But in a common law system, the law has many letters. The law consists not just of legislation, but of precedent, briefs, circumstances, intentions and so on. You cite previous decisions and congressional hearings and the feelings of interested parties because that all weighs into how the law is read.
You may disagree with this, but the fact remains that the law works like this in the US and UK and has since 1066.
You may disagree with this, but the fact remains that the law works like this in the US and UK and has since 1066.