The Epstein documents have broken a usual two-camp pattern. Not the political party camps, both of which had too many implicated powerful players to allow partisan finger pointing, but another set of cultural camps: the conspiracy theorists and the conspiracy deniers. Most institutional events of consequence fit a predictable dynamic. One voice sees coordinated intentional harm, or conspiracy. The other voice sees mistakes and isolated bad actors, or no conspiracy. The public conversation oscillates between them along whatever tribal lines are operating. Epstein hasn’t sorted that way.
The documents were too concrete to dismiss. Flight logs, photos, financial records, witness testimony, video. The voices that wanted to call this overblown couldn't survive contact with the evidence. But the documents also didn't fit the master-planning version of the conspiracy account, at least not in what the released material shows so far. The participants don’t seem like smart, calculating people executing a long-term plan. They appear sloppy, tawdry, and operationally undisciplined. The texts and emails read like fraternity pranks. The financial trails are obvious. This is a claim about the people in the documents, not about whatever operational organization may have stood behind them, a distinction the essay returns to, because the question of deliberate design at the operational level is exactly the kind of thing the released record leaves open.
The names also cross every political line. Presidents, royals, scientists, financiers, academics, intelligence figures, and both major U.S. parties. There was no way to pin the network on a political out-group. Each tribe found its own implicated. This destabilized the usual sorting mechanism. The discourse normally functions by letting one camp blame the other, and Epstein gave neither camp clean targets.
What emerges from this picture is something neither camp has a clean name for, weirdly enough: real coordination; harmful and stupid behavior by sloppy and egotistical individuals; protected by structural cover, coalitional loyalty, and institutional inertia. Epstein is useful as a starting point precisely because his story breaks both camps at once: the conspiracy account was right that the network existed and partly wrong about its shape, while the dismissive account was wrong that nothing organized was happening.
Epstein also didn't arrive in a cultural vacuum. Current generations have come to see a whole series of events, among many others, as egregious examples of institutional betrayal or outright lying. The Iraq War and the WMD claims. The 2008 financial crisis. Syria, Libya, Ukraine. Russiagate. The Hunter Biden laptop. COVID. The arc arguably runs back further still, to the unresolved questions around the Kennedy assassination and through any number of events in between; the point is not a precise chronology or a complete list but a felt accumulation. Each event damaged a different segment of the population's trust in different institutions, and each became visible because the internet had collapsed the hierarchical distribution of information. Primary sources became readable directly. Dissident voices became findable across tribal lines. By the time the Epstein documents emerged, the cumulative effect was that broad skepticism toward credentialed authority had stopped being a partisan position. Both sides of the political aisle had lost faith in different parts of the same official story.
To see what kind of phenomenon any of this actually is, we need a richer map than the two-camp framing provides. My solution is a new map with coordination and intent on the axes. Coordination and intent can be present together, present separately, or absent. With this structure, four quadrants of harmful behavior become more evident, not just the two we usually collapse to. In this model, the Epstein documents have components in more than one of them. The COVID response spreads across all four. The 2008 financial crisis sits mostly in one. Telling them apart is the work this essay is attempting.
The Four Quadrants
The map is a map of harm. It only does its work once something has gone wrong and the question is what kind of wrong it was. The axes do not describe behavior in general. They describe behavior that has produced harm, or that looks from the outside like it might have. Given that harm, two questions can be used to sort it.
The first is coordination. Did the harm come from aligned action across multiple actors, or from something more isolated? The second is intent. Intent here means individual conscious aim, what a person was actually trying to do. Did the actors consciously mean to cause the harm?
Whether a system as a whole produces harm it was never consciously aimed at is a different question, and it is the one the architecture later in this essay exists to answer. For now the two axes stay at the level of the people acting: were they coordinated, and did they mean it.
These two questions vary independently, which is the whole reason the map is needed. A harmful outcome can be coordinated without anyone intending it. It can be intended without anyone coordinating. Both can be true at once, or neither. Map them and four kinds of harmful behavior appear. The names below describe the behavior.
Accident is the low-coordination, low-intent corner. No one meant the harm and no one aligned to produce it. Mistakes, errors, real disagreement, the ordinary friction of large systems doing imperfect work. Early COVID treatment confusion, before the evidence stabilized, was mostly this. Most institutional interactions genuinely live here, which is exactly why this corner is so easy to over-apply.
Misconduct is the low-coordination, high-intent corner. A specific actor meant the harm, but the harm did not require a ring to produce it. The cleanest instance is plain corruption: the official taking bribes, the executive enriching himself through fraud, the actor who makes choices for personal gain at others' expense. Corrupt is the right strong word here, and it names something the other corners do not: a person who knew, chose, and benefited. Corrupt officials, fraudulent executives, individual abusers, and the particular bad actors. The harm is real and intentional, and it is also local. This corner is where personal moral responsibility lives in its plainest form, and naming it matters, because a structural account of harm can become so diffuse that it loses all individual responsibility. At some point accountability requires pointing at a person who chose, and Misconduct is the corner that keeps that pointing honest. The mistake the map guards against here is the opposite overreach: assuming that because someone clearly meant it, others must have been coordinating with them.
Capture is the high-coordination, low-intent corner, and it is the one the public conversation has almost no word for. Harm produced by aligned action across many actors, none of whom narrate the harm to themselves as the goal. Institutional capture. Coalitional pressure. Vitamin D going unmentioned through the early pandemic, beach closures persisting past the point evidence justified them, regulatory bodies operating to protect the industries they nominally police. The coordination is real. The intent to harm, in the conscious individual sense, is absent. What this looks like in practice is people restricting others' rights, or suppressing things that are true, while believing they are doing the responsible thing or the only thing they can do. It is not the smoke-filled room of the standard conspiracy image. It is coalitional capture: a group of people each doing what their positions reward, arriving together at an outcome none of them would author alone. The absence of a master plan is not, however, an absence of responsibility. The people inside Capture went along with things they had reason to recognize as wrong, and the reason they went along is not mysterious. You do not advance in a large organization by calling out its bad decisions. The corner is where most institutional harm lives, it is real, it is common, and it is most of what this essay develops, because it is the corner the available vocabulary keeps forcing into one of the other three.
Conspiracy is the high-coordination, high-intent corner. Genuine coordinated intentional harm. Cartels, intelligence operations, planned market manipulation, the parts of the Twitter Files coordination that were exactly what they looked like. This corner is real, and it is worth being blunt about how real, because the reflexive dismissal of all conspiracy as paranoia is itself a position that the historical record does not support. Documented, often court-proven conspiracies are not rare. The tobacco companies coordinated for decades to suppress what they knew about cancer, a coordination established in litigation. Volkswagen engineered its vehicles to cheat emissions tests. A cartel of banks rigged the LIBOR benchmark that prices trillions in loans. The Gulf of Tonkin incident was misrepresented to expand a war. COINTELPRO was a real, documented FBI program to surveil and disrupt domestic political groups. The First World War propaganda operations, including the British bureau that flooded the United States with fabricated atrocity material after the Lusitania sinking, were deliberate campaigns to manufacture consent for war. To wave all of this away as the fantasy of unstable minds is not the sober, realist posture it imagines itself to be. It is a comfort position, a way of not having to live in a world where powerful people sometimes coordinate to deceive and harm, and it is contradicted by the documented past. The denier who treats this entire corner as empty or as only historical is making an error at least as large as the conspiracy theorist who treats every corner as full. Conspiracies happen, power concentrates and corrupts, and the cost of missing a real one is high. The mistake the map guards against here is the reverse of the misconduct error: assuming that because harm was coordinated, someone must have consciously planned it as harm.
The four corners are descriptions of what a given harmful behavior actually is. A single event can have components in more than one corner, which is the normal case rather than the exception, and the COVID section that follows takes events apart precisely this way.
Why the Discourse Oscillates
People are not evenly distributed across this map. Two figures dominate public argument, and they sit mostly on the diagonal corners facing each other: the denier and the conspiracy theorist. Each is a person who spends most of their time looking mostly through one quadrant’s lens, and the reason they do is worth taking seriously, because both are responding to something real.
The denier spends most of their time in the lower half of the graph, and particularly in the Accident corner. This is not foolishness. The denier is responding accurately to a genuine feature of the world: society is built to reduce friction, and that machinery works hard to keep bad behavior from being seen. Most of what the denier encounters really is benign, or really is presented in a way designed to read as benign, and a baseline of trust is what makes ordinary life workable at all. The reflex has good reasons. There is also a structural reason so many credentialed and institutional voices sit here: captured institutions retain the people whose architecture lets them hold the institutional narrative sincerely, and wash out the people who cannot. The denier corner is, in part, what institutions produce as their characteristic public voice. What the denier misses is everything above Accident and Misconduct, and especially Capture, which their available vocabulary keeps rounding down to Accident.
The conspiracy theorist, often derided as the tin-foil-hat thinker, spends most of their time in the Conspiracy corner. This is not foolishness either. The conspiracy theorist is responding accurately to a different genuine feature of the world: they are often looking directly at very bad behavior, and coordinated harm is genuinely hard to distinguish from planned malice, because from the outside Capture and Conspiracy look almost identical. Aligned action producing harm looks like a plan whether or not anyone actually planned it. Given a limited vocabulary and a real pattern of coordinated harm, reaching for "conspiracy" is a reasonable move, not a crazy one. Hypervigilance to coordinated threat had survival value, and missing a real conspiracy costs more than suspecting a false one.
There is a further reason the conspiracy theorist is sometimes simply correct, and it deserves to be stated plainly because the rest of this essay leans so hard on Capture. There exists a type of person the framework has not yet accounted for: the steerer. For the steerer, coordinated, intentional steering of the public is not a hidden operative function but an openly held philosophy of governance. This is the lineage that runs from Edward Bernays who in Propaganda (1928) and Crystallizing Public Opinion (1923) described the conscious and intelligent manipulation of the public mind as the legitimate work of an enlightened class, through the CIA advice to label skeptics of the Warren Commission report as conspiracy theorists (those who go this far, who actively shame intelligent skeptics as crazy, rightly deserve their own special place in hell), and on to the contemporary advocates of "choice architecture" and the technocratic nudging of populations toward better outcomes. The steerer is not captured in the cognitive sense or the incentive sense; they follow an ideology, a worldview in which manufactured consent is not a betrayal of the public but a service to it. This is what makes the steerer the most uncomfortable figure of the four. You cannot say they would stop if only they could see what they were doing, since they do see it. They have a theory of the good in which it is justified, and the theory revolves around whether adults are agents to be informed or subjects to be managed, landing mostly on the latter. For the steerer, in other words, the high-coordination, high-intent corner is not an accusation but a description of the job as they understand it, and when the conspiracy theorist insists that someone really is deliberately coordinating to shape what the public believes and does, this is the case where they are exactly right. The Conspiracy corner has genuine, sincere, unapologetic occupants, and some of them moved in on purpose and consider it good work.
What the conspiracy theorist still tends to miss is that steerers are rarer than the apparent coordination requires and sit higher in the structure than the machinery they set in motion, and that most of the people executing the coordination below them are not fellow ideologues but ordinary participants held in place by Capture. The architect of the choice-architecture believes in it; the thousands who implement it are mostly just keeping their jobs. So even here, where the conspiracy theorist is right that intentional steering exists, the bulk of the machinery still runs on coalitional drift rather than shared design. Treating every coordinated harm as the work of the avowed steerers produces the recognizable failure mode of seeing master plans where most of the participants would, if asked, sincerely deny one.
The crucial point is that neither the conspiracy theorist or the denier is wrong in what they perceive, and each experiences himself as seeing clearly. The denier really does see a world full of benign (and sometimes individually malicious) mishaps and friction-reducing cover, and the things he points to are really there. The conspiracy theorist really does see coordinated bad behavior that the official voices refuse to name, and the clues he follows are real clues. Each is reading genuine evidence. Each, in part, is right. What neither has is the frame that would let the evidence resolve into its actual shape, and so each fills the gap with the reading his wiring already favors while remaining convinced he is the one seeing clearly. What limits them is not perception. It is four things underneath it.
The first is vocabulary. Ordinary language gives us roughly two words for four phenomena: accident and conspiracy. Misconduct gets folded into one or the other depending on mood, and Capture, the largest category, has no common word at all. So both observers round the thing they are seeing toward the nearest available word.
The second is wiring. Each of us is cognitively inclined toward one pole, by temperament and by the coalitions we belong to, and the inclination pretty much decides which way we round. The denier rounds coordinated harm down toward accident. The conspiracy theorist rounds it up toward conspiracy. Capture sits between them with no name, and so it falls to whichever side the observer's wiring already favors.
The third is deeper than either, and it is what the missing word is downstream of. We have not had the lens that would let us see Capture as a thing at all. A word gets coined for a phenomenon a culture can already perceive; the reason there is no common word for Capture is that until very recently we had no framework in which coordinated-but-unintended harm was an expected product of human nature rather than a contradiction in terms. That lens has two parts that work together. The first is evolutionary. The mind that staffs institutions evolved for coalitional life, and coalitional life selected for a specific set of drives: stay inside the group, because expulsion was historically fatal; defer to the group's account of reality, because the group's approval mattered more to survival than the group's accuracy; treat the costs of dissent as real threats, because they were. Evolution selected for intelligence as a tool of social navigation and status competition rather than as an instrument for finding the truth. It even selected for structural victim-blaming, the reflex that reads the person harmed by a system as having brought it on themselves, because that reflex preserves the observer's faith in the group they still depend on. None of these are malfunctions. They are the design. The second part is organizational. Institutions retain and promote the people willing to produce the operative output, or willing to narrate the idealized story sincerely, and they quietly shed the people who can do neither. The evolutionary drives supply the raw material; the organization selects, from a population already inclined to defer and conform, the individuals who defer and conform most usefully. Put the two together and the missing category appears. Every one of these forces produces aligned, harmful behavior that no individual consciously aimed at. Without the lens, such behavior is unintelligible, so it gets sorted into the only two categories the old picture allowed: it was an accident, or someone planned it. Capture is what comes into view once you understand that the full range of human motivation includes powerful forces that generate coordinated harm with no author, and that organizations are machines for concentrating exactly those forces. The missing word is a symptom. The missing understanding of human nature is the cause.
Fourth, and maybe most viscerally impactful: Capture removes obvious and punishable blame. It leaves us hanging, so to speak, unable to get mad at something or someone. Any discussion about the herd-like behavior of humans does the same, it seems to absolve the participants when we have deep emotional needs to identify those responsible for harm.
There is one more reason Capture stays hidden, and it runs in the opposite direction from where most people look. We attribute intelligence and coordination on the basis of position, power, and strength. Someone who occupies a high seat is read as competent by the fact of occupying it, and someone competent is assumed to be steering. This is the halo effect operating on authority, and it pushes every reading off Capture and onto the accepted diagonals. If the people in charge are as smart and as deliberate as their position implies, then a bad outcome was either an honest accident among capable people or a thing capable people intended. The possibility that capable-seeming elites are neither steering nor especially smart, that they are coalitionally captured and self-interested in ways their position disguises, is exactly what the halo forbids us from seeing. The argument of this essay, compressed, is that the halo is wrong. Our elites look intelligent and coordinated because of where they sit, not because of what they are doing. Strip the halo and the apparent master-planning resolves into something both more ordinary and more disturbing: real evolutionary forces producing behavior that looks intentional from the outside and is often nothing of the kind from within. Capture becomes visible the moment we stop crediting the powerful with the deliberateness their position projects onto them.
This is what produces the familiar discomfort with the standard discourse. Most people have had the experience of finding the denier account too simple and the conspiracy account too complex, of sensing that the real thing is something both are partly seeing and neither is naming. The thing they cannot name is usually Capture. Giving it a corner of its own is what lets us resolve into analysis instead of oscillation.
COVID as Map
The COVID response is a useful test case for the map because the events associated with it span graph. Different elements of the same broad institutional response sit in different corners. Sorting some of the long list them can help to clarify what was actually happening, and it shows why no single word could ever have described the whole.
Vitamin D and sunlight. This looks to me like Capture, though the placement is a reading of incomplete evidence rather than a verdict. Through the early months of the pandemic, basic immune-health information went conspicuously unmentioned in public health communication. Vitamin D deficiency correlates strongly with severe COVID outcomes. Sunlight exposure is a free, simple, well-documented contributor to immune function. Neither was emphasized. Why? We can now entertain the idea that no one decided to suppress them. The decision space inside captured public health institutions had no slot for free, simple, non-pharmaceutical interventions. The institutional pairing of credentialed-expert knowledge with specific-product recommendation had been operating for decades. Free and simple does not generate billable encounters, does not require expert mediation, and undermines the urgency frame that justifies emergency authority. So vitamin D was arguably structurally invisible to those inside the institution, and the public never heard about it from the channels that were claiming to inform them. The denier reads this as oversight, an Accident. The conspiracy theorist reads it as deliberate suppression, a Conspiracy. The most likely reading is Capture: structural invisibility, no decision required, the cumulative effect of an institution producing the outputs its selection pressures shape it to produce. That reading could be wrong at the edges, and some specific suppression may yet turn out to have been more deliberate, but the bulk of the pattern fits the Capture quadrant best.
The closing of beaches, parks, and trails. This reads as mostly Capture with a small Misconduct component, again as a likely placement rather than a settled one. The early closures had genuine uncertainty driving them. As evidence accumulated that outdoor transmission was negligible, the closures persisted past the point the data justified. Why? Probably not because someone designed them to constrain cognitive autonomy, though they had that effect. But rather because policies that signaled seriousness, that demonstrated institutional response, that justified expanded emergency authority, were the policies that survived inside coalitional pressures. Reopening too early would have been politically costly. Keeping closures in place was politically free. So the closures continued. There were also specific officials whose individual choices kept particular closures going past defensible windows, and those specific choices are Misconduct: intentional, local, owned by a person. But the broader pattern seems to me as Capture: aligned action across many actors producing harmful outcomes that none of them experienced as the operative goal.
Ivermectin and NAC. This looks like mostly Capture with a clear edge into Conspiracy. Under FDA emergency use authorization rules, an EUA is contingent on the absence of an adequate alternative therapy. Any plausible alternative therapy threatens the legal basis of the EUA. This is not conspiracy theory. It is regulatory architecture. So when ivermectin began being used off-label by physicians and discussed publicly as a possible treatment, the institutional response was sharp and coordinated. The "you are not a horse" framing was a deliberate communication choice. The Twitter Files later documented government coordination with platforms specifically on ivermectin and related substances. NAC was administratively pushed off Amazon. As much as it looks like it, none of this need necessarily have been master-planned conspiracy. But it was real coordination, with real operational discipline, around protecting a specific regulatory framework. The deciders almost certainly would have told themselves and their colleagues that they were protecting public health from misinformation. The operative function was protecting the EUA. This is where Capture shades into Conspiracy: there was enough conscious coordination around a known objective that the harm stops being purely emergent, while the participants still would not have described themselves as conspirators.
The Twitter Files coordination on speech. Conspiracy territory, in part, in the precise sense the map gives the word. The documents released after Musk's acquisition showed direct government communication with platform moderators about specific accounts and specific content categories. This was coordinated. It was intentional. The participants knew they were doing it. The conspiracy theorist was correct that this happened. Where that reading potentially overstates is in imagining the coordination was master-planned by some unified decision-maker. The Files show many different actors with overlapping concerns, working through informal pressure channels, each operating within their own institutional logic. Coordination and intent, yes. Single master plan, no… or maybe. This sure seems like it was part of an "engineering of consent” plan. Genuine Conspiracy requires conscious coordinated harm, which is what the Files show.
These are just examples. What we know is also incomplete. Subsequent disclosures have indicated that the Department of Defense played a larger role in portions of the pandemic response than was publicly understood at the time, including in vaccine procurement architecture and information operations. These layers of involvement were not visible in the early Twitter Files releases. The Conspiracy corner of the COVID response may be larger than the Twitter Files alone make visible. The most accurate working statement is that even what comes closest to traditional conspiracy in the COVID response still may not need to match the master-planning frame as the standard theory imagines it, while leaving open that more deliberately designed coordination may yet come to light.
The vaccine itself is the hardest case, and an honest use of the map cannot route around it. Start with the part that is most human and most sympathetic. The desire to trust a medical solution in the middle of a frightening pandemic was enormous and entirely understandable, and the impulse to follow authoritative medical voices is not a weakness but the same coalitional deference that makes ordinary social life possible. Most people who trusted the vaccine were doing the reasonable thing with the information and the authorities available to them. That has to be said first, because the point of the map is not to indict the public for trusting; it is to ask what the trusted institutions were actually doing.
What they were doing gave real grounds for question, and these are only some of the red flags rather than a complete bill. The placebo control groups in the trials were unblinded and offered the vaccine relatively early, a decision with a stated ethical rationale that also had the effect of destroying the long-term controlled comparison that would have revealed later harms. Plausible alternative treatments were suppressed in ways that, not coincidentally, protected the legal basis of the emergency authorization. Transparency was poor, and the manufacturers sought to delay the release of their trial data for decades rather than months. The very definition of "vaccine" was revised in official sources during this period in ways that smoothed public messaging. To these one could add the shifting and at times contradictory guidance on masking and transmission, and more besides. The pharmaceutical industry, it is worth remembering, brings a genuinely and particularly checkered history to all of this, a documented record of suppressed trials and settled fraud that makes questioning its claims the reasonable default rather than a fringe reflex.
Taken together, these point toward decisions that produced harm, or that a reasonable person has grounds to suspect produced harm. And here is exactly where the map earns its keep, because the binary it replaces offers only two readings of that suspicion: either nothing untoward happened, or a conscious conspiracy to harm did. The map allows what is almost certainly the truth, which is a plurality of motives distributed mostly across Capture with a hard edge into Conspiracy. There were large financial incentives to suppress unfavorable data, and that motive edges toward conscious intent or willful blindness. There was the ordinary desire to go along with the group, which is pure Capture. There was the pressure not to put one's position, funding, or standing in jeopardy, which is the careerist silence the rest of this essay has been describing. One outcome, many motives, spanning the map. The financial-suppression piece is the one a hostile reader will most want to dismiss and therefore the one that needs the firmest sourcing; the go-along and protect-my-position pieces are so ordinary that no sourcing is required, because everyone has felt them.
This case also answers the standard objection to any large-scale institutional harm, the objection that always sounds decisive: you could never get that many people to go along with something wrong, all those scientists and regulators and clinicians would have had to be in on it. The answer is that you do not need them in on it. You need a relatively small number of people at the top, and after that the coalitional machinery does the work, because people will generally go along with whatever keeps their position secure. The thousands did not need to be deceived or recruited. They needed only to do their narrow jobs, defer to the authorities above them, and decline to be the one who stood up. That is not conspiracy. It is Capture, and it scales to any size precisely because it asks so little of each participant.
The reason this matters is that it is the only frame that lets an honest observer hold the harms without being forced into a master plan. As richer counter-documentation of actual harms accumulates, it becomes genuinely hard to look at the results and not feel that intention was present somewhere. Maybe it was. It is not unreasonable to notice that some powerful figures have spoken openly of desires for depopulation or for managing the planet's human footprint, and to wonder. But if one rejects the coalitional mechanism entirely, there is nowhere left to stand except full conspiracy, because real harm plus real coordination with no Capture in between can only resolve into a plan. The map keeps the third option alive. A genuine Conspiracy core can sit inside a Capture body, the small group of deliberate actors surrounded by the vastly larger group held in place by coalitional pressure, and both can be true at once. The framework does not rule out the conscious core. It explains how a conscious core, if it exists, propagates its effects through tens of thousands of people who were never part of any plan.
The clearest single tell that part of this sat near the Conspiracy edge is the use of recognizable propaganda methodology, the same toolkit the ivermectin response displayed. Beyond the "you are not a horse" framing, there was the documented paying of social-media influencers to promote the official line, the active denigration of people who raised questions, and the deplatforming of credentialed dissenters. These are not the signatures of emergent drift. Coordinated message discipline and the systematic suppression of dissent are the signatures of intentional communication management, which is why the vaccine case sits so tight on the line between Capture and Conspiracy. The bulk of participant behavior stayed in Capture. The communication-management layer pushed hard toward Conspiracy. The map is what lets us say both sentences without contradiction.
Looking at the COVID response across the map, the pattern that emerges is consistent. Most of the general harm probably sits in the actions of those in Capture. A meaningful slice sits in Conspiracy, especially around ivermectin, platform speech coordination, and the communication management surrounding the vaccine. Some sits in Misconduct, specific officials making specific decisions that crossed into intentional harm. Very little of it sits in Accident, despite the official narrative insisting that was where it all lived. The Accident framing protected the institution by mapping every event into the benign corner regardless of what the events actually showed.
This is the value of the map. Without it, the COVID conversation oscillates between two loud voices, neither of which can describe what actually happened, because each has only its one word. With it, the events sort cleanly. Different parts of the same response belong to different corners. The institutional architecture produced different operative functions in different domains, and the map lets the reader hold them all at once without collapsing them into a single narrative, although easy blame and its emotional satisfaction are reduced.
The Architecture of Upstream Decisions
A note on the architectural language before this section uses it heavily. Throughout this essay I am drawing on a long psychological tradition that distinguishes conscious deliberative cognition from the unconscious intuitive cognition beneath it. The metaphor I will use is the rider and the elephant, popularized by Jonathan Haidt and inherited from earlier sources, especially Buddhism. The elephant is the intuitive, emotional, automatic mind, the bulk of what cognition actually is, and trained during childhood by the culture one is born into. The rider is the conscious narrative mind perched on top. The simplest version of the metaphor says the rider does not steer at all, that it only narrates what the elephant has already decided, and for most of the time that may be roughly true. But it is too strong as a general claim, and the more accurate version matters for this essay. The rider does make decisions. What the rider does not do is set the boundaries within which it decides. The option-space, the things that even register as available choices, the framings that feel reasonable, the moves that feel unthinkable, all of that is supplied from below, by the elephant and by the cultural programming the elephant has absorbed. The rider chooses, sometimes with real deliberation, but it chooses among options the lower system has already pre-selected and pre-weighted. So an institutional actor can genuinely deliberate, can weigh and reason and decide, while the whole space of what they were willing to consider was fixed before deliberation began. Most human decision-making is elephant-bounded in exactly this way, and the rider's further job is to make the resulting decisions intelligible before and after the fact, to other people and to the conscious self. The framework underneath this essay operates at this level. The protective frame is what the rider produces and believes. The operative function is what the bounded choices actually serve. Institutional decisions look from the outside like products of free rider-level deliberation, but most of what they actually are is constrained choice inside an option-space the elephant defined, with rider-level justification.
Institutions show the same structure, and the separation between narrative and operative function is architectural rather than accidental. The standard account of institutional capture imagines an institution forming around a legitimate purpose, doing that work for some period, and then drifting toward capture and extraction. My sharper claim is that institutions cannot form or grow without the separation already in place. An institution requires two things to exist at scale. It needs an idealized narrative to attract personnel, funding, and public legitimacy. And it needs an operative function that meets a hard material requirement: the organization has to make money, grow, secure its budget, or otherwise produce the value that keeps it alive. That requirement is not optional and not cynical; an institution that does not sustain itself materially simply ceases to exist, so every institution that persists is, by selection, one that solved the problem of sustaining itself. The idealized narrative is what it says it is for. The operative function is what actually keeps the lights on. An institution with only the narrative would have no resources to grow. An institution with only the operative function would have no legitimacy to attract participants. The pairing is constitutive, not corrupting. There was no original alignment from which the institution decayed. The separation between covering narrative and operative function is the institution's growth mechanism from the start.
This reframes the work of this essay. The patterns it describes are not deformations of institutions that were once aligned. They are the patterns of institutions doing exactly what institutions do. The framework's analytical contribution is naming the architecture of that doing.
The hardest question for any structural account of institutional harm is the upstream-decision case. Vitamin D being unmentioned can be explained as drift. Beach closures persisting can be explained as inertia. But the ivermectin response required someone, somewhere, to actually decide. Someone wrote the FDA letters. Someone coordinated the platform messaging. Someone signed off on the "you are not a horse" framing. Those were specific choices made by specific people. How can a structural account explain decisions that look from outside exactly like conspiracy?
The answer is that the architecture produces decisions, and lots of them, whose deciders do not narrate themselves as malicious. The rider does not have direct access to the operative function even when making explicit choices. So a decision can be deliberate, harmful, coordinated, and still experienced by its maker as something else.
What the decider experiences is the protective frame. In the ivermectin case, the protective frame was something like: we are seeing concerning off-label use and circulating misinformation, and we need to issue clear public health guidance and coordinate with platforms on misinformation policy. This frame was certainly real to the people inside it. They are probably not lying when they describe their work this way. The cognitive friction that lying would produce is not present.
What is not consciously present in the protective frame is the operative reasoning. The operative reasoning is something like: if a plausible alternative therapy gains traction, the EUA becomes legally vulnerable, the vaccine framework collapses, and the institutional position we have built over the last year is at risk. This reasoning shapes the decision. It is what determines which guidance gets issued and how aggressively it gets coordinated. But it is not what the decider experiences themselves as acting on. It is the operative function the protective frame covers.
There is also a temporal dimension to how these decisions accumulate. Diane Vaughan's work on the Challenger disaster, published in 1996, named a specific institutional pattern she called the normalization of deviance. Practices that begin as exceptions or workarounds gradually become normalized, and once normalized, they become invisible as deviations. NASA did not decide to launch a shuttle that would explode. It slid into that launch through a long series of decisions, each of which felt routine because the previous decisions had made them routine. The institution arrived at fatal conclusions without anyone deciding to. The same pattern recurs across institutional failures. The first time a regulator approves a workaround, it feels aggressive. The hundredth time, it feels routine. The institution does not decide to fail. It slides into failure through the cumulative effect of decisions whose deviance has been progressively normalized.
This is the framework's high-coordination, low-intent quadrant operating in time. No single decider produces the outcome. The outcome is the integral of many small normalizations, each made by someone whose protective frame did not flag the cumulative pattern. Vaughan's contribution to the framework is the temporal axis: the architecture produces decisions one at a time, each of which feels reasonable in context, and the accumulated effect is the institutional pathology nobody chose.
The selection pressure on individuals within institutions amplifies all of this. The people who reach positions where they can make EUA-level decisions reached them through decades of advancement inside the institution. Anyone whose architecture forced them to see operative function for what it is would have washed out earlier in the career path. The architecture that allows someone to hold the institutional narrative sincerely while acting on the operative function effectively is the architecture that gets selected. By the time someone is in a position to make the decision, they are by selection precisely the kind of person who finds the protective frame natural and the dissenting frame alien. The cynical "they are bought off" reading misses this. Bought off implies a more conscious calculation than the architecture actually requires. The decider does not experience the alignment between their interest and the institution's interest as compromise. They experience it as obvious.
This is what makes the moral question more uncomfortable, not less. The framework doesn't say the deciders are blameless. It moves the moral question from "did you intend this" to "what did you do once you had reason to suspect what was happening." By the time ivermectin data was genuinely mixed rather than dismissable, the protective frame was thinning. By the time the safety profile of NAC was obvious, the suppression was harder to defend. The framework asks: what did you do when the cover started slipping? Did you update? Did you ask different questions? Did you push back inside the institution? Or did you continue with the protective frame intact while the evidence accumulated against it? The accountability lands not on the original decision but on the failure to update. That is a question the deciders cannot answer with the protective frame alone.
Three Ways People Stay Inside
The framework so far has described what institutions do. The next question is what kind of person stays inside them. Captured institutions need to be staffed continuously, and the architecture that produces the institutional pathology also produces the people who keep showing up. Three character types appear consistently, each a normal human response to the elephant's evolutionary programming, each with its own moral position, and together they staff most of what institutions actually do. A fourth figure, less common and differently constituted, sits above them and will be taken up once the three are in place.
A note on the underlying mechanism. All three character types are downstream of tribal-survival programming. The elephant evolved in environments where being exposed or expelled from the coalition was often fatal. The selection pressure favored minds that would stay inside the coalition by whatever means available. Belief, when belief was available. Conformity, when belief was not. Attention management, when conformity required it. These are not moral failures. They are what minds of our kind evolved to do under coalitional pressure. The framework names them not to condemn the people who exhibit them, but to specify the architecture of staying inside.
The sincere believer. The institution's narrative has been so thoroughly absorbed that the protective frame is genuinely the truthful frame. The sincere believer is not lying when they describe the institution as doing good. Their architecture does not let them see the operative function for what it is. They have made their peace with the institution because no peace was required. There never was a felt conflict to resolve. The selection pressure has produced a rider that genuinely reports the protective frame as accurate, and that rider has no access to whatever the elephant is actually doing.
The sincere believer is captured at the cognitive level. The moral position is constrained: they cannot easily be held accountable for what they cannot see. Their accountability is mostly about willingness to update once the cover starts visibly slipping. When the evidence accumulates against the protective frame, do they look? Do they update? Most do not, because the architecture that produced the sincere belief in the first place is the architecture that resists updating. But some do. The honest sincere believer who becomes a former sincere believer is the rarest and most morally credible figure in the framework.
The strategic conformist. Sees enough to know better and stays anyway. The strategic conformist is not deceived. They understand, at some level, that the institutional narrative covers something else. They go along because the costs of speaking exceed the costs of conforming. Mortgage, school payments, professional standing, social belonging, the daily texture of their lives. The strategic conformist is captured at the incentive level. They have made a calculation, either explicitly or in the elephant-level pattern matching that feels like instinct, and the calculation produces conformity.
The moral position here is sharper than for the sincere believer. The strategic conformist knew enough to know better. They saw the cover slipping and chose silence. The framework specifies how the architecture produced the conditions of the choice, but it does not exonerate the choice. The strategic conformist is the central figure in most institutional pathologies because most of the people inside captured institutions are this type. They are not deceived; they are domesticated.
The survivor. The third type is what most of the workforce in most large institutions actually is. The survivor manages attention so that the institution-wide question does not come into focus sharply enough to require a position. There are two flavors. The active flavor is the compartmentalizer. They work in their specific department, on their specific projects, doing genuinely good local work, and they wall off the institution-wide picture as belonging to somewhere else. The marketing executive at a tobacco company who runs the corporate anti-bullying program. The compliance officer at a predatory bank who feels they are keeping their corner honest. The teacher at a failing district who knows the system is broken but feels they reach kids in their classroom. The State Department officer whose human rights portfolio is meaningful even when other parts of the department enable autocracies. The journalist whose specific stories matter even when the outlet's overall coverage is captured. The character is sincere about their corner, and that sincerity is real, and it is also what keeps them inside.
The passive flavor is the head-down version. The person who goes to work, does their job, does not ask hard questions, and does not let the larger picture form. They are not actively engaged with local goodness; they are just not engaged with the larger question. The mechanism is the same: attention management so the moral picture does not crystallize into something that would require a choice. Both flavors are survivors, doing what the elephant evolved to do when expulsion from the coalition would be costly.
The mechanism in both cases is cognitive dissonance resolved through attention rather than through action. The psychological cost of fully holding both "I am part of an institution doing harm" and "I cannot give up my position" is too high. The mind solves the problem by no longer fully holding the first proposition. The local goodness becomes the visible part of the work. The institution-wide harm becomes a fact about elsewhere, about other departments, about decisions made above one's pay grade. The survivor is morally accountable in a specific way: they have the cognitive capacity to see, they have the local moral standing to credibly object, and they choose not to use it because using it would dismantle the comfortable position they have built. The accountability is not for being captured. The accountability is for the management of attention that holds the capture in place.
There is a fourth figure who does not fit the staying-inside frame the other three share, because they are not holding any tension at all. They are the steerer we described above, the leader inside the organization who lives and acts in the conspiracy quadrant by conscious and deliberate choice. The sincere believer cannot see the operative function; the strategic conformist sees it and stays quiet; the survivor manages their attention so it never comes into focus; the steerer sees it clearly, names it without flinching, and approves of it on principle. For the steerer there is no gap between narrative and operative, because their narrative is the operative: arranging other people's choices and information for their own good is, in their sincere view, exactly what a competent and responsible elite is supposed to do.
The steerer changes the accountability picture, and not in their favor. The other three types get some moral shelter from the architecture: the sincere believer cannot see, the conformist faced real costs, the survivor was managing an unbearable dissonance. The steerer has no such shelter, because nothing was hidden from them. Their accountability is not for failing to update when the cover slipped, since they never relied on cover. It is for the value commitment itself, the deliberate choice to treat other people as objects to be arranged rather than agents to be addressed. That is a moral disagreement conducted in the open, and it is the one place in this framework where the harm comes not from people who would be ashamed if they saw clearly, but from people who see clearly and have decided they are entitled to manage the rest of us.
The first three types are not exclusive. Most actual people inside captured institutions are blends. A sincere believer at thirty becomes a strategic conformist at forty-five and a survivor at sixty as the institutional reality gradually becomes harder to deny. A person can hold sincere belief on Monday, strategic conformity on Wednesday, and survivor compartmentalization on Friday across different aspects of the same job. The types are useful as analytical categories even when actual psychology is mixed. The steerer is the exception to the blending, because the steerer's position is not a way of managing tension but a settled conviction; one does not drift in and out of believing that managing the public is legitimate work.
The case of Enron is a clean illustration, and a clarifying one, because it shows both the typology at work and the point where the typology ends. Enron collapsed in late 2001 after revelations that its financial position was fictional. The post-mortem literature, most accessibly Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind's The Smartest Guys in the Room, documents how the collapse was made possible by people going along. All three of the go-along types were present, the steerer was present in a particular and instructive form, and the case also exposes a figure the typology does not classify at all.
The sincere believers existed. People who genuinely believed Enron was revolutionizing finance, that mark-to-market accounting reflected real economic value, that the asset-light model was the future. Jeffrey Skilling was probably partly in this camp. He had internalized the McKinsey-style worldview in which the smartest people in the room produced the best outcomes by being smart enough to see what others couldn't, and his belief in his own intelligence served as the protective frame for what the company was actually doing — a belief that, as we will see, shades into something less innocent.
The strategic conformists were everywhere. Enron's rank-and-yank performance system fired the bottom tier of employees each year, producing extreme pressure to conform and produce numbers. People knew the accounting was aggressive and the deals were structured to hide debt, and they went along because dissent meant the bottom of the curve and termination. Sherron Watkins, the famous internal whistleblower, raised concerns to Ken Lay in August 2001 and was effectively ignored. Her experience demonstrates what happened when the strategic conformist position was abandoned. She was not protected. Other whistleblowers existed and were similarly marginalized. The strategic conformists who stayed had calculated correctly about the costs of speaking.
The survivors were probably the bulk of Enron's workforce. People worked on legitimate energy trading businesses or on specific projects without engaging with the broader picture of off-balance-sheet entities and accounting fraud. The company's organizational structure compartmentalized information, and the cultural pressure to focus on one's own deals and one's own numbers reinforced the attentional management. Most Enron employees did not see themselves as participating in fraud. They were doing their specific jobs, using the company's preferred language, and not asking questions about the broader picture. Banality at corporate scale. They were not the architects of the fraud. They were what made the fraud sustainable.
It is tempting to look for the steerers among the architects of the fraud, and the obvious candidate is Andrew Fastow, the chief financial officer who built the off-balance-sheet partnerships that hid the company's debt and manufactured its earnings. Fastow saw the operative function with total clarity. He designed it. But Fastow is not a steerer, and the reason is worth stating precisely, because it marks the edge of this whole typology. The character types describe people constituted by the institution they serve, three who stay inside it by going along, and one who leads it by conviction. Fastow was doing none of those things. He was looting. He pulled tens of millions of dollars out of partnerships he ran against his own employer, which is not a way of staying inside an institution but a way of exploiting one. This is the individual misconduct quadrant: corruption, self-dealing, and fraud. It is a different phenomenon from the go-along personalities, running on a different logic and answerable to a different judgment. It is the Law of Inevitable Exploitation operating at the level of the single actor: an institution that can be looted will eventually attract someone to loot it. The typology classifies the people who keep the institution running. It does not absorb every bad actor inside it. Fastow is not a character type. He is a thief, and filing him under the steerer because he was the cleverest deceiver would confuse the conscious exploitation of an institution with the conviction that managing other people is legitimate work.
The actual steerer disposition at Enron was more diffuse and more ideological than any single villain. It lived in the smartest-guys-in-the-room ethos itself, the conviction that Enron's people were sophisticated enough to see value the market could not, and therefore entitled to manage how the market perceived the company until reality caught up to their vision. In that worldview, aggressive accounting was not fraud but translation, presenting real value in terms the less sophisticated could be brought to accept. Skilling is the figure where this comes closest to the surface, which is why he sits on the boundary between the sincere believer and the steerer: the belief in Enron's superior intelligence was sincere, and it licensed the deliberate management of perception as a kind of duty owed by the smart to the slow. The same disposition ran through the professional class around the company, the structured-finance bankers and the Arthur Andersen partners who treated the management of disclosure as the ordinary craft of people who knew how the game was really played. For them, as for Bernays, arranging what the unsophisticated were permitted to perceive was not a betrayal of the market but the competent exercise of expertise. That is the steerer, and at Enron the steerer was less a person than a culture.
What Enron makes visible is that the framework's character types are not abstractions. They map onto actual people in actual institutions, and the proportions matter. A captured institution has a small number of sincere believers at the top providing the protective frame, a larger middle ring of strategic conformists doing the operative work, and a broad base of survivors who keep the institution staffed and functioning. Above and around all three sits the steerer disposition, rarer than any of them and supplying not the labor of the institution but the conviction that managing everyone outside it is legitimate work. Remove any of the three rings and the institution would collapse; remove the steerers and it would merely lose its theory of why the whole arrangement was deserved. The thief belongs to none of this. He is not part of the institution's metabolism but a predator on it, and an account of who keeps a captured institution running is under no obligation to explain him — only to refuse to mistake him for one of its own.
The Sloppy Cabal
The essay opened with the Epstein documents and the way they broke both camps at once. With the map and the character types in place, that picture can now be stated precisely, and it carries one qualification worth developing before closing.
The standard conspiracy theory imagines master criminals with operational discipline. The actual participants could not manage basic operational security. Texts that should never have been sent. Photos that should never have existed. Financial trails any first-year prosecutor could follow. Group chats that read like fraternity pranks. Emails preserved on a laptop left at a repair shop. Names in flight logs. This is not a contradiction of conspiracy. It is what the framework predicts about the participants. People who reach positions of that kind of access were not selected for careful planning. They were selected for narrative force, coalitional skill, and elephant-level pattern matching. The narcissism that put them in those rooms is the same narcissism that produced the records that brought them down. Their architecture let them feel important; it did not flag the obvious risk of the records they were creating.
The qualification matters. Sloppy participants do not preclude a deliberately designed operation underneath them. The Epstein case contains enough that remains unexplained, and enough that points toward intentional design at the operational level, that the kompromat reading deserves to stay on the table. Compromising material gathered systematically and used for leverage is a known intelligence technique with a long documented history. We do not know where the money came from at the scale he was operating. We do not know who funded the residences and the access. We do not know with confidence what happened in the cell where he died. The participants behaved sloppily because participants are usually sloppy. The operation around them may have been more deliberately constructed than the participants themselves understood.
Three different protections are operating, and the map's value is that it keeps them separate. The first is structural: coalitional loyalty and institutional inertia protect the participants the way they protect anyone embedded in a captured institution, no coordination required. The second, where it exists, is operational: active interests keeping specific information protected, which is what the persistence of unknowns after years of legal and journalistic pressure points toward. The third is the one the Epstein case illustrates most clearly. Normal scandals get investigated because the opposition party drives the engine — its journalists pursue the story, its politicians weaponize the disclosures, its fundraising benefits from the recriminations. With Epstein that engine never engaged, because the implication runs through both parties. Republicans cannot go after Clinton without exposing Trump; Democrats cannot go after Trump without exposing Clinton. The political incentive on both sides is mutual restraint, and the machinery that normally produces disclosure simply idles. This is a protection that operates as if it were coordination while requiring none at all. The people best positioned to drive disclosure are the people most exposed by it.
So the compressed claim the essay opened with resolves into its parts. Real coordination. Real harm. Sloppy, egotistical participants. Possibly deliberate operational design beneath them. Structural cover at one layer, possibly active operational protection at another, bipartisan restraint at a third. Each layer runs on a different logic, and the framework's contribution is not to insist on a single account but to specify the layers honestly, so the reader can hold the question open exactly where the evidence is genuinely incomplete.
The Moral Question Doesn't Disappear
A reader who follows the framework this far might worry that it produces exoneration. If the people inside captured institutions are not consciously malicious, if their architecture has made the protective frame the truthful frame, then in what sense are they accountable?
Specification is not exoneration. The framework moves the moral question without dissolving it. The character types already mark where accountability lands for each — lightest on the sincere believer who cannot see, heaviest on the steerer who sees clearly and approves. What the architecture explains is how the harm was possible. It does not erase what each person did once they had reason to suspect. The accountability survives the explanation.
What the framework does change is the work of reform. If most institutional harm is produced by the architecture rather than by conscious malice, then removing specific bad actors will not produce durable change. The chair shapes whoever sits in it. New occupants of captured positions produce new versions of the same outputs, because the selection pressures that retained the institution go on operating on whoever arrives. Narrative-only change, hero-narrative change, better-people change — all have a near-perfect failure rate across the historical record. What has actually reduced capture is structural channeling: recognizing the temptations of power and control and building constraints the operative layer cannot route around, in positions the captured system cannot reach. That work is harder than punishing villains and less dramatic than overthrowing them. It is what history rewards.
So the accountability question and the reform question come apart. Specific people who failed to update once they had reason to suspect remain answerable for what they did. The work of preventing the next round of the same pattern is structural, not moral. The framework holds both. It does not let anyone off the hook, and it does not pretend that catching bad actors will fix what produced them.
This essay began with the Epstein documents and the failure of the two-camp framing to describe what they showed: real conspiracy, sloppy participants, mostly structural protection, sincere narrators, and unresolved questions at the operational level. The map of harm lets that picture be held. The architecture under the map explains how it became possible. The character types describe who staffs the institutions that make it possible. The essay's contribution is not a hero story. It is a description of how the world actually works, offered to whoever can use it.