Doctrine
The Records
— min

A king without records forgets his lineage; a system without backups forgets its state.

RPO and RTO are not numbers you set — they are promises you have already made to the kingdom. Test the restore. Every quarter. Without exception.

Listen to this essay Audio will be available when the essay is published
— / —

Preview of what is coming

The essay will be organised around five movements, in the editorial tradition of these doctrines:

  • The sutra, restated at length — the principle, the corollaries, and the test that distinguishes a kingdom that follows it from a kingdom that merely cites it.
  • Real-world collapses — three public or near-public case studies where the principle was ignored, with a precise anatomy of how the failure cascaded.
  • Real-world victories — three cases where the principle was followed against pressure, and the system survived what would have ended a less principled kingdom.
  • The anti-patterns — the common ways an organisation rationalises the abandonment of the principle, with a worked refutation of each rationalisation.
  • The operating cadence — the weekly, monthly, quarterly, and annual practices that keep the principle alive in a system whose people will, eventually, change.

Until the full essay is published, the shorter statement of the sutra on the Doctrine page is the canonical reference. Subscribe via the RSS feed to be notified when the deep-dive is published.


Composed inHTML / CSS / JS — no frameworks
TypeFraunces · Inter · JetBrains Mono
SeriesSystem Nīti · Backups
Sutra10 of 15 — The Records
Other essays in the doctrine
03 · Resources Extravagance is the first ruin of kings. The Treasury · ~6,000 words 11 · Security An open gate invites invasion. The Watch · ~6,000 words 14 · Docs If knowledge dies with the king, the realm enters anarchy. The Library · ~6,000 words