The Ground Report
Not a poll. Not a petition. A document. With weight.
The Ground Report is the permanent public record of what people said - why they said it, where they agreed, where they disagreed, and what remains genuinely unresolved. It is the thing that lands on the desk of a world leader and cannot be filed away as a form letter.
What it contains
- The strongest arguments for every position, drawn from submissions not editorial judgment
- The strongest arguments against, with equal weight and equal rigour
- Key factual disputes, where the evidence is contested and why
- Unresolved conflicts, named clearly and not papered over
- Full methodology transparency, every conclusion linked to its source submissions
- A demographic breakdown, how many voices, from where, identifying as what
- A transparency statement, confirming human editorial review before publication
How Plinthcore finds who receives it
This is what makes the Ground Report different to everything else.
For every issue, the AI analyses the submissions and the subject matter to identify every body, institution, governance agency, and organisation in the world with the mandate, jurisdiction, or power to act on the findings. You don't need to know who they are. Plinthcore finds them.
Depending on the issue, that might include heads of state and relevant ministers, UN Secretary-General and relevant Special Rapporteurs, WHO, UNHCR, UNICEF and relevant humanitarian bodies, international courts and human rights commissions, peak bodies and regulatory agencies, global universities and research institutions, and every major international and national newsroom.
When you receive it
The Ground Report lands in your inbox at the exact same moment it lands on their desks. Not after. Not summarised. The same document. You submitted. You are part of the record. You receive it when they do.
The one line at the bottom of every Ground Report
Plinthcore invites a public response to these findings within 30 days.
Most won't respond immediately. But the ones who do become part of the next report. And the ones who don't are on the public record as having received it.
What it is not
The Ground Report does not take sides or recommend a course of action. But make no mistake, delivering the structured testimony of thousands of people directly to the institutions that affect their lives is an act of advocacy. It advocates for the voices. It advocates for the record. What those institutions do next is on them, and on the record.