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The Proof: Overview

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

This isn’t a theoretical plan. It’s a greatest hits album of things that already worked. Like mixing chocolate and peanut butter, except the chocolate is “not dying” and the peanut butter is “getting rich.”

Pragmatic Trials: 44.1x (95% CI: 39.4x-89.1x) More Efficient

Traditional Phase 3 trials cost $41K (95% CI: $20K-$120K) per patient115. Pragmatic trials embedded in routine care cost $929 (95% CI: $97-$3K) per patient1, a 44.1x (95% CI: 39.4x-89.1x) cost reduction.

A Harvard meta-analysis of 108 embedded pragmatic trials found median costs of just $97 per patient138. The ALLHAT trial demonstrated that pragmatic designs can identify superior treatments while reducing healthcare costs by billions annually139.

Oxford’s RECOVERY trial achieved $500 (95% CI: $400-$2.50K) per patient, finding life-saving COVID treatments in under 100 days and saving over a million lives98.

Switzerland: 200 Years of Not Killing People

Two world wars. Everyone else fought. Switzerland made chocolate.

Result

  • 25% richer than Americans108 ($93K vs $76K GDP per capita)
  • Live 5 years longer (84 vs 79 years)140
  • Haven’t had a war death since 1847141
  • Military budget: 0.7% GDP (source107) (US: 3.5%)

The difference went to education, healthcare, and trains that actually work. Peace dividends compound over centuries. War debts compound faster.

Comparison of Switzerland vs. USA on economic prosperity, longevity, and military spending percentages.

Comparison of Switzerland vs. USA on economic prosperity, longevity, and military spending percentages.

War Bonds: How Capitalism Beat Fascism

WWII cost $4 trillion (today’s dollars)142. America was broke.

Solution: Sell bonds to regular people. Promise them profit + dead Nazis.

Result: Funded the entire war143, defeated fascism, everyone made money.

The lesson: When saving the world is profitable, people fund it.

VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds use the same model. Except instead of dead Nazis, you offer dead cancer cells.

The Landmine Treaty: Citizens Beat Armies

1992: Random people decided landmines were stupid. 1997: 160 countries banned them90.

A timeline and power-shift diagram showing the 5-year progression from grassroots citizen activism in 1992 to a global ban on landmines signed by 160 countries in 1997.

A timeline and power-shift diagram showing the 5-year progression from grassroots citizen activism in 1992 to a global ban on landmines signed by 160 countries in 1997.

No government started it. No UN committee. Just pissed-off citizens with fax machines.

They beat the entire military-industrial complex in 5 years with fax machines.

You have the internet.

The 3.5% Rule

Harvard analyzed every major movement in history.

A visual representation of the 3.5 percent Rule showing the tipping point for social movements and the scale of 280 million supporters relative to the global internet population.

A visual representation of the 3.5 percent Rule showing the tipping point for social movements and the scale of 280 million supporters relative to the global internet population.

Finding: Once 3.5% of any population actively supports something, it wins.

  • Civil rights: Won at 3.5%
  • Women’s suffrage: Won at 3.5%
  • Indian independence: Won at 3.5%
  • Failed movements: Never hit 3.5%

The strategy needs 280M of people million people. The internet reaches 5 billion144. Math says it wins.

The Post-WW2 Economic Miracle: History’s Greatest Peace Dividend

1945: US military spending 37% of GDP93 (highest in history). 1948: Cut to 7% of GDP93 (30 percentage points redirected).

Result: The greatest economic boom in human history.

  • GDP growth: 8% average145 for a decade (vs 2-3% normal)
  • Middle class explosion: Home ownership doubled146
  • Education boom: GI Bill created modern knowledge economy
  • Infrastructure: Interstate highway system built

The lesson: Redirecting military spending to productive uses = prosperity explosion.

Correlation chart showing the sharp decline in military spending (37 percent to 7 percent) coinciding with the historic spike in GDP growth (8 percent average).

Correlation chart showing the sharp decline in military spending (37 percent to 7 percent) coinciding with the historic spike in GDP growth (8 percent average).

You Have Advantages They Didn’t

  • Internet: Instant global coordination
  • Money: Subsidized healthcare creates participation incentive
  • Data: We can prove what works in real-time
  • Urgency: 150,000 people die daily147 (motivation is high)

The Political Precedents: How to Win

Creating Binding International Law

The Precedent: The International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL)

Random citizens created international law with fax machines.

  • The ICBL got 160 nations to ban landmines through peer pressure and shame.
  • No government started it. Citizens did.
  • It worked in 5 years.

The Lesson: Citizens with fax machines beat the military-industrial complex. We have Twitter. The Global Referendum copies their homework.

Achieving a Political Tipping Point

The Precedent: The 3.5% Rule (Erica Chenoweth’s Research)

Harvard did math on revolutions. Found the magic number: 3.5%.

A visualization of the 3.5 percent rule, highlighting the small fraction of a population, such as one person in a classroom, required to reach a tipping point for social change.

A visualization of the 3.5 percent rule, highlighting the small fraction of a population, such as one person in a classroom, required to reach a tipping point for social change.
  • Once 3.5% of any population actively protests something, it wins.

  • Civil rights: Won at 3.5%

  • Indian independence: Won at 3.5%

  • Failed movements: Never hit 3.5%

The Lesson: You don’t need everyone. You need 280M of people million people out of 8.00B of people (95% CI: 7.80B of people-8.20B of people) billion. That’s one person in every classroom, one family on every block.

The Financial Precedents: How to Fund It

Mobilizing Mass Public Capital

The Precedent: WWII War Bonds

Americans funded beating Hitler by buying bonds. Made money while saving democracy.

A comparative infographic showing the parallel between WWII War Bonds and VICTORY Bonds, contrasting their goals (Nazis vs. Cancer) and their financial returns (3 percent vs. 272 percent).

A comparative infographic showing the parallel between WWII War Bonds and VICTORY Bonds, contrasting their goals (Nazis vs. Cancer) and their financial returns (3 percent vs. 272 percent).
  • War Bonds raised trillions (today’s dollars)
  • Regular people bought them to kill Nazis and get 3% returns
  • It worked

The Lesson: VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds copy the formula. Except instead of killing Nazis for 3%, you kill cancer for 272%.

B. Building a New Global Health Institution

The Precedent: The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria

The idea of creating a new, multi-billion-dollar global health institution from scratch has been done before.

A conceptual diagram illustrating how the successful public-private funding model of The Global Fund serves as a structural precedent for the proposed Decentralized Institutes of Health (DIH).

A conceptual diagram illustrating how the successful public-private funding model of The Global Fund serves as a structural precedent for the proposed Decentralized Institutes of Health (DIH).
  • The Global Fund was created in 2002 as a public-private partnership to pool and distribute billions of dollars to fight these three diseases, operating outside of traditional institutional channels. It has since saved an estimated 70 million lives148 (as of 2025).

The Lesson: This provides the precedent for your decentralized institutes of health (DIH). It proves that the world is capable of creating new, large-scale, and more efficient financial institutions for global health when the existing systems are insufficient.

C. Pricing the Political Risk

The Precedent: Michael Milken’s High-Yield Bonds & George Soros’s Political Arbitrage

The investment thesis for VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds, a high-risk, high-reward bet on a political outcome, is grounded in proven financial strategies.

A conceptual diagram showing how the strategies of Michael Milken and George Soros converge to create the high-yield, political arbitrage model for VICTORY Bonds.

A conceptual diagram showing how the strategies of Michael Milken and George Soros converge to create the high-yield, political arbitrage model for VICTORY Bonds.
  • Michael Milken proved that to attract capital for high-risk ventures, you must offer a correspondingly high, contractually obligated return.
  • George Soros’s legendary bet against the British pound in 1992 is the ultimate example of privately financed political arbitrage, proving it’s possible to deploy immense private capital to bet on a political outcome.

The Lesson: The financial model, which offers a $>272% targeted return, is a direct application of these principles. It correctly prices the political risk to attract the sophisticated capital needed to win.

4. The Cautionary Tales: How Not to Fail

The failures of past movements are even more instructive than the successes, as they reveal the exact failure modes the strategy is engineered to avoid.

A. Don’t Bring a Moral Argument to a Financial Fight

The Precedent: The Nuclear Disarmament Movement (“The Freeze”)

  • The Failure: Despite enormous popular support in the 1980s, the movement largely failed because it could not overcome the entrenched financial interests of the military-industrial complex.
  • The Lesson: This is the historical proof for the core thesis: You cannot defeat bad money with good intentions alone. It is the primary justification for the strategy of “legal bribery” and co-opting opposition with a superior financial offer.

A comparison showing why moral arguments fail against entrenched financial interests, and how a superior financial offer provides a more effective path to overcoming opposition.

A comparison showing why moral arguments fail against entrenched financial interests, and how a superior financial offer provides a more effective path to overcoming opposition.

B. Don’t Have a Diffuse, Unactionable Goal

The Precedent: Occupy Wall Street

  • The Failure: While it successfully changed the public conversation in 2011, the movement produced no lasting policy change because it lacked a single, specific, actionable demand.
  • The Lesson: The project avoids this trap by focusing all energy and capital on a single, clear, and achievable goal: ratification of a “1% treaty.” That is the only ask.

A comparison showing how the broad, unfocused approach of Occupy Wall Street resulted in no policy change, contrasted with the current project’s laser focus on the single goal of a 1 percent treaty.

A comparison showing how the broad, unfocused approach of Occupy Wall Street resulted in no policy change, contrasted with the current project’s laser focus on the single goal of a 1 percent treaty.

In This Section

Additional Evidence

A conceptual diagram showing the three pillars of evidence, efficiency metrics, organizational precedents, and historical clinical models, supporting the proposed synthesis.

A conceptual diagram showing the three pillars of evidence, efficiency metrics, organizational precedents, and historical clinical models, supporting the proposed synthesis.

None of this is theoretical. Every component worked somewhere: