EQUALISM Manifest for a New World Order

€10.60

Equalism is not about equal money. It is about equal power — because law, human rights, and peoples’ rights only become real when power is balanced, visible, and accountable.

Marx was wrong on one decisive level: equal capital is not the same as real equality in society. Capitalism is equally wrong when it claims that people are equal simply because they stand equal before the law. Equal capital is not human equality, and equal rights are not human equality. As long as power remains unequally distributed, every promise of equality remains incomplete in practice.

Equalism begins with one correction: equality is a function of power. Power determines who gains access, who is heard, and which paths in life are possible. Unequal power produces inequality; equal power creates justice. That is why Equalism argues for a world order in which power is no longer hidden, concentrated, or unaccountable but visible, constrained, and shared.

The book applies this principle to war, migration, democracy, human rights, and the United Nations. It analyzes the Security Council, veto power, and Article 27 of the UN Charter and introduces the Vₙ = 0 framework to show how veto-based asymmetry fuels war and exclusion. Equalism connects global injustice to one root cause: unequal authority.

This manifesto is both a diagnosis and a demand. It challenges the foundations of the existing world order and argues for a future in which equal rights are backed by equal power.

If this vision resonates with you, you can also sign the Equalism Manifest on our website and join the movement for equal power and equal rights.

Equalism is not about equal money. It is about equal power — because law, human rights, and peoples’ rights only become real when power is balanced, visible, and accountable.

Marx was wrong on one decisive level: equal capital is not the same as real equality in society. Capitalism is equally wrong when it claims that people are equal simply because they stand equal before the law. Equal capital is not human equality, and equal rights are not human equality. As long as power remains unequally distributed, every promise of equality remains incomplete in practice.

Equalism begins with one correction: equality is a function of power. Power determines who gains access, who is heard, and which paths in life are possible. Unequal power produces inequality; equal power creates justice. That is why Equalism argues for a world order in which power is no longer hidden, concentrated, or unaccountable but visible, constrained, and shared.

The book applies this principle to war, migration, democracy, human rights, and the United Nations. It analyzes the Security Council, veto power, and Article 27 of the UN Charter and introduces the Vₙ = 0 framework to show how veto-based asymmetry fuels war and exclusion. Equalism connects global injustice to one root cause: unequal authority.

This manifesto is both a diagnosis and a demand. It challenges the foundations of the existing world order and argues for a future in which equal rights are backed by equal power.

If this vision resonates with you, you can also sign the Equalism Manifest on our website and join the movement for equal power and equal rights.