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Article XIV of XXVIII

Education

Restructured, Free, and Strategically Focused

K-8: Fundamentals

Grades K-8 cover reading, writing, math, science, history, financial literacy, civic responsibility, and the firearms safety program. This is the foundation every American needs regardless of what they specialize in.

9+: Free Specialty Education (College)

At age 14, students enter free specialty education — what we currently call college. They choose a major from fields that serve the nation's strategic needs:

  • AI and software development
  • Robotics and humanoid engineering
  • Material science and deep earth exploration
  • Aerospace and space systems
  • Medical and nursing
  • Skilled trades — electrical, plumbing, welding, HVAC, heavy equipment, CNC machining
  • Cybersecurity and network engineering
  • Nuclear engineering
  • Agriculture and food science
  • Other fields as national needs evolve

Students choose their own major and can pivot at any time. Nobody is assigned a specialty. But every available field serves a real national need — no publicly funded degrees in fields without practical application.

By age 18, every American enters the workforce with 4 years of focused specialty training. A 4-year head start over the current system where kids don't specialize until 22 at the earliest.

Creative Education

Creativity is not eliminated — it is integrated and liberated.

Within technical curricula: competitions to build the coolest robot, design the most elegant solution, create the most innovative prototype. Creativity lives inside every discipline rather than being siloed into a separate degree program.

Free instruments, art materials, and supplies provided to any American who wants them through a government program. High-quality free online courses in music, visual art, writing, and every creative discipline. Anyone can pursue art — they just do it on their own time with free resources rather than spending $100K on a degree. More people actually creating, not fewer.

The Pipeline

Specialty education feeds directly into the national apprenticeship program and the workforce. A graduate at 18 enters an apprenticeship, gets a living stipend, and is fully employed in their field by 20. The education system doesn't produce graduates who can't find work — it produces exactly what the economy needs.

As humanoids and AI take over physical labor, the education system pivots toward the industries that build and maintain those systems. The curriculum isn't static — it evolves as national needs evolve.