MEET DAVID DYE
The perspective that shapes David’s work today was not developed in theory. It emerged over decades of direct experience across science, infrastructure, and complex institutional systems.
For more than twenty-five years, David studied how systems behave under pressure—how narratives form, how power consolidates, and how human agency is influenced or constrained by design.
His work expanded beyond medicine into economics, technology, governance, infrastructure, and information systems, where similar structural patterns repeatedly emerged.
What distinguishes David’s work is not ideology, but orientation. He is less interested in what people believe than in how conclusions are formed, who benefits from prevailing narratives, and which questions are no longer being asked.
His focus is clarity—not persuasion—and understanding, rather than opposition.
David followed a traditional academic path early on. He completed his secondary education at University of Detroit Jesuit High School, where disciplined inquiry and rigorous thinking were emphasized.
He earned a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry from Wayne State University, and later completed his MBA at Wayne State University in 2004.
Alongside his academic studies, David worked in biomedical research at Wayne State University Medical School through the Minority Biomedical Research Support program. His work focused on endocrine physiology, specifically insulin–glucagon dynamics in diabetes, under the supervision of Dr. Joseph Dunbar. He also spent time at UCLA, working in recombinant DNA and molecular biology, experience that sharpened his understanding of both the power and the limitations of reductionist medical models.
David later attended Wayne State University Medical School, but left after one year when it became clear to him that the prevailing framework did not meaningfully address the root causes of disease. At the time, he was highly analytical and left-brain focused—yet increasingly aware that something essential was missing.
David spent 26 years working at the Detroit Water & Sewerage Department, one of the largest municipal water systems in the United States.
As a Water Systems Chemist, his work spanned operations, technical support, data analysis, and large-scale infrastructure projects, including the implementation of new chlorination–dechlorination facilities.
He eventually served as Senior Chemist and shift supervisor, gaining first-hand insight into how complex public systems function under regulatory, political, and economic pressure. He later worked at a major oil refinery, where prolonged exposure to industrial solvents led to health challenges—reinforcing his concerns about occupational safety, environmental exposure, and institutional blind spots.
Law, Economics, and the
Architecture of Power
Parallel to his scientific career, David pursued independent study in areas rarely examined together:
Constitutional and commercial law
Equity and jurisdictional frameworks
Economic history and monetary systems
Incentive design within legal and financial institutions
Through this work, he developed a systems-level understanding of how governance, law, and finance interact—often in ways that are opaque to the public but highly consequential in practice.
David’s interest in power and narrative formation began early.
Exposure to suppressed histories and early independent research revealed how official narratives often omit context—reinforcing his lifelong commitment to evidence over consensus.
Over time, David’s inquiry expanded into entrepreneurship, finance, economics, systems of control, psychology, and human performance. His studies have included:
✔️Austrian economics and monetary policy.
✔️ Financial derivatives and systemic risk.
✔️ Historical banking crises and economic collapses.
✔️ Information control, narrative shaping, and psychological operations.
Alongside his intellectual work, David maintains a disciplined physical practice.
He has earned two black belts—one in Kung Fu and one in kickboxing—reflecting a long-term commitment to focus, self-mastery, and embodied awareness.
Guest Inquiry
Conversations are considered based on relevance, evidence, and alignment with the network’s standards.
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The Question Everything Network
The Question Everything Network emerged from this lifetime of inquiry. As artificial intelligence accelerates, centralized systems grow more opaque, and decision-making becomes increasingly abstracted from human experience, David believes the ability to think clearly has become a form of civic responsibility. Human sovereignty, in this context, is not a slogan—it is a function of comprehension.
This network exists to support that comprehension.
David hosts conversations with researchers, practitioners, whistleblowers, and experts who examine evidence and break down difficult questions with clarity
—and in full view of the systems shaping our collective future.