The People’s Truth Act confronts a problem most Americans sense but rarely understand: our government cannot consistently prove the truth. Records go missing, timelines don’t align, explanations shift, and institutions struggle to reconstruct what actually happened. These failures aren’t the result of corruption alone — they stem from outdated systems, fragmented information, and processes built for a world that no longer exists.
Written from the perspective of an ordinary citizen rather than an insider, the book traces a multi‑year effort to map the structural weaknesses that allow truth to break down. It reveals how modern governance depends on record systems that cannot meet today’s demands, and how this gap erodes public trust.
To solve this, the book introduces Titanium, a comprehensive truth‑preservation architecture designed to capture decisions in real time, verify them cryptographically, preserve them immutably, and make them accessible to the public. Titanium is paired with The People’s Truth Act, a model legislative framework that mandates this system across public institutions. Together, they form a blueprint for a government capable of demonstrating what happened, when it happened, and why.
More than a critique, this is a solution — a citizen‑built plan to rebuild trust through verifiable transparency. The People’s Truth Act argues that truth is infrastructure, and that real reform begins not in government offices, but with people who refuse to accept “that’s just how it is.”