Freedom and Dignity
A modern constitutional and policy framework for the United States — built on evidence, designed for durability, and open to anyone who wants to help build it.
A modern constitutional and policy framework for the United States — built on evidence, designed for durability, and open to anyone who wants to help build it.
The U.S. constitutional framework was designed for a different world. The mechanisms meant to prevent authoritarian capture, protect individual rights, and distribute power have been tested — and shown their limits. Worker productivity has grown 64.6% since 1979; median wages, 17.5%.[1] The top 10% of households own 93% of all financial assets.[2] The amendment process is effectively frozen by political polarization. These are structural failures — not partisan ones.
Read the full analysis →Most policy platforms are lists of demands. This one also explains how the policies should work — who enforces them, what happens when they conflict, how they're updated. We call this PolicyOS. It's what makes this platform transferable, testable, and honest.
The platform is organized into five structural foundations, each with concrete policy pillars. The outputs include three co-equal rights frameworks that finish what Roosevelt started in 1944 — and go further than he could have imagined.
No president, judge, corporation, or billionaire is above the law. Power must be constrained, auditable, and answerable.
Learn more →Government must answer to people, not money. Fair elections. Dark money ended. Corporate concentration broken.
Learn more →The same law applied the same way to everyone. Regardless of wealth, race, immigration status, or connections.
Learn more →Rights must be explicit, enforceable, and protected. Privacy. Bodily autonomy. Rights that exist in practice, not just on paper.
Learn more →Healthcare, a living wage, clean air and water, a livable climate — the material conditions without which every other freedom becomes theoretical.
Learn more →"True individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence. Necessitous men are not free men."
He proposed eight new rights. Congress never passed them. This project finishes them — and goes further.[3]
This project is modular. You don't need to understand the entire framework to contribute — pick the piece that interests you and start there.
Follow this path to understand the project from first principles to concrete proposals.
You can't be free if you're sick.
You can't be free if you're homeless.
You can't be free if the system was built to keep you from changing it.
A better system
is possible.
A country worth
belonging to
is possible.
Sources
[1] Economic Policy Institute, The Productivity–Pay Gap (2023)
[2] Federal Reserve, Distribution of Household Wealth in the U.S. (2023)
[3] Roosevelt, State of the Union Address, January 11, 1944