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ACTIONS BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

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Preface

The constitutional Amendment requires that the U.S. Government and the State Governments expeditiously and cooperatively take Government Actions to implement the intentions of the constitutional Amendment.

The Amendment does not incorporate Government Actions, as they are a guide and outline. The documents may have expansion and clarification to meet future conditions without amending the Constitution.

Congressional legislation punishing violation of gag orders, tampering with the Boule (i.e., United States Citizens' Initiatives Assembly), abuse of proposing initiatives, and unexcused failure to serve on the Boule may seem relatively severe by today's "white-collar crime" standards. However, jail time is the only real deterrent to wealthy persons and organizations—they can easily afford fines and often have insurance coverage. Without serious deterrents, they would make a mockery of the process.

 
 

Government Actions Text

Comments

1. The President, Using the President’s Executive Power, Shall Arrange To:

 

1.1. Convene the initial Boule (i.e., United States Citizens' Initiatives Assembly) within one year of this Amendment's ratification. The primary responsibility must fall on the executive branch, which has the resources and the ability to take prompt actions.
1.2. Hire a suitable company to conduct the random selection of Boule Members necessary for the initial Boule convocation and subsequent monthly replacements. There are many private polling and statistical analysis companies with this capability.
1.3. Provide Boule facilities for the first year after convocation. The basic requirements are defined in the Boule rules.
1.4. Hire a suitable management company to provide overall direction for the Boule convocation and for the following three months with options for the Boule to continue the service. There are many private convention companies with this capability. Their contract should be turned over to the Boule to ensure continuity and assist it to become fully established.
1.5. Hire organizations to provide a short course on the deliberative process and the operations of a Boule to the Members preparatory to the first Boule meeting. There are several business and university organizations with experience in deliberative Boule training.
1.6. Provide continuing security. Protection shall be of quality superior to that provided to a Federal Grand Jury and U.S. institutional symbols. It should be assumed that the Boule could become a terrorist target as is Congress, and it should be guarded accordingly.
1.7. Establish a Boule bank account and ensure deposit of the Boule annual budgets at least one month in advance of its initial Boule convocation and its anniversaries. The government must have no financial influence over the Boule.
1.8. Ensure that law enforcement Agencies detect and gather evidence of violations of the gag order and of attempts to tamper with the Boule, Boule Members or their families. Exploit all legal means including periodic sting traps.

Layered protection against tampering will make even an attempt unlikely.

2. The Congress Shall Enact Legislation:

 

2.1 The employer of a Boule Member shall provide time away from their work in order to attend Boule Sessions (or care for children under six years old or disabled while the spouse who normally performs this function must attend the Boule). The employer (or an employer of the spouse of a Member if they have children under six years old and not in primary school, or disabled) shall continue their employment benefits during their term on the Boule. In computing benefits, time spent on Boule business shall be regular working time. The employee must return to work for any reasonable time the Boule releases them. Employers shall take no adverse employment action against employees due to service as a Boule Member. If their job function changes by mutual consent to accommodate Boule duty, the Employer shall reinstate the original job function and remuneration at the end of their term as a Boule Member.

The objective is to minimize a Member's personal disruption caused by Boule attendance.

2.2 Fund the Boule as an entitlement of the People. Appropriate the annual budget for the Boule. The budget for the first year is $90 million, for the second year it is $75 million including startup costs, and for subsequent years $60 million (unless the Boule gets approval for a different annual budget by Direct Initiatives.)

The U.S. Government can be given no economic control over the Boule; otherwise, it could leverage the economic control into political control. The threat is real since it is used extensively between Congress and the President.

2.3 Punishment:

The punishments are substantial. The objective is to discourage violators before they start. For comparison, refer to the laws on DVD copyright infringement, where the crime is a federal felony investigated by the FBI. Citizens face a maximum $250,000 fine plus five years in federal penitentiary.

2.3.1 The laws shall punish violations of the Boule gag orders or tampering with the Boule or Boule Members or their families. A violation shall be a felony under the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts. Officers and directors of any organization shall be personally and corporately liable for failure to safeguard against violations by reasonable due diligence. The minimum penalty for each offence is ten days and the maximum is ten years in federal penitentiary plus a maximum fine of ten percent of net individual and/or organization assets.

The Members must be vigorously protected from tampering and media interference. Special interests and other potential violators will often hide behind corporate shields, which must be penetrated for effective enforcement. Violators may be very wealthy and many organizations carry Officers and Directors insurance. Consequently, a fine based on simple fixed maximum amount is not a significant deterrent. Mandatory goal time, against which insurance cannot protect, and fines based on net worth are appropriate and efficacious.

2.3.2 Citizens or organizations who abuse their right to propose initiatives, especially where their abuse attempts to clog or confuse the system with publication of an excess of proposed initiatives or comments on proposed initiatives initiated by themselves or through their surrogates. The maximum penalty is one year in federal penitentiary plus a maximum fine of five percent of net individual and/or organization assets.

If unconstrained, a malicious group of wealthy persons could arrange to propose many trivial or offensive initiatives. The punishment has to be sufficient to forestall this type of abuse.

2.3.3 The laws shall punish Citizens who the lottery has selected to serve in the Boule and who a Federal Court has not excused, who fail to perform, who refuse or hide from their citizen's duty, or whom the Boule dishonorably discharge. The penalty is a maximum of three months in federal penitentiary plus a maximum fine of five percent of net assets.

Service is a duty of citizenship in the same manner as conscription for military service— however, there is no injury or loss-of-life threat and service is only part time for one year. Failure to perform distorts the membership and makes a less perfect transcript of the whole society. They cannot be permitted to do so without sufficient penalty to make it a very rare event.

2.4 The laws shall ensure that no copyright of any proposed Initiative is enforceable against the Boule, Boule Members, the United States Electorate or the United States Government once the Initiative authors publish the Initiative or cause it to come to the attention of the Boule.

This simply avoids potential claims of copyright.

3. The President, the Congress, the Supreme Court, and the States Shall:

 

3.1 Resolve any jurisdictional issues to implement a gag order and secrecy order to protect the confidentiality of the Boule's deliberations, each Member's privacy, and their family's privacy. These orders shall extend to protect ex-Members while the Electorate has still to vote on the ex-Member's Initiative efforts for a minimum of two years and a maximum of five years. The orders shall not limit Boule and Boule Members' access to published materials. The orders shall exclude Materials published by the Boule. Where applicable, the orders shall use the Federal Grand Jury system and Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure as minimum standards. Coordinate the penalties with those for tampering with the Boule, Members or family. Inter-governmental jurisdictional disputes might stall convocation or harm the formation of the Boule.
3.2 Enact such rules, laws and decisions necessary to implement the requisite duty of the Boule and Boule Members.

Once selected, a Citizen's duty to participate in the Boule must not be undermined by federal, state or local government.

4.3 Excuse a Boule Member from duty only in case of excessive hardship proven before an expedited hearing in a United States Federal Court nearest the citizen's residence. Failure to fulfill the duty shall be contempt of that court. The Courts shall consider excuse guidelines prepared by the Boule.

Excessive hardship excuse should only be given in genuine cases. The current ease of avoiding jury duty cannot carry over to Boule Members.

3.4 Provide the Boule with prompt free equal access to their libraries, collections, information and data, both hard copy and electronic, unless for valid non-trivial reasons of secret classification.

Access to all necessary information is essential to the Boule's function.

3.5 Include all Initiatives on the election ballots and fund the costs from existing sources including the cost of printing a pamphlet describing the Initiatives and distributing the pamphlet with other voter information. Voters shall cast their votes and election official shall count the votes in a manner similar to those used for candidates for the United States House of Representatives.

Lest anyone try to subvert the nationwide Initiative process by omitting Initiatives from the ballot, the process must be defined to occur with other ballot processes.

3.6 Promptly inform the Boule if they decide not to process a request for advice or opinion, otherwise the advice or opinion shall be in writing, freely given, and provided in a timely manner. The Senate, the House of Representatives, the President and the Supreme Court shall each send to the Boule brief timely written opinion on Candidates Initiatives. The Boule will include these opinions with each Candidate Initiative for the Electorate's guidance.

The Boule should seek advice and opinion from government. If it will not be forthcoming, the Boule must be informed so it can proceed without it.

3.7 Cooperate with one another and with the Boule to avoid delay so that the people may vote on Initiatives at the earliest date.

Government agencies are responsible for cooperating with each other so that issues are not ignored and agencies do not pass the blame from one to another.

Download PDF and Print: Cover and Five Documents for State Legislator's Information Package

Cover Page for the Five Key Documents Introduction to Nationwide Initiatives Plan Reasons Why States Should Support the Plan State Bill and Constitutional Amendment Reference 1:  Government Actions Mandated Reference 2: Citizens' Boule Rules

Consolidated PDF Version of State Legislator's Information Package Including Cover and Five Documents

     
 

 

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 June 26, 2009