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Incentive Alignment Bonds

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

Related: Aligning Incentives | Academic Paper

Remember when your grandparents funded WW2 by buying war bonds? They got roughly 3% returns and a world without Nazis (mostly). Good deal.

You’re doing the same thing. Except instead of buying bonds to kill Nazis, you’re buying bonds to kill diseases. War bonds, but backwards.

The Core Problem: Good Ideas Die in Committee

Here’s your species’ fun puzzle: you know how to save millions of lives. You can measure exactly how many. You have the money. You don’t do it.

Not because your politicians are evil. Because your system is built so that:

  • Politicians maximize reelection, status, and post-office careers, not “humans continuing to exist”
  • Bureaucracies maximize budget and turf, not “speed of treatments”
  • Lobbyists maximize client profits, not “global welfare”

You don’t fix this with awareness campaigns. You’ve been “raising awareness” for decades and everyone is still dying, but they’re dying aware, so that’s nice. You don’t fix it with white papers. Politicians use white papers to stabilize wobbly tables. You fix it by changing what self-interest points at.

On Wishonia, we used something very similar to bootstrap the whole transition 4,297 years ago. We don’t need them anymore (people do useful things because they’re useful, which I realize sounds made up, but you also thought “washing your hands” sounded made up until 1847). The point is: you need them now.

This chapter describes how to legally bribe your politicians into doing the right thing.

Incentive Alignment Bonds (IABs): a financial instrument for paying for better governance without technically paying politicians, giving money to governments, or going to prison.

Tiny cost now, massive benefit later. Politicians are very good at the ‘now’ part and very bad at the ‘later’ part.

Tiny cost now, massive benefit later. Politicians are very good at the ‘now’ part and very bad at the ‘later’ part.

Your 1% Treaty136 isn’t constrained by physics, biology, or money. It’s constrained by politics, which is like being constrained by your dog’s opinion on quantum mechanics, except your dog can veto legislation.

No politician wants to be the one who “cut the military.” Even by 1%. Even if that 1% cures cancer. The attack ads write themselves: “Senator Johnson voted to WEAKEN AMERICA.” Your system does exactly what it’s incentivized to do. It’s not broken. It’s working perfectly at the wrong thing.

Politician does good thing. People get healthier. Politician gets money. It’s a bribe, but backwards and legal.

Politician does good thing. People get healthier. Politician gets money. It’s a bribe, but backwards and legal.

The fix: tell every politician on Earth, “Vote for a 1%-style reform and you get better reelection odds and a Goldman Sachs board seat when you retire.” No backroom deals. No suitcases of cash. Just a standing, public rule: do the objectively good thing, and the world systematically rewards you. Nobody has to become a better person. The money just circulates until diseases stop existing.

How IABs Work (Four Steps)

Not charity (doesn’t scale). Not lobbying (slot taken). Not “paying politicians” (illegal, slot also taken). You work with the primates you have, not the primates you wish you had. The recipe has two steps. Step 1: make the right thing profitable. Step 2: wait. There is no Step 3. On Wishonia, we spent 4,000 years trying to add a Step 3 (moral education, cultural reform, public shaming, interpretive dance). None of them worked. Step 2 always did the job by itself.

Rich people give money to politicians who save lives. The triangle of virtue signaling that actually works.

Rich people give money to politicians who save lives. The triangle of virtue signaling that actually works.

How to build a legal bribery machine in four easy steps. Lawyers helped.

How to build a legal bribery machine in four easy steps. Lawyers helped.

Step 1: Pick a Measurable Outcome

Things we can count right now versus things that matter later. One gets you reelected, the other gets you into heaven. Choose wisely.

Things we can count right now versus things that matter later. One gets you reelected, the other gets you into heaven. Choose wisely.

Measure funding flows, not health outcomes. You can’t attribute a treatment breakthrough to any single country’s funding. But you CAN measure: % of military spending redirected, total $ contributed, and politician votes on treaty passage. Health improvements justify the policy. Funding flows are the scoreboard, because that’s what politicians actually control.

Step 2: Raise Capital

Money goes into a trust. Trust pays out when good things happen. It’s like a piggy bank that only opens when people stop dying.

Money goes into a trust. Trust pays out when good things happen. It’s like a piggy bank that only opens when people stop dying.

Investors buy IABs. Capital sits in a trust. It pays out if and only if public-good targets are hit. Same structure as green bonds and catastrophe bonds.

Step 3: Reward Your Politicians (Indirectly)

Save lives, get good ratings, win elections, get consulting gig at think tank. The circle of political life.

Save lives, get good ratings, win elections, get consulting gig at think tank. The circle of political life.

When a politician votes for a 1%-style policy and funding actually flows:

  • Public Good Scores rise (published by independent rating orgs)
  • Electoral support increases (independent campaigns favor high-scorers)
  • Post-office opportunities unlock (fellowships, boards, speaking circuits)

No money flows to politicians (see why this isn’t bribery). What flows is reputation, electoral advantage, and career advancement.

Step 4: Watch Self-Interest Do the Rest

Do good things, get points, media loves you, voters love you, you get richer and more famous. Virtue has never been so profitable.

Do good things, get points, media loves you, voters love you, you get richer and more famous. Virtue has never been so profitable.

Your politicians’ utility function is roughly:

U = P(reelection) + career advancement + post-office income + legacy

IABs make supporting 1%-equivalent policies strictly increase all four terms. No altruism required. “Maximize personal payoff” and “reduce suffering” become the same action. You’ve tricked your leaders into saving lives by making it the selfish thing to do.

The Three-Layer Architecture (How to Not Go to Prison)

Three different ways to pay politicians to be nice, stacked on top of each other like a very boring wedding cake.

Three different ways to pay politicians to be nice, stacked on top of each other like a very boring wedding cake.

You cannot legally say “support Bill #XYZ123 and get paid.” That’s bribery. But you can create a system where politicians who support a class of pro-social policies systematically get more of everything they want. The trick: rule-based, universal, announced in advance.

Layer A: Scoring (Data Only)

Your state’s health plus your voting record equals your Good Boy Points. Gold stars for senators who behave.

Your state’s health plus your voting record equals your Good Boy Points. Gold stars for senators who behave.

An independent org assigns each politician a Public Good Score based on votes, sponsorship, and funding flows. Scores cover a policy class (any >=1% military-to-health reallocation), not a specific bill. Public, rules-based, non-partisan. In the 1% Treaty materials, this domain-specific implementation is called the Treaty Support Score. (See the Senator Smith example for how scores translate to concrete payoffs.)

Layer B: Electoral Benefits (Separate Actors)

Your score gets broadcast to every organization with money and opinions. Peer pressure, but with Super PACs.

Your score gets broadcast to every organization with money and opinions. Peer pressure, but with Super PACs.

Independent PACs and 501(c)(4)s commit in advance to favor high-scoring politicians. The goal: make the Public Good Score as influential as Moody’s credit ratings or NRA grades. Moody’s can downgrade a country and suddenly borrowing costs spike. NRA grades already determine which politicians get funded. Same gun, different target.

Layer C: Post-Office Careers (The Goldman Sachs Board Problem)

Old way: help corporations, get cushy job. New way: help humans, get cushy job. Same job, different resume line.

Old way: help corporations, get cushy job. New way: help humans, get cushy job. Same job, different resume line.

Foundations and think tanks set eligibility rules: Public Good Score above X gets you WHO boards and Aspen fellowships. Below X, you’re explaining at dinner why you voted against curing diseases. The revolving door, but spinning toward “saved lives” instead of toward whoever paid the most lobbyists.

Why This Isn’t Bribery

Four reasons your lawyers will stop hyperventilating:

  1. No one is paid to break a duty. “Do your job better and we’ll tell everyone you did.” That’s a performance review, not a bribe.
  2. Rules are universal and ex-ante. Same rules, all politicians, all parties, announced publicly in advance. No envelopes in parking garages.
  3. No money goes to politicians. They benefit indirectly: better scores, electoral support, nicer career options. This is how democracy was supposed to work before your species broke it.
  4. Scores are based on public voting records. Did they vote YES? Verifiable and ungameable. The 10% fund flows automatically based on treasury inflows. Pure math.

Bribery corrupts alignment. IABs create it. Wealthy actors already buy policy (pharma spends $300M/year on lobbying, weapons manufacturers spend $127M/year). The question isn’t “should money influence policy?” but “can you point the money at welfare instead of warfare?”

Here’s what makes this structurally different from current lobbying: in the current system, money and influence are inseparable. Give money, get influence over where the money goes, use that to get more money. The loop is opaque and self-reinforcing.

IABs break the loop. Investors give money and get money back (10% revenue share). That’s it. They don’t decide which diseases get funded. Politicians get career incentives (10%). They don’t touch the research budget. The remaining 80% flows to clinical trials via wishocratic allocation, controlled by direct democracy, not by the people who paid for it. The corruption is capped at 20%, transparent, and completely separated from the public goods funding. Name a government budget that can say the same.

Worked Example: How Senator Smith Votes Yes

Abstract mechanisms are great for economists and incomprehensible to everyone who matters. Here’s how IABs work on an actual human politician (a creature that navigates entirely by self-interest, like a moth but with a pension).

The Scoring System

Vote to cure cancer: plus 10 points. Vote to bomb Yemen: minus 15 points. It’s like Weight Watchers, but for your soul.

Vote to cure cancer: plus 10 points. Vote to bomb Yemen: minus 15 points. It’s like Weight Watchers, but for your soul.

Each politician gets a Public Good Score based on their voting record (like a credit score for your soul, except useful):

Bill Type Yes Vote No Vote
Increase % reallocation to 1% Treaty Fund +15 -15
Protect existing funding +10 -10
Expand treaty to more countries +10 -10
Cut funding or % -20 +5

Get 60 points, unlock Tier 3 campaign spending. Get 80 points, unlock consulting jobs. Politics as a video game.

Get 60 points, unlock Tier 3 campaign spending. Get 80 points, unlock consulting jobs. Politics as a video game.

Your score determines what you get:

Score PAC Spending Post-Office Tier Annual Income
75+ +$2M for you Tier 1: WHO boards, Aspen fellowships $500K+
60-74 +$500K for you Tier 2: Brookings, RAND, university chairs $200-400K
50-59 $0 Tier 3: Standard revolving door $150-300K
40-49 $500K to opponent Tier 3 $150-300K
<40 $2M to opponent Tier 3 $150-300K

In short: high scorers get millions in PAC support and access to the best post-office careers. Low scorers watch that same money go to their opponents. It’s like a video game skill tree, except the XP comes from not killing people.

The Setup

VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds have raised $1B from investors who want 272% returns. That money has funded:

  • A referendum showing 70% of Americans support reallocating 1% of military spending to pragmatic clinical trials
  • A lobbying campaign that’s converted several weapons manufacturers (they did the math on their own mortality, and mortality lost)
  • The Public Good Scoring system described above, tracking every federal legislator

Senator Smith (R-Texas) is up for reelection in 2026. The 1% Treaty Implementation Act is coming to a vote.

Senator Smith’s report card: below average score, barely passing reelection odds, medium-quality retirement prospects. Her mother is disappointed.

Senator Smith’s report card: below average score, barely passing reelection odds, medium-quality retirement prospects. Her mother is disappointed.

Her current stats:

  • Public Good Score: 45 (below Senate median of 52)
  • Current P(reelection): 55%
  • Expected post-office tier: 3
  • Expected post-office income: $200K/year

The Old Calculus (Without IABs)

Vote Yes Vote No
Attack ads: “Smith voted to WEAKEN AMERICA” Safe from military lobby attacks
Defense contractors fund opponent Defense contractors fund you
No immediate upside Status quo maintained
Benefits arrive in 10 years Costs arrive never

Expected utility of No vote: \(\text{U} = 0.55 \cdot \text{Office} + \$200\text{K}/\text{year} \cdot 20\text{yrs} + \text{Medium Legacy}\)

Result: Vote no. Obviously.

The New Calculus (With IABs)

If Smith votes YES:

  • VoteRecord: +15 points (major treaty vote)
  • New Score: 45 + 15 = 60, rising to 72 with the early-supporter multiplier (the scoring system rewards politicians who vote yes before the outcome is certain)
  • P(reelection): 55% → 62% (score boost + $500K independent support)
  • Post-office tier: 3 → 2 (with path to Tier 1 if she becomes a champion)
  • Expected post-office income: $200K → $300K/year

If Smith votes NO:

  • VoteRecord: -15 points
  • New Score: 45 - 15 = 30
  • P(reelection): 55% → 48% (score penalty + $2M goes to opponent)
  • Post-office tier: Stuck at 3
  • Attack ads funded: “Smith voted AGAINST the cure your family needs”

The math (at the moment of the vote):

\[ \Delta \text{U}_{\text{Yes vs No}} = 0.14 \cdot \text{Office} + \$100\text{K}/\text{year} \cdot 20\text{yrs} + \text{Legacy Boost} \]

That’s a +14 percentage point swing in reelection odds (62% vs 48%) and +$2M in lifetime post-office earnings. These numbers improve further after the treaty passes (see post-treaty table below).

Result: Vote yes. The math changed.

What Actually Happens

All the math a senator does before deciding how to vote. Turns out they can count when money’s involved.

All the math a senator does before deciding how to vote. Turns out they can count when money’s involved.
  1. Pre-vote: Smith’s staff models the yes vote. Score jumps to 72. Reelection odds rise 7 points.
  2. Lobbying meeting: Military lobby threatens. But three major contractors already support the treaty (their market is shrinking 1%, the health market is growing, and the bond returns make their pension funds very happy). Threat is empty.
  3. Campaign finance: Health advocacy Super PACs have committed $50M nationally. At score 72, she gets $500K in independent support. A no vote sends that $500K to her opponent.
  4. Constituent mail: 70% of Texans voted yes in the referendum. Voting against that means explaining why you think they’re wrong about not wanting to die.
  5. The vote: Smith votes yes. So do 50 others. The bill passes the Senate.

Post-Treaty

After the treaty passes and public support solidifies, Smith’s numbers improve beyond the initial vote-day projections. Her score climbs from 72 to 78 as she co-sponsors expansion legislation and the early-supporter multiplier compounds. That pushes her into Tier 1 territory.

Senator Smith’s career trajectory before and after voting yes. One line goes up, one line stays flat. Guess which one she prefers.

Senator Smith’s career trajectory before and after voting yes. One line goes up, one line stays flat. Guess which one she prefers.
Metric Before After
Public Good Score 45 78
P(reelection) 55% 68%
Independent support $0 $3M
Post-office tier 3 1
Post-office income $200K/yr $500K/yr

Every metric jumps: her score increases by over 70%, reelection odds climb 13 points, she gains $3M in independent support, and her post-office income more than doubles.

Smith wins reelection comfortably. Joins the WHO Advisory Board. Chairs the Aspen Health Initiative. All because she did math instead of listening to lobbyists. (Politicians can count. They just need something worth counting.)

The Revenue Split

Money flows through two engines, investors and politicians, before reaching the actual medical research. It’s trickle-down economics, but for not dying.

Money flows through two engines, investors and politicians, before reaching the actual medical research. It’s trickle-down economics, but for not dying.

Incentive Alignment Bonds raise the capital and align the politicians. Treaty revenue splits three ways: 10% to investors ($2.72B), 10% to political incentives ($2.72B), and 80% to the part that actually funds treatments ($21.8B).

Everyone profits from treaty expansion. If the treaty holds, this is the rare financial instrument where “everyone profits” might actually be true.

Why 10% Goes to Political Incentives

Your 1% treaty is the proof of concept. The endgame is redirecting most of military spending to health. That doesn’t happen automatically. Without sustained political pressure, your treaty stalls at 1% forever, like every other agreement your species has signed and then quietly forgotten about.

The 10% allocation creates a political ratchet that only moves one direction:

Treaty Level Bondholder Payouts (10%) Political Incentives (10%) Research Funding (80%) Effect
1% $2.72B/year $2.72B/year $21.8B/year Politicians rewarded for passage
5% $13.6B/year $13.6B/year $108.8B/year Defense industry pivots to health
10% $27.2B/year $27.2B/year $218B/year Health lobbying starts to rival defense lobbying
50% $136B/year $136B/year $1.09T/year Global transformation
100% $272B/year $272B/year $2.18T/year Full redirection achieved

The pattern is simple: every expansion multiplies the political incentive budget, the research funding, and bondholder payouts. “Support pragmatic clinical trials” would become the single most profitable opinion a politician can hold. That’s how you change what politicians believe: make the belief profitable.

The bondholder constituency. IABs create the defense lobby’s mirror image: a permanent class of wealthy investors whose income scales directly with treaty expansion. At 1%, bondholders collect $2.72B/year. At full redirection, $272B/year. Perpetual bonds mean a perpetual financial incentive to lobby for expansion, every single year, forever. Except bondholders have better math and a more popular product (“not dying” polls well).

Without IABs:

What happens over fifty years if we do nothing special versus if we pay politicians to care. One line stays flat, the other goes up like a rocket.

What happens over fifty years if we do nothing special versus if we pay politicians to care. One line stays flat, the other goes up like a rocket.
  • Year 1-3: Treaty passes. Celebration. Champagne.
  • Year 4-7: Defense lobby regroups. No expansion. Champagne goes flat.
  • Year 16+: Treaty becomes another Paris Agreement. Nice symbol. Everyone ignores it. Champagne was wasted.

With IABs:

  • Year 1-3: Treaty passes. Politicians rewarded.
  • Year 4-7: Politicians compete to expand to 2%.
  • Year 8-15: 5% treaty. Defense contractors pivot.
  • Year 50+: Full redirection. Disease: solved.

The 10% isn’t a cost. It’s the engine. Without it, you get a one-time win. With it, you get compounding political pressure that makes each expansion easier than the last.

Beyond the 1% Treaty

The four boxes you need to tick before you can bribe governments into solving global problems. Apparently you can’t just bribe them willy-nilly.

The four boxes you need to tick before you can bribe governments into solving global problems. Apparently you can’t just bribe them willy-nilly.

The same architecture works for any global coordination problem where: the public good is measurable, politicians control the outcome, benefits are diffuse, and costs are concentrated. That describes most of the problems that could end your civilization, which is a worryingly long list:

Domain Metric (already exists) IAB Makes Career-Optimal
Climate UNFCCC emissions data “Vote for emissions cuts”
Nuclear START treaty warhead counts “I reduced our arsenal”
Pandemic WHO Joint External Evaluation “I funded preparedness”

Same pattern every time: existing metric, scoring system, electoral support for high-scorers, cushy jobs for leaders who governed well. See the academic paper if you enjoy equations.


NoteFor Investors

The sections above explain why IABs work. The sections below explain why you should buy them. If you prefer not dying AND getting rich, keep reading.

The Investor Pitch

A financial instrument that generates massive returns while accidentally curing diseases as a side effect. Like a hedge fund with a conscience, except the conscience is also profitable.

What you’re offering investors: 272% annually, funded by a share of treaty revenue. That number looks absurd. It should. It’s the premium for betting on politicians doing something useful, which is historically a bad bet, but the payout if it works is real.

The money doesn’t stop (if the treaty holds). No maturity date. Bondholders get paid as long as the treaty exists, which could be until the sun explodes or humanity achieves immortality. Whichever comes first. (Bet on the immortality thing. That’s what the bonds are for.)

“If the treaty holds” is doing a lot of work in that sentence, so let’s address it: the treaty creates a class of billionaire bondholders whose personal wealth depends on the treaty surviving and expanding. These are people with enormous unrelated influence over government (media access, campaign donations, social networks, board seats at companies that employ voters). They didn’t buy influence over the treaty fund. They bought a revenue share. But their pre-existing influence over everything else means any politician who tries to repeal the treaty is picking a fight with the richest, most politically connected humans on the planet, all of whom have a quarterly earnings call explaining why the treaty should be bigger, not smaller.

Money goes in, saves humanity, pays dividends forever. Wall Street called it ‘suspiciously sustainable.’

Money goes in, saves humanity, pays dividends forever. Wall Street called it ‘suspiciously sustainable.’

The Perpetuity Math

VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds never mature. They keep paying as long as the treaty exists. You calculate lifetime value using the perpetuity formula, which is finance-speak for “money printer that runs as long as the input does”:

\[ \text{Total Value} = \frac{\text{Annual Payment}}{\text{Discount Rate}} = \frac{\$2.72\text{B}}{r} \]

Even if you’re extremely pessimistic

How Skeptical You Are Total Lifetime Value Your $1B Becomes
Mildly skeptical (3% discount) $90.7B 90x your money
Pretty skeptical (5% discount) $54.4B 54x your money
Very skeptical (10% discount) $27.2B 27x your money

Even at a 10% discount rate (as risky as funding a Mars casino), your $1B becomes worth $27.2B.

As long as humans prefer being alive to being dead, the treaty exists. As long as the treaty exists, you get paid. And as long as you get paid, you have every reason to make sure the treaty keeps existing. It’s a loyalty program for civilization, except the rewards are real and the members are billionaires with senators on speed dial.

Security Package and Risk

Five layers of “you’ll get paid”:

  1. $27.2B+ annual treaty revenue stream (starts year 1 if treaty passes)
  2. Political entrenchment (treaties are historically hard to repeal once implemented, unlike New Year’s resolutions)
  3. Public support (70%+ approval, grows with each breakthrough)
  4. Aligned incentives (everyone profits from cooperation)
  5. First-lien position (bondholders get paid before anyone else touches the money)

Five layers of legal protection ensuring you get paid even if governments collapse. We learned from history: trust nobody, especially nations.

Five layers of legal protection ensuring you get paid even if governments collapse. We learned from history: trust nobody, especially nations.

Two categories of risk (both involving trusting humans, which is historically unwise):

Project Risks

  • Political Risk: The treaty may fail to pass because politicians prefer the status quo to political risk. Mitigation: broad bipartisan support, multi-country strategy, no single points of failure.
  • Execution Risk: The campaign may fail to hit milestones. Mitigation: milestone-gated funding, lean operations, and competent humans (finding those is itself a risk).

Political risk mitigation: bribe politicians legally. Execution risk mitigation: hire competent people. Revolutionary concepts in 2026.

Political risk mitigation: bribe politicians legally. Execution risk mitigation: hire competent people. Revolutionary concepts in 2026.

Investor-Specific Risks

  • Liquidity Risk: Funds locked 12-36 months during the campaign phase (roughly how long it takes to convince politicians that living voters are better than dead ones). Mitigation: secondary market trading after lock-up.
  • Timeline Risk: Politicians could take longer than projected. They are famously slow at everything except accepting donations. The perpetual nature of the bond rewards patience.

Your money is locked for 12 to 36 months while we save civilization. Then you can sell your shares to someone who doesn’t believe in extinction.

Your money is locked for 12 to 36 months while we save civilization. Then you can sell your shares to someone who doesn’t believe in extinction.

How It Compares (If It Works)

Investment Annual Return Risk Term Catch
VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds 272% High (binary: treaty passes or it doesn’t) Forever Requires politicians to act rationally
Savings Account 0.5% None Whenever Loses to inflation
S&P 500

10%

Moderate Whenever Boring, responsible
Real Estate 8% Moderate 30 years Requires being a landlord
Venture Capital 15-25% Extreme 7-10 years Requires picking winners
Hedge Funds 8-15% High Lock-ups Requires being rich already
Medallion Fund 39%137 Extreme N/A Closed to mortals
Warren Buffett 20%3 Moderate 60 years Requires being Warren Buffett

Fine print: The 272% is a revenue-share return on campaign capital, not a market return on traded securities. It’s a fundamentally different kind of bet: you’re funding a political campaign, and the return is a permanent share of treaty revenue if that campaign succeeds. The other investments in this table are liquid and diversified. This one is concentrated and binary. The return is enormous because the risk is enormous. If the treaty fails, you lose your money. If politicians prefer dead constituents to living ones, that’s exactly what happens. But you’ll be too dead from preventable diseases to notice.

Pitch angle: If you believe the treaty can pass, the risk-adjusted return is compelling. If you don’t, no return percentage will convince you.

Investment Thresholds and Term Sheet

Lock-up: 12-36 months until the treaty passes. Then perpetual distributions begin, like a dividend that outlives you.

You need different amounts of money to be allowed to make more money, depending on how much money you already have. The rich call this ‘protecting investors.’

You need different amounts of money to be allowed to make more money, depending on how much money you already have. The rich call this ‘protecting investors.’

Minimum investment amounts by investor type (your species requires gatekeeping even for saving itself):

  • Institutional investors: $10M+ per investor
  • Family offices: $5M+ per office
  • High net worth individuals: $1M+ per person
  • Qualified investors: $100K+ minimum

(Have lawyers review, this is illustrative only)

  • Interest rate: 0% (all returns via revenue share model)
  • Revenue share: 10% of all treaty inflows
  • Term: Perpetual (no maturity date)
  • Payment frequency: Annual distributions
  • Default provisions: Transparent reporting, third-party audits
  • Transferability: Tradable on secondary market after 12 months
  • Governance: Transparent reporting and third-party audits. Bondholders receive money, not influence.

“This sounds like a Ponzi scheme run by someone who failed math.”

“Ponzi schemes pay old investors with new investor money. That’s why they collapse. This pays investors with a share of $27.2B in annual revenue. That revenue comes from redirecting 1% of military budgets via treaty.

One circle takes money from new investors to pay old investors until it collapses. The other circle takes money from weapons to fund cures and pays investors forever. Spot the difference.

One circle takes money from new investors to pay old investors until it collapses. The other circle takes money from weapons to fund cures and pays investors forever. Spot the difference.

The money comes from governments that currently spend it on bombs. The returns are high because the political risk is high. You’re betting politicians will act rationally when shown the numbers. Historically, that’s a coin flip at best.

It’s not a Ponzi scheme. It’s lobbying economics pointed at diseases instead of wars. Same weapon, different enemy.”

“Won’t politicians game the metrics?”

Things people can lie about versus things they can’t. Turns out politicians are better at lying than numbers are.

Things people can lie about versus things they can’t. Turns out politicians are better at lying than numbers are.

To game these metrics, you’d have to falsify your own vote (public record) or pretend money moved when it didn’t (treasury records). Orders of magnitude harder than self-reported ESG compliance, which is the bar your species currently uses.

“What if politicians reverse the policy?”

What happens to your score when you do good things for a while and then suddenly decide to do bad things instead. The graph goes down quite dramatically.

What happens to your score when you do good things for a while and then suddenly decide to do bad things instead. The graph goes down quite dramatically.

Score decay. The same mechanism that rewarded you punishes backsliding, making reversals career suicide (the only kind of death politicians fear).

“What happens when this fails and I lose my billion dollars?”

“If the treaty fails completely, you lose your $1B. It gets spent on the campaign. Convincing humans to click buttons. Bribing lobbyists. Building platforms. Paying lawyers to make bribery legal.

This is the primary risk. You’re funding a political campaign with a massive payout if it wins.

If it fails completely, you’ll probably die of a preventable disease anyway. You won’t be around to complain about the lost money.

It’s venture capital but for not dying.”

“Is this realistic globally?”

How countries copy each other’s homework after seeing someone else get a good grade. Like peer pressure, but for governments.

How countries copy each other’s homework after seeing someone else get a good grade. Like peer pressure, but for governments.

Doesn’t have to start global. One or two pilot countries (Portugal, Costa Rica, New Zealand) adopt a limited 1%-style policy. Funding flows get verified. Leaders get invited to better conferences. Other countries notice. FOMO takes over. FOMO is the most powerful force in international relations, more powerful than diplomacy, trade agreements, or nuclear weapons.

Credit ratings started as one guy in the 1800s publishing opinions about railroad bonds. Now Moody’s can tank a country’s economy with a press release. Same scaling path: proof of concept, early movers, FOMO among laggards, new normal. Your species is remarkably good at copying things that work, once someone else does it first.

“How is this different from just donating to charity?”

Charity: give money away, feel good, get tax break. VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds: give money away, feel good, get 272 percent back. One of these seems objectively better.

Charity: give money away, feel good, get tax break. VICTORY Incentive Alignment Bonds: give money away, feel good, get 272 percent back. One of these seems objectively better.

Charity is for people who want to feel good. This is for people who want to get obscenely rich while curing diseases as a side effect. It’s the Louisiana Purchase of pragmatic clinical trials. Except instead of buying land from France, you’re buying life extension from death. And unlike Louisiana, it doesn’t flood. And unlike France, it doesn’t surrender.

Summary

The more people you save, the more money you make. Capitalism finally discovers that helping people is profitable.

The more people you save, the more money you make. Capitalism finally discovers that helping people is profitable.

For investors: 272% annually, for as long as the treaty holds, with first-lien priority. Perpetual payments that grow as the treaty expands from 1% to 5%+. Side effect: millions of humans continue existing.

How to make politicians care about the future by promising them good jobs after they stop being politicians. Turns out they like money that comes later too.

How to make politicians care about the future by promising them good jobs after they stop being politicians. Turns out they like money that comes later too.

IABs don’t change human nature. Nothing changes human nature. You’ve tried religion, philosophy, education, and strongly worded letters. None of it worked. IABs just redirect the nature you’ve got. Legal (three-layer architecture, no money to officials). Scalable (one country, then FOMO). Self-reinforcing (each expansion funds the next expansion).

You’re not asking your politicians to be saints. Saints don’t run for office. You’re making “save millions of lives” and “advance my career” the same sentence. The rest is gravity.