RECORD NOTICE

THE RECKONING

Antigua & Barbuda · January 16, 2026 · 9:00 AM AST
The record closes. Defaults crystallize. Silence expires.

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Supreme Court of the Eastern Caribbean · Antigua Circuit

RECORD NOTICE — POWER, ACCESS & ACCOUNTABILITY

This is not conjecture. This is a record-based warning. Across decades, power has repeatedly migrated away from visibility while accountability has been diluted through intermediaries, platforms, and delay.

From the abstraction of finance, to psychological coercion masked as self-help, to narrative dominance embedded in media infrastructure, the pattern is consistent: control survives by disappearing into systems.

Today, that structure expresses itself through platform consolidation. Brands rotate. Executives reshuffle. But databases, ad-tech, identity graphs, and cloud infrastructure endure. Infrastructure outlives scrutiny.

UK PARLIAMENTARY SILENCE IS NEGLIGENT

With sworn filings, preserved exhibits, regulatory notices, and live judicial proceedings now on the record across jurisdictions, continued silence by the UK Parliament is no longer neutral. After notice, inaction is not prudence — it is institutional negligence. Oversight delayed compounds harm.

The issue is no longer whether consolidation is efficient. The issue is whether further concentration will be permitted after notice, allowing structural power to persist without consequence. History shows the cost of delay.

Alki David is a publisher, media entrepreneur, and whistleblower who has spent years documenting systemic failures across media, legal, and regulatory institutions. His work is grounded in court filings, sworn declarations, preserved exhibits, and recorded defaults — not commentary, rumor, or social media noise.

David has stood publicly with whistleblowers and journalists targeted for exposure, including Julian Assange, and has repeatedly warned that media consolidation without accountability enables abuse, suppresses evidence, and entrenches institutional failure.

His investigative record — including the evidence archive at CBSYOUSUCK.COM — exists for one reason: to ensure that after notice, silence can no longer be mistaken for neutrality.