Methodology
Adverse Review exists because the alternate legal theory landscape has a credibility problem that hurts everyone — including the people with genuine insights. The sovereign-citizen ecosystem mixes real doctrinal observations with catastrophic legal advice. The legal establishment dismisses all of it without engagement. Neither approach serves the public interest.
This site does something different: it examines specific claims against primary sources and publishes the reasoning, not just the conclusion. Here’s how.
Identify the claim
A specific, testable proposition is extracted from the source material. "Wages aren't income" is a claim. "The system is rigged" is a complaint. We examine claims.
Trace to primary authority
Every claim rests on a reading of something — a statute, a constitutional provision, a court opinion, a regulatory text. We find that source and read it directly, not through the lens of the person citing it.
Steelman the argument
Before evaluating, we construct the strongest possible version of the claim. If the original source makes the argument poorly, we ask: is there a better version that holds up? This is where most debunking sites fail — they attack the weakest formulation and declare victory.
Examine counter-authority
Case law, IRS guidance, legislative history, and scholarly commentary that addresses the claim — all examined with the same rigor applied to the claim itself. The government's position gets steelmanned too.
Render a verdict
Supported. Partially supported. Foreclosed. Unsupported. Unresolved. The verdict reflects what the primary sources actually say, not what we wish they said. Every verdict is accompanied by the specific citations and reasoning that produced it.
Publish the work
The full analysis — claim, sources, steelman, counter-authority, verdict — is published as an essay or finding. Readers can follow the reasoning and check the citations. The site is correctable: if a counter-citation invalidates a finding, the verdict is updated and the original reasoning is preserved for transparency.
What the verdicts mean
Supported means the claim is doctrinally sound and the primary sources confirm it. This does not mean a court will agree. It means the textual and historical evidence supports the reading.
Partially supported means the core observation has merit, but the conclusion drawn from it is overstated, misapplied, or missing critical context. Many alternate legal theories land here — they see something real and then overextend.
Foreclosed means the argument is coherent but has been decisively rejected by the courts. The reasoning may be thin, and we’ll say so when it is, but the practical reality is settled. Raising a foreclosed argument in court will result in sanctions, not a hearing on the merits.
Unsupported means the claim does not survive examination against primary sources. The cited authority doesn’t say what the claimant says it says, or the reasoning contains a fatal logical error.
Unresolved means the doctrine is genuinely contested or internally inconsistent. No honest verdict is possible. These are the most interesting findings.
What this site is not
This is not legal advice. This is not a guide to reducing your tax liability. This is not a sovereign-citizen resource. This is not an IRS apologia. This is a legal analysis project that takes primary sources seriously and publishes what it finds, regardless of which “side” the finding supports.