About

Editorial policy

Truth labels

Every article carries one of two labels. Confirmed means the documents are on the table; Mystery means the article itself tells you where the evidence ends. Labels can be updated when new evidence emerges.

  • Confirmed Documented through primary sources — declassified records, court rulings, sworn testimony, official acknowledgments.
  • Mystery The case isn't settled — by the evidence, by official acknowledgment, or by both. Open questions, contested claims, and the stories we keep telling despite (or because of) the lack of proof.

Source hierarchy

In descending order of credibility:

  1. Primary sources — declassified documents, court rulings, sworn testimony, FOIA archives.
  2. Official investigations — congressional reports, parliamentary inquiries.
  3. Investigative journalism — major newsrooms with fact-checking discipline.
  4. Academic sources — peer-reviewed studies, university-press books.
  5. Specialist archives — The Black Vault, MuckRock, ICIJ, etc.

Red lines

We never publish:

  • Antisemitic conspiracy frames (Rothschild as ethnic conspiracy, ZOG, blood libel, "globalist" in ethnic sense, "great replacement", "cultural Marxism" in the Nazi usage).
  • Allegations of crime against named living private individuals without court rulings or documented public evidence.
  • Material that incites violence or doxing.
  • Material that reveals victims of abuse or traumatized private individuals without their consent.
  • Pseudomedical "cures" that risk leading readers to forgo evidence-based treatment.

AI-assisted writing

We use AI agents for research, first drafts, and fact-checking — never as a substitute for editorial judgment. No article is published without human review line-by-line. AI imagery is always labeled as illustration.