That statement was made yesterday by a Cleveland judge as he sentenced admitted sex offender Michael Flory to the maximum of 5 years in prison, with 5 years of supervised parole afterwards, with the ability of 2 and a half more years in prison if he screws up, under the new Adam Walsh law lifetime membership as a registered sex offender, and almost 3 thousand dollars in restitution to his victim.
That statement was made after people like his victim, who despite everyone knowing who she is I will not say her name, her father, and I told the tale of how the admitted sex offender used his position within the party to blast his victim, to get his toadies and kool-aid drinking friends to say that she was a lying whore, who was only going after him for political gain. My first response to that is, how did that work out for her, does she have any more political power, anything resembling a political career anymore, the answer to both questions is no, but that probably makes his sycophants happy.
I am in the process of getting my hands on the transcripts, which go more than 60 pages and are, according to the court reporter, the longest sentencing that judge has ever done. Part of this is because the admitted sex offender made a political speech to the judge, whining about how he had brought shame upon himself and his family, how he was sorry for the pain he caused, and that he should be let go so he can play daddy to his child. He should have removed the pretense and instead of addressing the judge he just should had looked directly into the camera from Channel 19 news that was there. The other reasons for the length was the 3 speeches I eluded to earlier, and then the long oratory by the absolutely amazing ADA who completely blasted the admitted sex offender, and told the story of what really happened, the story that some people still don’t believe because of how good of a job the admitted sex offender did spinning his story after what happened happened. The last reason for the length was the verbal pasting the judge gave to the admitted sex offender before and after he sentenced him to five years in prison, and had him put in handcuffs, in front of his victim, his mother, his wife, and I.
Here is my understanding of the truth, which has been embargoed by myself until now because of the ongoing legal proceeding. July 8th was the awards dinner at the hotel; afterwards we went to the Warehouse District of Cleveland for a party by the Georgia delegation. The provided a few free drinks, but because she knew someone she got more, she got drunk, he drank, she got sick on herself, someone else, and was so out of it she dropped her phone into the toiler while puking. A friend tried to find someone to take her back to the hotel, and found the admitted sex offender and put them in a cab together. I have no doubt that he wasn’t out looking for it from her, but once he saw his opportunity he took advantage of it. He advanced on her in the cab, all the while she had just been sick on herself, and followed her up to the room and after she tried to be polite and say goodnight, he forced his way into the room and forced himself upon her. He orally, vaginally, and anally raped her. He did this to a menstruating woman, who in the middle of his rape had to be sick again, and while she was puking again, he followed her into the bathroom and raped her while she was puking. All the while he was holding her throat, pulling her hair, calling her a whore and a slut and saying he knew she wanted it and she loved it. When her roommate came back, he held her by the throat and made her tell the roommate to go away, which she did, out of fear, a fear I don’t know and I doubt almost anyone reading this will know until they stare death in the face. When he finished with her, he went to a party in the hotel, and when someone came to the door with a glass of water, which the admitted sex offender mistook for straight vodka, he said that he liked vodka because “It’s knocks the ladies out” and “I just left a girl wet who tasted like vodka, she didn’t know what hit her.”
My involvement began at 7:50 AM the next morning, when my rooms phone rang, I thought one of my roommates asked for a wake up call so I ignored it and went back to sleep, only to be awoke again a moment later saying she wanted to talk to me, she asked me to come up to her room, me, being tired and thinking I had an hour and 10 minutes left to sleep, responded with a curt, “Why” she asked me to come up and I again asked why, then she said, and I will remember these words as long as I live “I had unconsentual sex last night.” At that moment, I was awake. Someone asked me why she said that and not rape, and I am firm of the belief that she couldn’t say it, because that word brought with it so many connotations that she revered to innocuous medical language like that, as per her training as a nurse, she was used to. I went up to the room and she told me what happened, and here’s the part where I become the villain to the admitted sex offenders toadies and kool-aid drinkers. She was hesitant about reporting it, she said she didn’t want to go through what was to come, as most victims of rape, which is why so many aren’t reported, however I insisted she report it, that she was going to have to live with this either way, and how would she feel when this happened to someone else and knowing she could have stopped it, and that he did this evil thing to you and he should be put away. So yes, here is the part I want everyone to understand, it was MY suggestion that we call the cops, and it was MY insistence that got this process going. I was telling friends yesterday that I put a man in jail, and while most of the credit goes to her for going through the hell she has been through, I am partially right. I knew what had to be done, and I haven’t regretted it for a second.
We called the cops, who were a pair that would make Reno 911 proud, especially the one who didn’t take off his aviator sunglasses the whole time looking like Dangle. We went to the hospital, and then we stayed for the rest of the day, mostly because she didn’t want to burden me and the other person who came with us on missing out on things because this happened to her. I think she was in the denial phase of the grief process at that moment, as she tried to act like nothing had happened to everyone else, while inside I’m sure she was suffering. We have gone through a year together of ups and downs, of her process of integrating this into her life, and even though the biggest part of my job is over I’m sure I will always have a role to play, and it is something I am proud to do.
Now onto the headline I led with, what the judge meant when he said that is that he was shocked that the Republican Party in Michigan would believe the rapist over his victim, and would actively work to make sure his victim was marginalized. However it’s not like Saul Anuzis got on his daily e-mail and said everyone believe him over her, it was more subtle, and it was led by sycophants and others who were devoted to the admitted sex offender. It was led by people who have proven themselves to be bad people, people who would do things like release a rape victims name on his blog, and other completely disgusting acts. However these actions are just the symptoms of a larger problem, the problem of the fractioning and infighting and vitriol and sniping within the Party. Now I am all for a rigorous debate on the issues and where we want to go as a party leading into the next election, but the manner on which the party attacks its own disgusts me. I have always prided myself on my ability to be friends and foster relationships with people on all sides of this divide, but the point is coming where one of these friends is going to do something that is going to need response, and going to need repudiation, and it is my intention to speak the truth to all, friend and foe alike, because it is my personal belief that the truth is a lot more fun than anything I can make up.
I wanted this blog to be a place where I could stretch my intellectualism, and my intellectual conservatism, however we live in a time where intellectualism and serious discussion and debate is frowned upon opposed to the quick hit piece and a personal smear. So here is my promise for the future, I will never personally attack anyone, I will disagree with positions and methods, and if something is relevant I will share it, but we are all people doing what we think is right, and we need to stop hating each other for it, when we must see who the real enemies are…Democrats.
Friday, September 14, 2007
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Six Years Later
From now until the end of time this will be a special day in the course of the year. This will be a day long remembered, if not because of any patriotic or nationalist matter, but because it was a day of extreme human depravity, showing us at our worst, but also at our best.
This is a day on which we should never forget the lessons of, because they are lessons long remembered, lessons that teach us to be prepared for the most extreme of situations, for they may sometime come to bear. It also showed us the best of what we can be as a people, we can be people who run into the fire of a burning building that is about to come down so one more person can make it out, we are people who line up to give blood and do what little we can in the aftermath of a horror, and we are a people that will stand up in one voice and say your not going to do this to us, as Americans, and as humans.
We have come a long way since 2001, we are no longer united behind a single task, because that task was done and we differed on what to do next, which is reasonable and expected. We have begun the end of our grief and mourning as we begin to put buildings back up where the Twin Towers fell. We have gone back to the petty bickering and annoyances that define our politics. These were all going to happen, and the fact that they have happened show that we have accepted life beyond 9/11 and have learned to live with it.
We are in a period of transition about this day, from a day that brought horrid images screaming back to our face, to a date that we remember for the horrors that occurred. The difference is how we thought of September 11th 5 years ago and how we look at December 7th today. We remember the vile act, we remember that it caused us to unite and accomplish a great feat, but the anger and fear aren’t there anymore, and in the end that is what should be happening.
We should never forget this day, or the 2,997 people whose lives were ended in a heartbeat, but we cant continue to live for that day, and I think it is healthy that we don’t anymore, as long as we never forget what happened and what it shows us we must do. May God bless those souls, and all of ours.
This is a day on which we should never forget the lessons of, because they are lessons long remembered, lessons that teach us to be prepared for the most extreme of situations, for they may sometime come to bear. It also showed us the best of what we can be as a people, we can be people who run into the fire of a burning building that is about to come down so one more person can make it out, we are people who line up to give blood and do what little we can in the aftermath of a horror, and we are a people that will stand up in one voice and say your not going to do this to us, as Americans, and as humans.
We have come a long way since 2001, we are no longer united behind a single task, because that task was done and we differed on what to do next, which is reasonable and expected. We have begun the end of our grief and mourning as we begin to put buildings back up where the Twin Towers fell. We have gone back to the petty bickering and annoyances that define our politics. These were all going to happen, and the fact that they have happened show that we have accepted life beyond 9/11 and have learned to live with it.
We are in a period of transition about this day, from a day that brought horrid images screaming back to our face, to a date that we remember for the horrors that occurred. The difference is how we thought of September 11th 5 years ago and how we look at December 7th today. We remember the vile act, we remember that it caused us to unite and accomplish a great feat, but the anger and fear aren’t there anymore, and in the end that is what should be happening.
We should never forget this day, or the 2,997 people whose lives were ended in a heartbeat, but we cant continue to live for that day, and I think it is healthy that we don’t anymore, as long as we never forget what happened and what it shows us we must do. May God bless those souls, and all of ours.
Friday, September 7, 2007
Debate Analysis
There are a number of issues upon which I want to touch base on, now that my first week of law school is done and I can devote some of my brain to politics again.
The first thing that is worth touching on is the debate held on Wednesday night on Fox News. I found the debate to be like most of the others, so controlled and time-limited that it is impossible to get into great detail about what these people believe. We are in dire need of a narrowing of the field. Also the absence of Fred Thompson was both good and bad for him; I will go into why later.
Here are my feelings on what each candidate did in this debate and where they should go from here:
Rudy – Stood pretty strong, didn’t help or hurt himself, showed he can be a frontrunner and just sit in cruse control. He made a concerted effort to show that he has the relevant executive experience by stating NYC is the 3rd biggest government in the country, and talking about bringing crime down as dramatically as he did.
Romney – Took some blows, and I don’t think he completely recovered from them. He may have the lead in Iowa and New Hampshire at the moment but the reason he trails nationally came out in this debate. The stinging rebuke from the Deputy Sheriff about the comment about his children and their service v. volunteering for him was very hard to come back from.
McCain – He looked much better in this debate, he was forceful while not seeming too forceful. The only bad point was his rebuke of Romney when he said the surge is working, he seemed to be sniping at Romney instead of debating him. His point was fair but his tone was off, not as bad as the over-practiced lines of the past but still. He seems to have come out of his summer slump swinging, but I think that if he doesn’t get back what he has lost, he may be done for good.
Huckabee – In my humble opinion, the winner of the evening. He is using his momentum out of his second place finish in the Ames Straw Poll well, and his rebuke of Ron Paul was almost perfectly worded while having the exact right tone. He may not be my Presidential pick because of his organization and his national reach, but I think he is the obvious choice for Vice President at this time, and after a stint in that office, would be an almost perfect GOP Presidential nominee.
Brownback, Hunter, and Tancredo – Their time is almost over, they are essentially issue candidates right now, with no real chance of winning. Brownback is the social conservative issue candidate, Hunter and Tancredo are there for border rights and strong national defense in terms of issues. They have served their purpose, and should drop out either in the next few months, or right after Iowa.
Ron Paul – Destroyed what credibility he had with the Republican Party with his ranting during this debate. I was waiting for him to yell “Get off my lawn!” to the crowd. Has probably the most devoted fan base, and will probably be the Libertarian Party’s Presidential candidate, but shows why he has no place in mainstream American politics.
Now onto Fred Thompson, he was mocked a bit at the beginning of the debate, but to the national audience it helped because they were all talking about him, not about the differences between them. His announcement on the Tonight Show was very good, he looked a bit nervous at the beginning but after some banter with Jay he was ready to announce and articulate himself to America. He obviously had the biggest audience of the night, and not just wonks like me who watched the Fox debate. He announced to probably the widest audience of any of the candidates, because he did so in the traditional time when candidates announce, and in the mot public venue. He had the best line when he said that to the American people politicians are like dentists, as in they only pay attention to them when they have to. It is my opinion that Rudy is leading the national polls because of pure name ID, and Romney is leading in Iowa and New Hampshire for the same reason, because Romney dumped millions into those states. The time has come for policies to start to change these numbers, so no matter how far back they started, or how soon the primaries are, the real game is about to begin.
I will get to other things shortly.
The first thing that is worth touching on is the debate held on Wednesday night on Fox News. I found the debate to be like most of the others, so controlled and time-limited that it is impossible to get into great detail about what these people believe. We are in dire need of a narrowing of the field. Also the absence of Fred Thompson was both good and bad for him; I will go into why later.
Here are my feelings on what each candidate did in this debate and where they should go from here:
Rudy – Stood pretty strong, didn’t help or hurt himself, showed he can be a frontrunner and just sit in cruse control. He made a concerted effort to show that he has the relevant executive experience by stating NYC is the 3rd biggest government in the country, and talking about bringing crime down as dramatically as he did.
Romney – Took some blows, and I don’t think he completely recovered from them. He may have the lead in Iowa and New Hampshire at the moment but the reason he trails nationally came out in this debate. The stinging rebuke from the Deputy Sheriff about the comment about his children and their service v. volunteering for him was very hard to come back from.
McCain – He looked much better in this debate, he was forceful while not seeming too forceful. The only bad point was his rebuke of Romney when he said the surge is working, he seemed to be sniping at Romney instead of debating him. His point was fair but his tone was off, not as bad as the over-practiced lines of the past but still. He seems to have come out of his summer slump swinging, but I think that if he doesn’t get back what he has lost, he may be done for good.
Huckabee – In my humble opinion, the winner of the evening. He is using his momentum out of his second place finish in the Ames Straw Poll well, and his rebuke of Ron Paul was almost perfectly worded while having the exact right tone. He may not be my Presidential pick because of his organization and his national reach, but I think he is the obvious choice for Vice President at this time, and after a stint in that office, would be an almost perfect GOP Presidential nominee.
Brownback, Hunter, and Tancredo – Their time is almost over, they are essentially issue candidates right now, with no real chance of winning. Brownback is the social conservative issue candidate, Hunter and Tancredo are there for border rights and strong national defense in terms of issues. They have served their purpose, and should drop out either in the next few months, or right after Iowa.
Ron Paul – Destroyed what credibility he had with the Republican Party with his ranting during this debate. I was waiting for him to yell “Get off my lawn!” to the crowd. Has probably the most devoted fan base, and will probably be the Libertarian Party’s Presidential candidate, but shows why he has no place in mainstream American politics.
Now onto Fred Thompson, he was mocked a bit at the beginning of the debate, but to the national audience it helped because they were all talking about him, not about the differences between them. His announcement on the Tonight Show was very good, he looked a bit nervous at the beginning but after some banter with Jay he was ready to announce and articulate himself to America. He obviously had the biggest audience of the night, and not just wonks like me who watched the Fox debate. He announced to probably the widest audience of any of the candidates, because he did so in the traditional time when candidates announce, and in the mot public venue. He had the best line when he said that to the American people politicians are like dentists, as in they only pay attention to them when they have to. It is my opinion that Rudy is leading the national polls because of pure name ID, and Romney is leading in Iowa and New Hampshire for the same reason, because Romney dumped millions into those states. The time has come for policies to start to change these numbers, so no matter how far back they started, or how soon the primaries are, the real game is about to begin.
I will get to other things shortly.
Sunday, September 2, 2007
Why I'm With Fred
Now that my finals are over I can begin to give my full attention to something other than passing my classes. I believe the time has come to throw my support behind one of the men running for the Republican nomination for President.
I decided right after 2004 that I would not be one of those people who endorsed way too early and got it wrong. I consider myself a completive man who takes the proper time in order to make the proper decision. After researching the past and present views of the candidates, their ability to successfully run for the office, and other factors important to me I have decided that former Senator Fred Dalton Thompson is the person that I think is best suited to win our nomination and the Presidency.
First off let me say this, I did not arrive at this decision because he is on TV and movies and I think he’s the next Reagan, nor because my best friend has also decided to endorse Fred, nor because he shares the same first name as my father and grandfather. I came to this decision on my own about two months or so ago after I had the opportunity to meet the man.
What first drew me towards Fred was the complete lack of someone in the race that I could truly get behind. I have many friends, who are with many candidates, and I respect all of them and their choices, but none of them were for me. I will go into why later. When many like me let their dissatisfaction known the call went out for another candidate, one we could unite behind, and that led to the idea of getting Fred to get into the race. That is one of his best qualities to me, he didn’t seek this nomination since the ballots were still being counted in 2004, he got into this race because we wanted him…because we needed him.
Now I am usually the first to point out the historical aversion this country has to electing Senators, in fact only 2 people, Harding and Kennedy, have been elected directly from the Senate. However of the 42 men who have been President, 15 have spent some time in the Senate before the Presidency. Why I don’t think this is an issue for Fred is that he is not a career Senator or politician for that matter. He was an attorney before becoming an actor, actually by accident. He was asked to play himself in a movie about a case, and kept being cast in parts. After years of successfully acting he ran for Al Gore’s vacated Senate seat in 1994 and won, was reelected in 1996, and after serving his time he went back to his career as an actor as opposed to becoming entrenched in Washington. This is the ideal of what we want from our leaders, for them to remember where they came from and not to become career politicians.
In Hollywood, FL at the Young Republican National Convention I had the opportunity to meet Fred and to hear him speak on the issues. I appreciated what I thought was a very common sense way of looking at the problems facing us today. Upon doing more research on him he also appealed to the libertarian in me with some of his Senate record, where he was the 1 on a number of 99-1 votes that sought to expand the size of the federal government. The concept of federalism, and moving the balance towards the states and away from the federal government, is something that hits right at the core of my belief system. I always am of the belief that if you want something done right, the last place to look is the federal government. Fred took the same Con Law classes I am taking, and he understand the swings in power the courts gave the federal government and how we are overdo for a swing against the federal government.
Of course he has his flaws like we all do, some Republicans might not like his voting record on campaign finance reform, and his ACU rating is 86, however no one is perfect and I believe it is the flaws where we find the true nature of a man, and in Fred’s case I find his true nature to be someone who is willing to take a stand based on what he believes is right, not based on what is polled to be popular or what is politically expedient.
Now as I stated I looked through all the other candidates and found them not to be what I was looking for. Back in 2000 I was a McCain supporter, because he was a straight talker who had no problem telling the party they were going down the wrong path, now I see McCain as someone who was so desperate to get the nomination he sold himself out, he became a party yes man, and I am a conservative first, Republican second. John McCain isn’t John McCain anymore, he’s the second coming of George W. Bush, which is not what the party or the country needs right now. Rudy Giuliani was a great leader on a terrible day; however one day does not make a President. His record on social issues makes him not palatable to me as a candidate. I do believe that he would be a tremendous Commander-in-Chief, but there are other duties of the office, and it is those duties that I worry about with a Giuliani Presidency. Mitt Romney is an interesting case, he says all the right things, has the right look, and even has the Michigan connection, but I just don’t trust him. He is the consummate politician, saying what he thinks needs to be said to win a nomination, not saying what he thinks needs to be said because he believes it. Now I know if you look to the second tier you find more true conservatives, but each of them are either one-dimensional or lacked that something extra to be someone you could follow to the White House. Fred Thompson was someone Hollywood casting directors looked to when they needed someone with a strong presence to play a leader or man in power, and in this case Hollywood may actually have got it right.
I know most of you are already entrenched with a candidate, and I respect all of you for your choices. I know the next few months we are going to debate and discuss with the passion I know we all have for this game. However in the end, after the insanely front-loaded primary system tells us who our nominee will be, I hope we can all come together as friends and put the past behind us and go forward with the ultimate goal, making sure the Democrats don’t take the White House.
Now that I have laid out my case, I hope to inspire discussion and debate, and maybe even a few converts, but from now until the end I can honestly stand up and say I’m With Fred.
I decided right after 2004 that I would not be one of those people who endorsed way too early and got it wrong. I consider myself a completive man who takes the proper time in order to make the proper decision. After researching the past and present views of the candidates, their ability to successfully run for the office, and other factors important to me I have decided that former Senator Fred Dalton Thompson is the person that I think is best suited to win our nomination and the Presidency.
First off let me say this, I did not arrive at this decision because he is on TV and movies and I think he’s the next Reagan, nor because my best friend has also decided to endorse Fred, nor because he shares the same first name as my father and grandfather. I came to this decision on my own about two months or so ago after I had the opportunity to meet the man.
What first drew me towards Fred was the complete lack of someone in the race that I could truly get behind. I have many friends, who are with many candidates, and I respect all of them and their choices, but none of them were for me. I will go into why later. When many like me let their dissatisfaction known the call went out for another candidate, one we could unite behind, and that led to the idea of getting Fred to get into the race. That is one of his best qualities to me, he didn’t seek this nomination since the ballots were still being counted in 2004, he got into this race because we wanted him…because we needed him.
Now I am usually the first to point out the historical aversion this country has to electing Senators, in fact only 2 people, Harding and Kennedy, have been elected directly from the Senate. However of the 42 men who have been President, 15 have spent some time in the Senate before the Presidency. Why I don’t think this is an issue for Fred is that he is not a career Senator or politician for that matter. He was an attorney before becoming an actor, actually by accident. He was asked to play himself in a movie about a case, and kept being cast in parts. After years of successfully acting he ran for Al Gore’s vacated Senate seat in 1994 and won, was reelected in 1996, and after serving his time he went back to his career as an actor as opposed to becoming entrenched in Washington. This is the ideal of what we want from our leaders, for them to remember where they came from and not to become career politicians.
In Hollywood, FL at the Young Republican National Convention I had the opportunity to meet Fred and to hear him speak on the issues. I appreciated what I thought was a very common sense way of looking at the problems facing us today. Upon doing more research on him he also appealed to the libertarian in me with some of his Senate record, where he was the 1 on a number of 99-1 votes that sought to expand the size of the federal government. The concept of federalism, and moving the balance towards the states and away from the federal government, is something that hits right at the core of my belief system. I always am of the belief that if you want something done right, the last place to look is the federal government. Fred took the same Con Law classes I am taking, and he understand the swings in power the courts gave the federal government and how we are overdo for a swing against the federal government.
Of course he has his flaws like we all do, some Republicans might not like his voting record on campaign finance reform, and his ACU rating is 86, however no one is perfect and I believe it is the flaws where we find the true nature of a man, and in Fred’s case I find his true nature to be someone who is willing to take a stand based on what he believes is right, not based on what is polled to be popular or what is politically expedient.
Now as I stated I looked through all the other candidates and found them not to be what I was looking for. Back in 2000 I was a McCain supporter, because he was a straight talker who had no problem telling the party they were going down the wrong path, now I see McCain as someone who was so desperate to get the nomination he sold himself out, he became a party yes man, and I am a conservative first, Republican second. John McCain isn’t John McCain anymore, he’s the second coming of George W. Bush, which is not what the party or the country needs right now. Rudy Giuliani was a great leader on a terrible day; however one day does not make a President. His record on social issues makes him not palatable to me as a candidate. I do believe that he would be a tremendous Commander-in-Chief, but there are other duties of the office, and it is those duties that I worry about with a Giuliani Presidency. Mitt Romney is an interesting case, he says all the right things, has the right look, and even has the Michigan connection, but I just don’t trust him. He is the consummate politician, saying what he thinks needs to be said to win a nomination, not saying what he thinks needs to be said because he believes it. Now I know if you look to the second tier you find more true conservatives, but each of them are either one-dimensional or lacked that something extra to be someone you could follow to the White House. Fred Thompson was someone Hollywood casting directors looked to when they needed someone with a strong presence to play a leader or man in power, and in this case Hollywood may actually have got it right.
I know most of you are already entrenched with a candidate, and I respect all of you for your choices. I know the next few months we are going to debate and discuss with the passion I know we all have for this game. However in the end, after the insanely front-loaded primary system tells us who our nominee will be, I hope we can all come together as friends and put the past behind us and go forward with the ultimate goal, making sure the Democrats don’t take the White House.
Now that I have laid out my case, I hope to inspire discussion and debate, and maybe even a few converts, but from now until the end I can honestly stand up and say I’m With Fred.
Welcome
Welcome all to my entry into the blogosphere. I figured since everyone else has one I might as well have one as well. At one point I had a LiveJournal, and pretty much stopped using it, however I intend not to do that here. I want this to be an outlet for my view on the issues of the day, and on completely irrelevant things as well, as blogs are meant to do.
If there is something you want me to talk about please let me know. I have spent years learning and developing my views on things, and I am always ready for a good discussion.
I welcome you to join the ride with me, and away we go...
If there is something you want me to talk about please let me know. I have spent years learning and developing my views on things, and I am always ready for a good discussion.
I welcome you to join the ride with me, and away we go...
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