This paper constitutes a formal civilisational testimony examining linguistic ableism, institutional temporality, and epistemic exclusion within modern knowledge systems. Structured as a multi movement testament, it integrates intellectual genealogy, lived anthropology, disability studies, and institutional analysis to demonstrate how language, procedural time, and credential architectures function as mechanisms of epistemic gatekeeping. The work introduces and applies the Equilibrium Ledger framework to analyse how disabled and neurodivergent intellectual production is systematically delayed, marginalised, or rendered administratively invisible despite substantive scholarly contribution. Written explicitly for archival endurance rather than consensus, this document is intended as anthropological evidence for future scholarly, legal, and historical evaluation of contemporary institutional practices. The paper positions itself within the lineage of Weber, Durkheim, Gramsci, Foucault, Bourdieu, Illich, Kafka, Orwell, Zola, and Manzoni, extending their insights into disability, time, and epistemic accessibility.
Alessandro Grassini Grimaldi (Mon,) studied this question.