📜 The Legislation Package
How to Write Laws That Actually Pass
Here’s how democracy actually works: Lobbyists write bills, give them to politicians who can’t read, and those politicians vote based on who donated most to their campaign. You’re about to become the best lobbyist in history, except your bills actually help people instead of killing them.
This is your blueprint for five bills that transform healthcare forever. Each one is designed to pass because it gives politicians what they crave: money, votes, and the ability to claim they did something.
The Treaty Implementation Act: Making It Real
This is your cornerstone legislation. Without it, the treaty is just paper. With it, you redirect $27 billion annually from death to life.
The Core Provisions
Section 1: Authorization
“The United States shall implement the 1% Treaty upon ratification by 3+ nations”
“1% of the United States defense budget (currently ~$10 billion) shall be automatically redirected to the DIH treasury as the nation’s contribution to the treaty fund.”
“Funds transfer via smart contract on first day of fiscal year”
No annual appropriation needed (politicians can’t kill it later)
Section 2: Protection Mechanisms
- Supersedes Budget Fights: Treaty obligations are treated as mandatory spending and supersede annual budget appropriations.
- Locked In: Withdrawal from the treaty requires a nearly impossible 2/3 Senate vote.
- Bulletproof Funding: Funds are exempt from sequestration, government shutdowns, and debt ceiling negotiations.
- Ratchet Clause: The 1% funding can only increase, never decrease. It automatically scales if other nations increase their commitment and can be expanded by public referendum.
- Emergency Use Only: Suspension of payments is only possible during a formally declared war, not a vaguely defined “conflict.”
Section 3: The Candy for Congress
- Each state gets proportional research funding
- Naming rights for politicians: “The Senator Smith Cancer Center”
- Job creation metrics published quarterly (re-election fuel)
- Local preference for trial sites (pork barrel paradise)
Why Politicians Will Vote Yes
For Republicans:
- “Cuts government waste!” (redirects, not adds)
- “Free market solution!” (competition, not bureaucracy)
- “Supports our troops!” (cures their PTSD and cancer)
- “America first!” (we lead the world in cures)
For Democrats:
- “Universal healthcare access!” (subsidized trials for all)
- “Reduces inequality!” (poor get same treatments as rich)
- “Anti-war vote!” (less money for bombs)
- “Historic healthcare expansion!” (biggest since Medicare)
For Everyone:
- Campaign contributions from VICTORY bondholders
- Constitutes can actually get treated
- Opposition gets primaried with DIH money
- History books write about them positively
The Legislative Hack
Bundle it with military funding. Politicians never vote against defense bills (career suicide). Your treaty implementation becomes a tiny rider on a massive bill they have to pass.
Once it passes, it’s essentially permanent. Repealing it means admitting they’re choosing bombs over cures. Political suicide.
The dFDA Parallel Track Act: Your Regulatory Revolution
This creates a legal pathway for treatments outside FDA’s 17-year death march. Patients get choices, researchers get freedom, and people stop dying while waiting for approval.
The Legal Architecture
Section 1: The Parallel Pathway
- “Patients may access treatments in active trials with informed consent”
- “Researchers may conduct trials without FDA pre-approval”
- “Insurance must cover parallel track treatments” (critical provision)
- “Results must be publicly reported” (transparency requirement)
Section 2: Safety Provisions (So They Can’t Call You Reckless)
- AI monitoring for adverse events
- Automatic trial suspension if harm detected
- Mandatory liability insurance for researchers
- Extra protections for vulnerable populations
Section 3: The Data Revolution
- All trial data becomes public (after privacy protection)
- Real-world evidence counts toward approval
- Patient-reported outcomes given equal weight
- Foreign trial data accepted (why waste good science?)
How to Sell This to Cowards
Politicians are terrified of being blamed for the next thalidomide. Here’s how you address their fear:
The Safety Argument:
- “More data makes things safer, not less”
- “Real-world monitoring beats controlled trials”
- “Patients are dying NOW under current system”
- “Other countries already do this successfully”
The Freedom Argument:
- “Patient choice is a fundamental right”
- “Government shouldn’t stand between patients and cures”
- “Free market for treatments, not Soviet medicine”
- “Right to try, expanded and improved”
The Innovation Argument:
- “America leads by innovating, not regulating”
- “Unleash our researchers to compete globally”
- “Create the Silicon Valley of medicine”
- “Make America the destination for cures”
The Implementation Trick
Start with terminal diseases only. Nobody argues against letting dying people try treatments. Once it works (it will), expand to chronic diseases. Then everything else. Classic foot-in-door technique.
The Right to Try Expansion Act: Medical Freedom
Current Right to Try laws are useless. They require FDA permission (defeats the purpose) and manufacturers can refuse (they always do). Here’s the version that actually works.
The Provisions That Matter
Section 1: Absolute Right
- “Any patient may access any treatment in trials”
- “Manufacturers must provide at cost + 15%” (reasonable profit)
- “Insurance must cover if cheaper than standard care”
- “No FDA approval needed for dying patients”
Section 2: The Subsidy System
- DIH subsidies make treatments affordable
- Sliding scale based on income
- Full coverage for those below 200% poverty line
- Catastrophic protection for everyone else
Section 3: The Data Exchange
- Patients provide outcome data in exchange for access
- Data improves treatments for everyone
- Creates massive real-world evidence database
- Accelerates learning by 100X
The Emotional Blackmail Strategy
This is where you deploy dying children strategically. Have them testify before Congress. Have them ask politicians directly: “Why won’t you let me try to live?”
Create a “Death Clock” website showing people dying while waiting for treatments available elsewhere. Update it live during hearings. Make opposition morally impossible.
The Talking Points:
- “Every parent would want this for their child”
- “Bureaucrats shouldn’t decide who lives and dies”
- “Other countries save these patients, why can’t we?”
- “The FDA approval timeline is a death sentence”
The Coalition Building
Get strange bedfellows working together:
- Libertarians: “Medical freedom!”
- Progressives: “Healthcare access!”
- Religious groups: “Sanctity of life!”
- Patient groups: “We want to live!”
When the Koch Brothers and Bernie Sanders agree, politicians panic and pass your bill.
The Budget Reallocation Act: Moving the Money
This is the technical bill that actually moves the money. Boring but critical. Without it, everything else is theater.
The Money Flow Mechanics
Section 1: Automatic Transfer
- 1% of DoD budget transferred on October 1st annually
- Via Federal Reserve direct transfer (no middlemen)
- To DIH Treasury smart contract (transparent, immutable)
- Cannot be rescinded or redirected without treaty withdrawal
Section 2: The Protection Clauses
- Funds exempt from sequestration
- Exempt from government shutdown
- Exempt from debt ceiling fights
- Treated as treaty obligation, not appropriation
Section 3: The Growth Mechanism
- Automatic increase if other nations increase
- Percentage can only go up, never down
- Success metrics trigger expansion discussions
- Public referendum can force increases
Making It Bulletproof
The Constitutional Approach:
- Treaty obligations supersede regular law
- Supremacy clause makes it unchangeable
- International law prevents backtracking
- Multiple legal theories for protection
The Political Protection:
- Touching it means you’re “against the troops” (their healthcare)
- And “against children” (pediatric trials)
- And “against jobs” (research employment)
- And “against America” (we’re winning the cure race)
The Technical Protection:
- Smart contracts execute automatically
- Multiple backup execution methods
- International oversight and verification
- Blockchain immutability prevents tampering
The Incremental Implementation
Year 1: Just move the money Year 2: Add performance metrics Year 3: Expand based on success Year 4: Other countries jealous, increase percentages Year 5: New global norm established
The Legislative Strategy: Order of Operations
Here’s how you pass all five bills:
Phase 1: Build Momentum
- Right to Try Expansion goes first (emotional, bipartisan)
- Creates patient demand for more access
- Shows system can handle parallel tracks
- Politicians get credit for “saving lives”
Phase 2: Create Infrastructure
- dFDA Parallel Track comes next
- Builds on Right to Try success
- Creates legal framework for trials
- Researchers start preparing for new system
Phase 3: Fund the System
- DIH Authorization establishes the organization
- Treaty Implementation provides the framework
- Budget Reallocation moves the money
- All three pass together in omnibus package
The Omnibus Strategy
Package everything in a must-pass bill:
- Defense authorization (they always pass)
- Or continuing resolution (government shutdown threat)
- Or debt ceiling increase (economic catastrophe threat)
Politicians can’t vote against it without catastrophic consequences. You win by default.
Conclusion: Democracy Theater at Its Finest
You’re not changing how democracy works - you’re using its current broken form to fix healthcare. These five bills create an unstoppable transformation from a system that profits from death to one that profits from life.
Once passed, they’re nearly impossible to repeal. The constituency for cures grows every day. Every person treated becomes a voter for expansion. Every cure makes the next bill easier to pass.
You’re creating a legislative ratchet that only turns one direction: toward life.
Remember: Politicians don’t read bills. Lobbyists write them. You’re about to become the most effective lobbyist in history, except instead of killing people for profit, you’re saving them.