Term limits for supreme court.
Remove electoral college.
Free health care
Get rid of super pacs and dark money.
No more support for isreal.
PFAD Staff
Posts by PFAD Staff
the Antifa flank
Arrest GOP and DNC leaders, abolish the Senate, end lifetime appointments to SCOTUS, expropriate Blackstone’s housing assets and redistribute them to the American people, expropriate health insurers and implement universal healthcare, turn Langley into a public school.
pricing transparency
mandate that all businesses in the United States must disclose the actual price paid as the real final price. this proposal bans all hidden fees and authorizes the FTC and the IRS to fine any business caught just once with photographic evidence fines starting at a mandatory minimum of one hundred million dollars per complaint the fines aplay before any trail take. in the event that the company is found innocent in trial the fines will be refunded.
Free Healthcare, practically speaking
In fiscal year 2024, the U.S. government spent around $1.7 trillion of its budget on health insurance. That’s a pretty big number. I don’t see why gradually, through the span of a decade, we can use part of this budget to give categorical grants to the states, requiring them to use this money to grant all of their citizens free healthcare. If you do $1.7 trillion times 10, you get $17 trillion. Obviously this budget for healthcare will probably go down severely because of the Republicans’ cut down on Medicare, but let’s just say it is $10 trillion over a decade. Here would be my plan: Each year, we give a categorical grant for free healthcare of $200 billion each for 5 states per year, in order to transition to free healthcare. Obviously more money would be needed to given to states with a higher population, so this number would fluctuate a lot per state. This means that at the end of the decade, $10 trillion dollars will be spent on this transition to Free Healthcare. This is my plan.
Thanksgiving
A Time for Thanks: Reflecting on America's Enduring Freedoms As the scent of roasted turkey...
Better mental health.
Forty-five years ago, President Reagan repealed the Mental Health Systems Act (MHSA) in August 1981 with the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, shifting mental healthcare funding to states. This led to a decline in mental health facilities, with many closures. Since then, we’ve seen an increase in mental decline and mental illness among our people. It may be a correlation, but I believe that the mental decline of our young people from 1990 to today has contributed to this trend. We’ve also seen a rise in violence, especially gun violence in schools, and increasingly unhinged and deranged behavior among our population. I believe we need legislation that focuses on mental health and wellness for our people. This epidemic of unsettling behavior has gotten out of hand, and change is necessary to regulate mental health in our communities. I believe these efforts will help decrease violence in schools and in public places.

