On the congress website they appear to be hiding almost 100 years of legislation from us.
(media.communities.win)
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Perhaps we would find laws like this:
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/pill-anthony-comstocks-chastity-laws/
"Making Birth Control a Federal Crime - In 1872 Comstock set off for Washington with an anti-obscenity bill, including a ban on contraceptives, that he had drafted himself. On March 3, 1873, Congress passed the new law, later known as the Comstock Act. The statute defined contraceptives as obscene and illicit, making it a federal offense to disseminate birth control through the mail or across state lines.
Sanger's Crusade - These laws remained unchallenged until birth-control advocate Margaret Sanger made it her mission to challenge the Comstock Act. The first successful change in the laws came from Sanger's 1916 arrest for opening the first birth control clinic in America. The case that grew out of her arrest resulted in the 1918 Crane decision, which allowed women to use birth control for therapeutic purposes.
Changing Laws for Changing Times - The next amendment of the Comstock Laws came with the 1936 U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision, United States v. One Package. The decision made it possible for doctors to distribute contraceptives across state lines. This time Margaret Sanger had been instrumental in maneuvering behind the scenes to bring the matter before the court. While this decision did not eliminate the problem of the restrictive "chastity laws" on the state level, it was a crucial ruling. Physicians could now legally mail birth control devices and information throughout the country, paving the way for the legitimization of birth control by the medical industry and the general public."
I wonder what they did in 1913.
The Federal Reserve Act started as the Aldrich Plan as Republican Senator Aldrich facilitated the Jekyll Island meeting in 1910. After campaigning for it for years while Democrats pretended to oppose it once Woodrow Wilson was elected they renamed it the Federal Reserve Act and then Aldrich pretended to oppose it in an early example of kayfabe.
What was the year of CORPORATION? Wasn't that 1873? I don't remember exactly, but it was around that time frame...