'Supremacist,' 'Hindu supremacy,' 'far-right' deployed editorially without operationalized decision rules
Definitions section present. Key characterizing terms — 'supremacist' (81×), 'far-right' (57×), 'Hindu supremacy,' 'Hindutva' — used extensively without published criteria distinguishing HAF's positions from conservative advocacy. For an investigation report, D1 requires that characterizing terms be operationalized into decision rules an independent observer could apply. The criteria used to classify specific HAF statements as evidence of 'supremacy' rather than 'conservatism' are not published.
Not applicable for Investigation Report type.
Not applicable for Investigation Report type.
Swap Test applicable to characterization criteria — not fully resolved
Report scope — documenting HAF's organizational positions — is internally consistent and matches the title. Does not claim symmetric coverage of all Hindu American advocacy. Swap Test for investigation reports: would the same characterization criteria classify equivalent positions held by progressive Hindu organizations (HfHR, Savera members) as supremacist? The criteria for 'supremacy' as applied to HAF — opposition to caste legislation, political affiliations, network connections to Sangh organizations — have not been systematically applied by Savera coalition members to organizations on the other side holding equivalent positions. Score of 6 reflects accurate scope disclosure with unresolved criteria asymmetry.
Coalition co-authors cite each other's prior work as independent evidence
2,497 URLs across 333 domains — substantial sourcing breadth. hinduamerican.org (236 citations) is the subject's own record — methodologically appropriate for investigation. The independence problem is institutional: Savera coalition members (Hindus for Human Rights, Equality Labs, India Civil Watch, Dalit Solidarity Forum) have pre-existing advocacy relationships and cross-cite each other's reports. Political Research Associates is co-publisher with documented progressive advocacy funding. The provenance trace for key characterizations would reveal whether independent evidence supports the claims or whether the verification chain loops through the same coalition's prior work.
web.archive.org for 182 citations is the strongest individual verification practice in the non-survey portion of the calibration corpus. Using HAF's own published statements as primary evidence for characterizations of HAF is methodologically appropriate. 2,497 total URLs represents dense sourcing. However no verification tier system is applied: not all citations are equally probative, and the report does not distinguish between primary documentation (HAF's own published statements) and secondary characterization (media or advocacy descriptions of HAF).
Coalition funding not disclosed; conflict of interest implicit but not stated
Coalition composition partially disclosed (member organizations listed). Political Research Associates is co-publisher with documented funding sources including foundations with progressive advocacy positions — this is material context for readers evaluating a report about a Hindu American conservative organization. Conflict of interest is implicit (coalition members have advocacy interests directly opposed to HAF's) but not explicitly disclosed. No individual authors named.
HAF counter-arguments not engaged substantively
Adapted for Investigation Report type. The report does not engage with HAF's substantive responses to the 'supremacy' characterization — responses that, even if ultimately rejected, would strengthen the report's credibility. The report's framing treats HAF's self-characterization as a civil rights organization as inherently bad faith rather than as a contested claim worth addressing. A limitations section acknowledging that some HAF positions are within the mainstream of conservative political advocacy — rather than definitionally supremacist — would be methodologically appropriate.