At the More Perfect Union Accountability Network, we believe in the power of the First Amendment—specifically, the right of the people to petition their government for a redress of grievances. Our mission is to make that right not just symbolic, but effective.
We provide a platform that bridges the gap between individuals and their government. Our tools ensure that grievances are not buried in digital archives or dismissed with a single click. "Select all" and "archive" is not an appropriate response to the voices of a free people. It's a betrayal of the generations who struggled, suffered, and fought to secure these rights.
We empower citizens to hold their government accountable. Whether through drafting your own message or selecting from our prewritten templates, we print and physically mail your grievance via the U.S. Postal Service to the appropriate government office or official. A printed letter demands attention—it must be opened, read, and managed by a government employee whose salary is funded by your tax dollars.
This government works for us. Its authority is limited and granted solely by We the People. When it fails to listen, we remind it—firmly, clearly, and in writing—that its legitimacy depends on our consent. If that consent is abused, it can be revoked.
Join us in ensuring accountability, letter by letter.
It all started with a simple idea: I wanted to hold the government accountable — the way the Constitution says I can. I figured I’d write a bunch of letters to public officials, make some noise the old-fashioned way. So I went to Costco, bought $100 worth of stamps (because that’s the only way they sell them), and came home ready to go.
Then reality hit.
I didn’t have a printer. I didn’t have the addresses I needed. Handwriting every letter, stuffing envelopes, figuring out where to send them — it turned into a massive chore. And I realized: if it’s this hard for me, how many other people give up before they even get started?
That’s when this project was born.
More Perfect Union Accountability Network exists to make it easy to do what we shouldn’t need to fight for: getting our voices heard by the people who are supposed to work for us. We help you draft a grievance, print it, and mail it — for real — straight to the desks of the officials who need to hear it.
Because a physical letter can’t be ignored with a “select all” and an “archive.” It takes up space. It demands attention. It slows down the system in the best way — and reminds those in power that we’re paying attention.
We’re here to make speaking up easier. Because our rights only mean something if we use them.
At More Perfect Union Accountability Network, we’re making it easier than ever for people to be heard — and harder than ever for public officials to ignore us. Every mailed grievance isn’t just a letter — it’s a record of civic action that must be seen, opened, and acknowledged.
Our live counter tracks every letter sent by issue and recipient, creating a public, transparent scoreboard of the people’s concerns. It’s both a message and a metric — one that shows where we stand as a community, where we’re demanding action, and who’s being held accountable.
This platform doesn’t just connect individuals to government — it builds collective momentum. With every mailed letter, the pressure grows. With every update to the counter, the will of the people becomes harder to dismiss. In a digital age where real voices are often buried by algorithms and inbox filters, we’re bringing civic engagement back into the physical world — where it has weight, friction, and undeniable presence.
We believe this simple act — mailing a grievance — can become a powerful national movement for transparency, accountability, and lasting change.
Our Covenant of Privacy & Principle
In keeping with the enduring spirit of the First Amendment and the sacred trust between free citizens, the More Perfect Union Accountability Network solemnly affirms:
Thus bound by honor and by this covenant, we stand as stewards of your trust and defenders of your right to speak truth to power—now and evermore.