The Pinkprint II: A Response to Saving America by Saving the Family: A Foundation for the Next 250 Years - Couverture souple

Max, Luna; Hemmings, Helena

 
9781966014492: The Pinkprint II: A Response to Saving America by Saving the Family: A Foundation for the Next 250 Years

Synopsis

The Pinkprint II examines the Heritage Foundation’s Saving America by Saving the Family: A Foundation for the Next 250 Years as a long range program for reorganizing private life around one approved model of family, morality, and belonging. Where Project 2025 focused on staffing, agencies, and executive power, this next phase shifts the agenda into homes, schools, healthcare, work, and benefits systems. It treats family as the governing unit and uses the language of stability to justify a broader politics of control.

This book argues that family stability cannot be built through moral grading, religious hierarchy, or narrowed life paths. It shows how the Heritage vision frames one religious and biological household model as the foundation of the republic, then applies pressure through benefits design, schools, healthcare access, employment rules, and cultural narratives until conformity looks like virtue and dissent looks like failure. What is presented as renewal is often restriction. What is presented as order is often exclusion.

The Pinkprint II is not a rebuttal by slogan or a point by point moral counterattack. It is a civic and political alternative. It lays out a long range social vision built on plural legitimacy, secular governance, material support, reproductive autonomy, strong public systems, and the idea that rights should not depend on household conformity. It argues that durable family life comes from secure housing, accessible healthcare, childcare, eldercare, fair work rules, and schools that build civic competence rather than obedience.

For readers interested in Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation, Christian nationalism, family policy, women’s rights, reproductive freedom, social democracy, public systems, secular governance, and the future of American democracy, the Pinkprint II offers a different blueprint for the decades ahead. It makes the case that real social stability is built through support, rights, and shared institutions, not through coercion dressed up as family values.

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