I was born in 1938 in Houston. I’m five years older than Joe Biden. I grew up during World War II, which is sometimes called “the last good war.” I remember the air raid sirens, the blackouts (everyone turned off the lights and pulled down the shades in case there was an attack by enemy aircraft), saving scraps of metal to be recycled into bullets. The oldest family photograph I have shows me, my older brother and older sister earnestly waving American flags. I was immersed in patriotism and love of country. My mother was an immigrant from Bessarabia who would not tolerate a bad word against the country that took in her family.
Patriotism is in my blood.
In my school days, we learned only the positive spin on American history. All the bad stuff was left out. As a college student and a graduate student and an adult, I learned about the dark side of our nation’s history. I learned about race massacres, lynchings, the brutal treatment of indigenous people, and the misuse of military power.
Yet, still I am a patriot. Still I believe in the promise of America and the importance of democracy. I know the disappointments and betrayals of the American Dream, yet still I am devoted to it.
That’s why it is so sickening to see Donald Trump, a man without principle, character or ethics, running for President. It is sickening to see a man so selfish and narcissistic wrap himself in the American flag. It is sickening to see a man who professes admiration, even love, for the world’s worst tyrants, running for President as his best hope for avoiding prison. And it is even more sickening to know that millions of people believe his lies.
In addition, there is the threat posed by a rogue Supreme Court. Six radical Republicans are making mincemeat of our Constitution. In their confirmation hearings, they pledged to uphold precedent and stare decisisis, but now in lifetime positions, they shred women’s rights, limit the power of government to protect public safety, and eviscerate the basic principle of the Constitution that “no one is above the law.” It turns out that the Presdent is above the law. According to the six radical Justices, he may imprison or assassinate his political rivals as part of his “official duties.” It can’t happen here, we like to think, but we are on the cusp of losing what we treasure.
This is not a happy Fourth of July. The threats to democracy are clear, present and ominous. It’s up to us to save it by voting and getting our family, friends, and neighbors to vote in November.
Here’s hoping we can celebrate a new burst of freedom and the rule of law in 2025.

Perfect. Thank you.
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Well said Diane.
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well said! Thanks.
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I chose to teach in part to serve my country. I could not serve as a soldier, but I could support the cause of democracy through the most important of democratic institutions, the Public Schools. Thank you for your words Diane. As always, your wisdom represents a prominent light to follow.
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Amen.
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great essay. The celebration of freedom is not a part of my upbringing, but it was not because my family was hostile to the country. There were many people I grew up around whose view of the Union was defined by the re-invented Civil War. That was not our family. We failed to celebrate any holidays. Other kids may have watched parades and fireworks, but we milked cows. Taking a day off to a dairy farmer is defined as working only 8 hours a day. So there was only minimal participation in any activity outside of church. Before his brain tumor, my father milked twice a day for nine straight years.
So I never got in the habit of celebrating the 4th. Now that the 4th reminds us that we are on the precipice of losing all the gains we have made since the first Roosevelt tore into the monopolies, I don’t feel much like celebrating. I do feel like giving a pile of money to democrats to use in places where there is hope. My vote in this vital election will have no sound. I will cast it, and the Trumpists will use my vote to shield the fact that they govern without throwing even a crumb to those with whom they differ.
So happy birthday to our great experiment. For the sake of freedom, many happy returns.
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I greatly appreciate your blog Diane. I really do. There are a lot of great discussions on the blog. Particularly when folks don’t go after each other in a negative way when they disagree about something.
But, what bothers me about this positive blog and and others like it is that in some ways we are breeching to the choir. People who need to read what the real United States and democracy are all about are not on this blog. The brain dead and conspiracy theorist are the ones that need to read the real history of this country, why this country was established, how democracy has last so long, and allowed the people of this country to prosper and succeed in life. No the United States is not perfect. Never will be. It is just frustrating that so many have their head buried in a certain individuals fifth point of contact and refuse to listen and learn. BTY. I prefer to call this nation the “United States”. America is a continent on which the United States is located just like Canada.
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So SHARE this blog on your social media. It’s not a perfect idea, but what is? Let’s make our voices known!!
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moe: I agree. The dissemination of good accurate information about history and current events is vital to democratic society. We can, in our modern society, listen only to our version of the story, and you can post that version on social media. But there is a problem with that. People know the buzzwords that indicate ideas that are to be avoided. I admit that I have to do that myself. If a person uses the woke word you disparage in an essay, I quit reading it immediately because I will otherwise be flooded with more offal than anyone can consume. I assume my conservative counterparts feel the same way about words like diversity.
So we talk past each other on the public square, usually refusing to listen. The problem is that the far right wants people in the middle to listen to justification of hatred. So I have no solution.
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Roy– I would encourage you to comment in another, lower-level internet platform as well. For a few years I have been participating in the comment threads at the msn ‘news’ platform– just because it’s the one that shows up when I log into the internet. It’s only sometimes ‘news’– the majority of the articles are about bread&butter topics, derived from everything from Bloomberg or Atlantic to [mostly] pop media sites (which recycle latest polls, & reddit/ tiktok articles that got millions of responses). The main benefit to me is I get to see what really ordinary JQPublic types have to say. An article about soc sec wrinkles or health ins, e.g., elicits responses from people with a huge variety of individual situations. On local taxes vs can you afford to stay in your house gets input from around the nation. I enjoy supplying stats/ facts to counter bogus claims. Bonus: the platform enables you to see & respond to replies to your posts, so you end up having actual conversations with these folks.
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Roy and Diane: We have a person who goes after his political opponents because they disagree with him, threatening jail time, and a person who accuses everyone else of what he, himself, does every day. (under that idea, Biden could jail Trump today, so it’s person, not policy and certainly not the law as we understand it, that counts here?)
Just these two things, both of which seem accepted by a huge number of voters in this democracy, should tell us about long-term destructive drifts in a “culture” and its education, despite some extremely creative counter-threads.
IF “we” make it through this awful time without total destruction of a democratic way of life (and its effects around the world), I wonder if the right people in the right places can have the intelligence, courage, and a long vision to turn things around, indeed, for the good of all.
I think, as an example of the seriousness of our current demise, the recent post (here) about the editorial situation at the New York Times was probably the most damning thing I have heard yet. It’s a gut punch to democracy like no other–the free press in suicidal mode.
Also, CNN’s set up of the debate was dismal, timing included (they seem to suffer the same absence of understanding as the NYT editors), coupled with what I think was a bunch of misguided Biden advisers who should have remembered Biden’s way above all, and even consulted Hollywood technical people on several issues, including presentations; but mostly, Trump-specific push back on issues that most concern voters even in Trump’s camp–all of that did Biden in. It seemed they wanted, above all, to overwhelm Biden himself–who I think is still naive because he is used to talking with other reasonable people, and not talking with a vile and vulgar person who hates your guts. (I was reminded of the Romney visit that time, that screamed of the dis-integration of a person with integrity.)
But ANYONE would have been overwhelmed in Biden’s situation, especially after a long trip. Our idealism about Biden is killing us all.
The above is coupled with Trump’s distractions and parsing of the first order. These are Trumpian tactics that he has honed well for years, just as a fascist personality hones things, not from planning, but from being in a constant state of a content swooshing vacuity.
For Biden, in my view, it was a real blivit–two pounds of Trump shit in a one pound bag that Biden was supposed to be able to address on a bumper-sticker time table. Everyone is still gob-smacked and overwhelmed by the utter vulgarity of the Trump-MAGA movement and its effect on so many people–people we thought were, above all, patriots.
Biden’s advisers, however, also seem not to know how to “advise” a senior/older person, probably because they are not older themselves. They cannot possibly understand what they have not experienced (already a sign of a lack of development, btw). It’s a different world but has many positive elements that can shine if handled rightly–btw, just like anything else or any age bracket.
Like Diane, however, I am sick to heart about the whole mess. And yet, at its center I still harbor hope that the American people will come through, as they have before in terrible times. The abortion ALONE should be enough to put Biden in the win column. But what it portends about the attack on our freedoms should strike at the heart of all involved. CBK
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Moeone2015,
I love writing the blog and sharing articles that seem important to me.
I wish the blog were read by Trumpers and independents, but the former won’t read anything critical of their hero.
Maybe I reach some independents. I don’t know.
The blogs reach was drastically reduced in 2016 when Facebook changed its algorithm. That was not long after Campbell Brown, a rightwing news anchor, was hired by Mark Zuckerberg to work for FB. My blog was no longer automatically posted on FB.
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Fear not, Diane! FB is barely used by younger people, and they are the ones whose opinions are not yet cast in concrete & should be reading here. And FWIW– there may be others like me– I have not been able access FB for nearly a year: it was hacked by some Asian girl who now gets to use all my contacts for god-knows-what purpose, and regularly sports my own personal family photos [to which I no longer have access] as “her” profile pictures! [grrr@$%!]
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Magnificent
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Race massacres, lynchings, the brutal treatment of indigenous people, spells WHITE EMPIRE, not Democracy. The disingenuous insistence that a nation founded on white supremacy colonialism, has changed course by the “new” immunity ruling, all but ignores the immunity granted to the legalized violence, penned by previous sponsors of “Trails of Tears.” Blowing the ‘merican dream democracy dog whistle DOES NOT challenge the immorality of the white empire project, ease the bleeding, or stop the hate. After Monday and Tuesday, even the calendar sez WTF…
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I rarely respond to your posts, No Brick, because I find them difficult to understand. But this one rings true. Personally, I tend to think along the same lines, but in an economic rather than racial vein [i.e., govt policies that favor rich over poor, as opposed to white over black]. But it’s just a parallel of the same pattern, historically. Yes, it’s pretty rich that prez immunity is now writ in the laws– when laws since the beginning of this republic have always supported a top-down [classist] society, with sanctions zero or lenient at the top, heaviest for those at the bottom.
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NOBrick: Challenge the horrid problems of white supremacy, blah blah blah, . . . it’s all true. But don’t challenge its democratic political grounds. BIG DIFFERENCE. CBK
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I am so saddened this 4th. My beloved country’s fundamental systems are being dismantled by the Fascist Trumpanzee court.
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i hear you, Bob. I am also feeling that existential dread. I dearly love this country and its Constitution. I wept when TFG was first elected, and I am beyond terrified for this election.
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Diane, thanks for that personal history. Mine’s similar. I’m a year older than you, and lived in Michigan during WWII. My playmates were of various nationalities and colors. We, too, had mock air raids, etc. I guess the authorities were worried about German U-boats in Hudson’s Bay, firing missiles down toward our factories–a lot of war stuff was made in Michigan.
Toward the end of the War, we sent packages from our school to kids in Europe, and to the Jewish kids migrating to Israel.
I loved Franklin Roosevelt, though we just saw his picture in the newspaper or heard his voice on the radio. I especially liked it when he announced his “Four Freedoms” for “everybody in the world.” At school we sang, “One world built on a firm foundation…” Etc.
After high school, I volunteered for the draft–to get my military service over–and to serve my country and the cause of democracy in the world. (Luckily, I served between the Korean War and Vietnam, so didn’t face combat–though I did see guys killed in accidents).
I became a history teacher, because I loved history and our country. But in college, at Ohio State University, I learned that we Yankees weren’t always the “good-guys,” as in Latin America–and the Middle East today.
During the Vietnam War era we saw Nixon wrap himself in the flag and try to use patriotism politically. We later learned Pres. Johnson had fudged information to pull us deeper into that war.
When Robert Kennedy was killed, some of further dedicated our lives to following his example. He said, “Each time a man stands up for an ideal…he sends out a tiny ripple of hope,” etc.
So now, while I still love America, when I stand for the Pledge of Allegiance, I also think about our nation’s flaws and try to help right them.
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Thank you, Jack, for sharing your memories.
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Jack– Your post hit a particular chord with me today. I dreamed last night of a close high school friend who died in VietNam. My last name started with H, his with J– he was in the desk behind me in many classes, and we had a small tightknit group of friends. He was a very smart cookie, son of a librarian dad & working class mom– but dad subject to depression, & that eventually afflicted him too. So even tho he got a free ride to RIT, the handwriting in his letters slowly assumed that downward tilt, & he flunked out in soph yr. [Drafted.] Boot camp was a real upper for him: he became a sargeant in short order & had high hopes. He was dead within less than a year of arrival in VN.
He, we, all of our circle had read “The United States in Vietnam [1967, Kahin & Lewis], penned by the dads of high school colleagues just a bit older [it was a collegetown]. We all knew it was a doomed war. I used to be angry with him just for getting depressed and flunking out, what did he think would happen. It still breaks my heart.
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wow
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I also remember the blackouts of WWII, in Los Angeles about 4 miles inland. Our living room and dining room had heavy black linings. A major from WWI was our block warden. My father learned to garden because the ethnic Japanese gardeners were removed to various “internment camps.” The closest was Manzanar. Recently, a friend who grew up in the same area said that her brother recognized a plane overhead having Japanese markings. Their father said he didn’t know – not because he didn’t, but because what he needed to know didn’t mean the kids had a “need to know.” We don’t want to live under tyranny.
My flags are out – daytime only. Can’t place upside down without them touching the dirt. We learned the rules for flag display in school and Girl Scouts.
We don’t need a dictator. We need our rights and freedom.
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Thank you for sharing your memories. You her readers might not understand the purpose of the blackout. It was to deny enemy aircraft a lit-up target.
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Our community expected to be a target because in addition to being near the Pacific Coast, there was an airplane factory a few miles away. Additional defense plants were slightly further away. During the Korean War, we were actually told that was why we needed to have bomb drills. By that time, the drills expanded to evacuating to the hallway for greater protection against atomic bombs. The basic drill was drop, cover, and hold on. If there was no war occurring, we had the same drill as an earthquake drill. Those were usually followed by evacuating the building in the same was as for a fire drill.
Public service note:
In case of earthquake: drop, cover, and hold on. If you can’t take cover by getting under a desk or table, pull a pillow or something over your head. Don’t run around. The doorway is not a helpful place to be. Old pictures of door frames surviving represent inadequate building codes with unreinforced walls.
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https://newrepublic.com/article/183422/joe-biden-ruthless-immunity-donald-trump
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Thanks, Quikwrit, amazing article!
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OMG. Hilarious — and perfect!!
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Democracy Is Us. We The People. It is not some detached, procedural, Polster-manipulated phenomena. This 4th of July many of us are doing our Patriotic Duty on an intensely deep level. We are absorbing that President Biden’s decades-long love affair with this country was “interfered”with. He walked onto that stage and into a well-financed, hate-filled Force Field fueled by DJT, the GOPee, Putin Pals, Pathological Right Wing Oligarchs, Mad Hatter Media & Left Wing Narcissists.
That night coupled with Robert’s corrupt SCOTUS Justice immunity decision. Joined with calls to harm Liz Cheney, Mike Pence, VP Harris and so many others. Should help us know deep in our bones that there is no coincidence here. Rather a shockingly coordinated attack.
Remember Jimmy Cliff?
“I can see clearly now the rain is goneI can see all obstacles in my wayGone are the dark clouds that had me blind.”
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“Sickening” is the word.
I just went to a small, ad hoc parade along the Upper Delaware River in Lordville, NY. It’s the sort of annual event where anyone and everyone can join in. In fact, people are encouraged to not be spectators. Talk about a metaphor for what representative government needs to be if it is going to work.
Each year the full Declaration of Independence is read aloud before the start of the short march over the bridge into Pennsylvania. The ideas in the Declaration have taken on a new and much more complicated meaning this year, that’s for sure. Not long from now, we’ll be marking the 250th ‘birthday’ of this document. What will be left of our country by then?
Indeed, Diane, let’s hope for a better 2025.
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This may be our last 4th of July with the U.S. Constitution guiding this country.
On July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress established the United States of America, but the US didn’t have a constitution yet.
The US Revolution raged between 1765 and 1783.
On June 21, 1788, the Constitution became the official framework of the government of the United States of America. The journey to ratification was a long process of negotiations and compromises.
It wouldn’t be until March 9, 1789, that this new country began operating under the US Constitution, that included an oath to defend it from all enemies domestic and foreign.
Traitor Trump and his MAGA Christian Nationalist cult is a threat to that Constitution.
If he is elected, will anyone that took that oath fight to defend that Constitution or will the United States become the 5th Reich.
Next July 4th may no longer be called Independence Day if Traitor Trump wins in November. Will he change the national holiday’s date and name it after himself — Trump Day?
He does have a long history of naming things after himself and plastering his name in huge letters on building and golf courses.
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Nailed it Diane!
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Sadly, it’s not coming down.
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Thank you. I agree. I think that at its core, MAGA “Take our country back” fanantics and regular folk are afraid. I think that changes in American’s rights reflecting a more diverse population and women’s and minority rights protected by the First Amendment is at the core of the fear. Fear with respect to k-12 education, gender rights (recently) and is generated fear about where and with whom children will be educated. We are seeing “backlash” in Red State Legislatures and the MAGA Supreme Court majority. It’s led to a new iteration of FASCISM in the Republican Party that’s been taken over by a populist demagogue, DJT.
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Monthy J Thornburg– IMHO, the only way we could have come to this situation– i.e., so many looking over their shoulder in fear that somebody else in some other group is going to eat off their plate– is because of our current huge rich-poor gap– income inequality.
We did not have this in the US until the 1980s. It’s a direct consequence of US govt’s response to rise of Asian industry/ global trade, + the digital revolution (which sped up the rate of automation, extending even into pink, then white collar jobs by the 1990s).
The combination of deregulating fin & corp sectors along with offshoring mgf sector + union-busting created a huge transfer of natl wealth to the tippy-top, creating a new higher sector. One little example illustrates: the # of US billionaires– long stable at 12-13 max– increased from 13 to 99 in 1985-1989 alone. [Today it’s 600-700.]
Results: the middle class contracted from 62% to 50% in short order. By 1989, social mobility came to a dead halt. By Oct 2021 for the 1st time in US history (incl the Gilded Age), the top 1% owned more national wealth than than the entire 60% middle band of earners (once known as “the middle class.”)
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I’m with you, Diane. We put out the flag for this holiday, as we did on Flag Day. But at this point, after recent SCOTUS decisions, the gesture is made in solmnity, and hope. Not in celebration.
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I am terrified. Our Supreme Court just OK’d bribery of any official and wanton illegality by the president. And it kneecapped regulators, or, to use a different metaphor, subjected the regulatory state, from here on, to routine carpet bombing. It basically laid the legal foundation for an authoritarian state. Some people (“Justice” Roberts, it seems) want things that way. They believe that the world is made up of natural-born aristocrats and the dangerous and immoral rabble and the former need absolute power to deal with the latter. Cheney and Barr long dreamed of the creation of an imperial presidency on the model described by Richard Nixon. Roberts delivered that. And this court is just getting started. What will be the next targets? The expansion of federal authority under the Commerce Clause?
Remember when Trump ordered Kirstjen Nielsen, his Secretary of Homeland Security, to SHOOT unarmed asylum seekers? She told him that she couldn’t do that because it would be illegal. Remember when he ordered Bill Barr, Attorney General to send federal agents to attack and arrest BLM protestors and ordered Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, and Mark Esper, Secretary of Defense, to send United States troops to attack and arrest those same protestors, and they told him that they could not legally do that (after Barr initially sent in some little green men). Well, no more. IF YOU LIKE the idea of the president of the United States being able to wield federal troops and the US military as Hitler did the SA and SS, then you will love the Roberts immunity decision.
There would have been no check on him.
The “final solution” was an “official act.” That’s how wrong the Extreme Court’s decision was.
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We may be heading into a very dark time. I’m terrified for my grandchildren.
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cx: federal agents and the U.S. military
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Put this on your “off the charts” list.
Along the way, I’m trying to grasp what kind of mindset can come up with what the Heritage Foundation president says–especially about the coming revolution will be bloodless if the left will allow it.
That’s truly Orwellian code for: no talking. Buckle under or we will kill you, and it will be your fault.
I want to ask him: “beaten your wife lately?” CBK
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I also wonder if SCOTUS figured into their new ideas about immunity the breaking of one’s oath, particularly the Presidential oath–given before the whole world with one’s hand on the Bible . . . er . . . perhaps we can change that to a copy of the Wall Street Journal?
And BTW, while we’re at it, I’ve always believed in the old saying that when you sleep with dogs, you’ll get up with fleas.
I wonder if MAGA people understand the principle–in particular, what can you say about those MAGA people who love and hang out with Trump–do they think Trump’s depravity won’t wear off on them? Do they fictionalize themselves as fine upstanding people and (come on!) patriots?
I want to say to them, about “making American great again” . . . it’s already great and got there by rejecting all things Trumpian.
What is it about Trump and SCOTUS destroying the freedoms that we all love so dearly that you think is “making American great again”?
Sorry guys . . . what happened to you . . . to make you into fine examples of moral and political degenerates who have no idea what America is really about. CBK
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My sentiment exactly ‘
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