Ensure that everyone has nutritious food, access to adequate housing,healthCare, proper employment, clean water, reliable electricity, and efficient transportation.
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The proposal outlines a comprehensive global framework designed to reduce armed conflict, stabilize international relations, and redirect resources toward humanitarian development. It calls for a phased 50% reduction in global military expenditures, with half of the reduced amount—25%—allocated to a United Nations–managed international security force and the remaining 25% retained by each nation for essential defense needs. The resources freed through this reduction would be redirected to address urgent global challenges such as hunger, healthcare, education, and long-term human development. Based on widely referenced global data, this approach has the potential to save an estimated 10 to 15 million lives annually and generate more than one trillion dollars each year for humanitarian and developmental programs. The framework is designed to be inclusive and progressive, allowing willing nations to adopt the agreement in early phases while enabling gradual expansion toward broader international participation.
The proposal has been formally submitted to multiple governments and international institutions as part of a structured outreach process. Phase 1 submissions included the United Nations on March 23, 2026, through both electronic and physical delivery. A submission was made to the White House on March 25, 2026, and an acknowledgment letter was received on April 2, 2026, confirming that the proposal had been reviewed and recorded. On the same day, March 25, 2026, the proposal was submitted to the Prime Minister’s Office of India and the Ministry of External Affairs under Registration No. PMOPG/E/2026/0049965, where it remains under processing. Electronic submissions were sent to Israel and Iran on April 4, 2026. Phase 2 submissions were completed on April 6, 2026, covering the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, France, Japan, Australia, South Korea, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and Brazil. The proposal is available for review at: https://uniteddevelopedworld.com/Global_Treaty_Proposal.pdf.
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Most private and government organizations provide employment only to skilled individuals, leaving those without skills or education struggling. However, everyone can join the United Company, where salaries are based on skills, allowing all to participate in global development.
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