Resources
Resources / accountability atlas
Choose a path, not just another post.
Use this page as the map of Eliminate Politicians: reading tracks, topic hubs, glossary terms, and the four questions that cut through most crisis narratives.
Start here
Pick the operating system under the headline.
01
Debt, inflation, and state capacityBudgets, procurement, trust collapse, and the hidden invoice.
02
Technology as powerAI, platforms, surveillance, robotics, synthetic media, and institutional leverage.
03
War rhetoric and domestic costEscalation chains, energy chokepoints, household pressure, and the politics of emergency.
04
Media spin and respectable corruptionHow useful signal gets buried by framing, access, credentialism, and intermediaries.
Topic hubs
Follow the power map.
Political power with better UI: platforms, automation, labor pressure, synthetic media, and surveillance infrastructure.
Topic hubWar / Foreign Policy
Geopolitical theater, escalation incentives, energy chokepoints, and the domestic invoice.
Topic hubBudgets / Spending
The appropriations machine, emergency money, procurement games, and the trust tax.
Topic hubMedia Spin
Frames, omissions, access games, narrative laundering, and the gap between coverage and consequence.
Topic hubCorruption / Accountability
Influence, ethics theater, revolving doors, conflicts, donor access, and what real accountability would require.
Deep archiveAnalysis
Longer reads that connect the daily incident to the durable system behind it.
Method
Move through it in layers.
- Start with the invoice. Look for who pays in money, time, institutional trust, or freedom of action.
- Find the protected class. Ask which agency, donor network, vendor, media frame, or political faction gets insulated from consequence.
- Separate crisis from leverage. Some emergencies are real. The grift is what gets attached to them.
- Keep receipts. Save primary documents, budget numbers, official claims, and reversals. Send them when they sharpen the public record.
Glossary
Terms we use repeatedly.
Trust tax
The extra cost ordinary people pay when institutions become unreliable, opaque, or captured.
Hidden invoice
The downstream bill that does not appear in the headline: prices, debt, social friction, lost agency, or future crisis.
Respectable corruption
Influence that is legal, credentialed, and normalized but still violates the public interest.
Crisis leverage
The opportunistic use of emergency conditions to expand budgets, powers, contracts, or censorship norms.