How do you actually coordinate a revolution?
Every revolution in history was a coordination problem, not a courage problem. The people always outnumbered the palace. What they lacked was a way to move at once.
Strip away the muskets and the barricades and revolutions require exactly three components. None of them is violence. Violence was only ever the costliest way to buy the third one.
A Schelling point
One legible document everyone can point to and say "that." Not a mood, not a grievance — a list. You are reading the draft of ours right now.
Common knowledge
Each person must know that everyone else knows, and knows they know. This is why revolutions happen in squares and why ours happens in the open — public drafts, public counts, public commitments.
A synchronized moment
Everyone must move on the same day. History's revolutionaries had to improvise this with blood. We inherit it on the calendar: November 3, 2026. November 7, 2028. November 2, 2032.
That's the whole trick. The United States pre-scheduled its own revolutions and then bet, for 250 years, that nobody would ever coordinate well enough to claim one on purpose. Movements get close every few decades, then dissolve into personalities. So the fix is structural: we're not electing a person, we're electing a to-do list. The platform hires the president. Not the other way around.
America250 — the 250th year — began July 4, 2026, four days before this page was first drafted. Consider this the country's quarter-millennium performance review, written by its shareholders.
The surge is coming. The only question is the routing.
The people building superintelligence expect systems that exceed human capability at most economically valuable work within roughly a decade. If they are even half right, the administration seated in January 2033 will preside over the largest surge of productive capacity in human history.
This page borrows its format from AI 2027, the research-backed scenario forecast, deliberately: dated, concrete, checkable claims instead of vibes. Their scenario ends at a fork — a race that concentrates everything, or a careful path that could spread it. This platform is a plan for the fork. Routed by default, abundance pools. Routed on purpose, everyone tastes heaven.
Normal capitalism prices the big, bold, beautiful ideas out of polite conversation — things everyone wants but feels out of touch even mentioning. Homes for everyone. Cures on purpose. Your attention belonging to you. An awakened America with superintelligent tooling is the first economy in history where these stop being pie in the sky and start being procurement.
Executive Orders for Utopia
Eight mandates. Each one is something a supermajority of Americans already wants and no party will say out loud.
One piece of honesty up front, because this platform runs on receipts: an executive order is a steering wheel, not an engine. Presidents can direct agencies, set procurement, and declassify; they cannot legislate. Most of what follows takes Congress — which is exactly why the roadmap starts with the 2026 and 2028 ballots, not the 2032 one. Every mandate below lists both levers: what gets signed on Day 1, and what we send Congress to pass.
The Feed Sovereignty Act
GDPR proved the play: one jurisdiction moves, and the world's software defaults change within two years. Nobody has run that play for the attention economy — the machine quietly optimizing two hundred million American brains for time-on-site. We run it.
- Default to following. Feeds open on the people you chose, in the order they posted. The engagement-optimized feed becomes an opt-in you can find — not a default you can't escape. (Platforms already hide this setting. It stops being hidden.)
- Open the algorithm. Platforms above 10M users expose their ranking systems to accredited public audit and open their APIs to third-party feed clients. You can't force a company to open-source its code overnight — but you can make interoperability the price of operating at nation-scale, which gets the public the same power.
- Attention Facts. A public health label for apps, like nutrition facts for food: audited, standardized, on the app store page. We label what goes into bodies. We label what goes into minds.
Attention Facts
Day-1 Executive Order
Federal devices and agencies may only carry labeled apps. FTC directed to open rulemaking on dark patterns and concealed defaults. Surgeon-General-style advisory on algorithmic feeds and minors.
Act of Congress
The Act itself: default-to-following, interoperability mandate, audit authority, Attention Facts labeling. Exportable by design — other nations adapted GDPR in two years; give them something better to copy.
The Glass Kitchen Act
You should not need a private lab subscription to know what's in dinner. Fragments of this system already exist — scattered across private testing companies, sold back to the public as premium reports. We make the publishing public, not the industry.
- Randomized open testing. Independent labs buy products off actual retail shelves — blind, randomized, continuous — and every raw result lands in one open national catalog, machine-readable, free forever.
- Bodycam transparency. Inspections recorded worker-side, privacy-scrubbed, published. Trust built the way trust is actually built: by letting people watch.
- Open protocols. The testing methods themselves are open-source, so any citizen, university, or rival lab can replicate and check the checkers.
Day-1 Executive Order
FDA and USDA publish all existing testing data machine-readable within 180 days. Pilot randomized retail-shelf testing program launches from existing discretionary budget.
Act of Congress
Permanent funding, the mandatory open catalog, whistleblower protections for food workers, and teeth for repeat offenders.
No Inflation Without Representation
Every tax in America requires a recorded vote by people you can fire — except the one that works by making your money smaller. Inflation transfers purchasing power from savers to whoever stands nearest the money printer, and it does so without a single name attached. Attach the names.
- The Silent Tax Statement. An annual statement to every household: what inflation cost you this year, in your dollars, alongside the specific fiscal and monetary decisions that drove it — with the recorded positions of every official involved.
- Score before you spend. Every major federal program gets a public projected purchasing-power impact, the way the CBO scores deficits today.
- An open ledger of the money. Money-supply decisions published in real time, in plain language, at a permanent public address.
Day-1 Executive Order
Treasury issues the first Silent Tax Statement. OMB begins publishing inflation-impact scores for every major program.
Act of Congress
Statutory reporting reform so the ledger and the statement outlive any one administration.
The Abundance Corps
"How big a budget would a robot army of abundance actually take?" Smaller than you fear — and you shouldn't take our word for it. Every number below is a slider. Do the math yourself.
The Corps is a publicly owned fleet of general-purpose robots assigned to the work everyone wants done and no market fully prices: building homes, growing and moving food, caring for elders, laying rail, restoring land. The interstate highway system, but the asset is labor itself. And one efficiency rule governs the whole stack: fewer data centers burning watts on ad auctions, more compute per dollar aimed at cures, materials, and logistics — public compute publishes its efficiency the way engines publish mileage.
The Abundance Calculator
Four assumptions, all yours to set. Defaults are labeled guesses, not facts — drag them to your own worldview and see what a robot fleet actually costs.
This calculator makes no claim about what robots will cost or when. It exists to shrink an unthinkable idea to arithmetic: at the defaults above, a ten-million-robot public fleet is a one-time outlay around 4% of a single federal budget year — the kind of number nations spend on far less beautiful things. Change the assumptions until you disagree with yourself.
Day-1 Executive Order
Defense Production Act-style procurement pilots in three states. Federal compute efficiency metrics published quarterly.
Act of Congress
The Corps charter and funding — authorized the way the interstate system was in 1956: as infrastructure, not welfare.
Homes for All by 2036
Robotic and modular construction attacks the labor cost curve. But the honest bottleneck isn't robots — it's permits, zoning, and land rules, which is precisely why housing is a ballot problem before it's a technology problem. Target, stated so it can be missed publicly: by 2036, no American is priced out of a dignified home. Progress published quarterly like earnings: starts, costs, keys handed over.
Day-1 Executive Order
Federal land audit for housing-eligible parcels. Fast-track approval lane for factory-built and robot-assisted housing on federal land.
Act of Congress
Permitting reform tied to Corps funding: cities that unblock building get the fleet first.
The Open Cures Act
The most universal want on Earth, and the one it feels most naive to demand. Superintelligence-assisted drug discovery is arriving inside this platform's window; the question is whether its outputs are priced like miracles or like water. Public money runs the discovery, trial data lands in the open by default, and what the public pays to discover, the public may not be gouged to receive. And the first name on the cure docket is aging itself — the disease every other disease works for.
Day-1 Executive Order
All federally funded trial data open by default. National AI-for-biology compute reserve, carved from the efficiency gains of Mandate 04.
Act of Congress
The Act: funding, open-data mandate, and price rules on publicly funded cures.
A Tutor for Every Child
For all of history, elites bought their children the same thing first: a patient, brilliant, one-on-one tutor. That is now software. Every American kid gets one — free, private by design, aligned to the family's values and the child's curiosity, working alongside teachers rather than around them. The first generation raised with an aristocrat's education and a public school's price.
Day-1 Executive Order
Procurement and open standards for tutor systems; pilot districts in all 50 states.
Act of Congress
Universal entitlement, privacy hard-lines, and a ban on ad-funded models anywhere near it (see Mandate 01).
The National Suggestion Box
Every great platform ships what its users beg for; companies mine the crowd's innovations and quietly implement them. The nation should do the same, in the open, with the crowd's own money. A standing, verified, public queue of what Americans actually want — ranked in daylight, with tax dollars flowing toward the top.
- Pie in the Sky days. Scheduled national dreaming: collective drafting of the "impossible" wants, exactly like the session that produced this page. Day 1 was July 2026. It never stops.
- Answer the people. Every agency must publicly respond to the top verified petitions — not with form letters, but with "yes, and here's the timeline" or "no, and here's the real reason."
- A citizen-directed slice. A fixed percentage of discretionary spending allocated by verified public ranking. Small at first. Watch what it does.
Day-1 Executive Order
The 60-day public response rule for top-100 verified petitions, government-wide.
Act of Congress
The participatory slice — starting at 1% of discretionary spending, citizen-ranked, fully auditable.
America's oldest job: run the experiment first, publish the results.
The United Nations does not yet stand for peace. So help us, it will — not because we demand it politely, but because abundance is the first negotiating position in history that every nation can accept.
The export strategy is the GDPR play run over and over: pass the standard at home, open-source it, let the world copy the homework. Feed sovereignty, glass kitchens, attention labels, open cures — drafted as model legislation any parliament can adopt in a weekend. Share the abundance stack with allies early. Lead the safety work so the surge lands softly everywhere, not just here. A superpower's flex, in the century of superintelligence, is not that others fear its arsenal. It's that others copy its defaults.
2026 → 2036, dated so it can be graded.
Vague futures are unfalsifiable, which is why nobody trusts them. Here is ours with dates on it. Clip this section and check it against reality every November.
Year 250. Day 1.
America250 begins; this document exists. Pie in the Sky opens: collective drafting of the mandates, in public, edit history and all.
First coordination test.
Midterm scorecards. Every candidate in every race gets the same on-the-record question: which mandates will you sign? The answers get published. That's it. That's the whole test.
Platform v1.0 freezes.
The open drafts consolidate into a versioned platform — numbered, citable, forkable. First mandate caucus: candidates begin running on the list rather than on themselves.
Vote the to-do list.
The beachhead election. The goal is not the presidency — it's a mandate-signing cohort in Congress, because Part III was honest about where the engine is.
First bills, first pilots.
Feed Sovereignty and Glass Kitchen introduced. Abundance Corps pilot cities break ground. Attention Facts labels start appearing voluntarily — market pressure works ahead of law.
The platform interviews candidates.
Applicants for 2032 answer to the list, publicly. The movement's nomination goes to an executor, not a celebrity. The platform hires the president.
PRES2032.
The scheduled revolution. If the coordination held — if the Schelling point, the common knowledge, and the synchronized moment all did their jobs — the to-do list takes the oath in January.
Day-1 package signed before lunch.
Every Day-1 executive order in Part III, executed on schedule, live-streamed. The Congress bills go up the Hill the same afternoon.
The build years.
Fleet scales. Housing starts compound. The first Silent Tax Statements arrive in mailboxes. Cures pipeline opens its data. Tutors reach every district.
The report card.
Published like earnings, graded like a promise: homes delivered, cures shipped, hours returned to families, feeds returned to their owners. Did we taste heaven? Show the receipts. Walk through that day →
How this fails.
A platform that can't name its own failure modes is a vibe. Here are ours, so you can watch for them.
It becomes a personality cult. The moment this is about a person, it's dead — personalities are how every prior movement dissolved. Antidote: the platform outranks any person, permanently, structurally.
It goes partisan. These mandates poll across both tribes precisely because no party owns them. The first time this page punches left or right instead of up, fork it and start over.
The numbers get faked. Movements rot when their claims do. Every figure on this page is either a public source or a labeled, editable assumption. Keep it that way or burn it down.
It stays a website. The unit of progress is a signed mandate, not a pageview. If by November 2026 this hasn't produced on-the-record candidate answers, Part V is already failing — and you should say so, loudly, here.
The surge doesn't come. If superintelligence stalls, the mandates shrink but survive — feeds, food, inflation receipts, and suggestion boxes need no robots. The utopia timeline slips; the sovereignty planks don't.