About This Archive
The Nexus is an independent research archive dedicated to documenting declassified government records, whistleblower testimony, investigative journalism, and the disputed margins of official history — presented clearly, with sources, for anyone to examine.
The Nexus is a research and reference archive. Each record in our collection synthesizes publicly available source material — declassified documents, congressional testimony, peer-reviewed studies, credentialed investigative reporting, and primary historical texts — into structured, readable summaries that allow readers to evaluate the evidence themselves.
We cover topics that span the spectrum from firmly established historical fact to actively contested claims. Our goal is the same in both cases: represent what the evidence actually shows, acknowledge where interpretation varies, and link directly to primary sources so readers can go further.
We currently maintain 188+ investigative records across six research categories:
Every record traces back to a verifiable source — a declassified document, congressional record, published study, or original testimony.
We clearly separate what is documented, what is alleged, and what remains disputed. Speculation is labeled as such.
All records are free and openly accessible. We believe access to information should not require payment or registration.
We cover topics because the evidence is interesting, not because the conclusion is comfortable. Records include mainstream scientific consensus and well-evidenced alternative perspectives.
The Nexus is not a news outlet, and we do not produce original reporting. We are a research archive and synthesis resource. We do not claim that all records represent established truth — many cover contested, speculative, or actively debated topics, and we present them as such.
We are not affiliated with any government agency, political organization, advocacy group, or commercial interest. Our funding comes from advertising revenue, which allows us to maintain the archive free of charge for all readers.
We welcome questions, corrections, and source submissions. If you have access to primary documents or credible evidence relevant to a record, we want to hear from you. Use our Contact page to get in touch.