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51 w

FACT CHECK: Contrary To Claim, Threads Post Does Not Show Recent Mugshot Of P. Diddy
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FACT CHECK: Contrary To Claim, Threads Post Does Not Show Recent Mugshot Of P. Diddy

A viral post shared on Threads claims to show a recent mugshot of rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs.   Post by @j.j.fad View on Threads   Verdict: False The image is not recent but stems from Combs’ 1999 arrest for firing a gun inside a Manhattan nightclub and can be found on Getty Images. Fact Check: […]
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51 w

Editor Daily Rundown: DOJ Releases Handwritten Letter Written By Ryan Routh
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Editor Daily Rundown: DOJ Releases Handwritten Letter Written By Ryan Routh

BREAKING THIS AM... RYAN ROUTH ADMITS TO 'ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT ON DONALD TRUMP'... DOJ RELEASES HANDWRITTEN LETTER ... SETH MACFARLANE, CBS: NEW: Seeking to get Ryan Routh held in pretrial jail, in alleged assassination attempt against Trump in Florida last weekend, Justice Dept alleges this letter by Routh was discovered last week (PHOTO) “This was an assassination attempt on Donald Trump but I failed you. I tried my best and gave it all the gumption I could muster. It is up to you now to finish the job; and I will offer $150,000 to whomever can complete the job.”
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51 w

The Thunderbolts* Teaser Would Feel All Too Familiar If Not for Florence Pugh
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The Thunderbolts* Teaser Would Feel All Too Familiar If Not for Florence Pugh

News Thunderbolts The Thunderbolts* Teaser Would Feel All Too Familiar If Not for Florence Pugh The gang’s all here (until the inevitable “surprise” cameo happens) By Molly Templeton | Published on September 23, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share The trouble with trying to make Thunderbolts*—yes, the asterisk is part of the title—at this moment in time is that we have already had multiple incarnations of the Suicide Squad. This problem is on full display in the first teaser for the film, which is three minutes of wacky bad-guy team-up action set to a chopped-up version of a well-known song. (It also doesn’t help that the song is The Pixies’ “Where Is My Mind?” which, cinematically speaking, is indelibly tied to the end of Fight Club and has been for 25 years.) Here are some bad guys! Here is a voiceover about the nature of bad guys! Here is a weird trap for the bad guys, plus some guy named Bob (Lewis Pullman), who is very clearly not just a guy named Bob. Here is David Harbour doing that cartoony accent for way too much of the trailer! But here, also, is Florence Pugh doing that incredible deadpan. Perhaps I am simply a sucker for this, but her Yelena has a weird, down-to-earth (in a murdery way) charm that I could watch for hours (and probably will, though this movie’s runtime hasn’t been announced). The most memorable thing in Hawkeye was not action or plot; it was Yelena and her mac and cheese, terrifying and intriguing Kate Bishop at once. And now she also gets to pal around with Hannah John-Kamen, returning as Ant-Man and the Wasp‘s terribly underused Ghost. (John-Kamen in an action role is just straight-up catnip for us Killjoys fans). Olga Kurylenko is back as Taskmaster, Wyatt Russell as the deeply annoying John Walker, Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, and of course Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) shows up to cause havoc and clean his arm in the dishwasher. Thunderbolts* is directed by Jake Schreier, whose previous films Robot & Frank and Paper Towns make him seem like something of an odd choice. IMDb lists three writers—Joanna Calo (The Bear), Lee Sung Jin (Beef), and Eric Pearson (Black Widow)—with a “created by” nod to Kurt Busiek. It’s in theaters May 2, 2025.[end-mark] The post The <i>Thunderbolts*</i> Teaser Would Feel All Too Familiar If Not for Florence Pugh appeared first on Reactor.
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51 w

The New Gladiator II Trailer Offers Up a Major Reveal
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The New Gladiator II Trailer Offers Up a Major Reveal

News Gladiator 2 The New Gladiator II Trailer Offers Up a Major Reveal He’s driven by rage … and daddy issues By Molly Templeton | Published on September 23, 2024 Screenshot: Paramount Pictures Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Paramount Pictures So far as I can tell from the trailers for Gladiator II, the real star of this movie is Denzel Washington, who stalks around with more charisma than the rest of the actors combined. The other star, of course, is the sheer amount of violence that will go down in the gladiatorial arena—violence that involves a bunch of CGI animals, boats, and creative chaos. I will give them points for the creative chaos. But this second trailer for the film makes a very strange choice: to reveal the true paternity of Paul Mescal’s Lucius. Tucked in among Washington’s pronouncements, the clash of swords, and Pedro Pascal’s moodiness is a scene in which Lucilla (Connie Nielsen) tells her son, “Lucius, take your father’s strength. His name was Maximus, and I see him in you.” (Lest you think this is a tricky misdirect, it’s been confirmed in Entertainment Weekly.) Why now? Why hide this in the initial wave of promotion and then reveal it in a trailer? Another question is why do something so predictable at all, but Gladiator II is clearly not worried about being predictable (when the trailers make it clear that Lucius’ beloved gets killed in order to further drive his rage, we are beyond worrying about cliches). The most interesting narrative thing here is the tension between Lucius and Pascal’s General Acacius: Lucius wants to kill the general, while Lucilla tells the very same man, “You must help him.” I’m sure that’s going to go super well. Ridley Scott’s Gladiator II is in theaters November 22nd.[end-mark] The post The New <i>Gladiator II</i> Trailer Offers Up a Major Reveal appeared first on Reactor.
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51 w

Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 14 and 15
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Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 14 and 15

Books Wind and Truth Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 14 and 15 Day Two kicks off with a bang, as various characters are hit with realizations, revelations, disturbing news, and surprise visitors… By Paige Vest, Lyndsey Luther, Drew McCaffrey | Published on September 23, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share Welcome, Sanderfans and Cosmere Chickens, to another Wind and Truth read-along discussion. Last week we saw a couple of fascinating Interludes featuring Kalak and Odium, which were pretty crazy, all around. We’ll be spotlighting some discussion of those down in the Social Media section, there’s been a lot of chatter online about these Interludes! Today, we embark on Day Two with chapters 14 and 15. Note that this post will possibly contain full Cosmere spoilers, so beware if you aren’t caught up on all Cosmere content. And please remember, when posting or commenting about these preview chapters on social media, to follow your platform’s spoiler rules. Pattern says, “No spoilers!” Your comments here, however, don’t need to be spoiler-tagged, so feel free to comment as you will down below! Onward to our commentary! Paige’s Summary and Commentary Chapter 14 is titled “Not Asleep” and the epigraph is from a different in-world book, The Way of Kings. (No! We were getting such good hints about Knights of Wind and Truth! Maybe we’ll get more of those epigraphs in future “days” so we can figure out who wrote it!) Well, we know who wrote The Way of Kings and in this excerpt from the fourth parable of the book, in which Nohadon meets a family seeking a new life. Perhaps we’ll hear more of this family in future epigraphs. In this chapter, we pick up with Dalinar, unable to sleep. He’s thinking of how he only has eight days to find a way to defeat Odium at the contest of champions. Then a frantic knock comes at the door and he opens it to find a wide-eyed Windrunner squire. We jump to Jasnah, who is also not sleeping. She’s drowning in a fluffy bed that she got for Wit because her bed had been too firm for him. I’m sorry, but this just cracks me up. Hoid… ten thousand years old and wanting a fluffy bed. I don’t know why I’m so amused by that, but I am. Also, he sometimes whistles when he sleeps. ::giggle:: While I realize this likely means he just whistles as he’s exhaling, but come on… this is Wit, who can’t picture him whistling a jolly tune as he sleeps? Jasnah tosses and turns, thinking about how she enjoys many things about her relationship with Wit, but also that there are downsides. She whispers to him that he lies to her sometimes and Jasnah really, really doesn’t like being lied to. She has come to a realization about her paramour: Wit would do what he thought was best for a person, not what they wanted. She also thinks about how she doesn’t connect with him well on a physical level, but also about how he doesn’t connect well with her on an emotional level. It’s an interesting passage, but I won’t get too far into it as Lyndsey will talk more about this below. She goes on to think about Dalinar and the contest of champions, how he would be the one to face Odium. She had actually written out the reasons why Dalinar was the best choice… though still she wonders if it shouldn’t be her. But then she knows that Dalinar hadn’t alienated people as she has done, despite having burned a city and claiming God was dead. And finally… finally we get a detail about her bad experience as a child! She realizes that she hates the soft bed because it reminds her of the restraints they’d used on her when she’d been locked away for months as a child. What? She hasn’t forgotten about it though everyone else has. What happened? Why was she locked away? And restrained? Tell us more, Brandon. But he doesn’t because just then, Wit wakes up. He’s agitated and he jumps from the bed, shockspren appearing. Then he says the most excellent swear, which I must repeat here: “The darkest, hairiest, greasiest bollocks on the most unkempt nethers of the most wanton demon of the most obscure religion’s damnable hellscape.” Now, the swearing is funny but that’s contrasted by the fact that Wit is freaking the storm out about something. Jasnah is also understandably freaked out, but Wit says to give him a moment and then spends some time scribbling notes that Jasnah can’t understand. Then… then things start happening. The door starts to rattle, and Jasnah realizes that Wit is doing it, somehow. Metal starts to move away from him, his night clothes twist and move of their own accord, some sand he’d pulled out suddenly bursts into light, and as fearspren appeared around him, his physical form changes. Into the real him, the real Hoid. He says he’s been tricked, then everything calms down and he changes back into Wit. “I’m missing,” Wit said, “three minutes and twenty-seven seconds.” Oh, Light! Wait… wrong series. Oh, storms! He’s finally realizes it! He realizes that a memory has been stolen from him! And he knows when that memory was stolen. And when Jasnah demands to know what happened, he admits that it was while he was having “a chat” with Odium. Jasnah says she asked him to involve her in any dealings with Odium and he says that he just told her, so he’s involving her. But Jasnah has come to the realization that she’ll never be someone that Wit confides in, even if he may love her. Feeling betrayed, she makes the decision to withdraw from the relationship, though she doesn’t say anything at the moment. She seems to still be trying to make sense of what’s happening. As is Wit. But he knows now that Odium somehow excised a memory from him, he can see where it was done. But bollocks… he still believes that it’s Rayse. Obviously, his realization that Odium was no longer held by Rayse was part of what Taravangian took away, but I am just dying for Wit to remember what was stolen from him! ::rages:: As they peruse the contract Dalinar made with Odium, a knock comes at the door. It’s a member of the Cobalt Guard who tells her that Adolin and Shallan have returned, that there’s an army of singers in Shadesmar headed toward Azimir, and that Dalinar has called a meeting. Wit says they need an expert beyond even his knowledge but that the only one currently on Roshar isn’t speaking to him. Instead, he says he’ll try to contact an old friend. Navani, as you may guess, is also not sleeping. She’s exploring Urithiru. She finds a chamber filled with hundreds of fabrials that help the tower to function. She feels the power, thrumming around her: The powerful strength of Towerlight, infusing all Radiants who entered. This is very cool… The Radiants can all use Towerlight, which we saw Kaladin doing in chapter 6 when he flew Dalinar to the top of the peak and got too far away from Urithiru to rely on Towerlight. Then the Sibling says something very interesting as they mentally talk to Navani about the tower being safe from more enemy attacks: My Light not only knocks Fused unconscious, it makes the Radiants here virtually invincible. Virtually invincible? And just automatically knocking Fused unconscious. Very cool. Of course, you’d have to keep enough “invincible” Radiants in the tower to defend it against another singer incursion. Not sure how realistic that would be. Navani thinks that they need to find a way to send Towerlight out into the world with the Radiants but the Sibling says it’s not possible, that humans are too full of holes to hold their light. Not sure why it couldn’t be held in gemstones, like Stormlight, except that it drains faster than Stormlight does. But if it’s readily available in the tower, it could be taken and used immediately, then they could switch to using the Stormlight when it runs out. Just speculating… Thoughts, Sanderfans? Next, we learn that Navani doesn’t need to sleep anymore. Like… wow. She can do research ALL the time! Though her husband may have a thing or two to say about that. ::laughing:: But I love this moment for Navani, which Lyndsey talks more about below. It’s like, yes, you are more than you thought you were! Not sure if this is worth touching on, but it was kind of odd/interesting to me. Navani sees a keenspren and gasps as she’s never seen one. The Sibling tells her that they don’t often come to humans as they’re afraid of being captured. How does Navani know what it is, then, I wonder? The Sibling then tells Navani that Dalinar is opening the door to their chamber and asks if she wants to listen. Navani chastises them for eavesdropping and we get a funny back-and-forth, but then they interrupt Navani, saying she really needs to know what the Windrunner is saying. Aaand we jump to Queen Fen who is not… wanna guess? Right, she’s not sleeping. She’s with Kmakl and they’re in a hammock. In the bowels of a ship. Snuck away for some quality time. At almost seventy! Go, them! They’re interrupted, in another very funny moment, by a lieutenant who sees them naked as the day they were born and gets all flustered. Fen tries to calm him as he gathers diamond spheres from the lantern that broke when he dropped it in shock. She rolled her eyes, then pulled a glove onto her safehand. “Look,” she said, wiggling the fingers. “There. Does that help, Lieutenant?”“No!” the young man said in a shrill voice. “It really, really doesn’t!” As we would expect, the lieutenant is there to inform them about the force in Shadesmar heading toward Azimir. As they try to dress, they’re interrupted by an admiral, telling them that their blockade of Jah Kaved had been breached and there’s an assault force heading toward Thaylen City. Yanagawn… was sleeping. Ha! Not really. He’s not sleeping, the schedule just says he should be sleeping so he pretends for the benefit of the ten citizens who, um, watch him sleep. Apparently, each hour, the citizens watching him depart and ten new citizens come to watch him sleep. These people are decidedly odd. Poor Gawx wishes he could do more than just exist as a figurehead who can’t charge into battle or face danger. He can’t think of wielding shards, because he’s too important. Those kinds of things are for others to do. But, when he’s “asleep” and “dreaming,” he dreams of being dangerous. Yaezir, god above, in the Halls pristine, he thought, is this really all you want of me? Ugh, I just wanna hug him. Then guards arrive and Yanagawn sits up to find that his head Vizier, Noura, is there. He realizes that something important has happened and rises to be dressed. Chapter 15 is titled “Passionspren.” The epigraph again mentions the family Nohadon met in the last epigraph, and how they used glyphs to communicate. In this chapter, Adolin discovers the wonder that is a shower. He’d napped for a bit and then rose to get ready for the meeting… but instead of heading there early, he luxuriates in the shower, which now works with Urithiru and the Sibling fully awake. Shallan returns after meetings with her Lightweavers, and joins him in this wondrous new thing, the shower. She immediately turns down the pressure and turns up the heat. It’s a cute scene, with Adolin showing her his new collection of soaps and shampoo. Then it gets incredibly sweet as Adolin holds her close and thinks about how this is what he wanted but had never found until now. Not merely skin to skin. Soul to soul. Adolin is truly the best boi! Shallan tells him that she needs to deal with the Ghostbloods and will miss the meeting. She asks him to tell Dalinar and Navani about Mraize and what she herself has done. He says he will, but his mood shifts and some of the joyspren wink out. He thinks how he can’t let go of the bitterness he’s felt since learning how his mother died, and how it’s actually gotten worse. Not only can he not move past it, he doesn’t want to get past it. He doesn’t want to forgive Dalinar. His pain has festered and he is more angry then he’d been a year ago. He asks Shallan if she really needs to miss the meeting and mentions the second attack heading toward Thaylen City, but she begs off, stating that she needs to move against Mraize before he moves against her. Adolin then laments that they’ve never had time since meeting to just be together, and that he wants to hold her tight whenever he can because he doesn’t know when the next chance to do so will come. Then Shallan remarks that she has to stop Mraize because he could capture or kill Adolin to get to her. It’s kind of a foreboding conversation despite taking place with them in the shower together. As Shallan goes to leave, without even conditioning her hair, Adolin notices, he stops her and suggests a little bit of shower sexy time. He really has to twist her arm to get her to stay, and they remain in the shower a while longer, passionspren falling like snow. Meanwhile, we catch up with Dalinar, heading to the Atrium to ascend the tower, when Sigzil finds him with a scouting report. It turns out that a third force is marching on the Shattered Plains with a thousand Fused and a thunderclast. Dalinar is shocked and concerned, as they don’t even have half that many Radiants. So they’re going to be facing a three-pronged offensive against the coalition’s three seats of power—excepting Urithiru, which they’re confident won’t be attacked. Though Dalinar does order extra guards around the tower, just in case. As he’s about to have Sigzil lash him to the top for the meeting, he sees a nursemaid carrying Gavinor, who looks as if he’s been crying. The boy’s up in the middle of the night due to nightmares and the nursemaid is taking him to the garden room to comfort him. As Dalinar’s giving the nursemaid instructions, he’s interrupted. A short, heavyset Makabaki woman dressed in brown addresses him, and responds to his question about whether he knows her by saying nothing except, “We’ve met,” and waving for him to follow her. He does so, thinking that her bearing and appearance are familiar… Could she be Cultivation, the third god? So, wow. A lot is happening early on in Day Two, don’t you think, Sanderfans? We’ve got three enemy armies approaching coalition strongholds, we’ve got monarchs appealing to Dalinar for help, we’ve got Shallan ready to face off against Mraize, and we’ve got freaking Cultivation visiting Dalinar? What could she want? Is she perhaps there to give him a warning about Odium? About Taravangian? That would be some handy information for Dalinar to have, at this point. Let us know your thoughts in the comments! Lyndsey’s Commentary: Characters and Relationships In chapter 14, we see two characters portrayed in the chapter arch; Vedeledev (Vedel) is the patron of the Edgedancers and appears in 2 of the 4 arches. Her attributes are Loving/ Healing and her role is Healer. The other two arches are occupied by the Joker, or the Wild Card. He often appears in relation to Hoid, though not always. We can pretty safely assume that the Joker is here because Hoid appears, because this is a wildly varied multiple POV chapter, or both. As for Vedel… This one is a bit of a mystery to me, to be honest. Yanagawn is closely aligned with Lift, an Edgedancer, but that’s a bit of a stretch. This chapter deals with the leaders of the various nations so it would seem to make more sense to have Jezrien, Herald of Kings, in this place. Chapter fifteen’s arches all feature Vedeledev (Vedel) again. Perhaps this is due to Adolin being the primary POV character, as Adolin has always seemed to align more with the Edgedancers. There’s also some healing going on here (for Shallan anyway), and a great deal of (::ahem::) loving. Cultivation’s appearance at the end may also be tied into this choice of Herald. As I approached the first crossroads, I met a family seeking a new life. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable This family did not speak my language, but we could both write glyphs, which proved facilitative in our conversation. As I shared their kindly cookfire, I learned some of their story. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable This isn’t the first time we’ve seen parables or excerpts from the in-world text of The Way of Kings, so the question becomes… what about this parable, in particular, is Sanderson linking to the events that are transpiring? We’ll just have to RAFO, I suppose. There’s a LOT going on in regards to various characters in chapter 14, so let’s dive right in! Jasnah/Hoid She had enjoyed [her relationship with Wit] for many reasons—the scheming together, the sharing of incredible plans, the chance to connect with someone so intellectually stimulating. Sanderson has verified via several interviews that Jasnah is asexual. For those who may not be aware, “asexual” isn’t as cut and dry as “someone who never wants sex.” It’s more of a blanket term for a variety of experiences, from being totally uninterested in sexual activity to “I’m okay with it in very specific circumstances or specific people.” I suspect, based on this and other instances in the series, that Jasnah is demisexual. This facet of asexuality is defined as someone who only experiences physical attraction after forming a strong emotional bond with a partner. However, as becomes clear later, Wit doesn’t really form a strong emotional bond with her. On the surface it may appear so, but he seems to be incapable of allowing anyone through the walls he’s built around his inner self. And so we see the chasms in their relationship in this chapter beginning to widen. So far Jasnah had caught him in only the most minor of lies. He’d engage in wordplay with her, or toy with puns, and she’d ask him to stop. He’d promise, and would appear to have done as he said. But then she’d notice that the games hadn’t ceased. They’d merely grown more subtle—Wit taking the wordplay to a more esoteric layer, difficult to spot. This has to be so hard to deal with. My expectation would be that Hoid has spent so long playing word games (millennia, by all accounts) that he doesn’t even consciously realize he’s doing it anymore. Letting someone in, truly in, to his deepest, darkest center would be totally anathema to him. And unfortunately, that’s not a good basis for a relationship. Even during sex, she felt distant. Perhaps the most distant she ever felt. That made him anxious, as if he were doing something wrong; he thought if he tried harder, he’d do something mind-blowing and change how she felt. This quote in particular is what’s leading me to think that she’s demi. I do feel for Wit, here. It’s hard to have a partner who doesn’t seem to reciprocate your affection, whether that be physical or emotional, and the tendency to keep trying different things is a very human one. However, he can’t give her the one thing she probably really needs: true emotional connection and uncompromising trust. There would never be a place for her inside his deepest self, would there? She’d always be on the outside, maintained as part of his collection. Enjoyed, perhaps even loved, but never confided in. Ouch. To have the one person you wish to connect to be unable to reciprocate that connection… that’s a really difficult pill to swallow. I think Jasnah has fallen a bit harder than she’d expected to—but unfortunately she can’t fall all the way, without someone there to catch her. And Hoid’s got way too many plates spinning to be able to be that for her. Jasnah When Jasnah Kholin spoke her mind, people hated her. I really hate to see this, because it’s such a stark echo of sexism in the real world. So often, when women are in positions of power, they’re perceived as “too forward” or simply discounted altogether, when a man in the same place, doing or saying the same exact things, would be heralded as “assertive” and a “good leader.” It’s frustrating and rage-inducing and it’s so annoying to see that it’s the same on Roshar as here on Earth. However… this is, after all, what makes speculative fiction so powerful. Seeing these same social issues reflected through the lens of another world can be eye-opening for some. Trembling there, she at last realized why she hated this mattress so much. It reminded her of the soft restraints they’d given her when she’d been young. When those who loved her had locked her away for a few terrible months that basically everyone else had forgotten about. Yet another tally mark on my “I can’t wait to find out about Jasnah’s backstory” tally board. I expect it will make me want to burn things down in vengeance for how she was treated, but a good spate of vindictive fictional vengeance never did anyone any harm. Hoid I have to say, seeing Hoid display actual, legitimate fear is terrifying. We knew at the end of the last book that he’d had the wool pulled over his eyes, and that was scary enough, but… seeing his reaction to realizing it was just as spooky. So much Investiture in so many different types (which I won’t go into as I know Drew will dig into this below) being used all at once is a sobering thought; and to know that if Hoid ever totally lost it and lost control of all that power completely? We can only hope that he keeps a good hold on all that power, for the sake of those around him. Navani It was all so wonderfully overwhelming. Not just the bond to the tower, but her emotional journey. Acknowledging her self-worth. Becoming a Radiant, when she’d been certain it would not be her lot. We love to see it. I think this is a nod Sanderson’s making to the growth that Navani underwent in the last book. She’s realized her worth and has moved past her ex-husband’s lies that he used to belittle her. Does this mean that her character arc is complete, and we’re not going to be seeing as much of her in this book as the last? Queen Fen/Kmakl “The queen would like advice from her most brilliant of advisors: Is she too old for quality time with her husband? Perhaps she is too distinguished for an occasional tumble in the surf?” This is honestly one of my favorite relationships in the Stormlight Archive. First of all, it’s pretty rare to see people older than, say, 50, in active roles in fantasy novels at all (unless they’re aged mentor types, of course) and to see a pair that are happily married and still getting it on? Glorious. I adore them. Not only that, but Kmakl is perfectly willing to play second fiddle/support to his Queen (not a role that a lot of men in Roshar would be willing to play). Everything about them is just so well-written. Yanagawn Yanagawn was basically like the rack that held up his clothing, kept to his shape so those passing outside could see it and be inspired. How he wished he could do more than stand and be seen. The constraints of leadership are difficult to bear for adults, so for a child to be held so tightly to those strictures is doubly upsetting. Yanagawn has such a sense of duty to his people, possibly due to his less-than-privileged upbringing, and that’s beautiful to see. But I also wish he could just be a kid and have fun. It’s lovely that he cares so much for his people and wants to protect them. But this is a level of responsibility that a child should not have to bear. He took in the five guards, pleased to remember each of their names, though he’d never speak to them directly—to do so would make them uncomfortable. I like this for two reasons; one, he’s taking after Adolin a bit with trying to remember the names of those who serve him, and two, he’s empathic and understanding enough to not want to make them uncomfortable. This kid has grown in leaps and bounds since we first met Gawx in Words of Radiance. Shallan/Adolin This was what he’d always wanted, and had never been able to find, until he met her. Not merely skin to skin. Soul to soul. Not going to get into the physical romance here (though I’d like to congratulate Sanderson on doing it very well—remaining coy about showing details while still getting some heat involved) but rather on the interactions between them. I’ve expressed dissatisfaction in the past with Shallan and how Adolin seems to be doing all the supporting; in this chapter we see Shallan reaching out and trying to support him in turn. It’s incredibly heartwarming and lovely to see. Their relationship is shockingly one of the healthiest we see in these books, considering how unstable Shallan’s mind has been. These two serve as such good foils for one another. Adolin “I don’t blame you for wanting someone to prep my father for you. He can be . . . stern to those who disappoint him.”She perhaps sensed the bitterness in his tone, noticed how several joyspren winked away. It had been a year since Adolin had learned Dalinar killed his mother, and he couldn’t let go. […] He’d thought waiting would let the pain fade. It had instead festered. He found himself more angry than he’d been when he’d first found out. Adolin is often criticized as being “too” perfect and good, but I’d like to point to this tension between him and his father as the thing that’s keeping the character from being a “Marty Stu.” Adolin has his faults just like anyone else, and his inability to communicate with or forgive his father is a very realistic and multi-faceted emotional problem. Gavinor It looks as though little Gav is still, understandably, dealing with the trauma and baggage surrounding seeing his father murdered in front of him, and undergoing months of torture at the hands of spren while suffering his mother’s neglect. I do sincerely hope that we can look forward to some healing for him in this book, poor little one. Usually, I stick to commentary on the characters/relationships and their arcs, but I really feel I need to note the beautiful structure of chapter 14. Each POV section begins with a variation of “so and so was not asleep” and the entire chapter as a whole ends with “the emperor was awake.” It’s a really nice way of not only bookending the chapter, but also of using repetitive phrasing to drive home a concept. Drew’s Commentary: Invested Arts & Theories Day Two kicks off with a serious bang. Just in chapter 14, we’re served with an absolute feast of teasers, starting strong with Jasnah and Hoid. He’d hinted that he visited other places at night. Other worlds. On one hand, we’ve had this pseudo-established in Rhythm of War, with the famous “The Dog and the Dragon” chapter. Kaladin’s dream (really more of a nightmare) with Hoid on Braize did seem to be more real than a normal dream—but here we see that Hoid isn’t awake at all when he’s doing stuff like that. How he does this is anyone’s guess, though the easy way out is calling it the standard Something Something Connection, Something Something Spiritual Realm. But that’s not all we see with Hoid! His motions became increasingly frantic, fearspren bubbling up through the ground around them. Then in a flash—his body shape physically changing, molded like wax—he became another person. Shorter, with stark white hair and subtly different features. This is one of the strangest passages yet, in my opinion. We’ve known for years that Hoid can change his appearance at will, but I think most people assumed it was due to Lightweaving—the Yolish variant, before he bonded Design—but this seems to be something much more intensive. The physical changes to his shape and form are, frankly, a bit alarming… not to mention the extreme Investiture output occurring when it happens, as he seems to be using some powerful Allomancy and perhaps also Sand Mastery as a side effect. Is this a form of substantiation, but worked upon himself? We know next to nothing about it, as it was only introduced a few chapters ago, but I’ve already seen some great theorizing going on around the fandom since. More on that later… Before we move on from Hoid, though, there are two other small elements to mention. The most obvious is that Hoid again admits that he and Cultivation did not get along; the more interesting one, in my mind, is the possibility that he’s going to our pen pal Frost for Shardic contract help. “I will instead see if I can contact an old friend…” With Navani, we get a lot more information about the function of Urithiru and see a massive array of old-school fabrials. There was one line that leapt out at me, however: Humans cannot hold my Light; they are too full of holes. This seems fairly innocuous on first glance, but it got me wondering. The Sibling was obviously around during the height of the Radiants, when they were at their most powerful. There would have been many Radiants of the Fifth Ideal back then, and I wonder what this line means for potential effects of the Fifth Ideal. Theories have been flying around for over a decade now over what the Fifth might provide; once it was clear that the Third grants a Shardblade and the Fourth grants Shardplate, people have been wondering what sort of final power-up lies in store. One of the leading theories is that the Fifth Ideal grants perfect Stormlight retention. However, the Siblings words here might poke some holes in that theory. Yes, Stormlight isn’t Towerlight, but perfect retention would imply zero “holes” for Light to leak out. Differences in Lights aside, this seems like a tough hurdle to clear. It also makes me wonder if anyone ever tried to store Towerlight in a perfect gemstone, like the King’s Drop or Honor’s Drop. Moving on to Adolin and Shallan, I have only one thing to say: I want that Investiture-powered shower so badly. And then the final scene of this week’s preview. Two lines that couldn’t be more perfectly placed to get your pulse moving. No. It couldn’t be. Could it?Cultivation. The third god. Way to slam that gauntlet onto the table there, Brandon. The urgency and tension of the story just shot through the roof in the last two chapters, and the arrival of a Shard in Urithiru would be the cherry on top. Fan Theories Likecorbyashi over on Reddit has a pretty interesting theory: Why is there not a bondsmith spren of Odium? … I have 2 half-baked theories but they both revolve around BAM being capable of making a Bondsmith. 1. The Night Watcher is not the 3rd bondsmith spren, it’s BAM 2. It is possible for there to be more than 3 Bondsmiths at once Meanwhile, mightyjor went back through some death rattles and found this: I was looking through the death rattles and saw one that might have some meaning now: “Three of sixteen ruled, but now the Broken One reigns.” Odium is now the broken One, right? Lastly in the Reddit roundup, bartbug has this theory which I hope winds up being true because WHOA, if so…: What if each throughline interlude is a different pov from a Shard? Honor “the broken one,” Autonomy “the one is many,” etc. clearly the cosmere gloves are off in this as it is. Here on Reactor, there’s been a lot of chatter about Odium’s interlude and GiangDo says… Todium says that he won’t let the Shard rule him but I feel like we can already see him going down the same path as his predecessor. Their reasoning may be different but their end goal is likely the same. Darnit26 replied with: “So many children died here, unseen. And Odium…That was not my name, he thought. I cannot lose myself in godhood. Odium wept for them,” As soon as I read that i knew he was starting to lose himself already. In another response in this thread, Steve-son-son-Charles says: Yes, this was bound to happen. But did Cultivation give him an advantage by training him to deal with inner conflict with his boon/curse as Taravangian? Might that let T-Odium have more freedom or control, and more importantly, is that a good or bad thing? GiangDo jumps back in with: It seems to me Cultivation is trying to sabotage Todium rather than helping him, which makes me wonder why she grooms him to take up the Shard of Odium in the first place. Maybe there’s a 3D-chess level of manipulation here. Ha2 finishes up this conversation with: Yeah, I’m still waiting for Cultivation’s endgame I don’t really think it makes sense that she “just expected Taravangian to be a good guy” since she’s the one whose Diagram directed him to the murder hospitals and to decimating Jah Keved. So it would be weird if she gave a guy like that divine power and then expected it to just work out. But we’ll see! Maybe I’m wrong and she’s just dumb lol We’ll be keeping an eye on the comment sections of posts about this article on various social media platforms and may include some of your comments/speculation (with attribution) on future weeks’ articles! Keep the conversation going, and PLEASE remember to spoiler-tag your comments on social media to help preserve the surprise for those who choose to wait for the full release. See you next Monday with chapters 16, 17, and 18![end-mark] The post <i>Wind and Truth</i> Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 14 and 15 appeared first on Reactor.
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Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 14 and 15
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Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 14 and 15

Excerpts Wind and Truth Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 14 and 15 Read new chapters from the new Stormlight Archive book every Monday, leading up to its release on December 6th By Brandon Sanderson | Published on September 23, 2024 Comment 1 Share New Share Brandon Sanderson’s epic Stormlight Archive fantasy series will continue with Wind and Truth, the concluding volume of the first major arc of this ten-book series. A defining pillar of Sanderson’s “Cosmere” fantasy book universe, this newest installment of The Stormlight Archive promises huge developments for the world of Roshar, the struggles of the Knights Radiant (and friends!), and for the Cosmere at large. Reactor is serializing the new book from now until its release date on December 6, 2024. A new installment will go live every Monday at 11 AM ET, along with read-along commentary from Stormlight beta readers and Cosmere experts Lyndsey Luther, Drew McCaffrey, and Paige Vest. You can find every chapter and commentary post published so far in the Wind and Truth index. We’re thrilled to also include chapters from the audiobook edition of Wind and Truth, read by Michael Kramer and Kate Reading. Click here to jump straight to the audio excerpt! Note: Title art is not final and will be updated as soon as the final cover is revealed. Day Two Dalinar Jasnah Navani Fen Yanagawn Adolin Shallan Szeth Sigzil Kaladin Lift Renarin Rlain Lopen Chapter 14: Not Asleep As I approached the first crossroads, I met a family seeking a new life. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable Dalinar was not asleep. He stood on his balcony, gazing out at the night, feeling alone. He was never truly alone these days, not with the Stormfather increasingly present in the back of his mind. Still, the sensation persisted. Dalinar. Alone. Against a god. He had eight days to find a way to defeat Odium. When younger, Gavilar had stood like this, surveying a battlefield, planning—while Dalinar had just blundered from fight to fight, stomping on toes and breaking down fences. How much better would all of this have gone if Dalinar had died in his brother’s place that fateful night? Perhaps this war would already have been won. But Gavilar was dead. So Dalinar surveyed the cold highlands, trying to see better than he had in the past. Finally, he shook his head and walked into his chambers. At least this place was starting to feel like home. Navani knew he detested clutter, and had begun expertly arranging the room to match both her desire for decoration and his preference for austerity. The result was homey, bedecked with items like his grandfather’s takama, which hung on the wall between two banners, cloth belt wrapped around it. Twice. He felt as tense as a bowstring. A subconscious portion of his mind could tell when a battle was shifting out of his control: when a line was close to breaking, or a formation about to be flanked. He felt it today, like a straining leather strap on the verge of snapping. So when the knock came at his door—frantic, fast, urgent—he knew. The storm was here. He reached the door as Pabolon, one of the door guards, was checking it. A Windrunner squire stood outside, eyes wide, Stormlight streaming from her. “What has happened?” he said. * * * Jasnah was not asleep. Partly it was this stupid bed. Wit adored plushness. He wanted a mattress that would swallow a person, and had found hers to be unsuitably stiff. Jasnah liked trying new things; this relationship itself was, in a way, such an experiment. She had enjoyed it for many reasons—the scheming together, the sharing of incredible plans, the chance to connect with someone so intellectually stimulating. Relationships were about compromise, she had read, and so she’d procured a new bed. And she hated it. She swam in stuffing, irritationspren—like pink motes almost invisible in the night—bobbing around her as she listened to Wit breathing. He didn’t snore, but he did occasionally whistle. She turned to the other side, which—since they both tended to sink toward the center of this awful mattress—should have jostled him. He just lay on his back, whistling softly as he exhaled. Was he actually asleep? He’d hinted that he visited other places at night. Other worlds. Engaging in political machinations at which she could still only guess. Yes, there had been wonderful things about the relationship. So many others, however, were like this bed. “You lie to me sometimes,” she whispered, facing him in the darkness. “You realize that means it can’t be a true relationship? I can trust someone who has secrets, but not someone who lies.” If he was aware, he didn’t say anything, though Design—on the wall behind him—pulsed and rotated. So far Jasnah had caught him in only the most minor of lies. He’d engage in wordplay with her, or toy with puns, and she’d ask him to stop. He’d promise, and would appear to have followed through. But then she’d notice that the games hadn’t ceased, they’d merely grown more subtle—Wit taking the wordplay to a more esoteric layer, difficult to spot. He seemed to think it would engage her, push her. Instead it signaled something else: Wit would do what he thought was best for a person, not what they wanted. Despite her efforts, she knew she wasn’t connecting to him physically as he’d like. Even during sex, she felt distant. Perhaps the most distant she ever felt. That made him anxious, as if he were doing something wrong; he thought if he tried harder, he’d do something mind-blowing and change how she felt. In turn, he wasn’t connecting with her on an emotional level, as she wanted. If only he’d be up-front with her… She turned over again. A stiff pillow did little to counteract the strange stuffing, which was made of baby chicken feathers. Or perhaps the smallest feathers of adult chickens? She hadn’t been able to parse Wit’s description, but either way, a good lavis-husk mattress was far superior. Shredded, to remove the awkward lumps. She had ordered another new mattress to put in the next room. She valued the experiment of trying it his way, but she would not continue in discomfort simply to please him. A relationship required sacrifice by all parties, but it should not be built on a foundation of sacrifice. And… And storms. This was why it was best to avoid such entanglements. Eight days until Dalinar confronted Odium, and she was worrying about a relationship. Perhaps it was a way to distract her. Because despite all of her training, all of her learning, all of her preparation… the final decision was going to come down to someone else. Dalinar would face Odium’s champion himself. She did not dispute his choice. He was a Bondsmith and a fierce warrior. He’d had dealings with Odium, and perhaps understood the creature better than any mortal. Jasnah had written out the reasons he was the best choice. Yet… could it have been her? What if, instead of hiding her powers, she’d told people what she could do and what she feared? Her life and Dalinar’s seemed very different. He’d burned a city, and people forgave him. He’d proclaimed the Almighty to be dead, and half the ardents had joined him. Yet when Jasnah was honest about her atheism, her thoughts on government, or her displeasure with traditions like the safehand… well, condemnation and judgment had chased her like twin headsmen, each looking to get a whipping in before the execution. When Jasnah Kholin spoke her mind, people hated her. Perhaps she’d learned the wrong lessons from that, but could she be blamed? She curled up, listening to the quiet sounds of Urithiru. Water moving through pipes of its own accord. Air whispering as it was pumped through vents. Trembling there, she at last realized why she hated this mattress so much. It reminded her of the soft restraints they’d given her when she’d been young. When those who loved her had locked her away for a few terrible months that basically everyone else had forgotten about. Everyone but Jasnah. Who would never forget. Wit suddenly sat up in bed. “Oh, hell,” he whispered. Jasnah came alert, forming Ivory as a Blade—a short, sturdy dagger—and warning her armor spren to be ready. She reached to the covered bowl of spheres beside the bed, but did not remove the black shroud or draw in Stormlight—Light rising from her skin would make her a target in the darkness. Wit sat there, barely visible by the dim light that escaped the bowl through the shroud. He wore silken nightclothes, though his hair—as always—was immaculate, despite his having slept on it. How? “What?” she hissed at him. “Oh, bollocks,” he whispered, and leaped from the bed, shockspren erupting all around, Design scurrying down the wall and across the floor toward him. “The darkest, hairiest, greasiest bollocks on the most unkempt nethers of the most wanton demon of the most obscure religion’s damnable hellscape.” “Wit?” Jasnah said as he rushed to the counter. “Wit!” He looked to her, wild eyed. Then he pulled the shroud off some spheres and washed the room in light. She blinked, dismissing her Blade. If Wit wasn’t worried about blinding them, then this wasn’t a physical danger. It might just be another of his strange rants. Except for the way he looked at her, eyes like glowing spheres. Lips drawn, without even a hint of a smile. Jaw taut, hands clenched. Breathing quickly. Genuine panic. “Wit,” she said. “Please. What’s wrong?” “Give me a moment,” he mumbled, turning back to the counter covered in documents. “I need… I need a moment…” He extracted a notebook and began writing. She stood, and though the air was warm—thanks to her mother’s transformations—she felt cold in only her nightgown. She threw on a robe, then leaned over Wit’s shoulder. The symbols he wrote were unfamiliar—one of the many languages he could speak from worlds beyond hers. It appeared that he was making a table though. And those notations at the left of each row—the dots and lines—numbers? They repeated far more often than the other symbols did. He wrote furiously, his handwriting growing sloppy. And he’d pulled out some of the strange color-changing sand he used when experimenting. His expression grew more intense. The doors began to shake. Jasnah had a sword in hand a second later, but then realized it was him. No one was on the other side. He was exerting some kind of pressure that made the doors vibrate. The rings in her jewelry box began to spill out onto the floor, while her shoes scooted away, pushed by their buckles. Every bit of metal in the room, save for her Shardblade, reacted to him—including her fabrial alarms, which went haywire, flashing rapidly. Then the sand burst alight with a mother-of-pearl iridescence and hovered above the table. Wit’s silky nightclothes began to writhe and contort as if alive. His motions became increasingly frantic, fearspren bubbling up through the ground around them. Then in a flash—his body shape physically changing, molded like wax—he became another person. Shorter, with stark white hair and subtly different features. This is the real him, she realized. A man not from their world who masqueraded as Wit. But… his change had been physical, not an illusion. He turned to her, pencil snapping under the pressure from his fingers. “I’ve been tricked,” he said. “H-how?” she asked. The sand turned black and sprayed back down onto the counter. Wit’s shape reverted to his familiar self in seconds, and the room quieted—as if at an order from him—save for her fabrial alarms strobing the room white and red. He stood, again taller than she was, and held up what he’d written. “I’m missing,” Wit said, “three minutes and twenty-seven seconds.” “I’m not following,” she said. “Forgive me, Wit. I’m trying to parse this, but… Storms, what is happening?” “I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” he said, slumping into the seat beside her stone counter—a natural feature of the room that jutted from the wall. “I have lived a very long time, Jasnah. Longer than a mortal mind can track, so I store memories in something called Breath, an easily accessible—if costly—form of Investiture a person can adopt and, with training, use to expand their soul. I periodically review my memories, deciding what can be jettisoned. In my review just now, I found something unexpected, something terrifying.” “Three minutes and twenty-seven seconds,” she whispered, interrogating the notes on his page. As if by force of will she could decipher them. “Missing. When?” “A bit over a day ago,” he said. “And… what were you doing at the time?” He let out a long breath, then met her eyes. “I was having a chat with Odium.” “A chat,” she said, her heart trembling, “with the most ancient enemy of humankind? The being that seeks to destroy us, to crush my family, to weaponize all of Roshar for his own ends? A chat?” “We have a history,” Wit explained. “As I believe I’ve told you.” Jasnah turned off her alarms, then pulled a chair over and sank down, feeling sick to her stomach. “I asked you, Wit,” she whispered. “I asked you to involve me in any dealings you had with him.” “I’m telling you now, Jasnah,” he said. “That is, technically, involving you.” She held his eyes and knew. There would never be a place for her inside his deepest self, would there? She’d always be on the outside, maintained as part of his collection. Enjoyed, perhaps even loved, but never confided in. She had to withdraw, for her own sake. Anxietyspren, like twisting black crosses, vanished as she tucked away feelings of betrayal. She had known what she was getting into with him. One did not court an immortal lightly. “What were you saying to Odium?” she asked. “I…” He shrugged. “I had to gloat a little. It was requisite, considering our history.” His eyes became distant. “I remember… feeling odd about the encounter. A sense of repetition. Something happened in those lost minutes. He got the better of me, then excised the memory from my mind, letting me believe I’d won the exchange. Now that I look, I can find the remnants. It was hurriedly done.” “This is wrong, isn’t it?” she said. “Fantastically wrong. Rayse is a megalomaniac, Jasnah. For all his craftiness, it would hurt him to let me walk away thinking I’d bested him. Yet this time he encouraged it.” Wit leaned forward and took her hand. “He’s grown. After ten thousand years, Rayse has actually learned something. That terrifies me. Because if I can’t anticipate what he will do…” “Then what?” “We have to reread the agreement between him and Dalinar,” Wit said. “Now.” Jasnah had a copy. After Dalinar and Odium had agreed upon the terms, the Sibling had been able to quote for them the exact wording. They indicated that an agreement between gods wasn’t quite a contract, but it could be written out as one. Wit started to scan it. “Wit,” she said, feeling genuinely unnerved. “Odium said he would keep to the spirit of the agreement, not exploiting loopholes. You confirmed this was indeed how it would work?” “So I thought,” Wit murmured, still reading. “I also thought I knew Rayse. Everything is uncertain…” A pounding sounded at the entry to her rooms. She pressed her hand on the wall and asked the Sibling to turn on the lights, then passed out of the bedroom, through the sitting room, to the door. She rapped out a pattern, and heard the proper knock in return, then eased open the door to reveal Hendit of the Cobalt Guard. A man with discretion to match his general poise. She trusted him as much as she trusted any, so wasn’t bothered when he saw Wit leave the bedroom. “What?” she said to Hendit. “Radiant Shallan and Highprince Adolin have returned, Your Majesty,” he said in a low voice. “Armies are moving through Shadesmar toward Azimir, and they report the Oathgate will let them through. Your uncle has called for a meeting at first bell.” “I’ll be there,” she said, then closed the door and looked back across the sitting room toward Wit. An invasion force closing on Azimir. She and Dalinar had both anticipated there would be attacks right up until the deadline, but they’d expected border skirmishes. After all, what kind of major offensive could be mobilized and executed in just ten days? “I knew the loss of Cultivation’s Perpendicularity was going to bite us,” Wit said. “We should have fought for it.” “We didn’t have the resources to hold the seas of Shadesmar,” Jasnah said. “We can defend against this assault. Assuming…” “Assuming there aren’t more such assaults coming,” Wit said. “Which seems a dangerous assumption. Something about this feels wrong, so very, very wrong… What else have I missed?” “If you have missed something, will you perhaps miss it again as you study?” “You’re right,” he said. He took a deep breath. “You’re… you’re right. We need an expert, beyond even my considerable knowledge.” “Do you know any?” “On your world?” he asked. “Only one, but she and I aren’t on speaking terms. I will instead see if I can contact an old friend…” * * * Navani was not asleep. She climbed through the bowels of Urithiru, exploring an ancient tunnel that—until her bonding of the Sibling—had been inaccessible. Lifespren bounced around her, small glowing green motes. Each one that arrived at the tower, called by the sudden transformation, first found Navani and spun around her for a few hours before making its way to the fields. She’d tried sleeping. It hadn’t worked, so she’d succumbed to her longing to explore. This tunnel ultimately led to a large chamber with a wall of fabrials: hundreds of glowing gemstones in wire housings, emerging from the stone like rockbuds. She’d been led here, as she could feel the workings of the tower. A thousand different fabrials pulsed in her mind, up and down the structure. Attractors drawing water to pumps deep below, delivering it to thousands of different faucets across the enormous building. Heating fabrials to warm the air. And these on the wall… they drew in air and pushed it through Urithiru, ventilating the entire city. How much could she learn from this? What marvels could she build with such knowledge? She closed her eyes, sensing the fabrials in the wall more acutely now that she was near. Their air was like the breath in her lungs, the water the pulse of her veins. Anytime she paused, she felt it—and a host of other interactions. Lights glowing from within stone. The lifts in near-constant motion. The powerful strength of Towerlight, infusing all Radiants who entered. With that, she hoped her home—now an extension of her very self—would be safe from any further attacks by the enemy. It should be, the Sibling said in her mind. They rarely dared infiltrate me before. My Light not only knocks Fused unconscious, it makes the Radiants here virtually invincible. We need to learn how to send that Light with them, Navani thought back, trailing through the room, resting her fingers on each fabrial she could reach. Spren of a half dozen varieties followed like a cloak made of light. It cannot be done, the Sibling said. Humans cannot hold my Light; they are too full of holes. In talking to Dalinar earlier, she’d learned that a Radiant leaving would lose Towerlight almost immediately. If a person carried it in a gemstone, the Light escaped faster than Stormlight did. Towerlight was a gift, but solely in Urithiru. But while they were here, it was omnipresent. Like the rhythms she now felt through her bond. She closed her eyes, letting herself experience it all. Pulses from the planet. The mechanics of the tower. The spren singing to the Sibling. She found such incredible awareness impossible to ignore. So no, she didn’t sleep. She hadn’t in two days, and didn’t feel tired or draw a single exhaustionspren. Would you like me to quiet the noise? the Sibling asked. Perhaps, Navani replied. I will need sleep eventually. No, the Sibling said. You’re part of me, and I am part of you. The tower doesn’t need sleep. You will not either. No sleep… She should have asked, but there was so much to learn. She’d discovered only yesterday that she couldn’t leave the tower for any extended period of time, or it would weaken the bond. A few weeks at most was all she could risk. She tried not to feel inhibited by that. She had great gifts, and the trade-off was a reasonable one. Plus, how much could she get done with the extra hours not spent asleep? She opened her eyes and tipped her head back, looking up some thirty feet at the wall dappled with gemstones and filigree. It was all so wonderfully overwhelming. Not just the bond to the tower, but her emotional journey. Acknowledging her self-worth. Becoming a Radiant, when she’d been certain it would not be her lot. A solitary keenspren, like a marvelous three-dimensional gradient of color, appeared above her. She gasped—it was the first she’d ever seen. They are afraid, the Sibling said. Of being captured. So they do not often come to humans. One thing still divided Navani and the Sibling, who disapproved of modern fabrials. The spren worried Navani would take what she learned and create more abominations. Modern fabrials required trapping spren against their wishes. The archaic versions, like the ones that ran the tower, used willing spren—but were inefficient in so many ways… And storms. There was so much to learn. So much to do. She barely knew where to start. Perhaps she could discuss it with Dalinar? Hopefully he was asleep by now. He’s opening the door to your rooms, the Sibling said. Would you like to listen to what he’s saying? We need to talk about you spying on everyone in the tower, Navani replied. Why? It’s not right. People need privacy. They’re inside me, Navani. They can’t expect privacy when they crawl inside someone. I don’t hear it all anyway. Only what I pay attention to. Still, Navani replied, it seems— Navani. NAVANI. She froze in place, hand on a fabrial, lifespren swirling around her as they sensed her mood. What? You really need to hear what this Windrunner is saying. * * * Queen Fen was not asleep. She blamed the prince consort. Here, they’d come to the royal yacht because he longed for the “sound of the deck creaking to serenade the swaying beat of waves on the hull.” They sometimes came down to the ship, even docked as it was, for a few nights. A getaway that didn’t involve much getting away, as she had business to be about. But they weren’t in the yacht’s royal suite. They were belowdecks, in the midshipmen’s quarters, stuffed into a hammock. She didn’t complain; she was the one who had married a sailor. Plus, this was cozy and warm. But still. “Aren’t we,” she said, swaying in the dark room, “a little old for this, gemheart?” “I’ll take it up with the council, love,” he replied, his whiskers sharp on her skin. “The queen would like advice from her most brilliant of advisors: Is she too old for quality time with her husband? Perhaps she is too distinguished for an occasional tumble in the surf?” “I wasn’t talking about that,” she replied. “Just the part where we snuck away from the guards and found a hammock. You’re almost seventy, you know.” “Which makes you…” “Almost seventy.” “Pretty young,” he said, “by some accountings.” “By what kind of accounting is seventy young?” “Almost seventy.” “And?” “And the average age of your merchant council must be somewhere in the eighties,” Kmakl replied. “So by that comparison, we’re basically a new schooner. Now stop distracting me from distracting you.” She sighed, but relaxed into the swaying hammock, the rough canvas rubbing her bare skin. Waves rocked the ship, and her cares fled before warm perfection. Until a brilliant white light lit the cabin. Damnation. She sat up, as did Kmakl on the other side of the hammock. Both of them glared at the young lieutenant standing on the ladder up, holding a diamond sphere lantern. His eyes locked on Fen—bare in the hammock—and he dropped the lantern in shock. It broke open, spilling diamonds in a cascade of glittering light. “Bother,” Kmakl said. “I thought they knew not to look for us. I specifically left hints…” “Sorry, sorry, sorry,” the lieutenant said, scrambling down the ladder, shamespren all around as he started snatching up the diamonds. “Sorry! I didn’t see! I mean, I’m sorry I saw, Your Majesty! Ah!” “It’s fine,” she said, leaning back. “You know, the queens of history were sometimes painted with one breast bare?” “Never did understand that,” Kmakl said. “Some nonsense about suckling a nation,” Fen replied. “As if these old things would offer more than sawdust.” The lieutenant continued to scramble for diamonds—though if he’d had half a brain, he would have simply left. “It truly is our fault for sneaking off,” Kmakl said. “Can’t believe you let me talk you into it, Fen. I thought you were more responsible.” She rolled her eyes, then pulled a glove onto her safehand. “Look,” she said, wiggling the fingers. “There. Does that help, Lieutenant?” “No!” the young man said in a shrill voice. “It really, really doesn’t!” She grinned at Kmakl, feeling a wicked delight at the young officer’s discomfort. Served him right. Though they pretended to be sneaky, the entire ship knew to turn a blind eye, letting them imagine they were being scandalous. “Oh, let the lad off, Fen,” Kmakl said. “Get on with you, boy,” Fen said. “We’ll deal with the spilled spheres. You pretend you weren’t here, and so will we. Out. Shoo.” The youth stood up, his white eyebrows stiffened in the naval fashion. He squeezed his eyes closed and saluted. “Your Majesty! Prince Consort! I’ve been sent to locate you! News from Urithiru: enemy armies are poised to invade Azir!” “What?” Fen said, coming alert. She reached for her clothing on the floor, nearly dumping the two of them out on their bare backsides. “Why didn’t you say something!” “Sorry. Sorry sorry sorry!” He saluted again, eyes still closed. “I thought they already invaded Azir,” Kmakl said. “That was Emul,” she replied. “It’s impossible they’d reach Azir by the deadline; we have the bulk of our armies in the way.” “They’re coming through Shadesmar!” the lieutenant said. “Does the Thaylen Council know, lad?” Kmakl asked. “They’re being roused. I—” He cut off and stumbled back as someone else slid down the ladder. It was a storming admiral. Fladrn to be precise—a man with grey hair like stormclouds and spiked eyebrows. He took in her state of undress and didn’t miss a beat. “Your Majesty, this is urgent.” “This news about Shadesmar is that bad?” Fen said, dressing rapidly. If Fladrn had come in person… “No, not that,” Fladrn said. “This is something new.” Fen froze. A pit forming in the depths of her stomach, anticipationspren rising through the floorboards in the shape of streamers. Perhaps it was a lifetime of always expecting the worst, but she somehow knew what he was going to say. “A second offensive,” she guessed. “Yes, Your Majesty,” he said. “Our blockade of Jah Keved has been breached. We just got word.” “The Veden blockade?” Kmakl said. “We were supposed to have that well secured, barring…” “Barring heavy air support,” Fen said, closing her eyes. “Heavenly Ones?” “No, Your Majesty,” the admiral said. “Skybreakers. The entire force of them—hundreds. They drove back the Windrunners posted to protect our ships, then sank half the fleet. The other half of our armada scattered, but now an assault force is heading straight for Thaylen City.” She tried to contain her anxiety. They had assumed the enemy would squabble over borders, but it appeared he had planned something grander: a play for the hearts of the coalition’s capitals. “Storms,” Kmakl whispered. “Let’s get moving,” she said, opening her eyes and throwing his trousers to him. “Our city is in danger, and with the blockade broken, we can’t stop an assault. It’s time to see how much this coalition is willing to provide in support.” * * * Yanagawn the First, Prime Aqasix, Emperor of all Makabak, was sleeping. He had to be sleeping. Because the schedule said he was to be asleep, and he kept to the schedule. It was basically the sole thing required of him. Follow the outline, provide a model of stability for an empire. The emperor did not lie awake, staring at his ceiling. The emperor understood that by sheer force of will he could bring peace and harmony to his people. So by force of will, the emperor could obviously make himself fall asleep. So he was sleeping. Right then. He had to be. Therefore, all the thoughts that crowded his mind—well, they were the thoughts of a man dreaming. He did not toss or turn. That would be interpreted as nervousness by the ten blessed citizens who had been granted the privilege of maintaining his bedside vigil. A great honor, tonight bestowed upon women who had worked diligently to feed their armies fighting near Emul. It happened all night, every night. Every hour, ten new people would come bask in the imperial presence. Not Yanagawn’s presence. It wasn’t a man who blessed this nation, but the office itself. Yanagawn was basically like the rack that held up his clothing, kept to his shape so those passing outside could see it and be inspired. How he wished he could do more than stand and be seen. It was good he was asleep, because those thoughts were unseemly. Yanagawn was specifically not a man like Dalinar Kholin, who made decisions, then acted. A man who had charged into battle with Plate and Blade, forging a nation. That kind of man was dangerous. Except, while dreaming, Yanagawn wished he were dangerous. On paper, he owned every Shard in the greater empire. In reality, many were owned by other kingdoms—and though they paid lip service to the imperial seat of Azir, they would never consider delivering up their artifacts. He’d be a fool to expose imperial impotence by making such a demand. Azir also owned Shards, carried by distinguished soldiers with an imperial grant of rights—they could offer aid to the great merchants and houses of Azir in exchange for money, much of which went to the crown. Most of their work was civil: cutting new trenches and the like. Those who wielded them were loyal, and it was a respected position. Demanding they return their Shards would be a great dishonor to them. Plus, it would involve quite a bit of paperwork. Even if they did return the Shards, Yanagawn couldn’t wield them. He was too important. He was needed. Not to administer the kingdom—that wasn’t his job, as tons of codes of law made explicit. His job was to lie in bed, sleeping while his mind ran on at length, watched over by praying citizens. Yaezir, god above, in the Halls pristine, he thought, is this really all you want of me? He would never want to return to his days as a thief with his uncle. He’d hated that life. Living each day for the next heist? Upending the order of the nation, a parasite feeding off those doing hard work? No, he didn’t want that. But the more he learned, the bigger he realized the world was. And how little lying in a bed staring at his own eyelids could accomplish. So he was excited when someone broke protocol. Guards arrived at the door, whispering apologies to the honored guests who had fed armies. Bowing to them, as today they were among the greatest in the empire. Then deeper bows to him. Yanagawn opened his eyes and sat up calmly. The cooks whispered, eyes wide. He took in the five guards, pleased to remember each of their names, though he’d never speak to them directly—to do so would make them uncomfortable. Instead he looked past them to where Noura knelt. Head vizier of his court. Scholar, strategist, teacher. Whatever had happened was important indeed. Without a word, he slipped from his bed and held his hands to the sides so he could be dressed. The emperor was awake. Chapter 15: Passionspren This family did not speak my language, but we could both write glyphs, which proved facilitative in our conversation. As I shared their kindly cookfire, I learned some of their story. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable Though Shallan had insisted on going to gather and talk with her Lightweavers, Adolin managed a few hours’ sleep. He rose, planning to arrive early for the meeting so he could get updates on current troop placements. Unfortunately, something interrupted his plans. It was called a shower. Water rained down through holes in the ceiling of a small room beside his bedroom. A light behind the stones indicated the level of heat, and if he pressed his hand to it and rotated, he could make the water warmer or colder. A similar dial let him control the pressure and flow. He was a highprince. A Shardbearer. And this was the single greatest moment of luxury he’d ever known. Steam filled the room like a Thaylen sauna as warm water melted away his fatigue, his anxiety. Both had seemed solid as stone, but even stone gave way—eventually—before rainwater. Storms. He could have stayed in here for hours. He turned up the pressure, letting the water massage his back. How would this feel after a hard training session? He released a huge sigh, drawing not a few joyspren. Storms, there really were a lot more spren in the tower now than before, weren’t there? Shallan peeked in, a splash of auburn red against the yellow-brown strata. Her meetings must be done. “What is that?” she asked, her eyes going wide. “Hakindar calls it a shower,” Adolin said, naming their room steward. She stared, aqua eyes bright as spheres. “I need to try it.” She was in there a moment later, looking stunning as she crowded him to the side. “Does it have to feel like a highstorm?” “You can adjust the pressure here,” he said, pulling his eyes away and showing her. She turned it down—changing the flow from a beating frenzy to a soft sprinkle. “Aaaahh…” she said. “But not hot enough.” “Are you trying to drive me out?” Adolin asked as she turned the heat up to uncomfortable levels. “It’s like rain,” she said, her head tipped back so the water could wash across her face, “if rain were warm.” “Hot.” “Heat is life. It reminds me that I’m alive.” “You… forget that?” “Once in a while,” she whispered, then leaned on him, wet hair against his chest. “You’re warm too.” “Hakindar brought me six different soaps,” Adolin said. “And a rough sand mix from Marat to exfoliate! There’s this one soap out of Thaylenah—they use it on their eyebrows—that is fantastic for hair.” She nodded absently, her eyes closed. So he held her, skin against skin, slick and warm. This was perfection. This was what he’d always wanted, and had never been able to find, until he met her. Not merely skin to skin. Soul to soul. He ran his fingers through her wet hair, massaging her scalp, her cheek against his chest. “I love you,” he whispered. She grinned back, and he picked her up off the ground a little, surrounded by joyspren, holding her tight. “I still…” Shallan whispered. “I still need to deal with the Ghostbloods. I might have to miss Dalinar’s meeting. Will you… will you tell him and Navani… about Mraize, and what I’ve done? I’m not sure I can spare the time.” “Of course,” Adolin said, impressed by how willing she was to be open about these issues. And if she didn’t want to—perhaps couldn’t—explain to Dalinar herself right now, he understood. “I don’t blame you for wanting someone to prep my father for you. He can be… stern to those who disappoint him.” She perhaps sensed the bitterness in his tone, noticed how several joyspren winked away. It had been a year since Adolin had learned Dalinar killed his mother, and he couldn’t let go. As he set Shallan down, she took his face in her hands. “Would it help to talk?” she asked. “I don’t know, Shallan,” he said. “Honestly, I don’t want to think about him. Or talk to him. I don’t want to fix things between us. I just… I…” He’d thought waiting would let the pain fade. It had instead festered. He found himself more angry than he’d been when he’d first found out. “Another time,” he told Shallan. “I promise. You’re really going to miss the meeting? Did you hear about Thaylen City? A second attack. Maybe more. We’ll know once the scout reports come in.” “You can handle it,” she said. “Mraize is here in the tower somewhere, and will move against me soon. So I have to move first. It will help if you’ll talk to the Bondsmiths, maybe get me authorization for Radiant troops and a preemptive strike, if I can find the current Ghostblood nest.” He sighed, wrapping his arms around her again. “Is this ever going to end? We met not long before the Everstorm, and married in the middle of a war. I’ve had enough of wearing uniforms every day. Watching cities fall. Feeling that I need to hold on tight every time I have you in my arms, as I don’t know when the next chance will be.” “I know,” she whispered, head to his chest once more. “I want to kiss you until you can’t breathe and spend a week never leaving our rooms. But we can’t. Not yet. Mraize will try to hurt me, love. Prove that I was foolish to cross him. To get to me, he’ll capture or kill you if he can. I have to act before he does.” He met her eyes, as best he could with both of them blinking away water. She reached up to push a cascade of soaked red hair out of her face. It might not have been the best place for a meaningful stare, but neither of them moved, and the joyspren were soon joined by passionspren—like snowflakes, but more crystalline. “Thank you,” he said. “For understanding?” “For trusting me to understand,” he said. “I’ve never begrudged you your secrets, Shallan, but now that you’re sharing them, I find them precious.” She cocked her head. “I… have shared them, haven’t I? You know it all. All about Mraize, the Ghostbloods, Formless…” She gripped his arms tight, pressing her entire self against him, and grinned, water dripping from her nose. “You know it all and you don’t hate me! Right?” “Of course I don’t.” “It’s almost kind of all right,” she said. “It can maybe, possibly work out… if I stop Mraize. I don’t know why he wants to find the prison of the most powerful Unmade, but…” Adolin nodded. “I’ll represent you at the meeting.” She moved to slip away, without even conditioning her hair. He pulled her back. Not for the hair though. “Surely we have a few minutes,” he said, “before running to the next crisis? I mean, haven’t you always wondered what it would be like, out in the rain…?” She paused, holding his hand. “Drat,” she said. “What?” “I was trying very hard to stay focused, Adolin Kholin,” she said, “and pretend you aren’t the most gorgeous statue of a man to ever grace the world.” “Even when he’s wet?” he said. “Um, especially when he’s wet, love.” She stepped back to him, went up on her toes, and kissed him, water falling around them like applause. The heat he’d been fighting off rose within him, outdoing that of the stream from above, and the passionspren fell more powerfully. It seemed that whether or not she had time to spare, they were going to find it. * * * Dalinar stomped through the corridors of Urithiru, throwing on his coat. He was joined by Colot, second-in-command of the Cobalt Guard. The tall lighteyed man had little tufts of red hair mixed through his black, dark enough that they were visible only in direct light. Dalinar didn’t need guards these days, but he said nothing as the man followed. Colot had been bouncing between positions for a few years, and the last thing he needed was to feel useless or rejected. Again. Kelen, the Windrunner squire who had come to fetch Dalinar, hovered along beside the two of them. It had been merely three days since Navani had reenergized the tower, and the Windrunners already appeared perfectly comfortable flying all the time. Even at this time of night, Urithiru was usually active—but today the main thoroughfare was less congested than normal. The invasion and the curfews had a lingering effect. People were still traumatized, hiding in their rooms, recovering from the stress. Dalinar stormed forward, keeping momentum, as had always been his way. People who spotted him would yelp and jump back, but mostly he ignored everyone. As they neared the atrium, where they’d be able to travel to the meeting chambers at the top of the tower, Windrunner Sigzil came streaking through the corridor and landed nearby. “I have the initial scout reports, sir.” “And?” “And you were right, sir,” Sigzil said, holding up a stack of papers as they walked. “It’s not just Azimir and Thaylen City—there’s a third offensive. A large number of Fused are marching on the Shattered Plains.” Damnation. Two was bad enough—particularly when one was Thaylen City, which had barely recovered from the Battle of Thaylen Field a year ago. It didn’t have much of a defensive force remaining, and what few ships the royal navy maintained had been dedicated to the Veden blockade. He’d need to send Fen support. A great deal of it. “What do we know about the Fused?” Dalinar asked. “We sent two Windrunners,” Sigzil said, “who were stationed at a scout post in the Frostlands. Sir, they estimate almost al thousand Fused, and at least one thunderclast is with them, if not both.” “Storms,” Dalinar said. A thousand Fused? He’d never faced a battle with more than two hundred. There weren’t that many Radiants in all Roshar—not by half. “Why the Shattered Plains? Did they get wind of Jasnah’s plan to found a second Alethi kingdom there?” The Windrunners didn’t have answers for him, though it did make sense to send Fused. Odium couldn’t get many troops to the Shattered Plains before the deadline—so he’d have to rely on quality rather than quantity. Plus, Fused moved far faster than conventional troops, especially if they had Heavenly Ones to fly them part of the distance. “A three-way assault,” Kelen said, hovering to his left. “Striking at our three most powerful strongholds other than Urithiru.” “Assuming,” Sigzil said, “they aren’t planning to strike here as well.” “The Sibling is confident,” Dalinar said, “that no Fused would dare set foot here now, and that Regal powers won’t work. They’d have to use conventional troops, which would be massacred by our Radiants.” But this did seem to be a message. Strikes on Dalinar’s coalition: Azimir, Thaylen City, and the Shattered Plains, which was becoming Alethkar in exile. Once the contest arrived in eight days, the borders would freeze—and while the enemy could probably capture more land by pushing at the borders, this was more intimidating. It warned that Odium could cut out the very hearts of his enemies if he wanted. Well, let him try. They reached the atrium and stepped out onto a balcony overlooking the central hub below. A large window ran up the length of the far wall, stretching a hundred stories into the sky, showing darkness outside. “Just in case,” Dalinar said, “wake every soldier. Send patrols to scan the nearby mountains and into Shadesmar here. Post quadruple guard forces at any possible incursion point into Urithiru—including the Oathgates and the caverns. Any news on the other monarchs?” “They’re confirmed for your meeting, sir,” Sigzil said, holding up the papers. “Teshav asked me to deliver these. Letters from Azir and Thaylenah—both sound quite alarmed, but agree that meeting is wise.” Dalinar had given him authority, as leader of the Windrunners, to read letters like this. It was wonderful to have another man around who didn’t feel embarrassed to be seen reading. In the past, Sigzil had always been coy about his training in Azir, and whether it included the ability to read Alethi scripts. In the face of Dalinar’s decisions, his need for subterfuge had evaporated. “Has anyone seen Wit?” Dalinar asked. “There,” Sigzil said, pointing toward one of the lifts already rising to the upper floors. “I spotted him and the queen on their way.” “Good,” Dalinar said, holding out his hand. “If you’ll give me a Lashing, I might beat them there. Then…” He trailed off as he noticed someone approaching down the hallway. The nursemaid, carrying little Gavinor, dressed in his schoolchild’s outfit of knee-length trousers and a blouse. “Mararin?” Dalinar said to her. “Is something wrong?” “I’m taking him up to the garden room,” Mararin said. “It comforts him, Brightlord. I apologize; I didn’t expect to encounter you.” “It’s the middle of the night.” Gav buried his face in her havah, but peeked at Dalinar. The boy’s eyes were red from tears. “Nightmares?” Dalinar asked Mararin. She nodded. The woman could be stern, but she cared deeply for the children she watched over. “Grampa?” Gav whispered, yawning. “You promised to play swords with me.” “You need sleep, Gav,” Dalinar said softly, stepping toward him. “And Grampa has important work today. We will play tomorrow.” Gavinor nodded, rubbing his eyes on Mararin’s dress. “Get him something to eat,” Dalinar said. “Then bring him up to the tower top. Maybe after my meeting I can—” “Dalinar Kholin?” a voice asked. He spun, but found that Colot the guardsman had already stepped between him and the speaker. She was a shorter woman, Makabaki, in brown clothing. Black hair in tight curls, heavyset build. Dark brown eyes that shimmered with something he couldn’t define. “Do I know you?” Dalinar asked. “We’ve met,” she said, then turned and walked along the balcony railing. She waved for him to follow. “You give orders to the king of Urithiru?” Colot said. “What manner of—” “Stay back,” Dalinar said, waving to them all. Then he ran to catch up to the woman. Her air, attitude, and looks dredged up deep memories. Ones he’d once forgotten by her own hand. No. It couldn’t be. Could it? Cultivation. The third god. Excerpted from Wind and Truth, copyright © 2024 Dragonsteel Entertainment. Join the Read-Along Here Find All Excerpts From Wind and Truth Here Listen to Chapters 14 and 15 MacmillanAudio · Chapter 14 – WIND AND TRUTH by Brandon Sanderson, narrated by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer MacmillanAudio · Chapter 15 – WIND AND TRUTH by Brandon Sanderson, narrated by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer Buy the Book Wind and Truth Brandon Sanderson Book Five of The Stormlight Archive Buy Book Wind and Truth Brandon Sanderson Book Five of The Stormlight Archive Book Five of The Stormlight Archive Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget The post Read <i>Wind and Truth</i> by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 14 and 15 appeared first on Reactor.
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Spain’s Disinfo Crackdown Censorship Trap, Sanchez Faces Backlash
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Spain’s Disinfo Crackdown Censorship Trap, Sanchez Faces Backlash

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Spain is yet another EU country that is coming up with legislative measures which officials say are necessary to combat “disinformation” both on social sites and in traditional media. Such a plan, consisting of 31 points, has been approved by Spain’s Council of Ministers (the main government body), but the opposition is already rejecting it as a ploy to censor free speech. “More transparency and accountability” is how Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez would like the measures, which will be debated in parliament, to be perceived. The debate should be interesting, not least considering that the minority government has come up with the proposal supposedly to tackle disinformation – but in the wake of corruption allegations involving the prime minister’s wife. The accusations leveled at Begona Gomez earlier in the year led to an inquiry, and now the government is determined to push new measures through the parliament that would stop “the spread of false news.” And this is particular – and coincidentally? – applies to such news when they concern “public institutions and individuals.” It seems pretty transparent what prompted all this, but that’s not what Sanchez says he has in mind when he talks about transparency: the prime minister frames the plan as needed to protect both accurate information, and democracy. And not only that, but make that democracy “freer and cleaner” as the justice minister in the left-wing coalition government, Felix Bolanos, chose to put it. And he may or may not be the only one who knows what that is supposed to mean. Meanwhile, the key opposition, right-wing People’s Party said it would vote against the proposal, as they believe the entire endeavor has to do with ushering in more censorship. The plan which Bolanos stated should “restore confidence” in the media can also be read as putting some not-so-subtle pressure on them. Amendments to the penal code are among the proposed provisions, but also a closer government look into media outlet’s finances – referred to as yet more transparency, this time around revenues. Reports say that to achieve all this, the Spanish government wants to set up “a special commission to combat disinformation” and, speaking of revenues, another measure is to “restrict the operation of corporate advertising in the media.” If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Spain’s Disinfo Crackdown Censorship Trap, Sanchez Faces Backlash appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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Drone King Leon Panetta Now Thinks the Israelis Are Terrorists
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Drone King Leon Panetta Now Thinks the Israelis Are Terrorists

Drone King Leon Panetta Now Thinks the Israelis Are Terrorists
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What Are Piezoelectric Crystals And How Do They Work?
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What Are Piezoelectric Crystals And How Do They Work?

We’ve found a lot of ways to make use of this strange property of certain crystals, but the most important effects were here long before us.
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Over 100 Anxiety-Associated Genes Identified In Huge New Multi-Ancestry Study
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Over 100 Anxiety-Associated Genes Identified In Huge New Multi-Ancestry Study

The research could help scientists better understand what puts someone at risk of an anxiety disorder.
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