Sectors 22–24: Sports, Charity, Spiritual/Religious (Nodes 153–171)
By L.M. Marlowe The Institutional Reformation™ · MARLOWE Certification™ Published April 28, 2026 · Prior Art Anchor: November 7, 2025
Opening Note
This is Part 8 of nine sector segments in my 185-node audit refresh. I am publishing each segment as documented evidence behind the conclusions I laid out in my opening essay.
This segment contains the single most consequential direct restoration mechanism I have documented anywhere in the entire audit refresh. In Sector 22 (Sports), the House v. NCAA settlement — approved by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken on June 6, 2025 — is the largest settlement in NCAA history. It commits $2.576 billion in back damages over ten years to more than 88,000 Division I athletes dating back to 2016, and it establishes an ongoing revenue-sharing system that will move approximately $1.6 billion per year in new compensation directly to athletes through 2035. This is the first instance in my entire 185-node review where a named institutional extraction node class has been ordered to pay back extracted dollars, directly to the extracted parties, in named amounts covering both back damages and ongoing future compensation. It is structurally analogous to my framework's Sovereign Recovery mechanism — extraction recovered for the original source.
I have to also document what House v. NCAA is not. It is not legislative reform; it was court-ordered antitrust settlement that required private plaintiffs and a federal judge willing to approve. It does not resolve the Title IX collision (approximately 90% of back-pay damages were allocated to male football and basketball players). It does not resolve athlete employee classification (Johnson v. NCAA continues under the FLSA). And the NCAA is actively lobbying Congress for an antitrust exemption that could lock in or weaken the current restoration framework. Court-ordered restoration depends on the courts; legislative reform that protects it has not arrived.
Sectors 23 (Charity) and 24 (Spiritual/Religious) move in the opposite direction. The donor-advised fund warehousing architecture remains intact. The 5% private foundation payout floor is unchanged. The IRS gutting at 27% workforce reduction reduces oversight of nonprofit hospital community-benefit standards and church-affiliated tax-exempt entities. The White House Faith Office has reopened and expanded faith-based federal funding routing. The Johnson Amendment — the 1954 statutory firewall against political activity by 501(c)(3) entities — is effectively non-enforced. The combination produces conditions where religious-affiliated extraction architecture has effectively more latitude than at any time since 1954.
What follows is the documented record for Sectors 22 through 24.
Sector 22 — Sports
Sector baseline: $70B annual extraction (MARLOWE published audit)
This is the sector that produced the single most consequential direct restoration mechanism I have documented across all 185 nodes. The House v. NCAA settlement, approved by Judge Claudia Wilken on June 6, 2025, is structurally analogous to my framework's Sovereign Recovery: a named institutional extraction node class (the NCAA and the Power 5 conferences) was ordered to pay back extracted dollars directly to the extracted parties (Division I athletes) in named amounts covering both back damages and ongoing future compensation. $2.576 billion in back damages over ten years to 88,000+ athletes. Approximately $1.6 billion per year in new direct compensation flowing to athletes through 2035. Schools may now share up to 22% of athletic media, ticket, and sponsorship revenue with athletes — the initial cap is approximately $20.5 million per institution per year, escalating 4% annually toward an estimated $32.9 million by 2035. Scholarship caps were eliminated and replaced with sport-specific roster limits. The College Sports Commission, with former MLB executive Bryan Seeley as CEO, is the new enforcement body that takes over NIL and revenue-sharing oversight from the NCAA national office. Deloitte runs the NIL Go clearinghouse that vets NIL deals valued $600+. The remaining sports nodes — NFL, NBA, MLB's century-old antitrust exemption, federal stadium subsidy architecture, the sports broadcasting cartel, sports gambling — were not touched. The House settlement reclassifies broadcast and media rights revenue as NIL for revenue-sharing purposes, which I count as an indirect cut at the broadcasting cartel node.
Node 153 — NCAA / College Sports Governance
MAJOR LANDMARK SETTLEMENT — House v. NCAA approved June 6, 2025:
- $2.8 billion settlement approved by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken — largest in NCAA history. Source: ESPN, June 7, 2025; SI, June 7, 2025.
- $2.576 billion in damages over 10 years to Division I athletes dating back to 2016 for lost NIL opportunities. Source: Sportico, January 5, 2026; NIL Revolution.
- 88,000+ former Division I athletes filed claims as part of the settlement.
- Power 5 conferences pay 60% of damages; remaining NCAA + rest of Division I covers 40% via reduced distributions for 10 years.
- NCAA was on hook for upward of $20 billion had the case gone to trial and lost.
- Effective July 1, 2025: schools can directly share up to 22% of athletic media/ticket/sponsorship revenue with athletes — initial cap ~$20.5 million per institution per year, escalating 4% annually (projected to reach ~$32.9M by 2035). Estimated $1.6 billion in new annual compensation flowing to athletes sector-wide.
- Scholarship caps eliminated — replaced with sport-specific roster limits (football: 105 spots vs. previous 85).
- College Sports Commission established as new enforcement organization (CEO: Bryan Seeley, former MLB executive). Takes over NIL/revenue sharing/roster enforcement from NCAA national office.
- NIL Go clearinghouse (operated by Deloitte) vets all NIL deals valued $600+ within 5 business days. "Valid business purpose" and "fair market value" requirements.
- Title IX collision unresolved: ~90% of back-pay damages allocated to male football/basketball players. Title IX litigation pending.
- Employee classification unresolved: Johnson v. NCAA (FLSA case) continues; could classify athletes as employees with minimum wage/overtime/CB rights.
Status: Single largest sector-level RESTORATION mechanism in entire audit by direct dollar amount to extracted parties — $2.576B in back damages + $1.6B annual ongoing direct payments to athletes. This is athletes recovering value previously extracted by NCAA/conferences/schools.
Node 154 — Power 5 Conferences (SEC, Big Ten, ACC, Big 12, Pac-12)
Federal action since 11/7/2025: Same House settlement applies — Power 5 paying 60% of $2.8B damages. Conferences now operating revenue-sharing system through 2035. Source: same. Status: Material extraction REDUCED from this node (~$1.7B of $2.8B settlement plus ongoing 22% revenue share to athletes).
Node 155 — NFL / National Football League
Federal action since 11/7/2025: No federal action targeting NFL extraction (antitrust exemption, broadcasting rights architecture). NFL's congressionally-granted Sports Broadcasting Act exemption intact. Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 156 — NBA / Basketball
Federal action since 11/7/2025: No federal action targeting NBA. League continues operating under Curt Flood Act framework. Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 157 — MLB / Baseball Antitrust Exemption
Federal action since 11/7/2025: MLB's century-old antitrust exemption (Federal Baseball Club v. National League, 1922) remains intact. No federal legislation reforming it since 11/7/2025. Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 158 — Stadium Subsidy Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- Federal tax-exempt bond financing for stadium construction continues at baseline.
- No federal action restricting stadium subsidies despite long-standing critique.
- OBBBA did not address stadium tax-exempt financing.
Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 159 — Sports Broadcasting / Media Rights Cartel
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- House settlement reclassifies broadcast and media rights revenue as NIL for revenue-sharing purposes — this is a MATERIAL structural shift. Source: HSB Law Firm analysis, June 2025.
- No federal antitrust action against sports broadcasting cartel directly.
Status: Indirect cut via House settlement reclassification.
Node 160 — Sports Gambling / Federal Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- Murphy v. NCAA (2018) framework continues — states authorized to legalize sports gambling.
- No federal regulation of sports betting beyond UIGEA / Wire Act baseline.
- DraftKings, FanDuel, and others operating under state-by-state licensing.
Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Sector 22 Summary
- Baseline extraction: $70B annual
- Federal action since 11/7/2025: MAJOR RESTORATION — House v. NCAA $2.8B settlement (June 6, 2025) plus $1.6B annual ongoing revenue sharing through 2035. Single largest direct-to-extracted-parties restoration mechanism documented in entire audit.
- Direct restorations to extracted parties (athletes): $2.576B in back damages over 10 years to ~88,000 athletes; ~$1.6B annually in new ongoing compensation; scholarship caps eliminated.
My verdict: This is the first sector in my entire 185-node audit refresh where extraction has been MATERIALLY REVERSED with direct dollar restoration to the extracted class. The House v. NCAA settlement is structurally analogous to my framework's Sovereign Recovery mechanism: a named institutional extraction node class (NCAA + Power 5) was ordered to pay back extracted dollars directly to the extracted parties (Division I athletes) in named amounts covering both retrospective back damages ($2.576 billion over ten years) and prospective ongoing compensation ($1.6 billion per year through 2035). I count this as one of only two confirmed direct-restoration mechanisms across all 185 nodes — and the only one whose dollars are flowing to extracted parties right now rather than beginning in 2028 or later. Important caveats: (1) it was court-ordered antitrust litigation, not legislative reform; (2) the Title IX collision is unresolved with approximately 90% of back-pay damages allocated to male football and basketball players; (3) athlete employee classification under the Fair Labor Standards Act is unresolved in Johnson v. NCAA; (4) the NCAA is actively lobbying Congress for an antitrust exemption that could lock in or weaken the current restoration framework. Court-ordered restoration depends on the courts; legislative protection has not arrived.
Sector 23 — Charity
Sector baseline: $100B+ warehoused (MARLOWE published audit)
This is the sector where I have documented zero federal action against the extraction architecture itself since the November 7, 2025 anchor. Donor-advised funds at Fidelity Charitable, Schwab Charitable, and similar institutions continue to warehouse contributed assets indefinitely with no required distribution timeline. The 5% private foundation payout requirement remains at the statutory minimum — no increase enacted, no Trump FY2026 budget proposal addressing it. The OBBBA / Working Families Tax Cuts Act expanded the tax tier on the largest university endowments, but that revenue flows to the Treasury rather than to extracted parties (students). The IRS workforce reduction at 27% has weakened oversight of nonprofit hospital community-benefit standards under Section 501(r), expanding the extraction footprint at the margins through reduced enforcement. The federal grant cancellations DOGE pursued across multiple sectors disrupted the foundation-government grant pipeline indirectly, but that disruption is not a direct cut to the charitable warehousing architecture itself.
Node 161 — Donor-Advised Funds (DAF) / Fidelity Charitable, Schwab Charitable
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- No federal payout requirement enacted for donor-advised funds.
- DAFs continue to warehouse contributed assets indefinitely with no required distribution timeline.
- ACE Act and Initiative for DAF Reform proposals continue but no enacted federal restriction.
Status: Extraction continues at published baseline. Warehousing architecture intact.
Node 162 — Private Foundation / 5% Payout Requirement
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- 5% payout requirement remains at statutory minimum. No increase enacted.
- Trump FY2026 budget did not address foundation payout reform.
Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 163 — University Endowment Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- OBBBA / Working Families Tax Cuts Act increased endowment tax tier for largest universities. Effective for tax years beginning after enactment. Tier expanded for Ivy-level endowments.
- Revenue flows to Treasury, not directly to extracted parties (students).
Status: Modest cut to endowment extraction shelter; revenue captured by Treasury.
Node 164 — Charitable Hospital / Nonprofit Hospital Tax-Exempt Status
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- IRS oversight of nonprofit hospital community-benefit standard reduced via IRS workforce -27%.
- Section 501(r) compliance enforcement weakened.
Status: Extraction expands through reduced oversight. No restoration to extracted parties (uninsured patients seeking financial assistance).
Node 165 — Megachurch / Religious Tax Architecture (overlap with Sector 24)
Federal action since 11/7/2025: No federal action targeting religious tax exemption. ECFA/parsonage exemption architecture intact. Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 166 — Federal Grant-Making Foundation Capture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- Many federal grant programs targeted by DOGE — recipients face cancellations across multiple sectors documented in earlier segments.
- Foundation-government grant pipeline disrupted by federal grant cancellation patterns.
Status: Indirect disruption to private foundation grant-leveraging architecture; not a direct cut.
Sector 23 Summary
- Baseline extraction: $100B+ warehoused
- Federal cuts since 11/7/2025: None to charitable extraction architecture. Modest endowment tax expansion (revenue to Treasury, not extracted parties).
- Direct restorations to extracted parties: Zero.
My verdict: The charitable warehousing architecture is entirely intact. Donor-advised fund reform has not been enacted. The 5% private foundation payout floor has not been raised. The ACE Act and Initiative for DAF Reform proposals remain unenacted. The single federal action of any significance in this sector — the OBBBA endowment tax expansion on the largest universities — captures revenue for the Treasury rather than restoring it to the extracted parties (students). The IRS gutting at 27% workforce reduction means reduced oversight of the nonprofit hospital community-benefit standard, which expands the extraction footprint at the margins. Donors continue to receive immediate tax deductions for contributions warehoused indefinitely in DAFs without any timeline requirement to deploy those contributions to charitable purpose. The architecture that converts charitable intent into perpetual asset accumulation under the donor's control remains exactly as it was before my November 7, 2025 anchor.
Sector 24 — Spiritual / Religious
Sector baseline: $10B+ settlements (MARLOWE published audit)
This is the sector where I have documented federal action moving consistently in one direction: expansion of the religious-affiliated extraction footprint via reduced oversight and expanded federal funding routing TO religious organizations. The White House Faith Office has been revived under the Trump second term and is expanding faith-based federal funding routing — refugee resettlement contracts, social services contracts, and other federal grants are increasingly flowing through faith-based organizations. The Johnson Amendment, the 1954 statutory firewall that limits political activity by 501(c)(3) entities, faces continued non-enforcement. There has been no federal legislative action to repeal it — but the practical effect of administrative non-enforcement and the IRS's 27% workforce reduction is that the political-activity firewall is effectively eliminated in practice. IRC Section 107 — the parsonage allowance housing exemption — remains intact. The Catholic Church diocesan bankruptcy architecture continues processing claims under the federal bankruptcy court system. The Boy Scouts settlement trust continues paying claimants under the pre-anchor framework. None of this is restoration; the extraction architecture has more operational latitude than at any point since the Johnson Amendment was enacted seventy-two years ago.
Node 167 — Catholic Church / Diocesan Bankruptcy Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- Federal bankruptcy court system continues to handle ongoing diocesan Chapter 11 cases (multiple dioceses in active proceedings).
- No federal legislation addressing parsonage exemption or religious tax shields.
Status: Extraction continues at published baseline.
Node 168 — Megachurch Tax Exemption / Parsonage Allowance Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- IRC Section 107 housing allowance exemption intact.
- IRS workforce -27% reduces audit pressure on church-affiliated entities.
Status: Extraction architecture EXPANDED via reduced IRS oversight.
Node 169 — Boy Scouts / Religious-Affiliated Settlement Trust Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025: Boy Scouts bankruptcy trust continues paying claimants under pre-anchor settlement framework. No new federal action. Status: Pre-anchor settlement architecture continues; no new restoration since 11/7/2025.
Node 170 — Faith-Based Initiative Federal Funding
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- White House Faith Office (revived under Trump second term) expanded faith-based federal funding routing.
- Faith-based organizations receiving expanded federal grant access.
- Federal funds increasingly routed through religious organizations (e.g., refugee resettlement contracts to faith-based orgs).
Status: Federal extraction routing TO religious organizations EXPANDED.
Node 171 — 501(c)(3) Religious Organization Architecture
Federal action since 11/7/2025:
- Johnson Amendment (limiting political activity by 501(c)(3) entities) faces continued non-enforcement.
- No federal legislative action repealing Johnson Amendment, but enforcement effectively suspended.
- IRS workforce -27% further reduces enforcement capacity.
Status: Extraction architecture EXPANDED via non-enforcement; political-activity firewall effectively eliminated in practice.
Sector 24 Summary
- Baseline extraction: $10B+ settlements
- Federal cuts since 11/7/2025: None.
- Federal EXPANSIONS: White House Faith Office reopened; faith-based federal funding expanded; Johnson Amendment effectively non-enforced; IRS oversight gutted.
- Direct restorations to extracted parties: Zero.
My verdict: The religious-extraction architecture has been EXPANDED via federal action since November 7, 2025. There is no restoration to abuse survivors, congregants, or other extracted parties beyond pre-anchor settlement frameworks (the Catholic diocesan bankruptcies and the Boy Scouts settlement trust, both of which began before my anchor). The combination of IRS workforce reduction at 27%, the reopening of the White House Faith Office, and the effective non-enforcement of the Johnson Amendment creates a regulatory environment in which religious-affiliated organizations have more operational latitude than at any point since the Johnson Amendment was enacted in 1954. Federal funds are increasingly routed THROUGH religious organizations (refugee resettlement contracts, social services contracts) rather than restored FROM them. The political-activity firewall that has stood for seventy-two years has not been repealed by Congress, but practically it has been suspended by an administration that has chosen not to enforce it and an IRS that has lost the staff capacity to enforce it even if the policy direction changed.
Cumulative Summary, Nodes 153–171
| Sector | Baseline Extraction | Federal Action Since 11/7/2025 | Restorations to Extracted Parties |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22 — Sports | $70B | HOUSE V. NCAA $2.8B SETTLEMENT (June 6, 2025) — largest in NCAA history; revenue sharing through 2035; $1.6B/year in athlete compensation | $2.576B over 10 years to ~88,000 athletes; $1.6B/year ongoing — single largest direct-to-extracted-parties restoration in entire audit |
| 23 — Charity | $100B+ warehoused | None to extraction architecture; modest endowment tax expansion (revenue to Treasury) | Zero |
| 24 — Spiritual / Religious | $10B+ settlements | White House Faith Office reopened; faith-based funding expanded; Johnson Amendment non-enforced; IRS gutted | Zero |
Where I land at the end of Part 8: This segment contains the single most consequential direct restoration mechanism I have documented anywhere in the audit refresh — the House v. NCAA $2.8 billion settlement in Sector 22. This is the first instance in my entire 171-node review (now 185 nodes when Part 9 is added) where (a) a named institutional extraction node class (NCAA + Power 5) has been ordered to pay back extracted dollars (b) directly to the extracted parties (athletes) (c) in named amounts covering both retrospective back damages ($2.576 billion) and prospective ongoing compensation ($1.6 billion per year through 2035).
This is structurally analogous to my framework's Sovereign Recovery mechanism. My framework was built to specify how extracted dollars come back to the original source — what the framework calls Sovereign Recovery. The House v. NCAA settlement is not the framework's mechanism; it is a different mechanism, court-ordered antitrust litigation, that produces an outcome with the same structural shape. Important caveats remain in place: (1) it was court-ordered, not legislative; (2) the Title IX collision is unresolved; (3) the athlete employee classification under the FLSA is unresolved in Johnson v. NCAA; (4) the NCAA is actively lobbying Congress for an antitrust exemption that could lock in or weaken the current restoration framework.
Sectors 23 (Charity) and 24 (Spiritual/Religious) showed no restoration. Both showed expansion of extraction via reduced oversight. The combination of IRS workforce reduction at 27%, the reopening of the White House Faith Office, and the effective non-enforcement of the Johnson Amendment produces conditions where religious-affiliated extraction architecture has effectively more latitude than at any time since the Johnson Amendment was enacted in 1954.
The pattern across this segment is what I would call asymmetric recovery: when restoration happens, it happens because a named extraction class was forced into it through external pressure (court-ordered antitrust litigation, in the case of House v. NCAA) — not because the federal architecture chose to restore. In the sectors where no court-ordered pressure existed (Charity, Religious), no restoration happened, and the extraction architecture expanded.
This is Part 8 of 9 in my 185-node audit refresh series, covering Nodes 153–171 (Sectors 22–24). Part 9 follows: Sectors 25–27 (Gig Economy, Elder Care, Intellectual Property — Nodes 172–185), the FINAL segment of the audit refresh.
MARLOWE Certification™ · The Institutional Reformation™ L.M. Marlowe · lmmarlowe.substack.com · marloweaudit.com Prior Art Anchor: November 7, 2025 · Non-derivative original work
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