At the End of All Things Elves in Revelation
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"It'd be pretty laborious to do without a demon but probably not hard to find a demon who'd help and there's no process for dealing with wrongly arrested daeva yet. And I also don't want to be the face of law enforcement."

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Nod. "It's good that there is one but it'd probably disrupt things a lot in the daeva realms if, like, you could get arrested for minor stuff - or mistakes -"

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"Yeah, I'll have to start throwing my weight around again if idiots involve themselves and do successful idioting but for the moment I want to see if Matt found good people for it."

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Nod. Hug. "Someday everyone'll be safe and free."

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Hug. "I hope so."

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The new division of the Justice Department handling daeva crimes reaches out to Revelation to let him know that they've settled on a list of things which will be prosecuted, so it can be publicized in the daeva realms. It is a list mercifully free of 'possession and distribution of cocaine' and so on; violent crimes, plus the distribution of biological and chemical weapons and nukes and so on.

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It's nice of them to keep him in the loop, he appreciates that, he'll see about getting the information publicized clearly in the daeva realms. He puts a link to their website up on his (the videos are Youtube; the circle downloads and so on are not).

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And they've screened a colony-ship-sized number of people.

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Good. Plans planned, prototype testing time...

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He can go make ships in space and make sure they are resilient to various potential catastrophes and make sure they can accelerate to allow for summoning and so on!

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Whee!

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(There are a bunch of tabloid headlines to the effect of 'Revelation thinks the world is doomed!' but most news coverage of sudden-Proxima-Centauri-colony-expedition is very positive.)

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Revelation thinks he would not insure the moon against catastrophe, but he doesn't say that. Anybody who suspects doomedness of the world can summon a daeva and sign up to be interviewed for the next ship.

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Well, if they're under 25. What if they're older than 25 and think the world is doomed, what then?

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Skip step 2, he supposes. Summoning still works.

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Someone in Berlin has their newborn summon an angel as soon as he's old enough to flip a switch. The angel is stuck and upset about it. 

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...concentration per se is not babies' forte but maybe the angel could give the baby its vaccinations or something, or yell at it.

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After a couple hours, upsetting the baby as much as possible works to send her home.

 

"Other people are gonna try that."

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"Yeah I'm gonna design a binding for long term untasked residency and try to hook daeva who want that up with people with at-risk kids."

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"All human kids are, like, at-risk enough that parents would be tempted to chance it -"

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"Rates'll be different. If there's a process they can apply for it might get some of them to wait in line instead of kidnap somebody. If there's a good binding for it at least they'll do that instead of leaving a daeva standing in their backyard for a couple years." Sigh.

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Shiver. "Yeah."

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Cam designs the binding, publishes it, hunts up daeva who would be willing to live on Earth for a while thereunder if annoying babies doesn't work.

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He can find some takers. The waitlist gets really long really fast. 

 

 

A man in jail for shooting his wife and their child dies. He was a summoner. The victim's family wants him rearrested to finish out the rest of his sentence.

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(Cam also publishes a binding suitable for summoning small children so they can lead mostly human childhoods without accidentally killing anyone.)

...He isn't going to register an object level opinion but he does mention that he thinks the possibility needs to be accompanied by more goal-oriented and thoughtful sentencing than an attempt to name the largest possible numbers. That posturing could only do so much harm when the maximum duration sentence was, in fact, life.

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