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Professors At Catholic Colleges Tell John Boehner: Your Budget Fails To Uphold Church Moral Teachings

enlarge Despite the efforts of the past two popes to purge the church’s ranks of liberals, there are still Catholics who believe in the teachings of social justice and they’re calling out John Boehner on his faux Catholicism: House Speaker John A. Boehner, a Republican who grew up in a devout Roman Catholic family in Ohio, is scheduled to give the commencement address this Saturday at the Catholic University of America in Washington, a prestigious venue in church circles for its affiliation with the nation’s bishops. But now Mr. Boehner is coming in for a dose of the same kind of harsh criticism previously leveled at some Democrats — including President Obama — who have been honored by Catholic universities: the accusation that his policies violate basic teachings of the Catholic church. More than 75 professors at Catholic University and other prominent Catholic colleges have written a pointed letter to Mr. Boehner saying that the Republican-supported budget he shepherded through the House of Representatives will hurt the poor, elderly and vulnerable, and therefore he has failed to uphold basic Catholic moral teaching. “Mr. Speaker, your voting record is at variance from one of the Church’s most ancient moral teachings,” the letter says. “From the apostles to the present, the Magisterium of the Church has insisted that those in power are morally obliged to preference the needs of the poor . Your record in support of legislation to address the desperate needs of the poor is among the worst in Congress. This fundamental concern should have great urgency for Catholic policy makers. Yet, even now, you work in opposition to it.”

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Professors At Catholic Colleges Tell John Boehner: Your Budget Fails To Uphold Church Moral Teachings

enlarge Despite the efforts of the past two popes to purge the church’s ranks of liberals, there are still Catholics who believe in the teachings of social justice and they’re calling out John Boehner on his faux Catholicism: House Speaker John A. Boehner, a Republican who grew up in a devout Roman Catholic family in Ohio, is scheduled to give the commencement address this Saturday at the Catholic University of America in Washington, a prestigious venue in church circles for its affiliation with the nation’s bishops. But now Mr. Boehner is coming in for a dose of the same kind of harsh criticism previously leveled at some Democrats — including President Obama — who have been honored by Catholic universities: the accusation that his policies violate basic teachings of the Catholic church. More than 75 professors at Catholic University and other prominent Catholic colleges have written a pointed letter to Mr. Boehner saying that the Republican-supported budget he shepherded through the House of Representatives will hurt the poor, elderly and vulnerable, and therefore he has failed to uphold basic Catholic moral teaching. “Mr. Speaker, your voting record is at variance from one of the Church’s most ancient moral teachings,” the letter says. “From the apostles to the present, the Magisterium of the Church has insisted that those in power are morally obliged to preference the needs of the poor . Your record in support of legislation to address the desperate needs of the poor is among the worst in Congress. This fundamental concern should have great urgency for Catholic policy makers. Yet, even now, you work in opposition to it.”

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Two arrested over ‘plot to attack New York synagogue’

Men bought three pistols, ammunition and inert grenade after seven-month sting operation, police and Manhattan prosecutors say Police in New York have arrested two North African-born men in a sting operation after they bought a hand grenade and guns in order to attack a synagogue, authorities said on Thursday. Algerian-born Ahmed Ferhani, 26, and 20-year-old Moroccan-born Mohammed Mamdouh bought three pistols, ammunition and an inert grenade after a seven-month sting operation, police and Manhattan prosecutors said. The plot, unravelled on Wednesday, was the 13th planned attack by Islamist militants on New York City since the 9/11 attacks, authorities said. New York has remained a target for al-Qaida, and police were put on heightened alert following the 2 May raid in which US special forces killed the al-Qaida leader, Osama bin Laden in Pakistan. In a separate case two years ago, four men were arrested for placing what they thought were explosives outside synagogues in the Bronx. The men, who were caught in an FBI sting operation, were videotaped making vitriolic anti-Semitic statements to an FBI informant. They were convicted following a trial at Manhattan federal court and await sentencing. “We are disturbed by the news reports of a home-grown terror plot aimed at Jewish communal institutions in New York City. “Especially in the wake of Osama bin Laden’s death, we are actively engaging the Federation Movement across North America to help communities be prepared, alert and secure against the heightened threat,” the Jewish Federations of North America said in a statement. New York United States guardian.co.uk

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Two arrested over ‘plot to attack New York synagogue’

Men bought three pistols, ammunition and inert grenade after seven-month sting operation, police and Manhattan prosecutors say Police in New York have arrested two North African-born men in a sting operation after they bought a hand grenade and guns in order to attack a synagogue, authorities said on Thursday. Algerian-born Ahmed Ferhani, 26, and 20-year-old Moroccan-born Mohammed Mamdouh bought three pistols, ammunition and an inert grenade after a seven-month sting operation, police and Manhattan prosecutors said. The plot, unravelled on Wednesday, was the 13th planned attack by Islamist militants on New York City since the 9/11 attacks, authorities said. New York has remained a target for al-Qaida, and police were put on heightened alert following the 2 May raid in which US special forces killed the al-Qaida leader, Osama bin Laden in Pakistan. In a separate case two years ago, four men were arrested for placing what they thought were explosives outside synagogues in the Bronx. The men, who were caught in an FBI sting operation, were videotaped making vitriolic anti-Semitic statements to an FBI informant. They were convicted following a trial at Manhattan federal court and await sentencing. “We are disturbed by the news reports of a home-grown terror plot aimed at Jewish communal institutions in New York City. “Especially in the wake of Osama bin Laden’s death, we are actively engaging the Federation Movement across North America to help communities be prepared, alert and secure against the heightened threat,” the Jewish Federations of North America said in a statement. New York United States guardian.co.uk

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Syria’s Crackdown on Protesters Escalates

Click here to view this media As both the PBS Newshour and the Times Online are reporting, the crackdown by the Syrian government on protesters continues. One of my fellow C&L contributors who is following a lot of what’s going on in the Middle East and North Africa told me any reports we’re getting here in the U.S. are sadly pretty mild compared to what those civilians are actually experiencing from what he’s reading on Twitter and the social networking sites and first hand accounts of the violence there. As he noted though, it’s extremely hard for any reporters to make it into, much less back out of Syria to do any reporting. So what we’re getting from the news outlets here in the U.S. and elsewhere is going to be limited to say the least. It’s a shame that what’s going on in the Middle East and North Africa has mainly fallen off of the radar of our “mainstream media” or better described, corporate media in the U.S. other than covering the Libyan conflict. I think that I’m the most disgusted by the fact that it’s ambulance chasing “BREAKING NEWS!!!” one day and the next day, it’s not worthy of even being covered because the ambulance chasers let something else take over their “news” cycle for reasons of pure sensationalism. As many problems as I have with the PBS Newshour’s program, the primary one being them allowing David Brooks to come on there and spout GOP, Villager, fact free conventional wisdom every Friday night, at least they do seem to be capable of managing to walk and chew gum at the same time with the diversity of the stories they cover every night, unlike those in the 24/7 news cycle who are free to deluge us with nonstop coverage of the same meaningless story for hour upon hour that they pretend is still breaking even if they’ve been flogging it for a half a day or sadly sometimes more. Here’s more from PBS on the protests in Syria. Syria’s Crackdown on Protesters Escalates, 18 Killed : JIM LEHRER: Finally tonight, an update on Syria, where the crackdown on protests escalated sharply again today. At least 18 people were killed when government tanks opened fire. Judy Woodruff has our story. JUDY WOODRUFF: The first reports of shelling came from Homs in central Syria. People living there said tanks targeted residential areas, and five people were killed. At least 13 others died outside Daraa in the south. Up to now, security forces relied on gunfire and snipers to crush the seven-week-old uprising against President Bashar al-Assad. But in the past week, the army has sealed off towns and villages that were centers of the protests. Maadamiyeh, a suburb of the capital, Damascus, is surrounded, as is Daraa, and the towns of Jassem and al-Harra, where much of today’s shelling occurred. And the city of Banias on the coast is also cut off. Syrian human rights workers now say more than 770 civilians have been killed in the crackdown. And in recent days, more than 9,000 people have been rounded up around the country. These YouTube pictures appear to show people being detained in Damascus. British reporter Martin Fletcher witnessed the roundups in Homs, after he got into Syria on a tourist visa. MARTIN FLETCHER, The Times of London: Quite clearly, the regime have been going around the street of Homs arresting any young man of fighting age and putting him into this and presumably other detention centers. And I was held for about six hours. And during that time, regularly — at regular intervals, young men were brought in like that. Some of them were literally whimpering with fear. Others were quite defiant. But it gave me a glimpse of the — the lengths to which this regime is going to suppress this insurrection. JUDY WOODRUFF: Another journalist, Al-Jazeera’s Dorothy Parvaz, was detained at the Damascus Airport in late April. She holds American, Canadian and Iranian citizenship, and has reportedly been sent to Iran and imprisoned there. Today, President Assad told a Syrian newspaper he will work to resolve the issue of detainees jailed during the unrest. He also urged Syrians to cooperate with the government so reforms can be made. But U.N. Secretary-Gen. Ban Ki-Moon urged Assad again to stop using excessive force. And, in Washington, White House spokesman Jay Carney condemned today’s tank attacks on protesters. JAY CARNEY, White House press secretary: One, it is abhorrent to use violence in any form against peaceful protesters and against unarmed citizens, your own citizens. But, two, if what they seek is stability, they are sowing the seeds of more instability by doing what they’re doing. And — and we strongly condemn that. JUDY WOODRUFF: But, just yesterday, President Assad’s cousin, Rami Makhlouf, warned, the regime will not back down. Makhlouf is one of Syria’s most powerful businessmen and told The New York Times — quote — “If there is no stability here, there’s no way there will be stability in Israel. Nobody can guarantee what will happen after, God forbid, anything happens to this regime.” In the meantime, the European Union Monday imposed sanctions on 13 members of Syria’s ruling elite, but not Assad himself. Now Germany and several other European nations are calling in Syrian ambassadors and threatening additional sanctions, unless the crackdown ends.

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In NY-26, Jack Davis Scuffles With Cameraman, and AP IDs Him As a ‘Tea Party Candidate’; He’s Not

Can someone call himself a Tea Party candidate even though he has no visible support from local Tea Party groups and has been asked by one of them not to run? The Associated Press's Carolyn Thompson apparently thinks so. Thompson's 3:03 p.m. report ( saved here for future reference, fair use and discussion purposes) makes no mention of congressional candidate Jack Davis's lack of Tea Party group support, and waited until the final paragraph of her 17-paragraph report to tell readers that Davis is “a wealthy Republican businessman” who ran for Congress in 2004, 2006, and 2008 — as a Democrat. The large body evidence that Davis is not a legitimate Tea Party candidate consists of at least the following: On April 6, William Jacobsen at Legal Insurrection asserted that “Davis is a spoiler, does not represent the Tea Party movement or conservatives, and his campaign is being run a self-described progressive operative.” On March 24, Moe Lane at RedState writes that the campaign manager, Curt Ellis, is a former diarist at Talking Points Memo, a leftist site, and quotes Ellis as saying the following about the Tea Party: “They fancy themselves the vanguard of a revolution, when in fact they are typical self-absorbed, privileged children used to having their way — now – and uninhibited about complaining loudly when they don’t. It’s the same demographic Spiro Agnew called 'an effete corps of impudent snobs who characterize themselves as intellectuals.'” On March 25, Roll Call reported that “Leaders of the largest tea party organization in Western New York have called on Jack Davis to exit the 26th district special election,” alleging that “his advisors and campaign manager are trying to pull a power play for self aggrandizement and power.” On April 6, Sam Foster at Left Coast Rebel in a post entitled “Months after Tea Partiers were Protesting, Jack Davis was supporting progressive politicians,” documented mid-2009 contributions of $1,000 to the following Democrats –Dan Maffei on June 30; $1,000 to Brian Higgins on June 25; $1,000 to Eric Massa on June 30; $1,000 to Louise “demon pass” Slaughter July 1; and Steven Kagen on August 4. Thompson's report addresses a YouTube-posted incident (also embedded at Hot Air , where Jazz Shaw's post is headlined “Fake Tea Party Candidate Assaults Cameraman”) which occurred on Wednesday. What follows are the first seven paragraphs from Thompson's report, with her “oh by the way” final paragraph added at the end: A 15-second video shows a tea party congressional candidate in New York scuffling with a Republican Party volunteer who questioned his absence from a debate.

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CBS Gives Obama Over 26 Minutes to Lecture on the Economy

CBS gave President Obama over 26 and a half minutes to answer 12 questions related to the economy during a town hall aired on Thursday's Early Show. Obama got six uninterrupted minutes to answer one question about Medicare during the hour-long event. Host Erica Hill wondered how the Democrat could ” change the mind-set from things are tough to things are turning around ” with the economy. Hill led the town hall with her concerned economic “mind-set” question, noting beforehand that “it seems that we have been hearing, whether it's on TV, at the office, around the kitchen table, things are tough,” but continuing that “there's positive economic data coming through. Yet, sometimes it can feel like for every two steps forward, it's one step back. There's definitely a psychological component to this recovery .” Once the President gave his initial answer, co-host Harry Smith followed up by pointing out how apparently, “people aren't feeling it, though…..So, you can read in the Wall Street Journal and the stock market has recovered really well, but at the same time, there are a lot of people who've stopped looking for jobs. Jobs just aren't there.” Later in the hour, CBS correspondent Rebecca Jarvis relayed a viewer's question from Internet to Mr. Obama: “So many of the good paying jobs have been outsourced, leaving nothing but low wage jobs. How can employers feel good enough to hire again or increase wages with so much uncertainty about the economy?” After he answered, Jarvis then asked a related question of her own from the left: JARVIS: At the same time, though, that we've seen some job growth, there are still 13.7 million people in this country unemployed. Wages have stagnated for the last decade, and you mentioned stocks are up ten percent away from their all time highs. Companies are making record profits. They have $2 trillion of cash to spend. If this isn't the right circumstance for raising wages and really going out and employing new people, what will be? Smith did interject with a right-leaning point after the Democrat answered an audience's question about her small business: “But as a small business person, do you feel over-regulated, because that's the other theme that we've heard over the last two years? ” Earlier in the hour, Hill also pointed out the President's poor ratings on the economy according to the latest CBS News/New York Times poll : “He received his lowest rating yet on his handling of the economy: 34 percent.” The President's six-minute monologue came near the end of the town hall after an audience member asked, “You've proposed budget changes to Medicare. I'd like to know how they still would be able to keep the 45-year promise that's been made to the American public.” CBS announced their plans for this town hall event last Friday, which came just over a month after President Obama officially announced the beginning of his reelection campaign. The transcript of the questions asked during Thursday's town hall event on CBS, along with some of President Obama's answers for context: HILL: You know, for the past four years, Mr. President, it seems that we have been hearing, whether it's on TV, at the office, around the kitchen table, things are tough, and there is some improvement. There's positive economic data coming through. Yet, sometimes it can feel like for every two steps forward, it's one step back. There's definitely a psychological component to this recovery. How, then, do we change the mind-set from things are tough, to things are turning around? SMITH: People aren't feeling it, though. That's the- just to sort of reemphasize the question. So, you can read in the Wall Street Journal and the stock market is- has recovered really well, but at the same time, there is- there are a lot of people who've stopped looking for jobs. Jobs just aren't there. OBAMA: Well, part of what's happened is that the recovery's uneven. So, certain sectors of the country are doing better than others. Manufacturing is actually doing really well, in part, because the auto industry is getting back on its feet, and that has to do with decisions that we made early in my administration to make sure that we still had those Big Three auto companies here in America, making U.S. cars and innovating so that we could compete internationally. But part of the problem is not just folks who don't have work. It's also folks who have work seeing their incomes flat-line, and that is a decade-long trend. That's part of the reason I ran for President was because too many folks were losing ground. Between 2000 and 2009, during that decade, the average income for American families actually went down. Even though, as you said, the stock market was booming, corporate profits were way up, CEO pay was- SMITH: Up 27 percent in the last year. OBAMA: That's exactly right. So part of what's happened also is some structural changes in the economy, where it used to be that there was broad-based shared prosperity, now if companies are doing really well, they're not necessarily hiring back workers. They're just figuring out how to do more with fewer workers. That may increase profits, but it doesn't help folks who are looking for a job, and oftentimes, that outlook puts a lot of pressure on the people who are already on the job. So, some of the changes that are taking place in the economy are ones that took a decade or two to get to, and it's gonna take us several years for us to get back to where we need to be.

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Phone hacking: How the Met ‘misled courts, parliament and public’

Metropolitan police accused of misleading the high court over the phone-hacking scandal The Royal Courts of Justice have heard hundreds of criminals claim that the police are bent. On Thursday, it was a respectable group of public figures including three former cabinet ministers and an erstwhile police chief who claimed that Scotland Yard had twisted the truth and buried the evidence in their case. In a series of attacks, the Metropolitan police were accused of misleading the high court, parliament and the public over the phone-hacking scandal; and of keeping hundreds, possibly thousands of victims in the dark in a way which shielded Rupert Murdoch’s News International from embarrassment and expensive legal settlements. The evidence emerged at a hearing in which Lord Prescott, the former Europe minister Chris Bryant and the Met’s former deputy assistant commissioner Brian Paddick sought permission for a judicial review of police handling of the affair. Three others including the former media, culture and sport secretary, Tessa Jowell, asked the court to be recognised as interested parties. In written and oral submissions, the court was confronted with claims that the News of the World’s private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire, had: • Intercepted 45 voicemail messages from Prescott and sent an email about them to an executive at the News of the World but the Met told him repeatedly that he was not a victim of hacking. • Kept notes on Bryant including a list of 23 numbers which made calls to his mobile phone – information which could have been obtained only by hacking his voicemail – and yet police told him there was no evidence his phone had been hacked. • Listed Paddick on his computer as “a project” and collected phone details for him, his partner, his former partner and numerous associates, but the police had told him only that Mulcaire had written his name, rank and address on one piece of paper. James Lewis QC, for the Met, acknowledged “some operational shortcomings” and that some victims had not been told there was clear evidence of their messages being intercepted. He said the evidence in relation to these claimants had not been clear until very recently. Lewis said that, having seized 10,000 pages of notes from Mulcaire, the original inquiry in 2006 failed to enter the material on to a computer system or to search and index it. In 2009, after the Guardian revived the affair, Scotland Yard started transferring material to a database but overlooked numerous documents and scanned others in a form that was not searchable, with the result they gave misleading replies to some public figures who asked if there was evidence they were victims. It was only when Scotland Yard launched Operation Weeting in January that the material had been fully searched and indexed. A written submission by the claimants’ solicitors, Bindman and Co, said that last autumn the police had told the high court they had given all of the claimants a complete summary of all of the relevant evidence in their possession. Yet it had now emerged that not one of the claimants had been given an accurate or complete account of the material which police held. Hundreds, if not thousands, of victims had been left in the dark by Scotland Yard. The effect of this had been to protect News International from expense and embarrassment: “We share the disquiet of the public about the police’s motivation for playing down the scale of unlawful behaviour and the way in which News International has, as a result, been shielded.” The submissions summarised evidence to parliament by Scotland Yard’s assistant commissioner, John Yates, who had explained the narrow focus of the original investigation and the small number of victims who had been warned by claiming that the Crown Prosecution Service had given police a very narrow interpretation of the law on interception. The submission recorded that this claim had been “strongly contradicted” by the head of the CPS, Keir Starmer QC. Claims by Yates that Scotland Yard had asked the four leading mobile phone companies to liaise with customers who had been victims, had been contradicted by all four companies who said they had received no such request from police. The interception of Prescott’s messages, the court was told, was achieved by targeting the phone of his then chief of staff, Joan Hammell. Glenn Mulcaire had emailed an editorial executive at the News of the World on 28 April 2006 referring to 45 messages left on her phone by Prescott and providing detailed instructions about how to continue accessing Hammell’s phone. This was at a time when Prescott’s private life was under tabloid scrutiny. That email had finally been disclosed by the News of the World on 26 January this year. Bindman’s submission said that, unlike Prescott, Tessa Jowell had been approached by police in 2006. “However, she was not told the extent of the interception and was also left in the dark about precisely what had happened to her private information. “Nor did she realise that the private information of close friends, cabinet colleagues and family members had been compromised. “She has now been shown a very substantial amount of material by the new inquiry and is at a loss to understand why material which was available to police in 2006 was not shown to her.” The submission concludes: “The Metropolitan police misled the claimants and the wider public by stating that there was only ‘a handful’ of victims; and that, where there was evidence of hacking, victims were told. “When those who thought they might have been victims contacted the police for fuller information, many were wrongly told that there was no evidence of hacking. “It has now emerged that, contrary to the picture painted by the police, that telephone interception was extremely widespread.” The police argued in court that, although there had been some failures, Operation Weeting had provided an adequate remedy and there was no case for a judicial review. Mr Justice Foskett said he would make a decision in the near future whether to allow the review. Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Nick Davies Amelia Hill guardian.co.uk

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Nato air strikes hit Gaddafi compound in Tripoli again

Attacks comes a few hours after Libyan leader makes his first public appearance since death of son Muammar Gaddafi’s compound in Tripoli has been hit by Nato rockets again, a few hours after the veteran autocrat appeared in public for the first time in almost two weeks. Gaddafi was shown on state television in a traditional brown robe addressing tribal leaders, whom he empowered to speak on behalf of a nation he has ruled with absolute power for almost 42 years. The labyrinthine complex in the heart of the capital was struck at around 3am with five bombs and rockets that appeared to target military installations and bunkers. A giant crater could be seen in the lawn in the middle of the complex, with one of the rockets having hit what appeared to be a bunker . Officials said six people were killed in the attack, including two Libyan reporters who had been interviewing supporters camped out at the scene. “These locations were known to be command and control facilities engaged in co-ordinating attacks against civilian populations in Libya,” said a Nato official speaking from Brussels. Libyan spokesman Moussa Ibrahim said the underground facility was not a bunker, but a sewage network. But following the strike, chanting Gaddafi supporters guarded a stairwell leading to the ruined site, having been told to let no reporters near it. Heat rose from a second smaller crater, where shattered reinforced concrete exposed a cavernous hole beneath. The US defence secretary, Robert Gates, revealed that the US had so far spent $750m (£460m) on the international effort to oust Gaddafi . The US and Nato attacks are taking a toll on Tripoli, where queues for fuel and basic services clutter most roadways. However, support for Gaddafi still appears to be solid. Rebel elements in the capital have not mustered any large offensive and the loyalist army appears to be in control despite nightly attacks

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Ugh. Six years of this guy is six too many. If we’re really lucky, maybe he’ll implode before he finishes his first term. How can anyone sit there with a straight face and suggest that supporting health care as a right is to support slavery? It makes no sense. PAUL: With regard to the idea of whether you have a right to health care, you have realize what that implies. It’s not an abstraction. I’m a physician. That means you have a right to come to my house and conscript me. It means you believe in slavery. It means that you’re going to enslave not only me, but the janitor at my hospital, the person who cleans my office, the assistants who work in my office, the nurses. Basically, once you imply a belief in a right to someone’s services — do you have a right to plumbing? Do you have a right to water? Do you have right to food? — you’re basically saying you believe in slavery. I’m a physician in your community and you say you have a right to health care. You have a right to beat down my door with the police, escort me away and force me to take care of you? That’s ultimately what the right to free health care would be. A couple of things. When did food and water become “services”? And where does he get this crazy fantasy that establishing a right to health care means people can beat his door down and carry him away to force him to treat them? Then there is the matter of the Hippocratic Oath , which I’m guessing Baby Paul doesn’t even know, much less practice. (I doubt he actually signed anything like it, since he is self-certified ). But for doctors who do sign it, this part might help keep people from banging down doors in the dead of night and carrying assistants away: I will remember that I remain a member of society, with special obligations to all my fellow human beings, those sound of mind and body as well as the infirm. Give me a break. Slavery? C’mon. [h/t Think Progress ]

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