Another Big Win For Putin!!!

CASHAPP

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Its insane how Putin has such a stranglehold on that country. Remember when that critic of his was killed outside the Kremlin months ago and immediately he was the first suspect and they found the fall guys to imprison?

This guy Putin the next week started a news story of how he(Putin) hasn't been seen in aa while in public just to get people's minds off what ha just happened to the guy that was killed outside the Kremlin.

And then people forgot about it completely. notice it hasnt been mentioned in ages?
 

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Russia’s Food Sanctions Have Escalated into Mass Cheese-Burning
BY
ALEX SWERDLOFF
July 28, 2015 / 5:00 pm


Somebody needs to inform the world’s despots that torture and exile are so totally passé. It’s 2015 and there is truly no better way of subtly sniping your geopolitical detractors than setting aflame a fukking massive pile of Camembert, Viking funeral-style.

At least that’s what the visionary folks over at the Ministry of Agriculture of the Russian Federation seem to think.

Whether we’re talking about a shawarma-fueled social media proxy war or getting your Hungry Hungry Hippos on with some decidedly dubious Filipino crocodile meat, we can all agree that some seriously strange solutions have arisen from the shytshow that is the Russian imports sanctions situation.

READ: Russian Social Media Is Trying to Take Down the West with Shawarma and Boobs
Well, Russia’s newest tactic for turning this Cold War red hot has just surfaced. Last Friday, Russia’s Minister of Agriculture, Alexander Tkachev, proposed that instead of sending back smuggled food items to their country of origin, it would serve the motherland better to simply have customs officers destroy the stuff.

As you may know, in response to Western sanctions against Russia following the conflict in the Ukraine, Russia has banned the import of Western beef, pork, fish and dairy. Now, the ban apparently isn’t enough for the Russians—they want to destroy any Western food that does happen to arrive at the borders.

Russian newspaper Kommersant reports that in a government meeting where president Vladimir Putin was present, Tkachev said: “I want to ask you to do everything possible to allow us to destroy illegal agricultural cargo that arrives at the border right there.”

Unsurprisingly, everybody’s favorite bear-straddling president agreed: “Let us accept the proposal of the Minister.” Putin has called for his government to consult with lawyers and develop the adequate steps to put the plan into effect. Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev expounded on Friday about the numerous ways smugglers are able to bring in embargoed foodstuffs.

This probably isn’t the best of news for the countless Russians feeling the negative effects of the sanctions. Food prices have soared since the sanctions started, leaving numerous citizens to consort with shadowy netizens for their unmet culinary needs.

READ: Russia Is Playing Whack-a-Mole with the Online Black Market for Imported Food
In fact, though, Tkachev’s proposal has already garnered several other supporters. The head of Russia’s National Union of Milk Producers, Andrei Danilenko, strongly supports the plan and lamented to Kommersant that despite producing enough milk to be self-reliant, Russia was still plagued by foreign milk in its markets.

So, you ask yourself, what is it exactly that has convinced Mr. Danilenko of the plan’s validity? How about this: “There are technologies that allow to destroy any product—say, burn cheese.” Damn those Reds and their futuristic space magic!

It just goes to show you, in the end, all multinational shadow conflicts inevitably come down to a technological arms race, and sometimes they involve cheese. At least the good ones do.

Nostrovia!
Russia's Food Sanctions Have Escalated into Mass Cheese-Burning
 

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Russia’s Food Sanctions Have Escalated into Mass Cheese-Burning
BY
ALEX SWERDLOFF
July 28, 2015 / 5:00 pm


Somebody needs to inform the world’s despots that torture and exile are so totally passé. It’s 2015 and there is truly no better way of subtly sniping your geopolitical detractors than setting aflame a fukking massive pile of Camembert, Viking funeral-style.

At least that’s what the visionary folks over at the Ministry of Agriculture of the Russian Federation seem to think.

Whether we’re talking about a shawarma-fueled social media proxy war or getting your Hungry Hungry Hippos on with some decidedly dubious Filipino crocodile meat, we can all agree that some seriously strange solutions have arisen from the shytshow that is the Russian imports sanctions situation.

READ: Russian Social Media Is Trying to Take Down the West with Shawarma and Boobs
Well, Russia’s newest tactic for turning this Cold War red hot has just surfaced. Last Friday, Russia’s Minister of Agriculture, Alexander Tkachev, proposed that instead of sending back smuggled food items to their country of origin, it would serve the motherland better to simply have customs officers destroy the stuff.

As you may know, in response to Western sanctions against Russia following the conflict in the Ukraine, Russia has banned the import of Western beef, pork, fish and dairy. Now, the ban apparently isn’t enough for the Russians—they want to destroy any Western food that does happen to arrive at the borders.

Russian newspaper Kommersant reports that in a government meeting where president Vladimir Putin was present, Tkachev said: “I want to ask you to do everything possible to allow us to destroy illegal agricultural cargo that arrives at the border right there.”

Unsurprisingly, everybody’s favorite bear-straddling president agreed: “Let us accept the proposal of the Minister.” Putin has called for his government to consult with lawyers and develop the adequate steps to put the plan into effect. Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev expounded on Friday about the numerous ways smugglers are able to bring in embargoed foodstuffs.

This probably isn’t the best of news for the countless Russians feeling the negative effects of the sanctions. Food prices have soared since the sanctions started, leaving numerous citizens to consort with shadowy netizens for their unmet culinary needs.

READ: Russia Is Playing Whack-a-Mole with the Online Black Market for Imported Food
In fact, though, Tkachev’s proposal has already garnered several other supporters. The head of Russia’s National Union of Milk Producers, Andrei Danilenko, strongly supports the plan and lamented to Kommersant that despite producing enough milk to be self-reliant, Russia was still plagued by foreign milk in its markets.

So, you ask yourself, what is it exactly that has convinced Mr. Danilenko of the plan’s validity? How about this: “There are technologies that allow to destroy any product—say, burn cheese.” Damn those Reds and their futuristic space magic!

It just goes to show you, in the end, all multinational shadow conflicts inevitably come down to a technological arms race, and sometimes they involve cheese. At least the good ones do.

Nostrovia!
Russia's Food Sanctions Have Escalated into Mass Cheese-Burning
yummmmm
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Sepp Blatter deserves Nobel prize for work with Fifa, says Vladimir Putin


• ‘Heads of sporting federations deserve special recognition’
• ‘I wonder if corruption fight is continuation of 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids’



The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, right, and Fifa’s Sepp Blatter met in St Petersburg at the weekend. Photograph: Maxim Shipenkov/AP
Reuters

Tuesday 28 July 2015 02.38 EDT

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Sepp Blatter deserves a Nobel prize for his stewardship of Fifa, Vladimir Putinsaid in an interview aired by the Swiss broadcaster RTS.

On Saturday, at a meeting with Putin in St Petersburg, Blatter said that Fifa, facing a major bribery scandal, had passed a resolution offering full support for holding the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

Russia’s president said of his Fifa counterpart: “We all know the situation developing around Mr Blatter right now. I don’t want to go into details but I don’t believe a word about him being involved in corruption personally,” he said. “I think people like Mr Blatter or the heads of big international sporting federations, or the Olympic Games, deserve special recognition. If there is anyone who deserves the Nobel prize, it’s those people.”

In June, Blatter announced he was standing down following a bribery scandal being investigated by US, Swiss and other law enforcement agencies that plunged Fifa into the worst crisis in its 111-year history. Officials have been indicted, although Blatter himself has not and he denies any misconduct.

The scandal has cast a cloud over the World Cups in Russia and Qatar but Russian officials have dismissed any suggestion they could be stripped of the tournament.

In May, when the scandal broke, Putin criticised the US investigation into Fifa as meddling in matters outside its jurisdiction. He rekindled that criticism in the interview broadcast by RTS and widened it to include Britain, noting that those two countries had bid to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

“The way there is this fight against corruption makes me wonder if it isn’t a continuation of the bids for 2018 and 2022.”

An economic crisis has forced cutbacks in Russia’s World Cup preparations but Putin and Fifa officials have said this will not affect Russia’s ability to host the tournament.
 

88m3

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Its insane how Putin has such a stranglehold on that country. Remember when that critic of his was killed outside the Kremlin months ago and immediately he was the first suspect and they found the fall guys to imprison?

This guy Putin the next week started a news story of how he(Putin) hasn't been seen in aa while in public just to get people's minds off what ha just happened to the guy that was killed outside the Kremlin.

And then people forgot about it completely. notice it hasnt been mentioned in ages?

Yeah, I mean all the evidence pointed directly to Putin. It's not like the security service or prosecutors can/will do anything about it though.
 

88m3

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Moscow Wants to Ban American Pro-Democracy NGO and Other Groups From Operating in Russia


By John Dyer

July 29, 2015 | 4:50 pm
Russia has launched a new crackdown on groups that might challenge President Vladimir Putin's monopoly on power.

On Tuesday, Moscow moved to ban the United States National Endowment for Democracy under a new law against foreign-backed "undesirable" nongovernmental organizations that the Kremlin claims are meddling in Russia's internal affairs.

"Prosecutors came to the conclusion that it [the Endowment] presents a threat to the constitutional order of Russia, its defense capabilities and state security," said Russian prosecutors in a statement, according to Deutsche Welle.

The endowment "participated in work to declare the results of election campaigns illegitimate, to organize political demonstrations aimed at influencing decisions taken by state institutions and to discredit service in the Russian armed forces," the prosecutor's statement said.

Under the new Russian law, if the Justice Ministry approved the prosecutor's motion, the Endowment won't be able to open offices or send money to local groups, Deutsche Welles reported. Activists found cooperating with banned groups face jail terms of as long as six years.

Related: Russia Just Vetoed a UN Resolution to Bring the People Who Downed MH17 to Justice

Funded largely by Congress, the Endowment is a private nonprofit that has given out more than 1,200 grants to nongovernmental organizations pursuing democratic goals in more than 90 countries, according to its website. The website lists more than 100 grants in Russia ranging from around $20,000 to $500,000 to promote human rights, freedom of the press, women's rights and other causes.

"The law on undesirable organizations is the latest in a series of highly restrictive laws that limit the freedom of Russian citizens," the Endowment said in a statement on Tuesday. "This law, as well as its predecessors, contravenes Russia's own constitution as well as numerous international laws and treaties. The true intent of these laws is to intimidate and isolate Russian citizens."

The ban is an expansion of previously enacted rules that require Russian NGOs to register with the government and disclose their ties to foreign entities. It comes after Russia has ended other foreign programs over the years, like the Peace Corps in 2002.

The pattern for all of those actions are the same, said Leonard Benardo, regional director for Eurasia at the Open Society Foundations, in an interview with VICE News. Putin and his cohort have cowed business, seized control of the media and hijacked the political system. Now they're moving to eviscerate the last semblance of a political opposition in the country: activists who might call into question Putin's autocratic policies.

"This is an attempt to ensure there are no alternative countervailing views," said Benardo. "There is no belief that these organizations exist on behalf of the Russian population. There is this regrettable belief that these groups are working on behalf of foreign governments to inspire or foment some form of rebellious activity."

Karen Lea Dawisha, a Miami University political scientist who wrote Putin's Kleptocracy: Who Owns Russia? was blunter. Eliminating NGOs isn't just about keeping a hold on power, it's also about building up a cult of personality, she said.

"They want to extend this image of Putin as the sole important person," Dawisha told VICE News. "There is a reason that his entourage now refers to him as the czar. The czar doesn't have civil society. I think he is completely paranoid."

The chilling effect is working.

Last week, the MacArthur Foundation, which is now also listed as a NGO that prosecutors could deem undesirable in the future, announced that it would pull out of Russia.

"The recent passage and implementation of several laws in Russia make it all but impossible for international foundations to operate effectively and support worthy civil society organizations in that country," said MacArthur President Julia Stasch in a statement.

Related: Vietnam Is Pissed that China is Blowing Up the South China Sea

Activists aren't giving up, however. They're going underground, giving rise to subterfuge that recalls dissidents in the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

"I know from talking to people who are high up in various civil society organizations that they have already implemented off-internet plans," said Dawisha. "That is the number one way they are being surveilled. It's a shame, because of course that is what Russia wants them to do. But they are still organizing. The old meeting in the parks and the prearranged meetings in cafes are staring to occur."

Follow John Dyer on Twitter: @johnjdyerjr

Moscow Wants to Ban American Pro-Democracy NGO and Other Groups From Operating in Russia | VICE News
 

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Putin just signed a decree ordering the 'destruction' of all Western imported food

  • Jul. 30, 2015, 10:00 PM
  • 11,208
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REUTERS/Mikhail Klimentyev/RIA Novosti/KremlinRussia's President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with members of the international expert council of the Russian Direct Investment Fund and representatives of the international investment community, part of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum 2015 (SPIEF 2015) in St. Petersburg, Russia, June 18, 2015.
See Also

How dairy! Russian cheese smuggler caught with bootful

Russia Will Ban All Imports Of US Food And EU Fruits And Vegetables

Russia's Counter-Sanctions Are Going To Be Painful For Russia


Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree Wednesday ordering the "destruction" of all food brought into the country against import bans on Western products. The import bans were part of sanctions instituted in 2014 in response to Western sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine crisis, and they have greatly disrupted the daily lives of ordinary Russians who used to be huge importers of European goods.

The order will come into effect on Aug. 6. "[A]gricultural goods, raw materials and food originating from a country that has made the decision to introduce economic sanctions against Russian entities and/or individuals, or has joined such a decision, and which are prohibited from being imported into the Russian Federation ... are subject to destruction," the decree read, according to the Moscow Times.

The sanctions on Russia and those imposed by the country on Western countries have not affected Russia alone. Many European countries who were large exporters to Russia have also taken a hit. French dairy farmers have been protesting unfair prices and a shrinking market since the start of July, and a large part of that problem was due to the disappearance of the Russian market for French cheese.

The new decree does not pertain to the small amounts of Western goods that citizens are allowed to bring back from Europe or the U.S. for personal consumption. The limits of "personal consumption" have often been tested, with Russians attempting to smuggle large amounts of imported cheese or other specialty goods into the country. Earlier this month, a Russian man was caught attempting to smuggle1,000 pounds of contraband cheese into the country.

A large black market for these banned products has quickly emerged in the past year, complete with back room dealings.

Putin's decree was a continuation of policies in the past few months to solidify sanctions with Western nations and demonstrate that Russia has no intention of reversing them. Putin signed a decree renewing the sanctions for at least another year.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/puti...ll-western-imported-food-2015-7#ixzz3hVyHYLMB
 

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Russia 'may ban gay emojis' under 'propaganda' law
  • 7 hours ago
  • From the sectionEurope
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A range of emojis depicting same sex couples are now available on social media
Russia may ban "gay emojis" from social media if an investigation by the state media watchdog rules that they infringe laws against "gay propaganda".

According to a report by Russia's Izvestia newspaper, the investigation was prompted by a complaint from Mikhail Marchenko, a Russian senator.

Mr Marchenko claims the symbols - which depict smiley-faced same-sex couples - violate a controversial 2013 law which prohibits promotion of non-traditional sexual relationships.

The law allows Russian authorities to block access to websites deemed to promote homosexuality.

Mr Marchenko said in his complaint that the emojis "promoted non-traditional sexual relationships", "denied family values" and showed "disrespect for parents and other family members".

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An Apple update earlier this year introduced emojis depicting gay parents
In response to the complaint, media watchdog Roskomnadzor asked the youth group of President Vladimir Putin's political party, the Young Guard, to report on the matter.

Kirill Grinchenko, a spokesman for the Young Guard, told Izvestia that the group had not yet received a request to look into the matter but was "ready to deal with the protection of rights on the Internet under Russian law".

On Tuesday the founder of Children-404, an online community for LGBT teenagers in Russia, was fined 50,000 roubles (£520; $830) after a Russian court ruled that the site was guilty of distributing "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations among minors".

Russia has faced international criticism for its anti-gay laws. Individuals can be fined 4,000-5,000 roubles if they are convicted of promoting so-called non-traditional sexual relations, with much higher fines for businesses and possible jail sentences for foreigners.

Apple first added emojis depicting gay couples to its operating system back in 2012. An update earlier this year introduced emojis showing gay couples with children, and hugely increased the racial diversity among the 300 symbols available.


Russia 'may ban gay emojis' under 'propaganda' law - BBC News
 

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Vladimir Putin 'ordered killing', Litvinenko inquiry hears
  • 9 hours ago
  • From the sectionUK
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A lawyer for Alexander Litvinenko's family said Vladimir Putin was a "tinpot despot"
Russian President Vladimir Putin "personally ordered" the killing of Alexander Litvinenko, the inquiry into the former spy's death has heard.

Ben Emmerson QC, for Mr Litvinenko's family, said in his closing statement that Russian state responsibility had been proven "beyond reasonable doubt".

Mr Litvinenko's widow Marina said she believed her husband's "murderers and their paymasters" had "been unmasked".

But the Kremlin told the BBC it did not trust the inquiry.

'Tinpot despot'
Dissident Mr Litvinenko, 43, drank tea containing a fatal dose of radioactive polonium during a meeting with suspects Dmitry Kovtun and Andrei Lugovoi in London in 2006.

The Kremlin wanted Mr Litvinenko dead and provided the poison used to kill him, Mr Emmerson alleged.

Scientific evidence proves Mr Kovtun and Mr Lugovoi killed the former spy, he added.

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Media captionThe BBC's Gordon Corera explains how Alexander Litvinenko's killers left traces of poison in their wake
Mr Emmerson told the inquiry Mr Putin was an "increasingly isolated tinpot despot" and a "morally deranged authoritarian".

He said the Russian president and his allies are "directly implicated in organised crime".

Mr Putin's "personal cabal" are "willing to murder those who stand in their way", Mr Emmerson added.

He said: "If the Russian state is responsible, Vladimir Putin is responsible.

"Not on some analogical version of vicarious liability but because he personally ordered the liquidation of an enemy who was bent on exposing him and his cronies."

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Dimitry Kovtun failed to appear at the inquiry
The QC said Mr Kovtun had failed to appear before the inquiry because he would be unable to explain the evidence against him.

Mr Kovtun said in March that he wanted to testify, but failed to appear by videolink.

Speaking outside the Royal Courts of Justice after the closing statements, Mrs Litvinenko said she believed "the truth has finally been uncovered".

She said her husband had "vowed to expose corruption" in the Russian Federal Security Service and the "highest echelons of power in Russia".

Jump media player
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Media captionMarina Litvinenko: "The truth has finally been uncovered"
"His actions were perceived as treachery and he paid the ultimate price for them," she said.

Mrs Litvinenko added: "Any reasonable person who looks at the evidence presented in the inquiry will see my husband was killed by agents of the Russian state in the first ever act of nuclear terrorism in the streets of London.

"This could not have happened without knowledge and consent of Mr Putin."

'Biased and politicised'
The Kremlin said the accusations raised at the inquiry had been heard before.

A spokesman said: "Such statements were made without any results from the investigation, and after there were results of some sort of investigation.

"It seems they had to add something, so that their words could seem convincing."

He said officials in Russia "don't want to have anything to do" with British investigations into the death.

Mr Lugovoi said the inquiry had been "biased".

"These proceedings have long since stopped being of interest to me, since I understood a long time ago that they are biased and politicised," he told Interfax.

Inquiry chairman Sir Robert Owen will now consider the evidence heard over the last six months.

He is expected to report back to the home secretary by the end of the year.

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The Litvinenko case
  • 23 Nov 2006 - Mr Litvinenko dies three weeks after having tea with former agents Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun in London
  • 24 Nov 2006 - His death is attributed to polonium-210
  • 22 May 2007 - Britain's director of public prosecutions decides Mr Lugovoi should be charged with the murder of Mr Litvinenko
  • 31 May 2007 - Mr Lugovoi denies any involvement in his death but says Mr Litvinenko was a British spy
  • 5 Jul 2007 - Russia officially refuses to extradite Mr Lugovoi, saying its constitution does not allow it
  • May-June 2013 - Inquest into Mr Litvinenko's death delayed as coroner decides a public inquiry would be preferable, as it would be able to hear some evidence in secret
  • July 2013 - Ministers rule out public inquiry
  • Jan 2014 - Marina Litvinenko in High Court fight to force a public inquiry
  • 11 Feb 2014 - High Court says the Home Office had been wrong to rule out an inquiry before the outcome of an inquest
  • July 2014 - Public inquiry announced by Home Office
  • January 2015 - Public inquiry begins
  • July 2015 - Closing submissions are made at the inquiry
Vladimir Putin 'ordered killing', Litvinenko inquiry hears - BBC News
 

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$40 Oil May Force Russia Into an Emergency Rate Hike, Economists Say
And cause the economy to shrink by 5 percent this year
by Andre Tartar
July 30, 2015 — 1:34 AM EDT



Already faced with recession and sanctions, a further drop in crude might force the country's central bank into an emergency rate hike — after four cuts already this year — according to 65 percent of economists surveyed by Bloomberg from July 24-29. Thirty-nine percent of analysts said the government might impose Greek-like capital controls and 22 percent predicted a takeover of at least some of the country's banks.

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When asked about the central bank's own analysis of the $40-per-barrel oil scenario, which found a roughly 600 billion ruble capital deficit and two-fold increase in the share of non-performing loans, 69 percent of economists said it has accurately estimated the risks to the Russian economy and banking sector.


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The impact on growth from $40 oil would be particularly severe, weakening the ruble to 65 against the U.S. dollar by end-2015 and causing the economy to contract by 5 percent this year and 1 percent in 2016. Compare that to the far less pessimistic baseline consensus provided by Bloomberg's monthly economic survey, which currently forecasts a 3.5 percent contraction in 2015 and a 0.5 percent expansion in 2016.

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Even with oil trading closer to $50 per barrel, economists see an 83 percent probability of recession in the next 12 months. That's down from 95 percent last month but still marks the twelfth month that the indicator has stood above the 50 percent mark.

On the sanctions front, only 28 percent of respondents said the EU will begin lifting existing asset freezes and travel bans during the next year, down from 52 percent who said the same in May.

488x-1.png

Just one economist expects the U.S. to lift its sanctions in the next 12 months.


$40 Oil May Force Russia Into an Emergency Rate Hike, Economists Say
 

GzUp

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is russia going to eventually take over Ukraine?
 
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