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02-16-2013, 08:56 AM
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#1
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 17, 2011
Location: Texas
Posts: 843
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Ted Cruz: Kickin Ass & Takin Names!!
That's what I'm talkin bout...sic'em, Ted!!!!
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/16/us...wanted=1&_r=1&
(I'm on a mobile device, so if any of my right thinking hobby buds could cut & paste the article, it would give the lazy libtards one less excuse to not read the article...)
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02-16-2013, 09:01 AM
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#2
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Dec 23, 2009
Location: Central Texas
Posts: 15,047
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EXTXOILMAN
That's what I'm talkin bout...sic'em, Ted!!!!
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/16/us...wanted=1&_r=1&
(I'm on a mobile device, so if any of my right thinking hobby buds could cut & paste the article, it would give the lazy libtards one less excuse to not read the article...)
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Thanks Marshy, for the update!
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02-16-2013, 09:55 AM
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#3
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 3, 2010
Location: Clarksville
Posts: 61,036
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Ted Cruz, kissing ass and calling names.
Nobody really believes this shit. Cruz is a pandering opportunist, plain and simple. ,
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| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 10:02 AM
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#4
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Sep 23, 2010
Location: houston texas
Posts: 10,174
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
Ted Cruz, kissing ass and calling names.
Nobody really believes this shit. Cruz is a pandering opportunist, plain and simple. ,
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And the dems don't do the same fucking thing?
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| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 10:11 AM
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#5
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 3, 2010
Location: Clarksville
Posts: 61,036
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Not like this asshole. The GOP is embarrassed by him already.
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 10:35 AM
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#6
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Lifetime Premium Access
Join Date: Jan 1, 2010
Location: houston
Posts: 48,267
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seedman55
And the dems don't do the same fucking thing?
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Yes, Ted Cruz and Shelia Jackson Lee are cut from the same cloth! You don't see me praising that bitch now do you? Praising Cruz means you fall into the looney camp.
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| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 10:40 AM
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#7
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Jun 19, 2011
Location: Dixie Land
Posts: 22,098
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Somebody order a shit sandwich?
Texas Senator Goes on Attack and Raises Bipartisan Hackles
Doug Mills/The New York Times
Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, on a senators-only elevator on Thursday. He says he intends to shake up Washington.
By JONATHAN WEISMAN
Published: February 15, 2013 997 Comments
WASHINGTON — As the Senate edged toward a divisive filibuster vote on Chuck Hagel’s nomination to be defense secretary, Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, sat silent and satisfied in the corner of the chamber — his voice lost to laryngitis — as he absorbed what he had wrought in his mere seven weeks of Senate service.
Related
Related in Opinion
Enlarge This Image
J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press
Critics said Mr. Cruz crossed a line in his questioning of Chuck Hagel, the Pentagon nominee.
Readers’ Comments
Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
Mr. Hagel, a former senator from Mr. Cruz’s own party, was about to be the victim of the first filibuster of a nominee to lead the Pentagon. The blockade was due in no small part to the very junior senator’s relentless pursuit of speeches, financial records or any other documents with Mr. Hagel’s name on them going back at least five years. Some Republicans praised the work of the brash newcomer, but others joined Democrats in saying that Mr. Cruz had gone too far.
Without naming names, Senator Barbara Boxer, Democrat of California, offered a biting label for the Texan’s accusatory crusade: McCarthyism.
“It was really reminiscent of a different time and place, when you said, ‘I have here in my pocket a speech you made on such and such a date,’ and, of course, nothing was in the pocket,” she said, a reference to Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s pursuit of Communists in the 1950s. “It was reminiscent of some bad times.”
In just two months, Mr. Cruz, 42, has made his presence felt in an institution where new arrivals are usually not heard from for months, if not years. Besides suggesting that Mr. Hagel might have received compensation from foreign enemies, he has tangled with the mayor of Chicago, challenged the Senate’s third-ranking Democrat on national television, voted against virtually everything before him — including the confirmation of John Kerry as secretary of state — and raised the hackles of colleagues from both parties.
He could not be more pleased. Washington’s new bad boy feels good.
“I made promises to the people of Texas that I would come to Washington to shake up the status quo,” he said in e-mailed answers to questions, in lieu of speaking. “That is what I intend to do, and it is what I have done in every way possible in the responsibilities that have been granted to me.”
In a body known for comity, Mr. Cruz is taking confrontational Tea Party sensibilities to new heights — or lows, depending on one’s perspective. Wowed conservatives hail him as a hero, but even some Republican colleagues are growing publicly frustrated with a man who has taken the zeal of the prosecutor and applied it to the decorous quarters of the Senate.
Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, said that some of the demands Mr. Cruz made of Mr. Hagel were “out of bounds, quite frankly.” Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, issued a public rebuke after Mr. Cruz suggested, with no evidence, that Mr. Hagel had accepted honorariums from North Korea.
“All I can say is that the appropriate way to treat Senator Hagel is to be as tough as you want to be, but don’t be disrespectful or malign his character,” Mr. McCain said in an interview.
Democrats were more blunt.
“He basically came out and made the accusation about money from North Korea or money from our enemies, and he just laid out there all of this accusatory verbiage without a shred of evidence,” said Senator Claire McCaskill, Democrat of Missouri. “In this country we had a terrible experience with innuendo and inference when Joe McCarthy hung out in the United States Senate, and I just think we have to be more careful.”
Mr. Cruz, a Canadian-born lawyer who won an upset primary victory last year, is adamant in his own defense. He said his focus at hearings had been on policy, not personality. With Mr. Hagel, whose nomination is set for a Senate vote the week of Feb. 25, he said his request for financial disclosures were backed by 24 other senators. As for his statement that Mr. Hagel may have received honorariums from nefarious sources, “the suggestions I have made in my arguments have been merely to raise examples for why I believe Senator Hagel’s financial disclosure is so important,” he said.
“Comity does not mean avoiding the truth,” he added. “And it would be wrong to avoid speaking the truth about someone’s record and past policy positions, even if doing so inevitably subjects me to personal criticism from Democrats and the media.”
To the growing core of ardent conservatives in the Senate, Mr. Cruz has offered a jolt of positive energy.
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02-16-2013, 10:42 AM
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#8
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Jun 19, 2011
Location: Dixie Land
Posts: 22,098
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Texas Senator Goes on Attack and Raises Bipartisan Hackles
Published: February 15, 2013 997 Comments
(Page 2 of 2)
“If you don’t ruffle any feathers, you’re not doing anything right,” said Senator Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky, who garnered similar attention in his opening weeks in the Senate two years ago.
Related
Related in Opinion
Readers’ Comments
Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
Mr. Cruz was among the 22 senators who voted against reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act, among the 34 who voted against raising the debt ceiling, among the 19 who tried to cut off military sales to Egypt, among the 36 who opposed a relief package for the regions hit by Hurricane Sandy, and among the three senators who voted against Mr. Kerry’s confirmation.
“I was compelled to vote no on Senator Kerry’s nomination because of his longstanding less-than-vigorous defense of U.S. national security issues,” said Mr. Cruz, who also questioned the commitment of Mr. Kerry and Mr. Hagel to the armed forces, though both served in Vietnam. Mr. Cruz has no record of military service.
Chris Chocola, the president of the Club for Growth, a conservative free-market political action committee that strongly backed Mr. Cruz in his victory last year against the establishment’s favorite, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, said the new senator was doing precisely what he had expected. The growing caucus of ardent conservatives — Mr. Cruz, Mr. Paul, Marco Rubio of Florida, Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania, Jeff Flake of Arizona, Mike Lee of Utah, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Tim Scott of South Carolina — has begun reshaping what it means to be a Republican in the Senate, he said.
“The last thing we need is another status quo senator or congressman who will go along to get along,” said former Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina, who pumped money into Mr. Cruz’s campaign, then left the Senate to lead the conservative Heritage Foundation.
Last month, Mr. Cruz faced off aggressively with Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York on a Sunday talk show. When Mayor Rahm Emanuel of Chicago wrote to the chiefs of big banks urging them not to invest in gun manufacturers, Mr. Cruz followed up with letters criticizing the “bullying” of a political “Godfather.”
After she raised the specter of McCarthyism, Ms. McCaskill was asked if she had spoken to Mr. Cruz about her concerns.
“I’m not sure it would do any good,” she said. “Do you?”
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02-16-2013, 11:47 AM
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#9
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 3, 2010
Location: Clarksville
Posts: 61,036
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EXTXOILMAN
(I'm on a mobile device)
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You riding your dildo again?
figured you for a Cruz supporter. They must be able to land a helicopter on your head!
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 12:10 PM
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#10
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Sep 23, 2010
Location: houston texas
Posts: 10,174
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
Not like this asshole. The GOP is embarrassed by him already.
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And by that do you mean the rinos? Fuck all those cocksuckers, they are the same as the fucking libtards.
Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF
Yes, Ted Cruz and Shelia Jackson Lee are cut from the same cloth! You don't see me praising that bitch now do you? Praising Cruz means you fall into the looney camp.
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I thought you already knew I am looney. Lmao
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
You riding your dildo again?
figured you for a Cruz supporter. They must be able to land a helicopter on your head!
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Now thats some funny shit, i do not care who ya are... lmfao
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 02:36 PM
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#11
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 17, 2011
Location: Texas
Posts: 843
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
Ted Cruz, kissing ass and calling names.
Nobody really believes this shit. Cruz is a pandering opportunist, plain and simple. ,
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Notwithstanding your obvious expertise in the ass kissing arena, I'll stick with my assessment on Cruz.
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 02:37 PM
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#12
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 3, 2010
Location: Clarksville
Posts: 61,036
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seedman55
And by that do you mean the rinos? Fuck all those cocksuckers, they are the same as the fucking libtards.
I thought you already knew I am looney. Lmao
Now thats some funny shit, i do not care who ya are... lmfao
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Actually, the Teawipes are RINOs.
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 02:50 PM
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#13
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Sep 23, 2010
Location: houston texas
Posts: 10,174
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
Actually, the Teawipes are RINOs.
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Sup, you really need to quit chewing those peyote buttons.
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 02:52 PM
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#14
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Mar 10, 2010
Location: Houston
Posts: 5,740
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Quote:
Originally Posted by IIFFOFRDB
Somebody order a shit sandwich?
Texas Senator Goes on Attack and Raises Bipartisan Hackles
Doug Mills/The New York Times
Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, on a senators-only elevator on Thursday. He says he intends to shake up Washington.
By JONATHAN WEISMAN
Published: February 15, 2013 997 Comments
WASHINGTON — As the Senate edged toward a divisive filibuster vote on Chuck Hagel’s nomination to be defense secretary, Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, sat silent and satisfied in the corner of the chamber — his voice lost to laryngitis — as he absorbed what he had wrought in his mere seven weeks of Senate service.
Related
Related in Opinion
Enlarge This Image
J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press
Critics said Mr. Cruz crossed a line in his questioning of Chuck Hagel, the Pentagon nominee.
Readers’ CommentsReaders shared their thoughts on this article.
Mr. Hagel, a former senator from Mr. Cruz’s own party, was about to be the victim of the first filibuster of a nominee to lead the Pentagon. The blockade was due in no small part to the very junior senator’s relentless pursuit of speeches, financial records or any other documents with Mr. Hagel’s name on them going back at least five years. Some Republicans praised the work of the brash newcomer, but others joined Democrats in saying that Mr. Cruz had gone too far.
Without naming names, Senator Barbara Boxer, Democrat of California, offered a biting label for the Texan’s accusatory crusade: McCarthyism.
“It was really reminiscent of a different time and place, when you said, ‘I have here in my pocket a speech you made on such and such a date,’ and, of course, nothing was in the pocket,” she said, a reference to Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s pursuit of Communists in the 1950s. “It was reminiscent of some bad times.”
In just two months, Mr. Cruz, 42, has made his presence felt in an institution where new arrivals are usually not heard from for months, if not years. Besides suggesting that Mr. Hagel might have received compensation from foreign enemies, he has tangled with the mayor of Chicago, challenged the Senate’s third-ranking Democrat on national television, voted against virtually everything before him — including the confirmation of John Kerry as secretary of state — and raised the hackles of colleagues from both parties.
He could not be more pleased. Washington’s new bad boy feels good.
“I made promises to the people of Texas that I would come to Washington to shake up the status quo,” he said in e-mailed answers to questions, in lieu of speaking. “That is what I intend to do, and it is what I have done in every way possible in the responsibilities that have been granted to me.”
In a body known for comity, Mr. Cruz is taking confrontational Tea Party sensibilities to new heights — or lows, depending on one’s perspective. Wowed conservatives hail him as a hero, but even some Republican colleagues are growing publicly frustrated with a man who has taken the zeal of the prosecutor and applied it to the decorous quarters of the Senate.
Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, said that some of the demands Mr. Cruz made of Mr. Hagel were “out of bounds, quite frankly.” Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, issued a public rebuke after Mr. Cruz suggested, with no evidence, that Mr. Hagel had accepted honorariums from North Korea.
“All I can say is that the appropriate way to treat Senator Hagel is to be as tough as you want to be, but don’t be disrespectful or malign his character,” Mr. McCain said in an interview.
Democrats were more blunt.
“He basically came out and made the accusation about money from North Korea or money from our enemies, and he just laid out there all of this accusatory verbiage without a shred of evidence,” said Senator Claire McCaskill, Democrat of Missouri. “In this country we had a terrible experience with innuendo and inference when Joe McCarthy hung out in the United States Senate, and I just think we have to be more careful.”
Mr. Cruz, a Canadian-born lawyer who won an upset primary victory last year, is adamant in his own defense. He said his focus at hearings had been on policy, not personality. With Mr. Hagel, whose nomination is set for a Senate vote the week of Feb. 25, he said his request for financial disclosures were backed by 24 other senators. As for his statement that Mr. Hagel may have received honorariums from nefarious sources, “the suggestions I have made in my arguments have been merely to raise examples for why I believe Senator Hagel’s financial disclosure is so important,” he said.
“Comity does not mean avoiding the truth,” he added. “And it would be wrong to avoid speaking the truth about someone’s record and past policy positions, even if doing so inevitably subjects me to personal criticism from Democrats and the media.”
To the growing core of ardent conservatives in the Senate, Mr. Cruz has offered a jolt of positive energy.
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Senator Boxer is accusing Ted Cruz of McCarthyism because he has researched Hagel's anti-semitic anti-Israel comments going back five years.
Imagine if the Republicans had nominated someone to be secretary of defense who had made similar remarks about blacks. The Democrats would hold him accountable for every word he had ever spoken from birth.
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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02-16-2013, 03:10 PM
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#15
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Valued Poster
Join Date: Jan 17, 2011
Location: Texas
Posts: 843
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Quote:
Originally Posted by joe bloe
Senator Boxer is accusing Ted Cruz of McCarthyism because he has researched Hagel's anti-semitic anti-Israel comments going back five years.
Imagine if the Republicans had nominated someone to be secretary of defense who had made similar remarks about blacks. The Democrats would hold him accountable for every word he had ever spoken from birth.
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+1.
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Quote
| 1 user liked this post
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