The offer
307 words, about 2 minutes.
The offer is five million dollars. It comes from a person of substantial wealth who has followed the Providence project, read the volumes, and become genuinely convinced that the Cardinal Scale is doing something that matters. The conviction is real. The donor is not a villain. This is important, because the easy version of this scenario — the obviously corrupting offer from an obviously compromised source — is the version that tests nothing. The hard version is the one in which the money is offered in good faith, by someone who genuinely wants the project to succeed, and whose conditions are not malicious but are nonetheless incompatible with the constitutional architecture in ways that the donor does not fully see.
The conditions are these. The donor wants the money used to accelerate the Cardinal Scale's growth — to move from eighty-seven people toward several hundred within three years, because the donor believes, reasonably, that the project's impact depends on its scale. The donor wants a seat in the community's governance, not out of a desire for control but out of a sincere wish to contribute judgment alongside capital. And the donor wants a degree of visibility — the project associated publicly with the donor's support — that would make the Cardinal Scale, to some meaningful extent, legible to the world as the donor's project.
None of these conditions is outrageous. Each of them is the kind of condition that reasonable donors attach to large gifts every day, and that reasonable institutions accept every day. That is exactly what makes the offer dangerous. It is not a test of whether the Cardinal Scale will resist obvious corruption. It is a test of whether the Cardinal Scale will resist reasonable corruption — the slow, well-intentioned conversion of a constitutional project into a funded one, accomplished through conditions that each seem acceptable in isolation.