Restoring the Public Good: A Call to Reclaim What Was Ours
Since the Reagan era, America has suffered from a slow,
calculated erosion of the public good. Under the banner of “small government”
and “free markets,” we have privatized what should never have been for sale.
Our most essential public services, healthcare, energy, transportation,
education, and social welfare, have become profit centers for corporations and
hedge funds. In doing so, we have not only weakened our democracy but also
betrayed the very idea of a shared society.
The result is the America we see today: fragmented, selfish,
overworked, and uncaring. It is a place where greed has replaced community, and
the ethic of “every man for himself” has become our cruel new national motto.
It is time to reverse course. It is time to restore the
public good.
What Is the Public Good?
The public good refers to society's collective well-being, a
shared commitment to the welfare of all citizens. It means having institutions
and services that are not for profit but for people: universal healthcare,
clean energy, public transportation, fair education, livable wages, clean
water, and safety nets for those in need.
These are not luxuries. They are the pillars of a civilized
society.
Yet, over the last forty years, the public good has been
sacrificed at the altar of privatization. Greed has hollowed out the middle
class, stripped rural and urban communities alike, and turned human needs into
revenue streams for the wealthy. The free market was never meant to be the
final judge of justice, fairness, or care.
What Went Wrong: The Privatization Era
Ronald Reagan famously said, “Government is not the solution
to our problem; government is the problem.” With that, a campaign began, not to
improve government but to dismantle it, defund it, and sell it off piece by
piece to private corporations.
- Healthcare
has become a for-profit industry, where illness is profitable and
prevention is discouraged.
- Energy
was deregulated and handed to monopolies that profit from pollution and
price gouging.
- Transportation
was underfunded or turned into toll systems, inaccessible to those who needed
it most.
- Education
was disinvested and replaced by charters and vouchers, draining public
school budgets.
- Welfare
and relief programs were slashed, rebranded, or offloaded onto churches
and nonprofits.
Since then, we’ve learned that the market has no conscience.
It chases profit, not justice, and it fails us in matters of human dignity
every time.
What Must Be Restored
To rebuild the nation, we must recommit to the public good,
expanding it beyond what it was even before Reagan. It’s not enough to reclaim,
and we must reinvent the public sphere for the 21st century:
1. Healthcare as a Right, Not a Commodity
No one should go bankrupt because they got sick. A publicly
funded, universally accessible healthcare system is not radical; it’s rational.
It’s more efficient, humane, and just than the nightmare we now endure.
2. Public Ownership of Energy and Transportation
Energy and transport are lifelines. They should not be
subject to the whims of profit-seeking monopolies. Public investment in green
energy and reliable, affordable transportation will serve everyone and protect
our planet.
3. Universal Education and Lifelong Learning
Education is the bedrock of democracy. Public schools, free
college, vocational training, libraries, these aren’t expenses. They’re
investments in a functioning society. They must be funded, defended, and
elevated.
4. Community Welfare and Human Dignity
Food security, shelter, elder care, mental health, and
addiction recovery are public goods, not private ventures. No child should go
hungry in the wealthiest nation on Earth. No elder should be left without care.
5. Civic Engagement and Community Control
Democracy doesn’t stop at the ballot box. We must empower
local communities to participate in the decisions that shape their lives. Town
halls, participatory budgeting, and cooperative ownership are the tools of a
renewed republic.
Project 2029: A Blueprint for Restoring the Public Good
Where Project 2025 seeks to dismantle government and
privatize everything, Project 2029 seeks to restore democracy by restoring the
public good.
It is our declaration that:
- The
people come before profit.
- Government
exists to serve all, not enrich a few.
- We are
stronger together than we are alone.
Project 2029 calls for:
- Public
investment in healthcare, education, and housing
- The
re-nationalization of critical infrastructure and utilities
- A
guaranteed minimum standard of living for all Americans
- Civic
institutions that educate, organize, and empower the people
It is a plan to bring back care, compassion, and common
sense to our politics.
The Moral Case for the Public Good
We cannot build a just society based on selfishness. We must
reject the poisonous lie that freedom means being free from
responsibility to others. In truth, freedom only flourishes in the community, with
shared commitments, shared burdens, and shared prosperity.
We are not just taxpayers or consumers; we are citizens. The
role of a citizen is to look beyond the self. The public good reminds us that
we are connected, that our futures are bound together, and that democracy
cannot survive without care.
Restoring the public good is not nostalgia, and it is a necessity. It is the only antidote to a nation sick with greed, disconnection, and despair. If we are to save this republic, we must revive its soul. We must invest in one another. We must believe again in the power of people coming together to solve common problems.
William James Spriggs