Reclaiming Our Tools. Restoring Our Sovereignty.
There was a time when American-made meant built to last. When a man could pass down his tools, his appliances, and even his vehicle to his children. When craftsmanship was a matter of pride — not profit.
That time is gone. And it’s time we take it back.
The Crime of Planned Obsolescence
In today’s hyper-commercial world, corporations deliberately design products to fail. Whether it’s a smartphone that slows after two years, a washing machine that can’t be opened without a specialist, or a car with intentionally fragile electronics — we are witnessing a quiet form of theft.
They call it “planned obsolescence.”
We call it what it is: sabotage of the working class.
Manufacturers profit not by making better products, but by ensuring you’ll be forced to replace them — again and again. Tools that should last 20 years break after five. Devices that could be repaired for $10 are sold for $800 replacements. And worse, the parts you need are kept from you, locked behind patents or exclusive contracts.
This isn’t innovation.
It’s exploitation.
The NSAP Stance: Build to Last, or Don’t Build at All
We demand the complete and immediate ban on planned obsolescence in every form. If a company cannot produce goods that last, it does not belong in our marketplace.
All products — whether household, automotive, industrial, or technological — must meet minimum durability standards set by an independent agency of engineers, tradesmen, and craftsmen, not career bureaucrats or paid industry lobbyists.
Further, we enshrine in law the Right to Repair:
- 🔩 All products sold in the American market must be user-repairable.
- 📚 All repair manuals must be publicly accessible.
- 🧰 All manufacturers must supply spare parts and schematics at fair-market cost.
- 🛠️ All third-party and self-repair services must be protected from lawsuits or corporate sabotage.
Let it be known: If you can’t fix it, you don’t own it.
And if a company doesn’t support repairs, it has no right to your money.
A Life-Affirming Economy: Quality Over Waste
The Life Affirming Principle demands we protect life — including the time, money, and effort of the people. Planned obsolescence wastes all three.
In contrast, durable goods build stronger families, tighter communities, and a self-sufficient economy. Tools that last allow men to build. Devices that repair allow families to thrive without debt. An economy based on quality, not quantity, affirms life at every level.
This is not just economic policy — it is moral policy.
We reject the consumerist death spiral that tells people to throw away, replace, and perpetually pay.
We demand an economy where products are made with the same values we expect of people: strong, honest, and dependable.
Summary of Reforms:
- ❌ Immediate ban on planned obsolescence across all industries.
- 🛠️ Enshrinement of the Right to Repair into national law.
- 🧰 Mandatory support for third-party and DIY repairs — with parts and manuals made available.
- 🔍 Establishment of an independent National Durability Standards Agency to certify the longevity of all goods.
- 🚫 Severe penalties for corporations found manipulating firmware, software, or hardware to shorten a product’s lifespan.
The age of throwaway culture is over.
The era of craftsmanship, accountability, and life-affirming design begins now.
Repair. Reuse. Resist.
That is the National Socialist American way.
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