Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition: Difference between revisions

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* ''mojende maita'' - a channel airing scientific documentaries as well as general educational programmes.
* ''mojende maita'' - a channel airing scientific documentaries as well as general educational programmes.
* ''tåldende maita'' - a channel airing exclusively music or music-related programmes.
* ''tåldende maita'' - a channel airing exclusively music or music-related programmes.
* Finally, the ''galabhælausire maita'' (International Channel) airs mainly outside the Inquisition and proposes programmes centered on Chlouvānem culture and that make propaganda for the Yunyalīlti religion, the Chlouvānem worldview, and more broadly forms of ''Yunyalīlti-influenced communism'' - an ideology found in fringes of communist parties in the West and widely represented in the former Kaiṣamā. It is aired in 14 languages: Chlouvānem, [[Brono-Fathanic|Bronic]], [[saKalurilut|Kalurilut]], [[Skyrdagor]], [[Cerian]], [[Holenagic]], [[Nordulaki|Nordûlaki]], [[Gathura]], [[Auralian]], [[Kalese]], [[Spocian]], Central Dabuke koiné, Nähäri, and Shurtūn.
* Finally, the ''galabhælausire maita'' (International Channel) airs mainly outside the Inquisition and presents programmes centered on Chlouvānem culture and that make propaganda for the Yunyalīlti religion, the Chlouvānem worldview, and more broadly forms of ''Yunyalīlti-influenced communism'' - an ideology found in fringes of communist parties in the West and widely represented in the former Kaiṣamā. It is aired in 14 languages: Chlouvānem, [[Brono-Fathanic|Bronic]], [[saKalurilut|Kalurilut]], [[Skyrdagor]], [[Cerian]], [[Holenagic]], [[Nordulaki|Nordûlaki]], [[Gathura]], [[Auralian]], [[Kalese]], [[Spocian]], Central Dabuke koiné, Nähäri, and Shurtūn.


Programmes are sometimes shared between two channels - for example the famous literary debate ''dholtanah pa nīdældoe'' (lit. A Talk on Writing) is aired daily on the Seventh Channel but once every lunar phase is contemporaneously aired on the First Channel.
Programmes are sometimes shared between two channels - for example the famous literary debate ''dholtanah pa nīdældoe'' (lit. A Talk on Writing) is aired daily on the Seventh Channel but once every lunar phase is contemporaneously aired on the First Channel.