WHAT WE BELIEVE


No More Foreign Wars

George Washington cautioned the early republic against becoming entangled in the affairs of foreign powers, understanding that the health of a free and independent society depends on prioritizing the needs of its own people. Today, that vision has been cast aside. The United States finds itself mired in endless conflicts abroad, weighed down by immense debts and crises that offer no tangible benefit to working Americans.

It is time to adopt a foreign policy grounded in realism, restraint, and the material interests of the people, not the ambitions of elites or the profits of arms manufacturers. We oppose the use of American labor, resources, and lives to sustain wars that do not serve our collective well-being. Our stance includes ending support for foreign military entanglements in places like Ukraine, Taiwan, and Israel. These are not the battles of everyday Americans. Our focus must return to rebuilding our communities, strengthening democratic control over foreign policy, and ensuring that the working class is never asked to sacrifice for someone else’s empire.


Post-Capitalism

This country was not built by the wealthy or the well-connected. It was built by working Americans, those who rose before the sun, who toiled in fields, factories, and mines, who fought in wars and raised families with grit and pride. American identity is not a brand or a product. It is a legacy shaped by labor, sacrifice, and the unwavering belief in the dignity of ordinary people.

From the beginning, the American ideal was never about kings or corporations. It was about a people who refused to be ruled without consent, who believed the fruits of their labor belonged to them and their communities. The founding struggle was not only for independence from a foreign crown, but for a society where power came from below, not imposed from above.

True patriotism has always lived among workers, farmers, builders, and defenders of this land. It is found in the calloused hands of those who create, not the idle hands of those who exploit. It thrives in small towns and union halls, not in boardrooms or stock exchanges. American identity means solidarity. It means standing together in the fight for justice, not only in courts, but on the job, in our neighborhoods, and across this land.

Today, that identity is being stripped away, not by foreign enemies, but by capitalism itself. A system that puts profit over people, divides us, exploits us, and discards us when we are no longer useful to the bottom line. Capitalism has drained our communities, commodified our lives, and sold off our future. We are not neutral, we are against capitalism.

We are against an economy where the few get rich from the labor of the many. We are against a system that treats workers as expendable, that measures success in stock prices while people struggle to survive. We are against the lie that endless growth can coexist with human dignity and democratic control.

To reclaim America, we must remember who we are. We are not just consumers. We are citizens. We are workers. We are the foundation of this nation. And we deserve not just to survive, but to thrive, together. That means rejecting capitalism, and building something better in its place: an economy rooted in cooperation, community, and justice.

American identity does not live in corporate slogans or performative flag-waving. It lives in the strength of people who organize, who resist, and who refuse to accept a system that denies them a future. It lives in the belief that we can, and must, build a new world, beyond capitalism, and by our own hands.


American Democracy

We stand for a real and organic democracy, one that reflects the will of the people, not the interests of global elites, billionaires, or corporate lobbyists. True democracy is not a hollow ritual of casting a vote every few years while unelected forces shape the future behind closed doors. It means having the power to protect our families, our communities, and our way of life from those who profit off division and decay.

For too long, powerful interests with no loyalty to our nation or its people have manipulated our institutions. They use their wealth and influence to rewrite the rules in their favor, leaving ordinary Americans voiceless in their own homeland. The very systems that should defend us now serve a small, self-interested class with no concern for the cultural, economic, or moral well-being of the nation.

We believe that those who build, labor, and sustain this country, the workers, the families, the small business owners, deserve a real say in how its resources are used and how its future is shaped. The land, housing, industry, and infrastructure should serve the national interest and the common good, not private profiteering or foreign speculation.

Defending democracy means standing together, reclaiming sovereignty over our neighborhoods, workplaces, and schools, and resisting the displacement and social atomization being forced upon us. Real democracy is rooted in strong communities, local institutions, and cultural cohesion. It is built from the ground up, through solidarity, cooperation, and the unapologetic defense of our people’s right to exist, thrive, and determine their own destiny.

We fight for a society that is just, free, and grounded in the values that made our civilization strong, a democracy that belongs to the people, not the privileged few.