ADR 2030
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Reference

Sources & References

The 21 authoritative sources behind the figures cited throughout this document, gathered in one place.

A note on the figures

Where this document cites a statistic, it draws on primary sources from federal agencies and recognized authorities — CBP, CDC, the FBI, NCMEC, FEMA and the American Red Cross, the National Human Trafficking Hotline, CISA, NIST, the EFF, the FTC, and the U.S. Intelligence Community, among others. Those figures appear as numbered footnotes within each section and are collected below.

Many elements of the doctrine describe proposed programs that do not yet exist — for example the SAFE-USA fund, watchtower-node counts, the deployment timeline, and the restoration-metric targets. The values shown in those interactive tools are illustrative planning figures, clearly labeled as such, and are not presented as sourced data. The distinction is deliberate: real-world context is cited; forward-looking proposals are marked as illustrative rather than given the appearance of authority they do not have.

§2 · The War on the Mind

§3 · Child-Centered Deterrence

§4 · OSINT + HUMINT: The Watchtower Model

§5 · Border, Cartel, and Internal Threat Posture

§6 · Strategic Stockpiles

§8 · National Rescue Operations

§13 · Surveillance Detox

About this document

American Defense Readiness 2030 — A National Doctrine to Rescue, Restore, and Defend. Version 1.0 — Long-Form Strategic Edition.

Project Defend & Protect Our Children (PDPC). In partnership with America's Future and allied coalitions.

This is an advocacy white paper presented for study and discussion. It states the authors' positions; contested or sensitive claims are attributed to the document rather than asserted as fact. All interactive inputs stay in your browser — nothing is sent to a server.