Equitism is not a utopia. It does not pretend humans are perfect. Instead, Equitism assumes the opposite: that power corrupts, that greed exists, and that any just system must prevent hoarding before it happens, not merely clean up after.
The Five Principles
- Equity is not charity. It is justice: fair outcomes, not just equal rules in a rigged game.
- Power must be decentralized. Not concentrated in parties, corporations, or strongmen. It belongs across councils, cooperatives, and communities.
- The commons must be restored. Land, water, housing, knowledge, and technology belong to everyone, not to those who can afford to fence them off.
- Work must serve life, not the other way around. Labor exists for contribution, creativity, and care. Not extraction.
- Technology must be harnessed for liberation. Automation should shorten workweeks. AI should empower, not monitor.
Equitism is a system designed for dignity, sustainability, and shared power. Not because it is idealistic, but because nothing else will survive what is coming.
If freedom means having a say in the systems that shape your life — why would you ever surrender that power to someone far away?