Veriphysics, as requested

The Enlightenment promised to replace superstition with reason, tyranny with liberty, and ignorance with progress. Three centuries later, the results are in.

Democratic governments no longer represent their citizens. Economic models that predicted shared prosperity have delivered stagnation and debt. The scientific establishment cannot correct its own errors. The very philosophers who enthroned reason ended by abandoning it entirely. What we are witnessing is not the corruption of a good idea by bad actors. It is the inevitable collapse of a framework that was flawed from its foundations.

Veriphysics: The Treatise is a systematic diagnosis of that collapse and a rigorous description of what must replace it.

In three parts, Vox Day examines how the Enlightenment’s five core premises — autonomous reason, sovereign individualism, mechanical nature, the fact-value distinction, and inevitable progress — have each been falsified by the experience of history and by the findings of the sciences the Enlightenment itself celebrated. He then reconstructs the intellectual history of how a superior philosophical tradition, the classical and Christian inheritance, was outmaneuvered not by better arguments but by superior rhetoric, institutional capture, and the patient infiltration of universities, academies, and publishing houses over generations.

The final and constructive section introduces Veriphysics as a genuine philosophical successor: a framework built on Aletheian Realism, grounded in the Christian metaphysical tradition, and equipped with a concrete epistemological tool identified as the Triveritas. Any claim that cannot satisfy all three of its conditions — logical validity, mathematical coherence, and empirical anchoring — does not merit assent, regardless of the credentials of those asserting it. Applied to the crown jewels of Enlightenment thought, including the cogito, Darwinian evolution, classical economics, and social contract theory, the Triveritas serves as a wrecking ball. The math doesn’t work. The logic doesn’t hold. The evidence, honestly examined, refutes rather than confirms.

This is not for those who want their current assumptions confirmed. It is for those who have become aware that something is deeply wrong with the intellectual world they inherited, and who are willing to follow the path toward truth wherever it leads.

Authored by bestselling political philosopher Vox Day, also the author of the landmark science work Probability ZeroVeriphysics: The Treatise is a philosophical manifesto for the 21st century. Available on Amazon, Kindle Unlimited, and Audible.


I released this 84-page treatise more so that people could have an easy single reference than as a book proper; it consists of the first two parts, the final section of the latter which was posted today, plus the third part, which I will continue to post here daily until it is complete. Although it naturally comes off as highly critical of the Enlightenment, and, to a lesser extent, their Scholastic rivals, it represents my attempt to transition from the purely critical role to constructing something useful.

I leave it to the readers to decide how effective it is as a post-Enlightenment proto-philosophy, but there are already some signs that the triveritan approach it utilizes is a fundamentally more viable and reliable heuristic than historical truth-metrics.

DISCUSS ON SG


Extended Air War on Iran

It increasingly appears that the tail is in firm control of the dog, and that Netanyahu is going to get his Round 2 with Iran for which he has been working to enlist the US military.

A large wave of American airpower is heading toward the Middle East to bolster forces already there as U.S. President Donald Trump considers an attack against Iran. Online flight trackers are showing F-22 Raptors, F-16 Fighting Falcons, E-3 Sentry radar planes and a U-2 Dragon Lady spy plane either in transit across the Atlantic or newly arrived in Europe. In addition, a seventh Arleigh Burke class guided missile destroyer, the USS Pinckney, has recently deployed to the U.S. Central Command Area of Responsibility (AOR) as well, a U.S. Navy official told us.

While we don’t know whether Trump will decide to attack Iran, these are exactly the movements we’ve been expecting, but so far not seeing, in advance of a sustained operation, both defensive and offensive. The U.S. aircraft heading east represents the most intense phase of a force plus-up that began after Trump started threatening Iran over its harsh treatment of anti-regime protesters. Taken together, the force now assembling in the Middle East, combined with the Israel Air Force’s capabilities, including hundreds of fighter aircraft, as well as USAF ‘global airpower’ bomber flights, would be enough for a major operation that could last weeks not days. We will likely see additional assets deploy in the coming days.

A demonstration of unprecedented military might or the US Sicilian Expedition? I tend to assume the latter, as does Col. Douglas Macgregor. But the Russian and Chinese navies would appear to be a deterrent, only it’s very hard to deter irrational minds without the actual use of force.

And contra what the Christian Zionists are saying, if Israel fails, that doesn’t mean Jesus isn’t real. It means that Christian Zionism is false and has always been a satanic charade. The mere fact that they would even express such a thought tends to indicate the source of the concept.

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The Ending of All Endings

In Rivendell, the ground shook.

It was not a great sensation. It was merely a tremor, a shudder, the sort of thing that might have been mistaken for a cart passing on a nearby road. But the water in the fountains rippled, and the leaves of the ancient trees trembled without wind, and the light, the clear, golden light that always lay upon the valley of Imladris, suddenly dimmed, as if a cloud had passed before the sun. But there was no cloud. The sky above Rivendell was clear.

Gandalf felt it first. He was standing on the terrace where Gwaihir had departed that morning, his pipe unlit in his hand, and he had been watching the southeastern sky with an expression of quiet confidence that had been slowly, imperceptibly curdling into something else, something he had not felt in a very long time, something he had almost forgotten the shape of.

Fear.

The tremor passed through the stone beneath his feet, and the doubt became certainty, and the certainty was the worst thing he had ever felt.

Elrond emerged from the house. He did not run because Elf lords do not run, but he moved quickly with the controlled pace of someone who has received terrible news and is walking toward the place where he knows it will be confirmed. He came to stand beside Gandalf on the terrace, and for a long moment neither of them spoke. They looked to the east, toward the shadow on the horizon that was, even now, visibly darker than it had been an hour ago. It was visibly expanding to the north and to the west.

“The shadow grows,” said Elrond.

“Yes,” said Gandalf.

“Then—”

“Indeed.”

Elrond closed his eyes. When he opened them, they held something that Gandalf had never seen in them before, not in six thousand years of their acquaintance, not in the fall of Gil-galad, not in the ruin of Eregion, not even in the moment on the slopes of Orodruin when Isildur had taken the Ring and walked away to his doom. It was not despair, exactly. Elrond was far too old for despair, which is a youthful emotion that requires the ability to believe that things ought to be other than they are. It was something deeper, quieter, and more final.

“The Windlord has fallen,” said Elrond. It was not a question.

Gandalf said nothing. His hand, resting on the stone rail of the terrace, was trembling.

Behind them, in the garden, Frodo Baggins looked up from his book. He did not know what had happened. He did not yet understand the darkness that was gathering on the edge of the world, or the silence that had fallen over Rivendell as if the land itself was holding its breath. But he felt it. He felt the ground shiver, felt the light change, felt something vast and irreversible shift in the deep foundations of the world. The book slid from his hands, and he sat very still, and he was afraid.

On the terrace, Gandalf and Elrond stood side by side and watched the shadow rise in the east, and neither of them spoke, because there was nothing left to say.

The ring had been reclaimed.

The One Ring had returned to its maker.

The darkness was rising.

And soon the dark lord would rule over all Middle Earth.

THE END


And that, my friends, is why JRR Tolkien didn’t simply have the eagles fly the ring to Mordor.

QEFD

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Veriphysics: The Treatise 017

VIII. The Shape of Renewal

The path forward is not a return to pure dialectic, as though the lessons of the Enlightenment’s victory over the last three centuries could simply be unlearned. Nor is it an embrace of pure rhetoric, which would make a neoclassical tradition no better and no more viable than its opponents. It is the synthesis that the Enlightenment pretended to offer but never delivered, the combination of genuine logical rigor, with genuine mathematical abstraction connected to genuine empirical grounding, all deployed with rhetorical effectiveness, that is the optimal philosophical path.

This requires several things.

First, it requires calling all the bluffs. Every Enlightenment claim that invokes reason, mathematics, or evidence must be challenged to produce the reasoning, the equations, and the evidence. These challenges must be pressed relentlessly, and publicly, until the bankruptcy is fully exposed. The tradition has been too polite and too willing to assume good faith on the part of opponents who relentlessly operate in bad faith. That philosophical courtesy must end.

Second, it requires actually doing the intellectual labor. It is not enough to assert that the tradition has logic, mathematics, and evidence on its side. The logic must be articulated clearly. The mathematics must be calculated accurately and presented accessibly. The evidence must be gathered and displayed. The tradition must mint real philosophical currency and spend it lavishly.

Third, it requires addressing the public. The specialized vocabulary that served the tradition well in the seminar room is a liability in the public square. The arguments must be translated, popularized, and even dumbed down where necessary in order to make them accessible to the laymen who lacks specialist training. Clarity is not the enemy of rigor; it is its completion.

Fourth, it requires going on offense. The tradition has played defense long enough. The Enlightenment’s premises are vulnerable, and are even more vulnerable than they have ever been now that their evil consequences are manifest. Those premises must be attacked: the autonomous reason that cannot ground itself, the social contract that no one signed, the invisible hand that does not exist, the progress that has not occurred. The tradition must set the agenda rather than respond to it.

Fifth, it requires building institutions. The Enlightenment understood that ideas require infrastructure. The new philosophical tradition must understand this too. Alternative platforms, alternative credentials, alternative networks of patronage and publication must be created, funded, policed, and sustained. A long game is not only in order, it is necessary.

Now, these actions are not strictly necessary. The Enlightenment is dying of its own contradictions. The tradition that it displaced remains true. The tools that the Enlightenment falsely claimed, logic, mathematics, and empirical evidence, are readily available to those willing to use them honestly. The rhetorical landscape has gradually shifted in ways that favor truth over propaganda, and rhetoric supported by dialectic over pure, groundless rhetoric.

What is needed is a philosophical framework that unites these elements: the perennial insights of the tradition, the rigorous methods it always possessed, the empirical data now available, and the rhetorical effectiveness necessary to make truth prevail. Such a framework would not be a revival of Scholasticism, nor a capitulation to Enlightenment terms, but something truly new, a genuine advancing of the historical classical tradition that is capable of meeting the various intellectual needs of the present.


Since a number of people have asked me to make these posts available in ebook form, I have done so. Please note that this is not the complete work, it is only the 20,000-word treatise that contains the first two parts that have previously appeared here on the blog, as well as the third part, entitled The Path Toward Truth. I do not know when the complete work will be done and I do not have any target date for doing so.

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The Great Shadow Falls

It came from behind the peak — from the far side of Orodruin, where the mountain’s bulk had hidden it from view — and it rose into the sky above the crater with a slowness that was worse than speed, because speed would have implied effort, and this creature moved as if effort were a concept that applied to lesser things.

Felgarion. Son of Ancalagon the Black.

The dragon was enormous. Not the size of Smaug, who had been large enough to blanket a town in flame, but larger, far larger, a creature from the Elder Days when the world was younger and made things of a scale it could no longer sustain. His wingspan blocked out the sky above the mountain. His scales were green, not the dark green of the elvenwoods but the deep, liquid green of emeralds, and they caught the red light of the fires below and threw it back in dark, bloody reflections. His eyes were gold and slitted and ancient and utterly without mercy. His jaws, when they opened, revealed a throat that glowed like the inside of a forge.

And on his back, between the great ridged spines that ran from skull to tail, sat Sauron.

The Dark Lord had changed. He was no longer a quiet figure in a silk robe, the chess player, the sketcher of sleeping beauty. He wore armor of black steel, chased with lines of red-gold that pulsed with the same rhythm as the mountain beneath him, and on his head sat a crown of iron, and in his hand he carried nothing at all. He wielded neither sword nor spear, because when one rides a dragon, one does not require weapons. He was terrible and beautiful in the way that a fire is beautiful when it engulfs a forest, and his eyes, visible even at this distance, burned with the same lidless intensity as the Eye atop his tower.

The dragon and his rider crested the peak of Orodruin and hung there for a moment, motionless, silhouetted against the column of smoke and ash, and the image was one that would haunt the nightmares of every creature that saw it for as long as they lived, which in some cases would not be very long at all.

Landroval saw it first. The great eagle turned and threw himself without hesitation at the dragon, not because he believed he could harm it, but because Gwaihir was below and still diving for the crack and someone had to buy him time. It was the bravest thing Landroval had ever done. It was also the last thing Landroval ever did.

Felgarion opened his mouth. The fire that came was not the fire of Smaug. It was not the hot, orange, flaming fire of a lesser wyrm. It was the fire of Ancalagon’s line, white at its core, blue at its edges, a fire that had once melted the towers of the Valar’s own fortifications in the War of Wrath. It struck Landroval in midair.

The great eagle was instantly transformed into a torch. His feathers, his flesh, the very structure of his bones — all of it caught and burned with an intensity that turned the eagle from a living creature into a shape of pure flame in the space of a single heartbeat. He did not scream. The fire was burned too fast for screams. He burned, and he fell, and the wind of his falling trailed a long ribbon of white fire down the mountainside like a comet striking the earth, and then he was gone.

Gwaihir did not look back. He could not afford to look back. The entrance to the Sammath Naur was fifty yards ahead, close enough to see the ancient stone of its lintel, close enough to feel the blast of heat from within, and he drove himself toward it with every ounce of strength his fatigued wings could summon.

He did not reach it.

Felgarion descended upon him like a green star falling. The dragon came straight down, folding his wings and dropping with a speed that belied his enormous size, and his claws — each one as long as a ship’s mast, black as volcanic glass and sharp beyond the craft of any smith — closed around Gwaihir’s body from above. The eagle thrashed. His wings beat against the dragon’s grip, his talons raked at the emerald scales, but Felgarion’s claws held him with the casual, immovable strength of the earth itself.

The dragon’s head descended.

His jaws opened, and the teeth — row upon row, black and translucent and curved like scimitars — closed around Gwaihir’s neck. There was a sound. It was a sound that should not be described, because some things are too terrible for language and this was one of them. The Windlord’s headless body went limp in the dragon’s claws.

Felgarion landed on the slopes of Orodruin with a concussion that shook the mountain to its roots. His claws released the broken body of the eagle, and it slid down the black rock and lay still, the great wings splayed and bent, the golden plumage darkened with dirt and ash, the oozing red blood in stark contrast with the exposed white bone of his severed spine.

Sauron dismounted.

He walked to the body of Gwaihir the Windlord, and he knelt beside the left talon, and he unbuckled the pale leather pouch with his nine remaining fingers. The Elven craftsmanship was exquisite. Even in the moment of his triumph, he noted this with the detached appreciation of a fellow artisan.

He opened the pouch, and drew out the Ring.

It was warm. It was always warm. But now, here, on the slopes of the mountain where it had been made, it was more than warm, it was alive, singing in a frequency that resonated with the fire beneath the stone, with the will of its maker, with the vast and ancient design that had begun in the forges of Eregion and was, in this moment, finally and irrevocably complete.

Sauron stood. He raised his fist, his right hand, the one with the missing finger and held the Ring aloft against the burning sky. The mountain roared beneath him. The clouds above Mordor, the great pall of shadow that had hung over the land for years, began to spread across the sky, rolling rapidly outward in all directions like a dark tide unleashed. The Great Eye atop Barad-dûr blazed with an exultant light that could be seen from the Shire to the Sea of Rhûn.

Behind him, Felgarion raised his head and roared, a sound that shook the very foundations of the Ephel Dúath and sent avalanches cascading down every peak in the range, and the Witch-king, circling above on his fell beast, bowed his hooded head.

On the slopes of Mount Doom, in the shadow of his dragon, with the blood of the Windlord at his feet and the One Ring burning in his fist, the Dark Lord of Mordor exulted in his victory.

DISCUSS ON SG


DOJ Defends Clown World

Pam Bondi and the corrupt DOJ are still lying through their teeth about having released all of the information in the Epstein Files. I’ve heard that the additional 3 million documents are still less than 10 percent of the total:

MAGA broadcaster Alex Jones expressed frustration after insisting that Attorney General Pam Bondi’s Department of Justice was wrong to claim that it had released all documents required by the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

“Now it’s the big, massive top story, Saturday and Sunday, that people reading these files think maybe that’s the case,” Jones explained on his Monday show. “Again, you heard Bondi, oh, there’s hundreds of victims with Epstein and, oh, these powerful people are going to go to jail. Then she’s like, oh, actually, I was wrong.”

“So when you go into these files in the public, you see stuff blacked out, that’s the reason. So you’re like, God, that’s satanic. Yeah, folks, they have satanic training by increment to find out who is satanic to build a satanic army,” he continued.

Just two days ago, Jones was telling everyone that an apoplectic Trump was threatening to fire everyone; apparently their argument against releasing the files in full is due to how many institutional figures from the colleges and corporations to the state and federal levels would be taking a fall and that this would destroy the stock market. And supposedly, Trump had finally figured out that the stock market is going to crash anyhow, so the threat was a hollow one.

Of course, this scenario doesn’t account for the probability that the short fake Trump serves the same masters as his corrupt Department of Injustice and Other Iniquities.

Americans don’t care about the stock market or the economy. What they very much want to see every single blood-drinking satanic pedophile exposed and punished for their dreadful crimes in a timely manner. If that crashes the economy, the corporations, and the banks, well, that’s a price that the American Posterity is more than willing to pay.

Because if the system can’t prevent those crimes, the system isn’t worth preserving. And Clown World is going to collapse no matter how they try to rationalize it or preserve it.

Satanic Witch Marina Abramovic says she can no longer walk down the streets.

Hmmm… I seem to recall someone predicting that a few years ago…

UPDATE: Apparently what has been released to date is about 2 percent of the total. Also, it’s now firmly established that Bannon is one of the Epsteinists.

When Steve Bannon worked for Trump in his first term, every single thing that was inside knowledge, every secret, he ran straight to Jeffrey Epstein, the world’s most famous pedophile and child trafficker in history, and told him everything.

DISCUSS ON SG


Now It’s a Problem

It’s fascinating to see how SJWs think real reviews are “harasssment” and a serious problem that requires addressing when the public is allowed to play the role that the SJW gatekeepers usually do:

According to developers who spoke with the Guardian, abuse – particularly directed towards transgender creators – is a fact of life on the platform. “Everyone is at one another’s throats all the time in reviews, discussions, forums, anywhere you can possibly find it on Steam,” says content creator and Steam curator Bri “BlondePizza” Moore. “It ensures no one is safe on the platform; developers and consumers alike.”

Aside from the content of Steam’s forums, sources pointed to two main causes for concern: bigoted reviews posted on games’ Steam pages, which can hugely affect sales for their developers; and Steam curators (self-appointed taste-makers on the platform) directing campaigns against games they perceive to lean left or pursue inclusion.

“I’m not new to online harassment,” says designer Nathalie Lawhead, who spent two years trying to get reviews removed from their games’ pages. Both reference allegations of sexual assault that Lawhead made in 2019. “I assumed reporting Steam abuse might have its own issues. But when people suggested that I open a ticket, I did have hope that this would be the way to get it resolved.”

Never mind that the whole reason these campaigns exist is that they are a direct reaction to the campaigns waged against the game journos since #GamerGate originally kicked off twelve years ago.

Why shouldn’t gamers be free to say what they think about games, and inclusivity, and transgenderism if the game journos are permitted to do so. At least the gamers usually tend to play the games before reviewing them, unlike the journos.

Convergence is always and inevitably about control.

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Veriphysics: The Treatise 016

VII. The Counterfeit and the Real

The deepest irony of the Enlightenment’s triumph is that its self-proclaimed weapons of reason, mathematics, and empirical evidence were all counterfeits, while the tradition possessed the genuine articles but failed to deploy them effectively.

The Enlightenment claimed reason but practiced rhetoric. Its arguments were not demonstrations but performances, designed to persuade rather than prove. When the arguments were examined carefully, as Hume examined causation, as Kant examined pure reason, and as the positivists examined verification, they dissolved under it. The Enlightenment’s elevation of human reason was a promise that could never be fulfilled.

The Enlightenment claimed to be mathematically sound but refrained from actually doing the calculations. When the calculations were finally done, whether it be Gorman on demand curves, the Wistar mathematicians on mutation rates, or the various genomic analyses of the twenty-first century, they uniformly refuted the Enlightenment’s claims. The mathematics was available all along but the Enlightenment simply never submitted to its discipline despite the public posturing of the empiricists.

The Enlightenment claimed empirical evidence while immunizing its core axioms from empirical testing. The social contract is not an empirical claim; it is a philosophical posture. The invisible hand is not a testable hypothesis, it is a literary metaphor. The perfectibility of man is not an objective subject to falsification, it is a groundless faith. Whenever empirical evidence contradicted Enlightenment expectations, as it has, repeatedly, across every domain, the evidence was either reinterpreted or ignored. Enlightenment empiricism was selective, avoided, and ultimately proved to be fraudulent.

The tradition, by contrast, had the real currency. Its logical tools were genuine; its openness to evidence was principled; its capacity for mathematical reasoning had been demonstrated over centuries. But the tradition did not mint this currency for public circulation. It kept its intellectual gold in the vault while the Enlightenment flooded the market with counterfeits. By the time the fakes were exposed, the Enlightenment had already bought up everything that mattered.

However, the situation today is not the situation in which the eighteenth-century intellectuals found themselves facing. The Enlightenment’s institutional monopoly, while formidable, is observably cracking. The prestige of its credentials is declining with every passing year. The failures documented in Part One are increasingly visible to ordinary observers as well as to specialists. The rhetoric of “science says” and “experts agree” and “studies show” no longer commands belief because far too many lies have been told in the name of science.

More importantly, the empirical data now exists to anchor the critical arguments that were previously abstract. The human and chimpanzee genomes have been mapped; the calculations can be done; the impossibility of Neo-Darwinism can be demonstrated and mathematically proved, not merely asserted. The economic data of three decades of free trade is available, the predictions can be checked and the failures can be confirmed. The democratic outcomes of two centuries of representative government can be examined; the gap between promise and performance can be measured.

The tradition’s arguments were always sound. What was lacking was the empirical anchor that would make them irrefutable and the rhetorical strategy that would make them heard. The empirical anchor now exists. The rhetorical landscape has shifted. The opportunity is real and the time is now.

DISCUSS ON SG


The Battle of Orodruin

They came to Mordor in the sixth hour.

The clouds broke apart as the eagles crossed the Ephel Dúath, and the land below them was revealed in all its desolation, with the brown, cracked wasteland of the Plateau of Gorgoroth stretching away under a sky of smoke and sullen amber, the dark mass of Barad-dûr rising in the distant northeast like a needle of black iron thrust into the heavens, and there, directly ahead, filling the southern horizon with its vast and terrible shape, Orodruin.

Mount Doom.

The mountain was active. It was always active — had been since Sauron first bent its fires to his will in the forging of the Rings — and now it breathed a column of smoke and ash into the sky that rose miles above the peak and spread into a canopy of darkness that blotted out the sun. The slopes were black and red, veined with rivulets of cooling lava that glowed like infected wounds, and from the fractured cone at the summit a dull orange light pulsed in slow, rhythmic intervals, as if the mountain itself had a heartbeat.

Gwaihir descended. The air thickened as they dropped below the cloud layer — thickened with heat and ash and the acrid stink of brimstone, and the winds became treacherous, gusting unpredictably as thermals off the mountain’s slopes collided with the cooler air from the plateau. The great eagle’s wings adjusted constantly, reading the turbulence with an instinct born of millennia, but even Gwaihir felt the strain. This was not his sky. This was a sky of fire and poison, and every breath of it burned.

Landroval flew on his right. Meneldor on his left. The three eagles were tired — six hours at altitude, at speed, without rest — but the mountain was before them and the Sammath Naur was close, a dark gash in the face of the cone visible now even through the haze of ash. Minutes. They were minutes from the end.

The Witch-king came out of the smoke.

He came from below and to the east, rising on a fell beast that screamed as it climbed — a sound like iron tearing, like the death cry of something that had never truly been alive. He had been waiting in the lee of the mountain, hidden by the ash plume, and his timing was precise. The fell beast’s vast wings beat the fouled air and drove it upward on a collision course with Meneldor, the youngest and outermost of the three eagles, and behind him came two more — Uvatha and Adûnaphel on their own mounts, spreading wide to flank.

“Nazgûl!” The cry came from Landroval, less a word than a shriek in the eagle’s tongue, a sound of warning and fury that cut through the roar of the mountain. Gwaihir banked hard, and the formation broke.

Meneldor turned to meet the Witch-king. It was the brave choice and the wrong one. The fell beast was larger than Meneldor, uglier, and utterly without fear, driven by a will that was not its own, and the Witch-king rode it with the cold expertise of a warrior who had been killing from the air since before the founding of Gondor. They met in a tangle of wings and talons above the eastern slope, and for a moment the two shapes became one, a thrashing, screaming knot of feather and membrane and raking claws, and then they broke apart with Meneldor bleeding.

The wound was along his left side, where the fell beast’s claws had torn through feather and flesh to the muscle beneath. Meneldor’s wing faltered. He dropped, caught himself, dropped again. The Witch-king circled above him, patient, and the fell beast’s mouth hung open, trailing ropes of dark saliva, waiting.

But the Witch-king had made a mistake. He had committed to Meneldor, and in doing so he had left Uvatha and Adûnaphel to deal with Gwaihir and Landroval alone.

They were not enough.

Landroval struck Uvatha’s fell beast from above and behind with the full force of a diving eagle — talons extended, wings folded, falling like a bolt of golden lightning. The impact broke the fell beast’s spine. The sound it made was extraordinary — a wet, structural crunch that was felt as much as heard — and the black-scaled creature folded in on itself like a thing made of paper and fell, spinning, trailing a banner of dark blood, and Uvatha the Horseman, who had once ridden the plains of Khand with an army at his back, fell with it, his black robes streaming behind him, silent, and not without dignity, until the slopes of Orodruin received him and he was gone from the sky.

Gwaihir took Adûnaphel’s mount head-on. The fell beast lunged for him with its serpentine neck and snapping jaws, and Gwaihir caught its long neck in both his talons and wrenched in opposite directions. The fell beast’s neck broke with a sound like a green branch snapping, and Gwaihir released it and beat upward as the dead creature tumbled past him, its wings still twitching in purposeless spasm. Adûnaphel fell screaming, and her screams gradually faded as she plunged into the fires that coursed along the mountain’s lower slopes.

Two Nazgûl down. The Witch-king, seeing his support destroyed in a matter of seconds, pulled back. He drove his fell beast away from the wounded Meneldor and climbed, circling wide, and for a moment the sky above Orodruin was clear.

“Go!” Landroval screamed at Gwaihir. “The crack! Now!”

The Windlord turned toward the Sammath Naur. He could see it clearly — the great opening in the mountainside, dark and wide, lit from within by the deep red glow of the fires below. The air above it shimmered with heat. He folded his wings into a shallow dive, angling his descent toward the entrance, and the pouch on his talon — that small, exquisitely crafted pouch of pale Elvish leather — swung beneath him like a pendulum. Within it, the Ring seemed to pulse, seemed to burn, seemed to cry out in a voice that only the mountain could hear.

Four hundred yards. three hundred. He could feel the heat now, rising from the cone in waves that distorted the air and made the dark opening dance and waver. Two hundred yards. He adjusted his angle, spreading his wings to brake, preparing to stoop through the entrance and release the pouch into the abyss below —

And then the shadow fell over him.

DISCUSS ON SG


Russian Objectives are Expanding

When Russia launched its special military operation in 2022, the initial objective was the liberation of the Donbass from Clown World. Now that the initial objective has been largely achieved, but neither the Kiev regime nor the NATO clowns are willing to accept the situation and surrender, there is no reason for the Russians to refrain from expanding their objectives:

In his February 9, 2026, interview with TV BRICS (and echoed in related remarks), Lavrov reiterated Russia’s demands for a settlement: eradicating “Nazi foundations,” preventing weapons in Ukraine that threaten Russia, and protecting rights of Russian/Russian-speaking people in Crimea, Donbas, and Novorossiya (who the Kyiv regime has labeled as “subhuman” and launched a civil war against them early in 2014).

In a February 10, 2026, speech/ceremony marking Diplomatic Workers’ Day (reported by TASS and mid.ru), Lavrov stated that Russia will “complete the process of returning” Crimea, Donbas, and Novorossiya to their “native harbor” (i.e., full integration with Russia), in line with the “will” expressed in the 2022 referendums. He added that linguistic, cultural, and religious rights of Russians/Russian-speakers in areas remaining under Kyiv’s control must be restored, alongside eliminating military threats from Ukraine to Russia’s security.

Similar phrasing appeared in his February 11, 2026, remarks during the Government Hour in the State Duma, where he criticized Western “double standards” (e.g., supporting self-determination for Greenland while denying it for Crimea, Donbas, and Novorossiya) and vowed to defend Russia’s position diplomatically.

Novorossiya (Russian: Новороссия, meaning “New Russia”) is a historical term that originated in the 18th century during the era of the Russian Empire. It referred to a large administrative and colonial region in what is now southern and southeastern mainland Ukraine, along the northern coast of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.

The term entered official use in 1764, when Empress Catherine the Great established the Novorossiya Governorate (Novorossiyskaya guberniya). This was part of Russia’s southward expansion during the late 18th century, driven by a series of Russo-Turkish Wars (notably 1768–1774 and 1787–1792).

I believe that when Putin and Lavrov speak of Novorossiya today they are signaling maximalist goals… Not just holding annexed territories (Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia) but laying a claim to adjacent regions, which include Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Odessa, Mykolaiv where Russian speakers live or there are historical ties.

I tend to agree. While I always felt that Russia would insist on reclaiming Odessa for strategic reasons, the fact that it’s now clear that they will have to impose terms on Kiev and Clown World rather than reach an accommodation, it makes more sense to simply acquire the four additional regions that would complete the liberation of Novorossiya in its entirety.

Which probably explains the way in which Russian military activity will be increasing as the US ties itself up in Israel’s Middle East conflict with Iran and potentially a number of other countries, including Turkey.

DISCUSS ON SG