This essay examines the release of high‑profile sealed archives—including the Epstein files—not as revelations of individual morality but as exposures of the moral architecture of the institutions that concealed them. Secrecy is treated as a stabilizing technology, an infrastructural mechanism that governs visibility, legitimacy, and public trust. By analyzing the archive as a moral actor and exploring how hidden structures surface when institutional legitimacy erodes, the essay reframes system exposure as a structural event rather than a scandal. The trial at stake is not legal but infrastructural: what is judged is the system’s reliance on opacity, selective visibility, and moral darkness to maintain operational stability. Positioned within the SR canon, this work extends ongoing inquiries into visibility, governance, and the ethics of concealed infrastructures.
Signal Rupture (Fri,) studied this question.
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