
For decades, U.S. foreign policy has been shaped by private profit and power — not public well-being or global justice.
Weapons manufacturers
Fossil fuel corporations
Authoritarian partners
Lobbyists and billionaires
Civilians abroad
Veterans and military families
Refugees and displaced communities
Americans are missing investments in care, housing, climate, and education.
$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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.