Imagine a group of people who are paid handsomely to wear expensive suits and sit in very comfortable chairs—yes, I’m talking about Congress. In this particular episode of "Who Wants to Actually Do Their Job?", a brave survivor named Roza had to remind these professional hand-shakers that she isn't the one with the legislative magic wand. She basically walked into the House Oversight Committee, looked at a room full of people who usually spend their time arguing over which brand of bottled water to order for the breakroom, and told them, "Hey, figure it out."
It’s a classic workplace move: asking the person who just went through a nightmare to basically write the law, solve the crime, and probably fix the office printer while they’re at it. Roza wasn't having any of it. She delivered a verbal mic drop that essentially translated to: "I survived the unthinkable; the least you guys can do is navigate your own bureaucracy without needing a GPS and a juice box." It’s a bold strategy, telling the most powerful people in the country to stop looking at her for the answers and start looking at the massive law books gathering dust on their desks.
The irony here is thick enough to spread on toast. You have the House Oversight Committee—people whose entire job title literally includes the word "Oversight"—getting a stern talking-to about their lack of, well, oversight. It’s like hiring a plumber who stands over a leaking pipe and asks the homeowner for a YouTube tutorial on how a wrench works. Roza’s message was loud and clear: she did the hard part by surviving; now it’s time for the people in the fancy mahogany room to stop nodding solemnly and actually earn those taxpayer-funded salaries.
In the end, it was a refreshing reminder that just because you have a fancy title and a pin on your lapel doesn't mean you get to outsource the hard work of justice to the people who have already suffered enough. If only we could get her to give similar pep talks to the people who design "easy-open" packaging or the folks in charge of local traffic light synchronization.