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Congress Takes Up Controversial Measure

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  • Congress Takes Up Controversial Measure

    CONGRESS TAKES UP CONTROVERSIAL MEASURE
    >From NBC's Mike Viqueira

    MSNBC -
    July 30 2007

    Many of us view the goings on here in your US House with bemusement
    or even disdain. The rap is that the "people's House" occupies itself
    with naming post offices and passing "sense of Congress" resolutions
    that are sops to one special interest or another and have no real
    impact. Everything else -- the important stuff -- gets mired in
    partisanship.

    But a resolution on the floor today demonstrates very clearly that
    Americans are not the only ones watching what goes on here, and that
    what our national legislature says and thinks has great influence
    abroad. Today, the House will likely call on the government of Japan
    to "apologize and accept historical responsibility" for comfort women
    -- the young Asian women who were forced into sexual slavery by the
    Japanese Imperial Army during World War II. The resolution, though
    destined for obscurity on these shores, is threatening to cause a
    rift with one of America's closest allies.

    The measure is sponsored by Bay Area Democrat Mike Honda, a Japanese
    American who spent his childhood in a WWII Japanese internment camp
    in Colorado. It has been the subject of a reportedly harsh letter
    from the Japanese embassy in Washington to Speaker Pelosi. Normally
    forthcoming congressional aides have been secretive about such
    run-of-the-mill matters as when the bill would hit the floor,
    announcing just yesterday that it be considered today. So great is
    the potential impact in Asia that it appears to have been held until
    the day after Japanese parliamentary elections.

    Congressional staff refers to these resolutions as "postcards" that
    can generate three days of headlines in the country in question,
    while being completely ignored here. Another extremely controversial
    example is one dealing with the "Armenian Genocide" of almost 100
    years ago, sponsored by California Democrat Adam Schiff, that awaits
    consideration.
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