Who Owns the Peace Board?
In Washington, nothing says “trust us” quite like a grand civic title wrapped around a money pipeline and a fog machine. If the Board…
In Washington, nothing says “trust us” quite like a grand civic title wrapped around a money pipeline and a fog machine. If the Board of Peace is supposed to be serious governance, the first question should be boring and public: who actually controls the money, and who gets to say no?
That’s the part where the donor perfume starts to smell like a private billing system in a flag pin. You can call it peace, leadership, oversight, or destiny if you want, but Phil McCracken has seen enough polished names on messy invoices to know the trick: give the arrangement a noble label, then hope nobody asks for the receipt. Ordinary people don’t need another ceremonial board. They need the answer to one simple question: who holds the purse, who audits the purse, and why does the purse still seem to belong to everyone except the public?