1. Term limits - 6 years max between senate AND congress
2. Congress MUST NOT have any access to anything extra or laws that apply to them and not the public and vice versa.
3.Congress does NOT meet at the capital. This idea that they all have to be in the same place at the same time to do anything is the biggest pile of foolishness there is. Multi-billion dollar corporations manage to run themselves via teleconference and email and video conference, but the congress cant. bullcrap!
They all sit in DC so it makes it easier for the lobbyists to come to them. they must go home to their districts and only meet in DC twice yearly for 3 -4 weeks at a time. They're home office in their district ALL are the same. Size, materials, etc. approx. 3000 sq. ft. of office space with a max cost allowed.
If you think they'll allow the above WITHOUT force, you're sadly mistaken.
—
Gwinnett County Georgia
War is an instrument entirely inefficient toward redressing wrong; and multiplies, instead of indemnifying losses.
Thomas Jefferson
Comment: The items that need to happen
The items that need to happen
wont.
1. Term limits - 6 years max between senate AND congress
2. Congress MUST NOT have any access to anything extra or laws that apply to them and not the public and vice versa.
3.Congress does NOT meet at the capital. This idea that they all have to be in the same place at the same time to do anything is the biggest pile of foolishness there is. Multi-billion dollar corporations manage to run themselves via teleconference and email and video conference, but the congress cant. bullcrap!
They all sit in DC so it makes it easier for the lobbyists to come to them. they must go home to their districts and only meet in DC twice yearly for 3 -4 weeks at a time. They're home office in their district ALL are the same. Size, materials, etc. approx. 3000 sq. ft. of office space with a max cost allowed.
If you think they'll allow the above WITHOUT force, you're sadly mistaken.
Gwinnett County Georgia
War is an instrument entirely inefficient toward redressing wrong; and multiplies, instead of indemnifying losses.
Thomas Jefferson