PGI 5.46: The UN Voted Twice and Agreed on Nothing
Yesterday's Perception Gap Index hit 5.46 after the UN passed two opposite Iran resolutions in the same session. The world agreed on facts. It disagreed completely on blame. Here's what drove the widest gaps.

The Perception Gap Index hit 5.46 on March 26, up from 5.38 the day before, driven by the UN passing two contradictory Iran resolutions in a single session — condemning Iran's sovereignty violations and condemning airstrikes on Iranian schools within hours of each other. The widest gap: US ↔ Middle East at 7.2, with geopolitics entering "Competing Realities" territory at 6.37.
That number alone doesn't mean much. Here's what does.
Two votes. Two moral verdicts. One institution.
The UN Security Council and General Assembly produced opposite conclusions about the same war on the same day. One resolution condemned Iran for threatening regional security. The other condemned airstrikes that killed students at Iranian schools.
Both passed.
Gulf media led with the condemnation of Iranian sovereignty violations. Iranian media led with the school bombing session. Each region's outlets reported only the resolution that served their narrative. The other vote might as well not have existed.
This story scored a PGI of 7.93 — the day's highest. Not because anyone lied about what happened. Both votes are real. Both resolutions exist. The perception gap lives in which one your feed showed you.
The causal dimension is doing the heavy lifting
Yesterday's overall PGI was pulled up by geopolitics (6.37, Competing Realities tier) and economics (5.67). But the interesting pattern isn't which tributary scored highest — it's which dimension of perception is diverging most.
Across the top stories, factual agreement is relatively high. Regions don't dispute that the energy lockdowns hit 10 countries, that oil dipped below $100, or that Lebanon's death toll passed 1,100. The facts aren't the battleground.
Cause and blame are.
Hindi media calls the energy rationing "energy lockdown fear" (ऊर्जा लॉकडाउन). Arabic outlets describe the same data as "hope for peace." The Middle East blames Iran. Europe blames Russia. South Asia blames global markets. Asia-Pacific blames import dependency. US media is absent entirely from the story.
Same rationing. Same pain. Five different culprits.
The $580M trade story shows the invisibility gap
Yesterday's second-biggest divergence wasn't a framing battle. It was a disappearing act.
The $580 million in oil trades placed minutes before Trump's Iran post scored 7.28 — but only because of what wasn't there. Arabic, Farsi, Russian, and Chinese coverage of this story is virtually nonexistent. A major market manipulation scandal exists in one language sphere and doesn't exist in others.
The US ↔ China pair on this story hit 8.2. Not because Beijing covered it differently. Because Beijing didn't cover it.
What today's PGI means for your next headline
A 5.46 sits firmly in "Diverging Narratives" territory. The 7-day rolling average is 5.29, meaning this week has been consistently split. The most aligned pair — EU and US at 4.6 — shares a baseline that breaks down the moment you add any other region.
The calmest tributary is climate, at 3.48. When NOAA and WMO publish data, the world mostly reports it the same way. But economics and geopolitics? There, the same institutions produce opposite conclusions, and each audience sees only the version that confirms what they already believe.
The question worth sitting with: if the UN itself can't produce a single verdict on the same war in the same day, what chance does your social media feed have?
Sources for this article are being documented. Albis is building transparent source tracking for every story.
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