Long-form investigative dossiers. Each file traces the systems and incentives behind a specific organization, technology, or movement. Slow, careful, footnoted, and grounded in primary sources.
Where the files explain how a system works, the dashboards let you watch it work. External tools are linked with the operator clearly identified; internal tools are noted as such.
Open source intelligence on the systems shaping Canadian sovereignty and civic life.
What we are watching, and why. Each tracked vector becomes a file when the analysis is ready, or a dashboard when there is live data worth surfacing.
Relational organizing technology and the privatization of the political coordination layer. First file published.
Organized pressure on Canadian unity, jurisdictional disputes, and constitutional friction points and their financing.
Who owns the platforms that political mobilization, public records, and civic identity now run on. Cross-border data flows.
Future tracking vector. Pitch a topic worth standing watch on, with the systems-level question that would make it a useful focus area.
Time-stamped record of publication events. Provenance is part of the work. Corrections, additions, and material changes are recorded here in chronological order.
Defend Canada is editorial systems analysis, written for the citizen who wants to understand the structure underneath the news rather than be told what to think about it. Methodology is treated as part of the deliverable.
Every claim is grounded in a primary source. Operator self-statements are treated as primary evidence for what an operator says about itself. Architectural inferences follow from those statements and are flagged as inferences.
Files take the time they take. A file is published when its core architectural claim can be supported by sources we can name and link. Where evidence is partial or contested, that is stated in the file rather than smoothed over.
No anonymous sourcing for structural claims. Speculation is labeled. Corrections are issued in the briefing log when needed and remain part of the public record.
Non-partisan. Not aligned with any party, campaign, or advocacy group. The work is concerned with the structure of systems, not with the merits of the causes those systems serve.
Independent. No paid editorial. Funding model and supporters disclosed when relevant to subject matter.
Open. Source materials cited and linked wherever permissible.