
Full Congressional Draft
The Final Draft
THE 99% REVOLUTION ACT OF 2025
[Omnibus Legislative Proposal]
118th Congress – 2nd Session
A BILL
To restore economic democracy, expand public ownership, guarantee universal healthcare and income, enact reparations for American Descendants of Slavery, reform public education with AI integration, and protect U.S. democracy from executive overreach.
PREAMBLE
Whereas the American people have endured decades of economic inequality, corporate dominance, and legislative inaction;
Whereas the Constitution guarantees a government by the people, and the people now demand a restoration of justice, dignity, and shared prosperity;
Therefore, be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, that this Act may be cited as the "99% Revolution Act of 2025" and shall take effect immediately upon enactment.
THE 99% REVOLUTION ACT – MASTER TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREAMBLE – Declaration of Purpose and Constitutional Authority
TITLE I – AI ECONOMIC & SOCIAL PROTECTIONS ACT
TITLE II – UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE & CAREGIVER ACCESS ACT
TITLE III – PUBLIC EDUCATION MODERNIZATION & DIGITAL LEARNING EQUITY ACT
TITLE IV – REPARATIONS FOR AMERICAN DESCENDANTS OF SLAVERY (ADOS)
TITLE V – T.A.C. REGIONAL AUTONOMY COMPACT
TITLE VI – UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME & ECONOMIC STABILIZATION ACT
TITLE VII – PUBLIC MONEY, GOLD-BACKED BONDS & MONETARY DEMOCRACY ACT
TITLE VIII – GREEN ECONOMY & CLIMATE RESILIENCE ACT
TITLE IX – HOUSING JUSTICE, TENANT RIGHTS & LAND EQUITY ACT
TITLE X – JUDICIAL ETHICS, ACCOUNTABILITY & TERM LIMITS ACT
TITLE XI – NATIONAL UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE IMPLEMENTATION FRAMEWORK
TITLE XII – FEDERAL JOB GUARANTEE & PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT INITIATIVE
TITLE XIII – IMMIGRANT JUSTICE, DACA PROTECTIONS & PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP
TITLE XIV – WEALTH ENFORCEMENT, CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY & EXIT TAX LAW
TITLE XV – BROADBAND JUSTICE & TECH ACCESS EQUITY ACT
TITLE XVI – CRYPTOCURRENCY REGULATION & DIGITAL ECONOMY FAIRNESS ACT
TITLE XVII – FEDERAL RESERVE RESTRUCTURING & PUBLIC BANKING EXPANSION ACT
TITLE XVIII – DACA, TPS & COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION RIGHTS FRAMEWORK
TITLE XIX – POLITICAL INTEGRITY & FOREIGN INFLUENCE BAN ACT
TITLE XX – TECH WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT & PUBLIC OWNERSHIP ACT
TITLE XXI – COMMUNITY HEALING, EDUCATION & FOOD JUSTICE ACT
TITLE XXII – INDIGENOUS SOVEREIGNTY, LAND RETURN & TRIBAL NATIONS JUSTICE ACT
TITLE XXIII – YOUTH JUSTICE & FAMILY PROTECTION ACT
TITLE XXIV – WORKPLACE JUSTICE & LABOR RIGHTS ACT
TITLE XXV – ELECTION INTEGRITY & DEMOCRACY PROTECTION ACT
TITLE XXVI – ELDER CARE, DISABILITY JUSTICE & DIGNITY ACT
TITLE XXVII – EMERGENCY CLIMATE RESILIENCE & DISASTER PREPAREDNESS ACT
TITLE XXVIII – NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE REBUILD & PUBLIC WORKS ACT
TITLE XXIX – NATIONAL SECURITY, CIVIL DEFENSE & MILITARY INTEGRITY ACT
TITLE XXX – PEOPLE’S MANDATE ENFORCEMENT & IMPLEMENTATION CLAUSE
TITLE XXXI – NATIONAL GUN SAFETY, SECOND AMENDMENT RIGHTS & COMMUNITY PROTECTION ACT
TITLE XXXII – CORPORATE DEMOCRACY & ANTI-MONOPOLY ACT
TITLE XXXIII – DIGITAL PRIVACY, DATA RIGHTS & PUBLIC AI INFRASTRUCTURE ACT
APPENDIX A: DEFINITIONS, ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS & JUDICIAL PATHWAYS
APPENDIX B: FUNDING BREAKDOWNS, FISCAL TIMELINES & IMPLEMENTATION PHASES
APPENDIX C: CITIZEN PETITION TEMPLATE, REFERENDUM GUIDE & CIVIC TOOLKIT
End of Master Table of Contents – The 99% Revolution Act
TITLE I — UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME (UBI)
Section 101. Establishment of the Universal Basic Income Program
(a) Purpose.
To ensure the economic security, dignity, and stability of every United States citizen through the implementation of a guaranteed, unconditional monthly income.
(b) Program Creation.
The Department of the Treasury, in coordination with the Social Security Administration (SSA) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), shall establish the Universal Basic Income Program (UBIP) to provide monthly direct cash payments to eligible recipients.
(c) Eligibility.
All U.S. citizens aged 18 and older shall be eligible to receive a UBI payment, regardless of employment status or income level. Citizenship shall be verified through existing federal databases without additional burden to the applicant.
(d) Amount and Frequency.
Beginning within 12 months of enactment:
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Each eligible adult citizen shall receive a monthly, non-taxable UBI payment of $1,000.
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An additional $200 per month shall be distributed for each dependent under the age of 18 in the household.
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The amount shall be indexed annually to inflation using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U).
(e) Accessibility.
Recipients may choose to receive payments via direct deposit, prepaid federal debit card, or check. Individuals without fixed addresses shall be provided access through designated community financial access centers.
Section 102. Protections and Exemptions
(a) Taxation.
UBI payments shall not be considered taxable income at the federal, state, or local level.
(b) Means-Test Exemption.
UBI payments shall not be counted against eligibility for other federal aid programs unless the recipient voluntarily opts to consolidate aid under UBI.
(c) Debt Protection.
UBI payments shall be protected from garnishment, seizure, or offset by federal or private creditors, except in cases of child support enforcement.
Section 103. Phase-In and Equity Prioritization
(a) Rollout Schedule.
Year 1: Priority enrollment for individuals below 200% of the federal poverty line, formerly incarcerated individuals, veterans, tribal communities, and residents of persistent poverty counties.
Year 2: General national enrollment opens for all eligible citizens.
(b) Data Privacy.
The UBIP shall comply with the highest standards of data privacy. Personal data collected for the purpose of this program shall not be shared with law enforcement, immigration agencies, or private entities.
(c) Program Awareness.
The Department of Education and Health and Human Services shall lead a national public education campaign to ensure full awareness of enrollment options.
Section 104. Integration with Broader Economic Reform
(a) Relationship to Reparations.
Recipients eligible under the ADOS Reparations Program may elect to receive reparations in addition to UBI without penalty.
(b) Relationship to Employment.
UBI is not a substitute for employment. It is a base economic guarantee. Employment, entrepreneurship, and social contributions remain encouraged.
(c) Opt-Out Provision.
Any citizen who does not wish to receive UBI may opt out through a simple online or mail-in form.
Section 105. Funding of the Universal Basic Income Program
(a) Primary Revenue Sources.
The UBIP shall be funded through:
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A 34% wealth tax on individuals with net assets exceeding $50 million.
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A financial transaction tax of 0.25% on high-frequency Wall Street trades.
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A universal digital asset tax on declared crypto holdings exceeding $50,000.
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Corporate profit share redirection from AI systems monetized using public data.
(b) Public Ownership Mandate.
AI models trained on federal data or public education systems must yield a royalty to the UBIP fund.
(c) Constitutional Compliance.
This section is enacted pursuant to Congress’s authority under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, ensuring the general welfare of the United States through uniform taxation and direct economic provision.
(d) Sunset Provision Review.
Every five years, an independent public commission shall review the effectiveness, sufficiency, and equity of the funding sources and recommend adjustments to Congress.
Section 106. Enforcement and Oversight
(a) Oversight Agency.
The UBIP shall be overseen by a newly created Office for Economic Security and Human Dignity (OESHD) housed within the Department of the Treasury.
(b) Citizen Oversight Board.
A 21-member oversight board composed of UBI recipients, economists, civil rights experts, labor leaders, and small business owners shall advise on program implementation and equity.
(c) Annual Public Report.
The OESHD shall issue an annual public report detailing disbursements, outcomes, fraud prevention efforts, and funding flows.
End of Title I — Universal Basic Income
TITLE II — UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE FOR ALL
Section 201. National Health Coverage Guarantee
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Establishes a universal, single-payer healthcare system covering:
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Primary care, vision, dental, mental health, prescriptions, surgeries, maternal care
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Long-term care, physical therapy, rehabilitation, chronic illness
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No copays, premiums, or deductibles
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Includes undocumented, unhoused, formerly incarcerated, and gig workers
Section 202. Prescription & Medical Sovereignty Provisions
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Requires domestic production or secure national contracts for:
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Insulin
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Vaccines
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PPE
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Essential generics and antibiotics
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Creates a Federal Biomedical Manufacturing Trust (FBMT) to:
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Oversee public production of high-demand medications
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Prevent price gouging, shortages, and foreign dependency
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Includes national stockpiling and public pharmacy distribution network
Section 203. Mental Health and Trauma Care Expansion
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Guarantees mental healthcare as a core benefit
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Funds:
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Community therapy clinics
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Indigenous and spiritual healing
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Trauma-informed inpatient and outpatient programs
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Launches the National Healing Initiative to destigmatize care access
Section 204. Elder & Disability Health and Caregiver Access
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Guarantees in-home caregiving, medical transportation, and daily living support
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Provides $24/hour minimum caregiver wage and federal caregiver registry
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Expands disability-responsive diagnostic care and mobile services
Section 205. Medical Debt Abolition & Financial Protection
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Erases all existing medical debt for U.S. residents
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Prohibits future medical debt collection or credit scoring based on health
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Refunds all interest payments collected by hospitals since 2005
Section 206. Healthcare Workforce Expansion and Training Grants
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Pays full tuition for medical students committing to 5+ years in public health
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Funds school nurse programs, EMT development, and rural healthcare housing
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Offers loan forgiveness and relocation bonuses for providers in shortage zones
**End of Title II – Universal Healthcare & Car
End of Title II — Universal Healthcare for All
TITLE III — EDUCATION REFORM AND AI INTEGRATION
Section 301. Establishment of the AI-Powered Public Education System
(a) Purpose.
To modernize the U.S. public education system by integrating artificial intelligence (AI), digital tools, and immersive technologies under public ownership, while protecting educator roles, student rights, and equitable access to quality learning.
(b) Creation of the National AI Education Platform.
The Department of Education shall create the National AI Education Platform (NAEP) which will:
- Personalize curriculum based on student performance and learning style.
- Provide 24/7 AI tutoring and assignment support.
- Translate content across multiple languages and accessibility needs.
- Integrate immersive (AR/VR) experiences into civics, science, and history education.
- Operate as a public digital platform — not privatized, licensed, or owned by corporate entities.
(c) Phase-In Timeline.
- Year 1: Pilot launch in Title I schools, rural districts, and tribal communities.
- Year 2–3: Expand to all K-12 institutions nationally.
- Year 4: Extend platform to community colleges and adult learning centers.
Section 302. Content Creator Participation & Compensation
(a) Public Content Marketplace.
The NAEP shall allow verified educators, experts, and creators to upload curriculum-aligned content to a federal Education Content Marketplace.
(b) Compensation Model.
Creators shall receive federal royalties based on:
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Student engagement and completion metrics.
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Usage in high-need districts.
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Equity benchmarks (e.g., underserved or special needs learners).
(c) Public Copyright Model.
All publicly paid content shall be free to access, permanently archived, and attributed. Derivatives shall require approval from the Education Oversight Council.
Section 303. Educator Integration and Job Protection
(a) AI as a Tool — Not Replacement.
AI shall support — not replace — licensed teachers. Classroom roles will be preserved, and AI tools shall be under educator supervision.
(b) Federal Training Fund.
A $5 billion Education Technology Training Fund is established to:
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Provide AI-literacy and metaverse curriculum certifications for educators.
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Support instructional design for teachers creating platform content.
(c) Union & Labor Protections.
Educator unions shall retain bargaining rights over all AI-related tech integration, workload impacts, and training conditions.
Section 304. Ownership, Governance, and Oversight
(a) Public Ownership Clause.
All core AI infrastructure, learning data models, and content libraries created under this title shall:
- Remain federally owned.
- Be governed by a public board composed of educators, students, accessibility experts, and technologists.
(b) Anti-Privatization Safeguards.
No AI platform, curriculum model, or backend data collected through public education may be sold, leased, or licensed to private companies without:
- 2/3 vote of Congress and
- guaranteed revenue sharing with the Department of Education.
(c) Transparency & Equity Reporting.
Annual public reports shall be issued on:
- Regional usage gaps.
- Accessibility to marginalized communities.
- Content quality evaluations.
Section 305. Funding and Economic Impact
(a) Estimated Annual Cost: $60 billion over 5 years
(b) Funding Sources:
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Universal Service Fee on Large Tech Firms (projected: $20B/year)
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AI Licensing Fees for companies using education sector data (projected: $8B/year)
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Reallocation of EdTech contracts from privatized vendors to public systems (projected savings: $12B/year)
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Public Content Revenue from optional licensing to private learners/institutions (projected: $5B/year)
(c) Job Creation Estimate:
This section is estimated to generate approximately 750,000 direct education sector jobs, as part of an overall 3.3 million new jobs created across all AI-powered public infrastructure initiatives authorized under this Act.
Section 306. Legal and Constitutional Authority
(a) Congressional Power.
This Title is enacted pursuant to:
- Article I, Section 8 — to provide for the general welfare and regulate commerce (as education affects economic mobility and national innovation).
- Spending Clause — to allocate federal funding toward public instruction.
- Commerce Clause — to regulate nationwide digital learning standards, platforms, and protections across state lines.
(b) Federal Preemption.
All states must meet or exceed the standards of NAEP. States may supplement with localized content but may not reject the federal platform unless providing equal or greater access, free of charge.
End of Title III — Education Reform and AI Integration
TITLE IV – REPARATIONS FOR AMERICAN DESCENDANTS OF SLAVERY (ADOS)
Section 401. Purpose and Historical Mandate
To provide restorative justice to American Descendants of Slavery (ADOS) through a constitutionally authorized, federally administered reparations program grounded in verified ancestry, historical harm, and economic exclusion, in recognition of the generational trauma, systemic disadvantage, and denial of wealth accumulation caused by slavery, Jim Crow, redlining, and mass incarceration.
Section 402. Legal and Constitutional Authority
This title is enacted under:
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14th Amendment: Equal protection under the law
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5th Amendment: Right to restitution for government-sanctioned harm
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Article I, Section 8: Congressional power to tax, spend, and provide for the general welfare
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International law: U.S. obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD)
The Reparations Act shall not be construed as race-based redistribution but as injury-based restitution for a specific class of harmed citizens.
Section 403. Eligibility and Verification
(a) Eligibility
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Must be a U.S. citizen with DNA-verified African ancestry traceable to U.S. chattel slavery.
(b) Verification Process Acceptable documentation includes:
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Freedmen’s Bureau records
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U.S. Census documentation (1870–1940)
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Manumission records, church registries, or military pension records from Union Black regiments
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Verified oral history matched with genealogical data
Section 404. Reparations Compensation Framework
(a) Baseline Guarantee
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Every verified ADOS individual shall receive a minimum of $10,000 in reparations, tax-free and protected from garnishment.
(b) Tiered Sliding Scale (Ancestry + Proof-Based)
Category Eligibility Proof Total Cap Additional Benefits Tier I (1–9%) DNA + kinship linkage $10K Cultural restitution, housing access, land lotteries Tier II (10–24%) Census + regional match $25K 10-year ADOS property tax exemption Tier III (25–49%) Freedmen’s Bureau + Jim Crow linkage $100K Homebuyer grants, student loan discharge Tier IV (50–74%) Generational linkage $250K Annual stipend for 10 years, land credit option Tier V (75–100%) Direct chattel slave descent $500K Full tuition, paid housing, business seed grant
(c) Optional Non-Cash Compensation
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10–15 year federal tax exemption in lieu of full payout
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Business capital match in federal development zones
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Fully paid housing or cooperative land ownership credits
Section 405. Reparations Trust and Administration
(a) ADOS National Reparations Trust Fund
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Managed by a public Reparations Oversight Commission
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Required annual report to Congress and the public
(b) Asset & Equity Programs
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Federal land transfers: Up to 5 acres per family
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Forgivable business loans: Up to $100K
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Black banking expansion and financial literacy programs
(c) Cultural Restoration
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ADOS-centered historical education and archival support
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Reparative royalties for Black cultural exploitation by media industries
Section 406. Economic Integration & Protections
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Payments are tax-exempt and not counted against federal benefits
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Reparations may be received alongside UBI and Social Security
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Non-transferable to non-ADOS individuals or corporations
Section 407. Justification for Inclusion at 1% Ancestry
Even 1% DNA ties individuals to systems of:
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Generational exclusion
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Cultural erasure
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Redlined family histories and reclassified identities
Including low-percentage individuals honors fractured ancestral lines, expands unity, and prevents exclusion caused by census erasure or forced migration.
Section 408. Funding and Fiscal Integrity
Primary Revenue Sources:
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34% Wealth Tax on net assets over $50M
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15% Exit Tax on billionaires moving to TAC states
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AI royalties and public licensing
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Crypto transaction fees on portfolios over $50K
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Profits from federal public banks and gold-backed Treasury bonds
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Redirected Fed profits post-reform under Title VII
Estimated Cost: $11 trillion over 15–20 years Phased Rollout: Begins immediately for highest tiers and lowest income brackets
Section 409. Oversight and Governance
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Reparations Oversight Commission (21 members)
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Majority-ADOS panel, including economists, historians, legal experts
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Public reports every year with national equity assessments
End of Title IV – Reparations for American Descendants of Slavery (ADOS)
TITLE V – TAC REGIONAL AUTONOMY COMPACT
Section 500. Intent of the TAC Regional Autonomy Compact
The purpose of this Compact is to allow nine designated states—Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Kentucky—to operate with greater autonomy over cultural, religious, educational, and social policies, while remaining within the constitutional framework of the United States.
This Compact draws legal precedent from Congress’s authority to recognize territorial governance structures such as those granted to Puerto Rico (Commonwealth model) and Washington, D.C. (limited home rule). It also invokes Congress’s Article I, Section 8 powers to regulate interstate commerce, tax and spend for the general welfare, and establish uniform laws for governance.
Why Currency Autonomy is Allowed:
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Enables cultural and economic self-determination without national disruption
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Empowers TAC states to fund faith-based or community-oriented systems not supported by federal programs
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Serves as an economic experiment in regionalized sovereignty without requiring full secession
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Reduces reliance on federal redistribution from progressive states
What TAC States Gain:
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Full control over local education, healthcare policy, and public morality laws
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The option to opt out of UBI, reparations, federal healthcare, and AI education systems
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The ability to create and use internal currencies (digital, credit-based, or gold-backed) for voluntary, in-state use only, provided they do not replace or interfere with the U.S. dollar as legal tender
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The right to establish state-run crypto or alternative value systems for commerce, tax credits, or public benefit programs
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Authority to run alternative retirement systems if opting out of Social Security
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The ability to limit federal program influence in daily state operations
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Access to federal military protection, judicial review, and national security services
What TAC States Lose:
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All federal funding for any program they choose to opt out of
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Congressional voting power on progressive federal programs they no longer participate in
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Participation in national public referendums related to funding, healthcare, UBI, or reparations
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Influence over federal agency rules that do not apply to them
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Treasury-backed insurance (FDIC) for state-run banks or currencies unless compliant with federal standards
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Legal authority to enforce discriminatory laws or deny civil rights protections within any federally governed institution
This Compact creates a voluntary firewall that respects the autonomy of participating states while preserving national unity, the U.S. Constitution, and the rights of all Americans under federal protection. It offers an alternative path for states seeking cultural and political independence—without the risks or illegality of full secession.
TITLE VI – WEALTH ENFORCEMENT & FISCAL FAIRNESS ACT
Section 601. Purpose and Legislative Authority
This title establishes the financial mechanisms, enforcement structures, and constitutional protections necessary to fully fund the 99% Revolution Act. It ensures billionaires, multinational corporations, and digital asset holders contribute equitably to the American economy.
Constitutional authority is derived from:
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Article I, Section 8 (Taxing and Spending Power)
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16th Amendment (Income Tax Authority)
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Commerce Clause (Interstate financial regulation)
Section 602. Wealth Tax Residency Rule
Any U.S. citizen with net assets exceeding $50 million is subject to an annual federal wealth tax regardless of residency.
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Applicable nationwide, including within TAC Compact states
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Includes domestic and international assets held by U.S. persons
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Non-compliance triggers fines, asset liens, and public disclosure of avoidance schemes
Section 603. Wealth Tax Rates
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2% on net assets over $50 million
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4% on assets over $500 million
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6% on assets over $1 billion
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8% on assets over $10 billion
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Assessed annually by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) through a specialized Public Wealth Review Office
Section 604. Exit Tax for High Net-Worth Individuals
Any individual with over $50 million in assets relocating to a TAC Compact state or renouncing U.S. residency is subject to:
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A one-time 15% federal tax on all unrealized capital gains
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Immediate reporting requirement upon intent to relocate
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Exit tax must be paid before asset transfers are finalized
Section 605. Corporate Revenue Nexus Law
All corporations operating in the U.S. will be taxed based on total national revenue, not corporate headquarters location.
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Ensures corporations cannot avoid taxation by locating in TAC states
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Applies to all domestic and multinational firms with U.S. revenue exceeding $10 million
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IRS will establish a Public Corporate Revenue Nexus Registry
Section 606. AI Licensing and Public Royalties
Any AI platform, service, or model using public data or user-generated content must:
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Obtain an annual federal AI license
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Pay a 3% royalty on gross revenue derived from public data, federal research, or U.S.-based users
These royalties fund:
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Public education platforms (Title III)
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Universal Basic Income (Title I)
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Reparations Trust (Title IV)
Section 607. Crypto Transaction Fee and Regulation
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A 2% federal transaction fee shall apply to cryptocurrency transactions over $50,000 annually per wallet
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All digital assets must be registered with the Federal Digital Asset Compliance Bureau (FDACB)
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Anonymous or foreign-hosted wallets are subject to U.S. taxation if linked to U.S. persons
Section 608. Gold-Backed Treasury Bonds for Social Security
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The U.S. Treasury shall issue gold-backed bonds to directly support the Social Security Trust Fund
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Bonds shall be available for purchase by the public, banks, and international partners
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All proceeds go directly into retirement, disability, and survivor benefits
Section 609. Public Disclosure and Enforcement
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Annual publication of all tax receipts collected from ultra-wealthy individuals and corporations
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Public dashboards available through the Department of the Treasury
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Whistleblower protections and rewards for reporting avoidance schemes
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Criminal penalties for wealth concealment or tax fraud exceeding $10 million
Section 610. Oversight and Reporting
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Establishes the Office of Fiscal Equity Enforcement (OFEE)
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Annual joint audit with the IRS, GAO, and Treasury Inspector General
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Mandatory Congressional review every two years
Section 611. Reversal of 2017 High-Income and Corporate Tax Cuts
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All provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act benefiting individuals with incomes above $400,000 and corporations with annual profits exceeding $10 million are repealed.
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Corporate tax rates shall be restored to 28%, with a 10% surtax applied to executive stock-based compensation above $5 million.
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Capital gains for the top 1% shall be taxed at the same rate as ordinary income.The IRS Public Wealth Review Office shall administer recalculated tax brackets retroactively for tax fairness compliance.
End of Title VI – Wealth Enforcement & Fiscal Fairness Act
TITLE VII – PUBLIC MONEY & MONETARY DEMOCRACY ACT
Section 701. Purpose and Legislative Authority
This title restructures national monetary policy to serve the public interest through democratic control, transparency, and equitable distribution of financial resources. It authorizes Congress to reclaim fiscal authority delegated to the Federal Reserve and establish a publicly accountable monetary system.
Constitutional authority is drawn from:
- Article I, Section 8 (Power to coin money and regulate its value)
- Necessary and Proper Clause
- Historical precedent: Federal Reserve Act of 1913 (created by Congress, revocable by Congress)
Section 702. Creation of the Public Monetary Authority (PMA)
- Establishes the Public Monetary Authority as an independent agency under the Department of the Treasury
- PMA shall be responsible for issuing digital currency, managing monetary supply, and funding social trust programs
- All functions formerly reserved for the Federal Reserve may be transferred by Congressional vote
Section 703. Annual Audit and Oversight of the Federal Reserve
- The Government Accountability Office (GAO) shall conduct a full annual audit of all Federal Reserve operations
- Audit results shall be made public
- The Treasury and Congress may revoke or revise any monetary decisions made by the Federal Reserve upon a two-thirds vote
Section 704. Public Ownership of Monetary Profits
- All profits generated by the Federal Reserve or the PMA shall be transferred to:
- Universal Basic Income Trust (Title I)
- Reparations Trust (Title IV)
- Social Security and Public Pension Accounts
- These profits shall no longer be held by private Federal Reserve member banks
Section 705. National Digital Public Banking System
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Creates a nationwide public banking system accessible to all U.S. residents
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Offers zero-fee checking, savings, microloans, and digital wallets
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All Americans shall receive access to a "Public Treasury Wallet" for receiving UBI, reparations, and tax returns
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Banks shall be integrated with AI-based fraud detection and consumer protection tools
Section 706. Legal Restrictions on Private Money Creation
- Private banks shall no longer be permitted to issue money via debt expansion without full collateral reserves
- Lending practices must comply with fair access laws, civil rights protections, and anti-discrimination banking codes
- Cryptocurrency issuers must register under federal monetary regulations
Section 707. Treasury Digital Dollar Authorization
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The Public Monetary Authority may issue a U.S. Treasury Digital Dollar as an official legal tender alongside physical currency
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Digital dollar is backed by public trust and data-driven reserves, not private speculation
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May be used for federal payments, social benefits, and public transactions
Section 708. Constitutional Amendment Proposal
Congress shall submit to the states a constitutional amendment to read:
"No private institution shall have exclusive control over the issuance of the national currency. All monetary policy shall be subject to public oversight and may only be delegated by an act of Congress, revocable at any time."
End of Title VII – Public Money & Monetary Democracy Act
TITLE VIII – GREEN ECONOMY & CLIMATE RESILIENCE ACT
Section 801. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To establish a national framework for a just green transition, job creation, and climate resilience. This title accelerates the U.S. response to environmental collapse by investing in sustainable industries, climate-smart infrastructure, and frontline communities.
Constitutional authority is drawn from:
- Article I, Section 8 (Commerce Clause, General Welfare)
- Article IV, Section 3 (Federal land and resource management)
- Supreme Court precedent on environmental regulation (e.g., Massachusetts v. EPA, 2007)
Section 802. National Green Jobs Corps
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Establishes a federally funded Green Jobs Corps for employment in climate adaptation, energy transition, reforestation, and public infrastructure
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Target: 1 million new jobs in first 5 years
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Prioritizes low-income workers, youth, and communities transitioning from fossil fuel sectors
Section 803. Public Climate Infrastructure Bank
- Creates the Public Climate Infrastructure Bank (PCIB) under the Department of Energy
- Finances community solar, public transit, water purification, smart grid upgrades, and zero-emission construction
- Offers low-interest green loans, municipal bonds, and climate equity grants
Section 804. Energy Justice and Environmental Equity Zones
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Designates at-risk neighborhoods, tribal lands, and former industrial zones as "Environmental Equity Zones"
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Delivers direct federal investment, pollution cleanup, and zero-cost weatherization
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Requires 40% of PCIB funding to be allocated to these zones
Section 805. Fossil Fuel Transition Fund
- Funds buyouts, retraining, and relocation for workers in coal, oil, and gas industries
- Provides small business transition assistance and clean tech start-up grants in affected regions
- Implements a national cap on new fossil fuel infrastructure starting in 2027
Section 806. Federal Clean Energy Mandate
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Requires 100% clean electricity on federal property and military bases by 2030
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Phases out federal contracts with non-renewable energy companies
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Creates federal standards for battery storage, offshore wind, and domestic solar manufacturing
Section 807. Agricultural and Food System Resilience
- Invests in regenerative agriculture, food forest pilots, and community gardens
- Expands USDA funding for Black, Indigenous, and small-scale farmers
- Provides incentives for climate-resilient crops and carbon-sequestering practices
Section 808. Climate Emergency Mobilization Authority
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Declares the climate crisis a national emergency
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Grants authority to redirect federal contracts and deploy resources for disaster mitigation
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Funds infrastructure hardening, climate migration relocation, and wildfire/flood defense
Section 809. Funding Mechanisms
- 15% share of revenue from the federal wealth tax (Title VI)
- 50% of all federal carbon and pollution fines
- Public Climate Bonds issued through the Public Monetary Authority (Title VII)
- Redirection of $300B in annual fossil fuel subsidies to climate and environmental justice programs
Section 810. Oversight and Implementation
- Establishes the Climate Equity & Resilience Council (CERC) under White House Office of Climate Policy
- Mandates annual progress reports to Congress and public dashboards
- Creates a National Climate Apprenticeship Program linked to Green Jobs Corps
End of Title VIII – Green Economy & Climate Resilience Act
TITLE IX – VOTING RIGHTS & ELECTORAL REFORM ACT
Section 901. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To restore, protect, and modernize voting access in the United States by expanding democratic participation, ending voter suppression, reforming electoral representation, and ensuring fair elections for all citizens.
Authority is drawn from:
-
14th Amendment (Equal Protection)
-
15th Amendment (Right to vote regardless of race)
-
17th, 19th, 24th, and 26th Amendments (Voting protections by age, gender, and income)
-
Article I, Section 4 (Elections Clause – Congress may regulate the time, place, and manner of elections)
Section 902. Automatic Voter Registration and National Vote ID
-
All eligible U.S. citizens shall be automatically registered to vote at age 18 through Social Security and federal agencies
-
Establishes a secure National Voter ID (free and non-discriminatory)
-
Ensures registration is portable across state lines
Section 903. Universal Early Voting and Mail-In Ballots
-
Mandates 14-day minimum early voting period in all federal elections
-
Requires no-excuse absentee voting and mail-in ballot access for all voters
-
Ensures ballots are trackable, transparent, and verified by signature or secure ID
Section 904. Restoration of Voting Rights
-
Guarantees full voting rights for all formerly incarcerated individuals upon release
-
Bans states from permanently disenfranchising citizens due to past convictions
-
Funds reentry civic education and registration initiatives
Section 905. Ranked-Choice Voting (RCV) Implementation
-
Requires RCV for all federal elections including presidential primaries
-
Provides grants to states for implementation training, software, and equipment
-
Creates public education fund for voter awareness campaigns
Section 906. End of Gerrymandering and Independent Redistricting
-
Requires all congressional redistricting to be conducted by nonpartisan commissions
-
Prohibits racial and partisan gerrymandering by algorithmic audit and federal oversight
-
Establishes the Office of Electoral Fairness within the DOJ
Section 907. Abolition of the Electoral College (Proposed Amendment)
-
Proposes a constitutional amendment to establish national popular vote for President
-
States electoral votes must be allocated proportionally or by national outcome until full abolition is ratified
-
Prevents minority rule from overriding the democratic majority
Section 908. Election Security and Oversight
-
Requires hand-marked paper ballot backup systems
-
Federal cybersecurity upgrades for voting machines and tabulation systems
-
Whistleblower protections for election officials and poll workers
Section 909. Voter Suppression Prevention and Civil Penalties
-
Criminalizes targeted misinformation, voter intimidation, and polling location sabotage
-
Authorizes civil suits and federal investigations for suppression incidents
-
Triples penalties for states found guilty of repeated voting rights violations
Section 910. Federal Election Holiday
-
Declares Election Day a national paid holiday
-
Mandates time off for workers without penalty to cast votes
End of Title IX – Voting Rights & Electoral Reform Act
TITLE X – JUDICIAL ETHICS & EXECUTIVE POWER LIMITS ACT
Section 1001. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To protect democratic governance and restore checks and balances by limiting executive overreach, reforming the federal judiciary, and increasing transparency and accountability across all branches of government.
Authority is derived from:
- Article I (Legislative Powers)
- Article II (Executive Oversight)
- Article III (Judiciary Power)
- Necessary and Proper Clause
Section 1002. Supreme Court Ethics and Term Limits
-
Establishes a mandatory 20-year term limit for future Supreme Court Justices
-
Requires public financial disclosures, recusal standards, and conflict-of-interest enforcement
-
Creates an independent Judicial Ethics Council under the Office of Congressional Oversight
-
Prohibits Justices from accepting gifts, luxury travel, or private financing from political donors or dark money groups
Section 1003. Lower Federal Court Reform
- Expands funding for judicial training, ethics, and workload relief
- Establishes an independent review board for complaints against lower court judges
- Increases the number of federal circuit court judgeships to address case backlogs
Section 1004. Executive Order Accountability Reform
-
Limits executive orders to matters of national emergency, agency coordination, and time-limited guidance unless authorized by Congress
-
Requires automatic Congressional review for executive orders lasting longer than 120 days
-
Establishes public notification systems for all federal orders and memoranda
Section 1005. Agency Independence and Anti-Politicization
-
Prevents partisan takeovers of federal agencies via Project 2025 or similar political initiatives
-
Mandates Senate-confirmed appointments for all Cabinet-level positions and key agency heads
-
Prohibits executive personnel from reclassifying civil servants into political appointee roles
Section 1006. Federal Appointee Conduct and Lobbying Ban
- Prohibits federal appointees from lobbying for private entities for 10 years after leaving office
- Criminalizes coordination between former officials and corporate interests during or after government service
- Creates a public transparency registry of all federal appointee financial interests
Section 1007. Independent Investigative Authority
- Establishes the Office of Constitutional Investigations (OCI) to investigate misconduct by members of the executive, judiciary, or federal agencies
- Authorized to refer cases to DOJ or Congress with subpoena powers and whistleblower protections
- Headed by a nonpartisan, term-limited commission confirmed by a two-thirds Senate vote
Section 1008. Constitutional Amendment Proposal: Judicial and Executive Reform Clause
Congress shall submit to the states the following amendment:
"No individual shall serve more than twenty years on the Supreme Court of the United States. All branches of government shall remain subject to checks and balances, and no executive or judicial officer shall be exempt from congressional oversight, public accountability, or legal challenge."
End of Title X – Judicial Ethics & Executive Power Limits Act
TITLE XI – NATIONAL HOUSING, LAND & PUBLIC SPACE ACT
Section 1101. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To ensure access to affordable housing, expand land equity, and restore public spaces through federally funded programs, green development, and anti-displacement protections.
Authority is drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (General Welfare and Spending Powers)
-
13th and 14th Amendments (Protection from housing discrimination and economic exclusion)
-
Fair Housing Act and Civil Rights Act
Section 1102. Universal Housing Guarantee
-
Establishes housing as a human right under federal law
-
Requires every state to offer a Public Housing Access Plan for residents under 150% of the poverty line
-
Includes transitional housing, cooperative housing, senior housing, and low-income rental options
Section 1103. National Public Housing Expansion Fund
-
Creates $500B federally backed investment over 10 years to construct, retrofit, and maintain public housing
-
Prioritizes sustainable, modular, and climate-resilient construction
-
Provides community-based design grants to local governments and tribal authorities
Section 1104. First-Time Homebuyer Justice Program
-
Provides down payment assistance, closing cost coverage, and credit repair resources for first-generation homeowners
-
Special incentives for descendants of redlined families and communities historically excluded from homeownership
-
Includes a Public Homeownership Education curriculum for UBI and ADOS recipients
Section 1105. Federal Anti-Displacement and Tenant Rights Protections
-
Bans no-cause evictions in federally supported housing
-
Requires rent stabilization measures in cities receiving public housing funds
-
Establishes a Tenant Defense Fund and public legal clinics in high-eviction areas
Section 1106. Land Back and Land Equity Initiative
-
Transfers up to 20 million acres of unused federal land to tribal governments, ADOS cooperatives, and community land trusts
-
Creates reparative land access programs for Black farmers and displaced Indigenous communities
-
Prohibits corporate land-banking of public or gifted lands
Section 1107. Urban and Rural Green Redevelopment Zones
-
Converts abandoned malls, factories, and federal properties into mixed-use housing, schools, gardens, and job centers
-
Provides solar-ready infrastructure grants and walkable community design support
-
Includes cultural preservation funds for Black, Indigenous, and immigrant communities
Section 1108. National Public Space Restoration Authority
-
Creates the Public Space Corps for maintaining parks, trails, water access, and safe gathering areas
-
Grants design funds to cities for plazas, playgrounds, and green corridors in underserved communities
-
Requires all federal buildings to provide public-access space or programming by 2030
Section 1109. Funding Mechanisms
-
10% allocation from the federal wealth tax (Title VI)
-
Revenue from luxury real estate tax and vacant property fees
-
Public Infrastructure Bonds issued by the Public Monetary Authority (Title VII)
-
Redirection of HUD administrative overhead and defense land repurposing funds
Section 1110. Oversight and Implementation
-
Establishes the Housing & Land Equity Office (HLEO) under the Department of Housing and Urban Development
-
Community board reviews required for new federal projects in gentrifying zip codes
-
Annual equity audits and land ownership transparency reporting
End of Title XI – National Housing, Land & Public Space Act
TITLE XII – LABOR, WORKER RIGHTS & ECONOMIC FREEDOM ACT
Section 1201. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To restore worker power, ensure living wages, eliminate forced arbitration, and build an economy rooted in dignity, union rights, and economic fairness for all.
Authority is drawn from:
-
13th Amendment (Freedom from involuntary servitude)
-
Article I, Section 8 (Commerce Clause, labor regulation)
-
National Labor Relations Act and Fair Labor Standards Act
Section 1202. Universal Living Wage Guarantee
-
Establishes a national living wage baseline of $22/hour indexed to inflation
-
Applies to all public and private employers with 10+ employees
-
Includes tipped, gig, and part-time workers under federal protection
Section 1203. Right to Unionize and Collective Bargaining
-
Codifies the right to form, join, and organize unions in all sectors
-
Requires employers to recognize unions after majority card check
-
Establishes public sector collective bargaining protections nationwide
Section 1204. Ban on Forced Arbitration and At-Will Exploitation
-
Prohibits forced arbitration clauses in employment, consumer, housing, and service contracts
-
Ends at-will termination practices without just cause in federally regulated sectors
-
Creates the Office of Labor Fairness under the Department of Labor
Section 1205. Fair Scheduling and Worker Safety Standards
-
Mandates two-week advance scheduling for hourly workers
-
Requires paid sick leave, paid family leave, and universal OSHA compliance
-
Creates emergency heat, smoke, and air quality standards for climate-related workplace threats
Section 1206. Gig Worker and Platform Labor Protections
-
Redefines gig workers as employees with full benefits, bargaining rights, and tax protections
-
Requires digital platforms to pay into unemployment, Social Security, and Medicare
-
Prohibits algorithmic wage discrimination or retaliation
Section 1207. Workplace Democracy and Profit Sharing
-
Creates worker representation boards in companies with 250+ employees
-
Encourages co-determination and shared governance with management
-
Offers federal grants to support employee-owned businesses and cooperatives
Section 1208. Youth Employment and Apprenticeship Access
-
Expands national pre-apprenticeship and apprenticeship networks in green energy, construction, AI, and caregiving
-
Creates federal Youth Economic Freedom Fund for job guarantees and startup grants for youth ages 16–25
-
Prohibits child labor exploitation in hazardous sectors and online platforms
Section 1209. Funding Mechanisms
-
Funded through corporate revenue tax, AI licensing royalties, and wealth tax allocations (Title VI)
-
Redirects federal procurement savings from fair labor contracts
-
Establishes the Labor Transition Investment Fund (LTIF) under the Treasury
Section 1210. Oversight and Implementation
-
Establishes the National Economic Freedom Council (NEFC) composed of labor leaders, economists, and public members
-
Requires annual labor rights audit published by the GAO
-
Creates Labor Equity Index to track employer fairness and compliance
End of Title XII – Labor, Worker Rights & Economic Freedom Act
TITLE XIII – CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS & PEOPLE’S PROTECTIONS ACT
Section 1301. Purpose and Scope
To propose and initiate constitutional amendments that enshrine economic justice, digital sovereignty, public governance of AI, and democratic control over federal systems to prevent oligarchy and authoritarianism.
Section 1302. Amendment I – Digital & AI Sovereignty Clause
"No private institution shall have exclusive control over artificial intelligence systems developed using public data, taxpayer-funded infrastructure, or derived from public user behavior. All AI technologies operating in the United States shall be subject to federal licensing, public oversight, and equitable revenue sharing with the American people."
-
Prohibits monopolization of foundational AI models trained on public data
-
Requires Congress to regulate AI under public interest standards
-
Grants Americans ownership stake in AI profits derived from collective content or activity
Section 1303. Amendment II – Right to Housing, Healthcare, and a Living Income
"Every person residing in the United States shall have the right to safe housing, essential healthcare, and a basic income sufficient for dignity. Congress shall have the power to enforce this provision by appropriate legislation."
-
Converts economic guarantees into constitutional rights
-
Supports implementation of Titles I, II, and XI
Section 1304. Amendment III – Electoral Democracy and Equal Representation
"The right of citizens to vote shall not be abridged by gerrymandering, voter suppression, or electoral systems that deny proportional representation. The electoral college shall be abolished and replaced with a national popular vote."
-
Ends Electoral College by constitutional mandate
-
Strengthens direct democracy and proportional vote representation
Section 1305. Amendment IV – Supreme Court Term Limits and Ethical Standards
"No Justice of the Supreme Court shall serve more than twenty years. All federal judges shall be subject to binding codes of ethics and congressional oversight."
-
Reinforces Title X judicial ethics reform
-
Limits concentrated judicial power
Section 1306. Amendment V – Separation of Religion and State Policy
"No policy, program, or law of the United States shall be imposed or interpreted based on religious doctrine. Government funds shall not be allocated to enforce religious-based mandates in public institutions."
-
Protects reproductive rights, LGBTQ+ rights, and secular education
-
Prevents Project 2025-style theocratic overreach
Section 1307. Ratification and State Mobilization Plan
-
A Constitutional Convention may be convened under Article V if two-thirds of states agree
-
Alternatively, Congress may refer these amendments to the states for ratification by three-fourths of state legislatures
-
Creates a public campaign and national ballot movement to organize ratification pressure
End of Title XIII – Constitutional Amendments & People’s Protections Act
TITLE XIV – CIVIL LIBERTIES & BODILY AUTONOMY ACT
Section 1401. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To codify and protect civil liberties under federal law, including reproductive freedom, LGBTQ+ rights, and freedom from state-imposed religious mandates.
Authority drawn from:
-
14th Amendment (Equal Protection and Due Process)
-
1st Amendment (Freedom of Religion and Expression)
-
9th Amendment (Unenumerated Rights)
Section 1402. Federal Reproductive Freedom Guarantee
- Codifies Roe v. Wade protections as federal law
- Guarantees abortion access nationwide up to viability (with health exemptions afterward)
- Blocks state laws that impose bans, penalties, or barriers to access
- Creates federal clinic protection zones and privacy safeguards for patients and providers
Section 1403. LGBTQ+ Rights and Non-Discrimination Protections
-
Enshrines federal protection from discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, or expression
-
Bans conversion therapy in all federally funded programs
-
Requires equal access to gender-affirming healthcare under federal insurance programs
-
Bans “Don’t Say Gay”-style restrictions in public education and federal funding recipients
Section 1404. Prohibition on Religious-Based Policy Enforcement
- No federal, state, or local agency may use religious doctrine to deny public services, funding, or rights
- Prohibits faith-based overrides of civil law in public institutions, including hospitals and schools
- Establishes a DOJ Office of Religious Neutrality Enforcement to audit and intervene where violations occur
Section 1405. Bodily Autonomy Protections
-
Bans state or federal mandates requiring forced sterilization, conversion therapy, or denial of gender-affirming care
-
Requires consent-based medical policy in all federally regulated programs
Section 1406. Oversight and Public Redress
- Creates the Civil Rights and Autonomy Commission (CRAC) with investigatory and enforcement authority
- Annual public reporting on civil rights compliance across all 50 states
End of Title XIV – Civil Liberties & Bodily Autonomy Act
TITLE XV – BROADBAND ACCESS & DIGITAL JUSTICE ACT
Section 1501. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To declare high-speed internet access a public utility and civil right, and to expand broadband infrastructure, affordability, and public digital sovereignty in all communities.
Authority drawn from:
- Article I, Section 8 (Commerce Clause and Postal Roads Clause)
- 14th Amendment (Equal Protection in public services)
- Communications Act of 1934 and Telecommunications Act of 1996
Section 1502. Declaration of Broadband as a Public Utility
- Classifies broadband internet as an essential public utility under federal law
- Requires internet providers to meet accessibility, affordability, and nondiscrimination standards
- Enforces universal service obligations in rural, tribal, and urban underserved areas
Section 1503. Public Broadband Infrastructure and Ownership
- Establishes $250 billion in federal investment over 10 years to build public or cooperative broadband networks
- Prioritizes municipal, tribal, and nonprofit community networks
- Provides direct grants to local governments to deploy and manage their own internet infrastructure
Section 1504. Affordability and Net Neutrality Requirements
- Caps monthly broadband bills at $30/month for households earning under $75K/year
- Restores and codifies net neutrality under federal law
- Requires clear billing and cost transparency for all digital services
Section 1505. Digital Inclusion and Access Programs
-
Creates the Digital Equity Access Grant (DEAG) for seniors, rural residents, and low-income families
-
Requires digital literacy and job training programs in partnership with public schools and libraries
-
Distributes free mobile hotspots and laptops for qualifying households
Section 1506. Enforcement and Oversight
- Creates the Office of Digital Equity and Access (ODEA) under the Department of Commerce
- Annual reporting of national broadband coverage, affordability, and ownership metrics
End of Title XV – Broadband Access & Digital Justice Act
TITLE XVI – INSURANCE REFORM & HOUSING COST PROTECTIONS ACT
Section 1601. Purpose and Legislative Authority
To protect Americans from predatory insurance rate increases, climate-driven property risk discrimination, and runaway property taxes that undermine housing security.
Authority drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (Commerce Clause)
-
14th Amendment (Equal Protection)
-
McCarran-Ferguson Act (federal-state insurance regulatory power)
Section 1602. Federal Insurance Premium Cap
-
Caps annual premium increases for residential insurance at 5% per year unless justified by audited loss data
-
Applies to homeowners, renters, flood, and wildfire insurance under state and federal providers
-
Requires public justification for regional surcharges or climate risk assessments
Section 1603. National Risk Pool and Reinsurance Fund
-
Creates a Federal Property Resilience Pool (FPRP) to stabilize rates in high-risk regions
-
Offers federally subsidized reinsurance to help private insurers avoid withdrawals from climate-vulnerable markets
-
Prevents insurer abandonment of ADOS, tribal, and low-income zones
Section 1604. Property Tax Stabilization and Equity Clause
-
Caps local property tax increases at the lesser of 3% or inflation unless approved by direct voter referendum
-
Requires “property tax hardship exemption” for homeowners earning under 200% of the poverty line
-
Creates a national homestead exemption for elderly and ADOS reparations recipients
Section 1605. Enforcement and Oversight
-
Creates the Office of Housing Cost Equity (OHCE) under HUD
-
Investigates regional disparities in insurance and taxation
-
Provides public grievance pathways and enforcement audits
End of Title XVI – Insurance Reform & Housing Cost Protections Act
TITLE XVII – IMMIGRATION JUSTICE & DACA PROTECTIONS ACT
Section 1701. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To secure humane, lawful, and equitable immigration protections, create a pathway to citizenship for long-term residents and DACA recipients, and prevent extremist anti-immigrant policies under future administrations.
Authority drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (Naturalization and Immigration Law)
-
14th Amendment (Equal Protection and Due Process)
-
International human rights obligations
Section 1702. DACA, DREAMer, and TPS Citizenship Pathway
-
Grants legal permanent residency and a pathway to citizenship for:
-
All DACA recipients
-
DREAMers who entered the U.S. before age 18
-
TPS (Temporary Protected Status) holders with 5+ years of U.S. residence
-
-
Includes eligibility for UBI, healthcare, and education under Titles I–III
-
Protects from deportation, exclusion from federal programs, or family separation
Section 1703. Ban on Mass Deportation and Anti-Immigrant Raids
-
Prohibits use of federal funds for mass ICE raids or workplace enforcement operations not targeting violent crimes
-
Establishes judicial review protections before removal proceedings can occur
-
Prohibits military use in immigration enforcement
Section 1704. Border and Asylum Reform
-
Reinstates lawful asylum access at ports of entry
-
Bans family separations and child detention camps
-
Creates humanitarian border facilities with federal oversight
Section 1705. Ban on Citizenship Revocation and Birthright Erosion
-
Codifies birthright citizenship as protected under the 14th Amendment
-
Prohibits executive action or state-level laws attempting to restrict citizenship for U.S.-born children
Section 1706. Office of Immigrant Rights and Integration
-
Creates a federal Office of Citizenship and Human Rights under the DOJ
-
Provides legal aid, housing assistance, and job placement for eligible immigrant families
-
Funds community-based support networks
Section 1707. Oversight and Sunset Protection
-
Ensures all rights under this title cannot be suspended or overridden without Congressional supermajority
-
Annual public report on immigrant protections, abuses, and access to benefits
End of Title XVII – Immigration Justice & DACA Protections Act
TITLE XVIII – ANTI-MONOPOLY & CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY ACT
Section 1801. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To dismantle concentrated economic power, restore competitive markets, and protect the public from exploitative monopolies, price manipulation, and corporate abuses.
Authority drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (Commerce Clause)
-
Sherman Antitrust Act (1890), Clayton Act (1914), and Federal Trade Commission Act (1914)
Section 1802. Ban on Megamergers and Monopoly Expansion
-
Prohibits mergers and acquisitions that result in any company holding more than 15% of national market share in critical sectors (food, media, energy, housing, pharmaceuticals, healthcare, technology)
-
Establishes automatic DOJ and FTC review for any proposed merger valued over $5 billion
-
Requires community impact assessments and public hearings before approval
Section 1803. Corporate Breakup Authority
-
Grants DOJ authority to forcibly divest companies proven to engage in:
-
Market rigging
-
Algorithmic price-fixing
-
Data monopolization
-
Predatory acquisition of small competitors
-
-
Creates special division within FTC for Tech, Pharma, and Food monopoly enforcement
Section 1804. Public Option Alternatives
-
Creates publicly owned alternatives to private monopolies in key sectors:
-
Public grocery cooperatives
-
National public generic drug manufacturer
-
Digital marketplace cooperatives
-
-
Ensures these public services are not privatized or captured by lobbying interests
Section 1805. Labor and Consumer Equity Requirements
-
Requires large corporations (250+ employees or $1B in revenue) to:
-
Include worker representation on boards
-
Share profits through annual employee dividend programs
-
Cap CEO pay at no more than 50x median worker salary in publicly traded firms
-
Section 1806. Corporate Charter Revocation and Criminal Liability
-
Allows federal charter revocation for companies committing repeated labor, environmental, or tax crimes
-
Establishes personal criminal liability for executives overseeing fraud, wage theft, or rights violations
Section 1807. Oversight and Enforcement
-
Establishes the National Anti-Monopoly Bureau (NAMB)
-
Annual public report on industry concentration, enforcement actions, and lobbying influence
-
Whistleblower protections and financial rewards for disclosures leading to enforcement
End of Title XVIII – Anti-Monopoly & Corporate Accountability Act
TITLE XIX – POLITICAL INTEGRITY & FOREIGN INFLUENCE BAN ACT
Section 1901. Purpose and Authority
To eliminate corruption, restore public trust in government, and prevent undue influence from corporate, foreign, or private actors over elected officials.
Authority drawn from:
-
First Amendment (Freedom of Speech & Petition, balanced with anti-corruption safeguards)
-
Article I, Section 4 (Regulation of Elections)
-
Federal Election Campaign Act
Section 1902. Lobbying & Corporate Access Restrictions
-
Imposes a 10-year ban on lobbying by former members of Congress or senior federal officials
-
Prohibits any federal agency appointee from working in industries they regulated within 5 years of leaving office
-
All lobbyist meetings with public officials must be:
-
Publicly logged within 24 hours
-
Livestreamed or recorded for public access
-
Section 1903. Foreign Agent Registration & PAC Reform
-
Prohibits foreign governments, corporations, and agents from:
-
Funding or sponsoring political ads, think tanks, or media outlets
-
Operating Super PACs or funneling money through proxies
-
-
All nonprofit organizations engaged in policy influence must disclose foreign funding
-
Bans dark money transfers between 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) orgs related to electioneering
Section 1904. AIPAC & Foreign Lobby Oversight Framework
-
All foreign-linked PACs, including AIPAC and equivalents, must:
-
Register under a new Foreign Political Influence Disclosure Registry
-
Submit quarterly financials, donor lists, and issue briefings
-
-
Prohibited from direct contact with elected officials during active legislative sessions
-
Violations subject to fines, disqualification from U.S. political activity, and potential asset seizure
Section 1905. Campaign Finance Public Option
-
Creates a Public Election Fund with opt-in public campaign financing
-
Candidates who accept public financing agree to:
-
Donation caps of $500 per person
-
No PAC or Super PAC contributions
-
-
Funded through a 0.1% Financial Transactions Tax (FTT) on Wall Street trades
End of Title XIX – Political Integrity & Foreign Influence Ban Act
-
TITLE XXI – COMMUNITY HEALING, EDUCATION & FOOD JUSTICE ACT
Section 2101. Teacher Pay and Professional Equity
-
Establishes a federal teacher salary floor of $60,000/year, adjusted for local cost of living
-
Provides federal subsidies to states and school districts to meet this baseline
-
Offers full loan forgiveness for public school teachers serving 5+ years
-
Annual classroom supply stipend of $1,000 per teacher
-
Paid trauma-informed training and mental health leave included in benefits
Section 2102. Parent Educator & ESA Expansion Program
-
Expands ESA funding to cover:
-
Homeschool technology and tutoring
-
Mental health services for students
-
Specialized and adaptive learning tools
-
-
Creates Parent Educator Grants of $5,000–$15,000 per year for:
-
Homeschoolers
-
Caregivers of children with disabilities
-
Faith-based and cultural education providers
-
-
Creates local Education Freedom Hubs with:
-
Wi-Fi, AI tutors, modular classrooms
-
Peer learning programs and caregiver support
-
Section 2103. School and Public Food Sovereignty Infrastructure
-
Requires all new federally funded schools and housing developments to include:
-
Community gardens
-
Edible landscaping
-
Fruit-bearing trees
-
-
Launches the National Orchard and Civic Garden Corps, creating jobs to:
-
Plant trees in food deserts
-
Build rooftop and vertical gardens
-
Maintain community food systems
-
-
Schools must incorporate garden-based education into science and health curricula
Section 2104. Community Healing, Student Wellness & Mandatory Mental Health Services
-
Requires every K–12 public school to offer:
-
On-site mental health professionals
-
Weekly mental wellness programming
-
Crisis prevention and trauma-informed therapy access
-
-
Funds:
-
In-school mental health staff in all Title I schools
-
Art, music, sound therapy, meditation, and yoga
-
Indigenous healing practices and culturally affirming therapy
-
-
Creates a DOE-HHS Healing Alliance to oversee trauma-informed school transformation
Section 2105. AI Curriculum Freedom and Decentralized Learning Hub
-
Establishes a federal AI-driven education platform, open to:
-
Homeschool families
-
ESA-funded students
-
Private, public, and charter school partners
-
-
Parents, districts, and TAC states may:
-
Upload and customize curricula, including church-centered or culturally specific content
-
Set filters based on values, content preferences, and age
-
-
Platform includes:
-
AI tutoring, adaptive testing, creator income system
-
Public review and transparency for educational content
-
-
Content creators can earn ESA-based payments via verified viewership, boosting education entrepreneurship
Section 2106. Universal Background Checks & Gun Safety in Schools
-
Requires universal background checks for all gun purchases nationwide
-
Prohibits gun sales to individuals with recent histories of violent crimes, domestic abuse, or mental health risk determinations by court order
-
Mandates secure gun storage at home for households with school-aged children
-
Schools must conduct annual safety audits and implement non-police crisis de-escalation training
Section 2107. Community Resource Officers in Public Schools
-
Every public school must have a trained Community Resource Officer (CRO) on campus during school hours
-
CROs shall be trained in:
-
Nonviolent conflict resolution
-
Trauma-informed de-escalation
-
Culturally responsive engagement
-
-
CROs may not arrest students for in-school disciplinary matters
-
Their role is to protect, mediate, and build community trust—not criminalize students
-
Schools must publish annual CRO performance and conduct reviews
-
End of Title XXI – Community Healing, Education & Food Justice Act
TITLE XXII – INDIGENOUS SOVEREIGNTY, LAND RETURN & TRIBAL NATIONS JUSTICE ACT
Section 2201. Purpose and Legal Authority
To recognize and restore Indigenous sovereignty, land rights, cultural protections, and equitable inclusion within federal policy systems, while respecting tribal governance as sovereign and independent.
Authority drawn from:
-
U.S. Constitution: Article I, Section 8 (Tribal commerce)
-
Treaties ratified by the United States with Tribal Nations
-
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)
-
14th Amendment (equal protection)
Section 2202. Recognition of Sovereignty and Self-Governance
-
Reaffirms that all federally recognized Tribal Nations are sovereign governments
-
Prohibits state interference in tribal governance, jurisdiction, or elections
-
Grants tribal governments full participation in all applicable sections of the 99% Revolution Act
Section 2203. Land Return, Access, and Protection
-
Establishes a Federal Indigenous Land Restoration Commission to:
-
Identify stolen, misallocated, or underutilized federal lands
-
Facilitate return or shared stewardship with Tribal Nations
-
-
Creates a National Indigenous Land Trust to:
-
Expand communal land ownership
-
Fund sustainable housing, farming, and water projects
-
-
Tribal communities shall have right of first refusal in federal land auctions within 100 miles of their ancestral territory
Section 2204. Cultural Protection and Language Revitalization
-
Funds the preservation of Indigenous languages, oral histories, and sacred traditions
-
Bans desecration or commercial development on sacred sites
-
Creates an Indigenous Cultural Media Grant to fund:
-
Podcasts, films, digital archives, and AI-enhanced language tools
-
Section 2205. Healthcare, Infrastructure, and Economic Equity
-
Fully funds Indian Health Service to parity with federal per-patient spending
-
Includes Tribal Nations in:
-
Public banking and UBI programs
-
Broadband justice (Title XV)
-
Housing sovereignty, energy credits, and job guarantees
-
Section 2206. Tribal Inclusion in AI, Education, and Environmental Titles
-
Reserves funding for:
-
Indigenous-led curriculum in AI learning hubs (Title III/XXI)
-
Tribal climate resilience under Green Economy Act (Title VIII)
-
Community gardens, water rights, and food sovereignty projects (Title XXI)
-
-
Grants sovereign right to opt into or out of federal education content hosted on the AI platform
Section 2207. Oversight and Enforcement
-
Creates the Office of Tribal Equity and Treaty Enforcement within the DOJ
-
Requires annual reports to Congress from Tribal leaders and Indigenous civil society
End of Title XXII – Indigenous Sovereignty, Land Return & Tribal Nations Justice Act
TITLE XXIII – YOUTH JUSTICE & FAMILY PROTECTION ACT
Section 2301. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To protect children and families from systemic harm, abuse, and political weaponization by reforming juvenile justice, foster care, and parental rights systems under constitutional and human rights standards.
Authority drawn from:
-
14th Amendment (Due Process and Equal Protection)
-
1st Amendment (Freedom of Religion and Association)
-
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (guidance standard)
-
Federal Family First Prevention Services Act (framework)
Section 2302. Parental Rights and Child Protection Balance
-
Affirms that parents have a fundamental right to guide their child’s upbringing, education, and healthcare
-
Blocks state agencies from removing children based on:
-
Homeschooling
-
Religious upbringing
-
Poverty alone
-
-
Requires court review and evidence before child removal
Section 2303. Foster Care Reform and Prevention
-
Funds family preservation programs to avoid unnecessary foster placements
-
Establishes the Community Kinship Grant Program:
-
Pays relatives and close friends to care for children instead of state placement
-
-
Requires states to prioritize cultural, spiritual, and sibling continuity
Section 2304. Juvenile Justice and Incarceration Reform
-
Bans incarceration of children under 13 for nonviolent offenses
-
Requires restorative justice and trauma-informed alternatives for all minors
-
Ends private juvenile detention contracts federally
Section 2305. Protection from Political and Ideological Targeting
-
Prohibits state and federal agencies from:
-
Using child services to punish political, faith-based, or cultural beliefs
-
Profiling families based on race, immigration status, gender identity, or religion
-
-
Creates legal pathway for families to sue for wrongful removal and state retaliation
Section 2306. Office of Family Justice and Youth Rights
-
Establishes a new federal Office within HHS and DOJ
-
Provides oversight, technical assistance, and legal advocacy grants
-
Funds public defenders and guardians ad litem in all child welfare and juvenile proceedings
End of Title XXIII – Youth Justice & Family Protection Act
TITLE XXIII – YOUTH JUSTICE & FAMILY PROTECTION ACT
Section 2301. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To protect children and families from systemic harm, abuse, and political weaponization by reforming juvenile justice, foster care, and parental rights systems under constitutional and human rights standards.
Authority drawn from:
-
14th Amendment (Due Process and Equal Protection)
-
1st Amendment (Freedom of Religion and Association)
-
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (guidance standard)
-
Federal Family First Prevention Services Act (framework)
Section 2302. Parental Rights and Child Protection Balance
-
Affirms that parents have a fundamental right to guide their child’s upbringing, education, and healthcare
-
Blocks state agencies from removing children based on:
-
Homeschooling
-
Religious upbringing
-
Poverty alone
-
-
Requires court review and evidence before child removal
Section 2303. Foster Care Reform and Prevention
-
Funds family preservation programs to avoid unnecessary foster placements
-
Establishes the Community Kinship Grant Program:
-
Pays relatives and close friends to care for children instead of state placement
-
-
Requires states to prioritize cultural, spiritual, and sibling continuity
Section 2304. Juvenile Justice and Incarceration Reform
-
Bans incarceration of children under 13 for nonviolent offenses
-
Requires restorative justice and trauma-informed alternatives for all minors
-
Ends private juvenile detention contracts federally
Section 2305. Protection from Political and Ideological Targeting
-
Prohibits state and federal agencies from:
-
Using child services to punish political, faith-based, or cultural beliefs
-
Profiling families based on race, immigration status, gender identity, or religion
-
-
Creates legal pathway for families to sue for wrongful removal and state retaliation
Section 2306. Office of Family Justice and Youth Rights
-
Establishes a new federal Office within HHS and DOJ
-
Provides oversight, technical assistance, and legal advocacy grants
-
Funds public defenders and guardian's ad litem in all child welfare and juvenile proceedings
End of Title XXIII – Youth Justice & Family Protection Act
TITLE XXIV – WORKPLACE JUSTICE & LABOR RIGHTS ACT
Section 2401. Purpose and Legal Authority
To guarantee the rights of all workers to organize, bargain collectively, receive fair wages, and work in safe and just conditions—while dismantling exploitative practices and restoring labor power.
Authority drawn from:
-
National Labor Relations Act (1935)
-
Fair Labor Standards Act (1938)
-
13th Amendment (prohibits involuntary servitude)
-
14th Amendment (Equal Protection Clause)
Section 2402. Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Expansion
- Codifies union protections for all workers, including:
- Gig economy, domestic, farm, and formerly excluded workers
- Requires employers to recognize unions after a majority card check
- Bans employer interference, intimidation, and delay tactics
Section 2403. Repeal of “Right to Work” Laws and Forced Arbitration
-
Repeals all federal support for “Right to Work” statutes
-
Prohibits forced arbitration in labor, harassment, discrimination, and wage theft cases
-
Ensures workers have the right to take grievances to court
Section 2404. National Living Wage and Compensation Floor
- Establishes a federal living wage pegged to inflation and regional cost of living (starting at $20/hour)
- Annual COLA increases tied to economic growth
- Requires minimum 12 weeks paid family and medical leave
- Sets minimum wage for tipped workers at 100% of federal floor
Section 2405. Worker Ownership, Co-Ops, and Profit-Sharing Incentives
-
Launches a federal Co-Op and Worker Ownership Grant Program
-
Requires large federal contractors to offer employee equity or profit-sharing
-
Provides tax incentives for businesses transitioning to cooperative models
Section 2406. Whistleblower, Retaliation, and Blacklisting Protections
- Expands whistleblower protections in all sectors
- Criminalizes employer retaliation and unlawful blacklisting
- Creates a national public registry of labor law violations by company
Section 2407. Office of Worker Power and Labor Equity
-
Establishes an interagency task force under the Department of Labor
-
Monitors employer compliance, union busting, and retaliation trends
-
Produces an annual “State of the American Worker” public report
End of Title XXIV – Workplace Justice & Labor Rights Act
TITLE II – UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE & CAREGIVER ACCESS ACT
Section 201. National Health Coverage Guarantee
-
Establishes a universal, single-payer healthcare system covering:
-
Primary care, vision, dental, mental health, prescriptions, surgeries, maternal care
-
Long-term care, physical therapy, rehabilitation, chronic illness
-
-
No copays, premiums, or deductibles
-
Includes undocumented, unhoused, formerly incarcerated, and gig workers
Section 202. Prescription & Medical Sovereignty Provisions
-
Requires domestic production or secure national contracts for:
-
Insulin
-
Vaccines
-
PPE
-
Essential generics and antibiotics
-
-
Creates a Federal Biomedical Manufacturing Trust (FBMT) to:
-
Oversee public production of high-demand medications
-
Prevent price gouging, shortages, and foreign dependency
-
-
Includes national stockpiling and public pharmacy distribution network
Section 203. Mental Health and Trauma Care Expansion
-
Guarantees mental healthcare as a core benefit
-
Funds:
-
Community therapy clinics
-
Indigenous and spiritual healing
-
Trauma-informed inpatient and outpatient programs
-
-
Launches the National Healing Initiative to destigmatize care access
Section 204. Elder & Disability Health and Caregiver Access
-
Guarantees in-home caregiving, medical transportation, and daily living support
-
Provides $24/hour minimum caregiver wage and federal caregiver registry
-
Expands disability-responsive diagnostic care and mobile services
Section 205. Medical Debt Abolition & Financial Protection
-
Erases all existing medical debt for U.S. residents
-
Prohibits future medical debt collection or credit scoring based on health
-
Refunds all interest payments collected by hospitals since 2005
Section 206. Healthcare Workforce Expansion and Training Grants
-
Pays full tuition for medical students committing to 5+ years in public health
-
Funds school nurse programs, EMT development, and rural healthcare housing
-
Offers loan forgiveness and relocation bonuses for providers in shortage zones
**End of Title II – Universal Healthcare & Car
TITLE XXVI – ELDER CARE, DISABILITY JUSTICE & DIGNITY ACT
Section 2601. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To ensure the full dignity, independence, and inclusion of older adults and people with disabilities through expanded access to healthcare, income, housing, and supportive services.
Authority drawn from:
-
14th Amendment (Equal Protection and Due Process)
-
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
-
Older Americans Act (OAA)
-
Social Security Act
Section 2602. Home and Community-Based Services Expansion
-
Guarantees access to Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) for all eligible seniors and disabled individuals
-
Ends waitlists and coverage caps on personal care, in-home supports, and mobility services
-
Funds living wages for caregivers and support workers
Section 2603. Long-Term Care Reform and Oversight
-
Launches the National Long-Term Care Inspection Authority
-
Enforces safe staffing, abuse prevention, and patient rights in nursing homes
-
-
Provides federal grants for community-owned elder care cooperatives
Section 2604. Housing, Accessibility, and Independent Living
-
Funds retrofitting of public and private housing to meet ADA standards
-
Establishes Universal Design Grant Program for inclusive housing development
-
Expands support for independent and assisted living models
Section 2605. Financial Security and Dignity Income Protections
-
Guarantees that all elder and disability-related payments:
-
Are not counted against UBI, reparations, or other benefits
-
Are inflation-adjusted and protected from garnishment
-
-
Creates a Dignity Pension Floor of at least $2,000/month for seniors and disabled adults without sufficient Social Security earnings
-
Allows gold-backed Treasury bonds and public trust dividends to support elder benefits
Section 2606. Disability Rights and Inclusion in All Federal Programs
-
Requires disability access, ASL/visual tools, and universal design across all 99% Act programs
-
Funds disability-owned small businesses, creators, and innovation grants
-
Supports autonomous mobility, sensory support, and smart-home accessibility technologies
Section 2607. Office of Elder and Disability Justice
-
Creates a new Office under HHS and SSA
-
Manages coordination of elder care, HCBS, and disability services
-
Publishes annual “Dignity Report” on care outcomes, abuse rates, and accessibility progress
End of Title XXVI – Elder Care, Disability Justice & Dignity Act
TITLE XXVII – EMERGENCY CLIMATE RESILIENCE & DISASTER PREPAREDNESS ACT
Section 2701. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To prepare for, prevent, and respond to the accelerating impacts of climate change—including extreme heat, wildfires, flooding, drought, and storms—through community-based, science-driven, and justice-centered national preparedness efforts.
Authority drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (General Welfare & Natural Disaster Authority)
-
Stafford Act
-
National Emergencies Act
-
Article IV (Protection of States from Invasion or Domestic Violence)
Section 2702. National Climate Resilience Corps
-
Launches a 250,000-person paid federal corps for:
-
Wildfire mitigation
-
Coastal restoration and flood prevention
-
Urban heat island cooling
-
Clean water defense and drought adaptation
-
-
Prioritizes hiring from frontline, low-income, and tribal communities
Section 2703. Emergency Infrastructure Hardening
-
Requires all federally funded infrastructure projects to meet climate-resilient standards
-
Funds community shelters, air filtration hubs, and underground power systems in disaster-prone areas
-
Includes green retrofits for schools, hospitals, and public buildings
Section 2704. Local & Tribal Climate Preparedness Grants
-
Creates $100B federal grant pool for state, local, and tribal governments to:
-
Update evacuation systems
-
Invest in food and fuel reserves
-
Design emergency housing pods and mobile care centers
-
Section 2705. National Disaster Equity & Response Framework
-
Requires FEMA to establish a Disaster Equity Scorecard
-
Tracks who receives aid, how fast, and where disparities exist
-
-
Prioritizes pre-disaster funding for vulnerable populations and climate migrants
-
Bans disaster profiteering and contractor price-gouging
Section 2706. Oversight and Enforcement
-
Creates the Office of Climate Resilience and Emergency Justice (OCREJ) under FEMA and DOE
-
Annual public reporting on regional risk levels, spending equity, and infrastructure readiness
End of Title XXVII – Emergency Climate Resilience & Disaster Preparedness Act
TITLE XXVIII – NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE REBUILD & PUBLIC WORKS ACT
Section 2801. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To modernize America’s infrastructure through a publicly led, equity-driven, and climate-resilient investment strategy that rebuilds roads, bridges, water systems, and mass transit for the 21st century.
Authority drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (Commerce Clause and Spending Power)
-
Federal Aid Highway Act
-
Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act
Section 2802. National Infrastructure Audit and Public Mapping
-
Launches a Federal Infrastructure Transparency Portal for:
-
Real-time data on project locations, costs, delays, and contractors
-
Public tracking of equity benchmarks and environmental compliance
-
-
Conducts a nationwide audit of:
-
Roads, rail, bridges, tunnels, ports
-
Sewage, lead pipes, drinking water, electrical grids
-
Section 2803. Labor-Led Public Works Investment Program
-
Creates 5 million new union jobs via federally funded projects in:
-
Mass transit expansion
-
Bridge and tunnel rebuilds
-
EV charging and smart-grid deployment
-
Clean water pipe replacement (no lead by 2035)
-
-
Requires 40% of all contracts to be awarded to:
-
Minority-owned businesses
-
Tribal contractors
-
Worker cooperatives or employee-owned firms
-
Section 2804. Green Building and Resilient Design Standards
-
All new or retrofitted public infrastructure must:
-
Meet net-zero energy standards
-
Use recycled or locally sourced materials where possible
-
Include heat, flood, and drought protections
-
Section 2805. Transit, Broadband, and Rural Equity
-
Expands high-speed rail and zero-emission bus fleets
-
Builds rural broadband highways and digital access hubs
-
Funds walkable and bikeable city redesigns, prioritizing mobility justice
Section 2806. Public Oversight and Corruption Safeguards
-
Creates the National Infrastructure Ethics Office under the Department of Transportation
-
Bans corporate price-gouging, bid rigging, and no-bid contract monopolies
-
Whistleblower protections for fraud exposure
End of Title XXVIII – National Infrastructure Rebuild & Public Works Act
TITLE XXIX – NATIONAL SECURITY, CIVIL DEFENSE & MILITARY INTEGRITY ACT
Section 2901. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To protect national sovereignty, ensure transparent military governance, and guarantee both federal and regional security for all states, including the TAC regional autonomy compact.
Authority drawn from:
-
Article I, Section 8 (War Powers)
-
Second Amendment
-
Article IV, Section 4 (Republican form of government and protection from invasion)
Section 2902. National Defense Integrity Standards
-
Requires full financial transparency of:
-
Pentagon contracts over $10 million
-
Military aid to foreign nations
-
-
Bans private military contractors from engaging in combat or policing within U.S. borders
-
Mandates active-duty military remain apolitical and subject to congressional oversight
Section 2903. Service Member & Veteran Protections
-
Full VA reform: same-day mental health, housing guarantees, and tuition coverage
-
Creates a Universal GI Bill usable in any U.S. or TAC state system
-
Mandates suicide prevention, MST survivor justice, and guaranteed housing upon return
Section 2904. National Guard & Disaster Readiness Modernization
-
Modernizes National Guard equipment across all 50 states and U.S. territories
-
Allows states to retain command of their Guard units unless federalized during war
-
Prioritizes rapid deployment training for floods, fires, hurricanes, cyberattacks
Section 2905. TAC Civil Defense Funding Pool
-
Establishes a TAC Civil Defense Funding Pool funded from:
-
Reallocated federal defense apportionments
-
Revenue from federal disaster insurance systems
-
-
TAC states may use funds for:
-
National Guard salaries, equipment, border operations
-
Emergency shelters, faith-based disaster response, and civil preparedness drills
-
Regional defense infrastructure or sovereign supply chains
-
-
Administered by a TAC Regional Defense Council, elected by the 9 TAC legislatures
-
TAC states retain the right to reject federal defense mandates unrelated to direct threats
Section 2910. Military Family Protections Within TAC States
-
Federal military bases and installations shall retain full authority over:
-
Medical services, privacy rights, and civil liberties of service members and their families
-
Access to reproductive care, gender-affirming care, and other federally protected benefits
-
-
TAC states shall not:
-
Restrict military families from traveling out of state for medical services
-
Criminalize or surveil military dependents for receiving care outside TAC jurisdictions
-
-
Creates a Military Reassignment Freedom Clause, allowing:
-
Active-duty members or families facing moral or medical conflict with TAC laws to request reassignment without penalty
-
-
All federal personnel retain Constitutional rights under the Supremacy Clause while stationed in TAC territory
End of Title XXIX – National Security, Civil Defense & Military Integrity Act
TITLE XXX – PEOPLE’S MANDATE ENFORCEMENT & IMPLEMENTATION CLAUSE
Section 3001. Purpose and Authority of the People’s Mandate
To assert the collective, constitutional will of the American people in demanding full implementation of the 99% Revolution Act—regardless of political party control—by invoking our First Amendment right to petition for redress of grievances and the constitutional right to representative government.
This section affirms that:
-
The People are the highest governing body in a constitutional republic
-
Congress is obligated to act upon the will of the governed
-
No future administration may override this mandate without direct consent from the People through a national referendum
Section 3002. Ratification and Constitutional Pathway
-
This Act shall be enacted through:
-
Simple majority passage in the House of Representatives and Senate
-
Ratification by 38 states for any constitutional amendments included
-
Activation of emergency legal pathways through Article V, the Public Trust Doctrine, and judicial standing for citizen enforcement
-
-
Provides legal framework for:
-
Citizen-led lawsuits to compel implementation
-
Injunctive relief against noncompliant agencies or states
-
Section 3003. Anti-Obstruction Clause
-
Declares any federal, state, or corporate attempt to sabotage, defund, or block implementation of this Act to be a violation of constitutional democracy
-
Grants standing to grassroots organizations and citizen coalitions to file suit or seek injunctions
Section 3004. Binding Across Administrations
-
All future Presidents, Cabinet members, and Congress members shall:
-
Swear an oath to uphold this Act once ratified
-
Be subject to constitutional challenge and removal if they intentionally defy its mandates
-
-
Prevents repeal of core provisions without:
-
A national referendum
-
Two-thirds vote in both Houses of Congress
-
Approval by at least 34 state legislatures
-
Section 3005. Emergency Implementation & Oversight Authority
-
Creates a People’s Mandate Oversight Commission (PMOC) empowered to:
-
Monitor rollouts, timelines, and compliance
-
Publish public scorecards and performance audits
-
Refer violations to the DOJ, Courts, or Civil Rights Division
-
-
Composed of citizen delegates, legal scholars, and state-level community representatives
Section 3006. Civic Education and Mandate Awareness Campaign
-
Mandates national public education campaign on:
-
The 99% Revolution Act
-
Citizens’ constitutional rights and implementation tools
-
-
All public schools and institutions shall teach the constitutional pathway to legislative change and public power
End of Title XXX – People’s Mandate Enforcement & Implementation Clause
TITLE XXXI – NATIONAL GUN SAFETY, SECOND AMENDMENT RIGHTS & COMMUNITY PROTECTION ACT
Section 3101. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To protect public safety and constitutional liberty by enacting common-sense, widely supported gun safety measures that reduce firearm-related deaths while preserving lawful gun ownership rights.
Authority drawn from:
-
Second Amendment (right to bear arms)
-
Commerce Clause (interstate regulation of firearms)
-
Public Safety powers under Article I, Section 8
Section 3102. Universal Background Checks and National Waiting Period
-
Requires universal background checks for all firearm purchases, including:
-
Gun shows, private sales, online transactions
-
-
Creates a mandatory 72-hour waiting period for all first-time firearm purchases
-
Requires verification through a centralized federal database
Section 3103. Safe Storage & Child Access Prevention
-
Mandates secure firearm storage in households with minors or vulnerable persons
-
Requires gun safes or locking devices on all home-stored weapons
-
Criminal penalties for negligent storage leading to child access or injury
Section 3104. Red Flag Laws with Due Process
-
Enables family members, law enforcement, or mental health providers to petition for temporary firearm removal for individuals posing a risk
-
Requires:
-
Judicial review within 24 hours
-
Full due process hearings within 10 days
-
-
Temporary orders expire unless renewed with new evidence
Section 3105. High-Risk Weapons Restrictions
-
Bans the sale, transfer, and import of:
-
High-capacity magazines (over 10 rounds)
-
Bump stocks and similar rapid-fire modifications
-
-
Limits sales of semi-automatic long guns to individuals over age 21 with certified safety training
Section 3106. Licensing, Training & Firearm Owner Accountability
-
Requires federal licensing for first-time firearm purchasers, including:
-
Safety training certification
-
Mental health screening acknowledgment
-
-
License must be renewed every 5 years with a refresher safety course
Section 3107. National Gun Theft, Trafficking & Black Market Registry
-
Establishes a DOJ-based National Firearm Trafficking & Stolen Gun Registry
-
Mandates reporting of:
-
Lost or stolen firearms within 48 hours
-
Firearm resales or gifting between private individuals
-
Section 3108. Community-Based Gun Violence Prevention & Buybacks
-
Creates grants for:
-
Gun violence intervention programs
-
Hospital-based trauma reduction teams
-
Youth disarmament and conflict mediation programs
-
-
Launches a voluntary federal buyback and no-penalty amnesty program for unregistered weapons
Section 3109. Second Amendment Integrity and Public Trust Provisions
-
Affirms lawful gun ownership for:
-
Home defense
-
Hunting, sport, and collection
-
-
Establishes the Firearm Rights & Responsibility Council (FRRC):
-
Tracks misuse trends and gun safety outcomes
-
Recommends annual data-driven reforms
-
End of Title XXXI – National Gun Safety, Second Amendment Rights & Community Protection Act
TITLE XXXII – CORPORATE DEMOCRACY & ANTI-MONOPOLY ACT
Section 3201. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To end monopolistic control over critical sectors of the economy, restore competition, and ensure democratic governance within corporate structures where public interest is at stake.
Authority drawn from:
-
Sherman Antitrust Act
-
Clayton Act
-
Article I, Section 8 (Regulation of Commerce)
-
Public Utility Doctrine
Section 3202. Breakup of Monopolies in Essential Sectors
-
Directs the Department of Justice and FTC to break up corporate monopolies in:
-
Technology (social media, e-commerce platforms)
-
Energy and utilities
-
Healthcare and pharmaceuticals
-
Media conglomerates
-
-
No single corporation may control:
-
More than 25% of national market share in any essential sector
-
Public communication infrastructure or social platforms used by 100+ million users
-
Section 3203. Worker Co-Governance and Board Representation
-
Mandates worker-elected board representation in any corporation with:
-
1,000+ employees
-
Over $1 billion in annual revenue
-
-
At least 1/3 of corporate boards must include:
-
Workers
-
Union representatives (where applicable)
-
Community stakeholders in regulated sectors
-
Section 3204. Public Oversight of Critical Digital Platforms
-
Classifies large digital platforms (search engines, social media, e-commerce) as public utilities subject to:
-
Public interest obligations
-
User data protections
-
Algorithmic transparency and neutrality standards
-
-
Establishes a Digital Platform Oversight Authority (DPOA) to:
-
Audit algorithms for bias and manipulation
-
Enforce fair competition rules and anti-censorship safeguards
-
Section 3205. Public Ownership Threshold & Buyout Option
-
Grants Congress authority to:
-
Convert corporations exceeding 60% dependency on federal contracts or infrastructure into public-benefit entities
-
Facilitate democratic public buyouts of strategic industries if markets fail to meet national interest or price fairness
-
Section 3206. Anti-Collusion & Competitive Fairness Provisions
-
Prohibits coordinated pricing schemes, wage suppression agreements, and predatory buyouts
-
Expands whistleblower protections and rewards in anti-monopoly investigations
-
Automatic injunctions for merger attempts between top 5 market competitors in any regulated sector
End of Title XXXII – Corporate Democracy & Anti-Monopoly Act
TITLE XXXII – CORPORATE DEMOCRACY & ANTI-MONOPOLY ACT
Section 3201. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To end monopolistic control over critical sectors of the economy, restore competition, and ensure democratic governance within corporate structures where public interest is at stake.
Authority drawn from:
-
Sherman Antitrust Act
-
Clayton Act
-
Article I, Section 8 (Regulation of Commerce)
-
Public Utility Doctrine
Section 3202. Breakup of Monopolies in Essential Sectors
-
Directs the Department of Justice and FTC to break up corporate monopolies in:
-
Technology (social media, e-commerce platforms)
-
Energy and utilities
-
Healthcare and pharmaceuticals
-
Media conglomerates
-
-
No single corporation may control:
-
More than 25% of national market share in any essential sector
-
Public communication infrastructure or social platforms used by 100+ million users
-
Section 3203. Worker Co-Governance and Board Representation
-
Mandates worker-elected board representation in any corporation with:
-
1,000+ employees
-
Over $1 billion in annual revenue
-
-
At least 1/3 of corporate boards must include:
-
Workers
-
Union representatives (where applicable)
-
Community stakeholders in regulated sectors
-
Section 3204. Public Oversight of Critical Digital Platforms
-
Classifies large digital platforms (search engines, social media, e-commerce) as public utilities subject to:
-
Public interest obligations
-
User data protections
-
Algorithmic transparency and neutrality standards
-
-
Establishes a Digital Platform Oversight Authority (DPOA) to:
-
Audit algorithms for bias and manipulation
-
Enforce fair competition rules and anti-censorship safeguards
-
Section 3205. Public Ownership Threshold & Buyout Option
-
Grants Congress authority to:
-
Convert corporations exceeding 60% dependency on federal contracts or infrastructure into public-benefit entities
-
Facilitate democratic public buyouts of strategic industries if markets fail to meet national interest or price fairness
-
Section 3206. Anti-Collusion & Competitive Fairness Provisions
-
Prohibits coordinated pricing schemes, wage suppression agreements, and predatory buyouts
-
Expands whistleblower protections and rewards in anti-monopoly investigations
-
Automatic injunctions for merger attempts between top 5 market competitors in any regulated sector
End of Title XXXII – Corporate Democracy & Anti-Monopoly Act
TITLE XXXIII – DIGITAL PRIVACY, DATA RIGHTS & PUBLIC AI INFRASTRUCTURE ACT
Section 3301. Purpose and Legal Authority
To secure public ownership of personal data, regulate artificial intelligence, and establish publicly accountable digital infrastructure that protects civil liberties, supports education, and advances technological sovereignty.
Drawn from:
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Fourth Amendment (right to privacy)
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Commerce Clause (digital markets regulation)
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Civil Rights Act (non-discrimination in algorithmic systems)
Section 3302. Public Data Ownership & Opt-In Consent Model
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Declares all personal data as the property of the individual by default
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Requires opt-in only consent for data collection, sale, or third-party transfer
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Users may revoke consent at any time and request full data deletion (“right to be forgotten”)
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Creates a national Public Data Rights Registry (PDRR) to enforce protections
Section 3303. AI Ethics, Bias Prevention & Algorithmic Justice
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Establishes a Federal Algorithmic Oversight Board (FAOB) to:
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Audit AI systems for racial, gender, and class bias
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Ban automated systems used for voter suppression, healthcare denial, or unlawful surveillance
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Requires that all AI tools used in education, employment, housing, or justice be:
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Transparent
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Auditable
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Human-reviewable
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Section 3304. Digital Public Infrastructure & Open AI Access
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Develops a federal open-source AI platform housed in the Department of Education
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Provides decentralized AI access for:
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Students and educators
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Public agencies
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Nonprofit and research partners
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Ensures all training data and outcomes are:
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Publicly logged
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Free of corporate monopoly control
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Section 3305. Ban on Biometric Surveillance and Facial Recognition
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Prohibits facial recognition tech in public spaces, schools, and federal housing
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Requires warrants for any use by federal or local law enforcement
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Prohibits federal funding for biometric surveillance systems
Section 3306. AI Revenue Sharing and Worker Displacement Protections
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Any federal or publicly subsidized AI system generating revenue must:
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Pay royalties into a Public Technology Dividend Fund
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Redistribute funds to UBI, teacher pay, and digital creator funds
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Creates a Displaced Worker Reskilling and Innovation Grant for individuals replaced by automation
End of Title XXXIII – Digital Privacy, Data Rights & Public AI Infrastructure Act
TITLE XXIX – NATIONAL SECURITY, CIVIL DEFENSE & MILITARY INTEGRITY ACT
Section 2901. Purpose and Constitutional Authority
To protect national sovereignty, ensure transparent military governance, and guarantee both federal and regional security for all states, including the TAC regional autonomy compact.
Authority drawn from:
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Article I, Section 8 (War Powers)
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Second Amendment
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Article IV, Section 4 (Republican form of government and protection from invasion)
Section 2902. National Defense Integrity Standards
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Requires full financial transparency of:
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Pentagon contracts over $10 million
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Military aid to foreign nations
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Bans private military contractors from engaging in combat or policing within U.S. borders
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Mandates active-duty military remain apolitical and subject to congressional oversight
Section 2903. Service Member & Veteran Protections
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Full VA reform: same-day mental health, housing guarantees, and tuition coverage
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Creates a Universal GI Bill usable in any U.S. or TAC state system
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Mandates suicide prevention, MST survivor justice, and guaranteed housing upon return
Section 2904. National Guard & Disaster Readiness Modernization
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Modernizes National Guard equipment across all 50 states and U.S. territories
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Allows states to retain command of their Guard units unless federalized during war
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Prioritizes rapid deployment training for floods, fires, hurricanes, cyberattacks
Section 2905. TAC Civil Defense Funding Pool
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Establishes a TAC Civil Defense Funding Pool funded from:
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Reallocated federal defense apportionments
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Revenue from federal disaster insurance systems
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TAC states may use funds for:
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National Guard salaries, equipment, border operations
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Emergency shelters, faith-based disaster response, and civil preparedness drills
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Regional defense infrastructure or sovereign supply chains
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Administered by a TAC Regional Defense Council, elected by the 9 TAC legislatures
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TAC states retain the right to reject federal defense mandates unrelated to direct threats
Section 2910. Military Family Protections Within TAC States
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Federal military bases and installations shall retain full authority over:
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Medical services, privacy rights, and civil liberties of service members and their families
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Access to reproductive care, gender-affirming care, and other federally protected benefits
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TAC states shall not:
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Restrict military families from traveling out of state for medical services
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Criminalize or surveil military dependents for receiving care outside TAC jurisdictions
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Creates a Military Reassignment Freedom Clause, allowing:
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Active-duty members or families facing moral or medical conflict with TAC laws to request reassignment without penalty
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All federal personnel retain Constitutional rights under the Supremacy Clause while stationed in TAC territory
End of Title XXIX – National Security, Civil Defense & Military Integrity Act
TITLE V – T.A.C. REGIONAL AUTONOMY COMPACT
Section 501. Purpose and Legal Framework
To establish a lawful, constitutional model for semi-autonomous governance of nine states aligned with traditional, faith-based, and conservative values, under the protection of the U.S. Constitution.
Legal authority:
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Article I, Section 10: Congressional approval of interstate compacts
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Article IV, Section 4: Guarantee of state sovereignty and republican government
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Precedent: Puerto Rico, District of Columbia Home Rule, Tribal Sovereignty Compacts
Section 502. Member States
The T.A.C. Compact shall initially consist of:
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Texas
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Florida
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Louisiana
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Oklahoma
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Arkansas
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Mississippi
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Tennessee
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Kentucky
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Alabama
Section 503. Governance & Legislative Autonomy
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TAC states may jointly adopt a shared TAC Charter defining internal law, economic policy, and cultural values
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Each state retains its legislature, courts, and law enforcement
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May create cross-state councils for defense, education, finance, or infrastructure
Section 504. Cultural and Moral Policy Freedom
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TAC states may enact:
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Religious-based public education standards
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Traditional marriage, gender, and reproductive policies
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Faith-based funding models
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Religious healthcare systems or exemptions from federal mandates
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Progressive federal mandates in these domains shall not apply within TAC boundaries
Section 505. Economic Sovereignty & Dual Currency Option
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TAC states may create and use a regional currency (TAC Note or gold-backed)
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Dual-currency model allows:
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U.S. Dollar for federal commerce and military operations
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TAC currency for local and state commerce, contracts, and pricing
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TAC states may form a TAC Central Bank to manage reserves, interest rates, and cross-border conversion
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States may opt out of public banking participation
Section 506. Free Interstate Trade & Commerce Protections
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No tariffs, import/export taxes, or interstate trade restrictions shall be permitted between TAC and other U.S. states
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Labeling, disclosure, and regulatory standards may differ by region but must not impede free trade
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Movement of goods, labor, and capital shall remain Constitutionally protected under the Commerce Clause
Section 507. Social Program Opt-Out Provisions
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TAC states may opt out of:
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Universal Basic Income
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Reparations frameworks
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Federal Green Transition programs
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AI royalties or digital licensing redistribution
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Federal healthcare mandates (may create religious healthcare systems)
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Residents may still participate in:
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Social Security and Medicare (unless withdrawn by vote)
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Veteran benefits, disaster aid, and federal defense programs
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Section 508. Civil Defense, Borders & Emergency Control
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TAC states will have access to a dedicated TAC Civil Defense Funding Pool
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Administered by the TAC Regional Defense Council, this pool funds:
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Border patrol, National Guard, disaster readiness
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Law enforcement modernization, emergency shelter systems
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Faith-based humanitarian response networks
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TAC states may reject unrelated federal mandates during non-military emergencies
Section 509. Judicial Sovereignty and Religious Business Rights
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TAC states may establish a TAC Court of Review as their highest state appellate authority
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U.S. Supreme Court appeals only apply to federal constitutional claims
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TAC states may enact legislation that:
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Defines marriage and gender identity by religious or moral code
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Protects parental rights over education, health, and identity issues
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Allows corporations to operate under faith-based or conscience-based charters
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Section 510. Military & Federal Personnel Protections
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All federal military bases and installations within TAC states remain under federal authority
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Military families stationed in TAC zones shall retain full access to:
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Reproductive, gender-affirming, and privacy-protected healthcare
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Freedom to travel across state lines for medical or personal reasons without interference
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TAC states may not:
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Criminalize military dependents for medical decisions made out-of-state
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Block reassignment requests based on moral or medical conflict
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These protections operate under the federal Supremacy Clause, and are mirrored in Title XXIX
Section 511. Non-Secession Guarantee
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TAC states remain part of the United States
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Residents retain all federal rights, citizenship, and travel privileges
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This Compact exists to preserve cultural sovereignty without initiating civil conflict or constitutional secession
Section 512. Mutual Aid, Reunification, and Non-Aggression Clause
(a) Reunification and Federal Re-entry
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Any TAC state may petition to rejoin the full U.S. federal structure by:
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Holding a majority statewide referendum
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Submitting the result to Congress for recognition
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Upon reentry:
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All suspended or opted-out federal benefits are fully restored
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No reparations or penalties are required
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Social programs resume at full eligibility within 12 months
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(b) Humanitarian & Disaster Aid Cooperation
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A mutual aid agreement between TAC and non-TAC states ensures cooperation during:
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Natural disasters (hurricanes, earthquakes, wildfires)
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Pandemics and public health emergencies
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Mass displacements or infrastructure collapse
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Aid shall be administered by a Nonpartisan Emergency Aid Council, with members from both zones
(c) Economic Recovery & Stabilization Support
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A Reconnection Stabilization Fund shall be created by Congress to:
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Provide interest-free loans to any TAC state experiencing severe economic failure or public service collapse
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Assist in modernization if a TAC state seeks voluntary reintegration
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Funds are managed under the Public Treasury Accountability Board, with full public oversight
(d) Civil Peace and Non-Aggression Covenant
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Both TAC and non-TAC states agree to a Non-Aggression Pact:
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No armed military mobilizations across compact boundaries
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No state-funded disinformation, sabotage, or insurgency in another region
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No cyberattacks or media warfare sponsored by state entities
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Disputes may be heard in the U.S. Supreme Court or mediated by a neutral federal ombudsman
(e) Cultural Respect and Open Travel
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Citizens of both regions may travel, visit, study, and engage in peaceful discourse without harassment
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No region may prohibit interstate movement except in a declared emergency with federal approval
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No coercion or economic punishment for cultural policies shall be allowed
End of Title V – T.A.C. Regional Autonomy Compact
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