About The Civics Desk
Who we are, how we work, and what we stand for.
What this site is
The Civics Desk publishes explainers about political controversies. Each article takes a topic that's been in the news — tariffs, the Iran war, election interference, public school funding — and explains what happened, what the evidence shows, and what the competing arguments are.
Every factual claim links to official records, court documents, government data, or investigative reporting. We cite sources from across the political spectrum, including conservative outlets, when they confirm the facts we're presenting.
What this site is not
We are not a fact-checker. We are not a news site. We are not affiliated with any political party, campaign, or advocacy organization. We don't cover breaking news — we write comprehensive explainers after the facts are established.
We don't tell you what to think. We present what happened, with sources, and let you draw your own conclusions.
How we work
Each article goes through several steps before publication:
- Claims are verified against at least two independent sources
- We use the most precise language the evidence supports — if something was "weakened," we don't say "killed"
- Counter-arguments are presented at their strongest, not as strawmen
- Numbers are checked against their original sources and noted when estimates vary
- When a claim has been debunked or corrected, we note that rather than repeating it
Our correction policy
If we get something wrong, we want to know. Accuracy is the only thing that makes this site worth reading. If you find an error — a wrong number, a misattributed quote, a claim that's been debunked — contact us. We will correct it promptly and note the correction.
Contact
Corrections, questions, and feedback: thecivicsdesk@proton.me