Voices in the Storm
The Temporal Witnesses, Volume 8
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Buy Now for $9.68
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Narrated by:
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Wendy Baran
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By:
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Ricardo Gomez
About this listen
The Temporal Witnesses Volume 8: Voices in the Storm
The final choice. The ultimate responsibility. The moment that will determine humanity's relationship with truth itself.
The cosmic moment has arrived. As underground education networks successfully replace failed public systems and international coalitions establish permanent academic sanctuary programs, Cuchu Ramirez and Matias Kim embark on their final temporal journey to witness Voices in the Storm—the last moments of sophisticated civilizations before European contact changes the world forever.
But the Heritage Foundation 2.0 has unleashed temporal warfare designed to prevent any witness from reaching the truth about first contact and cultural collision. TENOCHTITLAN, MEXICO (1519 CE): In the final months before Cortés arrives, they experience the sophisticated Aztec capital with its democratic councils, floating gardens, and urban planning for 200,000 people. Witnessing the complex governance, advanced medicine, and artistic achievement that Spanish accounts will deliberately distort, they understand exactly what narratives of "primitive peoples" were designed to hide.
DUWAMISH VILLAGES, SEATTLE (1590 CE): Thirty years before European diseases reach the Pacific Northwest, they live with the sophisticated Coast Salish peoples whose sustainable resource management, complex social systems, and spiritual technologies maintained prosperity for millennia. This is their own homeland before colonization—the sophisticated society that existed where their school now stands.
BENIN CITY, NIGERIA (1590 CE): In one of the world's largest cities, they witness the wealth, artistic mastery, and international connections of the Benin Empire before the British "punitive expedition" will destroy it in 1897. The bronze artistry, urban planning, and diplomatic sophistication reveal African achievement at its peak—everything colonial narratives claimed never existed.