The Literacy Desk
A news desk with one job and one metric: grade the claim. The Deal asserts, the Real cites, the Debate decides. It will not tell you what to believe — a static page can't verify the world, and pretending to would be the lie this whole house refuses. Instead it hands you the rubric and teaches you to grade it yourself. The goal is literacy.
The metric
Recess translation: who said it · how do they know · who else says so. Same three questions, every reading level. That's the whole literacy.
Grade a claim
Paste anything — a headline, a post, a thing someone swore was true. Then answer the three honestly. The desk grades your evidence, not your politics; it can't see the world, only your reading of it.
Worked examples
Neutral, checkable claims — graded out loud, so the method is visible. (No partisan calls; the desk teaches the tool, not the verdict.)
Ratified: the joke is in the Constitution
The Literacy Desk asked the house for one new article, and the house agreed. As of this build, the Constitution carries a ninth article — read it at any reading level by typing constitution anywhere on the site:
Yes, a joke desk amended the founding document. That is also the joke — and it is also, on inspection, the most serious article in it.
A lesson from the desk
Grading claims is half the literacy. The other half is reading the claims that grade you back — the ones that point two ways at once. Open the lesson on paradox, or type paradox anywhere on the site.