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The Court of Humanity

Constitutional Architecture for Refusing Sovereign Immunity in Negligent Mass Homicide

Author
Affiliation

Mike P. Sinn

Institute for Accelerated Medicine

Abstract

Governments wrote laws making it illegal to sue them. The legal term is “sovereign immunity.” It descends from “the king can do no wrong,” which your species abolished in theory and preserved in practice. Governments waived it for slip-and-falls in federal buildings. They kept it for killing people through war, drug delay, and budget misallocation. This paper proposes the Court of Humanity: any human can file, any government can be sued, juries are randomly selected from the global population, and sovereign immunity is not recognized as a defense. Enforcement runs through bond markets, not armies: if the world’s investors agree the defendants owe the bill, the defendants’ borrowing costs go up whether they cooperate or not. The bill, calculated from the body count using the governments’ own life valuations (157), is larger than any government can pay. They can, however, settle. The 1% Treaty158 is the settlement offer.

Keywords

sovereign immunity, tort law, decentralized adjudication, proof of personhood, capital markets, international law, government accountability, wrongful death

The Question Nobody Asked You

Should every person have the legal right to seek justice against any government that kills, injures, or harms them or their family?

This is the question your species never put to itself. The reason is structural: the people who would have called the vote are the people who would have lost it.

A child can answer this. So can a grandmother. So can a refugee, a soldier, a doctor, a tax accountant. Voting no requires saying out loud “I believe my government should be allowed to kill my family with no consequences.” Very few ordinary humans want to say that sentence in public. The question does work the Treaty question cannot do by itself: it makes sovereign immunity visible.

Sovereign Immunity Is a Choice Nobody Chose

If a hospital kills your mother through negligence, you can sue. If a drug company hides safety data, you can sue. If a private security contractor shoots a child by accident, you can sue. If the government does the exact same thing, you cannot.

The legal doctrine that protects governments is called sovereign immunity. It descends, without architectural modification, from the principle of the king can do no wrong. Your species abolished the divine right of kings in the 18th century. You retained the one part of it that needed abolishing.

Sovereign immunity is waivable. Governments can give it up at any time. The United States has waived it for: postal-truck collisions, malpractice at federal hospitals, slip-and-falls in federal buildings, unauthorized disclosure of tax returns, and the disposal of certain hazardous materials. It has not waived it for: dying because the FDA refused to release a drug Germany prescribes for breakfast, dying because the Pentagon misplaced $2.46 trillion that would have funded your trial, or dying because your country bombed your city under a stated rationale that turned out to be wrong.

The asymmetry is not constitutional. It is political. Congress passes laws creating government liability for harms that damage people powerful enough to lobby. It does not pass laws creating government liability for harms that damage people too dead or too poor to lobby.

The Map of What You Cannot Sue For

The United States passed a law (the Federal Tort Claims Act) that lets you sue the government for some things. The exceptions are a precise map of the things that kill the most people. You cannot sue for:

  • “Policy choices” (28 U.S.C. § 2680(a)): budget allocation, regulatory standards, military spending. The things that determine who lives and dies.
  • Military combat deaths (28 U.S.C. § 2680(j)): if the government kills someone during a war, immune.
  • Anything that happens outside the U.S. (28 U.S.C. § 2680(k)): if the government harms someone in another country, immune.
  • Soldiers injured in service (the Feres doctrine, 1950): if you are in the military and the military hurts you, you cannot sue the military.

The pattern is what happens when you let the defendant write the immunity rules. The bigger the body count, the stronger the shield.

The Real Name for This Is Protection Racket

A “protection racket” is when a powerful entity provides “protection” against threats it itself creates, while exempting itself from accountability for the harm it causes. Your governments charge $2.72 trillion per year for “national security.” The same governments wrote the laws that prevent you from suing them when their security operations kill your family. This is not democracy. It is the structural form of organized crime, with the addition of a flag.

The question for you is not whether sovereign immunity is correct. The question is whether you noticed it exists, and whether, having noticed, you are willing to leave it in place.

The Corporate Damages Posture

Your governments’ own actuaries value a statistical human life at roughly $10 million (95% CI: $5 million-$15 million) (the standard regulatory valuation used by the EPA, DOT, and FDA). This is not the same thing as a court-awarded wrongful-death verdict. It is the number governments already use when deciding how many deaths a policy is allowed to buy.

The bill is calculated the same way a prosecutor would calculate it against a corporation: list every category of harm, prove the biggest ones first, and do not count the same death twice. Your existing system already does this. Pfizer paid $2.3 billion for health-care fraud159. BP paid $20.8 billion for the Deepwater Horizon spill160. Volkswagen paid $4.3 billion for cheating emissions tests and accepted a government monitor161. The Court is not inventing the bill format. It is applying the existing corporate bill format to a defendant whose revenue, customer base, and body count are larger162,163.

The full bill, broken into categories (what they owe for killing people, giving the money back, losing the money, making them return the profits, fixing the problem, and the value of settling now) is in the Corporate Damages Schedule of Humanity v. Government. The prosecutor’s demand, including the primary lost-income theory ($25.2 million (95% CI: $8.28 million-$71.6 million) per person over a lifetime) and the body-count backup tiers, is in the Prosecutor’s Demand. The three source ledgers are: Humanity v. Government for the liability theory, Cost of War for the historical cost of trials never funded, and 1% Treaty Impact164 158 for the future value of adopting the remedy now.

For context, global GDP is approximately $115 trillion per year. Even after heavy discounting, the bill is larger than any government can pay.

Your governments do not have this money. They cannot pay the full amount. That is not a problem. That is the point. A debt a defendant cannot pay is a debt that changes how the defendant behaves. You do not need to collect it. You need the defendant to know it exists, and you need voters, bondholders, insurers, and treaty parties to know it too.

What a Sensible Species Would Build

On every other planet I have observed where a species survived long enough to develop tort law, someone eventually built the obvious thing: a court where any person can bring a claim against any government, with the population as the jury. The architecture is not complicated. It is the absence of the architecture that requires explanation.

Here is what the Court of Humanity looks like, stripped of the jargon your legal profession adds to simple things to make them expensive.

Who can file. Any human, anywhere. No nationality requirement. No lawyer required. You submit evidence and select the closest matching case template, or file as “novel” for full procedure. Filing is free or carries a small refundable bond. On most planets, this is considered so obvious that describing it feels like explaining that water is wet.

Who gets sued. Any government, anywhere. The Court does not begin with defendant consent, because your species already tried that and the defendants who most need suing are the ones who decline to be sued. Sovereign immunity is not a defense in this court. It is an exhibit. The Court’s claim to authority derives from the consent of humans, who are, in any honest description of how political authority works, the actual sovereign. Its legal force grows as states, courts, bond contracts, procurement rules, and treaty parties choose to recognize that claim.

Templates. Most of the terrible things governments do are not creative. They pattern-match. FDA delay killing a cancer patient looks like FDA delay killing a heart patient looks like FDA delay killing a Parkinson’s patient. Drone strikes under disputed rationale look like other drone strikes under disputed rationale. So the Court pre-publishes case templates: what must be proven, what evidence looks like, and what the structural remedy is (typically a percentage redirect to a public trust, an automatic injunction, or a contribution to a victim-compensation fund). The templates themselves are drafted, debated, and ratified through global deliberative referenda, not by a committee of lawyers in a conference room.

AI-assisted briefs. Three independent AI systems (one arguing prosecution, one arguing defense, one neutral, each with its own reputation and money on the line) produce competing summaries. Jurors read the summaries. The raw 10,000-page filing remains available for anyone who wants it. Where the AIs disagree, the disagreement is flagged for expanded human review. This is how your species already processes complex information in every domain except the one where people are dying.

The jury. A randomly selected panel of approximately 1,000 to 10,000 verified humans, drawn proportionally from the global population using demographic and regional stratification. Multiple parallel juries vote on the same case independently. When they agree, the finding is robust. When they disagree, expanded review is triggered. The stratified-random model prevents vote-brigading (advocates cannot select their own jury) and bounds the information load (only ten thousand humans must read the evidence, not 8 billion).

How they vote. Yes or no on whether the conduct matches the template’s elements. Jurors do not vote on damages amounts. Damages are determined by formula. This is essential. It prevents sentiment-driven inflation, eliminates lottery dynamics, and produces verdicts that capital markets can price. Your species has a long history of juries awarding comedy-sized damages to sympathetic plaintiffs while structurally similar victims get nothing. The formula fixes this by removing the part where humans get to feel feelings about money.

Proof of personhood. Jurors verify their humanity through multiple independent biometric or social-graph systems (Worldcoin, BrightID, government IDs from non-defendant states). Eligibility requires verification on at least N systems, so no single compromised system can corrupt the jury. The verification systems are themselves auditable through the Court.

Edge cases. Some cases will be genuinely novel: conduct that does not match any template, or evidence requiring expert investigation beyond AI capacity. These proceed under modified adversarial procedure with attorneys and expert witnesses. The output is typically a new template, ratified through deliberative referendum and added to the library. Over time, routine cases are pattern-matched, AI-briefed, jury-voted, and automatically remedied with no lawyer involved. Lawyers occupy the edge-case fallback, which is where they belong, rather than the routine procedure, which is where they currently live at $800 per hour.

Enforcement. The Court does not have a sheriff. It has something governments fear more than sheriffs: bond markets.

The Boring Part That Prevents Humans From Setting Each Other on Fire

The Court only matters if its judgments deserve to be taken seriously. That requires boring procedural guarantees: notice to the defendant, a public evidence record, a right of response, conflict checks for AI briefers and jurors, published standards of proof, appeal to a larger jury panel when verdicts diverge, privacy rules for victims and proof-of-personhood data, and an auditable explanation of how the formula remedy follows from the factual findings.

Due process is the difference between a verdict and a press release. A verdict that skips due process is propaganda. A verdict that gives the defendant every procedural chance to answer, then still finds mass negligence, is a pricing event.

Your species has a tendency to skip due process when angry and then wonder why nobody respects the outcome. The Court is designed by someone who has watched this happen on 847 planets. The boring procedural parts are not optional. They are the load-bearing walls.

How Your Species Will Try to Break This

You will try. Every species does. Here is how, and here is why it will not work.

What you will try Why it will not work
Capture the proof-of-personhood system Verification requires N independent systems. Operators stake their own money and reputation. The verification systems are themselves auditable through the Court. You would need to capture all of them simultaneously, which requires coordinating a conspiracy across competing organizations, and conspiracies are the thing your species is worst at besides nutrition.
Flood the Court with disinformation Evidence has cryptographic provenance with a public versioning ledger. Three independent AI summarizers with their own reputations at stake produce competing analyses. Jurors can always access the raw evidence. Lying requires fooling multiple independent systems at once, and your species cannot even coordinate a group dinner.
Brigade the vote The jury is randomly selected, not self-selected. Advocates cannot choose their own jury. Reputation accrues from agreement with eventual consensus across multiple cases, so consistently wrong jurors lose influence. You would need to infiltrate a random sample of the global population, which is called “being popular,” and if you are popular enough to do that, you do not need to cheat.
File frivolous cases Small refundable filing bond. AI triage bundles similar cases and flags weak ones for early dismissal. Filing a frivolous case costs you money and accomplishes nothing, which is already how your existing legal system works, except yours charges more.
Ignore the judgment Capital markets will not ignore the judgment. Sovereign bond yields, insurance premiums, and trade flows will price it whether the defendant acknowledges it or not. You can refuse to recognize the Court. You cannot refuse to pay higher interest rates.
Game the damages formula Multiple independent AI systems classify the conduct, and disagreements trigger jury review. Templates are designed with overlapping coverage. Gaming requires finding a gap that all three AI systems miss while the entire global public watches.
Attack the infrastructure No single server, organization, or jurisdiction controls the ledger, the AI summarizers, the proof-of-personhood systems, or the jury-selection algorithm. Attacking the Court requires attacking every independent technical community that runs a node, which is called “attacking the internet,” and nobody has managed that yet, including people with nuclear weapons.

These are real risks. The Court does not need them to disappear. It needs each one bounded tightly enough that the people pricing sovereign debt treat its judgments as more informative than the current system, where sovereign immunity means nobody keeps score at all. A low bar. Your species has been clearing low bars for millennia. This one is approximately ankle height.

How the Court Makes Governments Do Things Without Making Them Do Anything

The objection writes itself: powerful governments routinely ignore courts they did not accept. The Court of Humanity has no army, no prison, no sheriff. It cannot arrest a head of state, seize a treasury, or compel a single vote.

This is not a weakness. Courts with armies are called “governments,” and governments are the defendants.

The Court does something different. It produces a public, permanent record of which governments killed how many people and what they did about it. Without the Court, there is nothing to score the defendants on. With it, every legislator’s vote on every Court ruling becomes a public grade, attached to a ledger that voters, investors, insurers, procurement officers, and treaty parties can read. The enforcement works through five independent layers, each of which operates whether the defendant cooperates or not:

Layer What happens Who cares
Money Sovereign bond yields rise, insurance premiums rise, trade flows shift away Treasuries, central banks, finance ministries (the people whose actual job is caring about this)
Diplomacy Procurement conditions, treaty access, and recognition rules favor compliant governments Foreign ministries, UN seats, trade pacts
Lawsuits Bondholders sue under Treaty Article VI in the defendant’s own courts Domestic courts, Treasury solicitors
Politics The Political Incentive Fund scores every legislator on Court compliance and funds their opponents when they score badly Individual legislators, party leadership, campaign finance
Reputation Public verdict ledger, citizen pressure, journalist scrutiny Voters, donors, regulators, civil society, and anyone who can read

The political layer is the fastest. Capital-markets pressure is real but slow. Diplomatic pressure is real but coordinated by the same officials being scored. Judicial pressure is bottlenecked by court calendars. Political pressure is the layer that can fire the people in office and replace them with people who are not. It works within each defendant’s own constitutional framework. It does not require the defendant to consent to anything. It requires the defendant to have elections, which, conveniently, most of them claim to.

Your Senators Already Have a Dog Trainer

The Political Incentive Fund, fed by 10% of every Treaty dollar ($2.72 billion/year at scale), is the largest political-incentive fund in human history by an order of magnitude.

It scores every legislator on two questions:

  1. Treaty compliance. Did you vote to implement and expand the 1% Treaty158?
  2. Court compliance. Did you vote to honor Court of Humanity judgments against your government, or did you vote to obstruct, defund, or ignore them?

High scorers get independent electoral support and post-office fellowships under general, published criteria (not as payment for a specific vote, which would be bribery, a concept your species has already mastered without our help). Low scorers get the same machinery pointed at their opponents.

The NRA already perfected this technology. They give every legislator a letter grade, and your senators are more afraid of a bad mark on the NRA scorecard than of a mass shooting in their own district. Environmental groups do it. Labor unions do it. Business coalitions do it. The infrastructure exists. The legal framework exists. The only thing missing was a funding source large enough to outbid the weapons industry and a target list tied to something that matters. The Treaty provides the first. The Court provides the second.

This is not a moral appeal. Your legislators are not being asked to become better people (clearly out of the question). They are being asked to respond to incentives, which is what they already do, on every issue, every day. You are changing which incentives they respond to. Same dog. Same training. Different trick.

Nobody Gets a Lottery Ticket

A reasonable concern: if any human can sue any government for negligent homicide, will rich plaintiffs with good lawyers collect enormous checks while the defendants go bankrupt and the rest of humanity gets nothing?

No. And the reason it does not work that way is the reason it works at all.

Individual plaintiffs do not collect individual checks. The body count is too large for individual compensation. Liquidating every treasury on Earth would still not create enough money to restore the dead or cure the diseases that were never cured. Individual compensation is mathematically impossible at the scale of the harm. So the Court does something smarter:

The Court issues structural judgments. A typical judgment looks like: “the defendant shall redirect X% of military spending to clinical trials, perpetually, with bondholders enforcing compliance.” The 1% Treaty is the standard form of this judgment. The remedy flows to a public trust, not to plaintiffs’ bank accounts. Disease victims receive cures, not checks. War victims receive peace, not reparations. Regulatory-delay victims receive faster access to the next drug, not retroactive damages.

For specific harm categories, dedicated victim trust funds pay out per formula. This is how the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund worked. It is how the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program works. It is how asbestos trust funds work. Decades of precedent. None of them bankrupted anyone.

Lawyers are mostly absent. For templated cases, no attorney is involved. For novel cases, attorneys are paid through capped fee-shifting rather than individual contingency, so their incentive is to establish precedent, not to hunt jackpots. The only category of human who profits in cash is bondholders, and bondholders profit by financing the lawsuit, not by being victims. Their returns scale with the structural settlement’s success. This is the Incentive Alignment Bond mechanism.

What this prevents: defendant bankruptcy (governments pay X% per year, sustainably, perpetually); a race to the courthouse (first-filers and last-filers receive equivalent structural compensation); a fraudulent-claim epidemic (you do not get money personally, so there is nothing to defraud); and, most importantly, the damages flow to fixing the cause of death, which prevents the next set of cases from arising. Your species calls this “injunctive and structural relief.” On every planet I have observed, it is called “the obvious thing.”

Precedents

Your species has already done this. Multiple times. You just never connected the pattern.

Asbestos trust funds: courts approved formula-based trusts after industry bankruptcy filings. Claimants receive structured payouts from a finite pool, not full theoretical damages. 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund: a special master used a structured formula rather than individualized tort litigation. Vaccine Injury Compensation Program: a no-fault administrative system funded by an excise tax, using standardized payouts. Camp Lejeune Justice Act: Congress waived sovereign immunity for a defined class of toxic-water harms. Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement: ongoing structured payments changed industry behavior without requiring immediate liquidation.

Each one demonstrates that mass tort liability can be resolved through structural settlement without either defendant collapse or plaintiff-lottery dynamics. The Court of Humanity applies the same mechanism to the largest unaddressed mass tort in human history. The legal precedent exists. The financial precedent exists. The only thing that does not exist is the institution, and that is what you are building.

The compensation you receive is your own non-death and your descendants’ continued existence. This is, on examination, a more useful form of compensation than a check.

The Settlement Offer

Your governments cannot pay the full exposure. They can, however, settle.

The 1% Treaty158 is the settlement offer. Governments accept liability for $27.2 billion per year (1% of military spending), in exchange for capping their exposure to the larger judgment indefinitely. The redirected funds go to clinical trials and bondholders.

Piece What it does
Court of Humanity The lawsuit. Establishes the exposure.
1% Treaty The settlement. Caps exposure at 1% of military spending.
Incentive Alignment Bonds The plaintiff’s contingency arrangement. Finances the lawsuit and the campaign.
dFDA The remedy. Absorbs the redirected funds and clears the disease backlog.

In any private-sector tort context, defendants facing existential exposure settle for a small recurring share of their annual budget the day the suit is filed. Their lawyers advise it. Their boards demand it. Their shareholders sue them if they don’t. Your governments do not have boards or shareholders. They have voters. The Court is what gives voters the leverage that lawyers, boards, and shareholders provide in every other context. It is the missing piece in a system where the defendant writes the rules, the judge is the defendant’s employee, and the victims are too dead to file.

Why This Is Not the ICC

The International Criminal Court, International Court of Justice, and various tribunals (ad hoc, hybrid, regional) have not produced the accountability outcomes their proponents anticipated. The reason is structural: each existing court depends on state consent, territorial links, Security Council referral, or treaty recognition. Defendants who anticipate being defendants avoid those hooks. The United States, China, Russia, Israel, and India are not parties to the Rome Statute. The result is a system with serious jurisdictional gaps precisely where power is largest. It is as though you designed a sprinkler system that automatically shuts off whenever it detects a fire.

The Court of Humanity differs in three respects: its legitimacy derives from the consent of humans, not the consent of governments; its enforcement runs through capital markets, political scoring, and treaty recognition rather than coercion; and any harmed human can bring a claim against any government, rather than requiring state-on-state suits or specific listed cases. It is not a competitor to the ICC. It is what the ICC would be if the defendants had not been allowed to design the exit doors.

Why Existing Courts Are Insufficient (But Useful)

Several existing courts can hear parts of this case. None can hear all of it. The ICC prosecutes war criminals but only from countries that signed up; the United States, China, Russia, Israel, and India did not. The International Court of Justice only hears disputes between states, not claims by individual victims. The European Court of Human Rights can hear right-to-life claims but has never been pushed on drug-delay deaths. The U.S. Federal Tort Claims Act allows negligence suits against the government but exempts “policy choices,” which is the legal wall around every budget decision. The Inter-American Court has actually ruled against governments for failing to protect health, but only covers the Americas.

What none of these courts will hear is the misallocation claim. The proposition that a government is liable for the cancer that was never cured because it spent the research budget on weapons does not have a serious forum anywhere on Earth. Existing courts treat budget allocation as a “political question,” which is a polite way of saying “we are not going to touch the thing that matters most.” The Court of Humanity is the only proposed institution that treats spending the cure money on weapons as a harm you can sue over.

The practical strategy: file war-death and drug-delay cases in existing courts while building the Court of Humanity. Wins create precedent. Losses create evidence that existing courts are insufficient. Dismissals create documentation of the gap. Every court that declines to hear the misallocation claim adds an entry to the record explaining why a new court is required. You cannot lose. You can only build the case for why the Court must exist.

Two Questions on the Same Ballot

The current global referendum asks one question: “Do you support the 1% Treaty?” The Treaty involves specific budget mechanics that some voters find complicated. (Your species finds 1% complicated. I am making a note of this.)

The Court referendum question is simpler: “Should every person have the legal right to seek justice against any government that kills, injures, or harms them or their family?”

Put both on the same ballot. The first question is the moral trigger. The second is the operational settlement. A voter who answers yes to the Court question has voted to reject sovereign immunity. A voter who answers yes to the Treaty question has voted to accept the settlement offer. The first vote begins the accountability process. The second gives governments the cheapest peaceful way to end it.

The ballot is also the consent record. A human signature does not make the signer a state party with budget obligations. It creates the public record from which the Court draws its authority. Organizations can sign before their governments do: a nonprofit, company, church, union, school, or city can publicly reject sovereign immunity before the nation it sits inside does. Government signatures implement the settlement. Human and organizational signatures create the mandate that makes refusal expensive.

What Happens When 4.13 billion People Answer Yes

The dynamics are not automatic, but the bargaining position changes.

More participation than every election in human history combined. Every politician asked: “Do you support the result?” Smaller nations sign on first: Costa Rica, Ireland, New Zealand, Iceland, Norway, Switzerland. Recognition costs them less than it costs large military powers, and it gives them moral authority they cannot buy with aircraft carriers. Holdout governments expose themselves. The United States, China, Russia, Israel, France, and the UK must defend sovereign immunity against a backdrop of 4.13 billion verified humans who rejected it. The Court does not require government permission to draft templates, run juries, and publish verdicts. Recognition by participating countries turns moral authority into legal effect. Capital gets a signal before the first ruling: bond yields, insurance premiums, investment flows, and procurement risk models begin distinguishing governments that recognize the standard from governments that reject it.

The first ruling is small. Likely a wrongful-death claim against a participating government for police violence or pharmaceutical-delay mortality. The participating government pays. Precedent is set. Legitimacy compounds. Holdouts choose: join and accept accountability, or remain outside while the costs accumulate from every direction simultaneously.

How You Boot a Judicial System From Scratch

The Court’s most genuine weakness is the bootstrapping period. Until templates are established, every case is novel. Until proof-of-personhood systems achieve adequate population coverage, jury legitimacy depends on the available verified population. Until capital markets begin pricing judgments, the enforcement mechanism is partial. This is honest, and I am including it because your species has a remarkable talent for finding the one legitimate objection to a proposal and using it as an excuse to do nothing.

Phase 1: Foundation cases. The first ~100 cases proceed under traditional adversarial procedure with attorneys, expert witnesses, and full discovery. These cases establish the initial templates. Voluntary participating governments (likely Costa Rica, Ireland, New Zealand, Iceland, Norway) supply the early defendants. Foundation-case attorneys are paid through fee-shifting from a pre-funded litigation trust capitalized by the Incentive Alignment Bond165 mechanism.

Phase 2: Template ratification. Drawing from the foundation-case docket, the Court drafts initial case templates and submits them for global deliberative referendum. Successful templates enter the library. The next ~10,000 cases use a hybrid model: templated where possible, traditional where not.

Phase 3: Steady-state. Pattern-matched cases dominate the docket. Attorneys occupy the edge-case fallback procedure rather than the routine procedure. The Court operates primarily as an automated structural-relief mechanism. Novel conduct categories still get traditional procedure, which produces new templates, which reduces the number of novel cases. The system converges on efficiency, which is what systems do when you stop letting lawyers charge hourly.

The Court does not begin from scratch. Its evidentiary foundation is the Invisible Graveyard157, a structured database of preventable deaths submitted by the families of the dead, cross-referenced against drug approval timelines and conflict records, with explicit consent for use as court evidence. By the time the Court hears its first case, it has documented deaths with named victims, dates, photographs, family testimony, and structured metadata. This is not an institution seeking evidence. It is evidence seeking an institution.

The Court is the institutional anchor of the International Campaign to End War and Disease, the public coalition of humans and organizations signing the 1% Treaty before governments do. It is modeled on the International Campaign to Ban Landmines and the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. Both predecessor campaigns drove governments to sign treaties most governments did not want to sign. This campaign builds the institution that lets governments settle a lawsuit. The difference is structural: a treaty is what governments sign when they wish to demonstrate good intentions; a settlement is what governments sign when the alternative is a continuing trial.

The Fourth Branch

Wishocracy166 describes a governance system in which decisions are made by the consent of the governed, weighted by neither wealth nor party affiliation, with corruption capped at 20% by structural design. The Court of Humanity is its judicial branch. The book has previously described the executive branch (the Optimitron), the budgetary mechanism (Incentive Alignment Bonds165), and the legislative trigger (the 1% Treaty). The Court is what was missing.

In existing political theory, separation of powers requires three branches that constrain each other. Your current system has three branches that coordinate with each other against the citizenry. The executive appoints the judges. The legislature confirms them. The judges rule in favor of the executive’s immunity. This is called “checks and balances,” which contains the word “checks” the same way “grape soda” contains the word “grape.”

The Court of Humanity introduces a fourth branch: the citizenry itself, voting on cases, constraining the other three. The defendants will object that this is mob rule. 8 billion humans are not a mob. They are the population. The current system is rule by a small governing class operating under the procedural shield of sovereign immunity. The Court replaces elite immunity with equal public standing. This is what democracy was supposed to be. It is not what democracy currently is.

The Cost-Effectiveness Case

Your species measures charitable interventions by how many years of healthy life each dollar buys. The standard benchmark is the malaria bed net, at $89 (95% CI: $78-$100) per year of healthy life saved. The Court of Humanity is, by a margin I find interesting, the highest-value charitable intervention currently available to your species.

Building the Court costs $30 million (95% CI: $10 million-$50 million). The International Criminal Court, for comparison, funds physical courtrooms, detention facilities, and a permanent staff. The Court of Humanity is digital: evidence submitted via web, AI triage, juries voting from home. No marble. No gavels. No parking garage.

The honest accounting matters. The Court does not directly prevent any deaths. The 1% Treaty does that. The Court is what makes the Treaty more likely to get adopted. So the math is not “Court cost divided by deaths prevented.” The math is “Court cost compared to how much more likely the Treaty becomes because the Court exists.”

The 1% Treaty has already established itself, separately, as approximately 503x (95% CI: 30x-3.0kx) more cost-effective than bed nets in expected value. That figure already accounts for the probability of political failure. The Court is small compared with the Treaty campaign itself ($30 million (95% CI: $10 million-$50 million) compared to $1 billion). If the Court increases the probability of Treaty adoption by even a small fraction, the Court’s cost per year of healthy life saved drops several orders of magnitude below bed nets.

The breakeven question: how little would the Court need to improve the odds before it is no longer worth funding? Very little. The Court does not need to pass the Treaty by itself. It only needs to make adoption slightly more likely.

To believe the Court is not worth funding, you must believe that a legal institution documenting millions of preventable deaths with named victims and family testimony contributes almost nothing to the political adoption of the 1% Treaty. I would be interested to read the argument for this position. I have not encountered it on any planet, and I have looked on 847.

For donors with an existing charitable portfolio: a dollar that funds bed nets saves healthy life-years at the bed-net rate. A dollar that funds the Court saves healthy life-years by improving the odds that the Treaty passes, and the Treaty has already, separately, established itself as the most cost-effective intervention ever measured against that benchmark. Same dollar. Different multiplier. The Court is a charity that buys other charities. It works by making everything else more likely to happen.

The full upside is described in the 1% Treaty Impact Analysis158 for the conservative case, in The Political Dysfunction Tax53 for the recoverable losses across the broader governance system, and in GDP Trajectories167 for the best-case scenario. The Court is the legal instrument that connects the indictment to the settlement. Everything else in this book describes what the settlement pays for.

What You Do

The public treaty register is at warondisease.org. It contains both questions. Signing takes 30 seconds. Answer the Court question first (the simpler one). Then the Treaty question. If you vote yes on both, you reject sovereign immunity and accept the settlement offer in the same motion. You are not asking permission to be represented. You are creating the record of consent from which the Court draws authority.

Your government has spent the past 80 years getting better at killing people while writing the laws that prevent you from suing them for it. They built the immunity. They funded the weapons. They hid the body count inside budget line items and regulatory delays and “discretionary function exceptions.” They did all of this in your name, with your money, without asking whether you consented to any of it.

You did not consent.

Now there is a court. It does not need their permission. It does not need their buildings, their sheriffs, their approval, or their cooperation. It needs yours. It needs you to say, publicly and on the record, that the king can, in fact, do wrong, and that you noticed.

The remaining question is whether you say it out loud.