Legislation for an issue as complex as this with so many different but interrelated components is going to be long. There's no avoiding that.
If people want to make an issue over how many pages the bill runs they could always stop using the double-spaced three inch column of text and switch to the wall of words preferred by some posters here. They could probably reduce it to 20 pages. And while there probably needs to be more time allowed to read the legislation prior to voting I doubt legislators would take advantage of it. They would still rely on the summaries prepared by their staff that they do now.
It's also very revealing that while most of the details contained in the bill were known for months, the Republicans
continued to attack the bill with a
debunked lie about the cost of cap and trade. Shorter bills or more reading time isn't going to solve that.
On the 300 page ammendment... most of it was a compilation of the 200 different ammendments that had already been proposed. It was a time saving step to combine them. I'm sorry that Embar doesn't know what was in it, but I doubt he knows what was in the 19 page Republican alternative bill either and that's been around since January.
As for Jecks, I find it "tragically hilarious" that he called the bill an "utter disaster posing as legit legislation" while posting a criticism that hinged on knowing nothing about the bill.