Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Primary Content
Section One: Restore The People’s House
Section Two: Article the first of the Bill of Rights
- An Absurdity and a Contradiction — Article the first’s Mysterious Defect
- The Road to Oligarchy — Why are there only 435 Representatives in the People’s House?
- George Washington and “Thirty-Thousand”
- The First Presidential Veto
Section Three: Take Control Away From the Special Interest Groups
Section Four: Overcome the Incumbency Advantage
Section Five: Eliminate Gerrymandering to Achieve True Representation
Section Six: End the Political Duopoly of Congress
Section Seven: Establish Citizen Equality Nationwide
- One Person, One Partial Vote — Achieving One-Person-One-Vote equality in the federal House.
- Analysis of Apportionment Sensitivity to Population Miscounts
- Neutralizing the Small-State Advantage in the Electoral College
Section Eight: Restore Liberty and Federal Fiscal Responsibility
Section Nine: The House of Representatives is Scalable
Section Ten: Achieving the Revolutionary Vision
Additional Resources
The Bill of Rights
- Overview: The First Congress Proposed Twelve Constitutional Amendments
- Zoomable Bill of Rights — Stonecut Version
- Zoomable Bill of Rights — Original on Parchment
Thirty-Thousand.org Blog
George Washington
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