http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6955YX20101006?pageNumber=2
No, this actually will not affect the court rulings about MERS, but what it will do is allow alot of people who fraud and perjury to get away with it.
If the president passes this bill his impeachment will be called for by the "people" of the United States. They do understand fully what his signature on this bill would mean, that he himself as well as Congress are
aiding and abetting the banks in committing federal crimes against the "people" of this nation.
What's the most disgusting part of it is that the head of the Judiciary committee is the one who submitted it for a vote. Either he is damned stupid or one arrogant son of a bitch.
The House had passed the bill in April. The House actually had passed identical bills twice before, but both times they died when the Senate Judiciary Committee failed to act.
Some House and Senate staffers said the Senate committee had let the bills languish because of concerns that they would interfere with individual state's rights to regulate notarizations.
Senate staffers familiar with the judiciary committee's actions said the latest one passed by the House seemed destined for the same fate. But shortly before the Senate's recess, Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy pressed to have the bill rushed through the special procedure, after Leahy "constituents" called him and pressed for passage.
The staffers said they didn't know who these constituents were or if anyone representing the mortgage industry or other interests had pressed for the bill to go through.
These staffers said that, in an unusual display of bipartisanship, Senator Jeff Sessions, the committee's senior Republican, also helped to engineer the Senate's unanimous consent for the bill.
Neither Leahy's nor Session's offices responded to requests for comment Wednesday.
In background interviews, several Senate staffers denied that it would have any adverse effect on the legal rights of homeowners