top of page

Congress: "Read Your Homework!"

Updated: Jul 23, 2025

When I was teaching English, I often felt frustrated when my students came to class without having read their assignments. Discussions were always more productive and meaningful when students came prepared. I understood, though, that their lives didn’t always revolve around my class or even school. 


Congress is a different story. Their constituents trust that they will be completely prepared and informed before they do their jobs: vote. They have no acceptable excuse, then, for failing to complete their homework, and I have no patience or understanding for those who don’t read "The One Big, Bogus Bill” before voting on it. 


This monumentally devastating bill for us all, which is making its way through Congress now, is projected to have significant negative impacts on the American people, including increasing the number of uninsured Americans by 10.9 million, creating catastrophic conditions for our most vulnerable populations, and adding trillions to our national debt. 


Still, despite the many disastrous details in the bill, it remains largely unread by our U.S. Representatives and Senators.  


At a recent town hall meeting, Republican Congressman Mike Flood was asked about a measure in the bill that would make it easier for the government to defy court orders. Bewildered, he responded with, “I am not going to hide the truth; this provision was unknown to me when I voted for that,” further indicating he wouldn’t have voted for the bill if he had known.


He didn’t do his homework. 


According to The New York Times, an outraged Marjorie Taylor Green claimed she wouldn’t have voted for the bill if she had known that a provision in the bill would block states from regulating artificial intelligence for a decade. 


She didn’t do her homework, either. 


Call Congress now. Urge them to do their homework: read the bill, or risk flunking out.


Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page