It is framed not as a conventional political platform but as a unifying, non-partisan covenant—a moral and practical commitment to heal a deeply fractured America and guide the nation from its current state of crisis to a brighter future by January 20, 2029.
Our campaign opens with an open letter and preface that speak directly to everyday Americans who feel unseen and overburdened: single parents sacrificing everything, veterans carrying invisible wounds, farmers watching crops fail, children going hungry, and elders shivering in neglect. These are presented as real people whose struggles—massive federal debt with crushing interest payments, millions homeless amid vacant homes, 25–28 million uninsured or bankrupted by medical bills, veterans facing long waits and daily suicides, one in six children food-insecure, elders in poverty, polluted air and water, job displacement from automation, surging mental health crises, rural isolation, and widespread distrust in government—are the raw pain that summoned this movement.
The campaign deliberately maintains anonymity until July 4, 2027, under the #NoFaceJustFixes hashtag, to shift focus from personalities to ideas, policies, and deliverables, challenging voters to evaluate the vision purely on its merits. The covenant repeatedly positions itself as a mirror reflecting the people’s resilience, fury, and hope, with the candidates as humble servants who do not lead but lift, weaving voices into unity under one indivisible sky. It diagnoses a nation scarred by systemic failures, citing 2025 statistics to highlight $35–38 trillion in federal debt, millions of vacant homes contrasted with widespread homelessness, tens of millions uninsured or bankrupted by healthcare costs, veteran neglect including long waits and suicides, child hunger, elder poverty, polluted water and air sickening millions, automation displacing jobs, mental health and addiction crises, rural isolation, and 68% of Americans distrusting government. These are portrayed as shared wounds demanding urgent, collective repair.
The entire agenda is powered by the Micro-Fee Prosperity Plan, a radical funding mechanism that applies small fees ($0.35–$0.85) to high-volume corporate and digital transactions—including advertising impressions, telecom connections, entertainment streams, housing utilities, government website ads via old and brand new technologies, prescriptions, tobacco and alcohol sales, food and retail purchases, energy usage, financial and digital interactions, global commerce, international payments, streaming services, and corporate benefits. The Policy Book explains these fees generate tens of trillions annually, absorbed by high-margin industries without taxing households, urgently funding massive new spending without inflation, business flight, or legal barriers.
The covenant’s immediate action plan centers on 25 Sparks—25 precise, Day One initiatives funded by the Micro-Fee Prosperity Plan. These include capping prescription drug prices, implementing rent caps, funding free trade schools, streamlining VA healthcare, protecting voting rights while ensuring only American citizens take part in America's voting processes, boosting green jobs, modernizing rural broadband, raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour across America's land, enhancing mental health access with new clinics, regulating Big Tech where urgently necessary, expanding Pell Grants, reforming policing, closing tax loopholes while ensuring the wealthy aren't financially punished because of their economic status, guaranteeing low wage earners have fair opportunity to equal wealth, improving public transit, supporting small businesses, strengthening cybersecurity, reducing student debt, expanding childcare, promoting fair trade, enhancing disaster preparedness, increasing teacher pay, reforming immigration with a merit-based pathway alongside enforcement, protecting workers’ unions, reducing regulatory burdens, and fostering community unity programs.
Scattered throughout are distinctive, highly original proposals that stand apart from the 25 Sparks. These include the National Health Sovereignty Network to break up vertical healthcare monopolies like the CVS/Aetna ecosystem through blockchain-AI transparency, mandatory divestiture of integrated arms, patient cooperatives, and elimination of prior authorization abuses; SickBank, a national pooled sick-leave fund granting every worker 20 paid sick days annually through shared employer/employee contributions and funded by a micro transction fee on electronic financial transactions; mandatory in-house daycare at medium and large companies by 2030, funded by modest employee paycheck contributions plus employer matches and 50% tax credits, aiming for a 94–95% cost reduction compared to private care; the PostPal Renaissance to revive the USPS with time-locked Memory Capsules, community hubs featuring cafés and co-working spaces, collectible AR-enabled stamps, and PostPal Dash on-demand local delivery by postal carriers; FEET and FLEGRI initiatives using $1 fees on educational transactions and vehicle registration renewals to raise all teachers and law enforcement officers to $90,000 salaries; the Family Whisper Network of mobile “hope haven” vans providing confidential reproductive counseling with early-term abortion referrals up to 12 weeks, adoption facilitation, and a voluntary donor database; a blockchain-based Voter Legacy Pass for secure, fraud-proof registration; and a reimagined White House as a collaborative hub featuring the National Harmony Council, Unity Voice Platform, People’s Innovation Lab, Citizen Impact Shares, and Unity Service Exchange.
Every pulse of the Covenant acknowledges conservative critiques of bloated government, overregulation, and inefficiency, acknowledges progressive critiques of neglect of the vulnerable and systemic inequities, and proposes a unifying solution through a named Alliance, Network, Framework, Partnership, Collaborative, or Co-op that incorporates community councils, labs, hubs, or co-ops, AI and blockchain tools, and massive funding from micro-fees.
The Covenant of Our Stars is a heartfelt, unifying vision born from deep compassion for every American who feels unseen or overburdened. It is a sacred pledge—not a traditional campaign—to heal our nation’s deepest wounds and guide us from today’s shadows into a brighter future by January 20, 2029. The Covenant sees you clearly: the single parent carrying the weight of love and sacrifice, the veteran bearing silent scars, the worker whose hands build tomorrow, the child hungry for hope, and the elder deserving dignity in their golden years. It honors your struggles as real and shared, refusing to reduce them to numbers, and promises that your pain is never carried alone.
The Covenant chooses hope over division, unity over despair. It listens to both conservative calls for leaner, freer government and progressive dreams of justice and care for the vulnerable, then offers a bridge: a government that is efficient yet kind, accountable yet uplifting, serving everyone under one indivisible sky. Powered by the innovative Micro-Fee Prosperity Plan—small, corporate transaction fees that generate vast resources without taxing households—it funds immediate, tangible change through the 25 Sparks: capping medicine costs, stabilizing rents, training workers, healing veterans, connecting rural communities, lifting wages, opening mental health doors, forgiving student debt without catastrophic loss, expanding childcare, protecting the vote, creating green jobs, and more—all designed to restore opportunity, trust, and belonging.
Above all, the Covenant is an invitation to rise together. It reminds us that your courage is the spark, your love the flame, and your unity the dawn. With quiet resolve and boundless devotion, it vows to weave every voice into a tapestry of shared strength, so that no one is left behind and every heart finds home. This is not just a plan; it is a promise kept, a new American story written in hope, and a gentle reminder that together—heart to heart—we can reclaim our stars and light the way for generations to come.