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FACT CHECK: No, The Heritage Foundation Did Not Endorse Kamala Harris
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FACT CHECK: No, The Heritage Foundation Did Not Endorse Kamala Harris

A post made on Instagram claims that the Heritage Foundation endorsed 2024 Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Divine Empresa (@divineempresa3) Verdict: False There is no evidence for this claim. The Heritage Foundation confirmed to Check Your Fact the claim is false. Fact Check: Social media […]
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Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 27 and 28
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Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 27 and 28

Books Wind and Truth Wind and Truth Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 27 and 28 Time to dust off your theories about anti-Stormlight, missing Honorblades, and the various Unmade… By Paige Vest, Lyndsey Luther, Drew McCaffrey | Published on November 4, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share It’s November! One more month-ish until the Wind and Truth release! It’s also Monday which means, dearest Sanderfans, that is time for another Wind and Truth read-along discussion! ::fanfare:: Last week we dove into chapters 25 and 26, with Dalinar, Navani, and Wit, and also some thrilling Shallan shenanigans… that girl, always getting mixed up with dangerous secret societies. ::shakes my head:: This week, we’re spending time with young Szeth, picking up where we left off with Shallan, and checking in on the buddy-cop adventure unfolding in Shinovar in chapters 27 and 28. That’s so much happening already, right? But we’ve still got a month to go, friends! And we are loving that we get to share these initial chapters with you, so let’s get to it… Oh, and be sure to check out the social media section at the end of the article to see if we’ve spotlighted one of your comments!  Note that this post will possibly (likely) 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, follow your platform’s spoiler rules. Your comments here, however, don’t need to be spoiler-tagged, so feel free to comment as you will down below! Paige’s Summary and Commentary Chapter 27 is titled “What is Right” and it’s another Szeth flashback. Remember, he’s 11 years old and has just discovered a new rock on his family’s homestead. (Well, Molli the sheep discovered it. I guess her licking it wasn’t desecrating it.) So now, Szeth’s father, Neturo-son-Vallano is inspecting the rock as they wait for Szeth’s mother, Zeenid-daughter-Beth to arrive. Szeth, who’s fearful, asks his father if they’ll have to tell the Stone Shamans about the rock and he doesn’t get a straight answer… His father just tells him that it depends. Wait, what? It depends? On what? And here we see Szeth wishing he hadn’t found the rock, for though it will surely be cause for celebration, it could mean change and he doesn’t want change. He loves his life as it is, and my heart aches for this younger, more innocent Szeth who was capable of love. Neturo says that the Stone Shamans may decide to close off the area, in case more stones appear. That they would have to tear down their house and possibly move to the town. Szeth doesn’t seem overly fond of the town; he likes how he can see the mountains and smell the sea breeze from their homestead. Szeth’s sister Elid says that she doesn’t want to move, that they shouldn’t be punished for finding a rock. Szeth, however, keeps going back to how they must do what is right. If it’s right that they have to move, then that’s what they’ll do. Then Zeenid arrives and Szeth is shocked to see her carrying a Soulcast shovel. She says that they’ll relocate the rock a few hundred yards away and Szeth is appalled that she’s going to touch the rock. But she brought gloves! No need to touch any sacred rocks here, son! But Szeth asks his father if they can really do this and he says that it depends on what Szeth thinks, since he found the rock. Oh, great idea… Put the decision in the child’s hands. Well, the child says he’ll do what is right and his father counters with asking if losing their home is right. Dude. So not cool. Szeth brings up the stonewalkers, stating that they’re hated because of how they treat rocks and his father gently corrects him, saying they just don’t know the right way. Elid pipes up, saying that the stonewalkers raid them and Neturo concedes and says that those men are evil but not because they walk on stone but because of the choices they make. Then he tells Szeth that they can move the rock if that’s what Szeth wants to do. Szeth asks if his father can’t tell him what to do and is told that no, he must make the choice but that Neturo will accept whatever Szeth decides. Szeth says they can move the rock. All three of them relaxed as he said it, and he felt a sudden—shameful— resentment. His father said Szeth could choose, but they’d all clearly wanted a specific decision. He’d made it not because it was right, but because he had sensed their desires. Szeth didn’t understand how they could all relax when it wasn’t right to move the rock. He wonders if he is somehow broken and thinks that if that’s what they had all wanted, why hadn’t they just done it instead of making him choose? …You’re killing me, here, Brandon! So Zeenid digs out the rock, scraping the Soulcast shovel against it several times and each time, Szeth cringes at the sound. She reveals an 8-inch gray rock which Szeth thinks could fit in his hand. As they all stare at the rock, a horn sounds. It’s a raid—stonewalkers have reached the coast. Neturo tells Seth they must move the sheep inland, away from the sea, and Zeenid plucks the rock from the ground and hides it in a nook amongst the roots of a nearby tree. And then… ha-ha-ha… the chapter ends. I guess we should’ve seen that coming! Chapter 28 is titled “Obstacle” and we’re back with Shallan, newly discovered by her Ghostblood enemies, as she calls her armor spren to her and pursues Iyatil, summoning Pattern as a blade and Testament as a shield. It’s quite a striking scene if you take the time to picture it: Shallan… Radiant… whoever… resplendent in red Shardplate with a Shardblade and a Shardshield. Damn, girl! Get it! She pursues Iyatil back into the main room and, of course, Mraize shoots a freaking bolt at her with his handheld ballista. She easily deflects it but wonders what would happen if a bolt containing an anti-Stormlight gem were to hit one of her shards. (What would happen, do you think Sanderfans?) Well, we won’t find out because when Iyatil takes the ballista from Mraize and shoots an anti-Stormlight bolt at Shallan, she dismisses her Plate and both of her spren and just… takes the bolt directly to her side! And it injects anti-Stormlight into her body! Eww. What the crem? Pardon me while I go wash my hands because, gross. Before she got shot though, Shallan told Mraize and Iyatil that she has seen Mishram and that they would not survive finding her. It was definitely an interesting moment, one that caught Mraize off guard; he was definitely not expecting that reveal. Iyatil grabs a knife and intends to finish Shallan off, but is interrupted by the ceiling melting. Lo and behold, a Stoneward has made their way into the chamber accompanied by Windrunners… here to save the day. ::more fanfare:: POV shift! Szeth has just finished telling Kaladin a bit of his childhood (double flashback duty!) and then he goes all shy and quiet and refuses to continue. Typical assassin. They come to a place where they can see green fields and towns laid out before them… and it’s beautiful. But against the mountains in the distance, they see an unnaturally dark, shadowy place along a rise. Szeth reveals that it’s a monastery, dedicated to Taln the Herald, and it has a Darkness about it. Kaladin worries that an Unmade is housed there and they decide to make camp for the night so they can approach the monastery during daylight. Kaladin suggests starting a campfire though Szeth resists. But Kaladin feels like Szeth needs a little bit of Bridge Four camaraderie to come out of his shell. Do you think it’ll work, Sanderfans? A campfire, a little stew, and maybe Szeth will just BOOM… open up and accept Kaladin’s therapy? What say you? Let us know in the comments, where you can share all the juicy theories you now have, or just talk about the feelings these chapters gave you!  Lyndsey’s Commentary Chapter 27’s chapter arch Herald is Ishi (Ishar), Herald of Luck, patron of the Bondsmiths in all four spaces. His attributes are Pious/Guiding and his role is Priest. It makes a LOT of sense for Ishi to be the Herald of this Szeth POV flashback, as the entire chapter is about piety. Chapter 28’s Herald of choice for the chapter arch, in all four spaces, is Chana, (Chanarach), Herald of the Common Man and patron of Dustbringers. Her attributes are Brave/Obedient and her role is Guard. Kaladin’s certainly acting the guard in this chapter, and Shallan’s being brave in standing up to the Ghostbloods. I do not have answers, and there will always be some who denounce me for this decision I made. But let me teach a truth here that is often misunderstood: sometimes, it is not weakness, but strength, to stand up and walk away. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable I honestly don’t have much to say on this one. I don’t think these bits of parable are related to the chapters they precede, so much as that they’re meant to be taken all together. Once we have the full picture, I’ll quote them all together and we’ll see what we can glean from them… Szeth Something new meant possible celebration, possible attention, possible change. He preferred quiet days full of languid breezes and bleating sheep. Poor Szeth. We know, from where he is now, that everything is going to change for him. He’s going to lose his family. His culture. His way of life. His innocence. Everything about his life that he loves as a child will be irrevocably taken from him. All three of them relaxed as he said it, and he felt a sudden—shameful—resentment. His father said Szeth could choose, but they’d all clearly wanted a specific decision. He’d made it not because it was right, but because he had sensed their desires. Ah, a difficult ethical dilemma, and a difficult place to be put in for such a young child. Should the will of the people supersede the divine? As to his abhorrence of making decisions in general… We still see this inclination in Szeth in the present. He prefers to be told what to do. And in a way, who can blame him? If you’re not the one making the decisions, the responsibility for said decisions can’t be laid at your feet. We show devotion because we choose to. And so, the kind of devotion we make is ours to decide.”“Don’t the Stone Shamans tell us what to do?”“They share the teachings of the spren,” Mother said, as she shouldered the shovel. “But we interpret those teachings. What we’re doing here today is reverent enough for me.” Taking the holy word of your religion and interpreting it how you wish is something that we see in the real world in almost every organized religion. It’s why there are so many variations of Christianity. The very nature of the written (or spoken) word is such that it’s open to interpretation. But of course, this goes against Szeth’s nature. He wants everything to be black and white, to be told what to do, to not have responsibility thrust upon his shoulders. But life is never that simple, and we rarely get what we want. Szeth trailed off, having told Kaladin a little about his family as they walked through the forest for a few hours. A story of the discovery of a rock, told in fits and starts. So the flashback we’re seeing is Szeth telling his own story to Kaladin. I’m honestly surprised that Kaladin’s managed to get this level of openness from him so swiftly, but I’m also happy to see it, for Szeth’s sake. He’s kept his trauma and pain bottled up for so long, with no one to listen to him. He needs this. He needs a friend. Thankfully Szeth joined him, and offered no further complaint about a cookfire. Because Kaladin needed this man to open up.And he figured he’d try an old standby. Ah, yes. The good old stew trick, of course. It’s nice to see that Rock’s legacy lives on, regardless of where he is… Shallan She would not ask Testament to kill again. Shallan reached her left arm to the side, and Testament appeared as a powerful shield, affixed to her arm, light as a cloth glyphward. Okay. That’s really cool. I’m also really glad to see Shallan being as sympathetic and understanding as she currently is. She’s really taking the time to think about her actions and how they’re affecting those she cares about. She almost drew in Stormlight, but forcibly stopped herself. I’m so impressed with her growth. She’s always been smart, of course, but this cool-headed analysis of the situation and doing the right thing—scientifically—in the heat of the moment is incredibly impressive. Cultural Analysis “I always thought there couldn’t be trees outside Shinovar,” Szeth said, Stormlight escaping his lips. “How could they grow in a land with no soil?”“And I,” Kaladin said, “never imagined you’d have them here. With nothing for their roots to grip.” I feel like there’s a deeper meaning here. Maybe it’s just the English Major in me looking for symbolism, but the lack of soil in Szeth’s perspective could also be symbolic of his peoples’ view that the Stonewalkers lack virtue. How can goodness “grow” in a land with no adherence to divinity? On Kaladin’s side, the Alethi seem to view the Shin as very wishy-washy, almost childlike. This makes sense, from a culture that holds war and battle in such a high regard, when looking at a pacifist culture. How can their culture “grow” when they have no strength, no bedrock of war upon which to base themselves? Drew’s Commentary: Invested Arts & Theories While Szeth’s flashbacks have started off relatively slow (when it comes to the magic and lore of the world, at least), things are starting to heat up a tad. It’s helped by the direct connection drawn between the flashback and Szeth’s conversation with Kaladin as they head into Shinovar. “That darkness,” Kaladin said, “reminds me of the darkness around the Kholinar palace. An Unmade lived there. You really met one here, in Shinovar?” And so we begin with the Cleansing of Shinovar plotline. Readers have been theorizing about what’s going on in Shinovar for ages now, and the Unmade have always been the leading possibility. But which Unmade are we dealing with here? A few of them can be crossed off the list straight away: Sja-anat, Ba-Ado-Mishram, and Nergaoul have all been busy elsewhere, as have Re-Shephir, Ashertmarn, and Yelig-nar. That leaves us with three potential culprits: Moelach, Dai-Gonarthis, and Chemoarish. Moelach is probably another one we can rule out, but it’s not a for-sure thing. Moelach, the Unmade that causes the Death Rattles, is known for moving around—and in fact Szeth notes in both The Way of Kings and Rhythm of War that Death Rattles were at one time common in Shinovar. But this taint on the region seems more permanent than Moelach would be capable of. Then there’s Chemoarish, the Dustmother. We know basically nothing about her, except that, according to Hessi’s Mythica, she’s not one of the mindless Unmade. This is actually pretty noteworthy, since the three mindless Unmade are all one-word names (Nergaoul, Moelach, and Ashertmarn), and the more aware/sapient of them have hyphenated names (like Sja-anat and Ba-Ado-Mishram). So Chemoarish already holds a strange place in the pantheon of Unmade. I think we should be keeping an eye out for any signs of dustlike phenomena, whether in Shinovar or elsewhere. The final potential Unmade culprit is Dai-Gonarthis, who according to Hessi may not even be one of the Unmade, but also might be responsible for the Scouring of Aimia. To me, this is a possible red flag waving, as what happened in Shinovar is still such a mystery…but maybe it’s another “Scouring” in progress? Oh, and another long-lasting mystery? Taln’s Honorblade. Ever since it disappeared en route to the Shattered Plains after the epilogue of The Way of Kings, people have been feverishly guessing about what happened to it. One of the leading theories is that the Shin Stone Shamans figured out that Taln was back and went to get their mitts on it. “Talmut’s”, Szeth said. “You call him Talenelat, or Taln. Stonesinew, the Bearer of Agonies.” If the disappearance of the Honorblade was indeed the doing of the Stone Shamans, we’re gonna find out sooner rather than later. If not, one of the most contentious mysteries of The Stormlight Archive will live on! Meanwhile, back on the Shattered Plains, Shallan is dealing with a new set of problems. Not only are the Ghostbloods (at least some of them) now bonded to Enlightened Radiant spren, but they have one heckuva weapon for taking down Radiants like Shallan, Testament Shardshield or no. What would happen if anti-Light met a Shardweapon? Shallan might be wondering about this, but this is a nice bit of dramatic irony. We already know what happens when this stuff comes into contact with a spren, and it’s not pretty. It was a great call to dismiss both Testament and her Plate before the bolt connected, to be honest. I can’t imagine an anti-light mini-ballista would have treated either of those very well. And speaking of great calls by Shallan, it was probably a clutch decision to not give in to either the urge to draw Stormlight to heal or to suck in the anti-Light that punched through her. Then there’s this: Then [Mraize], Iyatil, and Lieke—who had been lingering—vanished. The air around them warped with a light tinged black-violet, and they were gone. There are a few potential possibilities for what this is. Clearly there’s something weird with their Surgebinding, given the Enlightened spren angle. Thus, the black-violet thing, which is reminiscent of Voidlight. But what did they even do? Was this a weird Lightweaving? Or is one of them an Elsecaller? We really haven’t seen much of Transportation, but the epilogue of Words of Radiance does give us one clue. The air in front of him blurred, as if heated in a ring near the ground. A streak of light spun about the ring, forming a wall five or six feet high. It faded immediately—really, it was just an afterimage, as if something glowing had spun in the circle very quickly. This doesn’t sound exactly like what Mraize and Iyatil did, but it’s pretty close, yeah? Especially with the differences brought through the Enlightened bond. What do you think? Are the Ghostbloods Lightweaving or Elsecalling here? Fan Theories Daxelkurtz on Reddit says this: This is probably very silly, but I wonder if “Unite Them” is about to happen in another way. I wonder if the three Bondsmiths are about to meet, for the first time in many millennia: Dalinar, bonded to the Stormfather; Navani, bonded to the Sibling; and Ba-ado-Mishram, bonded to the Nightwatcher. This week’s “Reddit comment that made Lyn crack up” goes to the aptly named laughinglord with this gem: ** I will always have a soft spot for Kelsier. But damn buddy, choose better people in your crew. Mraize is a trigger pull away from becoming a moustache-twirling villain! Also, before anyone comes across this sentence from the end of chapter 27 and notes it as a typo: They don’t reverence stone or the spren who live within them.   We assure you, coming right from Dragonsteel, that the wording is intentional. 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 29 and 30![end-mark] The post <i>Wind and Truth</i> Read-Along Discussion: Chapters 27 and 28 appeared first on Reactor.
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Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 27 and 28
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Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 27 and 28

Excerpts Wind and Truth Read Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson: Chapters 27 and 28 Read new chapters from the new Stormlight Archive book every Monday, leading up to its release on December 6th By Brandon Sanderson | Published on November 4, 2024 Comment 0 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. Chapter 27: What Is Right Twenty-six years ago Szeth’s father, Neturo-son-Vallano, knelt beside the new stone. Szeth’s mother, Zeenid-daughter-Beth, was overseeing painting classes in the town, so they’d sent her a message via Tek, one of their carrier parrots. Wind blew across them, bringing with it the pungent scent of the gathered sheep in the nearby pasture. Szeth hid behind his father, peeking out. He wasn’t certain why this new stone frightened him so. He loved their rock, and a new one was surely cause for celebration, but shamefully… he wished he hadn’t found it. Something new meant possible celebration, possible attention, possible change. He preferred quiet days full of languid breezes and bleating sheep. Nights beside the hearth or the firepit, listening to Mother tell stories. He didn’t want some grand new thing. Szeth had what he loved. “What do we do, Father?” Elid asked. “Call the Stone Shamans?” “It depends,” he said. “Depends.” Their father was a calm man, with a long beard he liked to keep tied with a green ribbon at the bottom, matching ones on his arms, together forming his splash. He got to wear three, as his duty of training other shepherds elevated him. His head was shaded by his customary tall reed hat with a wide brim, and he had a bit of a paunch that spoke to his talent as a cook. He had all the answers. Always. “What about it is uncertain, Father?” Szeth said, peeking around at the little stone. “We just do what is right.” Father glanced at their larger stone, then at this one. “A single rock is a blessed anomaly. Two… might mean more. It might mean the spren have chosen this region.” “What do you mean?” Elid asked, hands on her hips. “I mean there might be other rocks,” Father said, “hiding beneath the surface here. Stone Shamans will want to set aside the entire region, preserve it and watch it for a few years to see if anything else emerges.” “And… us?” Szeth asked. “Well, we’ll have to move,” Father replied. “Tear down the house, in case it’s accidentally on holy ground. Set up wherever the Farmer finds land for us. Maybe in the town.” In the town? Szeth turned, looking into the distance—though the rolling hills prevented him from seeing Clearmount unless he climbed up on top of one. It was close enough to walk to in an hour or so, but he found the place noisy, congested. In the town, it felt like the mountains weren’t just around the corner, because buildings blocked them out. It felt like the meadows had gone brown, replaced by dull roads. You couldn’t smell the sea breezes. He didn’t hate the town. But he got the sense that it hated the things he loved. “I don’t want to move!” Elid said. “We found a rock! We shouldn’t be punished.” “If it’s right though,” Szeth said, “then we have to do it. Right, Father?” Father stood up, pulling at his trousers, and waited. Soon Szeth picked out his mother hurrying along the path between hills toward their home. She wore a long green skirt as her splash—while it was only one piece, that size… well, it was an audacious amount for her station. She had a white apron over the front, and curly light brown hair that bunched up around her head like a cloud. She was carrying one of the town’s shovels—a relic crafted from metal that had never seen rock, Soulcast by an Honorbearer and gifted to them. Szeth gaped, his jaw dropping. That couldn’t mean… Mother hurried up to them, shovel on her shoulder. Father nodded toward the new rock, and Mother let out a relieved sigh. “So small? Your note had me worried, Neturo.” “Mother?” Szeth said. “What are you doing?” “Merely a quick relocation,” she said. “I borrowed one of the shovels, but didn’t tell anyone why. We’ll dig up the rock and move it a few hundred yards. Let it rain a little, so it seems to have naturally poked up, then tell everyone.” Szeth gasped. “We can’t touch it!” Mother pulled out a pair of gloves. “Of course not. That’s why I brought gloves, dear.” “That’s the same thing!” Szeth said, horrified. He looked to his father. “We can’t do this, can we?” Father scratched at his beard. “Depends, I suppose, on what you think, son.” “Me?” “You found the rock,” Father said, glancing at Mother, who nodded in agreement. “So you can decide.” “I choose whatever is right,” Szeth said immediately. “Is it right for us to lose our home?” Father asked. “I…” Szeth glanced at the house. “There might be dozens of rocks underneath here,” Father said. “If that’s the case, then we should absolutely move. But in the hundreds of years that rain has fallen on this region, only two have emerged. So it’s unlikely. Moving the stone a few hundred yards will still make the shamans watch this area, but with the rocks being farther apart, the worry will be more nebulous. But that requires us to move it. In secret.” “We hate the stonewalkers,” Szeth said, “because of how they treat rock.” Father knelt down, one hand on Szeth’s shoulder. “We don’t hate them. They simply don’t know the right way of things.” “They raid us, Father,” Elid said, folding her arms. “Yes, well,” he said. “Those men are evil, but it’s not because they live in a place with too much stone. It’s because of the choices they make.” He smiled at Szeth. “It’s okay, son. If you want us to turn this in now, well, we’ll do it.” “Can’t you just… tell me what to do?” Szeth asked. “No, I don’t think that I can,” Father said. “Unfair to put you in this spot, I know, but the spren gave you the first sight. You should decide. We can move the rock, or we can move our home. I’ll accept either one.” “Maybe we should let him sleep on it,” Mother said. “No,” Szeth said. “No. We can… move the rock.” All three of them relaxed as he said it, and he felt a sudden—shameful—resentment. His father said Szeth could choose, but they’d all clearly wanted a specific decision. He’d made it not because it was right, but because he had sensed their desires. But how could they all want it if it wasn’t right? Maybe they saw something he didn’t—maybe he was broken. But if so, they should have simply told him what they intended to do, and then done it. That would have been fine. Why give him the choice? Didn’t they see that made this his fault? Mother pulled on her gloves and started digging. Szeth winced each time the shovel scraped the stone. That metallic sound was not natural. He hoped that they would discover the rock was enormous—so that the plan had to be abandoned. In the end, it was small. Eight inches long, and a dull grey color. He could have held it in one hand, if he’d wanted. Molli the ewe, seeming to sense his tension, rubbed up against him and he gripped at her wool, her warmth. Even Mother seemed a little unsure, now that she’d dug the rock out. She stepped back, leaving it in the hole. “You scraped it,” Elid said. “That seems… kind of obvious.” “Once we’ve buried it again,” Mother said, “nobody will see the scrapes.” “How much trouble would we be in,” Elid asked, “if someone found out?” “I suspect the Farmer wouldn’t be happy,” Father said. He laughed then, and it sounded genuine. “Might require some cake to make up for it. Don’t get that look, Szeth. We show devotion because we choose to. And so, the kind of devotion we make is ours to decide.” “I… don’t understand,” he said. “Don’t the Stone Shamans tell us what to do?” “They share the teachings of the spren,” Mother said, as she shouldered the shovel. “But we interpret those teachings. What we’re doing here today is reverent enough for me.” Szeth thought on that and wondered—as this was not the first clue in his life—if perhaps this was why they chose to live outside the town. Many shepherd families lived at least part of the year inside it. His family visited each month for devotions, so he didn’t dare think that his family wasn’t faithful. Yet the older he got, the more questions he had. How did he feel about his parents doing something he knew the shamans wouldn’t approve of? They were still all standing there, staring at the rock, when the horns sounded. Father looked up, then whispered a soft prayer to the spren of their stone. The horns meant raiders on the southern coast. Stonewalkers. Szeth felt an immediate panic. “What do we do?” “Gather the sheep,” Father said. “Quickly. We must drive them toward Dison’s Valley on the other side of the town. The Farmer has troops in the region. We’ll be safe inland.” “But this?” Szeth said, gesturing to the rock. “This!” Mother, suddenly determined, reached down and grabbed it in her gloved hands. Together, all four of them froze, then looked toward their family stone. It sat there, unmoving. None of them were struck down. Szeth thought he could tell, from the way his parents slowly relaxed, that they hadn’t been certain. At least this indicated his parents hadn’t been secretly moving rocks around all his life. Mother walked over to a tree nearer their house, then carefully placed the stone into a gnarled nook among the roots and hid it with leaves. “That will do for now,” she said. “If raiders do come here, they’ll think nothing of a stone. They don’t reverence stone or the spren who live within them. You all gather the sheep; I’ll return this shovel.” Father and Elid went to do exactly that. Szeth hugged Molli, wishing this day had never begun. Chapter 28: Obstacle I do not have answers, and there will always be some who denounce me for this decision I made. But let me teach a truth here that is often misunderstood: sometimes, it is not weakness, but strength, to stand up and walk away. —From The Way of Kings, fourth parable Iyatil ran for the larger room, giving Shallan time to reach into her sleeve and activate the spanreed strapped to her arm. A long press, locked into position, which would make the ruby on the other spanreed pulse—indicating an emergency. Shallan turned to run up the steps. Radiant stopped her. She’d fooled Mraize and Iyatil. She’d done it. They were just people. Deadly, capable, manipulative. But people. In some ways less capable than Shallan, for if they genuinely had spren, they were very new to them. Perhaps barely a few days into their bonding. Instead of running, Radiant ripped away the stupid wig and mask. “Armor,” she commanded. Shallan! It encased her in a heartbeat, a bright glow from the front of her visor illuminating the room. Pattern followed at her summons, a brilliant, silvery sword. And Testament? She would not ask Testament to kill again. Shallan reached her left arm to the side, and Testament appeared as a powerful shield, affixed to her arm, light as a cloth glyphward. Shallan was no longer a child, confused, terrified, forced to kill with a gifted necklace. She had spoken Truth. And today she was the Radiant she’d once only imagined. From the larger room with the bales of hay, Iyatil shouted to the others. “The Lightweaver is here! She was impersonating Aleen!” Radiant stepped through the doorway, checking the corners. She leveled her weapon at Lieke, who had been right inside. He fled backward, stepping on purple fearspren. Radiant didn’t blame him. Facing a Shardbearer without Shards was not a wise proposition. Unless you were a storm-faced bridgeman, of course. Across the room, Mraize took her in, then smiled. Storm him, he was proud of her. He calmly raised his hand ballista and shot a normal, non-lit bolt. She deflected it easily with her shield, and was struck by a new fear. What would happen if anti-Light met a Shardweapon? Storms, they were in unknown territory. Iyatil ripped the ballista out of Mraize’s hands. Nearby, the other Ghostbloods were doing themselves credit. When Shallan had pulled similar operations on groups like the Sons of Honor, there had been mass chaos. The Ghostbloods moved with deliberate coordination, spreading out, two summoning Shardblades, others producing conventional weapons. Iyatil moved quickest of all, explaining why she’d retreated instead of engaging Shallan. Stabbing a Knight Radiant was basically useless; she needed something stronger. Iyatil pulled a bolt from Mraize’s pouch and raised a now-cocked ballista with it loaded, glowing bright. While Mraize had chosen a conventional bolt, Iyatil would shoot anti-Stormlight. Shallan ducked back into the trophy room. She glanced over her shoulder and saw the Ghostbloods retreating toward the west side of the large chamber. Storms, of course they’d have another exit. There was no way in Damnation’s cold winds they would trap themselves—which meant she couldn’t just hold this room and wait for the others. She stepped into the doorway and shouted, “Mraize!” Her helmet amplified the sound, as if she’d spoken with ten times the force. Wow. Shallan! the armor said, somehow conveying You’re welcome. Mraize stopped retreating and turned toward her. “Would you become the prey?” she demanded. “Running before the axehound?” “Even a master hunter hides from the storm,” he called back. “I will face you when it is time, little knife.” “Why not now?” she asked, advancing. Iyatil was pulling on Mraize’s arm to flee, ballista lowered to her side. Lieke opened a hidden door in the west wall. The others went through—one at a time, no pushing. Shallan held her hands to the sides, dismissing both Pattern and Testament. “Go find the others; see what is taking them so long,” she whispered to the spren. She could resummon them, but didn’t want to risk them if that bolt was loosed. Iyatil trained the ballista on her, but did not shoot. She knew she had exactly one shot. The others were escaping, but so long as Iyatil and Mraize were focused on Shallan, she bought time for the strike force to arrive. “I’ve seen Mishram,” Shallan said. “Lightning in her eyes. Hair like midnight. I’ve seen her.” That did it. The two fixated on her even more squarely. “Mishram is imprisoned,” Iyatil said. “Can any prison truly hold a god?” Shallan said, stepping forward. “Whatever advantage you think you can gain from her, you’re wrong. She is malevolent and terrible, the essence of hatred, imprisoned for two thousand years. She will destroy you, Mraize. Whatever your plan, it is not worth the risk.” Mraize clasped his hands behind his back, studying her. Her argument wasn’t a good one—Mraize was willing to make big wagers, and was not driven by fear—but it was all she’d been able to come up with on the spot. Still, he studied Radiant. Was he thinking about what she’d said… No, Veil thought. He’s thinking how we surprised him by sneaking in here. And how bold we are to stand here, staring down that weapon. “We don’t have to be enemies,” she said to him. “You aren’t my enemy,” he said. “You’re my obstacle.” Iyatil shifted. She’s going to shoot. Shallan dove to the side while breathing out and purposely ejecting all of her Stormlight. With some, she created two illusions: one of her jumping in the other direction, another staying in place. Iyatil tracked the correct Shallan, then loosed. Go! Shallan commanded the armor. Shallan? the spren sent, but obeyed, vanishing right as the crossbow bolt took her in the ribs. She tumbled in her dive, grunting at the sudden jolt of pain. She almost drew in Stormlight, but forcibly stopped herself. No. No. The bolt had a metal tip, with a gemstone clipped into the shaft. That tip… it was designed, like the weapons of the Fused, to move Light. In this case, it injected the anti-Light, making it seep through her. It wasn’t painful, not compared to the actual wound, but it was wrong. A cold that prowled through her veins, carried through her body with every beat of her heart. Painspren clawed up from the stone ground around her. This feeling was unnatural, counter to her very nature, but… she felt she could have drawn it in like normal Light. She decided not to try, as it did not seem to be able to hurt her so long as she set her jaw against the pain and refused the normal Stormlight that would heal her. Because if those two met… Through tears of pain, Shallan watched Mraize take Iyatil by the arm and gesture toward the exit. She instead pulled a knife from its sheath at her belt and moved toward Shallan. Then, blessedly, something distracted them. Shouts from the hidden hallway? The ceiling in the center of the room—between Shallan and the other two—melted. Stone in a hole maybe eight feet across poured down, as if it had suddenly become mud. It splashed on the floor of the cavern—missing the podium by inches and touching none of the people—then instantly hardened. Through that hole came a dozen Windrunners one after another—the last carrying Erinor, Darcira’s husband, a Stoneward. That explained the meltiness. Hand on her wound—bloodied fingers around the crossbow bolt—Shallan met Mraize’s eyes. Then he, Iyatil, and Lieke—who had been lingering—vanished. The air around them warped with a light tinged black-violet, and they were gone. * * * Szeth trailed off, having told Kaladin a little about his family as they walked through the forest for a few hours. A story of the discovery of a rock, told in fits and starts. Kaladin hadn’t interrupted, enjoying hearing the other man open up—plus, learning about the Shin was genuinely interesting. This time when Szeth trailed off, he didn’t continue. “You heard a horn?” Kaladin eventually prompted. “What did that mean?” “I’m done for now,” Szeth said. Kaladin sighed, but otherwise contained his annoyance. At least that story had been something. They soon reached a sharp drop-off. Here the trail wound down in a series of steep switchbacks, so they took a quick jaunt into the sky. Kaladin felt invigorated, bathed in the light of a sun that had passed its zenith and was now working toward the horizon. “Do you have forests near your home?” Szeth asked as they lazily drifted down, skimming the tops of the foliage. “Not like this,” Kaladin said. “I didn’t see a true forest until I reached the Shattered Plains, and took a trip to the harvesting operations a half day’s march north.” “I always thought there couldn’t be trees outside Shinovar,” Szeth said, Stormlight escaping his lips. “How could they grow in a land with no soil?” “And I,” Kaladin said, “never imagined you’d have them here. With nothing for their roots to grip.” Szeth grunted at that, then Lashed himself in a steady swoop along the mountainside. Kaladin followed as the trees dwindled, and they approached Shinovar proper: a vast plain of vibrant green. Kaladin had seen many a field before, but he realized that up until this moment, he’d never seen something so alive as this prairie. Though again, there were no lifespren, which he found odd. Regardless, fields back home had grass, but with more space between the blades, so the brown cremstone filtered through. Here the grass grew like moss, achieving an aggressive density. As if the individual blades had formed mobs, armies, pike blocks. Following Szeth, he landed on an outcropping on the slope. As Szeth sat down to inspect the land before them, Kaladin walked to the edge, his Stormlight giving out, and his full weight settled on him, his feet sinking into the soft soil to an unfamiliar degree. The entire view—with the rolling hills of green and a thick blanket of grass—made him think of an ocean. Each of those hills a swell or wave, with trees like ships. There was even what he thought might be a herd of wild horses in the distance. Incredible. “I see it now,” Kaladin whispered. “What?” Szeth asked. “I see how your land survives. That grass… it doesn’t move, doesn’t react. Yet it feels as if it could swallow everything. Like it wants to consume me.” “It will, once you die,” Szeth said softly. “It will take all of us. Undoubtedly later than we deserve.” What a delightful way of thinking. Syl landed next to Kaladin, becoming full sized and trimmed in violet. She was grinning, naturally. “Look at the solitary trees!” she said, pointing. “Look at them just sitting there alone, without a care in the world.” Here, trees didn’t need companions with whom to lock roots. But Kaladin, now that he thought to look closer, found the buildings more unusual. This region wasn’t terribly well populated, but he picked out one town, maybe the size of Hearthstone—and several lonely homesteads. Those buildings seemed so unprotected, practically shouting for the storms to take them. Though they were distant, he thought they were wooden, and appeared flimsy. With flat walls to the east, and windows on those sides as well. He knew people here didn’t have to fight the storms, but those homes unnerved him. Made him think the people must be weak, innocent, in need of protection. Like lost children wandering a battlefield. “This is wrong,” Szeth said. “Yeah,” Kaladin said, kneeling beside him in the knee-high grass. “How do people live here?” “Peacefully, when your kind let them,” Szeth said, his eyes narrowed. He sat somewhat awkwardly, the strange black sword strapped to his back. It was a good example of why one normally summoned a Shardblade, instead of carrying it. The weapon was awkwardly sized: too long to be worn at the waist, but difficult to draw when strapped to the back like that. Szeth glanced at him and shook his head. “Something is wrong here. Not the things you see with a stonewalker’s perspective, Kaladin. Look. Does that region seem… darker than it should?” Kaladin followed Szeth’s pointing finger to a rise on the right, along the cliffsides of the mountain. It was darker than the stones and soil around it. But… there was no visible cloud to cause that shadow. Kaladin narrowed his eyes and thought he could see wisps of blackness rising from it. “What’s over there?” Kaladin asked. “The monastery,” Szeth said. “We have ten of them. Most are homes of the Honorblades.” The legendary weapons of the Heralds. Szeth had wielded one when killing old King Gavilar. It, unfortunately, had fallen into other hands… the hands of a man who should have been Kaladin’s brother. “You keep the Honorblades in monasteries?” Kaladin asked. “One for each Radiant order, though Talmut’s is missing, of course, as is Nin’s. Ishu has claimed his too, now. Regardless, when a person is elevated as I was in my youth, they travel to each monastery on pilgrimage, training at those that have an Honorblade, mastering each Surge. That one ahead is the first I lived in, but it has no Blade.” “Which one is it?” Syl asked from the edge of their overlook, gazing straight along the mountainside to that distant fortress on the ridge. “Which Blade should it have held?” “Talmut’s,” Szeth said. “You call him Talenelat, or Taln. Stonesinew, the Bearer of Agonies.” “That darkness,” Kaladin said, “reminds me of the darkness around the Kholinar palace. An Unmade lived there. You really met one here, in Shinovar?” “Yes,” Szeth said softly. “When was this?” Kaladin said. “After you discovered a rock on your family’s ground?” He hoped to prompt more of the story. “The meeting was much later,” Szeth said, “but that day with the rock, and the raid… that was the beginning.” “Do you want to tell me more?” Kaladin asked. “None of that matters. All that matters is the quest.” “And the people, your family, the—” “None of it matters,” Szeth repeated. “We should camp here for the night and visit the monastery in the morning. Unless you want to investigate that place now.” Kaladin shoved aside his annoyance at Szeth and looked again at the patch of darkness. Then he glanced at the sun, which was getting close to setting. He wasn’t certain how all this connected—Ishar, Dalinar’s request of him, and Szeth’s story. But if there was an Unmade, he didn’t want to risk encountering it at night. Kaladin had faced them at Kholinar, where he’d failed to protect the people. Even the Unmade he’d eventually defeated—when it had worn Amaram’s body—had been extremely dangerous. “Camping sounds good,” Kaladin said. “But let’s do it farther back and around that bend, to shelter the cookfire.” “We don’t need a cookfire,” Szeth said. “We have travel rations.” Kaladin insisted, however. Thankfully Szeth joined him, and offered no further complaint about a cookfire. Because Kaladin needed this man to open up. And he figured he’d try an old standby. Excerpted from Wind and Truth, copyright © 2024 Dragonsteel Entertainment. Join the Read-Along Discussion Here Find All the Excerpts Here Listen to Chapters 27 and 28 MacmillanAudio · Chapter 27 – WIND AND TRUTH by Brandon Sanderson, narrated by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer MacmillanAudio · Chapter 28 – 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 27 and 28 appeared first on Reactor.
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WATCH: Weiner Dog Outruns Hoomans At NFL Game
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WATCH: Weiner Dog Outruns Hoomans At NFL Game

A Dachshund escaped and ran around the field, outrunning all the hoomans trying to catch it, at an NFL game on Sunday, October 27. The “incident” happened during the Cleveland Browns game vs Baltimore Ravens. And while several Browns employees chased the dog around the field, the crowd erupted in cheers as it evaded all the hoomans trying to catch it. However, the dog was eventually caught, with some of the people in the crowd getting disappointed as they can be heard saying, “oh, they got him”. The video, which quickly became viral, was originally uploaded on TikTok by user ErnietheDog, with the caption, “Most entertaining part of the CLE Browns game”. The now-viral video, which was reuploaded a few times, has amassed almost a million likes and almost 8 million views on TikTok alone. Watch the video below to see the Dachshund zooming around the field as hoomans try to catch it! @csmosk #erniethedog #fyp #foryourpage #dogs #dogsoftiktok #funny #nfl #clevelandbrowns #cleveland #browns #funnydogs #wholetthedogsout ♬ Who Let The Dogs Out – Original – The Doggies
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We Keep On Playing Polling 'Head Games'
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We Keep On Playing Polling 'Head Games'

We Keep On Playing Polling 'Head Games'
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We Have a Country to Save
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We Have a Country to Save

We Have a Country to Save
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12 Million-Year-Old Fossil Reveals What May Be The Largest Terror Bird To Have Ever Lived
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12 Million-Year-Old Fossil Reveals What May Be The Largest Terror Bird To Have Ever Lived

The previous tallest members of the family were almost 3 meters high, and this was probably substantially bigger.
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The Toxic Wind Of Salton Sea Is Impacting Kids' Health In Southern California
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The Toxic Wind Of Salton Sea Is Impacting Kids' Health In Southern California

As it shrinks, California's largest lake has grown into an environmental catastrophe for the local community.
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CBS's 'FBI: Most Wanted' Pushes Anti-Fracking Climate Hysteria: 'The Earth is Doomed!'
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CBS's 'FBI: Most Wanted' Pushes Anti-Fracking Climate Hysteria: 'The Earth is Doomed!'

As Election Day nears, CBS’s procedural drama FBI: Most Wanted took on the issue of hydraulic fracturing (AKA fracking) and CO2 pipelines, but even though the ecoterrorists were the bad guys, the vibe was sympathetic to their cause if not their violent methods of protest. The episode, “White Buffalo,” starts with two young friends, Trevor (Bubba Weiler) and Emma (Eddy Grace), destroying art in a museum as Emma shouts, “The temperature of the earth is increasing day by day by day!” A scuffle ensues with a security guard and Trevor accidentally shoots another guard dead with the first guard’s gun. The two escape and the FBI team learns they’re part of an environmentalist group called Global Climate Front. Further investigation leads Remy (Dylan McDermott) and Nina (Shantel VanSanten) to discover Emma is an oil heiress. They deduce Emma must likely be “trying to repay some karmic debt.” Meanwhile, an accomplice arrives to assist Trevor and Emma, and the FBI team interview a leader of the Global Climate Front: Trevor: Tori? Tori: Yeah, yeah, get in. Trevor: All right, that's her. We'll be fine. 'Cause if you come with me, Em, you'll be in the fight of your life, not just for me, but for all life. Or you can go back to the life that your father gave you... The one subsidized by the rape and murder of our planet. Emma: I'm coming with you. Norbert: I mean, look, we want people to pay attention to global warming, to decrease the output of greenhouse gases so that our kids might have a chance at clean air and a summer where the temperature isn't over a hundred 14 days in a row. But we do not believe in communicating our message with violence. It's in our charter. Hana: Yeah, we'll be taking this laptop. Remy: Have Trevor and Emma ever been violent in the past? Norbert: No. But Trevor has a temper. Emma's way more easygoing. Remy: So, she's following his lead here? Hana: When was the last time you spoke to Emma or Trevor? Norbert: This morning before all hell broke loose. Remy: You planned for this chaos, to deface the artwork with pig blood. Any other stunts we should know about, Norbert? Norbert: The vote next week to save the polar bears up in Alaska. We're considering a sit-in at the senator's house. Hana: Just a sit-in? Norbert: Yes. When the trio arrives at Tori’s (Ellen Tamaki) farmhouse, Tori claims fracking poisoned her water, gave her a thyroid problem, killed her mother, and made her entire town sick: Tori: I know it’s not much but, uh, this is where I grew up. Me and my mayma, may she rest in peace. Emma: I'm sorry for your loss, Tori. Tori: She'd been sick for years. Um, everyone around these parts has been. I've had a thyroid problem my whole life. Trevor: God, what is it, this disgusting water? Tori: It's gotta be. We're on the Marcellus Shale deposit, so oil companies have been fracking this area for years. They just bleed us dry, get us sick, and then leave. That's why I wanna help you guys. I really believe in what you're doing. And I really think you didn't mean to shoot that guard. Emma: Thanks. I'm really glad you're on our team. I believe in you too. Trevor: Was one of the companies that fracked here Henstep Gas and Oil? Tori: Yeah, how'd you know? Trevor: Just saw one of their tanker trucks go by. See, there goes another one. Tori: You know, I've been noticing them the past couple of days, but I don't know where they're going because all the wells around here are closed. Trevor explains that Henstep is building a CO2 pipeline. “It's supposedly a good thing,” he says, “but the reason it's taken so long is this stuff is totally dangerous and bad for the environment.” There are very strict safety standards for CO2 pipelines, which provide invaluable benefits: cleaner air, enhanced economic development, job creation, support of domestic energy production, and many more . Of course, the writers didn’t mention any of that. The FBI team reviews an aerial photo of Tori’s farm and notes it’s on Marcellus Shale, leading Remy to remark, “That land’s been fracked within an inch of its life.” The terrorist trio hijacks a Henstep tanker after Trevor kills the driver and they wreak a ton of havoc as they try to escape. They release the truck’s 6,000 gallons of carbon dioxide outside an apple orchard filled with families, which depletes oxygen making it difficult to breathe. As the FBI works to shut down the gas and save the affected victims, Remy confronts a higher-up at Henstep. He’s painted as a heartless, money-hungry man, though he makes several valid points: Elliot: Do you know how long it took us to get that thing up and running? Seven years. I'm not shutting it down now based on a hunch. Remy: It's more than a hunch. We know our two fugitives are targeting your pipeline. Elliot: Where? Remy: Don't know yet. Elliot: It's over 70 miles long, Agent Scott, except for the part over near Everett that's still under construction. Remy: Is that why you're still using tanker trucks? Elliot: It's just temporary till we finish. We're really doing the residents here a favor with our carbon capture. Remy: What, are you getting some kind of tax break for all this? Elliot: Damn right. It's called a 45Q. And after all the money we've invested, I need this pipeline to be operational before the whole company goes under. Remy: You know what happens if they blow that pipeline, right? Lots of people will die. Elliot: My hands are really tied here. Remy: Where are your priorities, man? If you don't shut that pipeline down… you think Exxon Valdez was bad? Elliot: Exxon survived significant challenges, and so will we. Look, I'll get these photos over to our security team and make sure everyone's aware of the threat. I'm sorry, but I'm not gonna be intimidated about a bunch of pissant ecoterrorists. Remy: Show me the map of the pipeline. Elliot: What? Remy: I'm done playing with you! Show me the map! As Emma and Trevor hide out in a barn (Tori got left behind at the apple orchard), the two “pledge allegiance to the planet and to the destruction of companies who rape and murder her”: Emma: A white Buffalo was born at Yellowstone. Trevor: A white Buffalo? Emma: Yeah, it's a sign that the Earth is at a crossroads. Trevor: What is that, some kind of Dancing with Wolves thing? Like, Tatanka, Tatanka. Emma: It's Lakota. Jeez. It's a sign that there's hope, but that more must be done to protect the Earth. Trevor: Huh. Well, then I'd say that this white Buffalo is right on time. Look at how much we've accomplished so far. Emma: Two people are dead because of us. Trevor: They brought attention to us, to our mission. We're all over the news. Everyone's talking about us. Don't you see how great that is? How else are we gonna change the world? Save the world. You see it, right? Violence is the answer. Why else was that baby white Buffalo born today, right now, if not a sign that we are on the right path? Emma: Yeah, I guess so. Trevor: Emma, do you pledge allegiance to our planet, to the destruction of companies who rape and murder her? Emma: I do. Trevor: I do too. Emma. Now that we have the world's attention, let's show them how dangerous these pipelines really are. Emma: How? Trevor: You remember what that warning on the truck visor said? "Danger: If heated, might explode." Trevor discovers Henstep is illegally fracking with CO2. Which doesn’t really make any sense, but okay. He sets fire to the pipeline as the FBI team arrives, and a dramatic plea is made to Emma to surrender so she can stay alive to help fight for the planet. Emma proclaims, “The earth is doomed,” but eventually surrenders: Trevor: Whatever happens, this has been fun. Emma: Fun? Remy: Release the hostage and surrender. Emma: No, don't shoot me, please. Remy: Then let him go. Emma: Please don't shoot me. Hostage: Listen to him, Emma. Remy: Ray, Hana, handle the fire. Emma: What are you doing? Remy: I'll ask the same of you. This is an innocent man here. Killing him is not gonna save the planet. Emma: At least his death will be linked to me, to what I believe in, that these pipelines, the drilling, the fracking is causing our planet to burn up. Remy: I'm just as worried about all this as you are, Emma. Emma: Your generation has left a mess for mine. Trevor's dead. What else do I have to live for? Even that little white Buffalo, the sign of a better time to come, it died! The Earth is doomed! Nina: If you really believed that you wouldn't be fighting so hard to save it. Emma, you can do a lot more alive than you can dead. Look, I know your family made its money in oil, but you can carve out a different identity for yourself. Emma: No. Nina: Yes, you can. Away from your father, away from it all. You can put an end to oil wells like this. Violence isn't the answer. Just hand me the gun. It's over. Come on. Remy: You're under arrest for domestic terrorism and accomplice to murder. Let's go, Patty Hearst. We can read between the lines, FBI: Most Wanted. We see your not-so-hidden anti-fracking agenda. We’re supposed to believe the fracking claims that have been debunked and feel sad this girl was driven to extremes because of the “evil” she had to live with as an oil heiress. We’re not buying it, and neither are the viewers who are educated enough to understand the many benefits of fracking, including increasing America’s energy independence, creating jobs, lowering energy costs, and boosting local economies, just to name a few. If Hollywood resorts to lies and omitting facts to promote their agenda, it becomes pretty obvious they’re on the wrong side of the debate.
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EXCLUSIVE: YouTube STILL Wiping Out Scientific Discussion by Renowned Cardiologist
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EXCLUSIVE: YouTube STILL Wiping Out Scientific Discussion by Renowned Cardiologist

YouTube is still suppressing ongoing discussions on the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines and treatment nearly five years after the start of the pandemic. Eagle Forum hosted its Eagle Council 52 conference last month, which featured a plethora of speakers including renowned cardiologist and epidemiologist Dr. Peter McCullough. During his speech, Dr. McCullough mentioned some of the most pernicious impacts of the COVID-19 virus and vaccines. He also noted how censorship continues to impact discussions surrounding health and the pandemic. YouTube, however, censored Eagle Forum’s video of Dr. McCullough’s speech for allegedly “violating YouTube’s Community Guidelines.” Eagle Forum President Kris Ullman blasted YouTube for its censorship in exclusive comments to MRC Free Speech America. “Dr. McCullough spoke eloquently about the dangers to medicine and science when certain opinions are silenced. The idea that YouTube can censor a practicing doctor, who actually treated COVID patients, is outrageous,” she said.   Ulman added, “We are shocked that YouTube wants to prevent the public from hearing his views. This censorship actually damages Americans' faith in public health and the media. It must stop.” Although it is unclear exactly why YouTube removed the video from its platform, it seems that McCullough ran afoul of its Medical Misinformation policy, which absurdly forbids: “Claims that an approved COVID-19 vaccine will cause death, infertility, miscarriage, autism, or contraction of other infectious diseases” and “[c]laims that vaccines do not reduce the severity of illness, including hospitalization or death.”  But the cardiologist was frank about the health impact he is seeing both as a result of the COVID-19 virus and the vaccine. “Now in about 5 to 10 percent of people who took the vaccine, they have serious problems with the vaccine,” he said. McCullough continued, noting that the audience previously did a show of hands for those who knew someone who had experienced an adverse event. “You know what [the adverse impacts] are: heart damage, cardiac arrest, heart failure, stroke, neurologic injury, neuropathy, what’s called POTS (a dizziness and heart palpitations), blood clots like we’ve never seen before, the largest blood clots we’ve ever seen before – both with the infection and the vaccine, not just the vaccine, both – and then immunologic problems.”  He went on to suggest that he and other medical professionals are “hoping and praying” that COVID-19 and the vaccines for the disease do not cause or accelerate cancer. McCullough also noted many people have not only been injured by the vaccine but have died from it. “We could not have conceived a poison, a toxin to the population that accelerates all major forms of human death. We could not have imagined something — a [spike] protein — that could have been designed to cause so much human misery.” According to MRC Free Speech America’s exclusive CensorTrack database, McCullough has been censored by social media companies 16 additional times whether it be his posts, other users quoting him or clips of him speaking for media appearances.  McCullough is also one of no fewer than 40 medical professionals and scientists who have now been censored by Big Tech since the start of the pandemic, according to CensorTrack data. Many of them have been censored multiple times.  MRC Free Speech America has also now recorded over 1300 cases of censorship related to COVID-19 or the related vaccines. This is up from the over 800 cases CensorTrack had recorded by February 2022. YouTube did not respond to MRC Free Speech America’s request for comment. Eagle Forum is a member of the MRC-led Free Speech Alliance. Conservatives are under attack. Contact your representatives and demand that Big Tech be held to account to mirror the First Amendment while providing transparency, clarity on so-called hate speech and equal footing for conservatives. If you have been censored, contact us using CensorTrack’s contact form, and help us hold Big Tech accountable.
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