


I didn’t plan to run again — not by ambition, but because the circumstances are perfect. I was guided into this moment by my protégé and trusted campaign manager, William Pounds, who saw what I see: that now is the time for experience, courage, and relentless integrity to meet the challenges our country faces.
This campaign is about confronting the systems that fail everyday people, speaking truths that others ignore, and advancing solutions rooted in justice, transparency, and abundance. Together, we will hold the powerful accountable, protect the vulnerable, and restore a government that serves its citizens first.
This isn’t just my fight. It is ours — and it begins here.

When I stood in a congressional hearing room and directly confronted Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld about reports that DynCorp contractors were involved in child trafficking overseas — and that whistleblowers were punished instead of perpetrators — I was not grandstanding. I was doing my job. DynCorp employees in Bosnia had been implicated in buying and selling girls. Instead of rewarding the truth, our government rewarded the contractor with more money and protected the powerful. I demanded answers because silence is complicity.
That moment matters now.
The Epstein scandal tore open the curtain on a system where wealth and influence insulated abusers while victims were ignored. When Marjorie Taylor Greene began pressing for full disclosure of the Epstein files, she stepped into a fight that is larger than party labels. Transparency is not partisan. Accountability is not partisan. Protecting children is not partisan.
I have been here before.
I know what it means to challenge the Pentagon. I know what it means to demand oversight when leadership would rather look away. I know the resistance that comes when you threaten networks of money and power. And I have already paid the political price for telling the truth.
My plank for justice is clear:
Full declassification of all Epstein-related investigative records consistent with protecting victims’ identities.
Independent investigations into government contracts and agencies implicated in trafficking cover-ups.
Permanent whistleblower protections for those who expose trafficking and abuse.
Ending federal contracts with any corporation tied to exploitation or obstruction of justice.
A victims-first restitution fund financed by clawbacks from convicted traffickers and complicit institutions.
Human trafficking thrives in shadows. Government secrecy feeds it. When contractors, intelligence agencies, or political elites are shielded from scrutiny, predators flourish. That is not conspiracy thinking. That is the predictable result of concentrated power without oversight.
I confronted Rumsfeld when it was unpopular and politically risky. I will confront anyone — Republican or Democrat — who protects traffickers or buries evidence. If others have begun pulling at this thread, I am prepared to finish unraveling it.
Justice for trafficking victims requires courage, transparency, and an unwavering refusal to bow to power. I have demonstrated that courage before. I am ready to continue the fight until the system protects the vulnerable instead of the connected.

The United States government is currently occupied by a dual-loyalty regime that has placed the strategic and financial interests of a foreign apartheid state—Israel—above the safety, rights, and will of the American people. For decades, a powerful Zionist lobby has infiltrated every level of our government, from Congress to the executive branch, ensuring that billions of our tax dollars fund the slow-motion genocide of the Palestinian people while silencing any voice of dissent.
My own life is a testament to this occupation. As a direct result of my three attempts to break the illegal siege on Gaza—twice by sea on the SS Dignity and the Spirit of Humanity, and once successfully by land convoy alongside my dear friend George Galloway—I was targeted and ultimately ousted from my position by the very lobby I am now asking you to help dismantle. They did not want the American people to see the reality of Gaza, a reality that has now devolved into an unmistakable genocide under the watch of our captured government.
The depths of this regime's depravity are bottomless. The Epstein files and other investigative reports have illuminated the shocking truth: the Israeli intelligence apparatus will stop at nothing, including the sexual exploitation of children and the mass killing of civilians, to achieve its barbaric, expansionist aims. By funding and providing diplomatic cover for these actions, our government is complicit in these crimes against humanity. This is not an alliance; it is a hostage situation.
Therefore, we pledge to:
A truly free America must be free from the corrupting influence of foreign lobbies. We will reclaim our government from the Zionists and stand unequivocally on the side of human rights, international law, and the liberation of the Palestinian people.

For too long, we have been governed by the politics of scarcity. We are told there is not enough — not enough money for healthcare, not enough housing, not enough education, not enough investment in our communities. Yet there is always enough for war budgets, corporate bailouts, and speculative bubbles. Scarcity, in this system, is not a law of nature. It is a policy choice.
I reject the idea that working people must fight over crumbs while wealth concentrates at the top. I reject the rationing mindset that pits neighbor against neighbor. I reject an extractive economy that strips communities of labor, land, and dignity to maximize short-term profit.
America is not a poor country. We are a mismanaged one.
The question is not whether we have resources. It is whether we optimize them. Do we design systems that circulate wealth broadly, or systems that siphon it upward? Do we invest in productive capacity — manufacturing, regenerative agriculture, public infrastructure, research and innovation — or do we subsidize financial speculation and monopolies?
An economy of abundance is built on optimization. That means using data, technology, and democratic planning to reduce waste, increase efficiency, and align production with human need rather than artificial scarcity. It means modernizing our grid, upgrading supply chains, incentivizing circular manufacturing, and ensuring that idle labor and idle land are brought into productive use.
It means public banking that finances local enterprise instead of extracting interest for distant shareholders. It means antitrust enforcement that restores competition. It means a tax system that rewards value creation over rent-seeking.
Scarcity politics tells people to tighten their belts. Abundance politics asks why so much is being hoarded in the first place.
Economic justice is not about rationing decline. It is about designing prosperity. It is about recognizing that in a technologically advanced society, widespread poverty is evidence of structural failure, not natural limitation. When productivity rises but living standards stagnate, the problem is distribution and governance.
We can build an economy that plans for abundance — one that optimizes resources, invests in people, and measures success by well-being rather than quarterly returns. The tools exist. The wealth exists. What has been missing is the political will to reorganize power in the public interest.
The future will belong either to managed scarcity or engineered abundance. I choose abundance — disciplined, intelligent, and shared.
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