Introduction
Introduction I am a consumer rights advocate for the reintroduction of civics education and for congressional reform of our U.S. constitution to require congress and state legislators to schedule constitutional Conventions to amend laws that apply the ratification process as provisioned under Article V.
As a consumer advocate, kindly allow me to recap several civic perspectives I'm introducing to you, with said concerns to provoke thoughts the American citizen could never think to imagine how culpable the U.S. constitution is to systemic issues by authorizing "domestic institutions" slavery in America, establishing race during the reconstruction amendments, prohibition of checks and balances and the declaration of indentured servitude as unconstitutional which continues to allow human trafficking in the twentieth century, as well as the exclusion of Indians and with current executive orders disallowing the federal government to enforce and investigate civil rights violations while perpetuating the institution of non diversity, equity and inclusion as a fundamental part of making America great is the reason of how our most cherished document of American principles and privilege is a threat to democracy.

CMACFAR Objectives
Here are several CMACFAR objectives we aim to achieve:
- To identify slavery as human trafficking to be "domestic institutions" and declared unconstitutional in America.
- A congressional apology to Black Americans for the drafting and signing of laws to disenfranchise the Black race.
- To mandate constitutional conventions as a provision of civic duty for the American people and not the government.
- Federal/state constitutional policies, local laws, rules, procedures and regulations, amendments, provisions, and clauses which continue to cause paralytic conditions due to ambiguous, conflicting provisions and clauses between branches of government and their enumerated powers such as who controls the military (Congress or the President), both having independence to govern militia and go to war, declaring the institution of slavery unconstitutional, government shutdowns, and how the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court presides over senatorial impeachment proceedings involving the president while adhering to executive branch rules and procedures before judiciary rules and procedures afforded to the judicial branch.
The U.S. Constitution is responsible for racial segregation, division of communities, rights and privileges of citizenship, and the social conflicts involving the entire Black race against the American government and between the American people as a whole.
Background and Personal Journey
I founded CMACFAR, A Congressional Movement of American Citizens for Amending and Ratification of Law, in February 2025. It was important that I organize a group of American citizens for the sole congregation to discuss social science as a way to improve public relations and public education in government, business, and households, and not the political issues being raised, presented, and promoted by the fourth estate, the media. In addition to this, we debate ineffective policies by outlining measures that propose solutions for legislative reform, which are voted on by the American people as congressional voters.
This is the first congressional movement I call iCitizen Congress, a citizen government of Americans who are not under oath to "preserve, protect, and defend" the United States Constitution. Moreover, we the American people, under the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, which I call the Citizens Rights Amendment, are sworn under the Citizens Oath to litigate, prosecute, and convict the United States Constitution of America.
This organization is created to showcase the American people not simply as voters but as a fourth branch of government. We should work to indoctrinate this role into the U.S. Constitution as an independent structural body of the bicameral system. These are official citizens of the government working in a congressional capacity with elected representatives who have enumerated rights, privileges, and responsibilities independent of their American citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The CMACFAR organization is designed to confront the policy and not the legislator responsible for writing, drafting, and proposing legislative policies, rules, and regulations. The founding objective of CMACFAR is to amend, ratify, and impeach the laws, rules, and regulations, and to amend processes and procedures before the impeachment and removal of congressional leaders.
Bio
My name is Dwayne Arthur Jones, author of The Homeless Poet: Writing from Main Street to Capitol Hill, Influencing Legislation Through Poetry. I wrote this book while living in my car, homeless, for six years. During that time, I continued my education and earned certifications, permits, and licenses in Real Estate, Health and Fitness, Home Health Care, and Business Management and Development. My work has spanned households, businesses, and government agencies, with a strong focus on employee and customer retention, as well as public-relations a principal of doing good business under customer service.
I graduated from White Plains High School in White Plains, New York, in 1989. On the day of my graduation, while the ceremony was taking place and names were being called, I was home in bed, dreaming of a different kind of graduation. I often wonder what my classmates thought when they called my name and I wasn’t there. I imagine the confusion, the whispers, and the question repeated among them, “Where is Pepo?” I still marvel at the idea of a senior class of over nine hundred students sharing a moment of collective curiosity about me. That memory, though I was absent, feels more meaningful than walking across the stage to receive my diploma as the General Organization President of the student body.
My absence was a silent protest, a personal stand more powerful than receiving a blank eight-by-ten diploma tied with a red ribbon, handed over by administrators and faculty I had chosen not to face.
The very next day, I boarded a Greyhound bus from Port Authority in Manhattan and headed to Hollywood, California. I had no headshots, no agent, no acting experience, no credits, and, arguably, no talent. I carried with me half a New York cheesecake and five dollars. That was it. I traveled for four days fueled by manifesting dreams that would come to fruition 30 years later.
Over the next several years, I lived and worked throughout the Inland Empire, taking on minimum-wage jobs in retail, hospitality, food and beverage services. Eventually, I found my footing and co-owned a personal training gym in Hancock Park, California, called The little Big Gym. I ran the gym for fifteen years without a business plan, following the end of a partnership that dissolved just a year into the business.
Eventually, I realized I had remained in business not out of passion but to avoid the hassle of liquidating, moving, or storing what I could not sell. That kind of inertia keeps many people stuck. After consulting with a mentor, I made the difficult but intentional decision to close the gym. I chose to live homeless again, this time through the seasonal cycles of the COVID-19 pandemic, without a job but with a clear direction.
But in that hardship, I saved fifty thousand dollars—money I could not spend, travel with, or use—so I used the time to create. In just six months, I wrote and self-published my first book of poems in January 2020. That work led to a publishing deal. My publisher is now preparing to release two more books I have written: one is a murder mystery, and the other is a self-help book for children. Both were written using only an iPhone and are scheduled for release in the winter of 2025.