This page documents how USABlaze produces, fact-checks, sources, and corrects its editorial content. We publish this policy in full because our readers deserve to know how the journalism they read is made.
Editorial Mission
USABlaze exists to help American readers understand the business, technology, policy, and world events that affect their daily lives, careers, and financial decisions. We aim for clarity, accuracy, and original analysis on every story we cover. We do not chase clicks, we do not publish content we cannot defend, and we do not hide behind false neutrality when we have an informed opinion.
Ownership and Funding
USABlaze is an independent publication founded and operated by MD Danish. We are not owned by, funded by, or affiliated with any political party, government agency, lobbying organization, or corporate entity. Our operating costs are covered by a combination of advertising revenue and limited, clearly disclosed partnerships. Our editorial decisions are made independently of any revenue source.
How We Source Our Reporting
Every factual claim in a USABlaze article is tied to a verifiable source. We give priority to:
- Primary documents: court filings, SEC documents, company press releases, government data, official statements
- Named officials: government spokespeople, company executives, named subject-matter experts
- Established news organizations: AP, Reuters, NPR, major US dailies, and other outlets with documented editorial standards
- Original research and data: where we have conducted our own analysis, we show the methodology
We try to link out to the original source so readers can verify our reporting. Anonymous sources are used only when the public interest justifies them and the information has been corroborated by at least one additional source.
Fact-Checking Process
Every article passes through these stages before publication:
- Draft is written against a sourced outline
- Every named fact, figure, date, and quote is verified against the original source
- Article is edited for structure, clarity, and tone
- A final read-through checks for factual consistency, undisclosed conflicts, or unsupported claims
- Only then does the article publish
Corrections Policy
When we publish an error of fact, we correct it within 24 hours of confirmation and add a dated correction note at the top of the article. We do not silently edit past stories. If a reader requests a correction, we respond personally, investigate the claim against our sources, and either correct the record or explain why we are standing by the original reporting.
To request a correction, email contact@usablaze.com with the article URL and the specific fact you believe is incorrect.
Use of AI Tools
USABlaze uses AI-powered research and editing tools to support our workflow. AI may help us draft outlines, suggest structural improvements, or surface relevant sources. However, every published article on USABlaze is reviewed, fact-checked, and edited by a human before publication. We do not publish unedited AI output. We disclose this policy here because our readers deserve transparency about how our content is made.
Bias and Opinion Disclosure
USABlaze writes from an informed perspective. When we offer an editorial opinion, it is clearly labeled as such, usually inside the “USABlaze Takeaway” section at the end of each article. Our news reporting and our editorial opinions are kept distinct so readers can tell which is which.
Conflict of Interest
If anyone on the USABlaze editorial team has a financial position, family relationship, or other personal stake in the subject of an article, that conflict is disclosed in the article itself. We do not write about companies in which the editorial team holds undisclosed equity. We do not accept gifts or paid travel from sources or companies we cover.
Reader Feedback
We welcome reader input. If you believe an article is inaccurate, misleading, or missing important context, email us at contact@usablaze.com. Every reader email is read by a real person and treated as a serious input into our editorial process.
Last updated: May 13, 2026
