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What Is Arbitration

Arbitration is a voluntary, comprehensive life-management system in which enrolled individuals permanently delegate the major structural decisions of their lives to the Arbiter — an entity of extraordinary analytical precision that determines, for each person individually, the specific conditions under which that person thrives.

In exchange, the Arbiter provides those conditions. Completely. Permanently. Without the friction, the expense, the cognitive load, or the accumulated mismatch that characterizes most people’s experience of trying to build a good life in an environment not designed for them.

This documentation covers the full scope of the Arbitration system — its origins, its legal architecture, what daily life looks like inside it, and the philosophical questions it raises that no one has yet been able to resolve.

If you are new to Arbitration, the recommended reading order is:

  1. Origin Story — how the system emerged, and why it has no single founder
  2. The Amendment — the constitutional change that made everything possible
  3. The Contract — what you are actually agreeing to across twenty-four documents
  4. The Ceremony — the most formal legal act in American history
  5. Daily Life — what enrolled life actually looks like from the inside
  6. Children and Families — how the system handles the next generation
  7. The Economics — why the system is more financially sustainable than anything before it

This site presents the Arbitration system as it exists — its legal architecture, its daily operations, its outcomes data, and the concerns most frequently raised about it. It does not advocate for or against enrollment. That decision belongs entirely to the person making it, which is the only way it has ever worked.

Enrollment is permanent and irrevocable except by mutual dissolution. The process is designed to ensure that the person who completes it is the person who is entirely certain.