process. They are simple maintaining the status quo due to the absence of funds.
TFA's title is actually more informative: "Hill may freeze THOMAS in digital past". Congress is not actually trying to put in a cap on the download of materials. It merely seeks to maintain the old system where you're forced to download copies of bills one at a time. It's not trying to put a limit but to maintain whatever (technnical) limits are already in place.
I know there are all sorts of craziness for bills, but wouldn't something like a Git repository be ideal? that way, you can have the hash of the exact version of the bill your voting on, so the people know stuff wasn't 'slipped in' before it becomes law. Oh, wait, that is probably a 'feature'
What are we going to do tonight Brain?
It is impossible to "bypass" government, by the very nature (and definition) of government: Government is the organization assuming the special "right" to initiate coercion, against non-aggressors, as a business model. That is the only 100% objective definition of government that holds true for all governments that have ever existed, from rag-tag warlords up to world superpowers. In other words, any attempt to "bypass" government will be met with coercion: first the threat of violence, then actual violence -- and if it comes down to it, death.
In conclusion, disobedience and "bypassing" cannot solve the root of the problem: political power, that special "right" to employ coercion, which is the very lifeblood of oppression. The correct, and permanent, solution is to abolish that power, not dance around it.
....is that they will never decide on a better system but one that will selectively hide or make difficult access to bills they know the public would not approve of.
There is a belief that if a bill passes and becomes law that all the people of a country have agreed to it. Even if they don't know about it, such as spraying populations with things the people would not agree with... as had happened in California when teh people protested and stopped it (not to mention current chem trail spraying of supposed weather modification efforts).
The spraying of a population by land vehicle of air born vehicles with toxins in warfare experimentation is well establish knowledge of happening in the US and Europe and probably Russia too.. But the point here is forbidding the library of congress to continue with whatever level of government transparency they can regardless of any future system and what should instead be a transition, rather than a shut down.
So now do you see the scam?
Wait, what...? Isn't that the purpose of /. .
Did I miss a memo?
I am pretty sure that the majority of people on slashdot agree that being able to better understand how the various bills being considered by Congress interact would be good for this country.
And that explains why it must be prevented.
Lacking <sarcasm> tags,
Ok, the appropriations committee wants to delay money for a new system to replace THOMAS. But THOMAS doesn't limit access now, it just sucks. Congress could want to withhold money for a number of reasons, some legitimate (they don't like the bidding process for the new system), some less so (they have a favored systems integrator in mind.)
But if the current system is just lousy, but works, how is withholding a replacement in any way "limiting public availability of pending bills?"
Let's try a more reasonable one...
"The House Appropriations Committee is considering holding off on modernizing THOMAS until the system "owners" finalize the specifications."
It is entirely reasonable to put a hold on a project until everyone knows what it's going to be and buys off on the changes.
I am pretty sure that the majority of people on Slashdot agree that to dive into a project that will undoubtedly be large and expensive and is highly visible without nailing down the details first is irresponsible and a recipe for failure.
When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
If they're drafted by private parties and then copyright transferred to the US Gov't, Uncle Sam can hold the copyright.
Since the majority of bills are drafted by lobbyists, there's nothing in principle stopping Congress from blocking distribution on the grounds of protecting the copyright on the original special-interest draft and any derivative works.
Lacking <sarcasm> tags,
the republican-lead house of representatives wants to make it more difficulty for voters, media and scholars to see what fucked-up nonsense is going on at the capitol until after the elections for fear of losing control that half the capitol too... along with messing up their party's chance at the white house.
Starting with a lot of Congress being tried for Treason against the People OF the United states, those found guilty need to face a firing squad and have it televised on C-SPAN.
Problem is the sheep in this country keep voting for these scumbags that want to hide everything so they can try and get away with more.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Actually there is http://govtrack.us/ . You can bulk download from there. They even give you instructions on rsyncing all their data, plus have a rather nice API available.
I suppose he is in charge of the house too.
This:
they will never decide on a better system but one that will selectively hide or make difficult access to bills they know the public would not approve of.
The recommendation has merit regardless of the political motivation. The heart of the issue is how does one TRUST and verify the INTEGRITY of the download when its transported using XML. What's frustrating is someone's inability to agree to rely on existing standards - there's simply no reason to spend more $$$ reinventing / resolving what's already solved. Doesn't the government currently exchange XML-based information today? Isn't that information secured in such a manner that the provider (say, the contractor of the F-22) can be proven and the validity of the message confirmed? Another side-show and the land of the free where matters such as paying people to entertain us is more important than paying people to educate us.
How, if at all, would this affect a website like PopVox?
There is a war going on for your mind.
...our government does something, the same seven words come into my mouth.
"Get me out of this damn country."
I personally want to have the ability to read any bill that has been introduced. THOMAS is a good system, but horribly outdated. It could be made so much better. But we make do with what we have.
Improvements to the system should be that the database is updated in real-time, or at least as close to real-time as possible. There is no reason why this shouldn't be possible.
My guess, however, is that reps want not to be able to be accountable for their votes. Not many representatives have easy access to their voting record on their official web site. I know my old rep did (Frank Wolf) but my current (Jim Moran) does not. While the information can be found on THOMAS, it adds an additional step.
I know a few months ago, DC Counsel put an unpopular bill available online for comment. It was passed and when it finally it the news, there was outcry. The counsel said, "But you had a chance to comment." The problem was that they hid the bill on their website in a rarely browsed section, obfuscated, and ultimately in a place where no one would think to look. Stepping aside the fact that the news should have picked this up before it was voted on, the fact is that the DC Counsel followed the letter of the law, but not the spirit.
Every politician must be not be trusted, even if they are from "your party" or even if you voted for the guy. The framers had this in mind when writing the Constitution.
The thing that saddens me is that the original intentions of the Founding Fathers has long since gone: a government of the People, by the People, and for the People. I don't see this changing anytime soon.
We don't live in Shouldland.
Nobody needs to know what's in those bills.
"But we have to pass the...bill so that you can find out what is in it." -- N. Pelosi
I'm a pretty skilled web developer, anyone want to help?
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
This house is led by a man who has in the past been caught handing out lobbyist money on the floor, while in session. He is a lobbyist. He cut funding for congressional staffers under the lie of cutting budgets to save money so the congress itself has less ability to understand the bills they vote upon (this was already a problem but he made it worse.) The money he saved was negligible but the damage and cost to the public is immeasurable, as congressmen then rely even more on lobbyists to interpret and write pending laws for them. Also already a problem but he made it worse.
This is all in addition to basically not getting anything done or having any real planning to solve our problems because the plan has been to keep the black president impotent. Hurting the economy is just another trick; except when they are doing trickle down Reganomics they either believe that farce or are serving their masters who put them in office -- it is hard to distinguish between corruption (I'd include partisan fanatics in that) and adherence to an economic religion.
In the USSR, you dare not criticize communism. In the USA, you can't criticize capitalism - the only difference is in your punishment (not that some of these nuts wouldn't love to put their opponents into work camps if they could; it is possible we fall low enough that their dreams come true.)
I am pretty sure that the majority of people on Slashdot agree that being able to better understand how the various bills being considered by Congress interact would be good for this country.
And thus not so good for politicians who don't really want people to see in advance what the congress is doing. I can see how this could be a conflict of interest (theirs and ours).
"We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
I'm sure government wants to squeeze its agenda through with minimal "interference" from the public. The more the public is in the dark about what government does, the more power the government has over its citizens. This country is headed down tyranny lane because its citizens are apathetic, frightened, and look to its elected officials as a security blanket. In fact, Americans would sooner government think for them as evidenced in the whole creationism vs. evolution vs. intelligent design. I, for one, am sickened.
Obama reneged on his pledge to make bills available for five days for public review within weeks of being sworn in. This isn't a GOP vs Dems issue. It's a government vs governed issue.
I am pretty sure that the majority of people on Slashdot agree that being able to better understand how the various bills being considered by Congress interact would be good for this country.
Good for us and the country, bad for Congress critters.
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
The only server I ran would be the one that posted the checksums for the texts of the bills, and links to public file sharing repositories where the actual texts are. One guy could handle all this as part of his IT duties. Raise your hand if you can hack up a simple "submit text" server like this, and maintain the password file for members of Congress. Raise your hand if you can do it in less than 2 hours.
The phrase 'provide general welfare' is qualified by the list of specifically enumerated power below it.
"To regulate commerce [...] among the several states" is one such power. Otherwise, how is Medicare legal?
Government officials hiding information like this from the public should be a capital offense, This goes double for trying to hide taxes charged (Air Fares.).
Statement: They can NOT force me to buy insurance if I would rather pay cash directly to my physician.
This is true. It is impermissible for Congress to make failure to buy health insurance a federal crime.
The law actually in question does not do so, contrary to the paranoia of the right-wing crazies. It is improper terminology and a bad political idea to call it a "mandate" instead of what it actually is. It imposes a fine---more correctly a tax---on those who do not. And this is 100% legal.
It has been established precedent since the early 1800's (Supreme Court decisions) that the US Government has the power to tax even where it does not have the power to regulate, e.g. in this circumstance. Other examples, the US government imposes taxes on gasoline and tobacco, even when these items are consumed within states for non-commercial purposes.
This is in direct response to the outcry against SOPA. keep the public in the dark, they cant complain until its too late.
Bastards, run them ALL out of town on the next train.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Congress has the power to regulate commerce AMONG the states. Not inside the states
When commerce among the states competes with commerce inside the states, the Congress has power to protect commerce among the states from commerce inside the states. Wickard v. Filburn.
They can NOT force me to buy insurance if I would rather pay cash directly to my physician.
But they can tax you and give you a tax credit if you do.