The Book
The whole argument, end to end — the breakdown, the fix, and every objection a critic could throw at it, answered.
GET THE BOOKA citizen-proposed amendment — free to read
You found your way here — by accident, or on purpose. Either works. You don't need another list of everything that's gone sideways in America these last few decades; you've got your own, and it's probably accurate. The useful question isn't what's broken. It's why nothing you do about it ever seems to land.
Read the OverviewWelcome
The answer is simpler than it should be: the thing that's supposed to fix it is the thing that needs fixing.
Vote, petition, complain, file a comment, wait for the next election — every option you've been handed runs back through the same people you'd be trying to correct. You're handing the complaint to the people it's about, and then wondering why nothing changes.
So the question to ask yourself is simple: is the country actually getting better under the same people who've run it for as long as you can remember — or are we steaming toward an iceberg, somehow on land, which is even harder to explain.
The Amendment, in plain terms
The answer isn't a bigger boat — it's a way to change the crew, before we hit the damn thing. It's called the People's Reclamation Amendment.
A proposed amendment to the Constitution that does exactly one thing: it gives the people a peaceful, legal way to remove a federal government that's stopped working for them — and put a new one in its place. Not protest it. Not wait it out. Remove them, and replace them.
And before that starts to sound like chaos: it isn't. The people who actually run the country day to day — the ones keeping the planes apart, the checks going out, the lights on — they stay. It's the leadership that goes. The country doesn't stop. It changes management.
Disappointingly, for anyone hoping for torches and pitchforks: mostly you fill out paperwork. There's a process, there's a deliberately, almost rudely high bar, and there's a careful answer to every “but what about—” you're already forming. That's exactly what the rest of this is for. The amendment is here in full, free to read. The book makes the whole case and answers every objection. The maps lay the machine out in diagrams.
So before you go looking: read on and find out exactly how it works — or close it here and continue pretending the room isn't on fire and everything is fine.
“The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to restrain the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government.”
Where to go from here
Still here? Good — that's the answer that matters. The rest of this site is built for exactly that. There's no fine print and nothing to buy your way past; it's all just here.
If you want the whole argument, the book lays it out end to end — the breakdown, the fix, and every objection a critic could throw at it, answered. If you'd rather skip to the thing itself, the amendment is the full text, free, yours to read, cite, or pick apart. And if you just want to see how it all fits together, the maps lay the whole machine out in diagrams — also free to download, no strings. Here in a professional capacity? Press, an office, an organization — there's a door for that too.
No hurry. It keeps. And if you think there's something to it, tell a few people — because the folks it's aimed at certainly aren't going to.
The whole argument, end to end — the breakdown, the fix, and every objection a critic could throw at it, answered.
GET THE BOOKHere in a professional capacity? Press, an office, an organization — there's a door for that too.
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