
End the Unauthorized War.
One coordinated action creates the leverage to force Congress to do its job.
Congress Never Voted For This. Your Kids Shouldn't Have To Fight In It.
PHIERStorm is how we stop it.
The same coordinated action builds the leverage to stop this war β and fix healthcare at the same time.
Not later. Not separately. The same pressure forces both.
District counts begin compiling immediately. 1,500 in your district triggers a mandatory town hall.
βοΈ Here's what's actually happening:
The President is pushing us deeper into war β without a congressional vote. Congress is funding it anyway.
The Constitution is clear: Congress declares war. Not the President. Not the Pentagon. Not defense contractors. Your representatives have the power to stop this β but they won't, until we give them a reason to fear the consequences.
PHIERS is that reason.
β οΈ URGENT: War escalation is the biggest threat to everything, everywhere, all at once.
If the war spirals, nothing else matters. The draft isn't a conspiracy β it's being discussed in the Pentagon right now. We stop it now, or we may never get the chance. This is the priority.
Every single day. That's what the unauthorized war costs American taxpayers β with no congressional approval, no exit strategy, and no end in sight.
They're floating it. No vote to start the war β no vote should send your kids to fight in it. Stop it before it starts.
Congressional declarations of war. Not one vote. Not one debate. Just a blank check your representatives signed with your money and your children's futures.
U.S. troops deployed to the Middle East as of 2026 β with more on the way. None of them sent there by a vote of Congress. All of them someone's kid.
The only thing that stops a draft is people who organized before it happened.
The ripple effects are already hitting your grocery bill, your gas prices, and your electric bill. Unauthorized wars don't stay in the Middle East β they come home through every supply chain connected to oil. β See the full economic picture on the Crisis page
These are someone's kids. Someone's neighbors. Someone's family.
Congress sent them without a vote.
The War Nobody Authorized β And Now They Want Your Kids
Congress never voted to authorize this war. Not once. No debate. No mandate. No exit strategy. The Constitution is unambiguous β Congress declares war. Not the President. Not a defense contractor. Your Congress member. The one you elected. The one you can replace.
They didn't do their job. And now β with the conflict escalating and supply lines under attack β the word nobody wanted to hear is back on the table.
Draft.
Your kids. Sent to fight in a war your representatives were too cowardly to put their names on. A war that costs over $1 billion of your money every single day. A war that's already driving up your gas, your groceries, your electric bill β because when oil tankers get attacked in the Middle East, your kitchen table pays the price.
Nothing they wanted. Everything they feared. Not because their voices don't matter β but because they had no leverage.
Why Protest Alone Won't Stop a Draft
Congress ignores protests because protests don't threaten their jobs.
The only thing that reliably moves Congress is organized people β district by district, names on the record, with documented electoral consequences. When a politician sees that 1,500 verified constituents in their district are aligned on an issue β and that those constituents will vote accordingly β the math changes.
No leverage means no change. That's the lesson of every failed movement.
Leverage doesn't come from one issue.
It comes from coordinated people acting together.
PHIERS builds the leverage β by organizing people around one winnable demand.
That same leverage applies everywhere immediately.
Nothing changes until ignoring people costs more than responding to them.
PHIERS is how we raise that cost.
Stopping the War Is the Priority β Here's How PHIERS Does It
War escalation makes everything else impossible. The draft would tear families apart. Congress keeps funding it because they face no consequence β until we give them one.
PHIERS is the mechanism that creates that consequence. Here's how it works:
This is one coordinated action β and how it creates leverage across all demands at the same time.
Organize around one winnable demand β healthcare.
$600 telehealth on the ACA Exchange β one specific, verifiable demand that saves $2.7 trillion a year and covers 234 million Americans. This is how we prove organized people can force results β fast.
Reach 3.5% β and nationwide leverage is real.
11.6 million people. Every district affected. Every seat becomes competitive. Congress must respond β or face replacement. Harvard research proved it: No sustained campaign that reached 3.5% participation has failed.
Lock in savings and political power simultaneously.
$2.7 trillion a year redirected from insurance to people β wages, veterans' care, and an economy that works. β See the math
That same leverage forces war accountability and stops the draft.
The moment Congress sees this level of organized leverage, the same force that compels healthcare reform compels war accountability β no more blank checks, no more undeclared conflicts.
Build leverage once.
That same leverage forces healthcare reform, war accountability, and stops the draft.
Stop the War. Stop the Draft. Make Congress Do Its Job.
The energy in the streets is real. The anger is justified. But energy without mechanism is frustration that fades. And frustration that fades is exactly what they're counting on.
PHIERS is that mechanism. Healthcare builds the leverage. That same leverage forces accountability β including ending the unauthorized war and stopping the draft.
Not instead of protest. In addition to it.
With teeth.
PHIERS Can Deliver. Now Is the Time.
One coordinated action creates leverage.
That leverage forces results β across every issue at once.
That same pressure forces Congress to end the war and stop the draft.
Your name on the record isn't just about a $600 healthcare plan. It's proof that you showed up. That you were counted. That when the moment came β you didn't wait for someone else to fix it.
Where You Go Next
Crisis
The full picture β healthcare, economy, war, and why it's all connected.
β Explore βTelehealth vs Insurance
$600 replaces $10,000 β the fix that starts the sequence.
β Learn More βLeverage
1,500 signatures in your district forces a mandatory Congressional response.
β See the Math β5D Solutions
Healthcare, jobs, economy, politics, peace β connected problems, one answer.
β Discover βSimple Math
The numbers that make this undeniable β $2.7 trillion in savings.
β Crunch the Numbers βTake Action
Put your name on the record. This is where it counts.
β Take Action βTwo Sets of Laws.
Both Say No.
Most people know the constitutional argument. Congress declares war β not the President, not the Pentagon, not a defense contractor. Article I, Section 8. Written clearly. The President commands the military. Congress authorizes its use. That separation exists because the people who send others to war should be the people most directly accountable to those doing the dying.
Military action without a clear congressional authorization vote bypasses that accountability entirely. Members of Congress get to benefit from the action politically β or distance themselves from it β without ever having to put their names on it publicly.
That's the constitutional wall. What fewer people know is that there's a second one.
The international framework America built also says no.
The United Nations Charter β the framework America championed after World War II precisely to prevent nations from making unilateral decisions to use military force β is explicit. Article 2(4) prohibits the threat or use of force against another nation's territorial integrity. Article 25 obligates member states to act in accordance with Security Council decisions.
Military action without UN authorization doesn't just raise constitutional questions. It breaks the rules America wrote, signed, and spent decades insisting every other nation follow.
This matters in three concrete ways.
First: it removes every justification.
You cannot credibly claim self-defense while initiating offensive military action. You cannot invoke American leadership to bypass the framework America built to hold every nation β including itself β accountable. The moment America exempts itself from the rules it wrote, it surrenders the moral standing to demand anyone else follow them.
Second: it creates conditions for de-escalation.
The Strait of Hormuz stays open when the legal framework protecting it is one every party has standing to invoke. De-escalation requires a door both sides can walk through with dignity. Consistently applied international law is that door. An open strait means oil flows β and your grocery bill, your gas, your medicine, and your heat don't absorb a shock nobody voted for.
Third: it builds the widest possible coalition.
People who care about international law find standing here. People who care about sovereignty and rules that bind everyone equally find standing here. People who believe America should lead by example rather than by exemption find standing here. People who were promised an end to foreign entanglements find standing here. This is not a left argument or a right argument. It's a "we built these rules for a reason and that reason is right now" argument.
The kitchen table version
After World War II, America helped build a set of international rules. The whole point was simple: no more unilateral decisions to use military force. Because when powerful nations bypass the process, other powerful nations start bypassing it too. And when everyone bypasses it, the rules disappear. And when the rules disappear, what's left is whoever has the most weapons and the least restraint.
We built those rules because we saw what the world looks like without them. Those rules are available right now. They belong to every American who wants to use them.
Make Congress invoke them.