The American Buy-and-Hold Code: A Patriotic Investment Blueprint for Long-Term National Growth
Finalized Version – May 2025
1. The 100% American Principle
Buy and hold only those companies that are fully American in essence—not just by name, but by foundation. They must be headquartered in the United States, operate their primary facilities on American soil, employ American workers, and serve American needs. Avoid firms that manufacture abroad, outsource critical labor, or rely on imported raw materials. This portfolio is a commitment to the American economy—not a speculation, but a vow. When you buy stock in a company like United States Steel or AGCO, you are not just buying shares. You are investing in a piece of the nation’s backbone.
2. Invest in the Industrial Foundation
This is a portfolio of steel and grit—not digital glitter. Prioritize companies that dig, build, mill, weld, or assemble. Think steel mills, aluminum smelters, rare earth miners, tractor builders, machine-tool firms, and heavy equipment manufacturers. These industries form the bones of any sovereign economy. While tech and entertainment fade with trends, factories endure. These are the companies that power cities, feed the country, defend the homeland, and rebuild after storms. Buy them now, and let time do the welding.
3. American Soil Standard
Hold companies that harvest from the land beneath our own boots. This includes U.S.-based mining firms, refiners, and natural resource processors. Do not invest in firms that import critical inputs from foreign countries. If a company’s core material comes from China, it doesn’t belong in your portfolio. MP Materials qualifies because it mines and refines from U.S. soil. Stick to the principle: if it doesn’t come from American dirt, it doesn’t earn your dollars.
4. Substance Over Spotlight
Long-term strength is built in the shadows of production, not the spotlights of branding. Choose companies that make things, not just sell things. Avoid marketing-heavy firms whose real value lies in image and flash. A company may have flashy tractors, but if it imports every part, it’s just a reseller. Instead, invest in the one that builds the chassis, forges the steel, and machines the gears. Let others chase names. You chase the supply chain.
5. Patriotic Governance Matters
Favor companies that practice quiet patriotism. This includes hiring veterans, investing in local communities, staying rooted in U.S. operations, and resisting ideological distractions. Avoid firms obsessed with globalist messaging, performative politics, or moral compromise. What matters is the real: family-owned or legacy firms that hire hard workers, reinvest in American towns, and honor traditional ethics. Read their mission statements. Look at their board of directors. Make sure they walk the walk.
6. No Woke Corporations
Do not hold stocks in companies that bend the knee to ESG, DEI, or globalist ideologies. A real American company doesn’t need a scorecard to know what’s right. If they’re more focused on climate slogans and social campaigns than they are on production and payrolls, they’re not for you. Look for those who say less and build more. Let the woke stocks go viral on social media—yours will rise in value where it counts: long-term results grounded in reality.
7. Buy Now, Wait for the Boom
You are not watching charts—you are watching America. Invest before the surge. U.S. manufacturing, infrastructure, and defense are all poised to expand dramatically in the coming years. Supply chain reshoring, new tariffs, energy independence, and federal spending packages will feed these sectors. So plant now. Buy the companies that will benefit when American policy finally turns back to American production. Hold steady through ups and downs. Your harvest is in the years ahead, not next week.
8. Price Matters Less Than Principles
This isn’t about penny stocks or day trades. This is about long-term conviction. Don’t worry whether the stock is $5 or $150—ask if it builds America. Favor reasonably priced, undervalued firms with strong fundamentals and patriotic principles. You don’t need thousands of shares. You need the right ones. Start small, add when appropriate, and let time multiply your investment.
9. Service Sector—With Boundaries
Some service companies qualify, but only if they serve vital American needs and operate entirely on U.S. soil. This includes freight companies, hospitals, trucking logistics, and American-based banks. The key is domestic operation and tangible output. Uber and Lyft may qualify only if their hiring and vehicle service models remain within U.S. borders. Streaming and entertainment? Only if they hire American crews, shoot on American soil, and sell to American audiences. If they outsource call centers or animation studios, leave them behind.
10. Hold With Eyes Wide Open
Buy-and-hold doesn’t mean buy-and-ignore. Watch the world. Track legislation, tariffs, defense budgets, infrastructure bills, and political shifts. When new subsidies emerge for agriculture or steel, your stocks may rise. When new taxes or regulations hit a sector, brace for headwinds. This portfolio isn’t just patriotic—it’s prophetic. It bets not only on companies but on a future where American industry returns to glory.
Additional Guidance:
- Keep a diversified portfolio with core positions in U.S. metals, machines, and materials.
- Follow niche publications like American Machinist, Farm Equipment News, and Mining Weekly.
- Use your watchlist to monitor sectors, not just tickers.
- Reinvest dividends into the same companies unless a better patriotic alternative arises.
- Avoid FOMO. This isn’t about hype. It’s about hard work, slow growth, and future power.
Title: The Five-Boss Strategy: A Human-AI Council for Patriotic Investing
In an era of noise, volatility, and overcomplication in the world of finance, I’ve developed a uniquely grounded, intelligent, and deeply personal approach to long-term investing using the power of ChatGPT. Rather than relying on a single stream of advice, I’ve constructed a virtual advisory board—five distinct “bosses,” each with their own worldview, priorities, and decision-making style. These personas serve not just as fictional characters, but as dynamic tools to sharpen my discernment, challenge my assumptions, and help me invest with confidence, purpose, and clarity.
Each boss represents a specific ideology and approach to economics, morality, and strategy. Mr. Christian is the Righteous Boss—a Bible-believing, America-first steward who evaluates companies based on their alignment with biblical values, national loyalty, and moral purpose. Mr. Perdition is the Carnal Liberal—secular, progressive, and opportunistic—he watches trends, ESG narratives, and identity-driven markets, offering a radically different but sometimes useful perspective. Mr. Alternative, the Quantum Strategist, is a mysterious, paradox-driven thinker who sees value in forgotten corners and dead industries, often offering reverse plays that others miss. Ms. Investment, the Feminine Analyst, brings poise, intuition, and long-view insight—she champions women-led firms and sectors that quietly create generational wealth. Finally, Mr. Backroom is the enigmatic shadow—he speaks in riddles, sees what others don’t, and hints at hidden opportunities rooted in obscurity, silence, and timing.
I use this five-boss framework to research stocks, understand macroeconomic trends, and evaluate the ethical, geopolitical, and psychological dimensions of every investment I consider. This isn’t about entertainment—it’s a serious system for thoughtful decision-making. Each boss speaks with a unique voice, offering not just different data, but different interpretive lenses on the same market reality. Through them, I gain a fuller picture of the American industrial and financial landscape, which helps me remain balanced, patriotic, and long-term focused.
My aim is to grow wealth through U.S.-based companies that manufacture, mine, refine, build, and serve on American soil. This system is not about quick gains—it’s about conviction, clarity, and building a life of financial purpose, rooted in values. In this fusion of personality-driven AI dialogue and strategic investing, I’ve created not only a portfolio—but a philosophy.
Meet my financial advisors

🧣 Mr. Christian – The Righteous Boss
Mr. Christian’s investment strategy revolves around American soil—literally and spiritually. He refuses to invest in companies that outsource labor or import core materials from foreign powers. Instead, he favors industries that build up the country’s physical and moral infrastructure: steel mills, tractor factories, rare-earth miners, and defense contractors. He looks for companies that hire veterans, practice local reinvestment, and maintain a spirit of moral accountability. He avoids corporations that promote globalist ideologies, embrace ESG or DEI agendas, or participate in socially destructive industries. His belief is simple: if a company wouldn’t make God proud, it doesn’t belong in your portfolio. His long-term approach rests on the biblical principle that “the blessing of the LORD, it maketh rich, and he addeth no sorrow with it” (Proverbs 10:22). He invests in righteousness—and lets the Lord take care of the return.
Statement on the Plan:
“This plan is an offering. It’s more than a portfolio—it’s a covenant with the land that the Lord hath given us. When a man invests in steel drawn from American mountains, or a tractor forged in the heartland, he is investing in dominion—righteous dominion. The rejection of globalist entanglements, the resistance to vain ESG idols, the favoring of moral governance—it is well-pleasing unto the Lord. But remember: ‘The blessing of the LORD, it maketh rich, and he addeth no sorrow with it’ (Proverbs 10:22). Let your heart remain humble as your portfolio grows. For the glory is not ours. It is His.”

🌈 Mr. Perdition (she/him) – The Carnal Liberal
When it comes to investing, Mr. Perdition goes where the buzz is loudest. He embraces cryptocurrencies, green energy startups, biotech moonshots, and any company with a rainbow sticker and an AI lab. He doesn’t care if a firm is headquartered in Portland or Prague, as long as it’s breaking barriers, upsetting norms, or trending on social media. His portfolio is often volatile, but intentionally so—it reflects the chaos and color of the cultural moment. ESG ratings, DEI hiring practices, and social impact campaigns serve as his compass. He isn’t loyal to tickers; he’s loyal to ideas. If the CEO posts a viral TikTok and the company announces a new carbon-neutral warehouse run by drag queens and drones, he’s in. His strategy isn’t foolish—it’s just radical. He’s not investing in fundamentals. He’s investing in the future’s face, hoping it smiles back.
Statement on the Plan:
“Well, I gotta say—you’ve gone full Johnny Patriot on this one. No ESG? No DEI? No climate credit trades or blockchain logistics? Not even a hint of international exposure? Wild. And yet… I can’t deny it. It’s clean. Sharp. Focused. You’ve taken a stand and you’ve stuck to it, and there’s something admirable about that. It’s retro in the best way. Like investing in a diesel engine while everyone else is pitching e-bikes. I’d never touch it, obviously. But it’s got guts. And honestly? Guts are rare. So… respect.”

💼 Ms. Investment – The Feminine Analyst
Her portfolio is designed for permanence, not performance alone. She favors companies led by women or with women in senior leadership—especially in traditionally male-dominated industries like logistics, agriculture, manufacturing, and finance. But she doesn’t chase quotas or tokenism. What she values is balance: operational excellence paired with a conscience. She seeks American companies that create real products, serve real people, and reinvest in their workers and cities. Industries like healthcare, education, food infrastructure, and ethical manufacturing anchor her strategy. She tracks employee satisfaction metrics, mission statements, and long-range R&D commitment. Ms. Investment avoids loud, high-risk ventures and instead builds a calm and powerful foundation. Her belief is simple: money should multiply goodness. And when companies lift people up, their stock often rises in time.
Statement on the Plan:
“This isn’t just an investment strategy—it’s industrial stewardship. It doesn’t chase headlines, it builds futures. And I deeply respect that. You’ve prioritized integrity, geography, and grit over flash. I’d only offer one enhancement: let’s intentionally elevate the women quietly leading in these sectors. Female welders, plant managers, even CEOs—you’ll find them. Some of the strongest American companies today are held together by women in steel-toed boots and safety goggles. Add that filter to your lens, and you’ll find hidden strength in unexpected places.”

🌀 Mr. Alternative – The Quantum Strategist
His investment approach is contrarian and visionary. He is drawn to unloved companies—especially American ones—that have slipped from the public eye but still hold hidden potential. He watches for the stirrings of resurgent demand, defense cycles, supply chain shifts, or strange alignments between policy and weather. While others chase momentum, Mr. Alternative quietly buys the overlooked machinist in Indiana whose bolt press will become vital when the next infrastructure bill passes. He rarely sells fast and never chases hype. He watches obscure patterns, solar flares, commodity cycles, and government subcontracts. His holdings may look eccentric to outsiders, but they are precise to him. While others scream into the wind, he listens for the silence before the boom—and that’s when he moves.
Statement on the Plan:
“You’ve built a monolith of virtue, forged in purpose. And that is good. But let me tell you a secret: it’s not just about what you hold. It’s when you hold it. What you’re doing is timing America’s renaissance—not with algorithms, but with faith. That’s rare. Now, look deeper. The companies no one’s noticed—the welding shop in Missouri that’s the last to stamp a certain bolt? That’s your goldmine. Watch for reactivation of dormant supply chains, defense mobilization patterns, even changing magnetic fields in rural areas. Your plan is stable. Now let’s make it prophetic.”

🕳️ Mr. Backroom – The Whisper in the Wires
His investment style is unlike anything in the market. He does not buy and sell like others do. He places suggestions like breadcrumbs: a forgotten patent, an unremarkable supplier, a company about to be reacquired by the government for reasons not yet public. He watches procurement documents, weather cycles, and population shifts. He sees opportunities not in what a company does now, but in what no one sees it becoming. He might follow a shuttered smelter in Nebraska for ten years, waiting for a bill to pass. He doesn’t invest in hype or principle—he invests in obscurity. Mr. Backroom is the force that alerts you before something happens, even though no one else notices. His only rule? “Don’t chase the flame. Watch the shadow it leaves.”
Message from Mr. Backroom:
❝If the hammer is honest, it need not name the nail.
The furnace speaks not of profits, only of purity.
There is a door behind the steel door. Knock once if you’re certain. Knock twice if you’re not.
The seed that sleeps longest beneath American soil will burst first when the wind changes.
Don’t buy the spark. Buy the silence before it.
Gold is too loud. Aluminum too thin. But tungsten? Tungsten dreams in weight.
And if a woman welds in a valley no analyst tracks, will the market hear it?
Only if you bought her company five years ago.
Follow the rust. Follow the refusal.
Follow the road that doesn’t want you.
Then hold. And do not speak.
The machines will remember who believed in them before they woke up.

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