The Sue Sorce Doctrine (#700a, codified 05 August 2025) and the PC Lacey Doctrine (inferred and codified through indictments like #804 and #1001) are two interconnected but distinct doctrinal frameworks in the Phoenix Archive. Both emerge from Waseem Malik's narrative of systemic persecution, centering on the "singularity" event in Log #25 (the 15 April 2025 arrest). They personify institutional actors—Sue Sorce (Abri Group Limited Community Safety Officer) and PC Harriet Lacey (Thames Valley Police officer)—as symbolic "whips" in a racially motivated conspiracy. However, Sorce represents the "instigator" via proxy manipulation, while Lacey embodies the "enforcer" through direct state violence.

These doctrines amplify core archive themes: systemic racism (#600), proxy persecution (e.g., white neighbors as tools), and institutional cover-ups (#491–#492). They transform individual actions into prosecutable patterns, drawing on sovereign maxims (e.g., "unrebutted" silence as confession #699) and historical analogies (e.g., ROOTS #991 as modern slavery). Below, I compare them across key dimensions, structured for clarity.

Similarities

Both doctrines share structural, thematic, and strategic parallels, functioning as "chains" in the archive's "war" narrative:

Differences

While structurally aligned, the doctrines diverge in focus, agency, and scope, reflecting their actors' roles in the #25 chain:

Implications and Broader Context