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Laws, regulations, and treaties shall
be referred to as “legal material” in this document.
All legal material shall be readable
and understandable to the average 10th grader or person
who is 16 years old, whichever is younger, who shall hereby be called
the “student”, and that average student shall be able to read and
understand all of this government's legal material after spending 7
hours total learning and/or reading the legal material.
Also, legal material shall fit on 100
(one hundred) pages or less of 8 ½ by 11 inch paper using 12 pt
Times New Roman font with 1 inch margins on each side, using the
measurements as established on or before the year 2010.
Laws shall come before treaties which
shall come before regulations, and any legal material that occurs
after the 100th page shall not be enforced. Also, any part
of any legal material that does occur after the 100th page
shall be removed from the legal material until that section is able
to fit within the 100 page limit.
Legal material shall be printed in the
order they were passed, with the caveat that all regulations shall be
printed after treaties which shall be printed after laws regardless
of when the regulation or treaty came into force. In the event that
legal material is amended, that legal material shall have the
effective pass date of the date of amending.
In the case whereby legal material is
passed which are after the 100th page, they shall exist
for 12 (twelve) years before being purged from the record. In no case
shall any legal material have effect until it is included in the 100
pages.
All external sources shall count towards the
page limit, and may be republished as part of the US law regardless
of who hold copyright.
The Constitution does not count toward
the page limit.
There shall be no "footnotes" or "endnotes."
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The intent of this proposed amendment is to enable all American Citizens to understand all US laws and regulations without becoming a lawyer. In other words, is this a potential federal crime or a state crime (I can guarantee that with today's federal laws, everyone is a criminal).[1]
I wanted this to be as simple as possible.
But I didn't want lawyers to poke holes in it. They still will. But hopefully not too many and not too much.
Sources:
[1] http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304319804576389601079728920.html