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Papers & Publications

Keywords

war-on-disease, 1-percent-treaty, medical-research, public-health, peace-dividend, decentralized-trials, dfda, dih, victory-bonds, health-economics, cost-benefit-analysis, clinical-trials, drug-development, regulatory-reform, military-spending, peace-economics, decentralized-governance, wishocracy, blockchain-governance, impact-investing

This page provides an index of all academic papers, working drafts, and publications produced as part of the Disease Eradication Plan project.

The 1% Treaty: Harnessing Greed to Eradicate Disease

The 1 percent Treaty: Harnessing Greed to Eradicate Disease

6,650 diseases have 0 FDA-approved treatments. At current trial capacity (15 diseases/year), exploring the therapeutic search space takes ~443 years. Redirect 1% of military spending ($27.2 billion/year) to pragmatic clinical trials. Trial capacity jumps 12.3x. Search space explored in ~36 years instead of centuries. Average treatment reaches patients 212 years sooner. Timeline shift saves 10.7 billion deaths, valued at $84.8 quadrillion. Cost-effectiveness: $0.00177/DALY, 50.3kx better than bed nets. Even at 1% probability of treaty adoption, risk-adjusted cost-effectiveness remains superior to the best existing global health interventions. Incentive Alignment Bonds address political feasibility by tying legislators’ career incentives to a public voting scorecard. For ceiling context, the Minimum Sustainable Trajectory (1% Treaty) reaches 4.88x the Earth baseline after 20 years, with average income at $99,861 and total output at $919 trillion. The Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline, with average income at $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path and total output at $10.7 quadrillion (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

Ubiquitous Pragmatic Trial Impact Analysis: How to Prevent a Year of Death and Suffering for 84 Cents

Ubiquitous Pragmatic Trial Impact Analysis: How to Prevent a Year of Death and Suffering for 84 Cents

Of 9.5 million combinations plausible drug-disease pairings, only 0.342% have been clinically tested. At the current discovery rate of 15 diseases/year, clearing this backlog would take ~443 years. A decentralized FDA integrating pragmatic clinical trials into standard healthcare at $929/patient (vs. $41,000 traditional) increases trial capacity 12.3x, reducing backlog clearance to 36 years. Combined with eliminating the 8.2 years post-safety efficacy delay through opt-in trial participation after Phase I, treatments arrive 212 years earlier on average. This timeline shift saves 10.7 billion deaths, averts 565 billion DALYs, and eliminates 1.93 quadrillion hours of suffering (YLD portion of 565 billion DALYs converted to hours) at $0.842/DALY, competitive with bed nets ($89/DALY) at vastly greater scale. Using standard health economic valuation ($150,000/DALY, the US cost-effectiveness threshold; conservative relative to EPA/DOT Value of Statistical Life estimates), full impact yields $84.8 quadrillion in cumulative value (565 billion DALYs cumulative DALYs over the 212 years timeline shift, not annual; 178 thousand:1 ROI).

Choose Your Own Earth: A World Without the Political Dysfunction Tax, or Terminal Parasitic Load in 15 Years

Choose Your Own Earth: A World Without the Political Dysfunction Tax, or Terminal Parasitic Load in 15 Years

Your destructive economy (military spending plus cybercrime) is already 11.5% of GDP and growing faster than your productive economy. At current rates, it reaches the Soviet collapse threshold in 8 years and exceeds productive output in 15. This paper models two GDP trajectories: the optimized path under military-to-medical reallocation, and the default path to civilizational collapse.

Incentive Alignment Bonds: Making Public Goods Financially and Politically Profitable

Incentive Alignment Bonds: Making Public Goods Financially and Politically Profitable

Government spending correlates with lobbying intensity, not marginal societal value. Programs with benefit-cost ratios exceeding 100:1 (vaccines, e-governance) receive single-digit billions while programs with negative net returns (military beyond deterrence, fossil fuel subsidies) receive hundreds of billions. This paper introduces Incentive Alignment Bonds (IABs), financial instruments that realign politician incentives with net societal value optimization. IABs create a capital pool funded by treaty inflows (80% to pragmatic clinical trials, 10% to investor returns, 10% to political incentives) that rewards politicians (via campaign support and post-office career opportunities) for funding high-NSV programs over low-NSV alternatives. The mechanism requires no legislative change: existing PAC infrastructure, impact bonds, and prediction markets can deploy it today. Analysis of a proposed 1% Treaty redirecting $27.2 billion/year from military spending to medical research shows a conditional 272% annual return for bondholders while the treaty remains in force. The 90:1 capital asymmetry ($454 trillion in household wealth vs. $5 trillion for concentrated interests) means diffuse beneficiaries can outspend incumbent lobbies once coordination problems are solved. IABs solve that coordination problem by turning political change into an investable asset class. A dominant assurance contract mechanism solves the bootstrap coordination problem: investor participation is the strictly dominant strategy regardless of beliefs about other investors’ behavior, closing the end-to-end incentive chain from citizen coordination through treaty passage. At system scale, the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

Wishocracy: Solving the Democratic Principal-Agent Problem Through Pairwise Preference Aggregation

Wishocracy: Solving the Democratic Principal-Agent Problem Through Pairwise Preference Aggregation

Politicians’ votes have near-zero correlation with citizen preferences (Gilens and Page, 2014). Elite preferences predict policy outcomes. No mechanism connects citizen preferences to electoral consequences for representatives. RAPPA: Millions of citizens answer simple pairwise questions (“How would you split $100 between these two budget categories?”). Geometric mean aggregation produces population-level preference weights from sparse individual responses. Unlike approval voting or ranked choice, RAPPA captures preference intensity, not just what people want, but how much they care. Compare aggregated preferences to each legislator’s voting record. Publish Citizen Alignment Scores. Channel campaign resources to high-alignment candidates through Incentive Alignment Bonds. The mechanism achieves three properties no prior system combines: minimal cognitive load (~20 comparisons per participant yields statistical convergence), preference intensity capture, and approximate strategy-proofness. At system scale, the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

The Political Dysfunction Tax

The Political Dysfunction Tax

Governance dysfunction suppresses roughly $101 trillion in recoverable value each year. Under this paper’s 20-year transition model, the Minimum Sustainable Trajectory (1% Treaty) reaches 4.88x the Earth baseline ($919 trillion), while the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, and reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output. This paper is the project’s canonical derivation of that ceiling from an explicit waste ledger, opportunity ledger, and source-linked parameter model. Incentive Alignment Bonds are presented as the adoption mechanism, and full formulas, uncertainty ranges, and sensitivity outputs appear in Methodology, Parameters, and Calculations.

The Invisible Graveyard: Quantifying the Mortality Cost of FDA Efficacy Lag

The Invisible Graveyard: Quantifying the Mortality Cost of FDA Efficacy Lag

This study quantifies the cumulative mortality and morbidity costs associated with the Unitary Pre-Market Approval (UPMA) model mandated by the 1962 Kefauver-Harris Amendments. By enforcing efficacy testing prior to market entry, the current regulatory framework imposes an average “Efficacy Lag” of 8.2 years post-safety verification. Using data from the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development (CSDD) and the WHO Global Burden of Disease (GBD) database, we estimate two distinct mortality costs: (1) Historical mortality (1962-2024): approximately 102 million people died waiting for approved drugs during their approval delays, representing a lower bound excluding drugs never developed due to cost barriers; (2) Future timeline shift: an additional 416 million deaths will eventually die because the disease eradication timeline has been pushed back by 8.2 years. Combined, these represent 7.94 billion Disability-Adjusted Life Years when adjusted for morbidity, with a cumulative economic deadweight loss of approximately $1.19 quadrillion (2024 USD), reflecting 7.94 billion DALYs valued at the standard WHO cost-effectiveness threshold of $150,000/DALY. The societal cost of Type II Regulatory Errors (delayed access to effective therapies) exceeds the averted cost of Type I Regulatory Errors (market access for ineffective therapies) by a factor of 3,068.

The Organized Violence Tax

The Organized Violence Tax

Quantifying the compound cost of war since 1900: 310 million dead, $1.48 quadrillion in historical costs, and a 23x income multiple lost to eight compounding channels of destruction.

The Price of Political Change: A Cost-Benefit Framework for Policy Incentivization

The Price of Political Change: A Cost-Benefit Framework for Policy Incentivization

What is the maximum cost to achieve any policy change through legal democratic channels? We estimate $25 billion for the United States and $200 billion globally. These figures represent the upper bound of matching all opposition spending (campaign finance, lobbying) and providing career alternatives for affected legislators. For high net-societal-value policies, even these maximum costs yield extraordinary returns: military-to-health reallocation achieves a benefit-cost ratio exceeding 400,000:1, carbon pricing exceeds 1,000:1, and occupational licensing reform exceeds 2,000:1. The “political impossibility” objection thus reduces to a capital allocation problem. Political change is not impossible; it is merely expensive, and for valuable reforms, the price is trivial relative to the benefits. At system scale, the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

Algorithmic Public Administration: A Protocol for Replacing Government Intermediaries with Deterministic Functions

Government agencies are chains of humans passing paper to other humans, each checking whether the previous human filled out the right form rather than whether anyone got helped. In the United States alone, this intermediation destroys or diverts $4.9 trillion per year, or 17% of GDP146. We describe a protocol combining five primitives (transparent ledger, preference aggregation, evidence engine, identity verification, and automated monetary policy) that replaces specific mechanical functions currently performed by the Federal Reserve, Internal Revenue Service, Social Security Administration, Government Accountability Office, Congressional Budget Office, Office of Management and Budget, Federal Election Commission, and Census Bureau. The protocol preserves democratic control: citizens still decide resource allocation through pairwise preference comparison (Wishocracy147). The algorithm executes those decisions without extracting value at each administrative layer. We distinguish fiscal cash the protocol can route directly into UBI from broader societal gains that arrive as lower prices and higher wages, and we describe a phased implementation pathway compatible with the 1% Treaty148 funding mechanism.

United States Efficiency Audit

United States Efficiency Audit

This report applies systems engineering methodology to quantify allocative inefficiency in U.S. governance across four dysfunction categories: direct spending waste, compliance burden on the private sector, policy-induced GDP loss, and system inefficiency. Using Monte Carlo simulation across ten components with OECD benchmarking, we estimate an aggregate efficiency gap of $4.9 trillion annually and recoverable capital of $2.45 trillion if U.S. performance converges toward OECD median efficiency. This categorization distinguishes direct budget waste from broader economic dysfunction, each requiring different solution pathways. We also translate the efficiency gap into QALY and VSL-equivalent welfare terms for interpretability. For global ceiling context, the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

Optimocracy: Causal Inference on Cross-Jurisdictional Policy Data to Maximize Median Health and Wealth

Optimocracy: Causal Inference on Cross-Jurisdictional Policy Data to Maximize Median Health and Wealth

Thousands of jurisdictions (municipal, state, federal, international) have exposed populations to different policies over decades. This cross-jurisdictional variation is a natural experiment. Optimocracy: (1) Apply causal inference to this historical policy data, (2) Identify which policies predict above-average median income and healthy life years, (3) Publish recommendations for every major vote, (4) Track politician alignment with evidence, (5) Algorithmically fund the campaigns of the most aligned policymakers via SuperPAC. Politicians still decide; the algorithm just makes ignoring evidence expensive. At system scale, the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

The Optimal Policy Generator: A Causal Inference Protocol for Maximizing Median Health and Wealth Through Public Policy

The Optimal Policy Generator: A Causal Inference Protocol for Maximizing Median Health and Wealth Through Public Policy

Centuries of public policy variation across thousands of jurisdictions (countries, states, cities) constitute a massive natural experiment. The data to identify which policies maximize welfare exists but has not been systematically harvested. The Optimal Policy Generator (OPG) applies causal inference methods (synthetic control, difference-in-differences, regression discontinuity) and Bradford Hill criteria to this cross-jurisdictional data, measuring policy impact on two welfare metrics: real after-tax median income growth and median healthy life years. For any jurisdiction, OPG produces four categories of public policy recommendations: ENACT (evidence-supported policies the jurisdiction lacks), REPLACE (policies set at suboptimal levels), REPEAL (policies with net welfare harm), and MAINTAIN (policies aligned with evidence). Each recommendation includes expected effects on both metrics, confidence grades, and blocking factors including freedom and autonomy constraints. The framework is agnostic to which party enacted each policy, evaluating only whether it improved outcomes. Projected welfare gains for typical US states: 5-15% of GDP. At system scale, the Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

The Earth Optimization Prize

The Earth Optimization Prize

Humanity spends 604x more on wars than testing which medicines work. The Earth Optimization Prize pays whoever fixes that. Two target numbers: healthy life years and median income. Hit them by 2040 and the pool goes to the people who recruited voters for the 1% Treaty. Miss them and depositors split the pool pro rata (still beats a retirement account). The mechanism: deposit, recruit, and let compound interest do the rest.

The Optimal Budget Generator: A Causal Inference Protocol for Maximizing Median Health and Wealth Through Public Goods Funding

The Optimal Budget Generator: A Causal Inference Protocol for Maximizing Median Health and Wealth Through Public Goods Funding

20-40% of public goods funding is misallocated relative to outcome-maximizing benchmarks, representing trillions annually in foregone welfare gains. Budget processes respond to lobbying intensity and historical precedent rather than causal evidence of effectiveness. The Optimal Budget Generator (OBG) applies causal inference, diminishing returns modeling, and cost-effectiveness analysis to determine optimal public goods funding levels that maximize two welfare metrics: real after-tax median income growth and median healthy life years. For each spending category, OBG estimates an Optimal Spending Level (OSL) identifying where marginal returns equal opportunity cost. The Budget Impact Score (BIS) measures confidence in each OSL estimate based on study quality, statistical precision, and temporal recency of the underlying causal evidence. The result is a gap analysis showing which categories are over- or underfunded relative to evidence-based benchmarks, enabling systematic reallocation from low-return to high-return public investments. At system scale, the model’s Optimal Governance Trajectory reaches 56.7x the Earth baseline after 20 years, raises average income to $1.16 million versus $20,483 on the status-quo path, reaches $10.7 quadrillion in total output, and recovers roughly $101 trillion/year in suppressed value (The Political Dysfunction Tax).

The Continuous Evidence Generation Protocol: Two-Stage Validation (RWE → Pragmatic Trials)

The Continuous Evidence Generation Protocol: Two-Stage Validation (RWE → Pragmatic Trials)

Treatments that could save lives take an average of 8.2 years to complete clinical trials after discovery. Since 1962, these delays have contributed to an estimated 102 million preventable deaths. Meanwhile, only 1-10% of adverse drug events get reported to the FDA, and billions of people generate continuous health data through wearables and apps that remains unharvested. We present a two-stage framework that transforms this data into validated treatment recommendations. Stage 1 ($0.1/patient): aggregate millions of natural experiments and score causal confidence using the Predictor Impact Score (PIS), a composite metric operationalizing six Bradford Hill causality criteria. Stage 2 ($929/patient): confirm top signals through pragmatic trials embedded in routine care, 44.1x cheaper than traditional Phase III trials. Cost estimates derive from a meta-analysis of 108 pragmatic trials plus implementations like RECOVERY (which found a life-saving treatment in 100 days) and ADAPTABLE. A Trial Priority Score (PIS x DALYs x Novelty x Feasibility) determines which signals proceed to experimental confirmation. The framework produces three outputs absent from current pharmacovigilance: (1) “Outcome Labels,” per-condition documents ranking all treatments by quantitative effect size (inverting the traditional per-drug FDA label paradigm); (2) precision dosing recommendations derived from optimal daily values (the predictor values historically preceding the best outcomes); and (3) a three-tier evidence grading system (Validated, Promising, Signal) combining observational and experimental effect sizes. Trial results feed back to calibrate observational models, creating a learning health system where accuracy improves continuously. High PIS signals warrant experimental investigation; low PIS does not rule out true effects. This framework complements traditional RCTs. Stage 2 pragmatic trials are required to establish validated causal claims.

Right to Trial & FDA Upgrade Act

Right to Trial and FDA Upgrade Act

Act to modernize medical research and treatment access through an open-source FDA.gov v2, giving patients the right to participate in trials.

Earth Optimization Prize Protocol: Technical Specification

Earth Optimization Prize Protocol: Technical Specification

The Earth Optimization Prize149 is a pool of money. Two numbers on a Scoreboard: how long people live, how much they earn. By 2040, if global HALE reaches 85 years and median income reaches $76,704, VOTE point-holders split the pool. If not, depositors divide the pool pro rata (still beats a retirement account). Registration asks two questions: yes or no on the 1% Treaty, and how much military vs. clinical trials (with Optimitron evidence so the voter sees what each dollar actually buys). Anyone can start a second pool. It joins the network automatically, because all pools measure the same two numbers. That “automatically” requires six things this paper specifies: (1) verify each person is real and only counts once (identity layer with proof-of-personhood); (2) register pools so metric commitments are checkable, not promises (pool registry); (3) VOTE and PRIZE tokens with rules that work across pools (token mechanics); (4) any verified voter can claim from any pool directly, no netting, no settlement (cross-pool claims); (5) every front-end shows the same combined voter count and pool size (scoreboard aggregation); and (6) an oracle that reads the WHO and World Bank reports and triggers treasury release when the numbers are met (terminal metric oracle), with decentralized surveys as a cross-check. The goal is a protocol simple enough that a second pool can launch without asking the first pool’s permission.

How to End War and Disease

How to End War and Disease

The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Legally Bribing Your Way to Utopia

Drug Development Cost Increase Analysis

Drug Development Cost Increase Analysis

Drug development costs have increased approximately 105x in real terms since the 1962 Kefauver-Harris Amendment. This analysis uses the Baily (1972) academic study as the primary source, adjusts for inflation via Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI data, and validates the finding against six independent real-world price comparisons: generic vs. brand-name drugs, supplements vs. prescriptions, compounding pharmacies vs. FDA-approved products, veterinary vs. human drugs, orphan drug pricing, and historical antibiotic economics. Monte Carlo sensitivity analysis confirms the estimate is robust across plausible input ranges. The magnitude is consistent with independent estimates of 100-400x from multiple research groups.