Submit a Proposal Suggestion

Use this page to prepare proposed changes, additions, missing pillars, corrections, or better wording for public review.

Submissions are for improving the proposals, not scoring partisan points. A strong submission identifies a specific problem, proposes a concrete improvement, and gives readers enough context to evaluate the idea fairly.

What should be submitted

  • Specific proposed changes to Proposal One or Proposal Two.
  • Missing reform pillars.
  • Better wording.
  • Legal or practical concerns.
  • Evidence-backed criticism.
  • Examples from states, cities, countries, or institutions.
  • Tax reform suggestions.
  • Public education reform suggestions.
  • Anti-corruption and campaign-finance reforms.
  • Ways to strengthen equality and rights protections.
  • Ways to reduce corporate capture.

What should not be submitted

  • Partisan slogans with no reform substance.
  • Attacks on ordinary citizens based on race, religion, gender, sexuality, disability, nationality, or political identity.
  • Calls for violence.
  • Doxxing or private personal information.
  • Conspiracy claims without evidence.
  • Corporate lobbying language disguised as citizen reform.
  • Spam, fundraising, or self-promotion.
  • Proposals that remove rights from one group to benefit another.

Required submission format

Use this structure so readers can understand the proposal, test the reasoning, and compare likely benefits against risks.

  1. Title
  2. Which proposal or section it affects
  3. Problem being addressed
  4. Proposed change
  5. Why it is necessary
  6. Immediate benefits
  7. Risks or downsides
  8. Long-term benefits
  9. Who may support it
  10. Who may oppose it
  11. Sources or examples
  12. Suggested wording if available

Ready to share a suggestion?

Public suggestions should go through GitHub Discussions. Use email only for a private note or a concern that should not be posted publicly.