PGI March 29: Same Data, Five Alarm Levels
Fertilizer prices jumped 35%. English media called it a market indicator. Chinese media called it a food crisis. Brazilian media called it a harvest emergency. The same number, five different alarm levels — and the gap tells you more than the number itself.

Today's Perception Gap Index sits around 5.1 across 25 scored stories from the morning scan — down from yesterday's 5.88, but the drop is misleading. The divergence didn't shrink. It moved. Yesterday's fracture ran between regions disagreeing on what happened. Today's runs between regions disagreeing on how scared to be.
The clearest example: fertilizer prices rose 35% as the Hormuz blockade chokes 30% of global urea trade. One number. Five alarm levels.
The urgency gradient
Bloomberg and Reuters filed the 35% figure as an economic indicator. Price up, market adjusts, analysts quote supply disruption. In English, fertilizer is a commodity.
In Chinese, it's a food crisis. Xinhua: "Fertilizer price surge, spring planting in crisis." IFPRI's Joseph Glauber: "Poor-country farmers may simply reduce fertiliser use, leading to crop failures." War insurance rates jumped from 0.25% to 10%. The framing wasn't price movement. It was hunger trajectory.
In Turkish, it's a "perfect storm." Paraanaliz reported urea at 26,000 TL, DAP at 34,750 TL. Takvim: "urea up 50% in the first weeks of war." Turkish farmers face what outlets there call "the biggest crisis before spring planting."
In Portuguese, it's a harvest emergency. Gazeta do Povo: a "1-3 million tonne deficit in phosphate fertilizers in 2026." Urea up 89% year-on-year. Brazil — the world's largest agricultural exporter — entering planting season with the worst input costs in years. The 2027 food supply is already at risk.
Same data point. Five alarm levels. The PGI hit 5.73, but the real divergence isn't in the number — it's in the heartbeat. How fast your media tells you to worry depends on how many of your citizens hold a plough.
The day's widest gap: a chip, not a bomb
The US House passed the Chip Security Act after confirming DeepSeek used smuggled Nvidia chips. Reuters: $2.5 billion smuggling scheme. Security threat.
Beijing Academy of AI: "DeepSeek V4 arrives — skipping Nvidia, 50x cheaper. US export controls tried to 'choke' China's AI. DeepSeek's existence is the most powerful response."
Criminal (Washington) vs. national hero (Beijing). PGI 7.58 — the day's widest gap. Neither lying. Both selecting.
Japan's invisible alarm
Japan called this "the greatest oil crisis in history." Yomiuri Shimbun reported a 45-day strategic reserve release — 80 million barrels, the largest in Japanese history. Yahoo Japan: "Far scarier than the oil crisis — Hormuz closure starts a 'fertiliser scramble.'" Ninety percent of Japan's crude transits Hormuz.
GAI score: 6.59 — Information Shadow. 130 million people calling it existential. Invisible to six billion others.
Who counted the missiles
Iran hit five Gulf states overnight. That's English. Arabic media said eight — adding Iraq, Jordan, and Oman. BBC Arabic: "All red lines have been crossed." IRGC-affiliated Tasnim claimed six CIA officers killed in the UAE. No other source confirmed it.
Three more countries. One fabricated claim. Same night. Which alarm level matches reality — and would you know the answer if you only read in one language?
Sources for this article are being documented. Albis is building transparent source tracking for every story.
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