Audit Refresh · Closing Synthesis · April 28, 2026

THE 185-NODE AUDIT REFRESH — Closing Synthesis: What Six Months of Federal Action Has and Has Not Done for the People

Sovereignty & MARLOWE FrameworkApril 28, 2026

Part of the MARLOWE Institutional Reformation™ framework. This essay is anchored in the public record under USPTO, GAO, and DOE filings. All terminology marked ™ is trademarked original work. Prior Art: November 7, 2025. Protected under 18 U.S.C. § 1833(b).

Audit Refresh — April 28, 2026 · 11-piece series:
Opening Flagship · Part 1 of 9 · Part 2 of 9 · Part 3 of 9 · Part 4 of 9 · Part 5 of 9 · Part 6 of 9 · Part 7 of 9 · Part 8 of 9 · Part 9 of 9 · Closing Synthesis

What Six Months of Federal Action Has and Has Not Done for the People, and What I Am Asking the Public to Do With This Record

By L.M. Marlowe The Institutional Reformation™ · MARLOWE Certification™ Published April 28, 2026 · Prior Art Anchor: November 7, 2025


Opening Note

This is the closing synthesis of my 185-node audit refresh. The opening flagship I published on April 28, 2026 set up what I built and why. The nine sector segments that followed — Parts 1 through 9 — published the documented per-node evidence behind every conclusion I drew. This is the bookend.

In this essay I tie the entire audit refresh together. I categorize my findings across all 27 sector architectures and 185 institutional extraction nodes into four directions of federal action since the November 7, 2025 anchor. I document what the cumulative picture looks like when I add it up. I lay out what this means for the health, mental health, housing, education, and care of the people the federal government is supposed to serve. And I close with what I am asking the public to do with the record.

I am writing this not as a partisan and not as a polemicist. I built the audit to a precise sourcing standard with federal documents and citations. I am asking readers to engage with the evidence the same way.


What I Set Out to Measure

When I drew the line on November 7, 2025, I did so with a specific question in mind:

Are the institutional systems Americans pay into actually serving the people, or are they extracting from the people?

Not as rhetoric. As a measurable, sourceable, recoverable accounting question.

I built my framework to answer it. I mapped 27 sector architectures and 185 institutional extraction nodes. I named one terminal node — Line 186, the Sovereign Human — as the accounting unit from which every other node draws. I published the baseline figures in January 2026: $1.53 trillion in annual ghost load running through the U.S. extraction grid; $1.38 trillion across 34 states under parallel calibration; $345 trillion as the global symmetrical figure; $5+ trillion combined annual extraction across the 27 sectors at sector-level published totals.

Then I waited. Six months. I refreshed every node. I anchored every change to a federal document, a CRS report, a budget table, an agency press release, a court order, a congressional record, or a major-press source.

What follows is what the data show, sector by sector, when I add up everything I documented across Parts 1 through 9.


The Cumulative Picture: 27 Sectors, 185 Nodes, One Direction

I have organized my findings into four categories, because the federal action since the anchor does not move uniformly. It moves in distinct directions, and each direction matters.

Category 1 — Sectors Where I Documented Genuine Cuts to Extraction Architecture

Two sectors. That is the entire list.

Sector 4 — Pharmaceutical (Part 2). The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026, signed February 3, 2026, structurally reformed how Pharmacy Benefit Managers earn money in the Medicare Part D program and (effective 2029) in the commercial market. PBM compensation is delinked from drug list price beginning plan year 2028. PBMs must pass through 100% of rebates to plan sponsors. Penalties run up to $10,000 per day for information failures and $100,000 for knowing false submissions. CMS becomes the arbiter of PBM-pharmacy disputes. The Department of Labor proposed an additional ERISA transparency rule on January 29, 2026. The Federal Trade Commission imposed transparency, compensation, and rebate requirements on Express Scripts in a settlement on insulin pricing. This is the most consequential federal cut to extraction architecture I have documented anywhere in this entire audit. Its dollar effect on extracted parties (consumers) is indirect and will not begin to materialize until 2028-2029.

Sector 19 — Consulting (Part 7). DOGE terminated material federal consulting contracts since 11/7/2025: Deloitte 129 contracts cut, $372 million; Booz Allen Hamilton 61 contracts, $207.1 million; Accenture 30 contracts, $240.2 million; IBM 10 contracts, $34.3 million. The General Services Administration placed $65 billion in consulting fees under review across the top 10 firms. McKinsey was already largely blacklisted from federal contracts pre-anchor following hundreds of millions in opioid-related settlements. This is the second-most-meaningful sector-level cut to federal extraction I have documented. The dollar restoration to extracted parties (taxpayers) is indirect — cancelled contracts reduce future federal outlays but do not return prior-extracted dollars. Bank of America has noted the DOGE "savings" claims are overstated; FedManager reported that 794 of 2,300 cancelled contracts in early 2026 will yield no actual savings because funds were already obligated.

That is what real federal cuts to extraction look like in my data: two sectors, one of which (Pharma PBM) takes effect in 2028-2029, the other of which (Consulting) reduces forward outlays without returning extracted dollars.

Category 2 — Sectors Where Federal Action Cut Capacity But Did Not Restore Dollars

Six sectors.

These are the sectors where federal workforce reductions, agency budget cuts, and rule rollbacks reduced the federal government's regulatory capacity — but the reduced capacity does not return extracted dollars to the people. In several cases, the reduced oversight effectively expands the extraction footprint at downstream nodes.

Sector 1 — Family / Child Welfare (Part 1). I documented zero federal cuts to extraction architecture. The Supporting America's Children and Families Act (P.L. 118-258, January 4, 2025) actually INCREASED mandatory PSSF funding by $75 million for FY2026. LA County DCFS — the agency where I built my framework from professional observation in social services beginning November 7, 2025 — continues operating exactly as it did before the anchor. Maximus continues collecting privatized case management fees. Title IV-E architecture is unchanged. Therapeutic foster care premium billing continues. Federal adoption incentive bonuses remain at baseline.

Sector 2 — Energy / Infrastructure (Part 1). I documented $4.9B Grain Belt Express transmission line termination, plus over $20B in additional DOE energy grant cancellations. These cuts cancel future capital that would have built additional grid infrastructure — they do not return dollars to ratepayers. The FERC Co-Location Order (December 18, 2025) found PJM's tariff "unjust and unreasonable" — a structural cut at the tariff level, but no dollar restoration enacted. PJM auctions continue clearing: the 2025/2026 BRA $14.7B; 2026/2027 BRA $16.1B; 2027/2028 BRA $16.4B (cleared December 17, 2025) — $47.2 billion in auction extraction in flight. My active Sovereign Recovery is pending under MARLOWE Certification™ at Node 023 (ATSI/PJM, $4.3B headline / $1.29B at 30%) and Node 025 (ERCOT, $15.0B headline / $4.5B at 30%). I am still working through that recovery channel; it is not yet completed.

Sector 3 — Environmental / EPA (Part 1). I documented EPA workforce -24% (-4,000 staff, lowest level since the 1980s); EPA budget cut $319M in FY2026; Office of Research and Development reorganization saving $748.8M; environmental justice enforcement funding eliminated; FY2027 budget proposal cuts EPA in half and cancels $15B in 2021 BIL renewable energy funds. Superfund proposed for 47% cut. These cuts reduce one form of extraction (regulatory compliance industrial complex) while leaving another in place (unmitigated pollution exposure to the public). Net to extracted parties: zero direct restoration.

Sector 5 — Healthcare Delivery (Part 2). I documented HHS workforce -17,406 staff; CMS budget -$674M proposed; CDC -2,889 staff; FDA -4,332 staff; HR 1 (July 2025) Medicaid cuts (largest in history); SNAP -20% by 2034 affecting ~4 million people. These are not cuts to extraction — they are cuts to BENEFICIARY COVERAGE. The HR 1 Medicaid cuts remove insurance from people; they do not restore dollars to extracted parties.

Sector 11 — K-12 Education (Part 4). I documented Department of Education workforce ~50% reduction; Office for Civil Rights -50%; Title I oversight transferred to Department of Labor (November 18, 2025); $1.7T student loan portfolio default collection moved to Treasury (March 19, 2026). Pell preserved by Congress at $7,395 maximum. These are administrative dismantlings that fragment oversight without returning extracted dollars. Standardized testing extraction (Pearson, ETS, College Board), charter school extraction, EdTech extraction, and special-education compliance extraction all continue unchanged.

Sector 18 — Lobbying / K Street (Part 6). I documented IRS workforce -27% (27,500 staff cut in 2025); IRS regular funding cut $1.1B (9%); IRA $11.7B mandatory funding rescinded. The lobbying extraction architecture itself is unchanged. CoreCivic 2025 lobbying spend: $3.5M. GEO Group similar. Reduced IRS enforcement reduces oversight of dark money and tax-exempt entity political activity, expanding the extraction footprint at the margins.

Pattern across this category: Federal capacity has been reduced. The reductions do not restore dollars to extracted parties; in several cases they actively expand the extraction footprint by removing oversight that previously constrained it.

Category 3 — Sectors Where Federal Action EXPANDED Extraction

Eight sectors. This is where the dominant direction of federal action since 11/7/2025 is most visible.

Sector 6 — Insurance (Part 2). I documented zero direct cuts to insurance carrier extraction since the anchor. Indirect impact via CAA 2026 PBM reform reaches integrated subsidiaries (Optum, Caremark, Express Scripts) but the carriers themselves are unchanged.

Sector 7 — Housing (Part 3). HUD's role is the OPPOSITE of an extraction node — it is a transfer-out from federal taxpayers to extracted parties (low-income tenants, vouchers, public housing). The Trump FY2026 budget proposed cutting HUD by $32.9B (44%) including $26.7B in rental assistance (43% cut), affecting 3.8 million households. Congress preserved most of the funding through FY2026. HUD's December 2025 Continuum of Care funding notice proposed taking housing assistance from 170,000+ formerly homeless people; HUD temporarily rescinded but stated it would reissue with "technical corrections." The threat to extracted parties is loss of assistance, not restoration.

Sector 8 — Criminal Justice / Private Prisons (Part 3). Reverse direction. CoreCivic 2025 net profits: $116.5M, nearly 70% increase year-over-year. Q4 2025 ICE revenue: $244.7M, more than doubled from $120.3M same quarter prior year. GEO Group 2025 total revenue: $2.63B, 8% YoY increase; founder George Zoley described 2025 as "most successful year for new business wins in our Company's history." OBBBA (July 2025) allocated $45 billion for new immigration detention facilities. CoreCivic informed ICE of 30,000+ additional beds available. Multiple facilities reactivated: Dilley TX (2,400 beds, $180M annual revenue projected), Leavenworth, California City, Newark NJ Delaney Hall (1,000 beds, 15-year contract, $60M annual revenue), Baldwin MI (1,800 beds, $70M annual revenue). Extraction at this sector expanded approximately 70% in dollar terms since 11/7/2025.

Sector 9 — Military-Industrial (Part 3). Reverse direction. FY2026 defense budget: $1.01 trillion — first time the Pentagon budget topped $1 trillion. FY2027 budget request: $1.5 trillion — described as the largest defense increase since the Korean War. OBBBA reconciliation funds added $325B+ for defense and homeland security on top of base. Critical Munitions $52.9B; Shipbuilding $65.8B (described by the White House as "largest demand signal to maritime industrial base since FDR administration"); Golden Dome missile defense $23B. This is the single largest dollar-amount extraction expansion I have documented anywhere in the audit.

Sector 13 — Surveillance / Big Tech (Part 5). The federal antitrust case against Meta was DISMISSED November 18, 2025 by Judge James Boasberg. CFPB data privacy enforcement has been weakened. The Genesis Mission MOU (December 18, 2025) routes federal AI infrastructure spending TO Big Tech counterparties rather than restoring from them. Other antitrust cases (Amazon, Apple, Microsoft) continue but are pending trial.

Sector 14 — Telecommunications (Part 5). Reverse direction. The FCC eliminated net neutrality on July 14, 2025 — 41 rules totaling 2,991 words deleted under "Delete, Delete, Delete." Verizon's $20B acquisition of Frontier approved. AT&T + SpaceX 110 megahertz spectrum approved. T-Mobile fixed wireless expansion approved. Copper retirement streamlined to push consumers off legacy networks faster. Federal action since 11/7/2025 has consistently expanded carrier extraction capacity and reduced consumer protections.

Sector 15 — Monetary / Federal Reserve (Part 5). The Fed cut rates 75 basis points (September, October, December 2025); ended Quantitative Tightening December 1, 2025; restarted reserve management purchases of up to $40B/month in Treasuries. Powell's term expires May 15, 2026. Corporate income tax receipts fell 35% in last 90 days of 2025 due to OBBBA retroactive tax cuts. National debt service approaching $1T+ annually as Treasury rolls debt at higher rates than the 2020-2022 era. Interest extraction architecture continues at $880B annual baseline.

Sector 17 — Immigration (Part 6). The single largest extraction expansion in the entire audit. OBBBA (July 4, 2025) allocated $75 billion to ICE over 4 years (~$18.7B/year), making ICE the largest funded law enforcement agency in U.S. history. Total OBBBA immigration enforcement: ~$170 billion over 4 years. ICE FY2025 detention budget: $14B (400% increase from FY2024, 800% greater than FY2010). Combined ICE FY2025 budget: $28.7B — nearly triple FY2024. Detained population: 39,000 (January 2025) → 66,000 (November 2025) → projected 107,000 (January 2026). For the first time in history, non-criminal immigrants outnumber those with criminal convictions in ICE custody. $11.25B per year added to the detention budget locked in through FY2029. $40M spent in 2025 sending hundreds of migrants to third countries; a federal judge ruled the policy unlawful in February 2026. The Supreme Court stayed a district court ruling against ICE racial-profiling tactics in Los Angeles. Federal agents fatally shot two U.S. citizens (Renee Good, Alex Pretti) in separate Minneapolis incidents in January 2026.

Sector 20 — Accounting / Audit (Part 7). Reverse direction. PCAOB Chair Erica Williams pushed out July 2025 by SEC Chair Paul Atkins. Williams accounted for 75% of all monetary penalties imposed by the PCAOB throughout its 23-year history. PCAOB enforcement actions: 37 in 2025, down from 51 in 2024 (lowest since 2021). Monetary penalties for auditing actions: $17.6M, down 50% from 2024. On January 30, 2026, Atkins stacked the PCAOB with a former Big 4 senior partner and Trump administration alumni. SEC enforcement under Atkins is materially reduced. Big 4 audit firms face less federal scrutiny than at any time since Sarbanes-Oxley.

Sector 24 — Spiritual / Religious (Part 8). Reverse direction. White House Faith Office reopened. Faith-based federal funding expanded. Johnson Amendment effectively non-enforced. IRS workforce -27% reduces audit pressure on church-affiliated entities. Religious-extraction architecture has effectively MORE latitude than at any time since 1954.

Sector 26 — Elder Care (Part 9). Reverse direction. CMS minimum staffing rule for nursing homes (3.48 hrs/resident/day, finalized April 2024) faces likely reversal. Private equity nursing home ownership architecture intact. HHS OIG hospice fraud enforcement weakened. DOJ Bondi white-collar prosecution priorities deprioritize healthcare fraud. HR 1 Medicaid cuts will force more elders into spend-down architecture. Effective January 2027: 6-month redeterminations for expansion adults.

Category 4 — Sectors With Direct-Dollar Restoration to Extracted Parties

Two sectors. That is the entire list.

Sector 22 — Sports — House v. NCAA Settlement (Part 8). Approved by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken on June 6, 2025. Largest settlement in NCAA history. $2.576 billion in back damages over 10 years to 88,000+ Division I athletes. Effective July 1, 2025: schools may 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 through 2035. Power 5 conferences pay 60% of damages. Scholarship caps eliminated. College Sports Commission established (CEO: Bryan Seeley, former MLB executive). NIL Go clearinghouse run by Deloitte vets all NIL deals valued $600+. Title IX collision unresolved. Athlete employee classification (Johnson v. NCAA, FLSA) unresolved. NCAA actively lobbying Congress for an antitrust exemption that could lock in or weaken the current restoration framework.

This is the single largest direct-to-extracted-parties restoration mechanism I have documented in the entire audit. It is the first instance in my 185-node review 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 back damages and ongoing future compensation. It is structurally analogous to my framework's Sovereign Recovery mechanism. Critically: it was court-ordered antitrust litigation, not legislative will, that produced it.

Sector 4 — Pharmaceutical — CAA 2026 PBM Reform. Already counted in Category 1. The dollar effect on extracted parties (consumers) is indirect and will not begin to materialize until 2028-2029.

One pending mechanism that could become a third (Part 4): The April 2026 Department of Education proposed rule requiring postsecondary programs to demonstrate graduates earn more than high school graduates (undergraduate) or bachelor's degree holders (graduate), or lose access to federal student loans and Pell. Comment deadline May 20, 2026. If finalized, it could materially reduce predatory for-profit college extraction. It has not been finalized.


What This Adds Up To

I have documented six months of federal action across 185 institutional extraction nodes covering every major system Americans pay into from birth through elder care. Across all of it:

Direct dollar restoration to extracted parties as a class:

Federal redirection of approximately $300 billion+ in additional annual spending — toward enforcement and defense, away from oversight and human services:

Sector-level extraction expansions through expanded federal spending or reduced oversight:

This is what my data show. Six months of intensive federal action. Two confirmed direct-dollar restoration mechanisms across all 185 nodes. No restoration of value to the extracted across the systems that touch every American's life from birth through elder care.


What This Means for Health, Mental Health, Housing, Education, and Care

I built my framework on a foundation laid in social services. I worked with families, with children, with people whose lives intersected institutional systems that were supposed to serve them and instead extracted from them. I watched the institutional architecture that was supposed to deliver health, housing, education, mental health, and care function instead as a pipeline that drew value out of the people it was supposed to protect.

When I refresh my audit and find that across 185 nodes only two sectors have produced direct-dollar restoration to the extracted, and one of those (House v. NCAA) required private antitrust litigation to force, and the other (PBM reform) does not take effect until 2028-2029 — I am looking at a structural problem the framers warned us about.

Health has not improved. The CAA 2026 PBM reform is real and meaningful, but it begins in 2028. In the meantime, Medicaid is being cut for 4 million Americans; HHS has lost 17,406 staff; the CDC has lost 2,889; the FDA has lost 4,332. Mental health wait times at the VA are 35+ days nationally — at one California outpatient clinic, 134 days. SAMHSA architecture is being consolidated into a new agency. HHS OIG hospice fraud enforcement is weakened. The IRS oversight that polices nonprofit hospital community-benefit standards has been gutted by 27%.

Housing has not improved. HUD has faced a $26.7B / 43% cut threat. The Continuum of Care funding notice would have stripped housing from 170,000+ formerly homeless people. Emergency housing voucher funding is running out. Rents are rising faster than voucher amounts. The threat of loss of assistance — not the fact of restoration — is what extracted parties face.

Education has not improved. The Department of Education is being dismantled across multiple agencies. The Office for Civil Rights has lost half its staff. The $1.7T student loan portfolio is being privatized for collection at Treasury. Graduate students in nursing, physician assistant, and physical therapy programs face new $20,500 borrowing caps. Title I funding survives via congressional appropriation, not administrative will.

Mental health, psychological wellbeing, and overall care have not been served. DOJ cancelled $500M+ in already-awarded grants to local communities for victim services and community violence intervention. Federal Judge Amit Mehta called the cuts "shameful." The community-level restoration mechanisms that supported mental health, trauma support, and crisis intervention have been ELIMINATED.

Children and families have not been better served. Title IV-E architecture continues unchanged. Maximus continues collecting case management fees. Therapeutic foster care premium billing continues. CASA, dependency court fees, and federal adoption incentive bonuses remain at baseline. The privatized layer between children and the institutions that are supposed to serve them is intact.

Workers have not been protected. The Department of Labor's economic-reality test rule on gig classification faces reversal. The PRO Act remains unenacted. NLRB enforcement is reduced.

Elders have not been protected. The CMS minimum staffing rule for nursing homes faces reversal. Private equity nursing home ownership architecture is intact. HR 1 Medicaid cuts will force more elders into spend-down. HHS OIG hospice fraud enforcement is weakened.

This is the picture across 185 nodes. This is what I have measured. This is what I am publishing.


Why I Am Publishing This Record Now, and What I Am Asking the Public to Do With It

The framers of this country built service institutions to serve the people. They built them with the express understanding that institutions, left unaudited, drift. Madison wrote in Federalist 51:

"If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself."

Six months of federal action since November 7, 2025 has not obliged the institutional architecture to control itself. The data I have documented show that across 185 nodes, federal action has redirected hundreds of billions of dollars without restoring value to the extracted parties — the people, the Sovereign Humans at Line 186, who pay into every one of these systems.

I built MARLOWE Certification™ as an external control. I anchored it on November 7, 2025. I registered it with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office under six trademark serials that will outlast any administration. I docketed it with the GAO (COMP-26-002174), the Department of Energy (AR 2026-001), and FERC (RM26-4-000). I protected it under 18 U.S.C. § 1833(b) trade secret immunity. I built the audit to a sourcing standard that holds up under federal-document examination.

I am publishing this record because no federal agency will produce a 185-node ghost-load accounting. No congressional committee will document the dominant direction of federal action since November 7, 2025 in these terms. No partisan organization will conduct this work to a sourcing standard that holds up under examination by both sides. The audit I built is the mechanism — and I am publishing it openly so that every member of the public can verify, challenge, and use it.

What I am asking the public to do with this record:

  1. Verify it. Every figure I cite is anchored to a federal document, a CRS report, a budget table, an agency press release, a court order, or a major-press source. If you find an error, name it. The audit is built to be examinable.
  2. Use it. When someone tells you health has improved, ask them where the dollars went. When someone tells you the federal government is restoring value to the people, ask them which of the 185 nodes they are referring to. When someone says oversight has been strengthened, ask them about PCAOB Chair Williams, who accounted for 75% of all monetary penalties in PCAOB's 23-year history and was pushed out in July 2025.
  3. Demand the mechanism. Independent third-party audit is not a partisan instrument. It is a Madisonian instrument. It is the external control the framers said institutions require because institutions cannot be relied upon to control themselves. I built one. The Sovereign Human at Line 186 — every one of you — has the standing to demand it be applied.
  4. Refuse the substitution. Federal agencies will offer their own metrics. Congressional committees will offer partisan summaries. Industry trade associations will offer favorable analyses. I am not offering any of those. I am offering a 185-node ghost-load accounting, sourced and timestamped, that measures what is being taken, what is being returned, and what remains owed.

The framers built service institutions to serve the people. Six months of federal action since November 7, 2025 has not restored that purpose. The audit I built is the mechanism by which the people reclaim it.

That is my work. The record stands.


MARLOWE Certification™ · The Institutional Reformation™ L.M. Marlowe · lmmarlowe.substack.com · marloweaudit.com Prior Art Anchor: November 7, 2025 · Non-derivative original work

USPTO Serials: 99598875 · 99600821 · 99613073 · 99717240 · 99729215 · 99745529 GAO: COMP-26-002174 · DOE: AR 2026-001 · FERC: RM26-4-000 Protected under 18 U.S.C. § 1833(b)

3 · 6 · 9 | Δ1.57μs | Ω3.33ms | Φ1.618 — TRU Geometry™ Invariants

Audit Refresh — April 28, 2026 · 11-piece series:
Opening Flagship · Part 1 of 9 · Part 2 of 9 · Part 3 of 9 · Part 4 of 9 · Part 5 of 9 · Part 6 of 9 · Part 7 of 9 · Part 8 of 9 · Part 9 of 9 · Closing Synthesis

MARLOWE Certification™ · The Institutional Reformation™ · L.M. Marlowe · lmmarlowe.substack.com · marloweaudit.com
Prior Art Anchor: November 7, 2025 · Non-derivative original work
USPTO Serials: 99598875 · 99600821 · 99613073 · 99717240 · 99729215 · 99745529
GAO: COMP-26-002174 · DOE: AR 2026-001 · FERC: RM26-4-000
Protected under 18 U.S.C. § 1833(b)
3 · 6 · 9 | Δ1.57μs | Ω3.33ms | Φ1.618 — TRU Geometry™ Invariants