Denaturalization

In the wake of the Minnesota Medicaid and Daycare fraud, we must enable appropriate government agencies to rid our nation of naturalized citizens who take advantage of our system. These actions include an executive order and a bill, passed through Congress, to streamline the denaturalization process, and another bill, passed through Congress, to expand the grounds for denaturalization.

Attached, you will find drafts of these two bills and the executive order to accomplish these goals.

Currently, denaturalization law limits denaturalization to fraud during the application process, and even when such fraud is retroactively discovered, it takes years to denaturalize and deport the perpetrator.

America has enough home grown grifters, we do not need to import them from other countries. To better ensure that legal immigrants follow US laws after they are naturalized, we must have expanded grounds and streamlined processes for denaturalization.

Stopping Fake News

Fake news is as old as human speech, but with the advent of social media the ability to spread misleading or outright false information has exploded with it. Social media can be both good and bad. It is good that it makes it nearly impossible for anyone or any group to monopolize news narratives now that people can obtain information from a multitude of different sources, but it is bad that it has multiplied the misinformation available to the public.

Misinformation proliferation is so severe that an estimated 62% of online content is deemed false, 43.7% of internet information is unreliable or false, and 52% of Americans encounter fake news on a regular basis. Worst of all, fake news has a 70% more likely chance of being “retweeted” than factual news does. The bottom line of these statistics is that everyone living today has an 86% global exposure to misinformation. Eighty-six percent global exposure means that nearly all of us have watched, listen to, or read misleading or false information being passed off as news.

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Federalism Restoration Amendment

Our Founding Fathers created a unique form of civil government with numerous checks on power to keep it in balance so that one group of people were less likely to dominate another. One of those checks and balances was the clause from Article 1, Section 3 of the original Constitution, which stated,

“The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each State, chosen by the Legislature thereof…”

The check and balance in this clause was that each State’s legislature, which is itself composed of representative of the different constituents of that State, would choose the Senators. This clause was a counter-balance to the popular election of US Representatives. The US Senate, as the more senior body, was created to temper the exuberance of the populace.

The originally prescribed appointment system worked well until railroad and industrial magnates began corrupting it in the 1870s. They used their immense wealth to bribe state legislators into appointing Senators that would do the will of those who made the bribes. This corruption led to partisan deadlock in State legislatures in which some States went without one or two Senators for many years. Between 1891 and 1905, there were 46 deadlocks that occurred among 20 States.

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Phased Social Security Reform Plan

Most Americans understand that the Social Security System is, if unaltered, unsustainable. The problem with changing it is that those who paid into the system and lived their life with the promise of receiving benefits may find themselves too old to earn an income while shut out of the benefits they paid for and were promised.

While politicians have raised the alarm of the impending default, and some have proposed plans to “fix’ Social Security, none have proposed a plan to transition to a sustainable system that keeps the promise to those who are too senior to switch.

Below is a plan that outlines a twenty-to-thirty year transition to replace the U.S. Social Security system’s old age survivor insurance retirement benefits with mandatory private investment accounts. It prioritizes protecting older workers and retirees by guaranteeing they receive at least their contributed principal (adjusted for inflation) plus a minimum return if markets underperform. The goal is fiscal sustainability, higher potential returns via compounding investments, and individual ownership, while minimizing disruption. This plan ensures no one loses principal while shifting to a sustainable, growth-oriented system, where adjustments can be made via actuarial reviews every five years.

Phased Social Security Reform Plan

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Free and Independent Health Care Restoration Act

The Affordable Care Act, or what is commonly known as Obama Care, has been an abysmal failure and has become an albatross around the necks of American taxpayers which is sinking our nation deeper and deeper into unsustainable debt. 

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How Originalism Can Restore Constitutional Integrity

President Trump’s second term in office has been marred by activist judges placing injunctions, and partial or full blocks on his agenda. As tiring and counter-productive as their campaign against the will of the American people has been, judicial activism has been a problem for far longer than anyone alive can remember.

The 1857 Dred Scott case not only denied African Americans citizenship, it also struck down a law passed by Congress called the Missouri Compromise. The majority opinion of the court, at that time, used racial assumptions to read into the Constitution that which was not in the text. This judicial overreach inflamed sectional tensions and hastened the American Civil War.

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Gerrymandering

Configuring political districts to favor one party over another, known as gerrymandering, has its origins early in our nation’s history. The practice is named after Eldridge Gerry who was a Founding Father, merchant, politician, and diplomat from Massachusetts. Among his many accomplishments, Gerry signed the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution, and he served as Governor of Massachusetts and Vice President of the United States under James Madison. The Boston Gazette, on March 26, 1812, coined the term “gerrymandering” to describe the new Massachusetts Senate districts signed into law by then Governor Gerry, which the Gazette described as looking like a salamander. 

Since that time, all political parties in our nation’s history have employed gerrymandering for their political gain. Gerrymandering is so common that, within limitations, it is accepted as the right of the majority in power in any State. In addition to being widely accepted, it is also completely undemocratic. Gerrymandering suppresses the electoral voice of political constituents to favor one party over another which makes State and Federal governments unrepresentative of the people as a whole. For this reason alone, gerrymandering should be legislated out of existence.

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Norburn Monetary Reform Act Podcast

These sources describe a proposal called the Norburn Monetary Reform Act of 2025, which aims to change the U.S. monetary system radically. The core idea is to centralize money creation under a new government authority, replacing the current fractional reserve banking system and Federal Reserve functions. The plan uses real-time economic data and a Money Stability Index to guide money supply decisions and restrict government borrowing during normal times. A key aspect is the proposed use of an open-access digital ledger, potentially blockchain-based, to ensure transparency and accountability in money creation and distribution. The sources also evaluate the clarity and feasibility of the proposal and discuss its potential impacts on the economy, including the stock market and investing.

https://endgameleadership.substack.com/p/the-norburn-monetary-reform-act-of

Norburn Monetary Reform Act

Detailed White Paper

The Norburn Monetary Reform Act proposes a post-fractional reserve monetary system that centralizes the creation of money under an independent Department of Money. It eliminates credit-driven economic cycles, promotes transparency, enhances fiscal stability, and ensures that the public benefits directly from monetary issuance.