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- LETTERS, Page 5Two Hundred Years of Congress
-
- Despite your piece defending the U.S. Congress (ESSAY,
- April 17), that body is a brainless monster, feasting on its own
- vanity and ignorance. Its members remain in office term after
- term simply by overfeeding their constituents out of the U.S.
- Treasury, with little thought or concern for the country as a
- whole. That is why the national debt has become the problem it
- is, and that is also why the majority of voters, observing how
- truly bad Congress is, continue to send a Republican to the
- White House.
-
- Teddy A. Byrd Sr. Merritt Island, Fla.
-
- Americans must beware of insidious attempts to grab power
- by the Executive Branch. The line-item veto is the next step to
- one-branch control. The alternative to constitutional checks
- and balances is a dictatorship. Lack of power sharing may
- explain why few democracies have survived even 200 years.
-
- George A. Weber Mason City, Iowa
-
- Congress is not capable of dealing with the multiplicity of
- complex decisions that must be made. The world has dramatically
- changed in the past 200 years, and we need an institution that
- reflects and responds to that change. I would like to see a
- system patterned after the British parliamentary model. The
- party elected to the White House should have a chance to set the
- agenda and carry it out. If it fails, it is removed.
-
- Carl LaVerghetta Columbia, Md.
-
- The American voting public is simply expressing its belief
- that neither the Executive Branch (President, Republican) nor
- the Legislative Branch (Congress, mostly Democratic) is to be
- trusted alone. So the voters make their selections and then let
- them slug it out. This way of handling the dilemma seems pretty
- healthy to me.
-
- Ronald L. Braun Somerset, N.J.
-