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FOREIGN POLICY

Problem

For decades, U.S. foreign policy has been shaped by private profit and power — not public well-being or global justice.

Who benefits

  • Weapons manufacturers

  • Fossil fuel corporations

  • Authoritarian partners

  • Lobbyists and billionaires

Who bears the cost

  • Civilians abroad

  • Veterans and military families

  • Refugees and displaced communities

  • Americans are missing investments in care, housing, climate, and education.

Measured harm

  • $8+ trillion spent on post-9/11 wars

  • 929,000+ people killed, including 335,000 civilians

  • 37+ million people displaced by U.S. conflict zones

  • Pentagon budget: $886 billion, bigger than the next seven nations combined

  • Meanwhile, the U.S. ranks 30th–43rd globally on health outcomes, maternal mortality, and basic life expectancy.

Policy contradictions

  • Arming regimes that violate human rights

  • Backing coups and occupations

  • Fueling fossil fuel conflict while ignoring climate instability

  • Creating refugee flows, then criminalizing the people displaced

Bottom line: Endless militarism isn’t keeping Americans safe — it’s draining our future.

Solutions

1. End forever wars and restore democratic control

  • Repeal 2001 & 2002 AUMFs

  • Require congressional approval for any deployment.

  • Public civilian casualty reporting across all theaters

  • End unauthorized combat and drone campaigns.

Impact: Ending blank checks brings accountability and transparency.

2. Make diplomacy the first tool — not the last

  • Double staffing and training for the State Department

  • Invest in conflict prevention and peace negotiations.

  • Expand humanitarian and refugee assistance.

  • Elevate women, Indigenous movements, and civil society in diplomacy.

Impact: Prevent crises, rebuild global trust.

3. Stop arming human rights abusers

  • Condition all military aid on human rights compliance

  • Freeze arms transfers to states committing war crimes or suppressing democratic movements.

  • End support for apartheid systems, occupation, and regime-change wars

Impact: Save lives; reflect U.S. values worldwide.

4. Make climate the new national security

  • End U.S. financing of oil and gas projects abroad.

  • Build global partnerships on clean energy.

  • Support climate adaptation and disaster recovery.

  • Create humane pathways for climate-displaced families.

Impact: Reduce conflict; promote global climate action.

5. Replace corporate trade with fair trade

  • Require labor rights, environmental standards, and living wages in trade deals.

  • End secret investor-state courts that let corporations override democratic law.

  • Strengthen regional food and energy self-reliance.

Impact: Workers benefit; corporate influence diminished.

6. Align immigration policy with the realities we create abroad

Most migration stems from:

  • War

  • Land theft

  • Sanctions

  • Climate collapse

  • Exploitative trade

  • Government destabilization

Policies:

  • Expand refugee resettlement and legal work visas.

  • Protect families at the border.

  • Stop foreign policies that create forced displacement.

  • Treat migrants as community members, not threats.

Impact: Safe migration paths replace chaos.

Bottom Line

Stop exporting instability—stand for true freedom now.

A foreign policy rooted in:

  • Diplomacy

  • Human rights

  • Climate cooperation

  • Fair trade

  • Demilitarization

  • Migration justice

  • Democratic accountability

This serves people—reject war profiteers today.