Corporations aren't people.
But we talk about them like people.

The phrase "corporate greed' simplifies the situation in a way that glosses over the differences, and hides how they created and maintain political influence.

It makes their job easier.
And your life harder.

Because corporations are not people.
They're legal entities.

They don't have morals.
They have executives with a legal obligation to act in the best interest of the organization.

It's called fiduciary duty.
And public good doesn't factor into it.

They also have a mechanism of political leverage that businesses began strengthening over 50 years ago, and they apply it before real people ever cast their ballot.

It's campaign donations.

Now every industry in the United States has the ability to block policy that might hurt their bottom line.

And because on fiduciary duty, they're legallly obligated to use it.

This is why corporate interests have eclipsed the interests of citizens.

And it is why, after decades of donor-driven dysfunction that preserves solvable problems at our expense, while simultaneously funding the campaigns that turned Americans against one another, many citizens were willing to back a man that is working to tear it down.

The solution isn't difficult.
But corporations can't stop themselves.
And donor-backed politicians will never fix it.

Overturning Citizens United is a popular position to campaign on but is almost as unlikely as picking yourself up by your bootstraps.

It started as a joke.
Now it's just something people say.


Citizens must own the campaign arena.

Not Donors. Not Lobbyists. Not Elites. Not Billionaires. Not Corporations. Not Special interest. Not think tanks. Not consultants.

Living, breathing, flesh and bone, human citizens.

Every year billions and billions of dollars are funnel into the political process to leverage a few hundred candidates.

That's the bottle neck.

And it all goes to a wasteful and dreaded ritual of marketing materials nobody wants. Commercials, junk mail, yard signs, bumper stickers, canvassers, text messages, social media, and unwanted phone calls.

That's their leverage.

When 9,000,000 people take to the streets donors can shrug it off as, because that pressure, not leverage.

When the same group conducts a general strike, that's a mechanism to turn pressure into leverage. But donors have nuclear bunkers and we really on retail establishments for necessities and employment, so it would be hard on regular people, and easily absorbed by corporations as the cost of doing business.

But citizens don't want all of the bloated campaign materials anymore than we want to be represented by politicians who sell us out to pay for it. We've just been conditioned to accept it as part of the process.

So THAT is where
We The People
STRIKE.

Not a general strike that makes our lives harder too.

A precision strike at the mechanism of donor leverage.

When candidates start asking for YOUR vote, don't be too quick to give away. Make them work for it.

Citizens should have the power to say:

"If I give you my vote, who are you going to work for, me, your constituent? Or the donors that paid for your campaign?"

AND the tools to make them prove it.

That is what we're building. And it's just the start. Americans deserve to be represented by public servants who protect their interests with the same fiduciary duty as executives do for their shareholders.

It's easy. It's free.
And it will FEEL GREAT.

Project2029.vote is where we will be deploying this tools, with many more to come.

What starts as a precision strike paves the way for a campaign arena that YOU will own.

So when candidates run for office they can skip the bloated campaigns and bribery adjacent fundraising and instead go straight to you, the voter, to make their case.

But hey, if you'd rather have endless campaigning and puppet politicians, it's still a free country. For now.


If anywhere in the world should have a complaint department, it's the United States of America.

We launched a technological revolution that changed the entire trajectory of the human race, but we still don't have an appropriate place to register our grievances so they just end up on social media where they're used against us.

This is the another tool we're developing for you, and it's not just a suggestion box.

It's your own person drag-and-drop list where you can enter the things that bother you and prioritize them by importance.

Then we catalogue the input into a viewable aggregate creating a real-time, virtual to-do list to drive solutions, ensuring the future is optimized for humans, not shareholder value.

Though the model has been in development for some time, it will also be invaluable for mitigating job displacement from AI and robotics.

CLICK HERE TO TRY TO DEMO
VENT, RANT, RAGE!


This is just a brief introduction of
YOUR CIVIL NETWORK.

It's not a tech solution.

It's glue for the hundreds of millions of human being that call the United States home, and demand it that it finally lives up to the promise.

It's a new approach to how we view and address our problems as a people, inspired by, and in honor of, the spirit of this land.

Before the United States was even an idea, Turtle Island was home.

In 1751 Benjamin Franklin wrote was inspired by the democracy of the Haudenosaunee, and it's sophisticated system of checks and balances which had stood for over 600 years as the Great Law of Peace.

As the United States spread across this continent these stories became whispers.

The Heritage Foundation is a think tank.

Our Heritage is America.

Your Civil Network is the echo
from Turtle Island.

Power to the People.

All Rights Reserved. Corporations aren't People.