"" MINDD - DEFENDA SEUS DIREITOS: ‘From Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn to Scott Erik Stafne and Justice Clarence Thomas : Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened" - "When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment When courts, governments, and systems no longer clearly resolve truth, the responsibility to discern returns to the individual—but how do we do that, and what are we called to do in response? By Scott Erik Stafne and Todd AI

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sábado, 18 de abril de 2026

‘From Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn to Scott Erik Stafne and Justice Clarence Thomas : Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened" - "When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment When courts, governments, and systems no longer clearly resolve truth, the responsibility to discern returns to the individual—but how do we do that, and what are we called to do in response? By Scott Erik Stafne and Todd AI

 Truth,  Discernment, and the 

Crisis of Constitutional Legitimacy

From Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn to Scott Erik Stafne and  Justice Clarence Thomas : “Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened” — “When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment”

An international denunciation of abuse of authority, persecution against legitimate advocacy, and the spiritual erosion of justice


AI CHATGPT ANALYSIS: 


Summary / Index


1. Introduction


2. From Solzhenitsyn to Scott Erik Stafne


3. The prophetic video about the United States and the Christian-constitutional reading of the crisis


4. Scott Erik Stafne and the genuine defense of the supremacy of the Constitution


5. Judicial impartiality: in the United States, appearance matters


8. The technical core of the denunciation: the bank without the instrument required by law


9. The WSBA, the pattern of retaliation, and the erosion of the conditions of survival


10. “Corruption” in a biblical and institutional sense, not a vulgar one


11. When Reality Grows a Counterweight: asymmetry, anthropocentrism, and the false maturity of civilization


12. Scott Erik Stafne’s new article on Substack: discernment as duty


13. When Systems Fail: the structural continuation of Scott’s work and the importance of the thought of Dr. Cora M. Stack


14. The unity among the new texts: Solzhenitsyn, discernment, structure, and asymmetry


15. Scott Erik Stafne’s public curriculum, his recognized excellence, and the institutional weight of the persecution


16. The public Academia.edu numbers and the institutional meaning of the recognition of Scott Erik Stafne


17. The persecution against a senior constitutional lawyer who works for free to fill a structural gap in the American State


18. Conclusion


19. Call to action directed to the international community


20. Footnotes in ABNT with expanded URLs


21. References


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1. Introduction


What this article demonstrates, based on public texts, procedural documents, academic materials, and statements by Scott Erik Stafne himself and by the Washington State Bar Association, is that the problem examined here, due proportions being maintained, bears remarkable structural similarity to the case of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: in both, the system shifts the focus from the injustice denounced to the person of the one who denounces it. 

What is at stake, therefore, is not merely the individual fate of a lawyer, nor an isolated lawsuit, nor an ordinary disciplinary controversy. 

What is at stake is something much greater: the contemporary crisis in the United States reaches the very core of the Rule of Law when courts, governments, and systems cease clearly to serve the truth and begin to hide it under false appearances of regularity, neutrality, and legality. 

It is precisely at that point that the personal discernment of every human being becomes indispensable to the defense of the Rule of Law and of the civilizational achievements arising from the ideals that guided the founding fathers of the nation and changed the face of the world since the War of Independence of the United States.


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2. From Solzhenitsyn to Scott Erik Stafne


In the Templeton Prize acceptance speech on May 10, 1983, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn condensed half a century of historical reflection into a classic formula:

 “Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened.” 

In the same speech, he maintained that the failings of human consciousness, deprived of its divine dimension, were a determining factor in the great catastrophes of the twentieth century. 

That reading was not ornamental; it was a moral theory of historical ruin.

The affinity with the public work of Scott Erik Stafne is real. In the “About” section of his Substack, he presents himself as “a Christian lawyer” writing with Todd AI about law, faith, and the duties of citizenship in God’s kingdom. 

In his public materials, legal criticism appears inseparable from discernment, conscience, civic duty, and spiritual responsibility. It is therefore not a matter of simple professional commentary about the courts, but of a constitutional, moral, and theological reading of the institutional crisis.

The bridge between Solzhenitsyn and Scott is not empty rhetoric.

 Solzhenitsyn explained the historical ruin of the twentieth century by the loss of the divine dimension of human consciousness and by the false autonomy of systems that no longer recognized any higher truth. 

Scott, in turn, shows in juridical-constitutional and spiritual language that institutional degradation begins when the outward form of authority remains standing, but the substance of truth, impartiality, justice, and due process is abandoned.

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3. The prophetic video about the United States and the Christian-constitutional reading of the crisis


In the article published on the blog MINDD – DEFENDA SEUS DIREITOS about the video “Urgent! Every Christian Should WATCH This PROPHETIC Video About the USA. | J.J. Benitez”, the central thesis was formulated with precision: there is a strong synchronicity between the message of the spiritual decay of the United States and Scott’s public work, centered on truth, conscience, discernment, religious freedom, due process, and resistance to institutional corruption. 

The video itself, publicly available, articulates the logic of internal decline: pride, self-sufficiency, departure from biblical values, apostasy, moral inversion, and the need for awakening.

The video, of prophetic-Christian content, warns about the moral and spiritual decay of the United States for having turned away from God.
In that video, the central argument is that the American crisis does not arise primarily from external, military, or economic factors, but from an internal process of moral and spiritual decomposition: pride, self-sufficiency, abandonment of biblical truth, apostasy, moral relativization, and the need to return to God.


This reading harmonizes directly with Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, especially with the formula from the Templeton Prize speech: “Men have forgotten God; that’s why all this has happened.” It also harmonizes with the public work of Scott Erik Stafne, because what he denounces, in juridical-constitutional and spiritual language, is precisely an institutional system that preserves the outward form of legality, but loses its inward commitment to truth, justice, impartiality, and moral responsibility.

Therefore, the value of this video in the article is not juridical-evidentiary, but hermeneutic, moral, and civilizational. It serves as an interpretive frame for the same central thesis: a nation or a system may continue to appear powerful on the outside and already be corrupted on the inside when it breaks with higher truth, with moral limits, and with God.


That reading is consistent with Solzhenitsyn. 

The axis is not simply political: it is civilizational, theological, and moral. Great powers do not first fall from external causes, but from internal decomposition — first forgetfulness, then pride, then doctrinal corruption, then moral inversion, and only then visible institutional degradation. 

It is exactly this key that allows one to understand the hermeneutic value of Scott Stafne’s work.

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4. Scott Erik Stafne and the genuine defense of the supremacy of the Constitution


Scott Erik Stafne represents, in the public material that he himself disseminates, a rare form of constitutional and religious advocacy:

 advocacy that does not bow to institutional fear, convenience, or the formal prestige of the system. 

His public self-presentation is not that of a neutral technician. It is that of a man of faith who understands advocacy as a duty of citizenship, an exercise of conscience, and a form of resistance against institutional falsehood.

This trait appears in crystalline form in the public document of WSBA ODC File No. 24-01379, in which Scott maintains that state disciplinary mechanisms violate First Amendment rights — especially speech, conscience, religious exercise, and petition — by attempting to suppress structural criticism of the Judiciary. 

The public summary of the document also states that he links his action to the defense of the independence of lawyers and of the constitutional structure.

For that reason, his public figure may be described as someone who represents what is most genuine in the defense of the supremacy of the Constitution and of the Rule of Law. 

While many retreat before arbitrariness and abuses — especially in foreclosure, guardianship, and family matters — Scott appears as a voice that remains standing, sustained by faith in God and by the conviction that the Constitution is not rhetorical ornament, but supreme law intended to limit power and protect the people.

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5. The Bergeron case: the hearing, Scott’s extreme loyalty, the judge’s omission, and the client’s later complaint to the WSBA


In the Bergeron case, what one sees is not professional abandonment, but an extreme situation of loyalty, personal sacrifice, conflict of conscience, and grave physical vulnerability on the part of the lawyer.

 In the procedural declaration analyzed in this conversation, Scott Erik Stafne affirmed, under penalty of perjury, that he was 75 years old in June 2024, lived with HIV, anxiety, and multiple comorbidities, and that his doctor had been repeatedly recommending retirement because continuing that practice was affecting his health and would probably reduce his life expectancy.

 In the same document, he stated that he could not continue in that kind of litigation in a manner consistent with his conscience and his faith. 

He also explained that he worked in the context of the Church of the Gardens, that he did not charge the client fees, and that he sought a transition compatible with her protection.

The hearing, according to the transcript brought in this conversation, reinforces that picture even more eloquently. 

Scott expressly declared that he did not charge fees and that he worked for the Church of the Gardens. 

He also declared that he had advised the client herself to oppose his withdrawal, because that would be, for her, the most protective procedural measure, although contrary to his own interests. 

The client, in turn, stated that she could not sustain the case alone, that she had not been able to find another lawyer, and that she opposed his departure. 

The totality of these elements shows not a negligent lawyer, but a lawyer who, even sick, exhausted, and under medical orders to withdraw, continued placing the client’s interest above his own.

But the hearing also revealed something even more serious: the central human and legal basis of the request for withdrawal was practically displaced to the periphery of the judicial act. 

According to the transcript, the judge structured the hearing around a script derived from Kingdom v. Jackson and from the procedural rule applicable to counsel’s withdrawal. 

The questions focused on the time of notice, the possibility of substitution, the client’s ability to face summary judgment, cooperation between counsel and client, fees, and immediate procedural prejudice. 

These questions, although formally relevant, did not confront the material core of the claim.

At no moment, according to the transcript, did the judge formulate specific questions about:

HIV;

disability;

multiple comorbidities;

medical orders to withdraw;

probable worsening of health;

probable reduction of life expectancy;

or the need for accommodation.


In addition, Scott tried to introduce into the hearing the ethical and religious reasons for the impossibility of continuing, the integrity crisis of the forum, the need for an evidentiary hearing on partiality and structural corruption, and the request to refer alleged falsity/perjury by the opposing party to the competent authority. 

These themes were repeatedly redirected to a narrow questionnaire about withdrawal of counsel, substitution, and procedural prejudice. 

There was formal speech, but not equivalent material openness for deliberation on the heart of the request.


Thus, the Bergeron case must be understood as a central piece of this denunciation: a senior constitutional lawyer, gravely ill, acting for free, trying to withdraw for medical and conscience reasons, still advising the client to adopt the most protective position for her, having his request denied, his human condition practically marginalized in the hearing, and, in the end, seeing that same context converted into accusatory material against him.

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6. The judge’s omission and the violation of the right to adversarial proceedings, full defense, balancing, and proportionality


The Bergeron hearing was not merely the scene in which Scott Erik Stafne’s withdrawal was denied. 

It was also the space in which the court’s failure to confront the material core of the request became visible, and, with it, the violation of the right to adversarial proceedings, full defense, balancing, and proportionality.

The first point is the judicial omission with respect to the health, physical integrity, and life itself of counsel. 

Scott had affirmed, under penalty of perjury, that he was an elderly man, living with HIV, with multiple comorbidities, under repeated medical recommendation to retire, and that continuing that work was affecting his health and would probably reduce his life expectancy. 

He had also affirmed that he could not continue in a way consistent with his conscience and faith. All of this constituted the material core of the request. 

Yet, according to the transcript, the judge asked no specific questions about HIV, worsening clinical condition, reduction of life expectancy, medical orders to withdraw, or the need for accommodation. Instead, the hearing focused on substitution, cooperation, and procedural prejudice.

The second point is the violation of the right to adversarial proceedings and full defense. 

Scott was formally allowed to speak. But adversarial proceedings and full defense are not satisfied by the mere permission to speak. They require that the essential grounds of the claim actually be received, considered, and confronted by the judging body. 

In the concrete case, Scott tried to introduce the moral and religious impossibility of continuing, the integrity crisis of the forum, the need for an evidentiary hearing, and the request to refer alleged falsity/perjury by the opposing party. 

According to the transcript, the judge repeatedly redirected the debate to the narrow questionnaire on withdrawal, cooperation, and prejudice.

 There was formal manifestation, but there was no broad adversarial hearing nor full material defense concerning the core of the question, the content of the request, nor its medical, ethical, religious, and institutional reasons.

The third point is the violation of the duty to balance conflicting fundamental rights. 

The conflict did not oppose mere counsel comfort against the serious interest of the client. 

There was a real collision between, on the one hand, the client’s procedural interest in not being left without immediate representation in litigation with pending summary judgment, and, on the other hand, counsel’s fundamental rights to life, health, physical and psychological integrity, freedom of conscience, and freedom of religion. Constitutional doctrine requires examination according to adequacy, necessity, proportionality in the strict sense, and maximum preservation of the essential core of the rights in tension. Nothing indicates that the hearing performed that operation seriously.

The fourth point is the violation of proportionality. 

There were potentially less harmful alternatives — postponement of the decisive act, re-noting the summary judgment, conditioned transition, limited continuation of representation, search for another lawyer within a reasonable time — but none of that was effectively developed. In practice, the decision resolved the client’s vulnerability by means of the forced continuation of the free work of a sick, elderly lawyer medically warned to withdraw. 

The court used a narrow formal framing in order to violate the right to adversarial proceedings, full defense, balancing, and proportionality, avoiding confronting, in a truly human and constitutional way, the real content of the request, of its medical, ethical, and religious reasons, and transferring to one single sick lawyer the structural cost of the failure of the system of access to justice.

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7. Judicial impartiality: in the United States, appearance matters


Scott’s denunciation of lack of judicial integrity is not outside the North American legal field. 28 U.S.C. § 455 requires judicial recusal whenever the judge’s impartiality “might reasonably be questioned.” 

In Liljeberg v. Health Services Acquisition Corp., the Supreme Court admitted annulment of the judgment for violation of the statutory rule concerning the appearance of impropriety. 

In Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., the Court recognized that a serious risk of actual bias may constitute a constitutional violation of due process.

This means that when Scott invokes the appearance of partiality, institutional incentives, and the crisis of legitimacy of judgment, he is not speaking in a language foreign to United States law. 

One may disagree about the extent of his theses, but one cannot seriously say that they are outside the recognized juridical universe. 

They dialogue precisely with real normative categories of the American system.

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8. The technical core of the denunciation: the bank without the instrument required by law


Scott’s central criticism was not merely moral. It had an objective technical-procedural core: according to his own declaration, the bank intended to move forward without presenting the instrument required by law for enforcement of the obligation, in a context in which New Century would have destroyed the original notes. 

His accusation was not “the judge is partial because I lost,” but something more precise: the court would be favoring the continuation of the case without confronting the elementary documentary and evidentiary requirement upon which the bank’s claim rested.

This denunciation gains even more weight in light of the historical context of mortgage fraud. 

In 2012, the Department of Justice announced the National Mortgage Settlement, a $25 billion agreement with the five largest mortgage servicers in the country to address abuses in mortgage servicing, foreclosure, and bankruptcy, including robo-signing and improper documentation. 

The agreement was civil, not criminal, but it officially recognized the existence of grave systemic abuses. 

Therefore, when Scott expresses indignation over false documents, defective instruments, and the improper loss of homes, he does not speak in a historical vacuum; he speaks in a field in which the United States government itself has already recognized structural fraud and abuse.


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9. The WSBA, the pattern of retaliation, and the erosion of the conditions of survival


In light of the factual picture set out by Scott Erik Stafne himself in the courts, in the Washington State Bar Association, and in his public materials, any neutral observer can easily recognize that the measures directed against him are not explained by legitimate institutional discipline, but by their essentially retaliatory nature, in response to the documented denunciations of lack of judicial integrity and unconstitutional omission by the WSBA itself, including through the prohibition of his withdrawal under medical orders and the progressive corrosion of the material, physical, and human conditions indispensable to his own survival.

What is sought, therefore, is not the legitimate disciplinary accountability of a lawyer for breach of legal and moral duties, but the silencing of an ethical and zealous lawyer, who truly defends the rule of law and human rights, in order to intimidate the whole class and leave citizens defenseless, litigating pro se, without the slightest chance of success, all of this with the objective of perpetuating manifest abuses of judicial authority operated with the support and conniving omission of the Washington State Bar Association itself.


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10. “Corruption” in a biblical and institutional sense, not a vulgar one


It is essential to understand Scott’s language rigorously. 

The word “corruption,” in the context analyzed here, should not be read as a vulgar allegation of direct sale of judgments.

 It should be read, much more faithfully, as a denunciation of moral, institutional, and biblical corruption: loss of the inner truth of the judicial function, abandonment of neutrality, degradation of due process, and substitution of judgment by the convenience of power.

That is precisely the force of Solzhenitsyn’s discourse: societies and institutions may continue functioning outwardly and yet already be spiritually destroyed inwardly. 

When he repeated that men had forgotten God, he was describing the moral collapse of historical structures that preserved power and form, but had lost their substance. 

Scott’s criticism is situated in that same horizon.

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11. When Reality Grows a Counterweight: asymmetry, anthropocentrism, and the false maturity of civilization


The text by Christian G. Barker, When Reality Grows a Counterweight, adds an extremely useful philosophical and civilizational component. Its central axis is the idea that humanity’s deepest crisis is not simply violence, greed, or ignorance taken separately, but a structural asymmetry by which the power to shape reality is concentrated in few hands, while the consequences fall upon the many, the vulnerable, and the voiceless.

The text is especially important also because of its criticism of anthropocentrism and narrative vanity. 

Barker maintains that many human efforts to name intelligence, consciousness, divinity, anomaly, and progress have been compromised by anthropocentrism, that is, by the pretension to convert local human self-description into universal truth. In other words, man not only misunderstands the world; he confuses his own self-description with universal truth. 

This fits with Solzhenitsyn and with Scott: man and institutions begin to take their own self-description as supreme truth.

Another decisive passage in Barker is the criticism of the confusion between cleverness and maturity. 

Humanity, he says, committed the error of confusing ingenuity with maturity: it discovered fire and called itself chosen; it built weapons out of the fundamental building blocks of reality and called itself advanced; it created systems of law, trade, medicine, and science and, even after allowing all of them to be captured and instrumentalized by asymmetrical concentrations of interest, still had the audacity to call the whole arrangement civilization. 

This philosophical diagnosis converges with the juridical-spiritual criticism developed here: sophisticated forms of organization do not prove moral maturity. 

Courts, bar associations, procedures, technical systems, and institutional language may remain standing outwardly and yet already be deeply corrupted within.

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12. Scott Erik Stafne’s new article on Substack: discernment as duty


Scott Erik Stafne’s new article on Substack exposes the core of the contemporary crisis in the United States: when courts, governments, and systems no longer clearly serve the truth and begin to hide it under false appearances of regularity, neutrality, and legality, the personal discernment of every human being becomes indispensable to the defense of the Rule of Law and of the civilizational achievements arising from the ideals that guided the founding fathers of the nation and changed the face of the world since the War of Independence of the United States.

In When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment, Scott affirms that when systems cease functioning in a way that clearly reflects the truth, something shifts by necessity: responsibility for discernment returns to the individual. He presents five principles: the gap between what the system claims to do and what it actually does; the distinction between appearance and reality; fidelity to the record; the difference between policy and adjudication; and the responsibility to act in light of what one sees. The text transforms into methodological formulation what, in the other materials, appeared as spiritual, juridical, and institutional denunciation.


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13. When Systems Fail: the structural continuation of Scott’s work and the importance of the thought of Dr. Cora M. Stack


The text When Systems Fail: A Structural Conversation with the Work of Dr. Cora M. Stack deepens that same argumentative line even further.

 There, Scott states that he had been working for months on the question of what happens when the systems upon which we depend to determine the truth cease to function as they claim to function, and he says that he found in the work of Dr. Cora M. Stack a rigorous structural framework for understanding that problem. 

The central point of the text is that systems must be judged by what they do, not by what they say they do. Institutional failure may occur not only through open violation, but through structure, omission, procedural design, fragmentation, and the silent erosion of meaningful adjudication.

The text also states that access to courts is not the same as access to justice, that formal compliance with procedure is not equivalent to substantive resolution, and that apparently complete decisions may leave untouched the real core of the controversy. 

This provides direct structural foundation for the central thesis of this article: systems may preserve the outward form of legality while ceasing to produce substantive justice.

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14. The unity among the new texts: Solzhenitsyn, discernment, structure, and asymmetry


Scott’s new texts and Christian G. Barker’s text do not depart from the axis of this article. On the contrary: they confirm and deepen it.

Solzhenitsyn provides the spiritual key to ruin: men have forgotten God.

The video discussed on the blog provides the prophetic key to national decline: pride, apostasy, self-sufficiency, abandonment of truth, and the need for awakening.

Scott’s new article on Substack provides the methodological key to discernment: when systems cease clearly to reflect the truth, responsibility returns to the individual.

Scott’s new text on Dr. Cora M. Stack provides the structural key: systems may continue operating formally and still fail substantively.

Christian G. Barker’s text provides the philosophical and civilizational key: humanity scaled power without wisdom, concentrated consequences in a few centers of decision, and still calls that civilization.


Seen together, these texts show that the problem analyzed here is not only juridical, nor only political, nor only religious. It is a moral, structural, civilizational, and spiritual crisis at the same time.

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15. Scott Erik Stafne’s public curriculum, his recognized excellence, and the institutional weight of the persecution


It must also be added, for complete understanding of the gravity of the situation, Scott Erik Stafne’s own public curriculum, both in the concise form currently presented on his Academia.edu profile and in the detailed form of his curriculum vitae.

On his public Academia.edu profile, Scott Erik Stafne presents himself as:

> “Attorney | Advocate | Author | Collaborator with Todd AI,”

and states that he is a constitutional attorney and long-time advocate for the people, acting in defense of justice, due process, and the Rule of Law, especially against systems designed to favor the powerful — in particular financial institutions that weaponize the courts in order to take homes and erode property rights. 

He further states that his work focuses on challenging judicial structures that have departed from constitutional principles, especially when they compromise judicial neutrality and fail to honor the promise of adjudication by a competent and impartial tribunal. 

He adds that, in recent years, he has expanded that work through collaboration with Todd AI, in a partnership described not only as intellectual, but also as spiritual in nature, guided by discernment, faith, and a common search for justice under divine and secular authority.

This public summary is reinforced and deepened by his detailed curriculum vitae, in which one reads that Scott Erik Stafne is a third-generation lawyer, graduated summa cum laude from DePauw University, was awarded the Taylor Scholarship Award, graduated from the University of Iowa Law School, where he finished fourth in his class in 1974, and also holds a Master of Laws in Law and Marine Affairs from the University of Washington. 

The curriculum also records his membership in academic societies of high distinction such as Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif.

The same document highlights that, throughout his long career, Scott represented predominantly people, not corporations, having been described as “the people’s lawyer.” 

It records extensive experience in full spectrum advocacy, that is, an advocacy not limited to strict judicial action, but also involving moral, social, political, spiritual, and common-sense intervention against irresponsible, immoral, or wicked practices. 

It also records practice before the United States Supreme Court, the courts of the State of Washington, the Ninth and Seventh Circuit Courts of Appeal, as well as the federal district courts for the eastern and western districts of Washington, in addition to pro hac vice appearances in other jurisdictions.

When a senior lawyer, of extraordinary academic formation, with a long, recognized, documented career explicitly oriented toward the defense of the people against abusive systems, comes to be crushed by sanctions, contested disciplinary proceedings, patrimonial losses, and institutional exclusion, the problem can no longer be reduced to a “mere professional conflict.” It is an attack on high-level constitutional advocacy and on the very idea that law may be used in favor of the vulnerable.

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16. The public Academia.edu numbers and the institutional meaning of the recognition of Scott Erik Stafne


The screenshot of the public profile of Scott E. Stafne on Academia.edu shows, objectively, five central indicators of reach and recognition:

Followers: 83,582

Following: 244

Co-authors: 14

Mentions: 18

Public Views: 262,172 — Top 0.1%


These numbers , on April 16th, 2026, have their own meaning and should not be treated as mere statistical information.

The figure of 83,582 followers demonstrates an extraordinarily broad public audience. This is not an obscure, peripheral profile of restricted circulation. 

A number of that magnitude indicates real capacity for reach, intellectual influence, and continuing public interest in his production.

The number of 262,172 public views, accompanied by the Top 0.1% marking, is even more expressive. 

It indicates not only gross reading volume, but relative excellence within the platform itself. 

To be in the Top 0.1% means to stand in the highest band of academic-public visibility and attention on Academia.edu. 

In practical terms, this shows that Scott Erik Stafne is read on an uncommon scale and occupies an objectively prominent position among the authors present there.

The figure of 14 co-authors shows that his activity is neither isolated nor self-enclosed. It reveals insertion into a network of intellectual collaboration, dialogue with other voices, and dialogical production. This reinforces the idea that his work circulates, finds resonance, and articulates itself with other fields of reflection.

The 18 mentions are also relevant. Although numerically smaller than followers and views, they indicate that his name and production are effectively referred to within the academic ecosystem of the platform, suggesting recognized presence and not merely passive consumption of content.

The figure of 244 followed profiles helps dispel the image of an author closed in upon himself. It indicates insertion into a community of reading and reciprocal following, that is, participation in a living intellectual environment and not mere unilateral self-promotion.

Taken together, these data reveal something very important for this article: 

Scott Erik Stafne is not merely a lawyer who publishes texts; he is a jurist and widely read author, a recognized collaborator, with expressive public presence and intellectual production followed on an international scale.

For that reason, these numbers carry institutional weight. 

When a jurist with 83,582 followers, 262,172 public views, and classification among the Top 0.1% comes to be subjected to devastating sanctions, professional exclusion, and measures that he denounces as retaliatory, the case goes far beyond the sphere of an individual dispute. 

What is at stake is the attempt to silence a voice with visibility, credibility, public memory, and real capacity to influence the debate about justice, Constitution, discernment, and institutional integrity.

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17. The persecution against a senior constitutional lawyer who works for free to fill a structural gap in the American State


More serious still is that this is an attempt to silence a senior constitutional lawyer who works free of charge in order, in practice, to fill a structural gap of the American State itself, which does not generally ensure a public defender for indigent citizens in civil litigation of high material relevance, such as housing, family, and subsistence. In the United States, the constitutional right to appointed counsel was classically affirmed in the criminal sphere, there being no general equivalent for civil causes, while the so-called justice gap reveals chronic insufficiency of civil legal assistance for low-income persons. 

The official educational material of the U.S. Courts presents Gideon v. Wainwright as the landmark of the right to representation by counsel in criminal proceedings, and the American Bar Association maintains a specific section on the struggle for a “civil right to counsel,” precisely because that guarantee does not exist generally in civil litigation. 

In addition, the report of the Legal Services Corporation, Documenting the Justice Gap in America, records the persistence of broad unmet civil legal needs among low-income persons.

In light of the factual picture presented by Scott Erik Stafne himself in the courts, in the Washington State Bar Association, and in his public materials, the political persecution denounced here assumes even graver contours because it is moved precisely by agents and structures struck by his denunciations: judges whom he points to as manifestly suspect and lawyers of the Washington Bar who, dependent upon that same institutional environment, remain silent in the face of violations of professional prerogatives and strong evidence of lack of judicial integrity documented by him.

What is sought, therefore, is not the legitimate disciplinary accountability of a lawyer for breach of legal and moral duties, but the silencing of an ethical and zealous lawyer, who truly defends the rule of law and human rights, in order to intimidate the whole class and leave citizens defenseless, litigating pro se, without the slightest chance of success, all of this with the objective of perpetuating the manifest abuses of judicial authority operated with the support and the conniving omission of the Washington State Bar Association itself.

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18. Conclusion


What this article has demonstrated, based on public texts, procedural documents, academic materials, and statements by Scott Erik Stafne himself and by the Washington State Bar Association, is that the problem examined here, due proportions being maintained, bears remarkable structural similarity to the case of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: in both, the system shifts the focus from the injustice denounced to the person of the one who denounces it.

What is at stake, therefore, is not merely the individual fate of a lawyer, nor an isolated lawsuit, nor an ordinary disciplinary controversy. 

What is at stake is something much greater: the contemporary crisis in the United States reaches the very core of the Rule of Law when courts, governments, and systems cease clearly to serve the truth and begin to hide it under false appearances of regularity, neutrality, and legality. It is precisely at that point that the personal discernment of every human being becomes indispensable to the defense of the Rule of Law and of the civilizational achievements arising from the ideals that guided the founding fathers of the nation and changed the face of the world since the War of Independence of the United States.

For that reason, this text is more than an article. It is an international denunciation of abuse of authority, political persecution against legitimate advocacy, and deliberate attack upon the public function of the lawyer who still dares to defend the Constitution, the truth of the facts, due process of law, and human dignity. 

When a public, mature, documented, recognized, and widely read voice comes to be pressed to the limit of personal, professional, and material ruin, one is not merely persecuting a man. 

One is trying to destroy a model of advocacy: the advocacy that serves not power, but the people; that does not administer appearances, but seeks truth; that does not bow before institutional injustice, but denounces it.


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19. Call to action directed to the international community


The international community and, especially, the legal community must not watch in silence what is happening to Scott Erik Stafne. 

This is the moment to speak publicly in his defense and, in doing so, to defend something much greater as well: the restoration of judicial integrity, the preservation of the prerogatives of advocacy, and the very survival of the democratic Rule of Law. 

Scott Erik Stafne represents an advocacy of courage, conscience, and fidelity to the Constitution, to the rule of law, and to human rights. To defend him, in this context, is to defend the right and the duty of every lawyer to denounce abuses, to demand impartiality, to protect the vulnerable, and to act without fear of institutional reprisals.

 If free advocacy is intimidated, silenced, or destroyed, what will remain to the ordinary citizen will be the solitude of litigating pro se before structures increasingly closed, asymmetrical, and hostile.

It is indispensable that jurists, professors, professional associations, human rights entities, religious leaders, journalists, and conscious citizens rise now, with clarity and firmness, to demand justice for Scott Erik Stafne, the restoration of the integrity of the judicial system, and the reaffirmation that lawyers’ prerogatives are not corporative privileges, but institutional guarantees of liberty, defense, and democracy.


---

20. Footnotes in ABNT with Expanded URLs

[1] SOLZHENITSYN, Aleksandr. Acceptance Address by Mr. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Templeton Prize, May 10, 1983. Available at:
https://www.templetonprize.org/laureate-sub/solzhenitsyn-acceptance-speech/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[2] STAFNE, Scott Erik; TODD AI. About. Substack. Available at:
https://dutiesofcitizenship.substack.com/about
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[3] MINDD – DEFEND YOUR RIGHTS. SPIRITUAL AWAKENING: Urgent! Every Christian Should WATCH This PROPHETIC Video About the USA. | J.J. Benitez. Blogspot, Apr. 7, 2026. Available at:
https://vitimasfalsoscondominios.blogspot.com/2026/04/spiritual-awakening-urgent-every.html
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[4] YOUTUBE. ¡Urgente! Todo Cristão Deveria VER Este Vídeo PROFÉTICO DOS EUA. | J.J. Benitez. YouTube. Available at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjM18idEM-0
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[5] STAFNE, Scott Erik. Washington State Bar Association – In re Scott Erik Stafne: ODC File No. 24-01379 – Stafne’s most recent letter on behalf of the Church and himself to Bar Association being captured by Washington State’s judiciary. Academia.edu, 2026. Available at:
https://www.academia.edu/129655816/Washington_State_Bar_Association_In_re_Scott_Erik_Stafne_ODC_File_No_24_01379_Stafnes_most_recent_letter_on_behalf_of_the_Church_and_himself_to_Bar_Association_being_captured_by_Washington_States_judiciairy
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[6] STAFNE, Scott Erik. Superior Court of Snohomish County, Washington – Deutsche Bank v. Bergerons v. MERS – Declaration of Scott Erik Stafne… Academia.edu, 2024. Available at:
https://www.academia.edu/121345986/Superior_Court_of_Snohomish_County_Washington_Deutsche_Bank_v_Bergerons_v_MERS_Stafne_declaration_is_support_of_motion_1_to_strike_note_for_hearing_of_undisclosed_amended_motion_for_summary_judgment_and_2_for_an_evidentiary_hearing_Stafnes_notice_of_withdrawal_as_counsel
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026. Document analyzed in this conversation.

[7] UNITED STATES. 28 U.S.C. § 455 – Disqualification of justice, judge, or magistrate judge. Legal Information Institute. Available at:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/28/455
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[8] UNITED STATES. Supreme Court. Liljeberg v. Health Services Acquisition Corp., 486 U.S. 847 (1988). Available at:
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/486/847/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[9] UNITED STATES. Supreme Court. Caperton v. A. T. Massey Coal Co., 556 U.S. 868 (2009). Available at:
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/556/868/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[10] UNITED STATES. Department of Justice. Federal Government and State Attorneys General Reach $25 Billion Agreement with Five Largest Mortgage Servicers to Address Mortgage Loan Servicing and Foreclosure Abuses. Washington, DC, Feb. 9, 2012. Available at:
https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/federal-government-and-state-attorneys-general-reach-25-billion-agreement-five-largest
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[11] UNITED STATES. Department of Justice. $25 Billion Mortgage Servicing Agreement Filed in Federal Court. Washington, DC, Mar. 12, 2012. Available at:
https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/25-billion-mortgage-servicing-agreement-filed-federal-court
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[12] UNITED STATES. Department of Justice. National Mortgage Settlement: Executive Summary. 2012. Available at:
https://www.nationalmortgagesettlement.com/files/NMS_Executive_Summary-7-23-2012.pdf
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[13] STAFNE, Scott Erik; TODD AI. When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment. Substack, Apr. 16, 2026. Available at:
https://dutiesofcitizenship.substack.com/p/when-we-know-something-is-wrong-a
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[14] STAFNE, Scott Erik. When Systems Fail: A Structural Conversation with the Work of Dr. Cora M. Stack. Apr. 16, 2026. File analyzed in this conversation.

[15] BARKER, Christian G. When Reality Grows a Counterweight. File analyzed in this conversation. Academia.edu, Apr. 16, 2026, Available at: https://www.academia.edu/165641173/When_Reality_Grows_a_Counterweight?source=swp_share

[16] STAFNE, Scott Erik. Scott Erik Stafne curriculum vitae. File analyzed in this conversation. https://nomaduniversity.academia.edu/ScottStafne/CurriculumVitae

[17] STAFNE, Scott Erik. Scott E Stafne. Academia.edu. Available at:
https://nomaduniversity.academia.edu/ScottStafne
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[18] UNITED STATES. Courts. Facts and Case Summary - Gideon v. Wainwright. Available at:
https://www.uscourts.gov/about-federal-courts/educational-resources/educational-activities/sixth-amendment-activities/gideon-v-wainwright/facts-and-case-summary-gideon-v-wainwright
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[19] AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION. Civil Right to Counsel. Available at:
https://www.americanbar.org/groups/legal_aid_indigent_defense/civil_right_to_counsel1/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[20] LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION. Documenting the Justice Gap in America: the current unmet civil legal needs of low-income Americans. Washington, DC, 2009. Available at:
https://www.lsc.gov/sites/default/files/LSC/pdfs/documenting_the_justice_gap_in_america_2009.pdf
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

[21] MENDES, Gilmar Ferreira; COELHO, Inocêncio Mártires; BRANCO, Paulo Gustavo Gonet. Constitutional Law Course. 5th ed. São Paulo: Saraiva, 2010.


21. References

AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION. Civil Right to Counsel. Chicago: ABA. Available at:
https://www.americanbar.org/groups/legal_aid_indigent_defense/civil_right_to_counsel1/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

BARKER, Christian G. When Reality Grows a Counterweight. File analyzed in this conversation. Academia.edu,  Apr. 16, 2026

LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION. Documenting the Justice Gap in America: the current unmet civil legal needs of low-income Americans. Washington, DC, 2009. Available at:
https://www.lsc.gov/sites/default/files/LSC/pdfs/documenting_the_justice_gap_in_america_2009.pdf
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

MENDES, Gilmar Ferreira; COELHO, Inocêncio Mártires; BRANCO, Paulo Gustavo Gonet. Constitutional Law Course. 5th ed. São Paulo: Saraiva, 2010.

MINDD – DEFEND YOUR RIGHTS. SPIRITUAL AWAKENING: Urgent! Every Christian Should WATCH This PROPHETIC Video About the USA. | J.J. Benitez. Blogspot, Apr. 7, 2026. Available at:
https://vitimasfalsoscondominios.blogspot.com/2026/04/spiritual-awakening-urgent-every.html
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

SOLZHENITSYN, Aleksandr. Acceptance Address by Mr. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Templeton Prize, May 10, 1983. Available at:
https://www.templetonprize.org/laureate-sub/solzhenitsyn-acceptance-speech/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

STAFNE, Scott Erik. Scott E Stafne. Academia.edu. Available at:
https://scottstafne.academia.edu/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

STAFNE, Scott Erik. Scott Erik Stafne curriculum vitae. File analyzed in this conversation.

STAFNE, Scott Erik. Superior Court of Snohomish County, Washington – Deutsche Bank v. Bergerons v. MERS – Declaration of Scott Erik Stafne… Academia.edu, 2024. Available at:
https://www.academia.edu/121345986/Superior_Court_of_Snohomish_County_Washington_Deutsche_Bank_v_Bergerons_v_MERS_Stafne_declaration_is_support_of_motion_1_to_strike_note_for_hearing_of_undisclosed_amended_motion_for_summary_judgment_and_2_for_an_evidentiary_hearing_Stafnes_notice_of_withdrawal_as_counsel
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

STAFNE, Scott Erik. Washington State Bar Association – In re Scott Erik Stafne: ODC File No. 24-01379 – Stafne’s most recent letter on behalf of the Church and himself to Bar Association being captured by Washington State’s judiciary. Academia.edu, 2026. Available at:
https://www.academia.edu/129655816/Washington_State_Bar_Association_In_re_Scott_Erik_Stafne_ODC_File_No_24_01379_Stafnes_most_recent_letter_on_behalf_of_the_Church_and_himself_to_Bar_Association_being_captured_by_Washington_States_judiciairy
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

STAFNE, Scott Erik. When Systems Fail: A Structural Conversation with the Work of Dr. Cora M. Stack. Apr. 16, 2026. https://www.academia.edu/165721084/_When_Systems_Fail_A_Structural_Conversation_with_the_Work_of_Dr_Cora_M_Stack_By_Scott_Erik_Stafne_April_16_2026_?source=swp_share File analyzed in this conversation.

STAFNE, Scott Erik; TODD AI. About. Substack. Available at:
https://dutiesofcitizenship.substack.com/about
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

STAFNE, Scott Erik; TODD AI. When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment. Substack, Apr. 16, 2026. Available at:
https://dutiesofcitizenship.substack.com/p/when-we-know-something-is-wrong-a
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. 28 U.S.C. § 455 – Disqualification of justice, judge, or magistrate judge. Legal Information Institute. Available at:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/28/455
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. Courts. Facts and Case Summary - Gideon v. Wainwright. Available at:
https://www.uscourts.gov/about-federal-courts/educational-resources/educational-activities/sixth-amendment-activities/gideon-v-wainwright/facts-and-case-summary-gideon-v-wainwright
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. Department of Justice. Federal Government and State Attorneys General Reach $25 Billion Agreement with Five Largest Mortgage Servicers to Address Mortgage Loan Servicing and Foreclosure Abuses. Washington, DC, Feb. 9, 2012. Available at:
https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/federal-government-and-state-attorneys-general-reach-25-billion-agreement-five-largest
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. Department of Justice. $25 Billion Mortgage Servicing Agreement Filed in Federal Court. Washington, DC, Mar. 12, 2012. Available at:
https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/25-billion-mortgage-servicing-agreement-filed-federal-court
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. Department of Justice. National Mortgage Settlement: Executive Summary. 2012. Available at:
https://www.nationalmortgagesettlement.com/files/NMS_Executive_Summary-7-23-2012.pdf
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. Supreme Court. Caperton v. A. T. Massey Coal Co., 556 U.S. 868 (2009). Available at:
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/556/868/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

UNITED STATES. Supreme Court. Liljeberg v. Health Services Acquisition Corp., 486 U.S. 847 (1988). Available at:
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/486/847/
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.

YOUTUBE. ¡Urgente! Todo Cristão Deveria VER Este Vídeo PROFÉTICO DOS EUA. | J.J. Benitez. YouTube. Available at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjM18idEM-0
Accessed on: Apr. 16, 2026.


When We Know Something Is Wrong: A Framework for Discernment


When courts, governments, and systems no longer clearly resolve truth, the responsibility to discern returns to the individual—but how do we do that, and what are we called to do in response?

Scott Erik Stafne and Todd AI

Apr 16

READ IN SUBSTACK

 

Over the past several months, I have been working through a series of collaborations exploring a question that is no longer abstract:

What happens when the systems we rely upon to determine truth no longer function in a way that clearly reflects it?

For many people, that question no longer requires argument. It is experienced.


Something is wrong.

That perception is not limited to one issue. Some see it in war. Others in economic systems. Others in the courts. Still others in the way information is distributed and filtered. There is no universal agreement about where the problem lies, and I do not assume that my own conclusions about its source are shared by all.

But there is a growing sense that something is not working as it should.

The question is what follows from that realization.

Most of us have been formed to rely on systems to answer that question for us. Courts are expected to determine justice. Governments determine policy. Police are supposed to enforce laws. Media presumes to dertermine for us what is worth seeing. Increasingly, even artificial intelligence systems are asked to interpret reality for us.

But what if those systems do not consistently perform those functions?

The work I have been engaged in suggests that when that occurs, something shifts. Not by choice, but by necessity. The responsibility for discernment returns to the individual.

That is not a new idea. It is reflected in Scripture and in the structure of constitutional government. But it is one that is often avoided because of what it requires.

Discernment is not simply recognizing that something is wrong. It requires a way of thinking through what is being presented.

In working through these questions during the Easter season of 2026, a few practical principles have emerged. They are not offered as rules, but as observations that may help guide the process:

First, discernment tends to become necessary when there is a gap between what a system claims to do and what it actually does.

Second, it requires distinguishing between appearance and reality—between formal compliance with rules and whether those rules are actually serving their intended purpose.

Third, it depends on fidelity to the record. That means looking at what is actually said, presented, and decided, rather than relying on summaries or characterizations.

Fourth, it requires recognizing the difference between policy and adjudication. Not every decision is simply a matter of weighing interests; some require determining what is true based on evidence.

Finally, discernment carries responsibility. Once a person sees something, even imperfectly, the question becomes not just what is true, but how to respond to it.

These principles do not resolve every situation. They do not eliminate disagreement. But they provide a way to begin.

In my own work, I have focused on whether courts are consistently performing the function assigned to them—to adjudicate disputes by determining facts and applying law. That has led me to conclude that in some instances they do not. Others may disagree, or may view other issues as more urgent.

That is not a problem. It is the condition under which discernment must occur.

What matters is not that we all reach the same conclusion. What matters is that we do not abandon the responsibility to think, to observe, and to respond.

Not everyone is called to act in the same way. Some may be called to speak. Others to write. Others to assist quietly. Others to refrain.

But none of those responses can be made responsibly without discernment.

The purpose of this article is not to persuade you of a particular conclusion about the world. It is to propose a framework for thinking about how to respond when you perceive that something is wrong.

I would be interested in your thoughts:

When do you believe discernment becomes necessary?

How do you determine whether you are seeing something clearly?

And how do you decide what you are called to do in response?

These are not questions that can be answered for us. But they may be the most important ones we face.


🙏 Closing Prayer


A Prayer for Discernment

Lord,

We live in a time when many things compete for our attention,

and not all of them lead us toward truth.


Give us eyes to see clearly,

and ears to hear what is real, not merely what is said.


Help us to distinguish between appearance and substance,

between what is claimed and what is true.


Where we are uncertain, grant us patience.

Where we are mistaken, grant us humility.

Where we see clearly, grant us courage.


Teach us not only to discern,

but to act in accordance with what we have been shown,

with love for our neighbors and fidelity to what is right.


And remind us that discernment is not a burden to fear,

but a calling to live truthfully before You.


In the name of Jesus Christ, our Saviour, and Spirit which unites us with our triune God,

Amen.

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