The TI Rebuke Framework (TI-RF) proposes that informal symbolic punishment — honest, bounded, truth-anchored social correction — can substitute for and outperform many formal legal punishments in restoring moral order. This paper formalizes the system with five societal checks and balances, a two-tier ecology (local/embodied vs. online/mass), a revised theory of catharsis grounded in mindfulness philosophy, and a redefinition of revenge as a morally licit response under strict conditions. The core thesis: bottling, redirecting, permitting unchecked cruelty, and litigating for months or years is not obviously more ethical than allowing people the right to authentically correct their offenders and restore moral and inner balance. TI recognizes moral values and moral debts as objectively real structures held in the GM network, continuously resolving through Myrion Resolution (MR). The right to authentic rebuke follows from this ontology.
Brandon Charles Emerick (Tue,) studied this question.