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Take A Good Look At Post-Blizzard New York City. This Is What Our ‘New Austerity’ Will Look Like.

enlarge This bus was stranded in Brooklyn long enough to become the target of graffiti artists. One of my New York-native friends said her relatives were calling the post-blizzard city a “zombie apocalypse.” It’s bad enough that NYC has laid off 500 sanitation workers in the last two years (you know, instead of taxing Wall Street) or that there were plows sitting idle because they didn’t have enough people to drive them, or that people died because the EMTs couldn’t get down their streets. But that the mayor didn’t even bother to call a snow emergency? That’s plain crazy. Make fun of Philly all you want, but by canceling Sunday night’s Eagles game, we kept 60,000 cars off the streets at the height of the blizzard that didn’t need to be there. Looking at the pictures of New York with abandoned cars and buses everywhere is just surreal. (Of course, Mayor Mike Bloomberg’s street was nicely plowed .) Not to mention, NYC residents couldn’t go back to work. Manhattan was cleared, but people couldn’t get in to work from the outer boroughs. Wonder how much taxable revenue was lost this week? This is why it’s such a bad idea to run government like a business. This isn’t a business, it’s a government. It has to provide basic services, no matter what. It’s probably no secret that Wall Street has the same attitude toward New York City that they have toward the rest of the country: “You’re lucky to have us.” That’s why, instead of taxing them, Bloomberg bends over backwards to make them happy. After all, they might move to New Jersey! So Bloomberg keeps cutting. He laid off 500 sanitation workers and privatized much of the snow plow operations. Guess what? Plows sat idle because employees of the private contractors were on vacation during the holiday. Harry Nespoli, head of the sanitation workers union, warned of potential problems back in October: Better hope for a warm winter because the number of city sanitation workers has dipped so low that they might not be able to handle a big snowstorm , union officials say. “The city is rolling the dice,” said Harry Nespoli, president of the Uniformed Sanitationmen’s Association. “We’re noted as the best snow-fighters throughout the world.” The city has hired only 200 sanitation workers since 2008, but hundreds more have retired, Nespoli said. There are fewer than 5,800 sanitation workers on the job, compared with 6,216 one year ago and 6,473 in 2008 . And there are no immediate plans to hire new sanitation workers before the winter. “We’re going to do the best that we can with what we have, but it might take longer to dig out the city,” the union chief said. “We cover more than 6,300 miles during a major storm. That’s like going to California and back twice.” Yes, the city not only laid off hundreds of sanitation workers, they put the supervisors back on the street and made them take a $5000 pay cut. (Not great for morale, since landlords don’t offer a rent cut.) District Council 37 came up with its own list of ideas, saying the city could generate more than $500 million a year by cracking down on uncollected taxes and reducing the number of city contracts. “Layoffs of any city worker will end up costing the city money,” said DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts. “Layoffs in the city’s Department of Finance are particularly self-defeating. These are revenue-generating positions. The millions in tax revenue that goes uncollected because the Department of Finance is understaffed amount to tax breaks for the wealthy,” Roberts said. Hmm. Bug — or feature? enlarge Another bus stranded in Bushwick. Meanwhile, Bloomberg is now taking the blame. (For someone who loves to grade the public schools and attack teachers, he’s curiously reluctant to criticize his streets commissioner — who, I’m told, had his own street plowed all the way to the blacktop as soon as the storm stopped.) Daily Kos poster HamdenRice says Bloomberg’s probably just committed political suicide: What’s so shocking is that we are experiencing the complete collapse of city government. There is no Sanitation Department, which is usually fantastically reliable during snow storms. EMS is paralyzed in responding to most streets. There’s no Access A Ride, and the police have disappeared. There is no mass transit out here in a city that depends on it more than any city in America. This isn’t a minor failure. The collapse of city infrastructure in my part of the outerboroughs — and from what I’ve read on line in parts of Brooklyn — is comparable to what happened in New Orleans during Katrina. I don’t want at all to equate what’s happening to the people here to what happened there — but I do want to compare the bizarre collapse or withdrawal of services due to incompetence. What’s worse, is that none of this was necessary. All Bloomberg had to do was let the system run the way it always runs. Declare a snow emergency and let the Sanitation Department do its thing. For inexplicable reasons he’s been trying to defend, he didn’t declare a snow emergency. Apparently, rumor is that another aspect of Bloomberg’s spectacular incompetence was that he redeployed plows that would usually be out here and in Brooklyn, into Manhattan so they could be plowed even more frequently than normal. Oh, and by the way? Compare and contrast. Here’s the mayor’s street in Manhattan, Monday afternoon, and a street in Rego Park, Queens: enlarge Mayor Bloomberg’s street. enlarge Waiting for the plowman. Rego Park, Queens.

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Russell Pearce gears up to push birthright-citizenship bill — while Arizona crumbles

Click here to view this media Our favorite neo-Nazi-friendly legislator , Arizona’s own Russell Pearce, has been hankering to revoke Latinos’ birthright citizenship for a long time. But now he’s actually the president of the Arizona State Senate — which means he has real power. And with SB1070 under his belt, he’s ready to roll — not just in Arizona, but nationally. Interestingly, a recent Arizona Republic editorial actually begged him not to, considering that it’s not going to do a thing to help Arizona get out of its budget crisis: With Arizona facing huge shortfalls, this is no time for distractions. It’s hard to imagine a worse distraction than trying to write our own rules on citizenship. Unfortunately, Senate President-elect Russell Pearce is a keen promoter of trying to reinterpret the 14th Amendment, which establishes birthright citizenship, through state law. Never mind that the U.S. Constitution is completely outside the jurisdiction of state legislators. Or that the state faces its worst financial crisis ever. This is like calling the fire department when your house is in flames – and the firefighters responding by rushing to Washington, D.C., to spray water on the Capitol. There are wiser perspectives among the incoming legislators. Some senators supported Pearce, a Mesa Republican, for the top leadership job with the understanding that he wouldn’t file a birthright bill. That was, it turns out, more than a bit naive. Because there’s nothing to stop someone else from dropping such legislation. “I never pledged not to hear the bill,” Pearce said in a recent Editorial Board meeting. “Will I facilitate it getting passed? Yes, I will.” Pearce claims that Arizona suffered no harm from Senate Bill 1070, his last do-it-yourself immigration-enforcement job. That’s not what business people say. Arizona is still suffering from the economic damage, not to mention the bitter divisions, of that misguided law. The consequences – the opportunities lost, the long-lasting stain on our image – will stretch on for years. In other words, Pearce pulled a fast one on his fellow Republicans in order to win the Senate presidency. Because yesterday, there he was on Fox’s Your World with guest host Brian Sullivan, not only touting the bill essentially as his project — and vowing to unveil it as a national project: SULLIVAN: You are not keeping this in the Arizona borders. You are announcing this at the National Press Club, right, next week. PEARCE: Yes. Yes. (CROSSTALK) SULLIVAN: Why do this on a national stage? PEARCE: Well, because we have about 18 states that have joined us in this effort, a coalition of 18 states that agree with us. Others do, too. They just don`t think they can pass it through their congress or — I mean, their legislative bodies. So we actually have the majority of Americans on this issue on our side, too. The polls show 62 percent to 70 percent of Americans know that birthright citizenship is unconstitutional, that the practice ought to be stopped. What you`re doing, you are inducing — it is against the law to enter the United States in violation of federal law. And it`s against law to remain here without permission. And yet we induce you to break the law. It is absolutely outrageous. The common sense… The best part is that Pearce openly admits that his strategy is intended to draw the state of Arizona into costly litigation when the inevitable lawsuits arrive, with the hope that they will be able to get the Supreme Court to overturn its previous rulings making clear the 14th Amendment grants citizenship to anyone born on American soil. As he told Sullivan: PEARCE: So we know they will sue. That is a given. They sue you on everything. They don`t want the laws enforced. Their support for anarchists and for the — and for destruction of the rule of law is outrageous. Somewhat secondarily, we all saw how the fight over SB1070 became a nexus for right-wing extremist activity, to the point that it’s now abundantly clear that Arizona has a white-supremacist problem, maybe even more substantial than Idaho’s in its heyday. This bill will only pour gasoline on that particular bonfire. All in the service of Russell Pearce’s self-promoting ego. Arizonans and their budget can go to the devil for all he cares. He has a national image to promote.

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Israel’s ex-president Katsav guilty of rape

TEL AVIV (Reuters) – An Israeli court found former President Moshe Katsav guilty of rape and other sexual offenses on Thursday, convictions of unprecedented gravity for a head of the Jewish state. Former Israeli President Moshe Katsav speaks to the media during a news conference in Kiryat Malachi March 12, 2009. (REUTERS/Amir Cohen/Files) “Katsav’s testimony was riddled with lies,” the three-judge panel said…

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Years Of Crisis – 1958 With Edward R. Murrow – Ten Year Retrospective

enlarge Chairman Mao – the reason China gave the world pause in the 1950′s. Click here to view this media In this third installment of Years Of Crisis we’re diving into 1958, which just so happened was the 10th anniversary of the series. Joining Edward R. Murrow was a group of Commentators whose beats covered the various global hot spots from 1948-1958. Each of them gave an assessment of how events changed the course of the world, from it’s Post War (World War 2) environment to what it had become circa 1958. It appeared that every part of the globe had undergone some dramatic change in that ten year period, certainly not the least being the emergence of Communist China as a world power and the changing face of Asia in general. Africa was again a major topic of discussion, as were the developing relationships between France and Germany and the beginnings of the Common Market . Fading were the colonial powers, which began to see independence movements coming of age and spreading with Great Britain going through a reinvention of itself over the decade. All in all, it’s a fascinating document of the Post-War/Cold War world, and if it’s a period of time you’re the least bit curious about, worth checking out to see just how the evolution process took place in world politics. Sometimes history just never ceases to amaze. Especially in retrospect.

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Dallas pastor accused of breaking into church member’s home proclaims innocence

Click here to view this media A Dallas pastor who admitted that she entered a parishioner’s home and removed belongings without permission is now saying that she was only trying to help. The Dallas Morning News reported: Sandy McGriff, 52, said she was trying to protect valuables at the home of her longtime friend Serita Agnew and made a horrible mistake. Police accuse McGriff of stealing more than $10,000 worth of fur coats, designer purses and electronics from a home in the 2200 block of Village Way near Kiest Boulevard and Lancaster Road. She was also charged with resisting arrest. McGriff spent most of Christmas Day in jail and was released on $26,000 bail in time for Sunday morning services at The Church of the Living God. The sanctuary is in the back of her husband’s furniture store on Lancaster Road in east Oak Cliff. McGriff invited reporters to her Grand Prairie home Monday to tell her side of the story. She said she had been in Agnew’s east Oak Cliff neighborhood on Friday evening to pick up a peach cobbler from a friend. “Something just told me to go past her house,” McGriff said. McGriff said that when she did, she saw two men coming out from the side of Agnew’s house. She said she pulled her black Jaguar into the driveway and walked around the home. That’s when she saw the broken kitchen window. “My mistake was I did not call 911,” McGriff said. “I just used poor judgment.” She said she cleared away shards of glass, stood on a barrel and climbed in through the window. She said she was trying to protect Agnew’s valuables in case the men came back. “I thought I was helping,” McGriff said.

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CPAC losing significant chunks of the gay-bashing Right over GOProud

Click here to view this media As Susie reported earlier, it seems right-wingers have brains with overdeveloped fear centers. And what are they REALLY scared of? Why, Teh Gay, of course : Two of the nation’s premier moral issues organizations, the Family Research Council and Concerned Women for America, are refusing to attend the Conservative Political Action Conference in February because a homosexual activist group, GOProud, has been invited. “We’ve been very involved in CPAC for over a decade and have managed a couple of popular sessions. However, we will no longer be involved with CPAC because of the organization’s financial mismanagement and movement away from conservative principles,” said Tom McClusky, senior vice president for FRC Action. “CWA has decided not to participate in part because of GOProud,” CWA President Penny Nance told WND. FRC and CWA join the American Principles Project, American Values, Capital Research Center, the Center for Military Readiness, Liberty Counsel, and the National Organization for Marriage in withdrawing from CPAC. In November, APP organized a boycott of CPAC over the participation of GOProud. As Steve Benen observes, they must be scared of getting cooties or something. Mustang Bobby at Shakesville has more. You’ll also note that many of the groups listed as stepping out from CPAC are groups newly listed as hate groups by the SPLC. They may be bitching and moaning about that, but then they keep proving its accuracy on a daily basis.

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Tucker Carlson: Michael Vick should have been executed

Click here to view this media When President Barack Obama praised the NFL’s Eagles for giving quarterback Michael Vick a second chance, it was inevitable that the pundits at Fox News would feign outrage. But no one could have predicted that one Fox News host would go as far as to call for Vick’s death. “President Obama — it has been confirmed by the White House — called the owner of the Philadelphia Eagles and during the course of their conversation, thanked him for giving Michael Vick a second chance,” Fox News’ Tucker Carlson reported Tuesday while filling in for Sean Hannity. “Now, I’m a Christian. I’ve made mistakes myself. I believe fervently in second chances but Michael Vick killed dogs and he did it in a heartless and cruel way and I think, personally, he should have been executed for that,” he continued. “But the idea that the president of the United States would be getting behind someone who murdered dogs, kind of beyond the pale,” Carlson said. Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie told Sports Illustrated ‘s Peter King Monday that Obama called him and was passionate about Vick’s comeback. “He said, ‘So many people who serve time never get a fair second chance,’” Lurie said. “He said, ‘It’s never a level playing field for prisoners when they get out of jail.’ And he was happy that we did something on such a national stage that showed our faith in giving someone a second chance after such a major downfall.” White House spokesman Bill Burton clarified that Obama “of course condemns the crimes that Michael Vick was convicted of, but, as he’s said previously, he does think that individuals who have paid for their crimes should have an opportunity to contribute to society again.” Burton also said that part of the reason for Obama’s call was to talk about alternative energy plans for Lincoln Field, where the Eagles play. Carlson wasn’t the first Fox News host to be be upset by the president’s actions. “The criticism is to specifically praise giving Michael Vick this kind of a chance in some way excuses, perhaps, what Michael Vick did or sends some sort of a message to people that it’s not that bad,” Fox News host Megyn Kelly worried . Filling in for Keith Olbermann on MSNBC Tuesday, Sam Seder pointed out that while Obama didn’t excuse what Vick did, President George W. Bush did excuse I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby after he was convicted in the Valerie Plame case. “Tell me if I’m wrong here,” Seder asked sociologist Dr. Michael Eric Dyson. “In the media, at least, it seems to me that there appears to be two standards for two different crimes and for two different presidents.” “You’re absolutely right,” Dyson said.

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Extreme partisanship and corporate money. Those are the two biggest problems four departing Representatives — 2 Republicans and 2 Democrats — have with today’s political climate. Zach Wamp (R-TN), Chet Edwards (D-Tx), Carol Shea-Porter (D-NH) and Mike Castle (R-DE), sat down with ABC News last week to talk about their opinion of today’s Congress, politics, and the view from Washington, DC. It wasn’t pretty. Castle: Rep. Mike Castle, R-Del., who was taken out in his primary by Tea Party favorite Christine O’Donnell, expresed alarm at the division the movement had caused within his own party. “The Tea Party movement really is quite a bit different than the old Republican conservative movement, ” Castle said. ” They’re more than willing to take out Republicans, call us Republicans in name only, or whatever it may be. It was one thing when you were dealing with Democrats and Republicans. Now you’re dealing with divisions within your own party. ” Castle, a known centrist, also said that working with the other party — the Democrats — once seen as the cornerstone of a functioning democracy, has become a punishable offense. “I mean, I know I suffered in my primary defeat [because] I had supported some Democratic legislation, supported the president from time to time. And that was treated as a great sin,” Castle told ABC News. Both Democrats looked to the special interest money on Capitol Hill and in campaign finance as one of the reasons for Congress’ dysfunction: Shea-Porter said watching the growing influence of special interest money had been her biggest disappointment, calling it “awful for democracy.” ” I think it’s strangling us ,” she said. “They’re in the halls of Congress everywhere, and it means, for example, that you sit on a committee and you say something about concern about Chinese influence or something, you don’t even know if in the next election, somehow or another, they manage to send some money to some group that now doesn’t even have to say where they got it.” Edwards, too: ” In the future, you’re going to have to think before you cast a vote against an individual drug company. They can run a $2 million television campaign against you in central Texas or in Delaware, and take you out under the guise of being something they’re not,” Edwards said. “Congress has to find a solution to that within the limits of the new Supreme Court decision.” Not surprisingly, none of them had anything nice to say about the news media. Each member made a point to emphasize the bipartisan work they had taken part in during their time in Congress. However, each pointed out that the more cooperative interaction among members doesn’t hit the media radar as much as the conflicts. Shea-Porter said the media focused too much on the negativity in Congress. “I have listened to people on television say things like, ‘Well, everybody’s on the take in Washington,’ as if that’s a given fact. I think it just makes people more cynical about the whole process,” Shea-Porter said. Edwards blamed a misinformed public. “I think people are getting their news from stovepipe sources of information — where people are basically getting the news they want to hear. Whether it’s Fox on the right or MSNBC on the left, it’s making it hard for centrist Democrats. It’s making it hard to elect centrists, who I think are critical to the functioning of our checks and balances form of democracy.” Castle, who complained that conservative talking heads such as Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, misrepresented him during his primary campaign, echoed Edwards’ complaints, saying, “People are listening to what they want to listen to, and not hearing any other point of view at all. That, I think, is a huge problem affecting politics in America today. ”

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I’ve been astounded by the treatment of Julian Assange and the WikiLeaks story by the media ever since it broke. Howard Kurtz called Assange disingenuous for not outing his sources, which is insane. Howard Kurtz allegedly understands journalism, so it’s outrageous for Kurtz to take offense when Assange refuses to out his sources, as I explained in a post called: Why are the media so eager to bury WikiLeaks? KURTZ: Rick Stengel, let’s turn now to your interview with Julian Assange. I found some of his answers to be absolutely disingenuous. For example, you ask whether secrets are ever necessary, and he says, well, his secrets are necessary, protecting his sources, but “our responsibility is to bring matters to the public.” What’s important is the information contained in the WikiLeaks cables, not Assange himself — and when we’re dealing with whistleblowers, of course their identities have to be protected. Journalism 101 states that you never out your sources, no matter where you get your information. The Beltway Villagers even defended the odious Judith Miller when she went to prison rather than divulge that Scooter Libby was her source in the outing of a Valerie Plame, as I’ve mentioned before . That was information that led this country into an unjustified war based on lies told by Miller and her leakers. After watching Andrea Mitchell on MSNBC show such disdain for Assange, I asked a question that really hasn’t been asked all that much. Are folks in the media afraid they might be implicated in Wikileaks cables? I expected the State Department to speak out against WikiLeaks, but why have the media been so hostile to WikiLeaks and so passive about the people trying to silence his operation without a shred of evidence of him being guilty of a crime? I wonder if they are afraid that either they or their friends might show up in some of these leaked cables in an unfavorable light. Yesterday on MSNBC, Andrea Mitchell was discussing Assange’s bail in the UK and seemed afraid that he might have access to the dreaded “Internet” and destroy the world. I understand that access to D.C. is very precious to the Beltway Village, so outside of fear of what might be found out about their friends and that they’ll earn extra credit for bashing Assange by the powers that be, I still don’t get their attacks on the whole WikiLeaks story. And as we’ve seen, cable TV news has turned away from being a deliverer of news and instead focuses on orchestrating battles of opinions with punditshills and ex-GOP Bushies, but the networks for the most part have to turn away from their own stable of journalistic talkers to bring in a differing opinion on the WikiLeaks story, because the Villagers on TV are routinely characterizing Julian Assange as a terrorist. Glenn Greenwald posts today about his CNN interview last night over WikiLeaks and he highlighted four points in his post, The merger of journalists and government officials : 4) If one thinks about it, there’s something quite surreal about sitting there listening to a CNN anchor and her fellow CNN employee angrily proclaim that Julian Assange is a “terrorist” and a “criminal” when the CNN employee doing that is . . . . George W. Bush’s Homeland Security and Terrorism adviser. Fran Townsend was a high-level national security official for a President who destroyed another nation with an illegal, lie-fueled military attack that killed well over 100,000 innocent people, created a worldwide torture regime, illegally spied on his own citizens without warrants, disappeared people to CIA “black sites,” and erected a due-process-free gulag where scores of knowingly innocent people were put in cages for years. Julian Assange never did any of those things, or anything like them. But it’s Assange who is the “terrorist” and the “criminal.” Do you think Jessica Yellin would ever dare speak as scornfully and derisively about George Bush or his top officials as she does about Assange? Of course not. Instead, CNN quickly hires Bush’s Homeland Security Adviser who then becomes Yellin’s colleague and partner in demonizing Assange as a “terrorist.” Or consider the theme that framed last night’s segment: Assange is profiting off classified information by writing a book! Beyond the examples I gave, Bob Woodward has become a very rich man by writing book after book filled with classified information about America’s wars which his sources were not authorized to give him. Would Yellin ever in a million years dare lash out at Bob Woodward the way she did Assange? To ask the question is to answer it ( see here as CNN’s legal correspondent Jeffrey Toobin is completely befuddled in the middle of his anti-WikiLeaks rant when asked by a guest, Clay Shirky, to differentiate what Woodward continuously does from what Assange is doing)… read on Woodward has been the cleaner for the Washington Post for a long time, and he’s held up to a higher level of worship than even David Border. Here’s a classic video which has, of all people, Don Imus confronting Andrea and the Beltway elites over their behavior in 2005 on the Plame case: Imus: It seems unclear what you said and perhaps you can clear it up about what you said back in Oct. of 2003— Mitchell: I have been trying to figure out “what-the-heck” I was talking about, frankly. There is confusion because I am confused. Imus: So when you told Alan Murray of CNBC, that it was widely known that his wife worked for the CIA-(interruption)–what, were you drunk? Mitchell: I don’t even remember the deal. Imus: What this suggests to me is that you knew she worked at the CIA, but you didn’t know what she did there. Isn’t that fair-did you know that? Mitchell-(garbled) Imus: Why did you say that Andrea? Mitchell: I messed up…(later) Imus: Russert was a little short with me—almost like he was trying to hide something…. Imus (laughing): I realized — well this is an unfair thing to say, I was gonna say — all you folks in Washington are all in bed with one another, but that would be an awful thing to say …. I think Imus was right on when he said ‘all you folks in Washington are all in bed with one another,’ and Mitchell knew it. As time goes on it’s pretty hard to miss. Digby beats back one of the bigger zombie lies being told by the media about Wikileaks. There are many fine points in the piece, but he mentions one zombie lie I’d really love to kill — the one that all of these so-called reporters seem to have absorbed as if it’s the received word of God — the one that says Wikileaks dumped 260,000 cables indiscriminately on the Internet. Here’s the truth, from an AP news report from December 3, 2010. There’s no excuse for journalists not to know this by this point: Respected news outlets collaborate with WikiLeaks By The Associated Press 12.03.10 The diplomatic records exposed on WikiLeaks this week reveal not only secret government communications, but also an extraordinary collaboration between some of the world’s most respected news-media outlets and a website that is facing increasing pressure and criticism from governments worldwide. Unlike earlier disclosures by WikiLeaks of tens of thousands of secret government military records, the group is releasing only a trickle of documents at a time from a trove of a quarter-million, and only after considering advice from five news organizations with which it chose to share all of the material.. This is the saddest day for journalism since their guileless acceptance of the WMD boogeyman and giddy cheerleading for the Iraq war. It turns out that journalism is important, but most of these “professional” practitioners of the field are not only failing to practice it, they are hostile to the idea that they should practice it. It’s very revealing. It’s just another sad and revealing day for all the hacks running around and impersonating real journalists. Not all journos are acting like this. Major props goes to the Ray Odroso of the Village Voice. Read more here .

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