Genesis & Mission.
This is the long version. The full pitch — why we built it, why a memecoin works where a foundation doesn't, and why greed and reform can point the same way without anyone faking the moral high ground.
The problem in one sentence.
People who have never held a job outside government are writing the laws that govern every job.
Pelosi has been in Congress since 1987. Biden has been in politics since 1972. Kaczyński and Tusk both since the early 1990s. McConnell since 1985. Schumer since 1981. Mélenchon, Le Pen — forty years each. Putin twenty-six. Erdoğan twenty-three. These aren't outliers. This is the norm now.
None of them rides a bus. None of them has filed a small business tax return this decade. None of them has a boss who can fire them, a customer who can refuse them, a mortgage manager who can call the loan. They legislate down, into a country they no longer live in.
A politician without an off-ramp is a politician who builds the road to nowhere — and bills you for the asphalt.
Why "max 2 terms" works.
The argument is older than the United States: rotation in office prevents the accumulation of unchecked power. Eight years is long enough to do something — long enough to learn the job, push through an agenda, train successors, see your own laws play out. It is too short to build a personal patronage network. Too short to make every newspaper afraid of you. Too short for the office to become the person.
The data backs the intuition. Where term limits exist and bind, fresh policy reaches the floor. Where they don't, party seniority writes the script. Eight years, then back to the economy you legislated. That's not a constraint. That's the deal.
Why a memecoin. Yes, really.
A foundation begs for attention. A campaign organization spends donor money on overhead, on email lists, on consultants. Both, even when successful, are external to the audience they're trying to reach.
A token flips it. The holders become the marketing. Your bag goes up when more people hear about MAX2X — so you talk. The message is built into the product: every share is a tiny pump on your own position, and every share carries the same eight words. Politicians, max 2 terms, then out of office for good.
That isn't a clever trick. It's the only design we found that solves the actual problem: how do you make a political idea travel as fast as a meme without a billionaire behind it? You make the meme pay the messenger.
If MAX2X dies, the idea still got broadcast.
The cause cannot lose.
The Polish precedent.
In 2018, Poland passed a law limiting mayors and city presidents (prezydenci miast) to two consecutive terms. It happened. It was not catastrophic. The sky did not fall. Local politics got more competitive. New people ran. Old people, finally, did something else.
The law applies to local government. It doesn't apply to the Sejm. It doesn't apply to the Senate. It doesn't apply to anyone who can write a national budget, declare a war, sign a treaty, or appoint a judge. Why? Because the people who would write that law are the people who would be subject to it. Lifetime politicians do not legislate themselves out of a job.
Why anonymous.
Two ways democracies rot.
The site's Wall of Shame has two tabs because there are two failure modes.
Mode one: the limit exists but doesn't bind. Putin, Erdoğan, Łukaszenko, Xi. Every one of them came up through a system that had "max 2 terms" written down. Every one of them walked around it. The walk-around is always the same shape — a constitutional change, a regime swap, a "reset" of the counter, a referendum with suspicious math. Without social pressure, every limit gets walked around.
Mode two: there is no limit at all. Most democratic legislatures. The US Congress. The Sejm. The Bundestag. The Commons. Forty years in office become normal. Loyalty to the party becomes loyalty to the future of the nation by accident — the party is the only thing that re-nominates you. Newspapers learn to soften the angle on senators they need access to. Junior MPs learn not to challenge the old guard. The system rots from inside, slowly, while everyone keeps following the procedure.
Both modes need the same fix, applied differently. Two terms. Then out. For everyone elected. Heads of state, members of parliament, senators, governors, mayors. Eight years to serve. Then a real life — with a boss, a tax return, a commute, and the consequences of the laws you wrote.
What success looks like.
We don't need MAX2X to be a top-ten token. We don't even need it to be a top-thousand token. What success looks like, in the order it happens:
- The phrase politicians, max 2 terms appears under enough posts that politicians start being asked about it.
- One legislator, somewhere, introduces a real term-limit bill citing public pressure they can no longer ignore.
- Another country extends Poland's local-level rule to the national level.
- The Wall of Shame stops being a static page and becomes a list of names with retirement dates next to them.
If MAX2X moons along the way, holders make money. If it doesn't, the idea still got broadcast.
We put our own money into launching a memecoin that either fixes a piece of politics or becomes a funny chapter. There is no third option. — The team · anonymous