Video Archive
Each video is fully primary sourced.
The videos cover: how the British Empire worked and who profited from it. Colonial extraction in Ireland, Libya, Jamaica, Korea. The military-industrial complex and who owns it. Propaganda mechanics — Bernays, JTRIG, the illusory truth effect. How capitalism captured your government, your media, your school curriculum, and your idea of what’s normal.
Every video is indexed — title, topic, transcript, research file — in a single table.
→ Video Archive Index
Essay Archive
Over 100 essays. Primary sources throughout — declassified files, shareholder records, colonial legislation, government accounts.
alimcforever.substack.com
To read them, subscribe on Substack. £7 a month. That is the only thing funding this work — no institution, no sponsors, no brand deals.
→ Subscribe at alimcforever.substack.com
What this work actually costs
This research is not advertiser-friendly. No company sponsors someone who documents how banks, intelligence agencies, and hereditary wealth actually operate. This work is funded by the people who read it, or it doesn’t exist.
I left a stable career to do this. I took on legal exposure that comes with documenting state and corporate power without an institution behind me. I publish under my own name, share my face, and am transparent about my operation. The target on my back gets larger every time a piece lands.
The numbers are what they are. Over 300,000 people follow this work. Less than 200 are paying for it.
I understand that the people most harmed by concentrated power are also the people with the least margin to fund the work that names it. The archive exists because I understand that.
I’m still here. The bills are real.
Need access but can’t afford it?
If you’re a teacher, community organiser, student, or researcher without institutional funding — reach out. Tell me who you are and what you’re working on.
If you need the full essay corpus to feed into a research tool, say so. Upload it to NotebookLM or a similar tool and you can query across all of it at once. Without primary sources, those tools default to the institutional narrative. With these essays, they don’t have that excuse.