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Election Law

Keywords

war-on-disease, 1-percent-treaty, medical-research, public-health, peace-dividend, decentralized-trials, dfda, dih, victory-bonds, health-economics, cost-benefit-analysis, clinical-trials, drug-development, regulatory-reform, military-spending, peace-economics, decentralized-governance, wishocracy, blockchain-governance, impact-investing

It’s perfectly legal to buy politicians. You just have to use the right forms. The Supreme Court decided that money equals speech (Citizens United, 2010), which means billionaires speak louder than you.

Good news: You’re about to become the loudest voice in the room.

This chapter teaches you how to legally deploy $650M to make politicians choose between supporting your treaty or losing their jobs. Every technique here is legal. Every technique here is also disgusting. And every technique here is temporary - a means to an end, not the end itself.

The Super PAC Strategy

Setting Up “Cure Not Kill PAC”

Formation (One Day)

  1. File FEC Form 1 (Statement of Organization)
  2. Get an EIN from IRS
  3. Open a bank account
  4. Start taking unlimited money
  5. Begin destroying political careers

What You Can Do

  • Run attack ads against treaty opponents
  • Support ads for treaty supporters
  • Hire armies of canvassers
  • Buy entire media markets
  • Fund opposition research
  • Create viral content
  • Anything except directly bribing candidates

The 501(c)(4) Dark Money Machine

Your Action Fund (The Dark Money Vehicle)

This is your 501(c)(4) dark money vehicle. Unlike Super PACs, you don’t have to disclose donors.

The 51/49 Rule

  • 51% must be “social welfare” activity
  • 49% can be pure political destruction
  • “Education” about treaty benefits = social welfare
  • “Senator X is a murderer” ads = political

Visual representation of the required resource allocation for a 501(c)(4) to maintain tax-exempt status while engaging in political activity.

Visual representation of the required resource allocation for a 501(c)(4) to maintain tax-exempt status while engaging in political activity.

Campaign Finance Jujitsu

Making Opposition Expensive

The Primary Threat

A flowchart illustrating the strategic process of using primary challengers to financially deplete opponents and secure their future political support.

A flowchart illustrating the strategic process of using primary challengers to financially deplete opponents and secure their future political support.
  • Find primary challengers for treaty opponents
  • Fund them with $5-10M each
  • Force opponents to spend $20M defending
  • Even if they win, they’re weakened and poor
  • Next election, they support you to avoid this

The Bidding War

A flowchart depicting the iterative bidding process between two parties, illustrating the escalation of funds and the eventual breaking point based on financial constraints.

A flowchart depicting the iterative bidding process between two parties, illustrating the escalation of funds and the eventual breaking point based on financial constraints.
  • Publicly announce $10M against treaty opponents
  • Wait for military contractors to counter
  • Raise to $20M
  • They match
  • Keep escalating until they break
  • You have $650M, they have stockholders to answer to

The Overwhelming Force Doctrine

A flowchart illustrating the Overwhelming Force Doctrine, showing the sequence from targeted investment in a single race to achieving broad political control through a landslide victory.

A flowchart illustrating the Overwhelming Force Doctrine, showing the sequence from targeted investment in a single race to achieving broad political control through a landslide victory.
  • Pick one opponent to destroy completely
  • Spend $50M in their small state
  • Make them lose by 40 points
  • Every other politician gets the message
  • Total cost: $50M. Political control: Priceless

State and Local Compliance

Every state has different rules. Here’s how to handle them:

The Nightmare States

California: Requires extensive disclosure, frequent reporting New York: Complex registration, strict coordination rules Texas: Actually pretty loose, go wild

The Compliance Strategy

A strategic decision framework illustrating how funds are routed through federal or state PACs depending on regulatory complexity, supported by legal oversight.

A strategic decision framework illustrating how funds are routed through federal or state PACs depending on regulatory complexity, supported by legal oversight.
  • Create separate state PACs for complex states
  • Use federal Super PAC for simple states
  • Route money through appropriate entities
  • Hire local lawyers who know the rules
  • When in doubt, seek legal counsel before acting

Local Elections

  • City councils: $50K buys a seat
  • State legislators: $200K flips most races
  • Governors: $5-10M moves the needle
  • Focus on cheap races with treaty impact

The Media Buy Strategy

Surgical Strikes

Early and Often

  • Define opponents before they define themselves
  • First impression sticks
  • Run attacks during non-political shows
  • Capture low-information voters

The Saturation Approach

  • Buy every ad slot in small markets
  • Make opposition invisible
  • Cost: $500K/week in Wyoming
  • Impact: Total narrative control

Digital Micro-Targeting

  • Facebook: $0.50 per voter reached
  • Google: Target searches for “Senator [Name]”
  • YouTube: Pre-roll on local news
  • TikTok: Pay influencers to “discover” treaty benefits

The Ground Game

The Petition Army

  • Gather signatures for ballot initiatives
  • Each signature costs $3-5
  • 100,000 signatures = massive pressure
  • Politicians see organized opposition
  • They fold immediately

Enforcement: What Happens If You Break Rules

FEC Enforcement (LOL)

  • Requires 4 of 6 commissioners to act
  • Always split 3-3 on party lines
  • Average investigation: 2-4 years
  • Average fine: $50K
  • Worth it for the impact

DOJ Enforcement (Rare but Real)

  • Criminal prosecution for knowing violations
  • Foreign money = serious crime
  • Coordination = potential felony
  • Keep good lawyers on retainer
  • Document everything as “independent”

A risk-response diagram illustrating the triggers for DOJ enforcement, such as foreign funding or coordination, and the corresponding mitigation strategies of legal counsel and documentation.

A risk-response diagram illustrating the triggers for DOJ enforcement, such as foreign funding or coordination, and the corresponding mitigation strategies of legal counsel and documentation.

State Enforcement (Varies)

A comparative visualization of state enforcement levels ranging from aggressive to minimal, paired with a cost-benefit analysis of compliance versus legal risks.

A comparative visualization of state enforcement levels ranging from aggressive to minimal, paired with a cost-benefit analysis of compliance versus legal risks.
  • Some states have aggressive enforcement (New York, California)
  • Some states have minimal oversight (Delaware)
  • Compliance requirements vary significantly by state
  • Budget for legal counsel in each state ($50-100K per state)
  • Full compliance is cheaper than fines and bad press

The Lobbying Registration Trap

When You Must Register

  • Direct contact with officials about legislation
  • Spending over $3,000/quarter on lobbying
  • Coordinating grassroots campaigns
  • Paying others to lobby

When You Don’t

  • “Education” about issues
  • Grassroots organizing (if genuine)
  • Media campaigns
  • Think tank research
  • Public speeches

Stay on the non-registration side when possible. Registered lobbyists have restrictions.

A conceptual diagram contrasting advocacy activities that do not require registration with the restricted environment of registered lobbying.

A conceptual diagram contrasting advocacy activities that do not require registration with the restricted environment of registered lobbying.

International Considerations

Foreign Nationals Ban

A conceptual diagram showing a strict firewall separating international operations from US political activities, emphasizing that US operations must be exclusively US-funded and controlled.

A conceptual diagram showing a strict firewall separating international operations from US political activities, emphasizing that US operations must be exclusively US-funded and controlled.
  • Foreign citizens cannot donate to US political activities
  • Foreign citizens cannot direct how money is spent on US elections
  • Strict firewall required between international and US operations
  • US political operations must be 100% US-funded and US-controlled
  • Violation is a federal crime - take this seriously

Treaty Promotion

A workflow diagram showing the compliance steps for international treaty promotion, moving from identifying legal complexity to conducting jurisdictional analysis and finally consulting with election law experts.

A workflow diagram showing the compliance steps for international treaty promotion, moving from identifying legal complexity to conducting jurisdictional analysis and finally consulting with election law experts.
  • International treaty promotion is complex legally
  • Requires separate legal analysis for each jurisdiction
  • Consult with election law experts before any international spending

The Victory Conditions

Phase 1: Create Fear (Months 1-6)

  • $30M (95% CI: $21M-$39M) in attack ads (Phase 1)
  • Target 10 key opponents
  • 3-5 lose primaries
  • Rest get message

Phase 2: Offer Carrots (Months 7-12)

A flowchart showing the Phase 2 strategy where 30M USD in positive advertising converts supporters into ‘treaty heroes,’ creating political profit that triggers opponents to switch sides.

A flowchart showing the Phase 2 strategy where 30M USD in positive advertising converts supporters into ‘treaty heroes,’ creating political profit that triggers opponents to switch sides.
  • $30M (95% CI: $21M-$39M) in positive ads for supporters (Phase 1)
  • Create “treaty heroes”
  • Make support politically profitable
  • Opponents start switching

Phase 3: Ensure Victory (Months 13-18)

  • Surge for final push
  • Overwhelming force in key states
  • Make opposition political suicide
  • Treaty passes with 70%+ support

Eighteen-month strategic roadmap detailing the progression from attack ads to support campaigns, including budget allocation and success metrics per phase.

Eighteen-month strategic roadmap detailing the progression from attack ads to support campaigns, including budget allocation and success metrics per phase.

Conclusion: Democracy as Designed

You’re not corrupting democracy - you’re using it exactly as the Supreme Court intended. Every technique here is legal. Every dollar spent is protected speech. Every politician destroyed chose their fate.

A conceptual diagram illustrating the ‘rules of the game’ in campaign finance, showing how capital and strategy flow through legal protections to influence political survival.

A conceptual diagram illustrating the ‘rules of the game’ in campaign finance, showing how capital and strategy flow through legal protections to influence political survival.

The campaign finance system is a game with published rules. The current players (military contractors, pharma, insurance) have been winning for decades. You’re just better at the game. You have more money, better strategy, and most importantly - dead children on your side.

Remember: It’s not bribery if you use the right forms. It’s not corruption if the Supreme Court says it’s speech. And it’s not illegal if everyone else is doing it too.

The treaty opponents have two choices: Support you and keep their jobs, or oppose you and lose everything. That’s not a threat. That’s democracy.


WarningLegal Notice

This chapter describes legal campaign finance activities under current US law. Consult with election lawyers before implementing. Laws change, enforcement varies, and what’s technically legal might still look terrible in headlines. Always hire excellent lawyers.