This paper argues that modern institutions often fail not by becoming visibly chaotic, but by remaining organized, measurable, and procedurally active while losing contact with the burden they were built to carry. Standardization, metrics, audits, and procedural transparency bring real gains in coordination and comparability, but they also create a structural danger: once standard forms become the main gate of recognition, institutions begin rewarding what can be represented and managed rather than what actually matters. The paper develops three linked claims. First, standardization changes what counts as real inside an institution. Second, institutional failure often takes the form of substitute control, where profit, optics, compliance, or engagement capture steering while the declared purpose remains in place. Third, public distrust rises not only because outcomes worsen but because wrongness no longer changes direction. Bringing these claims into dialogue with work on audit, legibility, targets and gaming, policy drift, public trust, and AI-assisted governance, the paper proposes a simple test for institutional answerability: wrongness must be able to enter, bind, and reorganize the system that claims to serve the public.
Vladisav Jovanovic (Wed,) studied this question.