Truth. Justice. Moral Order.
Applied to the systems the world refuses to examine.
In the ancient Egyptian tradition, Ma'at is the cosmic principle against which every heart is weighed — no exceptions for wealth, status, or gender. This institute applies that principle to the narratives, systems, and structures that shape modern power. When a story repeats without variation across decades, the story itself becomes the variable to test.
Why do trafficking networks survive every high-profile prosecution? Because we're only ever arresting the expendable layer. A data-driven framework for understanding who actually architects these systems — and why no one wants to look.
The full "Follow the Women" analysis in video form — the conversation the television pundits aren't having.
Tracing the theological DNA of Western salvation traditions back to their Ma'atic Egyptian origins.
Ken is a specialist in ancient chronology and Ma'atic theology with a focus on how the oldest documented principles of truth and justice apply to modern systems of power. His research methodology — Systemic Inversion Methodology (SIM) — treats persistent, unchallenged narratives as variables to be tested, not established facts.
His work spans ancient Egyptian cosmology, the theological origins of Western moral frameworks, and the structural analysis of modern institutional failures — including research fraud detection and the architecture of criminal networks that exploit the most vulnerable.
He is currently developing Guardian, a multi-agent AI system for detecting fraud in academic research — applying Ma'at's principles of truth to the $28 billion annual problem of fabricated science.
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