MEMORANDUM
TO: |
Mr. Thomas Jefferson |
FROM: |
The Court of King George III, London, England |
SUBJECT: |
Declaration of Independence |
DATE: |
July 10, 1776 |
CC: |
The Continental Congress, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
We have read your "Declaration of Independence" with
great interest.
Certainly, it represents a considerable undertaking, and many
of your statements do merit serious consideration.
Unfortunately, the Declaration as a whole fails to meet
recently adopted specifications for proposals to the Crown, so we
must return the document to you for further refinement.
The questions which follow might assist you in your process of
revision:
- In your opening paragraph you use the phrase "the Laws
of Nature and Nature's God."
- What are these laws?
- In what way are they the criteria on which you base your
central arguments?
- Please document with citations from the recent
literature.
- In the same paragraph you refer to the "opinions of
mankind."
- Whose polling data are you using? Without specific evidence,
it seems to us the "opinions of mankind" are a matter
of opinion.
- You hold certain truths to be "self evident."
- Could you please elaborate. If they are as evident as you
claim then it should not be difficult for you to locate the
appropriate supporting statistics.
- The goals of your proposal seem to be "Life, Liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness."
- These are not measurable goals. If you were to say that
"among these is the ability to sustain an average life
expectancy in six of the 13 colonies of at last 55 years, and to
enable newspapers in the colonies to print news without outside
interference, and to raise the average income of the colonists by
10 percent in the next 10 years," these could be measurable
goals.
- Please clarify.
- You state that "Whenever any Form of Government becomes
destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter
or to abolish it, and to institute a new Government. .
."
- Have you weighed this assertion against all the
alternatives?
- What are the trade-off considerations?
- Your problem statement needs improvement. Your description of
the existing situation is quite extensive. Such a long list of
grievances should precede the statement of goals, not follow
it.
- Your strategy for achieving your goal is not developed at
all. You state that the colonies "ought to be Free and
Independent States," and that they are "Absolved from
All Allegiance to the British Crown."
- Who or what must change to achieve this objective?
- In what way must they change?
- What specific steps will you take to overcome the
resistance?
- How long will it take? We have found that a little foresight
in these areas helps to prevent careless errors later on.
- How cost-effective are your strategies?
- Please submit an organization chart and vitas of the
principal investigators.
- Who among the list of signatories will be responsible for
implementing your strategy?
- Who conceived it?
- Who provided the theoretical research?
- Who will constitute the advisory committee?
- You must include an evaluation design. We have been requiring
this since Queen Anne`s War.
- What impact will your problem have? Your failure to include
any assessment of this inspires little confidence in the
long-range prospects of your undertaking.
- Please submit:
- A PERT diagram.
- An activity chart.
- An itemized budget.
- A manpower utilization matrix.
We hope that these comments prove useful in revising your
"Declaration of Independence."
We welcome the submission of your revised proposal.
Our due date for unsolicited proposals is July 31, 1776.
Ten copies with original signatures will be required.
- Best Regards,
- Management Analyst to the British Crown
Home Office Services. All Rights
Reserved.