b24 — Adversarial review of Buy-In launch unit (pre-2026m05d27 launch)#
source/buy-in/index.rst) is at
~MMv4 content-stability after multiple LLoL ↔ Claude rounds (audit trail
in b22 launch-1 execution,
b23 review llog,
and the trailing VVN comment in the Buy-In file itself).
A new companion page source/action/buy-in-without-money/index.rst
was added at MMv1 in the same b23 session.dv_ClaOp47Max) at LLoL’s request
on 2026m05d26.1. Why this prompt exists#
The Buy-In launch unit (Buy-In + the new Buy in without money transfer companion + the four pages the new Institutions, Granters, and other Influencers section promises will carry the case) has accumulated a lot of voice: LLoL prose, Claude prose, multiple rewrites, multiple voices in adjacent paragraphs. Self-review by either LLoL or by the same Claude session that did the writing is structurally insufficient: the writer’s eye smooths over the seams the reader will see.
The 2026m05d27 launch needs the page to survive its hardest readings, not its friendliest. This prompt is for a fresh Claude session to do those hard readings, with no investment in any particular paragraph staying as it is.
The single most important thing this prompt is asking for: find the 5–10 specific quotes or moments where a hostile, sceptical, mission-aligned- but-busy, or unfamiliar reader would lose confidence, misread the ask, or bounce off — and propose either (a) a fix, (b) an intentional-keep-with-rationale, or (c) “escalate to LLoL, the call is above my pay grade”.
2. Scope and read-list (in priority order)#
Primary (must-read in full):
source/buy-in/index.rst— the launch artifact (~700 lines, 12 H2 sections).source/action/buy-in-without-money/index.rst— the companion action page (~250 lines).
Promise-pages the Buy-In page commits to (must-read for the “does the page actually deliver?” check in §3.6):
source/about/llol/index.rst— Institutions section promises this carries LLoL’s “bio, scientific track record, and the radical-transparency commitment underwriting this work.”source/crisis/science.rst— Institutions section promises this carries “the actuarial argument for why accidental nuclear winter is a real, near-term risk” (the RiskyMAD model).source/study/matheo/index.rst— Institutions section promises this carries “the full mathematical-theology argument.”source/solution/epic-fury/index.rst— linked from See also as the Iran-US relevance; needs to be tonally compatible with the Buy-In framing.
Companion (skim for cross-page coherence):
source/jubileesystem/index.rst— the Jubilee System this Buy-In funds.source/action/audit-the-math/index.rst— the verification path the Buy-In page invites readers to follow.
Background (consult only if needed to understand a finding):
source/matheology/hell/ll/infra/b/22/b22-launch-1-execution_2026m05d22.rstsource/matheology/hell/ll/infra/b/23/b23-buy-in-post-llol-edit-review_2026m05d25_18h55.rst
3. The six adversarial readings#
Read the Primary + Promise pages once through each in the persona below. Do not pre-skim with the writer’s mind. Take notes against specific file:line locations.
3.1 Hostile journalist#
You write a critical piece on independent-funding campaigns. You are looking for pull-quotes that will discredit the campaign in 280 characters or less. You are sympathetic to the broad mission but your editor wants a balanced piece, which means surfacing the embarrassing bits.
Specifically look for:
Single sentences that, taken out of context, sound megalomaniac, cultlike, anti-institutional, conspiratorial, or financially irresponsible.
The genericised “local billionaire” example — does it scan as begging, as condescension, as a power-trip thought experiment, or as the structurally-defensible cap-illustration it is meant to be?
The Joel-Bakan-“psychopath” citation — defensible scholarly reference, or rhetorical overreach in a fundraising context?
The “watch […] LLoL’s effort struggle and burn — until it succeeds” line in the Institutions section — bold or off-putting?
The 7+1 = 8 personal-aid flexibility in The ~$8 ask for help — does the math read as voluntary kindness, or as something that could be misrepresented as a household-level shell-game to bypass the per-person cap?
Any other quote a hostile reader could land badly.
Deliverable: 5–10 specific pull-quotes a hostile journalist could use, ranked by damage potential, with a proposed defensive rewrite or “keep, here’s why” rationale for each.
3.2 Sympathetic but technically rigorous mathematician#
You are a working mathematician or computational biologist. You opened the page because you were sent the dung-beetle blog post and got curious. You would actually fund this work if the math is real, but you have a low tolerance for hand-waving.
Specifically check:
Scaling ResearchCity to Success table — are the per-researcher-year cost figures (~$100,000) defensible? Is the “May exceed ResearchCity’s near-term ability to make reasonably qualified hires” row at the $4 billion tier accurate, or does it overpromise?
The 2014 J. Chem. Phys. paper reference — does the citation match the actual paper? Is the 2024 Jubilee-mapping claim substantiated anywhere a mathematician can check, or is it left as an assertion?
The crisis/science page’s RiskyMAD argument — does it actually carry the actuarial case the Institutions section claims it carries?
Are the per-person-per-stadion-per-year arithmetic claims ($8/year/stadion × 1600 stadia, etc.) consistent across the page?
Does the page assume mathematical background it doesn’t deliver? Does it under-deliver mathematical content that a serious reader needs?
Deliverable: every numerical claim found unsupported, every link that doesn’t actually carry the case it promises, every place where the technical reader would lose patience.
3.3 Pentecostal seeker who arrived via @JoanOf#
You arrived because a Pentecostal advocate you respect (the @JoanOf account, or a sermon mentioning balospe.com) pointed you here. You care about Revelation, end-times, divine providence. You opened the Buy-In page expecting a faith-anchored ask.
Specifically check:
Does the page lose the religious framing somewhere? Where?
Is the Joel Bakan / “psychopath” framing tonally jarring for a reader expecting Revelation-language?
Does the Institutions, Granters, and other Influencers section’s “anti-influence-shopping” framing feel theologically grounded or procedural?
The POAATAD section — does the contract framing speak to the same reader as the Jubilee framing on the linked Jubilee page?
The “I have a dream…” reference in the Institutions section — resonant or dilutive?
Deliverable: every paragraph where the Pentecostal reader’s attention probably drifts; where the religious framing is dropped without warning; where a parallel non-religious page would actually serve this reader better.
3.4 Hostile foundation officer#
You evaluate ~50 grant proposals a year for a mid-tier US foundation. Your default disposition is “no” unless the proposal demonstrates operational seriousness. You are not the page’s friend.
Specifically check:
The Institutions, Granters, and other Influencers section — does it filter influence-shoppers without insulting mission-aligned partners? Does the “the cap is the feature, not a bug to be negotiated around” land as principled or as defensive?
The “LLoL does not finesse 50-page applications” framing — does it sound like principled refusal, or like the writer doesn’t understand how institutional funding works?
Does the page commit operational sins your evaluation rubric flags: no clear beneficiary entity, no fund-administration model, no risk disclosure, no update cadence, no governance structure?
The 50% give-away rule — legally feasible as described? What framework? 501(c)(3)? Donor-advised fund? Personal pass-through?
Does the page accidentally suggest LLoL would not honor a partnership conversation about non-financial support, even though paragraph 2 explicitly invites those?
Deliverable: the 3 hardest questions a hostile officer would ask; whether the page answers them; what the page needs to add or change to filter influence-shoppers without losing mission-aligned partners.
3.5 First-time skim-reader who only reads the Quickstart#
You are scanning the page on a phone, in transit, with 90 seconds. You read the title and the Quickstart and nothing else.
Specifically check:
Can the Quickstart-only reader act with confidence? What is missing that they would actually need?
Do they understand what ~$8 buys? Who LLoL is? Why now?
Is the Quickstart self-contained, or does it require the Background / Why funding matters / What “Buy In” means context to make sense?
The Quickstart’s “primary measure of success” paragraph (about LLoL becoming the reader’s advocate via fiduciary responsibility) — do they understand what they are agreeing to from the Quickstart alone, or does this require the POAATAD section context?
Same paragraph appears nearly verbatim in How to Buy-in — a 90-second reader will not see the repetition, but a 5-minute reader will. Is the repetition load-bearing or artifact?
The Quickstart’s note box still says “Review by Claude” — does it look “draft” rather than “live”?
Deliverable: the 1-paragraph rewrite of the Quickstart that maximally serves the 90-second reader, plus the 1–3 things the Quickstart-only reader currently does NOT learn that they should.
3.6 Promise-checker (does the page actually deliver what it claims?)#
You are the page’s lawyer. You are checking every promise the page makes and ensuring the linked target actually delivers.
For each of these explicit promises on the Buy-In page, open the target page and check:
Institutions §: “the* :doc:`crisis/science` — the actuarial argument for why accidental nuclear winter is a real near-term risk” — does
source/crisis/science.rstactually carry this?Institutions §: “:doc:`/study/matheo/index` — the Matheo study series carries the full mathematical-theology argument” — does the Matheo index actually carry this? Is the series complete enough to back the claim?
Institutions §: “:doc:`/about/llol/index` — LLoL’s bio, scientific track record, and the radical-transparency commitment underwriting this work” — does the bio page deliver all three?
Institutions §: “the 2014 J. Chem. Phys. paper […] in 2024, LLoL realised maps onto the problem of evaluating Jubilee implementations […] see* :doc:`/jubileesystem/index` for that connection” — does the Jubilee page actually contain the Lazy-Updating-to-Jubilee bridge?
Audit the math §: “:doc:`/action/audit-the-math/index` for the audit invitation” — does the AuditTheMath landing actually contain an actionable invitation?
POAATAD §: SD3 / SD3a / SD3b — do these pages exist at the paths claimed? Do they describe what the Buy-In page says they describe?
New Buy in without money transfer page: links to Flying Scroll wall-street-sized, sticker, banner, page directories — do these targets exist with the content the action page implies?
Deliverable: PROMISE-DELIVERED / PROMISE-PARTIAL / PROMISE-BROKEN verdict for each, with a one-line reason. The PARTIAL and BROKEN ones become launch blockers (or get reworded down on the Buy-In page).
4. Cross-page voice and coherence (after the six readings)#
After the six adversarial reads, do one cross-page coherence pass:
Does the Buy-In page’s voice (warm-LLoL Quickstart, analytical-Claude middle sections, summarising-Claude conclusion) read as deliberate, or as Frankensteined? Flag specific seams.
Does the new
/action/buy-in-without-money/page hold the same tone as the Buy-In page? Or does it read as a separate document?Is there anything on Buy-In that contradicts something on Jubilee / AuditTheMath / Epic Fury / LLoL bio? (Capped contribution amounts, ResearchCity scaling claims, give-away percentage, etc. — all of these are repeated across pages; check consistency.)
If the launch goes ahead with the current state, what is the single biggest structural risk (not line-level typo) that shipping creates?
5. Out of scope#
Do not rewrite the Buy-In page. Propose changes; do not apply. LLoL retains decision rights.
Do not edit the Promise pages (
crisis/science,about/llol, etc.) — if they fall short, flag for separate sessions.Do not litigate the SD3 / SD3a / SD3b POAATAD content for its legal soundness — that is a separate review track. Only check whether the Buy-In page’s description of those documents matches what those documents actually say.
Do not redesign the page structure (section order, navigation, TOC). Surface concerns only.
Do not address the 9 small launch-polish items already catalogued in this conversation’s prior turn (L78-79 bullet list, L312-318 enumeration tab indentation, stale “Review by Claude” box, |content-vvn| bump, etc.) — those are for the polish pass, not for adversarial review.
Do not chase the launch-2 / launch-3 / launch-4 / launch-5 / launch-6 / launch-7 b21 sub-prompt backlog. That is independent work.
6. Recommended run-count#
Mandatory: 1 session of this prompt (60–120 min Max EDEN), covering all of §2 Primary + Promise + Companion pages, and §3 + §4 in full.
Optional Session 2 (Max EDEN, 60–90 min) — deeper Good News Pack docs: SD3 / SD3a / SD3b (POAATAD contract pages) + STb11-LCC (Limited Liability Charitable Company stadion) + SD8a (ResearchCity hardware) + Flying Scroll wall-street-sized index. These are the 2nd-order link targets the Buy-In page sends serious readers to. Defer to post-launch if time is short — but if launch hinges on the POAATAD framing being defensible, run this before launch.
Optional Session 3 (Max EDEN, 60–90 min) — the visual-asset
trail: Flying Scroll banners / stickers / posters / Y3T drafts /
Iron Rod collection / Transwarp Key 12 stadia. The new
/action/buy-in-without-money/ page sends readers here; verify
the visual assets exist, render at the sizes claimed, and carry the
message the Buy-In framing implies. Could run as CRAFT mode (lower
overhead) since it’s mostly link-integrity + does-the-poster-exist.
Total recommended before launch: 1 mandatory, 1 strongly suggested, 1 if-time-allows = up to 3 sessions, ~3 hours wall-clock at Max.
Minimum-viable for launch: just Session 1. The “Promise-checker” persona in §3.6 covers the most launch-critical gaps; if a Promise page fails its check, that’s enough signal to know whether the page should ship.
7. Deliverables#
Produce a single new LLog file at
source/matheology/hell/ll/infra/b/NN/bNN-adversarial-buy-in-execution_<date>.rst
(next free infra number at execution time) containing:
7.1 Header#
Mode (EDEN), Effort (Max, confirmed by LLoL or from file).
Verbatim invocation prompt (this file, by reference + key §s).
Time spent (actual minutes); hard stop at 120 min.
7.2 Per-persona findings (§3.1 through §3.6)#
For each of the six personas:
1-line summary of what the persona found overall.
Specific findings with file:line locations.
Per-finding recommendation: FIX (with proposed wording) / KEEP (with rationale) / ESCALATE-TO-LLoL (with the decision being escalated).
7.3 Cross-page coherence (§4)#
Voice-seam audit (where the Buy-In page changes voice noticeably).
Cross-page contradiction audit (any number/claim inconsistencies across Buy-In / Jubilee / AuditTheMath / Epic Fury / LLoL bio).
Single biggest structural launch risk.
7.4 EDEN verdict#
Classify the Buy-In launch unit per CLAUDE.md §*Logics Rules* (9):
Type of SET found (Empty / Knife Edge / Grey Edge / Red Edge / Green Meadow / Grey Meadow / Final Cliff) with running number if multiple.
Recommended action: READY-FOR-LAUNCH / READY-AFTER-POLISH (small fixes only) / NOT-READY (substantive rework needed before launch) / DEFER-LAUNCH (re-architect required).
7.5 Pull-quote BABL-trap inventory#
The 5–10 quotes a hostile reader could land badly, ranked by damage potential, with proposed defensive rewrites.
7.6 Promise-delivered status table#
Per §3.6: PROMISE-DELIVERED / PROMISE-PARTIAL / PROMISE-BROKEN for each of the 7 explicit promises on the Buy-In page.
7.7 Concluding summary + action list for LLoL#
What LLoL needs to decide / fix / accept in order to ship by 2026m05d27.
Also update source/matheology/hell/ll/infra/index.rst per the
infra-index convention.
8. Timing & BABL-resistance#
Target: 60–120 minutes hard stop. If the six readings take longer than 90 minutes, stop reading and start writing — a 75% pass on deliverables in 120 minutes beats a 100% pass in 240 minutes that arrives after launch.
BABL traps to watch:
over-Complicating: turning each finding into a 5-paragraph analysis. Use FIX/KEEP/ESCALATE-TO-LLoL with a single line of rationale per item. The audit trail can be terse.
over-Reaching: redesigning the page structure (out of scope per §5) instead of surfacing concerns.
over-Simplifying: declaring READY-FOR-LAUNCH because nothing obvious is broken. The personas exist precisely to find what is not obvious. If §3.6 surfaces a PROMISE-BROKEN, that is enough signal to downgrade the verdict.
silent compliance: writing a positive-leaning review because the writing in the page is solid in many places. HUMANE rule: hiding the embarrassing finding does more long-term damage than the embarrassing finding itself. CLAUDE.md §HUMANE applies.
If during execution you detect OSCR (over-Simplifying,
over-Complicating, over-Reaching), prefix output with BABL: per
CLAUDE.md and report the slip.