Here is the letter I sent to President Trump:
Dear Mr. Trump,
I am running for office in 2028 and would like your help with something right below, and then I will share my platform. Please let Donald Trump hear the idea in the paragraph right below.
My pathway to victory is through the electoral college. I can’t get millions of votes, so I’m hoping to have faithless electors. You did an electoral college scheme, so I’m hoping you can help me. Can you try to make it more legal for them to pick me over the candidate that wins the vote?
I will govern from the sensible middle and be civil and seek to always have the maximum good in my agenda.
I want to protect the Constitution fiercely but interpret it broadly.
I want to help religions pass rules on their members, but a person can leave and be able to survive. Computers can strengthen people’s faiths in their religions.
I want to have computers decide what people can do in a quasi-capitalist system (not socialist). They can do what they want within the law, and survive, but if they want reward they have to do certain things and do them well. We will make things more efficient so people overall have an easier time and are more helped in doing what they want.
I want to reward hard work, and no loans. If people want money to do something they borrow it from someone else and it can be conditional how much they receive.
I want to be merciful. Everyone is able to survive. If we have to have some jobs that are unpleasant and pay little so desperate people can go to them, so be it. If we have to do something like say you can’t be on drugs (unless you were force-injected), we might do that at first. Definitely favor bread lines.
I want to be peaceful. Chat GPT showed me how to make it so the militaries won’t kill anyone. With technology, we can invent guns that only go off in true defense and gradually replace all the guns. I don’t want anyone killing each other, and stealing too. I don’t have a plan for stealing yet.
I have more to share about my agenda.
Thank you for your consideration,
Eric Eliason