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The American Investment Bill

Section 1: Global Emergency Internet Infrastructure
The United States will build and operate a fully independent, sovereign backup internet system for the planet. This system will include a dedicated constellation of satellites, ground-based server farms, global super modems, and hard infrastructure capable of activating in the event of global internet collapse. Every federal, state, county, and city government, along with businesses and individual citizens, will be offered the opportunity to back up their digital infrastructure through monthly subscription services. This emergency system will preserve financial systems, national security, healthcare records, and communication channels if the global internet is disrupted.

Estimated Annual Revenue (from subscription services and sovereign backup agreements): $500 billion to $1.5 trillion.

Section 2: Weaponized Trade Strategy
The United States will establish bilateral and multilateral agreements stipulating that in exchange for U.S. military arms, equipment, and intelligence aid, recipient nations will commit to profit-sharing agreements. These will include:

  • Mineral Rights: Nations such as Ukraine, receiving U.S. arms, will agree that a fixed percentage of proceeds from the sale of minerals (e.g., lithium, nickel, coal) will be returned to the U.S. Treasury.

  • Agricultural Revenue Sharing: Nations supported with arms will provide the U.S. a royalty percentage on key agricultural exports (e.g., grains, sunflower oil, livestock).

  • Technology Licensing: Nations like Israel and Taiwan receiving military aid must allocate a share of future revenue from technology exports (e.g., semiconductors, defense tech, software) to the United States as intellectual property royalties.

Estimated Annual Revenue Potential: $40–75 billion across multiple trade theaters.

Section 3: Modernizing the 1099 Economy
The U.S. will enforce proper taxation of independent contractors by:

  • Creating a national 1099 software to manage subcontractor compliance.

  • Requiring an "Admin Fund Fee" of $12 per week per 1099 worker, paid by the client company, to cover future Social Security, Medicare, and liability fund offsets.

  • Auditing large gig platforms and labor staffing entities for compliance.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $60–90 billion (new taxes and compliance fees).

Section 4: Reforming Grazing Fees on Federal Land
Under the Taylor Grazing Act, the average fee paid by ranchers is only $0.40 per acre annually. This bill mandates:

  • An increase to $2.00 per acre (indexed for inflation)

  • Minimum $5.00 per acre in high-density or water-access federal zones

  • Dedicated reinvestment of funds into conservation and wildfire mitigation

Estimated Annual Revenue Increase: $600 million to $1.2 billion.

Section 5: Facilitated Foreign Trade Deals for U.S. Manufacturers
The federal government will assist U.S. manufacturers in making foreign trade deals, particularly with developing countries. In exchange for U.S. State Department and trade counsel support, the government will receive 1–3% of total deal value in perpetuity.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $15–30 billion.

Section 6: Clean Energy Exports with Royalty Agreements
The United States will assist clean energy companies in exporting solar, wind, nuclear, and hydrogen tech to Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia. In exchange, the federal government will claim a long-term royalty on energy revenues or installed infrastructure.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $10–25 billion.

Section 7: Undocumented Worker Compliance Fund
Undocumented individuals seeking to remain in the U.S. will be offered a path to semi-legal status via an annual fee and compliance registry.

  • Annual compliance fee: $2,000

  • Must pass biometric ID verification and criminal background checks

Estimated Annual Revenue (from ~8 million workers): $16 billion.

Section 8: Federal Land Leases
640 million acres of federal land will be reviewed for monetization.

  • Expand timber, carbon, solar, and grazing leases

  • Lease row crop rights in eligible zones

Estimated Annual Revenue: $35–50 billion.

Section 9: Mineral Resource Royalties
License and lease rights to extract rare earth elements, lithium, and uranium with appropriate safeguards.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $25–40 billion.

Section 10: Federal Data and IP Licensing
Commercialize patents and license satellite, climate, and medical data.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $5–10 billion.

Section 11: Infrastructure Monetization
Lease toll roads, ports, and airports. Sell naming rights and create federal infrastructure bonds.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $15–20 billion.

Section 12: Health Innovation Royalties
Recapture royalties on NIH-funded pharmaceutical research that becomes commercialized.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $10–15 billion.

Section 13: Educational and Cultural Licensing
Monetize digital access to U.S. education, history, and national archives.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $1–3 billion.

Section 14: Defense Consulting and Cybersecurity
License secure communication tools and provide contracted training and surveillance to allies.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $10–20 billion.

Section 15: International University Licensing
License U.S. universities to open foreign campuses and increase full-tuition international students.

Estimated Annual Revenue: $5–8 billion.

Total Annual Revenue Potential: $858 billion to $2.142 trillion

This plan offers a non-tax-based pathway to stabilize and grow America's budget, protect Social Security and Medicare, and reclaim long-term fiscal sovereignty without burdening working-class citizens.

 

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