What This Is For
Then begin where you choose: ▸ open the archive. The written version is below.
A place to put the alarm down as a record, not a weapon.
When you learn that an institution you trusted has been quietly working against the thing it promised to protect, the ground moves a little. It is not only anger. It is the quieter alarm of finding that something you took to be solid was never quite holding. Most of what gets built for that feeling points it at a person to blame, a side to join, an enemy to outlast. That path is fast, and it runs hot.
The Laundering is built to take the same alarm and send it somewhere else.
Every file here moves a charged thing, the sense that the system is captured and the protection you counted on was hollow, through a procedure instead of a grudge. We name a mechanism: placement, layering, integration. We keep what is verified apart from what is only reported. We give you the source, and ask you to check it. You are not asked to hate a face. You are asked to read a structure and decide for yourself whether it holds.
That is why one rule sits under everything: report, do not assert. It is not an editorial preference. It is the load-bearing thing. A record that lays out the evidence and lets you draw the line stays cool. The moment a file skips the record and just hands you the conclusion to feel, it stops being a record and starts being a recruiter. Mechanism, not culprit. No intent without receipts. That discipline is what keeps the most provocative material here from becoming one more thing to be furious inside of.
What you get back is not the relief of a villain. It is something steadier. A verifiable record that outlasts the moment that made it. The alarm has somewhere to go that is not hostility: it becomes a file, kept, checkable, still standing after the cycle that produced it has passed.
So read a case. Follow the receipts. Push back where the record is thin. That is the work, and you are not cargo on it.
There is a companion record for the court layer of all this. The Docket keeps the cases the Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear, the questions left unresolved when leave was denied without reasons, filed under the same rule: report, do not assert.
Crew, not cargo. Keep the file open.