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McCain claims iPad, iPhone are made in US

Click here to view this media Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) believes Americans should buy products made in the US, but he seems a bit confused about what those products might be. In an interview with ABC’s Christiane Amanpour Sunday, the senior senator from Arizona incorrectly declared that Apple’s iconic iPhone and iPad products were made in the US. ABC News dedicated several segments of their World News broadcast last week to furnishing a home only with products that were made in the US. In the end, the house was left without key electronic products like televisions and computers. McCain told Amanpour that the ABC News team should have simply purchased products from Apple. “I would also point out that if you emptied that house, if you had left a computer there or an iPad or an iPhone, those are built in the United States of America,” he said. In fact, both Apple products are designed in the US but manufactured in China. United Steelworkers President Leo Gerard corrected McCain in a later segment. “The iPad and iPhone are made in China,” he said. “They’re not made in America.”

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Amanpour Frets: ‘Will the Deep Budget Cuts on the Table Stick a Fork in the Recovery?’

Picking up on an argument made by economist Mark Zandi — whom the Washington Post described as “an architect of the 2009 stimulus package” and who last year pushed for a second stimulus bill — ABC’s Christiane Amanpour on Sunday morning, presuming there is an ongoing “recovery,” plugged a This Week roundtable topic: Up next, Washington's answer to the job crisis. Will the deep budget cuts on the table stick a fork in the recovery? In the subsequent segment, Amanpour forwarded: “$61 billion in budget cuts. Mark Zandi says 700,000 jobs will be lost.” Panelist Chrystia Freeland, global editor-at-large for Thomson-Reuters, agreed: “I think he's right.” Echoing Amanpour’s theme, over on Meet the Press NBC’s David Gregory cited a poll to show “people want that focus on immediate job creation,” not budget cuts, “and that gets the President's point, which is you've got to get the balance right. You can't grow if you keep cutting so much.” “Cutting so much”? How about actually “cutting” anything. The current proposed $60 billion cut is less than ten percent of the additional “stimulus” spending. Pseudo-conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks disjointedly agreed with Gregory and Obama: “Yeah, you've got to have some priorities. I'm not sure they've gotten there. For example, you can say we're going to cut, but we're not going to cut things that invest in our future. We're going to cut things that are consumption….” From the Sunday, March 6 This Week on ABC, which only very briefly addressed the topic Amanpour plugged in the roundtable with ABC’s David Muir, Mort Zuckerman, Leo Gerard, President of U.S. Steelworkers, and Freeland: AMANPOUR: $61 billion in budget cuts. Mark Zandi says 700,000 jobs will be lost. CHRYSTIA FREELAND: I think he's right. I mean I think that the problem is the U.S. government, at both the federal and the state level, needs to figure out how to walk and chew gum at the same time. So what you need to is find way, in the medium term, to have a full, a solid promise to the markets we are going to deal with essentially the health care problem and in the short term stimulate jobs.

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This Week Actually Talks About America’s Lack Of Industrial Policy

Wow. I’m so used to the insane talk that passes for intelligent discourse on the Sunday bobblehead shows, it took a minute for it to sink in: I’m hearing an actual discussion on American industrial policy? But yes, indeed I was. It was a few years ago at a Campaign for America’s Future conference when I finally learned that every other industrialized nation had an industrial policy — that is, their governments made long-term plans that involved actual government supports and trade protections to support specific industries deemed important to their nation’s future. In case you haven’t noticed, we don’t do that. And our lack of leadership has led to profit-driven offshore manufacturing instead of good American jobs. So I was very excited to see Leo Gerard, president of the United Steel Workers union, invited onto the roundtable at This Week with Christiane Amanpour. Leo’s a little low-key, and he was too polite to interrupt the usual blowhard assertions of Mort Zuckerman, but he made some good points (he corrected crazy Grandpa McCain’s earlier statement that iPhones and iPads were made in America when they’re made in China) — including the idea that we’ve channeled our best and brightest into the financial services industry instead of mechanical engineering. (Zuckerman said no one makes students choose a career. Gerard said the chance of earning eight million a year does.) Anyway, I think that’s two weeks in a row that a voice from labor appeared on This Week. Thank you, Ms. Amanour.

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WaPo ‘Humorist’ Hates Our ‘Stupid Ramparts’ and Our National Anthem

In Sunday's Washington Post Magazine, “humorist” and former Style section editor Gene Weingarten lamented how bad our national anthem is: the headline is “What so proudly we failed.” Many singers dislike the way the melody travels, but Weingarten seems to hate the whole idea of patriotic songs. He concluded by expressing how he liked

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Chris Wallace on Budget Cuts to Programs That Harm the Poor: ‘We’d Better Get Used to It’

Click here to view this media Chris Wallace sounds like he’s been going to the John Boehner school of compassionate conservatism. It wasn’t quite a “so be it” but “get used to it” isn’t too far off. That was his conclusion after showing how horribly damaging the decision to cut the RIF program is going to be for poor children. Wallace: For all the talk of waste, fraud and abuse, cutting the budget will mean ending real programs that serve real people. That doesn’t mean it’s wrong, but we’d better get used to it. Here’s the press release from RIF. Congress and President Obama Cut Reading Is Fundamental – America’s Largest Children’s Literacy Program serving over 4 Million children : March 3, 2011—Statement by Carol H. Rasco, president and CEO of Reading Is Fundamental On March 2, President Obama signed a bill that eliminated funding for Reading Is Fundamental (RIF) the nation’s largest organization providing free books and literacy resources to prepare and motivate children to read. RIF’s ability to provide 4.4 million children with free books and reading encouragement from RIF programs at nearly 17,000 locations throughout the United States is in jeopardy. RIF programs are in schools, community centers, hospitals, military bases, and other locations that serve children from low-income families, children with disabilities, homeless children, and children without adequate access to libraries. For 44 years, RIF has provided millions of children the opportunity to choose free and high-quality books to read and keep for themselves. The seeds of inspiration in these books have motivated children to follow their dreams and achieve their full potential. The facts are simple. Millions of children are living in the United States without access to books. Book distribution programs are a key factor in developing children to be readers at an early age and a gateway to greater student achievement. In 2010, RIF commissioned a comprehensive meta-analytic research synthesis by Learning Point Associates, an affiliate of the American Institutes for Research. The study found that providing children access to print through book lending and book distribution programs: improves their reading performance, is instrumental in helping them learn the basics of reading, causes them to read more and for longer lengths of time, and improves their attitude toward reading and learning. RIF has been an authorized, national program by the Department of Education through the Elementary and Secondary Education Act for over thirty years. RIF has received bi-partisan support and has been funded by six administrations without interruption until now. Our educational programs are under attack and it’s time to fight back. Investments in education are investments in our country’s future—our children. When I visit RIF programs across this country, I see firsthand the joy children feel when empowered to choose their very own book to own. All children deserve the American Dream, and we owe it to our nation’s children to provide the resources they need to turn the dream into reality. Even such small opportunities and encouragements to choose can inspire children to make greater choices: to choose learning, to choose success in school and life, to choose a brighter future. RIF is committed to ensuring that despite the odds, all children have the chance to experience the joy of reading and have books to call their own. By providing children this opportunity, we are preparing them for a better life. Reading is indeed fundamental.

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I love Michael Moore, because the man is a real American. There was a time in the early days of the blogosphere when most liberal bloggers ignored him – he made liberals “look bad,” he “isn’t our kind.” I wasn’t one of those bloggers, maybe because he is my kind — a fighting liberal from a blue-collar family. (It’s just hysterical when Sarah Palin calls this dyed-in-the-wool Michigander a “Hollywood” liberal.) He marched with the Wisconsin protesters yesterday and spoke at their rally. He gave a wonderful speech called “America Is Not Broke”, and we all should memorize it so that the next time a Fox News-loving person starts spouting the party line, you can set him or her straight. From PoliticusUSA : “America is not broke. Contrary to what those in power would like you to believe so that you’ll give up your pension, cut your wages and settle for the life your great grandparents had. America is not broke. Not by a long shot. The country is awash in wealth and cash. It’s just that it is not in your hands.” He then called the great conservative redistribution of America’s wealth a heist: “It has been transferred in the greatest heist in American history from the workers and consumers to the banks and portfolios of the uber-rich . Right now, this afternoon, just 400 Americans have more wealth than half of all Americans combined. Let me say that again, and please, someone in the mainstream media, just repeat this fact once. We’re not greedy. We’ll be happy to hear it just once. 400 obscenely wealthy individuals, 400 little Mubaraks, most of whom benefited in some way from the multi-trillion dollar taxpayer bailout of 2008 now have more cash, stock, and property than the assets of 155 million Americans combined.” “I have nothing more than a high school education, but Gov. Walker, back when I was in school, every student had to take one semester of economics in order to graduate, and here is what I learned. Money doesn’t grow on trees, unless it’s a palm tree. It grows when we make things. It grows when we have good jobs with good wages that we use to buy the things that we need, and guess what? That creates more jobs. “It grows when we provide an outstanding education system. An educational system that then grows a new generation of entrepreneur, inventors, scientists, thinkers. The people who will come up with the next great idea for this planet, and those ideas create jobs, and the jobs produce tax revenue, but the few who have the most money don‘t want to pay their fair share of the taxes.” Moore spoke about how the rich tax dodgers crashed our economic system. “They’d rather invest it in a gambling casino known as Wall St. betting for or against the stock market or against your home mortgage, and the entire population suffers because that wealth has been removed from circulation. What’s so cynical about this is that the very people who don’t pay their taxes crashed our economic system. They created the unemployment which has cost us tax revenue and states like Wisconsin have ended up with a so-called budget crisis, but Wisconsin is not broke.” “What are three biggest lies of the last decade? Let’s repeat them. Number one, Wisconsin is broke. Number two, there’s weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and number three, the Packers needs Farve to win the Super Bowl. The nation is not broke, my friends. There’s lots of money to go around, lots, lots. It’s just that those in charge have diverted that wealth into a deep well that sits in their well-guarded estates. They know. They know. They have committed crimes to make this happen.” Jason Easley and Sarah Jones wrote: Moore did something brilliant. He shifted the narrative. Republicans want the Wisconsin story to be about the budget. Early on, Democrats were focused on the issues of liberty and collective bargaining. Moore broadened the message and created a third narrative about how decades of pro-corporate and pro-wealthy economic policies have redistributed the nation’s wealth from the people to a small group of super-rich haves. This is the story that terrifies both conservative politicians and the network of billionaire wealth that owns them. Wisconsin isn’t only about freedom, unions and collective bargaining. At a deeper level, Wisconsin is about the systemic redistribution of wealth that the Republican Party has overseen since 1980. It is about creating an economic caste system where the rich always stay rich and rest of us are destined to serve them. Conservatives have expertly hid their true motives for years with distractions like the culture wars, and sometimes shooting wars like in Iraq. While America was focusing on the terror alert level, George W. Bush was picking up the mantle of Ronald Reagan and redistributing wealth. If Republicans and their puppet masters are successful in breaking the back of organized labor, then millions of Americans will be returned to a form of economic serfdom that was once thought to have been banished decades ago. Wisconsin is the battle field and unions are our last line of defense, and nothing less than economic liberty, and the American Dream hinge on the outcome. Watch live streaming video from theuptake at livestream.com

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The union leader’s assessment is right on target: This is, indeed, a “back-door Wisconsin.” The Providence school board just eviscerated the union contract so they can fire the most experienced (and most expensive) teachers at the end of the school year — instead of laying them off. This move also probably denies them unemployment benefits . This is just shameless: PROVIDENCE — After two hours of contentious discussion, the School Board voted 4 to 3 Thursday night to send out termination notices to each of the city’s 1,926 public school teachers. More than 700 teachers jammed a high school gymnasium to tell school officials that their hearts were broken, their trust violated and their futures as teachers jeopardized. “How do we feel? Disrespected,” said Julie Latessa, a special-needs teacher, before the vote. “We are broken. How do you repair the damage you have done today?” Every teacher received a certified letter from the School Department on Thursday informing them that they might be terminated at the end of the school year. It also said the School Board would vote on the proposed dismissals at Thursday night’s meeting, which was moved to the Providence Career and Technical Academy to accommodate the huge turnout. Many of the teachers were caught off guard by Mayor Angel Taveras’ decision to terminate teachers instead of laying them off. Last night, speakers questioned the mayor’s rationale: a $40-million school budget deficit and a March 1 deadline by which the School Department must notify teachers if their jobs are in jeopardy. “This is a quasi-legal power grab,” said Richard Larkin, a teacher at Classical High School. “You want to pick and choose teachers. Well, we will not be bullied.” Teachers begged the School Board to issue layoffs rather than fire them outright because, under the layoff provisions, teachers are recalled based on seniority. There is no guarantee that seniority would be used to bring back any of the fired teachers. School leaders have been vague about exactly how seniority will play out in the case of terminations. Before the vote, several School Board members explained their reasons for supporting or rejecting the motion to dismiss: Philip Gould said he believes that Providence Teachers Union President Steve Smith is committed to serious and meaningful school reform, adding that if “we do this, it will be detrimental to the children of this district.” Earlier Thursday, Smith called the terminations “an attack on labor and an attack on collective bargaining.” “This is a back-door Wisconsin,” Smith said, referring to the weeklong protests in Madison by labor unions . “We don’t know why we’re being fired. The mayor says he needs flexibility. Can you buy that? I don’t know of any other district that has done this.” Thursday night, Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, called the possible dismissals “shocking,” and said the move will “disrupt the education of all students and the entire community.” Superintendent Brady has said that the majority of teachers will be rehired but could not give any details until the mayor’s special panel completes its report on the city’s financial status . Meanwhile, the TEA teachers union in Tennessee rallied Saturday to preserve collective bargaining: More than 3,000 people marched on downtown Nashville to protest legislation that would end collective bargaining for teachers in Tennessee. Democratic lawmakers, union representatives and education activists denounced the Republican-sponsored bills as a political attack to destroy the Democratic Party’s fund-raising and voter base. “This is not about budgets. This is a political ballgame. They want to silence the votes of teachers,” said Dennis Van Roekel, president of the National Education Association. The Arizona math teacher flew in for Tennessee’s rally as he has for others in Wisconsin and the Northwest. House Democratic Caucus Chairman Mike Turner of Nashville warned that Republicans won’t stop with dismantling teachers’ unions and bargaining rights. “They’ll be coming after police officers, firefighters, construction workers and service workers.”

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NYT: If Public Employee Costs Aren’t Reined In New York Won’t be Able to Provide Essential Services

The New York Times on Sunday offered an extraordinarily sober prediction: if the state of New York doesn't rein in spiraling costs of public employees, it will find itself unable to provide even essential services. Despite clearly tying the problem to the power of New York's public employee unions, the Times editorial board assured readers that it's still pro-labor and is opposed to what Gov. Scott Walker is doing in Wisconsin: At a time when public school students are being forced into ever more crowded classrooms, and poor families will lose state medical benefits, New York State is paying 10 times more for state employees’ pensions than it did just a decade ago. That huge increase is largely because of Albany’s outsized generosity to the state’s powerful employees’ unions in the early years of the last decade, made worse when the recession pushed down pension fund earnings, forcing the state to make up the difference. Although taxpayers are on the hook for the recession’s costs, most state employees pay only 3 percent of their salaries to their pensions, half the level of most state employees elsewhere. Their health insurance payments are about half those in the private sector. In all, the salaries and benefits of state employees add up to $18.5 billion, or a fifth of New York’s operating budget. Unless those costs are reined in, New York will find itself unable to provide even essential services. Pretty sober assessment, right? Here's the punch line: To point out these alarming facts is not to be anti- union, or anti-worker. In recent weeks, Republican politicians in the Midwest have distorted what should be a serious discussion about state employees’ benefits, cynically using it as a pretext to crush unions. Republican politicians in the Midwest have distorted what should be a serious discussion about state employees’ benefits? How about what the media have done to distort this discussion by regularly presenting falsehoods about Walker's proposal as well as misleading Americans about the actual fiscal condition of Wisconsin? America should indeed be having a serious discussion about the poor condition of its states' budgets, but this has been hampered by a union-loving press that have intentionally confused rather than educated the public on the facts. On Sunday, with the state it serves suffering from its own self-made financial woes, the Times interestingly tried to do just that: Last April, in the midst of one of the worst financial crises that New York and the nation have ever faced, the state’s unionized workers got a 4 percent pay raise that cost $400 million. It came on top of 3 percent raises in each of the previous three years. These raises were negotiated long before the recession began, by a Legislature that routinely gave in to unions that remain among the biggest political contributors in Albany. During the same period, many private-sector workers had their pay or hours cut. Private-sector wages in New York dropped nearly 9 percent in 2008. In 2009, Gov. David Paterson pleaded with the unions to give up the raises to help the state out of its crisis. Union leaders attacked him in corrosive television ads, and Mr. Paterson eventually caved, settling for an agreement that reduced pension payments to new employees. The deal wasn’t enough to address New York’s serious fiscal problems. The average salary for New York’s full-time state employees in 2009 (even before the last round of raises) was $63,382, well above the state’s average personal income that year of $46,957 . Indeed. This is typical of states across the country and is at the very heart of their fiscal problems. At the core are unions which don't care one iota about state budgets or economic realities and instead demand compensation for their members with total disregard for the cost: In 2000, employee pensions cost New York State taxpayers $100 million. They now cost $1.5 billion, and will be more than $2 billion in 2014. Wall Street’s troubles are a big part of that. But so are state politics. The Legislature, ever eager to curry favor with powerful unions, added sweeteners to pensions and allowed employees to stop making contributions after 10 years. Let's look at that again: “In 2000, employee pensions cost New York State taxpayers $100 million. They now cost $1.5 billion, and will be more than $2 billion in 2014.” Readers are advised that this is a 1900 percent increase in eleven years. Inflation during that period was only 24 percent. This means that employee pension costs in New York have risen at almost 80 times the rate of inflation! Why? “The Legislature, ever eager to curry favor with powerful unions, added sweeteners to pensions and allowed employees to stop making contributions after 10 years.” Yet, having admitted this, the Times still felt it necessary to stick up for labor while taking a bash at Walker: Unlike Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, Governor Cuomo is not trying to break the unions. He is pressing them to accept a salary freeze and a reduction in benefits for new workers. The unions need to negotiate seriously. But will they? And even if they do, mightn't it be temporary? Doesn't the history of public employee unions so dictate? The reality here is that New York's problems are not much different than Wisconsin's or California's or Indiana's or Ohio's. Public employee unions for decades have gotten contracts for their members that in the end were unaffordable. But the unions don't care, and frankly, neither do their members. These folks feel they're entitled to everything they get, and that states should just be raising taxes to cover the rising costs. Despite the Times sober view of New York's fiscal problems, this was certainly part of its proposed solution: We are also urging the governor to rethink his pledge to cap property taxes and allow a tax surcharge on high incomes to expire at the end of this year. That would bring the state an additional $2 billion this fiscal year, and $4 billion the following year — not enough to solve the fiscal crisis, but a serious down payment. The state’s middle-class workers will have to make real sacrifices. New York’s many wealthy residents, all of whom are benefiting substantially from a new federal tax break, should have to pay their fair share as well. As such, despite calling for some concessions by unions, the Times wants an increase on property taxes and income taxes for high income wage earners. And, of course, it doesn't ask for any limitation to existing collective bargaining rights. As this is at the heart of the problem, ignoring it is like putting a band aid on a severed artery. It might temporarily stop the bleeding, but it's certain to start gushing again at some point in the future. Gov. Walker and Wisconsin's elected Republicans get this, and believe that any long-term solution to their state's budget problems must reduce the collective bargaining rights of public employees or risk a recurrence of this tenuous position down the road.

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Wisconsin State Capitol – 2/21/11 Perhaps taking his cues from the sniveling and dismissive State Sen. Glenn Grothman, who called the Wisconsin protesters ” slobs “, Gov. Scott Walker has sought a bid to clean up the Capitol building. His figures are a little dumbfounding : Department of Administration Secretary Mike Huebsch said the original $7.5 million estimate to repair marble damaged by tape was a “high-end“ estimate. An updated report from DOA says a majority of the nearly $350,000 would cover a crew to perform “very limited“ restoration on marble as well as landscape restoration. DOA originally said it would need $7 million to repair damage and between $60,000 and $500,000 just to assess the condition of the building. $7.5 million for removing tape? Holy FSM. No wonder the guy has trouble balancing the budget. Turns out that even the $350,000 downgraded estimate is more than a little ridiculous too . Like many, [the Center for Media and Democracy] was stunned to hear that Walker’s lawyers told a court that it would cost over seven million dollars to clean up the tape on the stone walls and railings. After criticism, the state’s lawyers acknowledged that this absurd figure was on “the high end” and then suggested that the cost could be “as low as $347,500,” if “restoration specialists” were not needed. The state asserted that its figures were “an educated guess.” Based on whose education is unknown. [..]Middleton art conservator Meghan Thumm Mackey assert[ed] that at $100 an hour it would cost $6 million to clean up the inside of the capitol, plus a million for the outside, in addition to a $500,000 initial assessment fee, according to the Wisconsin State Journal . Mackey noted that painter’s tape that is left on too long can require the use of acetone (the main ingredient in nail polish remover) and cotton swabs. CMD offers to perform an initial assessment at a fraction of the half million dollar fee suggested by Mackey. Mackey did note that the state’s initial estimate of $7.5 million seemed “high.” Luckily, the janitorial staff who actually has extensive experience cleaning the marble walls and floors and metal railings at the Capitol have weighed in. According to Sean Heiser, the Association of Federal, State, County, and Municipal Employees field supervisor who oversees an eight-person team that keeps the Capitol clean, the clean-up can be accomplished with readily available solvents and the damage claimed is “just not there.” The mendacity of Walker truly knows no bounds.

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Wisconsin State Capitol – 2/21/11 Perhaps taking his cues from the sniveling and dismissive State Sen. Glenn Grothman, who called the Wisconsin protesters ” slobs “, Gov. Scott Walker has sought a bid to clean up the Capitol building. His figures are a little dumbfounding : Department of Administration Secretary Mike Huebsch said the original $7.5 million estimate to repair marble damaged by tape was a “high-end“ estimate. An updated report from DOA says a majority of the nearly $350,000 would cover a crew to perform “very limited“ restoration on marble as well as landscape restoration. DOA originally said it would need $7 million to repair damage and between $60,000 and $500,000 just to assess the condition of the building. $7.5 million for removing tape? Holy FSM. No wonder the guy has trouble balancing the budget. Turns out that even the $350,000 downgraded estimate is more than a little ridiculous too . Like many, [the Center for Media and Democracy] was stunned to hear that Walker’s lawyers told a court that it would cost over seven million dollars to clean up the tape on the stone walls and railings. After criticism, the state’s lawyers acknowledged that this absurd figure was on “the high end” and then suggested that the cost could be “as low as $347,500,” if “restoration specialists” were not needed. The state asserted that its figures were “an educated guess.” Based on whose education is unknown. [..]Middleton art conservator Meghan Thumm Mackey assert[ed] that at $100 an hour it would cost $6 million to clean up the inside of the capitol, plus a million for the outside, in addition to a $500,000 initial assessment fee, according to the Wisconsin State Journal . Mackey noted that painter’s tape that is left on too long can require the use of acetone (the main ingredient in nail polish remover) and cotton swabs. CMD offers to perform an initial assessment at a fraction of the half million dollar fee suggested by Mackey. Mackey did note that the state’s initial estimate of $7.5 million seemed “high.” Luckily, the janitorial staff who actually has extensive experience cleaning the marble walls and floors and metal railings at the Capitol have weighed in. According to Sean Heiser, the Association of Federal, State, County, and Municipal Employees field supervisor who oversees an eight-person team that keeps the Capitol clean, the clean-up can be accomplished with readily available solvents and the damage claimed is “just not there.” The mendacity of Walker truly knows no bounds.

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