Home Future

Potential Outcomes

What we stand to gain

01

Wealth Redistribution, Free Health Care & Benefits in America and Worldwide

Economic benefits: stronger consumer demand, more business growth, reduced poverty. Social benefits: healthier populations, better education outcomes, lower crime. Gini coefficient improvement — a more equal society measures better on the Gini scale, indicating fairer distribution of income and wealth. Benefits extend globally as the U.S. shifts from extraction to partnership, funding development and stability abroad.

02

Climate Change & Reducing Carbon Emissions

Benefits of decarbonization: cleaner air and water, fewer extreme weather events, preserved ecosystems, new green jobs, energy independence. Reduced emissions slow global warming, protect coastal communities, and secure food and water supplies for future generations.

03

Benefits of Ending Racism and Sexism

When racism and sexism are dismantled: full participation of all people in the economy and civic life, higher productivity, reduced healthcare disparities, stronger communities. Equal opportunity unlocks talent that was previously suppressed — a more just society is also a more prosperous one.

04

Housing Security for Everyone

Treating housing as a human right instead of a speculative asset would stabilize families, improve educational continuity for children, reduce stress-related illness, and free income for saving and local spending. Cities become safer and more cohesive when eviction and homelessness are rare — not because we accept less ambition, but because we stop accepting displacement as normal.

05

Democracy That Actually Delivers

Reforms that expand participation — fair maps, access to voting, and limits on concentrated political spending — increase public trust and make policy track with majoritarian needs. When more people believe the system works for them, civic engagement rises, polarization can ease, and long-term problems (infrastructure, climate, schools) get the patient investment they require.

06

Education Without Exclusion

Universal access to quality childcare, K–12, and vocational or college pathways raises lifetime earnings, reduces incarceration, and strengthens innovation. When talent is screened by ability and interest instead of zip code, the whole economy gains — especially as automation and green industries demand a highly trained workforce.

07

Safer Communities & Sensible Gun Policy

Meaningful gun safety measures — paired with mental-health access and community violence intervention — can cut deaths without erasing responsible ownership. Fewer mass shootings, fewer suicides by firearm, and fewer schools living in drill-driven fear are achievable outcomes when politics finally matches what most Americans already support.

08

Food & Nutrition as National Infrastructure

Ending hunger in a food-rich country is an engineering and distribution problem, not a scarcity problem. Universal school meals, stronger SNAP, and support for local agriculture improve health metrics, military readiness, and worker productivity — while reducing long-term healthcare costs tied to diet-related disease.

09

Technology That Serves People, Not Only Shareholders

Antitrust enforcement, privacy protections, and public investment in open infrastructure can steer AI and platforms toward transparency and worker dignity instead of extraction. Outcomes include less manipulation of public debate, fairer labor markets, and tools that actually shorten work or save lives rather than endlessly stealing attention.

10

Global Cooperation on Shared Crises

When the U.S. leads with diplomacy and climate finance rather than only military dominance, we gain more stable supply chains, refugee relief before crises boil over, and faster progress on emissions and pandemic preparedness. American security in the 21st century is intertwined with planetary stability — isolation is a losing strategy.