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“We’ve spent trillions on war while bridges, people, and trust collapse at home.”


Revision – 08-04-2025
Following internal review and polling feedback, the provision allowing U.S. service members to be allocated to other countries will be removed moving forward. Analysis showed that the revenue generated from this measure would be negligible and did not meaningfully advance the overall purpose of the act.

This adjustment does not alter our commitment to supporting international partners. Instead, it reinforces the core intent of this act: to realign our military posture toward a defensive, home-focused strategy rather than an offensive, outward-deployed model, ensuring that our principles and resources remain consistent with a 21st-century national defense strategy.



American Priorities Rebalancing Act – FAQ

Rebalancing national priorities by replacing endless war and unchecked militarism with peace, service, and real security at home.

What is the American Priorities Rebalancing Act?

The American Priorities Rebalancing Act (APRA) is a core component of the Green Budget Framework that aims to end the era of bloated military spending, endless foreign wars, and corporate-driven defense policy. It redirects resources toward civilian resilience, peacebuilding, and the needs of everyday Americans—without compromising national safety.


Does this mean abolishing the military?

No. The act restructures the military to focus solely on national defense, climate disaster response, cyber protection, and humanitarian aid. It eliminates offensive wars, overseas occupations, and corporate contractor dominance. The goal is to build a defense force that truly defends, not invades.


How does it reduce the military budget?

The act gradually cuts military spending by 30–40% over 10 years, removing funding for:

Private military contractors

Unnecessary overseas bases (700+ globally)

Offensive weapons systems

Redundant intelligence operations

Savings are reinvested into veterans services, diplomacy, disaster resilience, and domestic infrastructure.


What is the Civilian National Guard Corps?

The Civilian National Guard Corps is a non-military, federally supported, locally operated emergency service force made up of trained civilians, veterans, and volunteers. Unlike the military-controlled National Guard, this corps:

Has no combat function

Is never deployed abroad

Responds only to climate disasters, infrastructure emergencies, and civil support missions

Focuses on nonviolent protection, rebuilding, and community care


What happens to current service membeers?

APRA ensures a just transition:

Troops are retrained and offered jobs in green infrastructure, public health, disaster relief, education, and cybersecurity

Veterans receive expanded mental health care, housing, and guaranteed placement in federal jobs

Service members can opt into the Civilian National Guard Corps or federal Civil Works Programs


How does this affect foreign policy?

APRA shifts foreign policy away from force and toward:

Diplomacy-first principles

Conflict prevention

International cooperation on climate, education, and health

Reducing global resentment by ending imperialism and military occupations


Will this make us less safe?

No. In fact, APRA increases safety:

Ends blowback from foreign wars

Increases domestic preparedness for disasters, cyber threats, and pandemics

Strengthens border integrity through smart tech, diplomacy, and economic justice—not militarization


How is the money reallocated?

Military savings are redirected into:

Universal health care

Affordable housing and public transit

Education and job retraining

Veteran services

Civilian emergency response teams

Peacebuilding, diplomacy, and international aid


How does this impact military communities?

The act includes:

Workforce development programs in military-heavy regions

Federal reinvestment in schools, infrastructure, and clean energy

Partnership with unions and local governments to prevent economic disruption


Will this eliminate weapons manufacturing jobs?

No, but opens the door for Workers to transition to

Green energy technology

Domestic manufacturing

Cybersecurity & climate response

Critical infrastructure restoration. These sectors will receive massive federal investment under the Green Budget.


What’s the long-term vision?

To create a country where service means healing, not harming — where national strength is measured in resilience, care, and justice, not bombs or budgets.

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