“We can’t move forward until we face the past and fund real healing.”

PLUR Act – FAQ

Peace. Love. Unity. Respect. A national reset through truth, repair, and collective healing.


What is the PLUR Act?

The PLUR Act—short for Peace, Love, Unity, and Respect for a Repaired Nation—is the capstone justice and reconciliation policy within the Green Budget Framework. It establishes a comprehensive national process to confront historical and systemic harms, deliver reparative justice, and build a country rooted in healing rather than harm. It draws on global truth and reconciliation models while expanding them to address racial, environmental, economic, gender-based, and cultural injustices in the United States.


Why is this act needed?

The U.S. has never fully addressed the intergenerational harms caused by:

Slavery, Indigenous genocide, and colonization

Environmental destruction and land theft

Mass incarceration and the War on Drugs

Systemic racism, patriarchy, homophobia, and ableism

Exploitation of labor, housing discrimination, and forced displacement

The PLUR Act recognizes that healing requires more than acknowledgment—it requires action, investment, and systemic change.


What does the act establish?

National Truth & Reconciliation Commissions across multiple focus areas (race, disability, gender, environmental justice, etc.)

A Reparative Justice Fund dedicated to land return, direct compensation, community infrastructure, and cultural preservation

Public hearings, records declassification, and education initiatives on U.S. history and systemic harm

Creation of a National Reparative Justice Council, including grassroots leaders and affected communities

Legal and policy reviews to dismantle unjust laws, court precedents, and agency practices


Who does the act serve?

The PLUR Act centers justice for:

Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities

LGBTQ+ individuals and gender-nonconforming people

People with disabilities and neurodivergent individuals

Immigrant communities and refugees

Victims of environmental racism and forced displacement

Survivors of state violence and cultural erasure

It is intersectional, community-driven, and responsive to generational and cultural trauma.


What does the Reparative Justice Fund pay for?

The Fund directs money to:

Direct payments and compensation where applicable (including land-based reparations)

Free access to public health care, education, and housing for harmed communities

Cultural and language preservation programs

Mental health and trauma-informed care infrastructure

Legal aid and record clearing for impacted individuals

Green infrastructure and economic investment in formerly excluded communities


How are communities involved?

The PLUR Act requires:

Community-led design of all local commissions

Participatory budgeting for how funds are spent

Representation of historically harmed groups in all governing bodies

Transparency and public accountability in every phase

This is not charity—it’s justice shaped by those who lived the harm.


Is this about replacing existing social programs?

No. The PLUR Act supplements existing policies by addressing deep-rooted injustices that conventional programs ignore. It works in concert with:

The Cannabis Justice & Public Revenue Act

The No School Left Behind Act

The Main Street Reinvestment Act

And other components of the Green Budget Framework

It makes justice a foundation—not just a talking point.


Is this connected to DEI?

This act goes far deeper than DEI initiatives. While it supports diversity and equity, its purpose is reparative justice, not corporate compliance. It delivers material outcomes through systemic policy change, not symbolic gestures or trainings.


How is the act funded?

The PLUR Act draws funding from:

A restructured federal tax code prioritizing ultra-wealthy individuals and corporations

Military de-escalation and redirecting funds from intelligence agencies and surveillance infrastructure

Corporate penalties for environmental and human rights abuses

Cannabis and Wall Street taxation through other acts in the Green Budget


How does this affect everyday Americans?

It creates a more truthful, united, and just nation—one where:

Historical lies are corrected

Wounds are acknowledged and treated

Whole communities are empowered to thrive

National identity is rebuilt on shared respect, not erasure or division

The PLUR Act invites all Americans to participate in truth-telling, repair, and shared liberation.


What is the long-term vision?

A country that heals through action, remembers with honesty, and respects all who live in it.
The PLUR Act is not about guilt—it’s about growth. It is a path forward based on truth, dignity, and the belief that no justice is too old to be served.

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