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civic engagement

From Organizing to Power: Campaign Finance, Gerrymandering, and Wealth Taxation

2026-05-112026-04-16 by Laurel Fitzhugh

American democracy is under deliberate, strategic assault. The methods used to shape public discourse have been in place for decades. They are now more coordinated, better funded, and more strategically aligned than before.

This piece examines how these tools work, documents the most serious current threat, and then turns to show the same tools used for positive political purposes. Three structural reforms — campaign finance, gerrymandering, and wealth taxation — have majority public support and no effective strategic campaign behind them, and they are examined here.

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Categories Values-Based Decision Making Tags American democracy, campaign finance reform, civic engagement, money in politics, structural reform, wealth inequality Leave a comment

Fear as Civic Control: What I Learned From Examining My Own Constraints

2026-04-062025-12-15 by Laurel Fitzhugh

I thought I was wrestling with an ethical dilemma about my research methods. Turns out I was actually responding to manufactured fear designed to keep people silent. Here’s what I learned about how fear operates as civic control—and what changes when you examine it.

Categories Unclassified Systems Writings Tags civic engagement, fear, polarization, propaganda, self censorship

Political Rebranding Reveals Deeper Collapse: When Signature Policies Need New Names

2025-11-072025-09-03 by Laurel Fitzhugh

When politicians abandon their signature policy names, they signal fundamental problems they will not or cannot solve. Trump’s team quietly stopped calling his major legislative package the “One Big Beautiful Bill” and falsely rebranded it as “Working Family Tax Cuts” because the old name is now political poison. This is political desperation masquerading as strategy.

Successful political movements don’t rebrand their victories. The New Deal remained the New Deal, and the Great Society kept its name. Trump built his political identity around being a master problem solver but, sadly, people are finding their problems increased. It contradicts his core claim to competence.

This follows a predictable pattern: when you cannot fix the underlying problem or product, you change what you call it and hope messaging can overcome reality. Standard, last ditch corporate strategy.

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Categories Psychopolitics Tags citizen power, civic engagement, democracy, grassroots organizing, political analysis, political collapse, political messaging, political rebranding, political strategy, Republican control, resistance movements, Sojourner Truth, Trump policy, truth vs lies

A Framework for Values-Based Navigation: Essential Principles for Democratic Decision Making

2026-03-032025-06-28 by Laurel Fitzhugh

Introduction: The Values Vacuum

American democracy has a fundamental problem: we make political decisions without agreeing on the values that guide those choices. When we lack clear principles, special interests take advantage. They advance their own agendas—maximizing profits, gaining power, avoiding accountability—that serve their narrow interests. Democratic decisions advance the nation’s interests by protecting individual liberty and building collective prosperity and security.

This capture by special interests has already happened. Financial deregulation led to the 2008 crisis that may have been the largest transfer of wealth in American history, destroying huge parts of the American middle class while those properties and assets ended up in the hands of wealthy investors. Insurance company lobbyists write healthcare policies. Fossil fuel companies block climate action through regulatory capture, and we are seeing the severe effects of global warming every day. Climate events are intensifying with documented economic costs, creating long-term challenges that require the kind of evidence-based, intergenerational planning that democracy should excel at. Tax policies shift burdens from corporations to individuals. This organized exploitation has transferred massive wealth upward, gutted the middle class, and created widespread economic insecurity and political anger. Special interests manipulate democracy’s vulnerabilities by exploiting our unclear principles.

Democracy is a values-based system of government, enshrined in our Declaration of Independence. When citizens share clear principles about what constitutes good decisions, democratic institutions function effectively. When citizens haven’t explicitly identified and agreed on their democratic values, special interests can exploit that confusion to advance their own agendas.

This article presents 33 core values organized into six categories. These values emerge from democratic theory and practice. I offer them as my contribution to the ongoing national conversation about what principles should guide American decision-making. Rather than prescribing outcomes, this framework helps citizens recognize the values already embedded in democratic institutions, identify their own priorities among these principles, and engage in political discourse based on explicit reasoning rather than partisan positioning.

Restoring values-based navigation to democratic decision-making provides essential protection against special interests who have gained excessive power by exploiting our unclear principles.

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Categories Values-Based Decision Making Tags American democracy, citizen responsibility, civic engagement, Declaration of Independence, democratic principles, democratic values, government accountability, political framework, political manipulation, political reform, special interests, values-based governance 2 Comments

Part 5: A Modern Playbook for Reclaiming Democracy

2025-10-032025-06-17 by Laurel Fitzhugh

Reclaiming Democracy from Manufactured Confusion The forces dividing us are powerful, but history proves they’re not invincible. Part 5 of our series provides the modern playbook for what actually works: building independent power that can’t be captured or controlled. Parts 1-4 showed the problem and historical solutions. Part 5 is your roadmap: concrete steps for … Read more

Categories INTERNAL - Substack Articles Tags civic engagement, Civic Strength, Collective Action, Communication, Democracy Reform

Do Something from the Comfort of Your Own Home

2025-07-232025-06-08 by Laurel Fitzhugh

A Few Minutes a Day to Resist Authoritarianism Safely

You can make a difference without leaving home, as part of your normal activities. Sharing accurate information helps counter misinformation and keeps people informed. Small actions add up.

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Categories INTERNAL - Substack Articles Tags civic engagement, digital literacy, everyone can help, fact checking, grassroots organizing, social media activism
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