BoatShoes;1274776 wrote:Well having read a fair amount of statutory language containing declarative commands, I doubt doing so to the press corps in attempt to dispute distortions would be very effective. For instance, saying, "section 1000(b)(8)(A) authorizes the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services to create a Medicare Payment Advisory Board.....etc." An in depth factual attack with the statutory language is not going to defeat the false assertion that this panel is a "death panel."
In fact, that's why she said what she said...democrats had spent considerable time combating these false claims and then in exasperation you say, along the lines, "Well, when the bill gets passed we'll see what's actually in it."
Whether out of exasperation or not, that still cannot be the attitude.
New legislation OUGHT to be a careful, tedious process where each bill is painstakingly scrutinized.
If there exists some problem with the statutory language, such that it allows for the notion of "death panels," then the language needs revised to distinguish the functionality between the two and to ensure that the latter cannot happen.
If you hand in an article for a journal, and the article leaves loose ends, you don't publish the loose ends. You revise the article so that it ties them up. A bill should function in the same way.