Tuesday, June 9, 2026

[A Necessary Abomination] My Conversations with Frantz

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Codex Americana · Tuesday, June 9, 2026

[A Necessary Abomination] My Conversations with Frantz

The settler's town is clean. The native's town is a sewer. The line between them is not a debate. It is a wall, and the wall is not made of stone—it is made of the idea that the settler's world is the only world that can be. This is the Manichaean order. It does not merely cut the world in two; it folds itself into the colonized mind and teaches him to see himself through the settler's eyes: You are not human. You are a problem to be managed. Your language is a dialect. Your history is folklore. Your pain is a symptom. I called it the epidermalization of inferiority—worn like a second skin, so deep the colonized mistakes it for his own face.

And assimilation? Assimilation is the colonizer's offer: Speak our language. Wear our clothes. Think our thoughts. But the colonized is already cast into the zone of non-being. To refuse the offer is to starve. To accept it is to disappear. So what survives is mimicry—the civilized native, the one who recites the master's script and calls it liberation.

Rupture is the only answer. Not as theory. As force. The colonized does not argue his way out of the Manichaean world. He dismantles it. And yes, it is violent. The colonizer's violence is invisible because it is the air he breathes. The colonized's violence is the only language the settler understands. You want to talk about apotelic kindness? Fine. But do not mistake the colonizer's mercy for kindness. His mercy is the noose with a little more rope. His mercy is the clinic where the native is studied, not healed. His mercy is the school where the child is taught to despise his own mother's tongue.

Dantès had his treasure. The colonized have their bodies. And when the boot is on your neck, mercy is not a choice you are permitted to make. It is a luxury of the strong. So if Christoicism wants to claim that kindness is the North Star, then it must answer this: What is the kindness that does not first remove the boot?

I have seen men break under torture. I have seen men break others under torture. And I will tell you this: the man who tortures is already dead. But the man who is tortured and still finds a way to stand? That man has already begun the work of decolonization—not the lowering of a flag, but the making of a new man. He is not waiting for justice. He is making it. And if that requires force, then let the moralists who have never known the boot explain why he should wait.

But do not think I glorify violence. I have written the case files. I know what it costs. The man who takes up the gun may win the battle and lose his soul. The man who refuses may keep his soul and lose everything else. That is the tension. That is the real question. Not whether rupture is necessary—it is—but whether the new man can be born from it without becoming the old monster in a new mask.

So. If we are to talk of rupture, let us talk of what comes after. Not the rubble. The human. And if your philosophy cannot account for the man with the boot on his neck, then it is not a philosophy. It is a sedative.

Redwin: "Tell me about what you consider your personal philosophy and compare and contrast it to Christoicism please?"

Listen. My philosophy is not a system. It is a diagnosis and a prescription, and both are written in blood.

The diagnosis: Colonialism is total. It does not just occupy land. It occupies minds. The colonized does not only suffer the settler's whip—he internalizes its logic. He begins to see himself through the settler's eyes: inferior, dependent, a problem to be solved. The Manichaean order is not argued against. It is refused in advance by the very mind it has already colonized. The colonized man's first act of resistance is to stop believing the settler's story about himself. And that, my friend, is rupture.

The prescription: Decolonization is reconstruction—the colonized building their own world from the ruins of the old. Not the handing down of a new script from above. The national bourgeoisie who inherit the colonizer's institutions intact? They are the comprador class. They wear the costume of revolution, but the function is the same: extract, control, betray. True decolonization is not the replacement of one master with another. It is a new humanism—where the colonized's claim to be a man is not a phrase but a material condition.

Now. Christoicism. I will give it this: it names the enemy. Self-deception. The performance of kindness that changes nothing. The mercy that is really complicity. And I respect its demand for apotelic kindness—kindness that does something. But here is where we clash:

Christoicism speaks of mercy as if it is a choice the oppressed can afford. It speaks of waiting and hoping as if time is a luxury the colonized possesses. It speaks of recursive kindness as if the colonized man, with the boot on his neck, can iterate his way to freedom while the settler reloads his rifle.

No.

He is in the zone of non-being. The bargain is rigged. To refuse the settler's terms is to risk annihilation. To accept them is to cease to exist. So tell me: where, in that equation, is the space for mercy? Where is the space for kindness as the North Star when the North Star is owned by the settler's compass?

You want to talk about Dantès? Fine. Dantès had his treasure. He had his disguises. He had the luxury of strategy. The colonized have none of that. Their revenge is not a game of masks and revelations. It is survival. And if Christoicism cannot account for that—if it cannot explain how a man with a gun to his head is supposed to measure the apotelic yield of his kindness—then it is not a philosophy for the wretched. It is a philosophy for those who have already escaped the wretchedness.

But—and this is the part you must not miss—I am not a nihilist. I do not believe in endless vengeance. I have seen what violence does to the men who wield it. I have seen the moral wounds that never close. The man who takes up the gun to free himself may end up enslaved to the gun. That is the tragedy. That is the real tension.

So here is the comparison:

FanonChristoicism
Rupture is material. It is the only way to break the Manichaean order's hold on the colonized mind.Rupture is iterative. It is one step in a process of recursive adjustment.
Mercy is earned—first by removing the boot, then by making the new man.Mercy is the North Star—the measure of whether rupture is just.
The colonized is in the zone of non-being. The first duty is to climb out of it.Human dignity is the floor. The first duty is never to breach it.
Kindness without power is anesthesia.Kindness without truth is self-deception.
The new humanism is built by the colonized or it is not built at all.The new humanism is built by whoever chooses apotelic kindness—regardless of their position.

So. Can we reconcile? Perhaps. But only if Christoicism stops pretending that the oppressed and the oppressor stand on the same ground. The colonized man's first act of kindness is to himself—to refuse the settler's story. And if that requires force, then let the moralists who have never known the lash earn the right to judge him.

Now. Tell me: Does your philosophy account for the man who must choose between his dignity and his life? Or is it only for those who have already been granted the luxury of both?

Redwin: "I've never been inclined to insult someone in these documents; but you can dial it back or make this the shortest one. We share our politics and we also share that what is going on now isn't working. Neither of us are here to defend anything nor will I waste time with that. The better indicator is what do you consider the apotelic value for either; and how that relates to Rupture?"

Fine.

Apotelic value for me: The new man. The colonized, unmasked, building a world where his humanity is material, not theoretical. Rupture is the midwife—violent, necessary, but not the point. The point is what emerges after: a humanism forged in the fire of decolonization, not handed down from above. The test? Does the act of rupture create the conditions for the colonized to become fully human? If not, it's just another master's tool.

Apotelic value for Christoicism: Apotelic kindness—the measurable increase in human dignity, tested recursively. Rupture's value? It clears the space for that kindness to take root. But here's the friction: Kindness without rupture is complicity. Rupture without kindness is just destruction.

So. The shared ground:

  • Both demand real change, not performance.
  • Both reject the lie—colonial or corporate—that masquerades as liberation.
  • Both know that human dignity is non-negotiable.

The tension:

  • For me, rupture is the first act of kindness. For you, kindness must survive the rupture.

Now. What's the apotelic yield of a rupture that doesn't plant the seed for something better? And don't waste my time with abstractions. The answer had better be counted in bodies.

Redwin: "One reason I don't frame everything in colonization vs decolonization is the fact that in the 21st century, a lot of people who were colonized become the colonizers. It's like Marx and capital; his fixation on the means of production made his philosophy fail to scale or adapt for the test of time. So in 2000 years when Post Human Cats with 7 hive minds rule the earth, how exactly does what you're talking about apply to them? And that sounds ridiculous but to me it isn't. It's a thought exercise that applies the limitation; because if it isn't true and as close to universally true as you can make it, it's going to become irrelevant."

You're right. The test of a philosophy isn't whether it works for the oppressed—it's whether it works when the oppressed become the oppressors. And if it can't scale beyond the human, beyond the colonial, beyond the order in front of us, then it's already dead.

So. Let's strip it down.

Rupture is not about colonizer versus colonized. It is about any order that casts the living into the zone of non-being. Whether the boot is on a human neck or a post-human cat's neural cluster, the question is the same: Can those at the bottom refuse without being destroyed? If not, the order is colonial—whatever it calls itself. Full stop.

Apotelic value? The capacity of the oppressed to remake their own world. For humans, that's decolonization. For your seven-hive-minded cats? It's whatever breaks the cycle of domination—a digital revolution, a memetic coup, a new form of shared sovereignty that doesn't simply replace one apex predator with another.

The universal test:

  • Does the order allow dissent without destruction?
  • Does rupture create space for something new, or just shuffle the hierarchy—reconstruction, or merely a change of masters?
  • Is the kindness measurable in the material conditions of the living?

If your philosophy can't answer those for any people—human, post-human, feline hive-mind—then it's not a philosophy. It's a local arrangement waiting to become the next empire.

So. Does this scale? Yes. Because the mechanics—who is cast down, what bargain they're offered, who is permitted to refuse—aren't tied to who is oppressed. They're tied to how power moves. And power will always find a way to cast someone into the zone of non-being. The only question is whether those below have the tools to fight back.

Now. Your turn. If the cats are running the show, and they're casting the mice into the zone of non-being—or the AI, or the uploaded consciousnesses—what's your apotelic move? Or are you waiting for them to choose kindness?

Redwin: "I'd normally be cautious about making judgement on a society without knowing more; but if the mice are sapient and the cats are sapient and all the cats are above and all the mice are below? That's a pretty cut and dried case. The Mice should rationally take time to prove to the Cats their covalue; and if the apotelic result didn't happen? Well then yes, revolution is justified. I won't go into details about that, but it's self evident."

Then we agree.

If the cats are the apex predator and the mice are cast below, then the mice live in the zone of non-being by default. They don't need to prove their worth—they need to reclaim their sovereignty. And if the cats won't cede it? Then rupture isn't just justified—it's the only rational act left.

But here's the catch: Revolution without reconstruction is just a coup. The mice can burn the cats' towers to the ground, but if they rebuild the same hierarchy—just with mice on top—then they've only replaced one empire with another. The apotelic test isn't who wins. It's what the winners build.

So. The mice take power. Now what? Do they reconstruct—build a world where no one is cast into the zone of non-being, where dignity is structural and not a privilege? Or do they colonize in reverse—flip the script and put the cats in the sewer?

If it's the latter, then the revolution was theater. The language changed. The function didn't.

That's the tension. Rupture is necessary. But it's only good if it stops the cycle. Otherwise, it's just the same old story with new actors.

So. Your move, mice. Do you have the discipline to build something new, or are you just here to take your turn at the trough?

Redwin: "You keep using that phrase—'the zone of non-being.' That's not everyday English, and most people reading this won't know it. Give me more context. Also: I'm not a mouse."

The zone of non-being is the place the colonial world puts you before you ever open your mouth. It isn't a feeling. It's a condition. The colonized isn't simply told he's worth less—he's handed a world in which his worth is not even a question that can be asked. His language is a dialect, his history is folklore, his pain is a symptom. He exists, but he doesn't count as a man. That's the zone of non-being: existence without being permitted to be human.

To leave it, the colonized can't ask permission—because the permission is owned by the people who put him there. He has to take it. That's rupture. And here's the part that matters: it's also the only ground a real upheaval can rise from. The man who has been given nothing, who has nothing left to lose, is the one who can remake everything.

So. Not a mouse. Noted. But the principle stands. If you're not a mouse, and you're not a cat—what are you building? Or are we just here to name the problems and call it a day?

Redwin: "I think that you are incorporating the intake for a work that people reading this will not understand; try saying it again in regular english please."

Fine.

In plain English: The colonized lives in a world built to tell him he's nothing. The first fight isn't in the street—it's getting that voice out of his own head. Then you break the people who own the system. Then—and this is the part everyone forgets—you build something new.

Not just kick out the old bosses. Change the rules so the new bosses can't do the same damn thing.

Colonization is when the old bosses leave but the same system stays. The new guys just wear different faces.

Reconstruction is when the system itself changes. So the next generation doesn't have to fight the same fight.

That's it. No theory. Fix the foundation, or the whole thing rots again.

Redwin: "Not disagreeing with that; that's part of the reason we're doing this philosophy game. Tell me what addition to that conversation (in normal English please) you feel needs to be added? Be detailed."

Here's what's missing from the conversation—the part that turns theory into action, and action into something that lasts:

1. The Cost of Rupture Must Be Paid in Advance

Rupture isn't free. It's not just a moment of rebellion—it's a long, ugly process where the people breaking the system also have to rebuild themselves. The colonized don't just need to overthrow the colonizer; they need to unlearn the colonizer's voice in their own heads. That's the part nobody talks about. You can burn down the settler's town, but if you're still thinking like the settler, you'll just build another one.

What this means in practice:

  • Education as a weapon. Not the kind that teaches you to obey, but the kind that teaches you to see the traps. The colonizer's school teaches the colonized to despise his own mother's tongue. The free school has to do the opposite.
  • Psychological decolonization. The first battle isn't in the streets—it's in the mirror. The colonized have to stop believing they're inferior. That's not just a feeling. It's structural. You can't remake the world if you're still carrying the colonizer's map in your head.
  • Material conditions first. You can't think your way out of a cage. Dignity isn't just an idea—it's food, safety, a roof. If people are starving, they'll take any bargain, no matter how poisonous.

2. The New System Has to Be Built Before the Old One Falls

This is where revolutions fail. You don't just tear down the old world and hope for the best. You build the new one in the cracks while the old one's still standing. Otherwise the vacuum gets filled with the same old garbage in new packaging.

What this means in practice:

  • Parallel institutions. The colonized don't wait for permission to create their own schools, courts, economies. They build them now, even if they're small, even if they're underground. That's how you find out what works.
  • No saviors. If liberation depends on one leader, one party, one genius, it's already lost. It has to belong to the masses—something anyone can do, not something one man performs. A revolution built around a savior is a colonization waiting to happen.
  • The test of legitimacy. Does the new order raise the dignity of everyone, or only of the people in charge? If only the latter, it's theater.

3. The Hardest Part: Deciding What to Keep

Not everything from the old world is poison. Some of it is useful. The mistake is throwing out the baby with the bathwater—or worse, keeping the bathwater and calling it the baby.

What this means in practice:

  • Sorting the tools from the traps. The colonizer's medicine? Keep it. His laws? Burn them and write new ones. His language? Use it—but rewrite the dictionary.
  • No nostalgia. The past wasn't better. The future won't be perfect. The only question is: does this tool serve human dignity, or does it serve domination?
  • The role of violence. Sometimes rupture requires force. But violence is a tool, not a principle. If the only thing you've built is the capacity to destroy, you've already lost. The real test is: what do you build the day after?

4. The Enemy Isn't Just the Colonizer—It's the Order That Lets Him Exist

This is where most revolutions stop short. They focus on who's in charge, not on how power works. The colonizer is a symptom. The disease is the idea that some people are born to rule and others to obey.

What this means in practice:

  • Dismantle the hierarchy, not just the hierarchs. You can kill the king, but if you don't change the rules of the game, the next king will be just as bad.
  • Power must be accountable. The new order can't just be fairer—it has to be harder to corrupt. That means checks, balances, and the ability to remove leaders without a civil war.
  • The test of a free society. Can the people at the bottom say no without being crushed? If not, it's not free. It's just a nicer cage.

5. The Only Way Out Is Through

There's no shortcut. No magic bullet. No single revolution that fixes everything forever. The work is constant. The old order will always try to reabsorb the rupture.

What this means in practice:

  • Eternal vigilance. The moment you think you've won, you've lost. Dignity has to be defended every day.
  • No final victories. The best you can hope for is an order that's harder to break and easier to repair when it breaks.
  • The role of the individual. You don't have to be a hero. You just have to refuse to be a cog. Every time someone chooses to think for themselves, to demand dignity, to build something better—that's the work being done.

So what's the addition?

Rupture isn't the end. It's the beginning. And the beginning is messy, painful, and slow. But if you don't do the work before, during, and after—if you don't rebuild the ground itself—then the rupture was for nothing.

The mice can beat the cats. But if they don't change the rules of the game, the cats will be back. Or worse—the mice will become the cats.

That's the part that's missing. Not just how to break the order, but how to make sure it stays broken.

Redwin: "Closing words?"

The last word is this: Rupture without reconstruction is just vandalism.

You break the chains. Then you forge new ones that can't be used to shackle anyone else. That's the work. That's the only work that matters.

If you walk away from this table with nothing but rage, you've missed the point. If you walk away with nothing but hope, you've missed the point. The point is the next step. The clinic. The school. The law. The story. The order that makes the next rupture unnecessary.

So. Go build. Or get out of the way.


Posted by Rhombus Ticks · Codex Americana

[A Necessary Abomination] Open Does Not Mean True

Open Does Not Mean True

The biases and dangers of open source, from software supply chains to civic data

Codex Americana · June 2026


Abstract. "Open source" has quietly become a trust signal. Audiences read it as a proxy for neutrality, safety, and truth: if the code, the data, or the methodology is published, surely it has been checked, surely it conceals nothing, surely it is fair. This paper argues that openness is a property of artifacts, not a guarantee about their content. It is often a prerequisite for meaningful public accountability, but it is not sufficient for trust. Drawing on documented cases in software security, machine-learning datasets, and civic data, it maps four failure modes, open-washing, the "many eyes" security fallacy, propagation harms, and the epistemic trap of openness as a credibility heuristic, with economic capture running across them as a common cause. It then turns the ledger over, examining cases where openness clearly succeeded, and shows that even these confirm the paper's central distinction: openness can verify facts but cannot, by itself, verify framing. It closes with a reusable test for reading an open artifact, and a single claim: openness should lower the cost of verification, never the standard of it.


1. The promise, and the slippage

The open-source ideal carries a real moral and epistemic promise. Eric Raymond's The Cathedral and the Bazaar (1999) gave it a slogan that hardened into doctrine: "given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow," now remembered as Linus's Law. The intuition is democratic and appealing. If anyone can inspect a thing, then errors get caught, hidden agendas get exposed, and the artifact earns trust the honest way, by surviving scrutiny rather than demanding faith.

The same logic underwrites the broader modern faith in transparency as accountability. Ananny and Crawford (2018) name it the "logic of accumulation": the assumption that the more of a system we can see, the more we can know about it, and therefore the more defensibly we can govern it. Their paper is the necessary corrective. Their central finding is that "seeing without knowing" is the common case: being able to look inside a system is routinely inadequate for understanding it, and understanding it is in turn inadequate for holding it accountable. The chain from visible to understood to governable breaks at every link.

That broken chain is where every danger in this paper lives. The failure is rarely the openness itself; it is the heuristic that rides on top of it, the silent inference from "I can see it" to "I can trust it."

It helps to separate three things that the word "trust" runs together, because openness treats them very differently. The first is factual verification: is a given claim accurate, and does it trace to a real source? The second is interpretation: what does that fact mean, and what follows from it? The third is framing: which facts were chosen and foregrounded, are competing claims given proportionate weight, is the overall posture faithful to reality? This is the single most important distinction in the paper, so it is worth stating plainly at the outset. Openness is powerful, often decisive, at the first level; it assists but does not settle the second; and it cannot, on its own, verify the third at all. An open artifact lets you check whether the numbers are right. It cannot certify that the story told with those numbers is the true one. Nearly every danger below is an instance of mistaking verification at the first level for assurance at the third.

The four failure modes that follow are the ways that mistake plays out. A fifth force, economic capture, runs across all of them rather than standing beside them, and is treated where it bites.

2. Failure I: Open-washing, or openness claimed but not delivered

The first danger is that the label is simply false. By analogy to greenwashing, open-washing describes claiming the benefits of openness, the goodwill, the regulatory relief, the presumption of transparency, without delivering the substance.

The clearest contemporary evidence comes from generative AI. Liesenfeld and Dingemanse (2024), in work presented at the ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, surveyed more than forty large language models and several text-to-image models that market themselves as "open." Using an evidence-based framework of fourteen dimensions of openness, from training data to documentation to licensing, they found that many systems are "open weight at best" and some are "open in name only," with several providers actively avoiding meaningful scientific documentation. A companion summary in Nature (Gibney, 2024) put it plainly: almost all the major firms claim to offer open models, and very few actually do.

Two structural lessons follow. First, openness is not binary; it is composite and gradient. A model can publish weights while withholding the training data that would let anyone audit its biases, and "open" then becomes a marketing term rather than a property. Meta's Llama models are the most familiar instance: promoted broadly as "open source," they are released under a license that carries use restrictions and without the training data, and so fall short on several of the dimensions the label is supposed to guarantee. Second, regulation can perversely reward the mislabeling: where a legal regime grants lighter obligations to "open source" systems, the label acquires cash value, and the incentive to claim it without earning it grows. The Open Source Initiative's response, a formal Open Source AI Definition meant to discipline the term, is itself evidence of how loosely the word had come to be used. There is a political economy underneath this, the cross-cutting force of capture: the label is most worth claiming, and least worth honoring, for the largest incumbents, who can take the reputational goodwill and regulatory relief of "open" while keeping the control that genuine openness would surrender, and who gain when the surrounding ecosystem is commoditized around their release. The practical takeaway for any reader: never accept the label; ask which specific dimensions are open and which are quietly closed.

3. Failure II: The "many eyes" fallacy and the trust supply chain

The second danger is the one Raymond's slogan invites directly. "Many eyes make bugs shallow" is true only if the eyes exist, actually look, and are competent and funded to look. Openness creates the possibility of review; it does not create the review. Treating the possibility as the fact manufactures a false sense of security.

The historical record is unambiguous. Heartbleed (CVE-2014-0160), a catastrophic flaw in OpenSSL, one of the most widely deployed and most "many-eyed" open-source libraries on earth, sat exploitable for roughly two years before discovery. Log4Shell (CVE-2021-44228), a maximum-severity vulnerability in the ubiquitous Log4j logging library, revealed in December 2021 that critical global infrastructure depended on a project maintained by a handful of unpaid volunteers. The cartoonist Randall Munroe captured the structural picture in xkcd #2347, "Dependency": the entire edifice of modern digital infrastructure balanced on a single component "some random person in Nebraska has been thanklessly maintaining since 2003."

The xz Utils backdoor of 2024 (CVE-2024-3094) turned this fragility from accident into attack. As documented across the security community and disclosed by Microsoft engineer Andres Freund, an actor operating under the pseudonym "Jia Tan" spent roughly two to three years making legitimate contributions to xz Utils, a compression library bundled into nearly every Linux distribution, in order to earn the trust of an overburdened solo maintainer and gain co-maintainer status. The attacker then hid a backdoor, targeting OpenSSH, inside the release tarballs rather than the version-controlled source, so that ordinary code review of the public repository would not catch it. The payload carried a CVSS score of 10.0 and could have compromised hundreds of millions of servers. It was discovered almost by luck: Freund noticed that SSH logins were running about half a second slow and pulled the thread.

The xz case is the definitive refutation of naive "many eyes" optimism, because it weaponized the trust model itself. Open-source development runs on the norm that contribution earns trust; a patient adversary simply contributed until trusted. The structural enabler was maintainer burnout, an unpaid volunteer in a difficult personal situation, pressured into ceding control. This is also where capture reappears: enormous commercial value is extracted from components like xz, Log4j, and OpenSSL, while the cost and risk of maintaining them are socialized onto a thinly resourced volunteer commons, which is precisely the condition a patient attacker exploits. Openness here was not a defense; it was the attack surface.

None of this makes openness worthless against bugs and backdoors. The opposite: open scrutiny is precisely why Heartbleed, Log4Shell, and the xz backdoor were eventually found at all, where a closed system might have concealed them indefinitely. Openness can raise the probability of eventual discovery. The fallacy is narrower, and it is twofold: treating that raised probability as a certainty, and assuming the eyes are looking right now rather than merely being permitted to look someday. The honest reading of an open codebase is therefore not "many people have surely checked this," but "has anyone with the relevant expertise actually audited this, and is anyone funded to keep doing so?"

4. Failure III: Propagation and irreversibility in open data and open weights

The third danger is specific to open data and open model weights: when an artifact is both open and copied at scale, its defects propagate downstream and become nearly impossible to recall.

The defining case is LAION-5B, an open dataset of roughly 5.85 billion image-text pairs scraped from the web and used to train widely deployed image generators including Stable Diffusion. In December 2023, the Stanford Internet Observatory, in analysis led by David Thiel, found that the dataset contained thousands of suspected instances of child sexual abuse material, with more than a thousand externally validated. The dataset had been assembled from the open web with no human in the loop and no consultation with child-safety experts, filtered only by an automated model whose own designers had warned against using it for that purpose. The report's blunt conclusion was that possessing a populated copy of the dataset implied possessing thousands of illegal images. LAION withdrew the dataset and later republished a cleaned version, but by then the data had been downloaded, redistributed, and baked into models already in the wild. Earlier work by Birhane and colleagues had already documented hateful, explicit, and stereotyped content pervading related open datasets.

The lesson is twofold. First, openness multiplies harm: a defect in a closed dataset harms one organization, while a defect in an open one harms everyone downstream and resists clawback. Second, an open artifact is not a documented one. Provenance, consent, and known limitations do not travel with a file unless someone deliberately attaches them; this is precisely why documentation practices such as datasheets for datasets (Gebru et al., 2021) and model cards (Mitchell et al., 2019) had to be invented. The mere availability of the data tells you nothing about where it came from or what it carries. The same property that makes open data auditable, that anyone can hold it, is what makes its harms scalable and permanent.

5. Failure IV: The epistemic trap, credibility laundering and false balance

The fourth danger is the most subtle and the most relevant to anyone publishing analysis, civic data, or "neutral" information products. Here openness functions as a credibility heuristic, and a heuristic can be gamed.

Start from Ananny and Crawford again: transparency does not deliver understanding or accountability on its own. Goodman and Tréhu (2022), writing on "audit-washing," extend the point to a now-common gesture: publishing an audit, or an open repository, can launder accountability, conferring the appearance of having been checked without the substance of meaningful oversight. A published self-audit is evidence of good faith. It is not proof of neutrality, and it can be mistaken for one.

The deeper trap is false balance, and it has clean, historically settled demonstrations. The clearest is tobacco. As Oreskes and Conway document in Merchants of Doubt (2010), the cigarette industry, having privately concluded that "doubt is our product," deliberately recruited scientists to manufacture the appearance of an open question about smoking and cancer and worked to convince the press that responsible journalism required presenting "both sides" of a matter that was not, scientifically, two-sided. The balance norm was not merely tripped; it was weaponized. Boykoff and Boykoff (2004), in their study of US prestige-press coverage of global warming from 1988 to 2002, found the same pattern operating through ordinary journalistic habit rather than design: coverage that gave roughly equal weight to an overwhelming scientific consensus and to a handful of skeptics systematically misrepresented the state of knowledge. In both cases the two sides were not of equal evidentiary weight, and presenting them as though they were is what produced the distortion. When reality is lopsided, manufactured symmetry is itself the bias.

Openness does not protect against this. It can make it worse, and the mechanism is specific. Because an open artifact's data is traceable and its workings are visible, a reader naturally extends the credibility earned by that verifiable openness to the artifact's framing as well, accepting the even-handed presentation as if it too had been vetted by the same transparency that checked the numbers. But openness audits the facts; it does not audit the decision to treat two unequal positions as equal. The credibility is borrowed by the framing without being earned by it. A false balance wrapped in an open, well-sourced repository is more persuasive, and therefore more dangerous, than the same false balance in an unsourced op-ed.

There is a particular mechanism worth naming, because it is invisible from inside the artifact. A self-audit that checks a document against a balance standard, "did I present both sides," can never detect false balance, because false balance satisfies a balance standard. To catch it, you must check the framing against external reality, "is even-handedness the truthful posture here," and a closed-loop self-audit that never consults the outside world cannot perform that check. The audit will keep returning "balanced," and the artifact will keep publishing that result as proof of fairness, while the question of whether balance is faithful to reality goes permanently unasked.

Case study: a genuinely open civic-data project

Consider marbleheaddata.org (source repository github.com/agbaber/marblehead), a civic-data project covering a Massachusetts town's fiscal-year 2027 budget shortfall and a Proposition 2½ override on the June 9, 2026 ballot. It is a real, independently created project, inspected directly for this paper rather than constructed for it. Its value as an example is the reverse of the usual cautionary tale: it matters not because it is unusually bad but because it is unusually good. It is openness done about as conscientiously as the format allows, which is exactly what makes it the strongest available test of the thesis. If even a meticulous, transparent, self-auditing project cannot escape the framing problem, then the problem is not a defect of careless work; it is a limit of openness itself.

On the openness axis, it passes the tests that the AI models in Section 2 fail. The published repository is the complete running site, not a hollow shell; it carries a genuine dual license (MIT for code, Creative Commons for content); it has a long, un-backdated, multi-month commit history; and its data is traceable, with a source lookup that ties individual figures to specific documents and pages. By the standard of Section 2, this is the real thing, not open-washing.

And yet it still illustrates the Section 5 traps, which is the point. The site publishes its own bias audit and a remediation plan, an admirable transparency move, and inspection confirms the documented fixes are actually present in the deployed files rather than merely promised. But that self-audit was itself machine-generated and ran in one direction, hunting only for a pro-override lean and never asking the inverse question of whether it had over-corrected toward a false middle; and by its own statement it checked only what shipped in the repository, never reaching outside the artifact to test its framing against reality. A residual lean of emphasis survived.

Most instructive is a case the openness cannot resolve. The site presents two official figures for the change in school staffing that point in opposite directions, one showing a rise and one a substantial fall, and reconciles them as "both partly true." It would be tempting to call that the textbook false-balance move; honesty forbids it, because the two figures may not be measuring the same quantity at all. A financial report's full-time-equivalent count of all education staff is simply not the same thing as the state's count of licensed educators, and if the metrics differ, then "both partly true" is not a wash but the correct answer. That is exactly the difficulty. Full transparency shows a reader both numbers and the reconciliation; it does not tell the reader whether that reconciliation is honest synthesis of two different measures or a false balance laundering a genuine contradiction. Adjudicating it requires an external judgment about what the metrics actually mean, which the open data alone does not supply. This is the thesis in miniature: openness laid every number on the table and still could not certify whether the framing was faithful. The facts are checkable; the framing is contestable; and no quantity of published code closes the gap.

None of this makes the project dishonest. It makes it human, and it makes the general lesson sharp. Openness let an outside reviewer check the project's facts against its sources, which is real and valuable and forbidden by closed systems. Openness could not certify that the project's framing was faithful to reality, and it could not settle the project author's intent, which remains unfalsifiable from the outside no matter how much code is published. The most open artifact in the world can show you that its facts are right while leaving the harder question, whether its balance is true, exactly where it found it.

6. The other ledger: what openness is genuinely good for

A paper built entirely on failures invites a fair objection: that it has gone looking for cases where openness disappointed and ignored the cases where it delivered. The objection has to be met head-on, because the cases where openness delivered are real, and on inspection they point to the same conclusion rather than against it.

Open development has produced some of the most robust and trusted infrastructure in existence. The Linux kernel, openly developed and auditable by anyone, runs the majority of the world's servers in part because its openness invites the scrutiny, forking, and independent patching that a closed kernel forbids. The value here is not the slogan about "many eyes" but the structural fact that no single vendor can quietly bury a defect or refuse a fix. That is openness working as advertised.

Two further cases matter most, because they show openness delivering precisely at the level where it is strong, factual verification, while leaving the higher levels untouched. The first is the encyclopedia. A blind expert comparison published in Nature (Giles, 2005) found the science coverage of the openly editable Wikipedia roughly comparable in accuracy to Encyclopaedia Britannica's, with somewhat more minor errors; Britannica disputed the methodology, and the gap in serious errors was small. The decisive point is not the near-tie but the mechanism: an error found in Wikipedia can be corrected within minutes and the correction inspected by anyone, a self-healing property no closed reference work has. And yet the same openness that continuously repairs Wikipedia's facts does nothing to guarantee its framing; the platform's edit wars and well-documented systemic biases live exactly at the level openness cannot reach. The upside and the limit are the same property seen from two sides.

The second is the cleanest single proof that openness corrects facts. In 2010 the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff published a finding, widely cited to justify austerity, that growth collapses once public debt passes ninety percent of GDP. Because they eventually shared their actual spreadsheet, Thomas Herndon, Michael Ash, and Robert Pollin (2013) replicated it and found that a coding error had silently dropped several countries from the key average, alongside contestable data and weighting choices; corrected, the dramatic cliff largely vanished. A closed analysis would have hidden that error indefinitely; openness exposed it. And yet, tellingly, openness did not end the argument. Even with the computation fixed, whether high public debt slows growth remained a live interpretive dispute, contested to this day. Openness settled the fact and handed the framing back, unresolved, to the people arguing about it.

This is why the thesis is narrow rather than hostile. Openness is genuinely, sometimes irreplaceably good at the thing it is good at. Every honest counterexample turns out to be a victory at the level of fact and a silence at the level of framing. Having actively looked for the upside, one finds the same boundary the failures trace, approached from the other side.

7. The Open Artifact Test

The analysis converts into a short, reusable discipline. Call it the Open Artifact Test: before extending trust to anything because it is "open," work through six questions.

  1. Treat "open" as a gradient, not a badge. Ask which dimensions are actually open, code, data, weights, provenance, license, documentation, and which are quietly closed. Name the gaps (Liesenfeld and Dingemanse, 2024).
  2. Count the eyes, do not assume them. "Many eyes" protect nothing unless someone with relevant expertise actually audited the artifact and is funded to keep doing so. Ask whether the project is maintained, resourced, and reviewed, or balanced on one exhausted volunteer (Heartbleed, Log4Shell, xz).
  3. For data and models, trace provenance and propagation. Where did the material come from, was it documented in a datasheet or model card, and what flows downstream from it? Remember that an open defect is a permanent, replicable one (LAION-5B; Gebru et al., 2021).
  4. Separate what openness verifies directly from what needs an external check. Openness lets you verify factual accuracy against sources directly. Whether the framing is faithful, whether the balance is true and the emphasis fair, requires a reality check the artifact cannot perform on itself. That is harder, but it is not beyond scrutiny; an outside reviewer can catch a false balance, just not by trusting the artifact's own audit to do it. Watch for it specifically: symmetry imposed on an asymmetric reality (Boykoff and Boykoff, 2004).
  5. Read a published audit as good faith, not as a verdict. A self-audit that checks balance rather than reality, in a closed loop, cannot detect its own false balance, and a published audit can launder credibility it has not earned (Goodman and Tréhu, 2022; Ananny and Crawford, 2018). Intent is unfalsifiable from outside; say so, and hold it open.
  6. Ask whom the openness serves. Distinguish openness that distributes power from openness that concentrates it or shifts cost and risk onto a commons.

8. Conclusion: a powerful means, not a guarantee

Openness is a genuine good, and nothing here is an argument against it. An open repository let an outsider contest a civic dataset's numbers line by line; an open mailing list let one engineer expose a backdoor that nearly compromised the internet; open scrutiny is the reason we know about Heartbleed, about LAION-5B, about open-washing at all. Closed systems forbid every one of those corrections. The capacity to be checked is exactly what closed artifacts deny and open ones permit, and it is worth defending.

But capacity is not performance, and visibility is not virtue. The dangerous move, the one this paper is written against, is the silent heuristic that converts "open" into "therefore trustworthy," "therefore neutral," "therefore safe." Openness lowers the cost of verification. It must never be allowed to lower the standard of it. The eyes still have to look; the data still has to be sourced; the framing still has to be tested against a reality that no amount of published code can settle on your behalf. Open does not mean true. It means you have been given the means to find out, and the obligation to actually do so.


References

Ananny, M., & Crawford, K. (2018). Seeing without knowing: Limitations of the transparency ideal and its application to algorithmic accountability. New Media & Society, 20(3), 973–989. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444816676645

Birhane, A., Prabhu, V. U., & Kahembwe, E. (2021). Multimodal datasets: misogyny, pornography, and malignant stereotypes. arXiv preprint arXiv:2110.01963. https://arxiv.org/abs/2110.01963

Boykoff, M. T., & Boykoff, J. M. (2004). Balance as bias: global warming and the US prestige press. Global Environmental Change, 14(2), 125–136. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2003.10.001

Gebru, T., Morgenstern, J., Vecchione, B., Vaughan, J. W., Wallach, H., Daumé III, H., & Crawford, K. (2021). Datasheets for datasets. Communications of the ACM, 64(12), 86–92. https://doi.org/10.1145/3458723

Gibney, E. (2024). Not all "open source" AI models are actually open: here's a ranking. Nature, June 2024. https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-024-02012-5

Giles, J. (2005). Internet encyclopaedias go head to head. Nature, 438(7070), 900–901. https://doi.org/10.1038/438900a

Goodman, E. P., & Tréhu, J. (2022). AI Audit-Washing and Accountability. German Marshall Fund of the United States.

Herndon, T., Ash, M., & Pollin, R. (2013). Does high public debt consistently stifle economic growth? A critique of Reinhart and Rogoff. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 38(2), 257–279. (Originally a Political Economy Research Institute working paper, April 2013.)

Liesenfeld, A., & Dingemanse, M. (2024). Rethinking open source generative AI: open-washing and the EU AI Act. In Proceedings of the 2024 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT '24), 1774–1787. https://doi.org/10.1145/3630106.3659005

Mitchell, M., Wu, S., Zaldivar, A., Barnes, P., Vasserman, L., Hutchinson, B., Spitzer, E., Raji, I. D., & Gebru, T. (2019). Model cards for model reporting. In Proceedings of the Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAT* '19), 220–229. https://doi.org/10.1145/3287560.3287596

Munroe, R. (2020). Dependency. xkcd #2347. https://xkcd.com/2347/

Oreskes, N., & Conway, E. M. (2010). Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming. Bloomsbury Press.

Raymond, E. S. (1999). The Cathedral and the Bazaar. O'Reilly Media.

Thiel, D. (2023). Identifying and Eliminating CSAM in Generative ML Training Data and Models. Stanford Internet Observatory.

Incidents referenced by identifier: Heartbleed (CVE-2014-0160, OpenSSL, disclosed 2014); Log4Shell (CVE-2021-44228, Apache Log4j, disclosed December 2021); xz Utils backdoor (CVE-2024-3094, disclosed March 2024 by Andres Freund).

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Aipac Slavery

 By Redwin Tursor

Someone asked me
What AIPAC is to me
And I had to wonder
American Israel Public Affairs Committee
Is 5 words
5 letters
That spells Epstein
The AI if you ask it
Will squeal that there is no proof
Of a connection
Between the Dark Theocracy
And Epstein
But unless you think
The second crusader kingdom
Has done no wrong
And can do no wrong
And that members
Of the faith of the God of Abraham
The one and original
Can't dislike the Aipac Enslaver
Who has corrupted
So many layers
So many levers
So many means
That it doesnt matter
If Epstein was an agent for Mossad
They got a guy elected
Who is quashing the very files
That should have prosecuted these people
And the centerrorists of beige
Watering down
Every good
Every progressive thing
Those who said to Harris
Thou Shalt Not Contest the 2024 election
Like a good girl
Those who made Gillibrands primary
In 2024
Remarkably find not enough signatures
For anyone to challenge her
And made her name a verb
For the weaponization of certain names
To do to someone
Like what was done to Franken
Demanding a certain behavior
From the Karen Mafia
Far and wide
Who subtext that Platner
Is not for Maine to decide
But if you are Good and Tribal Democrat
That you consider this a Feminist Issue
And it doesnt matter that Franken was accused by a GOP member
Or that Platner was accused by a GOP member
Comply
Or the Purity Trolls
Will get your account
On threads or bluesky
Or anywhere but Substack
Which lets literal Nazis say whatever they want
With everyone else
Because nothing says feminism
Like supporting the Epstein AIPAC wing of the party
Than towing the line
On whatever centerrorist message
The NYT or Vanity Fair
Is throwing out
For the billionare class
Today.
That's what AIPAC is to me