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Trade is fine. Dependency is not.

Manufacturing is national security.

A country that cannot build what it depends on is not secure. This site is a plainspoken citizen project about rebuilding industrial strength, asking harder questions, and pushing for action.

The idea

We outsourced too much, hollowed out too much, and trusted fragile supply chains too much. Serious countries do not do that forever.

The problem

Markets chased cheap labor and short-term returns. The country lost factories, supplier networks, skilled trades, and industrial depth.

The answer

A long-term industrial strategy, real accountability, and a national decision that some things are too important to leave to quarterly profit logic.

What this project is trying to do

Push the issue

Put manufacturing, industrial resilience, and military self-sufficiency back into public conversation. Not as a slogan. As a serious national question.

If we cannot build what we need, sooner or later somebody else owns our future.

Organize action

Give people simple tools to contact legislators, ask candidates better questions, write to editors, share the idea, and join coordinated outreach campaigns.

What we're proposing

National industrial strategy

A practical long-term plan for critical industries, workforce development, supplier depth, and domestic production targets.

Secretary of Industrial Strategy

A cabinet-level office focused on industrial capacity, supply-chain vulnerability, and long-horizon planning across agencies.

Military self-sufficiency amendment

A constitutional principle that the United States must maintain domestic capacity for the industrial base required to defend itself.

“Manufacturing isn’t coming back.”

You hear that a lot. To which the sensible answer is: it has to come back in the areas that matter. A serious country cannot shrug at military dependency and call that realism.

To hell you say. If we need it for national survival, we need the capacity to make it.

Start here