1
people have died from curable diseases
since this page started loading...
💀

A 1% treaty

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

The 1% Treaty is a legally-binding global accord with a single provision: every signatory nation redirects 1% of its annual military budget to the 1% Treaty Fund, which finances global health initiatives like your decentralized institutes of health (DIH).

The 1 percent Treaty Overview

The 1 percent Treaty Overview

The Math

  1. The Problem: The world spends $2.72T a year on military forces to maintain a delicate balance of power.
  2. The Hack: If every nation reduces military spending by 1% at the same time, the balance of power remains identical. No country becomes more vulnerable.
  3. The Prize: That 1%, a $27.2B-a-year river of cash, is redirected to cure all human diseases.

A visualization showing a 1 percent slice of the global military budget being redirected into a dedicated fund for curing diseases, demonstrating how a small relative change creates a massive financial resource.

A visualization showing a 1 percent slice of the global military budget being redirected into a dedicated fund for curing diseases, demonstrating how a small relative change creates a massive financial resource.

\[ \begin{gathered} Funding_{treaty} \\ = Spending_{mil} \times Reduce_{treaty} \\ = \$2.72T \times 1\% \\ = \$27.2B \end{gathered} \]

How It Works

A process diagram showing the flow of funds from the 1 percent Treaty Fund through decentralized institutes to clinical trials, managed by DAO governance and public transparency ledgers.

A process diagram showing the flow of funds from the 1 percent Treaty Fund through decentralized institutes to clinical trials, managed by DAO governance and public transparency ledgers.
  1. Funding: Creates a $27.2B/year revenue stream for the 1% Treaty Fund
  2. Execution: A network of decentralized institutes of health (DIH) subsidizes patient participation in a decentralized framework for drug assessment (dFDA), clinical trials that are 44.1x (95% CI: 39.4x-89.1x) cheaper than the current model
  3. Governance: Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) governed by smart contracts and global population via Wishocracy
  4. Transparency: All research, data, and spending published on public ledger

This Isn’t a Trade-Off.

The normal way to sell this: “Sacrifice security for health.”

That’s stupid. Here’s what actually happens:

You Get Two Good Things By Removing One Stupid Thing

When every nation builds 1% fewer explosion devices at the same time, something beautiful occurs:

Good Thing #1: You Become Safer

Everyone keeps the same relative scariness. But the global “we might all die by accident” temperature drops 1%. Fewer chances of:

  • Someone pressing the wrong button (happens more than you’d think)
  • Countries competing to build the biggest boom stick (expensive and pointless)
  • Nuclear weapons launched because a computer thought a flock of geese was a missile (this actually almost happened)
  • Wars started over who has the most murder toys

Good Thing #2: You Stop Dying From Stupid Things

That $27.2B pays sick people to try treatments instead of waiting for death.

A visualization of the resource shift from global risks and weaponry to medical treatments, illustrating the ‘Pareto improvement’ where safety and health both increase simultaneously.

A visualization of the resource shift from global risks and weaponry to medical treatments, illustrating the ‘Pareto improvement’ where safety and health both increase simultaneously.

This is called a Pareto improvement, which is economist-speak for “everybody wins and nobody loses.” It’s like finding out that eating less poison makes you both less poisoned AND wealthier because poison is expensive.

The Dead Capital Problem (Or: Why Bombs Are the Worst Investment Since Tulips)

Here’s something nobody tells you: when countries “invest” in military hardware, they’re not buying assets. They’re buying very expensive paperweights that occasionally explode.

A comparison between productive investment, which generates ongoing economic value, and military spending, which results in non-circulating ‘dead capital.’

A comparison between productive investment, which generates ongoing economic value, and military spending, which results in non-circulating ‘dead capital.’

A bridge

  • Generates economic activity daily (trucks move, people commute, value flows)
  • Lasts 50-100 years
  • Makes everyone richer
  • Pretty to look at

A missile

  • Sits in a hole doing nothing
  • Costs $1.5M/year just to keep it from rotting
  • Can only destroy things (including itself)
  • Makes everyone nervous

This is what economists call “dead capital” - resources trapped in a form that can’t generate returns. It’s like if you converted your house into a pile of TNT. Sure, it’s impressive. But you can’t live in it, rent it out, or do anything except eventually blow it up, at which point you have neither a house nor TNT.

A conceptual comparison between ‘dead capital’ (a missile in a silo) and productive investment (food, housing, and medicine) representing the opportunity cost of military spending.

A conceptual comparison between ‘dead capital’ (a missile in a silo) and productive investment (food, housing, and medicine) representing the opportunity cost of military spending.

As President Eisenhower (a 5-star General who knew about killing professionally) put it: “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.”

He literally ran the biggest military in history, and even HE thought you were being ridiculous about this.

A 1% treaty doesn’t ask you to spend $27.2B curing diseases. It asks you to stop wasting $27.2B on things that sit in holes making you poorer and less safe, and redirect those same papers to things that make you richer and less dead.

It’s not spending. It’s stopping wasting.

The Reallocation: How to Redirect $27.2B a Year (Legally)

This is how you redirect $27.2B a year from the military budget to medicine and dying people get better instead.

A visual comparison showing 2.72 trillion in global military spending with a highlighted 1 percent segment representing the 27.2 billion proposed for medical reallocation.

A visual comparison showing 2.72 trillion in global military spending with a highlighted 1 percent segment representing the 27.2 billion proposed for medical reallocation.

!Global military spending by region showing the $2.72T humans spend annually on weapons instead of cures

Nobody will even notice.

The Beautiful Mathematics of Mutual Stupidity Reduction

Here’s a fun fact: Every nation on Earth is pointing guns at every other nation on Earth, spending trillions of dollars to maintain what we call “peace.”

It’s like if everyone in your neighborhood spent their life savings on attack dogs, and then called it a “safe community” because all the dogs are equally vicious.

A 1% treaty is based on kindergarten logic so simple that world leaders might actually understand it:

The Proof That Even Generals Can Follow

  1. Current Situation: Every country spends billions on weapons to be exactly as scary as other countries with weapons. Like a very expensive, very deadly Mexican standoff that’s been going on since 1945.

  2. The Elegant Part: If EVERYONE reduces their military budget by exactly 1% at exactly the same time, everyone maintains exactly the same strategic position.

    • America: Still has 6,500 nukes instead of 6,565
    • Russia: Still has 6,000 nukes instead of 6,060
    • China: Still has enough weapons to kill everyone twice instead of 2.02 times
    • North Korea: Still terrifying but now 1% less so
  3. The Good Part: Nobody loses! Everyone keeps the same relative scariness! It’s like if everyone at a party agreed to take off their shoes - everyone gets shorter by the same amount, but nobody actually gets shorter relative to anyone else.

  4. The Prize: That 1% - that $27.2B per year - goes into a global fund to cure the diseases that are actually killing people, unlike the bombs which are mostly just sitting around getting dusty and occasionally almost ending the world by accident.

This is straightforward enough that it’s surprising it’s never been tried. And here’s the interesting part: 1% is just the beginning. This is a template for gradually redirecting resources toward human flourishing.

Comparison of military capabilities before and after a 1 percent reduction, demonstrating that strategic balance remains identical.

Comparison of military capabilities before and after a 1 percent reduction, demonstrating that strategic balance remains identical.

The Blueprint for a Saner World

Treaties are magic pieces of paper that countries sign when they want to pretend they’ll behave.

Sometimes they work (we haven’t had World War III yet). Sometimes they don’t (we’ve had about 200 other wars138). But they’re the only tool we have for getting countries to do anything together besides kill each other.

A 1% treaty: Technical Specifications for Global Survival

Article 1: The Promise

“We, the undersigned nations, being of sound mind and tired of dying, hereby agree to redirect 1% of our annual military expenditure to not dying instead.”

Article 2: The Money Part

Every signatory nation contributes exactly 1% of their military budget to the 1% Treaty Fund.

  • USA: $8.86 billion (won’t even notice, they’ve failed to account for over $2.46 trillion139)
  • China: $2.96 billion (what they spend on military parades140)
  • India: $835 million (one aircraft carrier’s wine budget)
  • Russia: $1.09 billion (Putin’s shirt budget)
  • Saudi Arabia: $754 million (one prince’s yacht)
  • UK: $686 million
  • France: $563 million (military cheese allocation)
  • And so on…

Projected annual contributions to a 1% Treaty Fund from top military spenders, based on a 1% reallocation of their military budgets.

Projected annual contributions to a 1% Treaty Fund from top military spenders, based on a 1% reallocation of their military budgets.

Article 3: The Incentive Mechanism

Politicians who support the treaty receive Incentive Alignment Bond benefits: campaign funding from the political incentive pool ($2.72B/year) and lucrative post-office career opportunities. Supporting the treaty becomes the career-maximizing choice.

Why This Is Actually About National Security (No, Really)

Here’s what actually threatens nations today:

Real Threats (That Actually Kill People)

A comparison of global annual death tolls from major health threats and pandemics relative to historical war casualties.

A comparison of global annual death tolls from major health threats and pandemics relative to historical war casualties.
  1. Pandemics: COVID killed more Americans than World War II, Korea, and Vietnam combined141
  2. Cancer: Kills 10 million globally per year142
  3. Heart Disease: 18 million annual deaths143
  4. Dementia: Destroying the minds of every nation’s elderly (and sometimes their leaders)
  5. Climate Disasters: Making entire regions uninhabitable
  6. Mental Health Crisis: More people kill themselves than die in wars144

Fake Threats (That Countries Spend Trillions On)

  1. Other Countries Maybe Attacking: Happens occasionally, usually over stupid stuff
  2. Terrorists: Kill fewer people than furniture accidents145
  3. Space Aliens: Still zero confirmed kills
  4. The Communists/Capitalists: Mostly just sell each other stuff now
  5. Immigration: People moving around, terrifying
  6. Critical Race Theory: A graduate seminar that somehow threatens nations

A 1% treaty addresses the real threats without compromising the ability to deal with the imaginary ones.

It’s security policy reframed to address actual threats.

Bar chart contrasting annual mortality rates from medical threats versus traditional military threats.

Bar chart contrasting annual mortality rates from medical threats versus traditional military threats.

The Rebranding Campaign: From “Weakness” to “Strategic Genius”

Politicians hate looking weak. It’s their biggest fear, right after being caught with their mistress or having to use their own healthcare system.

A visual representation of political reframing, showing the transformation of a single policy from a negative ‘weakness’ perception to a positive ‘strategic genius’ perception.

A visual representation of political reframing, showing the transformation of a single policy from a negative ‘weakness’ perception to a positive ‘strategic genius’ perception.

So you don’t frame this as “reducing military spending.” You frame it as:

“The Strategic Health Defense Initiative”

A comparison showing the shift from a negative political frame (defense cuts) to a positive strategic frame (biodefense shield).

A comparison showing the shift from a negative political frame (defense cuts) to a positive strategic frame (biodefense shield).
  • Old Frame: “We’re cutting defense by 1%” (Political suicide)
  • New Frame: “We’re building a biodefense shield against the real threats” (Political genius)

The Talking Points That Make Hawks Sound Like Doves

For Conservatives: “This is the ultimate America First policy. We’re protecting American lives from the Chinese virus and any future biological threats. It’s the Strategic Defense Initiative for the 21st century.”

A hub-and-spoke infographic showing how a single core policy is strategically messaged across different ideological perspectives like national security, economic ROI, and social justice.

A hub-and-spoke infographic showing how a single core policy is strategically messaged across different ideological perspectives like national security, economic ROI, and social justice.

For Liberals: “We’re redirecting the tools of war to the cause of healing. This is how we build a more just and equitable world.”

For Nationalists: “Our nation will be stronger when our people aren’t dying of preventable diseases. A healthy population is a powerful population.”

For Economists: “The ROI is 84.8M:1 (95% CI: 46.6M:1-144M:1). This beats every other public health intervention on record.”

For Conspiracy Theorists: “Big Pharma hates this one weird trick that makes medicine basically free.”

For Everyone: “Your mom has cancer. This might cure it. Sign here.”

Implementation

For the detailed execution timeline, see the Roadmap.

The Money Flow: Where $27.2B Actually Goes

Once the treaty is signed and the money starts flowing, here’s what happens:

The 1% Treaty Fund

Input: $27.2B annually from military budgets worldwide

Distribution: The $27.2B flows into the 1% Treaty Fund, where it is allocated using an 80/10/10 automatic split before any funds reach discretionary spending:

Allocation Percentage Annual Amount Purpose
Pragmatic Clinical Trials

80%

$21.8B

Patient subsidies, R&D, pandemic prep
VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bond Returns

10%

$2.72B

Perpetual investor payments
IAB Political Incentives

10%

$2.72B

Rewards for supporting legislators

The 80% allocated to pragmatic clinical trials is then distributed by the people of Earth via the Wishocracy platform. There are no committees or central planners. While allocations are dynamic, initial priorities determined by the crowd are projected to focus on:

  • Patient Subsidies: The largest portion, creating a market for clinical trials.
  • Research & Development: Funding for breakthrough platform technologies.
  • Pandemic Preparedness: A global insurance policy against the next COVID. The exact percentages will shift in real-time based on humanity’s collective will.

Governance: Governance is handled by Wishocracy, a system of direct digital democracy detailed in the ‘How to Replace Congress With an App’ chapter. In short: every human gets direct say on funding priorities. Yes, even Florida Man. We’ll risk it.

Sankey diagram tracing the flow of funds from global military budgets into specific treaty allocation buckets.

Sankey diagram tracing the flow of funds from global military budgets into specific treaty allocation buckets.

Year One Projected Outcomes

Right now, only 1.90M patients/year (95% CI: 1.50M patients/year-2.30M patients/year) participate in drug trials annually) out of 2.40B people (95% CI: 2.00B people-2.80B people) with chronic disease. A 1% treaty changes this:

Current System

With a 1% treaty + a decentralized framework for drug assessment

Side-by-side comparison of costs, participation rates, and speed between the current model and the proposed framework.

Side-by-side comparison of costs, participation rates, and speed between the current model and the proposed framework.

For detailed impact projections, see the full economic analysis.

The Incentive Structure

The military-industrial complex will LOVE this.

An infographic illustrating the ‘1 percent Pivot’ incentive structure, showing how a small shift in defense spending leads to five key benefits: budget retention, high-margin biotech ventures, improved public image, high investment returns, and personal health breakthroughs.

An infographic illustrating the ‘1 percent Pivot’ incentive structure, showing how a small shift in defense spending leads to five key benefits: budget retention, high-margin biotech ventures, improved public image, high investment returns, and personal health breakthroughs.

Why? Because they get to:

  1. Keep 99% of their budget (still plenty for bombs)
  2. Pivot 1% to biotech (higher profit margins)
  3. Look like heroes (rare for arms dealers)
  4. Invest in the fund (272% annual returns, remember?)
  5. Not die of cancer (even arms dealers get cancer)

Lockheed Martin Presents: The F-35 Cancer Killer™ Boeing Proud Sponsor of: Not Dying of Alzheimer’s Raytheon Technologies: Now With 1% Less Death

They keep their contracts. They keep their profits. They just point 1% of their death machines at actual death. This isn’t just about saving lives; it’s about creating a substantial growth industry, the business of not-dying, and letting everyone get rich in the process.

What Happens If This Actually Works

The Endgame: Reorienting Global Priorities

A 1% treaty isn’t the goal. It’s the beginning. It’s the opening wedge that demonstrates a better way to allocate resources. Your multi-generational strategy is to make organized violence less economically necessary. You’re not appealing to better angels; you’re making peace more profitable than war.

A conceptual diagram illustrating the ‘opening wedge’ strategy, where a 1 percent treaty shifts global resource allocation from organized violence toward a more profitable peace-based economy.

A conceptual diagram illustrating the ‘opening wedge’ strategy, where a 1 percent treaty shifts global resource allocation from organized violence toward a more profitable peace-based economy.

The Ratchet Effect: How to Boil a Frog (The Frog is the War Machine)

Once a 1% treaty is signed and the first cures for “untreatable” diseases start rolling out, the system becomes more valuable. This is how you sustain it.

A circular feedback loop illustrating the ‘Ratchet Effect’ where medical breakthroughs drive public support, leading to incremental funding shifts from military budgets to global health.

A circular feedback loop illustrating the ‘Ratchet Effect’ where medical breakthroughs drive public support, leading to incremental funding shifts from military budgets to global health.

Every five to ten years, you organize another global vote. The question is simple: “Hey, that worked out great. Grandma’s dementia is manageable and we stopped that pandemic before it started. Want to try another half-percent?”

It’s a politically tiny ask with an enormous payoff. This creates a feedback loop from hell for the “war is good, actually” crowd. More cures lead to more popular support, which leads to more votes for more funding, which leads to more cures. It’s a self-reinforcing flywheel for peace. The military budget gets put on a diet, one delicious, life-saving, politically-unassailable bite at a time.

The Economic Gold Rush

Eventually, the economic gravity of the planet will shift. The most talented scientists and engineers will be drawn to the massive opportunities in health and longevity, not designing better ways to blow people up. The world’s biggest investors will realize the greatest returns are found in curing Parkinson’s, not in building another aircraft carrier.

A conceptual shift showing the migration of talent, capital, and national power from military defense toward medical innovation and human longevity.

A conceptual shift showing the migration of talent, capital, and national power from military defense toward medical innovation and human longevity.

Nations will find that true power and global influence come not from their capacity for destruction, but from their contributions to human flourishing. The new geopolitical competition won’t be about who has the most weapons, but about who achieved the most breakthroughs in medicine.

The Vision

The 1% is just the beginning. Once the system proves itself, the feedback loop takes over: cures lead to popular support, which leads to votes for more funding, which leads to more cures. Each success makes the next increment politically easier.

A circular feedback loop showing how medical cures drive public support, leading to increased funding and further scientific breakthroughs.

A circular feedback loop showing how medical cures drive public support, leading to increased funding and further scientific breakthroughs.

For quantitative projections of health and economic impacts, see the comprehensive analysis.

Objections

For detailed responses to common objections (“This makes us weak!”, “This is socialism!”, “What if there’s a war?”, etc.), see the Frequently Asked Objections.

Avoiding Treaty Pitfalls

Treaties fail in predictable ways. Here’s how this one avoids the common killers:

Reservation Games

Countries love to sign treaties then add exceptions that gut them.

Solution: No reservations permitted. All or nothing. Take it or leave it.

Ratification Delays

Sign with fanfare, then let it die in committee forever.

Solution: Provisional application. Takes effect on signature. Ratification just formalizes what’s already happening.

Creative Accounting

Reclassify “military” spending as “peacekeeping” or “homeland security” to dodge obligations.

Solution: IABs make creative accounting self-defeating. Politicians who benefit from treaty compliance have personal financial incentive to ensure their nation’s full 1% contribution flows through. Reclassifying military spending to dodge obligations reduces IAB returns for that nation’s own legislators, the same people who control budget classifications.

Parliamentary Obstacles

Executive signs, legislature refuses to implement.

A flowchart comparing the paths of standard treaties versus self-executing treaties, showing how the latter bypasses the legislative implementation step to reach domestic effect.

A flowchart comparing the paths of standard treaties versus self-executing treaties, showing how the latter bypasses the legislative implementation step to reach domestic effect.

Solution: Self-executing treaty. No implementing legislation needed. Direct effect in domestic law (per the Supremacy Clause in the US, similar provisions elsewhere).

Summary

A 1% treaty is a piece of paper that says “Let’s spend 1% less on killing and 1% more on not dying.”

That’s it. That’s the whole thing.

It doesn’t end war. It doesn’t destroy the military. It doesn’t create world peace.

It just moves the first 1% of our murder budget to our survival budget.

If we can’t agree on that - if we can’t agree that spending 1 penny less on death and 1 penny more on life is a good idea - then we deserve whatever’s coming.

Addendum: The Actual Treaty Text (First Draft)

THE TREATY FOR THE 1% REALLOCATION OF MILITARY EXPENDITURES TOWARDS BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT FOR THE PREVENTION OF HUMAN SUFFERING AND DEATH

(Or: The “Let’s Not Die” Treaty, for short)

WHEREAS, humanity spends $2.72T annually on methods of killing itself;

WHEREAS, this seems somewhat counterproductive;

WHEREAS, diseases kill more people than all wars combined146 and don’t even have the decency to be quick about it;

WHEREAS, we have nuclear weapons sufficient to end civilization 20 times but can’t cure male pattern baldness once;

WHEREAS, this is embarrassing;

NOW, THEREFORE, the undersigned nations agree to stop being complete idiots about this, as follows:

Article I: Each signatory shall redirect exactly 1% of its annual military budget to the 1% Treaty Fund for allocation to pragmatic clinical trials.

A visualization of the 1 percent Treaty showing the redirection of global military funds toward biomedical research, contrasting current spending on weapons with the proposed investment in curing diseases.

A visualization of the 1 percent Treaty showing the redirection of global military funds toward biomedical research, contrasting current spending on weapons with the proposed investment in curing diseases.

Article II: Transfers shall be automatic, immediate, and irrevocable. No “we’ll get to it later.”

Article III: Percentages may increase but never decrease. This is a ratchet, not a yo-yo.

Article IV: Compliance shall be verified by blockchain and AI. No creative accounting.

Article V: Non-compliant parties lose access to IAB benefits and treaty fund advantages. Your opponents get what you forfeit.

Article VI: Success metrics trigger mandatory percentage reviews. When it works, we do more.

Article VII: Citizens have standing to enforce via domestic courts. You can sue your own government for non-compliance.

Article VIII: Withdrawal requires unanimous consent of all parties plus 10-year notice. Good luck with that.

Article IX: This treaty supersedes all conflicting domestic law. Yes, even that law.

Article X: Entry into force upon signature by two states. We only need two countries brave enough to go first.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned, being of sound mind and tired of watching their loved ones die of preventable diseases, have executed this Treaty.

Signed this day, ____________, in the year of our ongoing confusion.


[Nation Name] “We choose life, I guess”


P.S. - Yes, this includes space weapons. Nice try.