The Tech Recall and Reintroduction Act of 1993, abbreviated TRRA93, is an Act passed by the 103rd United States Congress that was signed into law by President Robert Redford. The act grants the President of the United States the authority to draft federal employees into the work of reintroducing technologies once deemed unsafe or illegal back into the public space according to the 30-year, five stage plan.[1]

TRRA93 was carried out by the Food, Drug and Technology Administration, which deems the technology safe to use for federal workers.[1]

Section 38504(f) Mandaites a routine inspection of all parcels of out-of-country items that contain M-Class materials or Chernekov-Glass radiation, as they are illegal and punishable by confiscation, fine and/or jail time. You can have your decision appeal under Section 38504(z) within 90 days.[2]

History

After the deadly 11/2 Psychic Shockwave, the US became technophobic, which severely hampered the growth of any equivalent to the Internet or social media. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, the Redford Administration would take steps to reintroduce electronic technology into the public sphere and the TRRA93 was the first of many steps.[3]

In 2019 the FBI was drafted into using stage five technologies by the president.[1]

Trivia

  • The abbreviation for the act has been misspelled multiply times, in the Peteypedia entre Memo: The Computer and You, it is abbreviated TTR93, and in the Blue Sunday Contents Letter it is correctly spelled in one sentence and misspelled TRAA93.

References