01 · The Goal

Restore the body’s steady control of blood sugar

The goal is to restore the body’s own steady control of blood sugar — the moment-to-moment regulation that breaks down in type 2 diabetes — so metabolic disease is corrected toward the root rather than only managed.

02 · Why It Matters

Healthy metabolism keeps blood sugar in a tight, stable range automatically. In type 2 diabetes that control fails — blood sugar swings high, and over years it damages vessels, nerves, kidneys, and eyes. The hopeful reality is that this control can be substantially restored, and type 2 diabetes can be pushed into remission. Restoring steady glucose regulation protects the whole body. It is the close companion to insulin-sensitivity restoration.

03 · What We’re Trying to Achieve

We are building the capability to restore stable, healthy blood-sugar regulation: reversing the dysfunction behind type 2 diabetes toward remission, rebuilding the body’s automatic glucose control, and protecting the organs high blood sugar harms.

04 · How It Works

Rebuilding automatic blood-sugar control

Achieving diabetes remission Demonstrated — clinical

Type 2 diabetes, long thought permanent, can be put into remission — clinical programs have restored normal blood sugar by reversing the underlying dysfunction.

Restoring the body’s control Demonstrated

Approaches that restore the body’s own glucose regulation bring blood sugar back toward a healthy, stable range.

Protecting against complications Clinical

Restoring stable control reduces the vessel, nerve, kidney, and eye damage that high blood sugar causes over time.

Rebuilding metabolic flexibility Frontier

Restoring the body’s ability to switch fuels cleanly — a hallmark of healthy metabolism — is an advancing goal.

05 · Who’s Building It

Cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers.

Universities & institutes

Academic metabolic-disease, endocrinology, and diabetes-remission research centers.

Government & programs

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK, NIH) · NIH metabolic-research programs.

Enabling science base

type 2 diabetes remission science · glucose-regulation physiology · metabolic-flexibility research · insulin-sensitivity science.

06 · Technologies

The technologies: metabolic and intensive-lifestyle programs and emerging therapies that restore control and achieve remission; glucose-regulation physiology that explains how stable control is maintained; metabolic-flexibility science; and the broader metabolic biology shared with insulin-sensitivity restoration. (We describe capabilities, not personal medical advice — treatment decisions belong with a clinician.)

07 · Breakthroughs

Type 2 diabetes remission Demonstrated — clinical

Clinical programs have achieved type 2 diabetes remission, restoring normal blood sugar toward the source.

Restored regulation Demonstrated

Approaches restoring the body’s glucose control bring blood sugar back toward a healthy, stable range.

Complication reduction Clinical

Stable control reduces long-term organ damage from high blood sugar.

Metabolic flexibility Frontier

Rebuilding clean fuel-switching is an active research goal.

08 · Remaining Challenges

The honest challenges: remission is real but can require sustained effort and may not hold for everyone or at every stage of disease. Deeper metabolic restoration (flexibility, mitochondrial health) is advancing, not finished. And glucose control is multifactorial. Remission and restored regulation are demonstrated and clinical; complete, durable restoration for all is not guaranteed, and we say so.

09 · Mature Capability

The future, fully built

A person with failing blood-sugar control — or told they would manage diabetes for life — has steady regulation restored: control rebuilt toward the source, type 2 diabetes pushed into remission, organs protected. Blood-sugar control becomes something we restore, not only manage.

Honest boundary: each item is tagged for where it stands — demonstrated, clinical, or frontier. The science is real, funded, and accelerating. AI supports human clinicians; it never replaces them.
10 · Evidence Vault

The proof, for this capability

Cited as evidence the capability is real, not as partners or endorsers.

Type 2 diabetes remission

Clinical programs have achieved remission, restoring normal blood sugar toward the source. Stage: Demonstrated (clinical).

Restored glucose regulation

Approaches restoring the body’s glucose control bring blood sugar toward a healthy, stable range. Stage: Demonstrated.

Deeper metabolic restoration

Restoring metabolic flexibility and mitochondrial health is advancing. Stage: Frontier.

Honest framing

Real organizations and studies are cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers. Remission may require sustained effort and not hold for all; we do not overstate it, and treatment decisions belong with a clinician.

Help build this future

Every signature grows the movement to make glucose-regulation restoration real — and free at the point of need.

Paid for by Michael Floyd for President.

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