Campaign design team
By Vincent Cordova
In a world where silence is complicity, the time has come for the American people and their leaders to take a principled stand. Not a partisan stand. Not a geopolitical calculation. A human stand.
We must declare — unequivocally — that we recognize Palestine.
This isn’t just about borders or flags. This is about basic human dignity. This is about life, liberty, and the universal right to exist without occupation, bombardment, or forced displacement. As Americans, as global citizens, and as people who believe in the foundational truth that all people are created equal, we cannot continue to ignore the suffering of the Palestinian people.
And we won’t.
Our government was built on the promise that power comes from the people. But what happens when foreign influence and unchecked alliances distort that power — when our taxpayer dollars fund human rights violations abroad while our voices are silenced at home?
We don’t just have the right to speak up. Under the Ninth Amendment, we have the duty to reclaim the powers and rights retained by the people when government institutions fail to act in accordance with justice and humanity.
This is why United for Accountability has launched a legal and constitutional case:
🔗 We Recognize Palestine – View the Declaration and Sign Now
This is more than symbolic. This is legal standing. It is precedent. It is people-powered justice.
At United for Accountability, this initiative is not a hashtag. It’s a formal legal declaration that our government’s continued support of the Israeli occupation, the use of American weapons in civilian massacres, and the refusal to recognize the sovereignty of Palestine is a constitutional betrayal.
We are gathering the signatures, the testimonies, and the legal backing to expose that betrayal — in the courts, in public forums, and through every channel the Constitution affords us.
Let the record show: We are no longer silent.
Recognition isn’t about choosing sides in an ancient conflict. It’s about affirming international law, acknowledging decades of U.N. resolutions, and confronting the devastating truth of apartheid, systemic displacement, and the erasure of an entire people’s right to self-determination.
Recognition means we stop hiding behind neutrality while funding oppression. It means we stop pretending that war crimes are justified because they’re done by an ally. It means we uphold equal rights for Palestinians and Israelis alike, with no exceptions.
And it means we start listening to the people — including Jewish and Israeli voices — who are saying, "Not in our name."
Since October 2023, the world has witnessed unspeakable horrors in Gaza — families incinerated, hospitals bombed, journalists targeted, aid blocked. Children have become statistics. Parents have become gravediggers. And still, the U.S. sends more weapons, more money, more silence.
But not all Americans consent to this.
We, the people, revoke our consent to this violence. We withdraw our support from policies that kill in our name. And we recognize that the Constitution never gave the government the right to fund or ignore genocide.
We are building a legal record. A national archive of conscience. A platform where everyday citizens become constitutional actors — reclaiming their retained rights and invoking the Ninth Amendment not just as theory, but as action.
By signing the declaration at United for Accountability, you’re not just adding your name. You are:
We will present this declaration to courts, lawmakers, and the global community. Your voice will be on the record — for history, for justice, and for future generations.
This is not the time to wait for Congress to act. It’s not the time to plead with politicians who’ve shown time and again that military contracts matter more than human lives.
It’s time for the people to lead — and the institutions to follow.
We’ve launched this recognition case because the people of Palestine deserve more than pity. They deserve solidarity. Legal, moral, constitutional solidarity.
👉 Sign the Declaration: We Recognize Palestine
Let history show that we did not turn away.
Let our Constitution speak — not in silence or delay, but in action.
Let Palestine be recognized — by the people, for the people.