Human Unity is a framework for redirecting social energy away from division and toward construction. Here is what it is, what it is not, and why it exists.
Human Unity begins with a single premise: the energy driving American social conflict is not the problem. Energy is neutral. The problem is where it goes — and where it goes is determined by the systems, incentives, and frameworks that channel it.
Right now, that energy flows toward outrage, division, and cynicism — because those are the paths of least resistance. Human Unity exists to build a different path: one that channels the same passion and urgency toward community construction, local leadership, and genuine problem-solving.
This is not naive. We are not asking people to stop caring about what they care about. We are asking them to put that care to work somewhere it can actually change something.
Human Unity is not a political party. It does not endorse candidates, take positions on legislation, or align with any political faction. It is explicitly post-partisan — not because politics doesn't matter, but because the coordination crisis we face is bigger than any political solution.
It is not a nonprofit in the traditional sense. It does not exist to raise money, run programs, or serve clients. It exists to build infrastructure — the frameworks, networks, and trained leaders that communities need to function.
It is not a movement with a manifesto. There is no ideology to subscribe to, no purity tests to pass, no enemies to oppose. There is only a problem worth solving and a method for solving it.
Human Unity grew out of a simple observation: the people most frustrated by the state of American society are also the people with the most energy to change it. The gap between that frustration and productive action is not a failure of motivation — it is a failure of infrastructure.
There was no coordinating framework. No practical model for how ordinary people — not politicians, not executives, not professional activists — could redirect their energy into something that actually builds community. Human Unity is the attempt to provide that model.
Neither. Human Unity is explicitly post-partisan. We believe that community breakdown, institutional distrust, and social fragmentation are problems that affect everyone — and that the solutions require people across the political spectrum working together. We do not take political positions.
Human Unity is in its early stages. We do not accept advertising, political donations, or funding from sources that would compromise our post-partisan orientation. We are building toward a sustainable model based on membership, training programs, and partnerships with aligned organizations.
Human Unity is operated by Litzenberg & Associates LLC, based in Waterville, Ohio. The project is designed to be distributed — the goal is to build a network where leadership is shared across thousands of local chapter leads rather than concentrated in a central organization.
Most community organizations are built around a cause — environmental protection, housing, civic engagement. Human Unity is built around a method: the recognition that trust is built through shared work, and that the specific project matters less than the consistent showing up. We provide the framework; communities choose their projects.
Yes. Human Unity chapters can form anywhere — urban, suburban, rural. The only requirement is a commitment to the post-partisan orientation and a willingness to focus on local, tangible projects. We provide the starter kit, mentorship, and network support.