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Crazy People

Following up on Andy's story in The Blogaround, there's yet another group of far-right evangelicals that are out there proclaiming that Teh Gays are planning to take over the world. This time it's West Virginia. Seriously. (West Virginia has its charms, but come on. Key West it ain't.) Ben Smith has the story.


These people are skating into Fred Phelps territory, leaving the idea of anything connected with Christianity as most people understand it so far behind it will take the light from it five years to catch up. Targeting straight people (at the 0:57 mark) with a sniper scope? What kind of sick shit is that?

Pam Spaudling has more, as does Christy Hardin Smith.

HT to Steve.

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Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act Update

Shaker Beth emailed this important update on a recently discussed issue, which I am posting with her permission:

Liss, I just wanted to pass on an update on the action item posted about a month ago regarding the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. This is just my quick summary, IANAL and all that, and I have been keeping my finger on the pulse of this thing but I don’t know but a tiny fraction of the excellent commentary and organizing that’s out there.

A one-year moratorium on enforcement was passed on Feb. 2nd, giving everyone some breathing room, and a whole slew of eleventh-hour exemptions were passed on the 9th. These cover quite a lot of the territory folks were most concerned about: "dyed or undyed textiles," "books printed after 1985 that are conventionally printed and intended to be read, as opposed to used for play," and items made from the natural materials that were exempted on January 15th. The full list of exemptions is on p. 8 here (PDF).

I'm not sure how that "after 1985" stipulation will affect my own library – a quick search tells me I have about 70 children's books *added to the system* before 1986, but as we're a small, low-budget rural library and about half of our collection is donations, I'm going to have to dig deeper for printing dates. And I don't know what we're going to do with our complete sets of vintage Nancy Drews and Hardy Boys, which are probably the bulk of that list. Most likely, class them as rare books and move them to our Parent-Teacher Resource collection, which is mostly homeschooling textbooks and fragile popups and is (in theory, not so much in practice, but I didn't say that! *laughs*) limited to adult checkouts. I hate that solution, but it keeps them on the shelves. I'm also going to have to go through our board books and toy books item by item, and again, probably move any book with non-paper parts to PTR.

The CPSA's exemptions are nice and all, but they're procedural policy that could change with the weather. The long-term goal is to get this atrociously written law amended, repealed or overturned. Jim DeMint's office is working on a reform bill. Reform CPSIA and Handmade Toy Alliance are good places to start looking for news and action options, and Twitter is maybe THE best point of contact for breaking news and networking.

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Quote of the Day

"[There has] been speculation that [Karl Rove] would decline to answer questions on Fifth Amendment grounds. That's a personal privilege; he will not assert it."—Rove's attorney Robert Luskin, on his client's disinclination to "invoke his Fifth Amendment right to protect himself from self-incrimination, if and when he testifies about the firing of nine US Attorneys and the prosecution of the former governor," now that his ass won't be protected by executive privilege. Heh.

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Masking Schmasking

As I mentioned, ahem, we've been repainting the kitchen.

Well, Iain's been repainting the kitchen. I've been masking the door to the kitchen.

You're probably thinking: These are not equal tasks. And you'd be right. Painting is a not altogether unenjoyable task, when it's all going reasonably well. Masking, on the other hand, is a job I wouldn't impose on the Devil himself.

Especially when the door in need of masking has 15—count 'em: FIFTEEN!—windows, and needs painted on both sides, which means masking 30—count 'em: THIRTY!—little rectangles, until you are screaming, "Get in the damn corner, you bastard piece of tape!" while your husband laughs and laughs.

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Daily Kitteh


"I claim this litterbox for Matildastan!"


"I claim these stairs for Olivialand!"


"I claim this lap for zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz."

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Monday Blogaround

lol your big fat gay blogaround woooooo!

Recommended Reading:

Marcella: Carnival Against Sexual Violence 65

Renee: Hear Us Roar: Women of Color and Allies Blog Carnival

Andy: 'Traditional Family' Gunned Down by Gays in West Virginia Web Ad

Pam: Suze Orman's Valentine's Day Message on Marriage Equality, Hate Amendments, and the Bottom Line

Echidne: Vaginaphobia

Yeoman Pip: 13-Year-Old Boy Becomes Father

For the Losties: Rachel's Recap and 100th Episode Cake!

Leave your links in comments...

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To Bankers: Go Ahead and Leave

Feeling cornered like feral animals, the Wall Street executives have been lashing out at the blasphemy of the Obama administration imposing pay caps (to a measly $500,000). The bankers cry "You'll see, damn you!" as they try to threaten us with the possibility this new compensation restriction will likely drive the best banking talent elsewhere to get what they consider to be their due. In this environment, who are they kidding? The financial sector brought us here to begin with, and I can't think of many companies right now who have the budget to give them top dollar.

Truthout gets more to the point, and calls their bluff: Who cares?

But, let's take bankers at their word. Let's say many of the "best minds in banking" will go elsewhere if serious pay restrictions are imposed. The question we have to ask is: so what? The answer is: this may be a blessing in not that much of a disguise. [...]

But what about the argument that the pay caps will make us loose the "best brains," as this restructuring takes place? Well, who are the highest paid bankers, the ones who should (but might not) chafe most under the new restrictions? The highest paid bankers are the "deal makers," the "rain makers," the ones who figured out how to create the toxic securities, the structured investment vehicles, the credit default swaps and sell them around the globe.

We do not want these kind of deals to be made anymore and so we do not need these top brains - or any brains - to make them.
Of course, none of this would be happening were it not for one thing: greed. It's the key ingredient that makes capitalism and politics work, and it's not going away anytime soon. I'm sure the bankers will come up with new ideas to satisfy that hunger, that insidious need for excessive wealth.

Maybe we'll see some of them in Handy Housewife Helper infomercials.

[H/T to Mike]

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Rape Is Hilarious

So, this weekend, we decide to rent Hamlet 2, which we've heard is clever and has Catherine Keener in it, which is always a pretty compelling selling point at Shakes Manor.

Suffice it to say, the film is yet another in a long line of movies purporting to be about freedom of expression, but is really just a thinly-veiled manifesto asserting the right to engage in unabashed retrofuckery and fuck anyone who doesn't like it. (Also see: Misogyny, racism, anti-Semiticism, fat-hating, etc. aren't actually "edgy.")

And you can imagine how I was tickled positively pink when one of the two big numbers performed as part of the musical extravaganza finale is a song called "Raped in the Face," all about how when something that sucks happens to you, it's like being "raped in the face!"—an up-tempo ditty penned by the drama teacher protagonist and performed by him and his high school students.

Hilarious, no?

The only thing I can think of that's funnier than a song called "Raped in the Face" is actually being raped in the face. Which is a laugh fucking riot, I assure you—to which the many other women and men who have been forcibly made to perform oral sex against their wills by unrepentant rapists will also certainly attest.

And not only funny, but just like being mildly inconvenienced, too. Ha ha ha!

I despair for the world. I really do.

UPDATE: I forgot to mention that, after seeing the film, I went back and tried to find a professional review that mentioned this song in any way. Though I found several mentions of an "objectionable" (or some variation on that idea) song, none that I saw explicitly noted there was a song called "Raped in the Face" in the film. And most of the ones that even passingly referenced an objectionable song did so on their way to complaining that the last 20 minutes were the only funny part of the film.

[Rape is Hilarious: Parts One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen, Fourteen, Fifteen, Sixteen, Seventeen, Eighteen, Nineteen, Twenty, Twenty-One, Twenty-Two, Twenty-Three, Twenty-Four, Twenty-Five, Twenty-Six, Twenty-Seven.]

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Octomom

I'm on the same page as Liss that Nadya Suleman and her reproductive choices are none of my business, but I seem to be in the minority.

Everyone who has tried to engage my reluctant attention about Suleman has opened the conversation by mocking or judging her. Many people have jumped on the bandwagon with great abandon, even people who are supposedly progressive. They can't wait to stick the knife in, to talk about what a "freak" this woman is.

I wondered why this story was eliciting so many pronouncements from atop unfamiliar moral high horses, and then I saw the media coverage, which has portrayed her as a monster, showing photographs of her distended belly under headlines like "Pics of Octomommy!" or "Octomom Photographed!" It's a headline that wouldn't look out of place on the front page of The Daily Bugle.

Octomom doesn't sound like a mother of octuplets; it sounds like a Marvel supervillain, or a monster. It's not a neutral descriptor, and it's not cute. It's disparaging. It's dehumanizing.

The media's portrayal of her is disgusting. It's just such a cheap shot. Let's demonize a woman for her reproductive choice that's somewhat out of the ordinary in order to sell detergent.

Many people who are usually more cynical about the media are jumping right on board. In addition to the usual misogyny that's always operative, I suspect there's a lot of projection going on. People who are in financial trouble with a lot of credit card debt, which may or may not be their fault because of the economy but they're told either way it's because they're irresponsible, have seized on a woman who's "more irresponsible" than they are, and they just can't get enough of shaming her.

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Heyyy! Everybodyyy! Thepriceisrightmeansimonvacation! Wooooo!

Iain is off work today because the markets are closed for Presidents' Day, and while we were eating brunch, we put on the TV and I went right for The Price Is Right, which was just starting. As the camera panned over the audience, filled with people in bright, primary-colored t-shirts, seated in the bright, primary-color decorated studio, Iain said, "I loove this shoo! I used tae watch the British version when I was oon holiday as a kid!"

Liss: Me, too. That's why I put it on. Nothing makes you feel more like you're on vacation than watching The Price Is Right. It's all the bright colors. It's the opposite of an office, where everyone's dressed in greys and browns and black and tan.

Iain: Tootally! [pauses; watches show] That's a fooking nutty bid. Bid higher! Bid higher!

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Make 'em Laugh

Some people just never give up. From Gail Kerr at The Tennessean.com (via Steve):

Four Tennessee state representatives, all Republicans, have signed up to be plaintiffs in a lawsuit against President Barack Obama, aimed at forcing him to prove he is a United States citizen by coughing up his birth certificate.

Let me just say what all the world is now thinking, including their fellow Republicans on the Hill: This is dumber than a box of rocks.

Tennessee Reps. Eric Swafford, Stacey Campfield, Glen Casada and Frank Nicely now have a giant "G" on their foreheads for "Gullible." The four were so willing to drink the craziest flavor of Kool-Aid, they've gotten themselves caught up in a national urban legend that has been thoroughly debunked.

What's next? A resolution honoring the Easter Bunny for doing such a great job with the annual colored egg delivery system? A proposed law asking these four to prove they have a brain?
Let me hasten to add that this kind of mind-numbing brain-farting isn't just limited to the fogbrains in Tennessee. There are folks all over the country who are still carrying on like banshees on crack that Barack Obama isn't really a U.S. citizen or that he renounced it passively when he moved to Indonesia as a child, or that he's really a lizard leader in disguise like the visitors in V and he eats live rodents.

Steve says, "It seems a little early in Obama's presidency to see Republicans become this deranged. I shudder to think how unhinged they'll be in, say, a year." Actually, I'm looking forward to it. These people are out of power, they can't do much harm -- as opposed to the last eight years -- and with the way the economy is, we'll need a lot of laughs.

Cross-posted from Bark Bark Woof Woof.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

Clarissa Explains It All

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A condom-based stank eye incident at the Walgreen’s…

Crossposted from AngryBlackBitch.com.

A bitch is concerned about the impact of stank eye.

Specifically, I’m concerned by the stank eye many people are subjected to when they buy condoms at their local pharmacy.

Shall we?

This past Saturday a bitch journeyed out and about of my lair because we were out of cranberry juice and that just won’t do. Since I didn’t need a ton of shit I decided to journey to Walgreen’s for a quick swing through. I failed to anticipate that Saturday was Valentines Day…and that there are a lot of last minute sweethearts out there…and that my local Walgreen’s can be slow as a motherfucker…so, I stood in line holding cranberry juice for several minutes (more like 10!!).

Cough.

Anyhoo, a bitch is a natural observer and took a look at the folks in line with me.

There were several young men purchasing silly ass Valentine shit that would hopefully make up in sentiment what it lacked in originality. The young man in front of me appeared to be itemless…until I glanced down at his hands and noted that he held two packs of condoms. He obviously wasn’t trying to bring attention to his safe-sex purchase, and one of the reasons why was waiting behind the counter to check him out.

As the young condom purchaser set his items on the counter the woman behind the counter leveled the most intense stank eye on him that I’ve seen in a long time.

I’m talking the same level of stank coming from the eyes that this bitch gets from those wooden cross dragging protesters outside of Pridefest each year…mmmhmm, STANK!

I was stunned and then I got pissed.

I’ve purchased condoms before…hell, I used to be the designated condom purchaser for my friends…and I’ve been the recipient of stankified eye before. And I found that shit insulting and intolerable.

Given the fact that St. Louis ranks number one in STIs, this bitch finds that kind of sanctimonious judgment beyond insulting and intolerable.

So, when I came up to purchase my juice I gave Ms. Thang some stank eye right back.

I stared hard…hard as hell…so hard and so filled with angry disgust that when she lifted her eyes to me she physically jerked.

And then she flushed and looked away.

Sigh.

The problem is that Ms. Stank Eye from the Walgreen’s isn’t the exception…she’s far too often the rule.

We need to create an environment where people can purchase condoms with out judgment …be in stank eye or from the other end of the spectrum and equally insulting “I’m so bloody proud of you for using protection!!!” over the top praise.

‘Tis fitting that this is National Condom week, because we really need to commit to raising awareness about condom use and the facts.

And based on what I witnessed whilst shopping at the Walgreen’s, we also need to work on breaking down that stigma and curing the eye stankification condom purchasers face.

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Helpful Hints from Your Blogmistress

When choosing a color to paint your kitchen walls, a good question to ask yourself is: Will this color, once applied to the walls, despite its undeniably lovely butternut squashiness on a small sample square, give my kitchen the appearance of having been ruthlessly attacked by 10,000 babies with diarrhea?


Now, if you'll excuse me, Iain and I have some paint shopping to do.

For the second time today.

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Random YouTubery: Jaques Tati’s Mon Oncle

Here is a bit of the Criterion Collection's description of Tati's 1958 masterpiece, which won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film:

Slapstick prevails when Jacques Tati’s eccentric hero Monsieur Hulot is let loose in the ultramodern home of his brother-in-law, and in an antiseptic factory that manufactures plastic hose. Tati directs and stars in the second entry of the Hulot series, a delightful satire of mechanized living.

But really, you have to see it. The comedy is all about movement and sound. The Criterion Collection version (available at Netflix) has beautifully restored sound and color. The disc also features an introduction by Terry Jones in which he acknowledges the great influence of Tati on Monty Python, and a 1947 Tati short film L’école des facteurs (link points to a YouTube clip).

Watching Tati, one can also see where Mr. Bean is coming from.



More below the fold...






Here's a time-lapse video of a reconstruction of the ultra-modern Villa Arpel for an interior design exhibit in 2007:



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Sunday in the Chat with Portly

Hi Shakers! I'm hosting another "Sunday Brunch" chat via Skype. Comment Rules same as here.

Please join me for a Skype Chat today (2/15/09) from 10 am to 2 pm -- chat is still going on as of 2 pm -- join us! (Pacific Time) at this link: Portly's Sunday Brunch.

(Note: You may want to check your Skype profile before you enter the chat and remove personal info if you want to remain anonymous -- also, using your Shakesville handle will be helpful.)

If you have any difficulty getting in, leave a comment in this post-thread, or email me via the contributor's page.

Hope to see you there! Virtual Earl Grey and Mimosas are on the house!

UPDATED: If you're having trouble getting into the chat, private message me in Skype and I'll add you. We're chatting away over there.

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Like a Horse and Carriage

Like most of our holidays, Valentine's Day has a history that reportedly starts with those horny pagans and another one of their many fertility festivals, makes its way to the Catholic Church, which, in a typical cooption, laid on top its own celebration and gave it a fancy new saint-name, winds its way through the work of a popular British author (no, not that guy for a change, but this guy) who gifted its association with romantic love, and ended up mercilessly corrupted by soulless corporations who want to Sell You Shit Without Which You Can't Possibly Celebrate This Holiday.

Ya know. Kinda like Easter. Or Christmas.

Its origins being murky at best, there are competing legends about the sainted man for whom Valentine's Day is named, each of which has emerged to fill a need in its time, like such things have a wont to do. The account I like best, though, casts St. Valentine as a priest who defied a decree of the Roman Emperor Claudius II forbidding soldiers from getting married on the premise that such emotional attachments weakened soldiers' resolve. Valentine, moved by the injustice of the edict, met young lovers in secret and held clandestine weddings despite the prohibition—an acknowledgement of the (nearly) universal desire to love and be loved and commit to another, for which he was eventually jailed and executed.

I like the idea, even if it's only that and nothing more, that Valentine's Day is not just about love, but about marriage equality.

Love is a concept that is largely absent from our modern debates about marriage equality—because, of course, the people who seek to deny marriage to same-sex couples lose ground when the emotions of the thing impose upon their clinical, passionless talking points about protecting an institution they'd happily return to little more than a property exchange between landowning men, given half a chance.

For a very long time, marriage between a man and a woman didn't have a lot to do with love. (In fact, in some cultures, it still doesn't.) One of the most remarkable things about our culture is that we have the freedom to marry for love, to forge lifelong bonds based not on class or race or religion or the number of goats our dads can spare, but on a feeling so beautiful that poets have spent lifetimes trying to lay it on a page, that artists have passionately sought its capture in one still but enduring moment. Operas and books and films and pop songs, so heartbreakingly lovely that they can steal one's breath, if just for a moment, have been written by people in the thralls of love, or the searing pain of its loss. Monuments have been built, wars have been fought, and some of the greatest happiness ever experienced by humankind has been born because of love.

We are blessed with the luxury of love, and, make no mistake, it is a luxury. Marriage at its best is an expression of love. When it's simply an institution to facilitate the continued existence of a society through the birth of new generations, it is a splendid functional legal contract and nothing more. When it's a sign of commitment forged out of love, it is something ever so much grander. It is the stuff of legend.

Aristophanes said, in Plato's Symposium, that humankind, "judging by their neglect of it, have never, as I think, at all understood the power of Love. For if they had understood it they would surely have built noble temples and altars, and offered solemn sacrifices in its honor." He then laid out the most beautiful explanation of the origin of love I have ever read, just a piece of which I will excerpt here (having updated the translations with gender-neutral language):

[T]he original human nature was not like the present, but different. The sexes were not two as they are now, but originally three in number; there was man, woman, and the union of the two, having a name corresponding to this double nature, which had once a real existence, but is now lost… In the second place, the primeval human was round, hir back and sides forming a circle; and ze had four hands and four feet, one head with two faces, looking opposite ways, set on a round neck and precisely alike; also four ears, two privy members, and the remainder to correspond. Ze could walk upright as humans now do, backwards or forwards as ze pleased, and ze could also roll over and over at a great pace, turning on hir four hands and four feet, eight in all, like tumblers going over and over with their legs in the air; this was when ze wanted to run fast.
The gods were scared of humans in this powerful state, and Zeus conspired to diminish their strength by striking each of them in two with a lightning bolt.
He spoke and cut humans in two, like a sorb-apple which is halved for pickling, or as you might divide an egg with a hair; and as he cut them one after another, he bade Apollo give the face and the half of the neck a turn in order that the human might contemplate the section of hirself: ze would thus learn a lesson of humility… After the division the two parts of humanity, each desiring hir other half, came together, and throwing their arms about one another, entwined in mutual embraces, longing to grow into one, they were on the point of dying from hunger and self-neglect, because they did not like to do anything apart; and when one of the halves died and the other survived, the survivor sought another mate, man or woman as we call them, being the sections of entire men or women, and clung to that. They were being destroyed, when Zeus in pity of them invented a new plan: he turned the parts of generation round to the front, for this had not been always their position and they sowed the seed no longer as hitherto like grasshoppers in the ground, but in one another; and after the transposition the male generated in the female in order that by the mutual embraces of man and woman they might breed, and the race might continue; or if man came to man they might be satisfied, and rest, and go their ways to the business of life: so ancient is the desire of one another which is implanted in us, reuniting our original nature, making one of two, and healing the state of humankind.
That isn't about marriage. It's not about being straight or gay, either. It's about feeling such a desperate need to be close to another person that you are certain the two of you were once torn asunder. It's about love. And that is neither the sole province of unions between one man and one woman, nor a luxury we should ever take for granted. It is a luxury so precious that denying of some people any and every expression of its unique and awesome qualities, treating their love as different, as less, is an affront to the tremendous gift we have been given in our capacity to feel love.

If we really understood love, we would not just build in its honor noble temples and altars, and offer solemn sacrifices, but would believe without reservation that to deny its existence in every human heart is to reject our humanity.

Happy Valentine's Day.

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Love songs open thread

So today is Valentine's Day. Eh.

However! Good music abounds! So share 'em here--your favorite songs about love, romance, and heartbreak. Happy, sad, angry, dark, goofy, non-traditional...let us know (and if there's a story to go with, share that too!).

I'll start us off with a few (*cough*) of mine:

Ultraviolet (Light My Way); U2



Starlight; Muse


Say Hey (I Love You) ; Michael Franti & Spearhead


Crack the Shutters; Snow Patrol


Chemicals Between Us; Bush


Never Tear Us Apart; INXS (John's fave)


Love Walks In; Van Halen (I love it, shaddup!)


Somebody to Love; Queen


Ok, I could go on for a dozen more songs. Share yours!

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Quote of the Day

"You have absolutely no reason, none, to trust our word or our actions at this point."RNC Chairperson Michael Steele, engaging in a bit of unintentional honesty about his party. I guess he doesn't really want to be RNC chair for long.

Glenn Beck: Michael, you know, the Democrats should not be pushing for the Fairness Doctrine, because, quite honestly, I think, at least my radio audience is more pissed at you guys than they are the Democrats. We expect socialism from some of the Democrats—

Michael Steele: [laughing] Right, exactly!

Beck: —we don't expect it from you. And if I may be so bold to speak for a lot of people here, I can tell you how I feel—

Steele: Go ahead.

Beck. —and I think a lot of people feel this way: We actually believed in something in 2000. We believed in something in 2004. It's not really easy to be the pariah in your office, to be the hatemonger, racist, that wants to steal, you know, starve everybody's children and just hate anybody who's different. We actually took a lotta crap for a long time, and then you guys betrayed us. Why should we even think twice of pulling a lever again... Fool me once, shame on me—

Steele: Right.

Beck: —fool me twice? Oh my gosh.

Steele: Yeah, Glenn, I'm not gonna try to bloke smoke, either. The reality of it is you are absolutely right. You have absolutely no reason, none, to trust our word or our actions at this point. So, yeah, it's gonna be an uphill climb. I'm not fooled by that.

Beck: I have to tell you, Michael—that's refreshing.

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