About the Platform
The We The People Platform is a federal-policy reform proposal package. It documents a comprehensive architecture for shared prosperity built on twelve interlocking policy pillars: universal healthcare, universal childcare, universal mental health access, universal paid family time, universal long-term care, a sovereign investment fund, modernized civic infrastructure, an education trust, criminal-justice reform, environmental stewardship, an anti-corruption framework, and a participation guarantee.
Each pillar has its own substantiation document explaining the funding architecture, the expected costs and benefits, the implementation path, and the interactions with existing federal programs. The platform also includes worked examples (showing what the architecture means for households at different income levels), a fiscal impact analysis (reconciling the platform's contributions to its commitments at steady state), a sovereign-fund design document, and an interactive calculator that lets a household enter their income and see the personalized comparison between the current federal tax architecture and the platform's proposed architecture.
What this site contains
The platform consists of 109 documents organized into seven folders, all linked from the platform index page. The index lets you filter by document type, by pillar, by folder, or by reading path (separate paths for different audiences: skeptical reader, policy professional, household curious about personal impact, etc.). Each document can be read directly in the browser as an HTML version; the original .docx files are available for download.
Architecture stance
The platform takes a substantive position: it argues that the federal architecture should pool risk and provide universal coverage for healthcare, childcare, mental health, paid family time, and long-term care, funded through payroll contributions (split between employer and employee shares) plus modest high-earner surcharges and wealth taxes on net worth above ten million and fifty million dollars. The Sovereign Investment Fund is funded by wealth-tax revenue and grows over sixty years to one-hundred-twenty-two trillion dollars, providing disbursements that finance modernization commitments without raising payroll rates.
The platform is not a partisan document; it is an architectural proposal that draws on policies that already exist in other developed countries (Germany's long-term care insurance, the United Kingdom's National Health Service, Norway's sovereign wealth fund) and adapts them to the United States's federal structure. The proposal documents are written for skeptical readers — the open-issues registry tracks every architectural decision, the substantiation documents cite federal data sources for every cost estimate, and the calculator shows the math behind every comparison.
Authorship
The platform was authored by Jason Robertson over 2026. The full version history (89 numbered iterations through v3.7.25) is documented in the platform's Iterative Hardening Process Documentation. Jason is based in Ohio. This is an independent work; not affiliated with any political party, campaign, or advocacy organization.