Comment Re:Splendid Idea, but will need to start elsewhere (Score 1) 334
Point-in-time legislative systems such as you describe exist elsewhere -- with notable open-access collections that have them in Canada and Australia. The first was developed in Tasmania some years ago (Google "Tasmania EnAct" to find information about it).
I'm not sure that diffs would do much to increase understanding, as they tend to operate at way too granular a level for people who just want to understand what the damn thing does. Sorta like trying to gauge the purpose and effects of a good-sized piece of software by reading a patch file. Not in my skill set, anyway.
The section-by-section Notes that accompany the United States Code provide a change history in narrative form. The Notes for a particular favorite of mine, the Wild Horse Annie Act, are here : http://bit.ly/ivW2b . Another interesting document tracking the evolution of the law, still more accessible to read, is the Annotated Constitution of the United States, one version of which is here: http://www.law.cornell.edu/anncon/html/index.html