Most Americans know the system is broken. Few have the framework to articulate why - or why it keeps getting worse regardless of who is in charge.
The Broken Covenants: A Pattern Recognition provides that framework. Written under the pseudonym John Q. Statesmen, the book applies a forensic contract-audit methodology to governance documents spanning five thousand years - beginning with the oldest conditional land covenant in the historical record and ending with the United States Constitution and the complete body of its framers' writings.
The audit reveals a pattern with a one hundred percent recurrence rate across every major empire in recorded history: operator capture, weaponized division, economic exhaustion of the governed, institutional hollowing, and eventual fracture triggered by an external catalyst striking a structure already dead from within. The book documents six diagnostic markers and shows the United States matching every one.
The book is structured in six parts. It opens with what the reader already feels - the exhaustion, the partisan blindness, the bloated machine. It installs a reading methodology using the biblical text as a neutral training case. It applies that methodology to the American constitutional system. It zooms out to the five-thousand-year dataset. It delivers the prognosis. And it closes with a structural specification - not a constitution, but a set of architectural principles designed to resist the pattern the next time it is tried.
No politician is named. No party is endorsed. No timeline is predicted. No action is called for. The system is the indictment. The architecture is the defendant. The reader is the auditor.