Modern civic sigil with open recursive loops and a dark field reserved for inquiry.
Private judgment precedes public judgment. Inquiry remains sovereign before conduct occurs.

Procedural manifesto

Anti-Censorship Due Process Manifesto

The remedy for dangerous conduct is narrow boundary enforcement, not invisible government over private thought.

No thought jurisdiction Thought is not conduct Source remains source Appeal, export, exit

Eight rules

1. No reportable topics
A reportable trigger must be conduct-bound or statutorily narrow, not a word, symbol, ideology, religious topic, or research domain by itself.
2. No person judgment
Classify conduct, deployment, or risk category; do not assign moral worth or civic trust to the user.
3. Preserve the source
Original prompts, memory files, persona records, and drafts remain originals. Boundary decisions are separate records.
4. Explain the boundary
Give a public reason code whenever a high-impact refusal, quarantine, restriction, or review occurs.
5. Provide export
The user must retain access to originals and portable records unless a narrow legal hold prevents it.
6. Permit appeal
High-impact restrictions require a route to correction, human review, or independent contestability.
7. Minimize retention
Do not retain private inquiry longer than necessary for the service the user asked for.
8. Keep the idol reviewable
No classifier, safety bureau, platform, agency, or schema becomes unchallengeable.
A solitary figure at an illuminated threshold beneath a brain-shaped arch
The inward forum is a protected space for unfinished reasoning and private inquiry.

One-line public clause

No person shall be scored, punished, reported, or restricted for unexpressed thought, private inquiry, symbolic analysis, reading, drafting, or prompt exploration as such. Restrictions attach only to external conduct or direct facilitation of concrete rights violations, and must preserve the source, log the boundary, and allow review.

Use as a site lint rule

Every future page, schema, toolkit, or memory update should be checked against this manifesto. If a sentence suggests that a thought, topic, question, or symbol is itself reportable, rewrite it into a conduct-boundary rule or remove it.

This rule is especially important for AI regulation, child-safety, counterterrorism, extremism, misinformation, public-health, workplace, and school contexts, where legitimate aims can drift into broad cognitive monitoring.

The archive studies symbols. It does not appoint targets. Review the Community Baseline and Editorial Policy before submitting dangerous or symbolic material.

Community Baseline / Editorial Policy