Holocaust Insurance Accountability Act of 2007

Insurance companies, taxpayers targeted

The Holocaust Claims Insurance Accountability Act of 2007 will amend federal law governing the National Archives and Records Administration to direct the Archivist of the United States/>/> to: (1) establish a collection of records known as the Holocaust Insurance Registry and (2) make it accessible to the public.  This legislation will require insurance companies doing business in the United States/>/> to publicly disclose all Holocaust-era insurance policies. H.R. 1746 will force insurers who profited from the Holocaust to be accountable for their actions.  The bill will inject transparency into the claims process and allow survivors to sue insurers in federal court to recover payouts from those policies.

What passes for an excuse here is that there remain tens of thousands of actual survivors who live below the poverty line. Yet the benefits of the proposed legislation are not limited to actual survivors, but will be available to “heirs, dependents, and others,” most likely countless lawyers.

No concentration camps for Jews existed on American soil between 1933-1945, but that apparently is irrelevant.

In World War II 416,837 Americans spilled their blood and sacrificed their lives, many against the primary country that targeted Jews, but apparently that is also irrelevant to the Holocaust Industry and Washington DC.

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2008-02-17