The Plan
Concrete. Doable. Built in phases, each one triggered by real numbers — not press releases. Here's how we get from pissed off to national policy.
What we're demanding
A national industrial strategy
A 20-year plan for critical industries: domestic capacity targets, workforce pipelines, supplier ecosystems, and procurement commitments. A plan that outlives whoever signs it.
A Secretary of Manufacturing
Cabinet-level. One office responsible for industrial capacity, supply-chain vulnerability, and long-horizon planning — across commerce, defense, energy, labor, and education.
The Amendment
Manufacturing is national security — in the Constitution. The United States maintains the industrial capacity to defend itself. Not a policy that flips with the next election. A principle.
Public money, public terms, public scorecard
Markets are useful. They are not sacred. Strategic industries get treated like infrastructure, not lines on a quarterly spreadsheet.
- Public support tied to domestic production
- Milestones and audits
- Clawbacks for firms that take the money and offshore anyway
- Domestic content requirements
- Long-term procurement commitments
No subsidy without obligation. No obligation without audit. No audit without penalties. Every supported project publishes what it got, what it promised, what it built, and whether it delivered.
How we get there
Build the base You are here
Signatures and funding. Real names, confirmed emails, verified contributions. Every number on this site is one we can defend.
No bots, no bought lists, no astroturf. When we say 5,000 people, it's 5,000 people.
First campaign
One ask. One week. Four channels. Email, phone, postal mail, and official contact pages — all pointed at the same lawmakers at the same time.
Coordinated pressure gets noticed. Trickles get filed in the trash.
Make friends
Unions. Trade associations. Manufacturers. The people who never wanted this fight to be necessary and never stopped fighting it.
Organizations endorse on the record and go on the wall. Their weight, our numbers — same direction.
The scorecard
Who signed. Who dodged. Who's blocking. Every legislator asked to put manufacturing security on the record — and every answer published.
Named. Updated. Permanent. Nobody gets to quietly kill this and walk away clean.
The Essentials
Never should have left our shores. We lead in these again — no debate.
- Steel & alloys
- Chips & ICs
- Circuit boards
- Machine tools
- Shipbuilding
- Pharmaceuticals
- Solar & batteries
- Grid & transformers
- Rare earths
- Aerospace parts
- Robotics
- Heavy equipment
If it's on this list, we make it here. Period.
Our word
- We don't expire. This outlasts election cycles, news cycles, and attention spans.
- We publish everything. Progress, misses, and money — the good and the ugly.
- We name names. Whoever tries to derail this gets pointed at, in public, with receipts.
- We stay until it's policy. Manufacturing Is National Security — written down, official, done.