Modern politics is increasingly a contest between systems that convert events into authority. Raw facts do not govern by themselves; they are measured, selected, named, connected, moralized, and transformed into commands: who must be trusted, who must be punished, what must be funded, what must be censored, what must be believed, and what must be treated as beyond dispute. The deepest struggle is therefore not only over information, but over the machinery that turns information into legitimacy. Whoever controls that transformation controls what a society experiences as real, moral, dangerous, respectable, and actionable.