Pages

Thursday, September 6, 2012

mog-world war c-the congressional reform act and term limits


Congressional Reform Act—Men of the Guillotine
1) Term Limits: The following will apply immediately after passage by fifty percent of those entitled to vote:
A. Two five-year Senate and House terms
B. At the end of each term or when replaced, a congressman is entitled to up to one year of paid consulting, exclusive of any other employment, for his replacement unless or until his replacement rejects his employment.  During this time, the consultant ex-congressman must pay his own expenses and has no access to the capital except as provided by his replacement.  His pay is set by congress at no more than his salary when in office.
2. No Tenure/No Pension:
A Congressman collects up to one-year salary while serving as consultant under 1(B) until terminated.  After the end of that one year or upon termination from that position by his replacement, he/she collects six months of his salary during the time when he/she is resettling.
3. Congress (past, present and future) participates in Social Security or other retirement held by the rest of the general population.  No federal retirement applies, and all funds in the Congressional retirement funds move to the Social Security system.
4. Congressional pay raises:
Congressional pay will fall proportionately with GDP but rise only by constitutional amendment or vote of 90 percent of each house and only for congressmen entering after the vote, except that it will not fall below the lowest state congressional pay for state congress nor be higher than the highest state congressional pay plus 10 percent.
6. Congress participates in the same healthcare system as the American people and may pay for any other health care from their salary.
7. Congress must equally abide by all laws they impose on the American people.
8. All contracts with past and present congressmen are void.
9. Lobbyist:
No Congressman may act as a lobbyist while receiving money under any provision of the law or for four years thereafter. A congressman may run for congress again after a period off of seven years unless they serve as a lobbyist, in which case they may run seven years after they last serve

LEGAL JUSTIFICATION
This law is valid notwithstanding executive, legislative, or judicial decision under the following provisions of law:
1.                  The constitution states it is by “We the people,” which implies that any provision to the contrary is invalid.
2.                  The declaration of independence recognizes the right of people “to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another,” and it is inherent in this that they can amend those bonds.
3.                  Because political establishments are “deriving their powers from the consent of the governed…whenever any form of government becomes destructive,” it is inherently within the power of the governed to change the laws. www.moftheg.com

No comments:

Post a Comment