00:00What is the cost of lies?
00:03It's not that we'll mistake them for the truth.
00:05The real danger is that if we hear enough lies,
00:09then we no longer recognize the truth at all.
00:13What can we do then?
00:15What else is left but to abandon even the hope of truth
00:18and content ourselves instead with stories?
00:22In these stories, it doesn't matter who the heroes are.
00:26All we want to know is who is to blame.
00:29In this story, it was Anatoly Dyatlov.
00:32He was the best choice.
00:33An arrogant, unpleasant man.
00:35He ran the room that night. He gave the orders.
00:38And no friends.
00:40Or at least, not important ones.
00:45And now, Dyatlov will spend the next ten years in a prison labour camp.
00:50Of course, that sentence is doubly unfair.
00:55There were far greater criminals than him at work.
01:00And as for what Dyatlov did do,
01:03the man doesn't deserve prison.
01:06He deserves death.
01:20But instead, ten years for criminal mismanagement.
01:25What does that mean?
01:27What does that mean?
01:28No one knows.
01:29It doesn't matter.
01:32What does matter is that to them,
01:36justice was done.
01:38Because you see,
01:40to them,
01:42a just world
01:43is a sane world.
01:47There was nothing sane about Chernobyl.
01:52What happened there,
01:53what happened after.
01:54Even the good we did.
01:56All of it.
01:58All of it.
02:01Madness.
02:01Madness.
02:06Well,
02:08I've given you everything I know.
02:12Don't deny it, of course.
02:14They always do.
02:21I know you'll try your best.
02:23What happened.
02:24...
02:52Textning Stina Hedin www.btistudios.com
02:54Let's go.
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