James Fitzgerald Therapy, PLLC

James Fitzgerald Therapy, PLLC Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor (LCMHC) Positive Psychology & Character Strengths Approach Some plans have high deductibles.

Credentials:
* VT roster of psychotherapists by the Allied Board of Mental Health Professionals.
* VT (AAP) Apprentice Addiction Professional by the Office of Professional Regulation. * PESI Certified tele-health provider.
* NBCC (NCC) National Certified Counselor by National Board of Certified Counselors.
* UVM (MS) Master's of Science in Clinical Mental Health Counseling
* CSJ (BA) Bachelor of

Arts Degree in Psychology

Payment for services:
I bill insurance electronically and accept:
* Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Cigna, MVP, and Medicaid. I file the claim on your behalf, and after I am issued an explanation of benefits, I email you an invoice or send request for payment through Venmo. It is therefore important that you provide me consent for electronic communication before the first session. Important note:
Some commercial insurance plans have limited coverage of outpatient mental health care or substance use counseling. Every insurance company contracts different rates of reimbursement with providers. Please verify your insurance before your first session. Please call your insurance company before your first session to inquire about covered services. Clients are responsible for paying any out of pocket costs, unmet deductibles, and copay amounts before the next scheduled service unless other arrangements are made. Payment types accepted:
Credit/Debit, HSA/FSA, Venmo, Square, and PayPal. Fees:
$75 - $120
I offer a sliding scale fee. Initial consultations are $0 cost. Modalities:
Individual, Couples, Family, Groups

Hours of availability:
Monday: 9:00 am - 6:00 pm
Tuesday: 9:00 am - 8:00 pm
Wednesday: 9:00 am - 8:00 pm
Thursday: 9:00 am - 8:00 pm
Friday: 9:00 am - 6:00 pm
Saturday: 9:00 am - 6:00 pm (upon request)

I blend the following Philosophies, Theories, and Interventions into an eclectic, cohesive, integral, and integrative approach:
* Neuroscience (Neuroplasticity)
* Positive Psychology
* Virtue Ethics and Moral Discipline
* Person Centered, Trauma Informed, Environmentally and Culturally Sensitive
* Character Strengths Theory
* Internal Family Systems Theory
* Cognitive Behavioral Theory
* Dialectical Behavior Theory
* Motivational Enhancement Theory
* Polyvagal Theory

Vermont Is Already Paying for Homelessness. The Question Is Whether We Want to Keep Paying for Failure.A proposal for tr...
05/29/2026

Vermont Is Already Paying for Homelessness. The Question Is Whether We Want to Keep Paying for Failure.

A proposal for transitional community housing, public safety, and fiscal responsibility

Vermont is already spending a great deal of public money on homelessness, mental health crises, addiction, incarceration, emergency medicine, motel rooms, shelters, police response, and psychiatric hospitalization. The question is not whether Vermont will pay. Vermont is already paying.

The real question is whether we want to keep paying for homelessness in the most expensive, chaotic, and least effective ways possible.

We can continue paying for emergency rooms, ambulance calls, police responses, court processing, jail beds, motel vouchers, psychiatric hospital beds, encampment sweeps, crisis services, and human deterioration. Or we can build a structured, humane, accountable, medically supported transitional housing system that reduces the number of people living outside and reduces the public cost of unmanaged crisis.

This is not a proposal for “free housing” as a reward for addiction, criminal behavior, or refusal to work. That criticism deserves to be answered directly because many taxpayers are asking it in good faith. A person who works, pays rent, follows the law, and struggles to afford groceries, property taxes, health care, and transportation has a right to ask why the state would fund housing, food, showers, medical care, case management, and security for someone living outside.

The answer is simple: because the current system is already costing us more than most people realize.

When someone is sleeping outside, untreated, medically unstable, addicted, psychotic, traumatized, or cycling between the street and jail, the cost does not disappear. It moves. It moves to police departments. It moves to sheriffs. It moves to emergency rooms. It moves to hospitals. It moves to Medicaid. It moves to the Department of Corrections. It moves to the state psychiatric system. It moves to municipalities, downtown businesses, libraries, parks, first responders, shelters, and exhausted nonprofit workers.

Refusing to house people does not make homelessness free. It often makes it more expensive.

The proposed model

Vermont should consider piloting a medically supported transitional community housing campus for unsheltered single adults.

Each community would house approximately 60 individuals in 60 small, private, three-room studio cottages or pods, each no larger than 300 square feet. Each unit would include a toilet and sink room, a bedroom, and a small common room. The units would be prefab wooden cottages, winterized for Vermont, with running water, electricity, heat, and Wi-Fi.

The campus would include a 30,000-square-foot main building with offices for residential staff, case managers, medical staff, security, administrative staff, and other support personnel. The main building would also include a community health center, a full cafeteria with kitchen staff, staffed private restrooms, showers, laundry capacity, and practical support spaces.

A secondary 2,000-square-foot community center would support structured programming, peer support, skills training, group activities, visiting providers, and community-building.

The campus would be gated, with unarmed security staffing the entrance and patrolling the grounds. Security would not be there to criminalize residents. It would be there to protect residents, staff, neighbors, and the integrity of the program. Violence, trafficking, dealing, weapons, predatory behavior, and intimidation would not be tolerated.

The staffing model would include nurses, case managers, residential staff, security staff, kitchen staff, cleaning staff, and per-diem coverage. Residents would be assigned case managers who help them move toward one of two outcomes: transition into a higher level of care when clinically necessary, or transition into permanent subsidized housing when they are stable enough to live more independently.

This is not meant to become a permanent warehouse for poor people. It should be designed as a bridge: from the street to stability, from crisis to care, from unmanaged public cost to measurable public benefit.

What would it cost?

A realistic planning estimate for one 60-person site is approximately $49 million in startup capital, with a likely range of $35 million to $71 million depending on land, construction costs, utilities, permitting, environmental work, site conditions, and inflation.

Annual operating costs would likely fall between $6 million and $11 million per year, with a base-case estimate around $8.2 million per year before debt service.

If construction is financed over time, debt service could add approximately $3.2 million per year in the base case. That means the full annual cost, including operations and debt service, could be approximately $11.4 million per year for one 60-person site.

That equals roughly $137,000 per resident per year for operations only, or about $190,000 per resident per year including construction financing.

At first glance, that sounds extremely expensive. But that number only becomes meaningful when compared to what Vermont already pays for unmanaged homelessness, incarceration, and psychiatric hospitalization.

What does Vermont already spend?

Vermont’s 2025 Point-in-Time count found 3,386 unhoused Vermonters on a single January night, including 270 people counted as unsheltered. That unsheltered number is almost certainly an undercount because Point-in-Time counts are snapshots, not complete population registries.

Vermont’s homelessness-response budget discussions have involved figures around $82.6 million for a continuum of emergency housing, shelter, case management, rental assistance, supportive housing, cold-weather shelter, and related services.

When that kind of spending is divided only by the officially counted unsheltered population, the number appears shockingly high: roughly $300,000 per unsheltered person per year. That figure must be interpreted carefully because homelessness funds do not serve only unsheltered people. They also serve people in shelters, hotels, temporary housing, supportive housing, prevention programs, and rental-assistance programs.

Still, the comparison matters. Vermont is already spending large sums responding to homelessness. The problem is that much of the money is being spent reactively.

The same is true in corrections. Vermont incarceration has been estimated at just under $300 per incarcerated person per day, or more than $100,000 per person per year. Other comparative analyses place Vermont’s incarceration cost even higher, around $134,000 per incarcerated person per year.

Psychiatric hospitalization is far more expensive. Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital’s FY2024 financial template listed operating expenses of approximately $34.2 million for a 25-bed state hospital. Divided across 25 beds, that equals roughly $1.37 million per bed per year. Even if one uses older and lower daily-rate comparisons, high-acuity inpatient psychiatric care still falls in the hundreds of thousands of dollars per person per year.

So the fiscal reality is this: the proposed housing campus is expensive, but it is not obviously more expensive than the status quo for the highest-cost individuals. It is likely cheaper than long-term psychiatric hospitalization. It is in the same broad range as Vermont’s highest public-cost systems when accounting for homelessness response, incarceration, crisis care, and emergency medicine.

Could Vermont save money?

Yes, but only under specific conditions.

A 60-person site could plausibly save Vermont approximately $4 million to $11 million per year if it is targeted to the highest-cost unsheltered adults and if it actually reduces spending in other systems.

A reasonable base-case estimate is that one site could avoid approximately $18.4 million per year in public costs, while costing about $8.2 million to operate. After debt service, the net savings could be about $7 million per year per 60-person community.

But this is not guaranteed. It depends on targeting and ex*****on.

The program saves money only if it reduces motel use, shelter overflow, police calls, ambulance transports, emergency department visits, jail days, psychiatric hospitalization, detox readmissions, and crisis-service utilization. If Vermont simply adds this program on top of the existing system, without reducing existing emergency spending, then there is no savings. There is only another expensive program.

This point matters politically and ethically. Vermont cannot afford symbolic compassion. It needs measurable compassion. It needs humane programs that work.

A response to conservative critics

Many people on the political right ask: Why should addicts, criminals, and drug dealers get free housing, food, and medical care?

The answer should not be defensive. It should be direct.

They should not receive housing because addiction, criminal conduct, or drug dealing is being rewarded. They should receive structured housing because untreated homelessness is dangerous, expensive, and socially destabilizing. The public has a rational interest in reducing the harm caused by unmanaged addiction, untreated mental illness, survival crime, public disorder, and repeated crisis-system use.

This is not about giving people something for nothing. It is about replacing a disorderly and expensive system with a structured and accountable one.

A person sleeping outside with untreated addiction does not become cheaper to the public because we refuse to house them. A person with untreated psychosis does not become safer because we leave them under a bridge. A person cycling between the street, the emergency room, jail, detox, and motel rooms does not become more accountable because the system refuses to stabilize them.

But conservatives are right about one thing: housing cannot mean lawlessness.

A housing campus must have rules. It must have expectations. It must prohibit violence, dealing, trafficking, exploitation, threats, weapons, and predatory behavior. It must protect staff, neighbors, and residents. It must include consequences for serious misconduct. It must work with law enforcement when public safety requires it. It must also distinguish between people who need housing support, people who need addiction treatment, people who need psychiatric care, people who need medical respite, people who need disability services, and people who pose a serious danger to others.

A serious system does not pretend everyone has the same needs. It sorts people accurately and responds proportionately.

The conservative case for this program is not that it is soft-hearted. The conservative case is that it could reduce disorder, reduce emergency spending, reduce public nuisance, reduce pressure on police, reduce jail cycling, reduce hospital burden, and create a more accountable pathway out of street homelessness.

A warning to the political left

Progressives also need to hear a hard truth: moral urgency does not repeal arithmetic.

Vermont is a small state with a limited tax base, high housing costs, high construction costs, rural geography, harsh winters, property-tax pressure, health care workforce shortages, and a population that already feels financially strained. If advocates propose large programs without credible cost controls, outcome measures, staffing plans, and tax fairness, the public will eventually turn against the programs.

The left should not argue as if every compassionate program automatically deserves indefinite funding. That is not policy. That is moral expression without fiscal discipline.

A real program needs a real budget. It needs a sustainable tax structure. It needs economies of scale. It needs shared administration. It needs Medicaid billing where legally permissible. It needs federal funds. It needs philanthropic capital. It needs hospital partnerships. It needs opioid settlement funding where substance-use services are involved. It needs measurable offsets from corrections, emergency housing, psychiatric hospitalization, emergency departments, and crisis services.

Most importantly, it needs public trust.

Vermonters should not be asked to fund an open-ended system with vague promises. They should be shown what the program costs, what it replaces, how many people it serves, how many people exit into permanent housing, how many return to homelessness, how emergency service use changes, how jail days change, how psychiatric bed days change, how staff safety is protected, and whether the public is getting a better outcome for the money spent.

Compassion without accountability will fail. Accountability without compassion will also fail.

The problem with dehumanization

The phrase “addicts, criminals, and drug dealers” is politically powerful because it reduces a complicated population to its most frightening examples.

Some unsheltered people do have substance use disorders. Some have criminal histories. Some engage in harmful or illegal behavior. Some are dangerous. Pretending otherwise insults the public’s intelligence.

But many unsheltered people are disabled, elderly, medically fragile, traumatized, cognitively impaired, neurodivergent, mentally ill, fleeing violence, priced out of housing, discharged from institutions, or unable to compete in a rental market that has no realistic place for them.

A humane society does not erase people’s harmful behavior. But it also does not erase their humanity.

When we reduce people to labels, we stop thinking clearly. “Addict” replaces a person’s developmental history, trauma, neurobiology, family losses, economic exclusion, and medical condition. “Criminal” replaces the question of whether a person needs accountability, treatment, supervision, housing, or all of the above. “Homeless” replaces the fact that this is a human being whose life has collapsed in public view.

Dehumanization is not only morally corrosive. It is bad policy analysis.

If we define people only by the worst thing they have done, we will build a system designed only for punishment. If we define people only as victims, we will build a system with no accountability. Vermont needs neither cruelty nor naivete. Vermont needs disciplined humanism.

Who should be at the table?

This proposal would affect far more than housing agencies.

The primary audience should include the Vermont Legislature, the Governor’s Office, the Agency of Human Services, the Department for Children and Families, the Department of Mental Health, the Department of Vermont Health Access, the Department of Corrections, the Vermont State Housing Authority, the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board, and municipal governments.

Secondary partners should include designated mental health agencies, preferred providers, local hospitals, the University of Vermont Health Network, Brattleboro Retreat, Rutland Regional Medical Center, Central Vermont Medical Center, federally qualified health centers, substance use disorder treatment providers, recovery centers, community justice centers, police departments, sheriffs, Vermont State Police, emergency medical services, fire departments, public health officials, housing nonprofits, shelters, domestic violence agencies, disability rights organizations, legal aid, peer-support organizations, veterans’ services, food security organizations, transportation providers, and neighborhood/community representatives.

This cannot be treated as only a housing problem. It is also a health care problem, a corrections problem, a municipal problem, a disability problem, a labor problem, a Medicaid problem, a public safety problem, and a moral problem.

How to fund it

A serious funding model should not rely on one source.

Capital costs could be supported through state bonding, federal housing funds, philanthropic contributions, hospital community-benefit investment, municipal participation, federal grants, climate-resilient building funds where applicable, and public-private partnerships.

Operating costs could be supported through a combination of state appropriations, Medicaid-billable services, federal homelessness funds, opioid settlement dollars for qualifying substance-use services, hospital partnerships, corrections reinvestment, mental health system savings, and local contributions where municipalities benefit from reduced emergency response.

The state should also consider a pay-for-performance structure. If the program reduces emergency room visits, jail days, psychiatric hospitalizations, motel use, and unsheltered homelessness among enrolled residents, future funding should expand. If it fails, it should be redesigned.

The funding logic should be replacement, not accumulation. Vermont should not simply create a new expensive program while preserving every inefficient emergency expenditure that the program was supposed to reduce.

What should be measured?

The program should publish a public dashboard.

At minimum, Vermont should measure the cost per resident per month; average length of stay; exits to permanent housing; exits to higher levels of care; returns to homelessness; emergency department use before and after admission; ambulance calls before and after admission; arrests and jail days before and after admission; psychiatric hospitalization before and after admission; overdose reversals; deaths; resident grievances; neighborhood safety incidents; staff injuries; staff turnover; employment or benefits stabilization; Medicaid enrollment; primary care connection; behavioral health connection; substance use treatment engagement; and resident satisfaction.

If the program cannot measure outcomes, it should not receive long-term funding.

The moral argument may open the door. The data must keep the door open.

The policy case

Vermont should pilot this model because the current system is too expensive, too fragmented, too reactive, and too inhumane.

A structured transitional housing campus would not solve homelessness by itself. It would not replace permanent affordable housing. It would not eliminate the need for psychiatric beds, addiction treatment, shelters, rental subsidies, or corrections reform. It would not be appropriate for every unsheltered person.

But it could serve a specific population extremely well: high-need unsheltered adults who are currently cycling through the most expensive parts of the public system and who need stabilization before they can move into permanent housing or higher-level care.

The program should be compassionate, but not permissive. Structured, but not punitive. Clinically informed, but not medically coercive. Fiscally disciplined, but not cruel. Transitional, but not disposable. Accountable to residents, staff, taxpayers, neighbors, and policymakers.

The public should not accept a false choice between punishment and permissiveness. There is a third path: structured care with public accountability.

The bottom line

Vermont is already paying for homelessness.

We are paying through emergency rooms, police calls, corrections, psychiatric hospitalization, motel rooms, shelters, crisis services, municipal disruption, and preventable human suffering.

The question is whether we want to keep paying for failure, or whether we want to pay for a system that has a chance to produce stability.

A 60-person community housing campus would be expensive. It might cost around $49 million to build and around $8.2 million per year to operate, with a full annual cost around $11.4 million if construction debt is included.

But if it is targeted to the highest-cost unsheltered adults, if it reduces motel use, jail days, hospitalizations, emergency department use, and crisis-system cycling, it could plausibly save Vermont several million dollars per year while producing a more humane and orderly public system.

That is the standard Vermont should use.

Not charity without limits.

Not punishment without results.

Not ideology without math.

The standard should be: Does it reduce human suffering? Does it improve public safety? Does it reduce emergency-system costs? Does it move people toward permanent housing or appropriate care? Does it protect taxpayers? Does it work?

If the answer is yes, then Vermont should build it.

Key source notes for hyperlinking or endnotes:
Vermont’s 2025 Point-in-Time count reported 3,386 unhoused people statewide, while VTDigger reported that 270 were counted as unsheltered in January 2025. ([Vermont Housing Alliance][1])

The Vermont Legislature’s H.938 fiscal comparison showed a homelessness-response total of about $82.6 million. ([Vermont General Assembly][2])

Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital’s FY2024 financial template listed $34.2 million in total operating expense; the state hospital is described as a 25-bed facility in state budget materials. ([Vermont Department of Health][3])

WCAX reported a Vermont corrections estimate of just under $300 per incarcerated person per day, and a 2025 comparative analysis reported Vermont at about $134,000 per incarcerated person annually. ([wcax.com][4])

[1]: https://helpingtohousevt.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/FINAL-State-of-Homelessness-2025.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com "2025 State of Homelessness in Vermont Report"

[2]: https://legislature.vermont.gov/Documents/2026/Workgroups/Senate%20Health%20and%20Welfare/Bills/H.938/Drafts%2C%20Amendments%2C%20Legal%20Documents/H.938~Nolan%20Langweil~Fiscal%20Side%20by%20Side%20Comparison%20%E2%80%93%20H.938%20vs.%20Gov%20Rec~4-9-2026.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com "H.938"

[3]: https://www.healthvermont.gov/sites/default/files/document/VPCH%20financial%20template%202024.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com "Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital"

[4]: https://www.wcax.com/2025/11/20/vermont-prison-population-reaches-highest-level-since-2019/?utm_source=chatgpt.com "Vermont prison population reaches highest level since 2019"

During the pandemic, the state worked to release as many inmates as possible. Today, the state’s six prisons are up to 1,632 people.

05/23/2026

One more three day training weekend left out of 4 total weekends, in the Internal Family Systems Therapy Level 1 Training. June 12, 13, 14. My client handbook (manual and workbook) is nearing the halfway point of completion.

05/18/2026

Which is it?
(setting aside the social and environmental impact)
1. AI is making us less intelligent?
2. AI is making us more intelligent?

In my humble uninformed opinion, based on my subjective experience, and based on how I prompt the software, and the fact that I pay for the supreme edition for healthcare professionals.
(not just a chatbot)

AI is helping me be more intelligent and intellectual.
AI is helping me be a better writer.
AI is helping me be a better therapist.

Why?
Because I check every source and reference, read every single word of its responses, analyze them, scrutinize them, study them, correct them, and then distribute them. The ideas, concepts, knowledge, and thoughts in the prompt are mine. The AI just organizes it and types it for me.

And in reciprocal fashion, I am teaching the AI to answer better next time.

The lesson: we need AI safeguards, regulations, laws, and policies, and less environmental and social impacts.

05/18/2026

Enhancing my private practice by continuously learning new things.
1. Reading "Wired to Feel" and "No Bad Parts."
2. Listening to "Unmasking Autism."
3. Participating in IFS Level 1 Training
4. Completing a Udemy masterclass in Business Coaching and Consulting

This while running my private practice, and creating:
1. A therapy program for clients
(therapy: client handbook and workbook)
2. A health and wellness program for coaching clients
(coaching: client handbook and workbook)
3. A fully functioning client engagement app system for both
(Quenza)
4. A private practice set up book for other professionals
(business coaching and consultant: client handbook)

Yes, my dear humans, sometimes there actually IS NOT enough time in the day. Not enough mental energy to go around. Not enough emotional energy to go around. And not enough physical energy to get it all done.

Conserve the spoons people.

Sincerely,
An (AuDHD) Autistic and ADHD Therapist.

I learned recently,
On the WAIS, I placed in the 95th percentile (for age and education level) in symbolic abstract reasoning (pattern recognition).

If you're still reading this post, it also helps to know (context) what that score looks like from the 30,000 feet view.

My Vudu library has 20 TV series and over 600 movies
(cloud based video storage and retrieval)
Most of the movies fall into specific genres
(science fiction, fantasy, action, adventure, superhero, comics, and documentaries)

My YouTube music playlists consist of music from specific genres
(Old School HipHop, Classic Rock, Folk, Jazz, Ska, Raggae, and Classical) No country music allowed

My Kindle library has over 750 books
(cloud book storage)
My Audible library has over 250 books
My physical bookshelf contains over 100 books

My Facebook saved posts numbers around 1,000

My thoughts never stop, I can visualize in vivid colored details, and I have vivid and lucid dreams.

And that my dear fellow humans, is me in a nutshell.


05/18/2026

Staring, unwanted online contact, and more.

05/18/2026

Sitting down this morning to have my cup of coffee. The thought occurred: "will today be the day?"

What happened to your system when you read that?

What was your first thought?

The way you attached meaning to that ambiguous statement gives you so much information about the way your brain and mind works.

You're welcome.

05/17/2026

I have just completed the third weekend out of four scheduled weekends. What am I talking about? I am completing a 90 hour course with 40 other participants. What course am I taking? I am participating in the Level 1 Training for Internal Family Systems Therapy with the Center For Mindfulness and Compassion and Internal Family Systems Institute. Today's lessons centered on shame and guilt in the internal system. I have a lot to process now.

The 50 Point Plan: A Civilization-Level Survival Framework for Moving Beyond the Fermi ParadoxThere is a haunting questi...
05/02/2026

The 50 Point Plan: A Civilization-Level Survival Framework for Moving Beyond the Fermi Paradox

There is a haunting question at the center of modern civilization: if intelligent life is possible, and if the universe is vast beyond ordinary comprehension, then where is everybody?

This question is often called the Fermi paradox. It asks why, in a universe filled with billions of galaxies and countless potentially habitable worlds, humanity has not yet found clear evidence of other advanced civilizations. One possible answer is comforting: perhaps intelligent life is rare. Another is more troubling: perhaps intelligent life commonly emerges, but civilizations destroy themselves before they become stable, peaceful, sustainable, and mature enough to survive across deep time.

The 50 Point Plan begins with the second possibility.

This project is built on a difficult premise: humanity may be approaching one of the great filters of civilization. Nuclear weapons, climate collapse, ecological destruction, artificial intelligence, mass inequality, authoritarianism, corporate capture, disinformation, social fragmentation, and technological acceleration are no longer separate problems. They are interconnected threats inside one planetary system. A civilization that treats them as separate crises may not be capable of surviving them.

The 50 Point Plan is my attempt to describe what civilization would need to do if it wanted to survive past the Fermi paradox.

This is not a small reform agenda. It is not a campaign platform. It is not a set of isolated policy preferences. It is a civilization-level survival framework. It is extreme because the crisis is extreme. It is complex because the system is complex. It is comprehensive because partial solutions are no longer enough. It is progressive, anti-fascist, anti-corporate, pro-republic, pro-federalist, pro-democracy, and pro-socialist in its construction because it assumes that human survival depends on balancing freedom, fairness, science, ecological responsibility, and democratic accountability.

The central idea is simple, but difficult to accept: the 50 points cannot be implemented one at a time in the usual slow, fragmented, politically compromised way. They must be activated together. They are designed as a simultaneous system. Each point supports the others. Each part depends on the whole. If only one piece is implemented while the rest of the structure remains unchanged, the system will likely absorb it, distort it, commodify it, weaken it, or turn it into another symbolic reform.

That is why this plan is not merely a list. It is an architecture.

At its foundation, the 50 Point Plan is human-centered. It begins with the belief that civilization should be organized around the well-being, dignity, development, and freedom of human beings—not around corporate extraction, inherited power, religious domination, oligarchic control, military expansion, or ideological obedience. A healthy civilization must protect people from domination while also calling people into responsibility. It must make room for freedom, but not the freedom of the powerful to exploit the vulnerable. It must support markets, but not allow markets to become gods. It must support democracy, but not confuse democracy with mob emotion, disinformation, or popularity contests.

The plan is egalitarian, but not anti-excellence. It values education, training, experience, discipline, and competence. It rejects both elitism and anti-intellectualism. It does not assume that every person is equally prepared for every responsibility. Instead, it asks how a society can build systems where leadership is based on expertise, credentials, skills, ethical accountability, and public trust without becoming a closed ruling class.

One of the more radical features of the plan is its use of political position appointment lotteries. These lotteries are not random chaos. They are not popularity contests. They are structured democratic mechanisms based on expertise, education, credentials, and demonstrated skill. The goal is to reduce corruption, careerism, dynastic politics, personality cults, corporate influence, and the permanent campaign machine. In this model, qualified citizens would be selected for certain public responsibilities through carefully designed civic lotteries, while still operating within transparent rules, public accountability, and democratic oversight.

This is a bottom-up architecture. It assumes that democracy cannot survive if people are only allowed to vote every few years while corporations, parties, lobbyists, billionaires, media systems, and permanent bureaucracies shape the actual decisions. Real democracy requires organized participation. It requires education. It requires public meetings. It requires clear rules of order. It requires voting on specific problems, single issues, ballot items, and concrete proposals. It requires people to practice democracy, not merely consume it as spectacle.

For that reason, the 50 Point Plan borrows part of its organizational structure from twelve-step fellowships. This does not mean it is religious, spiritual, or therapeutic in the usual sense. It means the plan learns from a durable social model: decentralized groups, shared principles, regular meetings, service roles, group conscience, rotating leadership, clear traditions, and a structure that allows people to participate without needing permission from centralized elites. Twelve-step fellowships have shown that ordinary people can organize around shared survival, mutual aid, accountability, and transformation. Civilization may need something similar at political, ecological, economic, and cultural scale.

The plan also insists that public policy must be guided by science-backed solutions rather than popular opinion, superstition, religious faith, propaganda, or corporate convenience. This does not mean scientists should become kings. It means evidence must matter. Climate policy should be shaped by climate science. Public health policy should be shaped by medical and epidemiological evidence. Education policy should be informed by developmental science, learning science, and social research. Economic policy should be judged by human outcomes, not slogans. Technology policy should be guided by safety, ethics, democratic accountability, and long-term consequences.

A mature civilization cannot keep making survival decisions based on fear, myth, profit, tribal loyalty, or charismatic authority.

The 50 Point Plan is also pro-republic and pro-federalist because it does not seek a vague revolution that destroys all institutions. It seeks a serious reconstruction of public life. A republic requires laws, rights, duties, offices, procedures, and protections against tyranny. Federalism allows power to be distributed across levels of governance rather than concentrated in one place. Democracy requires participation and consent. Socialism, in this framework, means that essential systems must serve the public good and that the people who create value should have meaningful power over the conditions of their lives.

This is not a call for authoritarian state control. It is a call for democratic social organization. It is not anti-market. It is anti-corporate domination. It supports fair trade, small business, cooperative ownership, ethical entrepreneurship, local economies, and free markets that are bounded by human rights, labor rights, ecological limits, and democratic law. Markets can be useful tools. They should not be allowed to become civilizations’ operating system.

The plan is environmentally friendly because no civilization survives by destroying its habitat. Ecology is not a side issue. It is the physical basis of civilization. Clean water, breathable air, stable agriculture, biodiversity, soil health, oceans, forests, and climate stability are not luxuries. They are survival infrastructure. Any politics that treats environmental protection as optional is already operating from a failed model of reality.

Over the next nine months, I will release each point of the plan through Substack articles and social media content. Each article will focus on one part of the larger system. Some points will be political. Some will be economic. Some will be ecological. Some will be cultural, educational, technological, psychological, or organizational. Each point will stand on its own, but each will also connect back to the same core question:

What would humanity need to become in order to survive?

The 50 Point Plan is not written from the assumption that we are doomed. It is written from the assumption that survival is still possible, but only if civilization becomes honest about the scale of the problem. We cannot solve planetary crises with branding, culture wars, billionaire fantasies, nostalgia, conspiracy thinking, or minor procedural reforms. We cannot build a survivable future while authoritarian movements attack democracy, while corporations purchase public policy, while ecological systems collapse, while people lose faith in institutions, and while technology evolves faster than our ethics.

The plan asks us to think at the scale of civilization.

It asks whether human beings can organize themselves intelligently enough to preserve democracy without surrendering to chaos, preserve markets without surrendering to corporate rule, preserve freedom without surrendering to exploitation, preserve science without surrendering to technocracy, preserve spirituality without surrendering to superstition, and preserve the planet without surrendering to despair.

This series is an invitation into that question.

It is not meant to be comfortable. It is meant to be clarifying. It is not meant to flatter the current system. It is meant to describe the kind of system that might be required if humanity intends to remain here.

The Fermi paradox asks why we have not found other civilizations.

The 50 Point Plan asks whether we can become the kind of civilization that survives long enough to be found.

Address

359 Dorset Street, Suite 200-2
South Burlington, VT
05403

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 4pm
Tuesday 9am - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 7pm
Thursday 9am - 7pm
Friday 9am - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

+18028551209

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