Tag: General News

  • Thursday LIVE: Troops Flood NYC Subway Amid Surge of Illegals as Biden Erects Fences Around Capital Ahead of SOTU


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    The American Journal: Biden To Gaslight Nation In State Of The Union Address – Watch LIVE

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  • BREAKING: Tinubu Suspends REA MD Ahmad Salihijo Over N1.2bn Fraud

    President Bola Tinubu has suspended the Managing Director/CEO of the Rural Electrification Agency (REA), Ahmad Salihijo Ahmad, along with three executive directors from office indefinitely.

    This followed investigations that uncovered a fraudulent expenditure amounting to N1.2 billion at the agency over the past two years.

    In a press release on Thursday, Tinubu’s spokesperson Ajuri Ngelale stated that in addition to Salihijo’s suspension, the following REA executive directors have also been suspended pending further investigation:

    • Olaniyi Alaba Netufo (Executive Director, Corporate Services)
    • Barka Sajou (Executive Director, Technical Services)
    • Sa’adatu Balgore (Executive Director, Rural Electrification Fund)

    Ngelale said some of the misappropriated funds have already been recovered by anti-graft agencies.

    He stated that Tinubu has ordered a wider probe into the conduct of the suspended officials.

    The president has appointed a new interim management team at REA with immediate effect. They are:

    • Abba Abubakar Aliyu (Acting Managing Director/CEO)
    • Ayoade Gboyega (Acting Executive Director, Corporate Services)
    • Umar Abdullahi Umar (Acting Executive Director, Technical Services)
    • Doris Uboh (Acting Executive Director, Rural Electrification Fund)
    • Olufemi Akinyelure (Head of Project Management Unit, Nigeria Electrification Project)

    Ngelale quoted Tinubu as saying he “expects all appointees in his administration to uphold the highest standards of transparency and accountability.” He reiterated Tinubu’s “determination to elevate the yearnings of Nigerians for good governance above narrow interests.”

    BREAKING: Tinubu Suspends REA MD Ahmad Salihijo Over N1.2bn Fraud is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: ICE gives some migrants smartphones to track them, not for personal use

    Florida state Sen. Jonathan Martin, R-Fort Myers, invoked a misleading claim about immigrants before the Senate approved new rules to prohibit homeless people from setting up camps in public spaces without state permission.

    The bill prohibits counties and municipalities from allowing public camping or sleeping on public property without permission. The bill also requires local governments to post information on their website on campsite locations — shelters with restrooms and running water — and how people can get permits to stay overnight in specific public places. 

    On March 4, before the bill passed the Senate, Sen. Shevrin Jones, D-Miami Gardens, asked Martin how homeless people can access that information if they lack laptops or smartphones.

    Martin replied that homeless people have access to information as others do and that he had seen them in downtown Fort Myers charging their cellphones on power strips. He then invoked migrants crossing the southern U.S. border.

    “This is the post-Obama phone era, this is the era where people are given smartphones when they cross the border and enter our country,” Martin said. “So, there’s a tremendous amount of information that everybody has, but of course not everybody has a cellphone, not everyone has the ability to look up that information on a website.” 

    Is he right that people who cross the border get smartphones?

    PolitiFact called and emailed Martin’s office but got no response. 

    Since 2018, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement gives smartphones or tablet computers to some immigrants who are released from federal custody after entering the country illegally and are awaiting decisions on their immigration cases. 

    The devices have the SmartLINK application, developed by BI Inc., a subsidiary of the GEO Group, a private prison company. This app lets officials track the migrants’ location. 

    Mike Alvarez, an ICE spokesperson, told PolitiFact that not all migrants are given a smartphone or a tablet for monitoring — the government gives them one only if they don’t have one at the time they’re enrolled in Alternatives to Detention programs. 

    The devices’ features are limited, people can use it only for the SmartLINK application, for emergency 911 calls and to communicate with immigration officials. They cannot access the internet.

    The app requires that people check in with immigration officials by uploading a selfie or answering a call from their case manager, according to The Associated Press.

    The devices also must be returned to ICE if the participants get a personal smartphone, are monitored instead through a GPS-device such as an ankle bracelet or a wrist-worn technology (such as a smartwatch that’s enabled only for monitoring), or have their case resolved.

    We’ve previously fact-checked similar claims, including from Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, that migrants get free cellphones. But this claim needs context.

    Our ruling

    Martin said, “This is the era where people are given smartphones when they cross the border and enter our country.”

    Some people may get smartphones when they cross the U.S. border, but Martin omits important context. These smartphones are not for personal use, but for tracking immigrants. The phones cannot be used to browse information online, post on social media or call friends or family. 

    We rate Martin’s claim Half True.

     



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  • It’s not just what Biden will say in State of the Union address, but how

    By ZEKE MILLER and SEUNG MIN KIM (Associated Press)

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is set to use his State of the Union address Thursday to promote his vision for a second term to a dispirited electorate that questions whether he’s up to the job and to warn that GOP front-runner Donald Trump would be a dangerous alternative.

    Biden’s third such address from the House rostrum will be something of an on-the-job interview, as the nation’s oldest president tries to quell voter concerns about his age and job performance while sharpening the contrast with his all-but-certain November rival.

    The president hopes to showcase his accomplishments on infrastructure and manufacturing, as well as push for action on aid to Ukraine, tougher migration rules, and lower drug prices, among other issues. But as he does so, the 81-year-old president will be closely watched not just for his message but for whether he can deliver it with vigor and command.

    White House aides said Biden would aim to prove his doubters wrong by flashing his combative side and trying to needle Republicans over positions he believes are out of step with the country, particularly on access to abortion, but also tax policy and healthcare. It’s part of his campaign-year effort to use even official speeches to clarify the choice for voters at the ballot box this fall.

    Biden spent last weekend working on the speech at the Camp David presidential retreat with his closest aides and presidential historian Jon Meacham. He was expected to keep fine-tuning it right into speech day, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.

    The president will be speaking before a historically ineffective Congress. In the GOP-led House, Speaker Mike Johnson took power five months ago after the chaotic ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Legislators are still struggling to approve funding bills for the current year and have been deadlocked for months on foreign assistance bills to help Ukraine stave off Russia’s invasion and support Israel’s fight against Hamas.

    The State of the Union address is a marquee night on the White House calendar, offering presidents a direct line to a captive audience of lawmakers and dignitaries in the House chamber and tens of millions of viewers at home. But even so, the night has lost some of its luster as viewership has declined.

    “You always hear people say, ‘Oh, the speech has completely lost its relevance. Just send a PDF of it. It should be a video.’ That’s just such nonsense,” said Michael Waldman, a speechwriter in the Clinton White House. “It may not be as big as Taylor Swift at the Super Bowl, but it’s a big audience for a political speech.”

    Biden aides inside the White House and on his campaign are hoping for some fresh viral moments — like when he tussled last year with heckling Republicans and chided them for past efforts to cut Medicare and Social Security.

    Johnson, eager to avoid a similar episode this year, in a private meeting on Wednesday urged Republicans to show “decorum” during the speech, according to a person familiar with his remarks to lawmakers.

    Biden goes into the speech with work to do shoring up his standing. Just 38% of U.S. adults approve of how he is handling his job as president, while 61% disapprove, according to a recent survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

    The same survey found that more than 6 in 10 (63%) say they’re not very or not at all confident in Biden’s mental capability to serve effectively as president. A similar but slightly smaller share (57%) say that Trump lacks the memory and acuity for the job.

    The already intense scrutiny of Biden’s age was magnified when special counsel Robert Hur raised questions about the president’s mental acuity in his report last month on Biden’s handling of classified information.

    Jim Messina, former President Barack Obama’s 2012 campaign manager, said Thursday’s speech offers Biden an important opportunity to address voter concerns.

    “The more people see him doing his job, the better,” Messina said. “And the more people see him out there being the president of the United States, the better off we are.”

    With Hur set to testify on Tuesday before lawmakers about his investigation, Messina said, Biden’s address could serve as a “prebuttal” to the special counsel’s appearance.

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  • The Zyn Craze: Nicotine’s New Disguise

    Nicotine’s new face: Zyn, a pouch product has been trending on social media. But is it a health hazard for young people? (Credit: Alfian Widiantono via Getty Images.)

    by Anissa Durham

    When it comes to nicotine, the impact on health — good or bad — depends on which researcher you’re talking to. Enter Zyn, a nicotine pouch that has been on the market for about a decade but recently exploded in popularity on social media. This isn’t your traditional smoke break; instead, it’s a discreet pouch tucked under the lip, slowly releasing nicotine into the system. 

    So, while public health experts debate whether getting a dose of nicotine through a pouch is simply substituting one unhealthy habit for another, there’s another danger lurking: The way nicotine-based products are often marketed to children and teens.  

    On TikTok, videos with teens using Zyn have racked up millions of views, even though it’s illegal to sell it to minors. Nicotine, the addictive drug in tobacco, has long been reported to increase the risk of cancer, heart disease, stroke, and birth-related illnesses.  

    Why this matters: Black adults face disproportionate rates of cancer, cardiovascular disease, depression, and stroke, and 87% of adults tried their first cigarette by age 18. Children and teens are incredibly vulnerable to addictive drugs. But instead of centering the debate on how harmful nicotine is — what’s actually leading kids to get ahold of these drugs? 

    A few things play a part. 

    • Big Tobacco: The tobacco industry has overwhelmingly spent billions of dollars to market these drugs in a way that attracts teens.  
    • Mental health: There’s a link between youth smoking and depression, anxiety, and stress. 
    • Social media influencers: Anyone can post just about anything on social media. Zynfluencers, as of late, are promoting the product on platforms like Tik Tok — some have accused influencers of targeting a younger audience. 
    • Flavors: Different flavors of the product often appeal to younger people who want to look attractive or cool, Dr. Robert Jackler, a tobacco advertising expert, told Time magazine. 
    Source: CDC • No data was provided for high school girsl use of smokeless tobacco and nicotine pouches. (Graphic by Anissa Durham)

    Solutions: Marketing tactics that target teens aren’t going to stop. It’s best to educate teens on the dangers of smoking and get to the underlying roots of why they want to do it. Here are a few tips from the American Heart Association. 

    • Raise cigarette prices. As teens are often financially provided for by a parent or guardian, raising the price can deter would-be smokers.  
    • Limit tobacco marketing. Regulatory initiatives that ban youth-focused marketing efforts help curb the appeal of smoking to young people.  
    • Prepare your children for peer pressure. Help your teens to know what to say when they are offered a cigarette or e-cigarette.  

    Bottom line: Zyn is just the latest trending tobacco-based product that is appealing to younger people. While the tactics to reach them get stronger, it’s critical to talk to children in your care and community about how to navigate a substance-addicted culture. Especially when Black adults face disproportionate rates of cancer, cardiovascular disease, depression, and stroke. 

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  • Watch: First Footage Of National Guard Patrolling NYC Subway Following Gov. Announcement


    Democrat-led tyranny isn’t coming, it’s here!

    The first videos of New Yorkers having their bags checked by police and National Guard troops in Big Apple subways are beginning to surface.

    “Martial Law” and “National Guard” were both top trending topics online Thursday following unelected New York Democrat Governor Kathy Hochul’s announcement of the scheme to intrude on average citizens instead of ending the leftist policies contributing to the rise in crime.

    Freedomnews.tv obtained the footage, which shows Americans going through bag checks guarded by armed police and national guardsmen when entering the city’s famous Grand Central Station.

    An X thread by Lebanese-American activist and author Peter Daou, who comes from a family of lifelong New Yorkers, accurately explained why the security theater has nothing to do with real safety.

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    This is about conditioning the public to accept brazen violations of civil liberties and rights,” he wrote. “Instead of criminalizing poverty, homelessness, and mental health, we could use the billions spent on military/cops to help people and improve quality of life for everyone. Even for those who believe in policing, you could simply have safety officers in subway cars, rather than deploying the National Guard to violate Fourth Amendment rights.”

    Daou then noted he’s been a Democrat for 25 years but refuses to “be silent when the Democratic Party does the exact same things they say Trump will do.”

    Of course, when citizens took matters into their own hands like Daniel Penny or Jordan Williams, who each killed men going wild on NYC subways, the city’s leftist prosecutors threw the book at them.

    Williams, who is a black man, avoided prosecution after a grand jury declined to indict him, while Penny, who is white and killed a black man, had amotion to dismiss his case denied by the judge.

    Some people, like Newsmax host Todd Starnes, wondered if there is more than meets the eye when it comes to the sudden deployment and suggested the city could be secretly beefing up protection due to a terror threat.





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  • Fire Incident Disrupts Operation At Murtala Muhammed Airport

    Murtala Muhammed International Airport

    A section of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, MMIA, Lagos was on fire on Thursday which led to a temporary suspension of operations according to reports.

    Unconfirmed reports said the fire broke out at the terminal of the E-Arrival section of the MMIA.

    The cause of the fire was not ascertained as of the time of filing the report but normal activities resumed at the terminal after firefighters intervened.

    Details Later…

    Fire Incident Disrupts Operation At Murtala Muhammed Airport is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: The U.S. Code doesn’t say traitors would be publicly hanged at high noon

    Editor’s note: This story contains graphic descriptions.

    It’s been 88 years since the last government-sponsored execution unfolded in the U.S. in a public space, open to anyone who wanted to attend.

    But some social media users are claiming traitors to the country could still suffer this gruesome fate of public execution.

    “The following is the U.S. penalty for treason,” read the text in a March 3 Instagram video before showing a card that read: 

    “Title 18 U.S. Code section 2381, which says ‘When in the presence of two witnesses to the same overt act or in an open court of law if you fail to timely move to protect and defend the constitution of the United States and honor your oath of office you are subject to the charge of capital felony treason and upon conviction you will be taken by the posse to the nearest busy intersection and at high noon hung by the neck until dead.”

    (Screenshot from Instagram)

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    We asked several legal experts about this claim; four of them responded and found it baseless. Stuart Banner, death penalty historian and law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles; Carlton Larson, University of California, Davis law professor who specializes in the law of treason; and Eugene Volokh, who’s also a UCLA law professor, told PolitiFact they’ve never heard of such a statute.

    “It’s pure invention,” said Frank O. Bowman III, a University of Missouri law professor.

    Here’s what Title 18 U.S. Code section 2381 actually says:

    “Whoever, owing allegiance to the United States, levies war against them or adheres to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort within the United States or elsewhere, is guilty of treason and shall suffer death, or shall be imprisoned not less than five years and fined under this title but not less than $10,000; and shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States.”

    We also looked at the historical versions of the criminal procedure for treason. The 1925 version of the U.S. Code stipulated the same penalties, plus one other: the person’s real and personal property would be levied on and collected. The 1934, 1940, 1946 versions outlined the same penalties. 

    The collection penalty was omitted in the 1952 version because it was “obsolete and repugnant to the more humane policy of modern law which does not impose criminal consequences on the innocent.”

    Proceeding versions (1958, 1964, 1970, 1976, 1982, 1988) were mostly identical to the current statute, save for minor wording changes.

    Although U.S. Code stipulates the death penalty as a punishment for treason, traitors wouldn’t be taken to and hanged at the “nearest busy intersection.” Public executions, described in one law journal article as those conducted in the “public squares or commons,” have been outlawed in all states. 

    States started to prohibit public executions in the 1830s. PolitiFact obtained a copy of a statute passed by the New York legislature in 1835, which restricted executions to the county prison and specified the people who can attend.

    Kentucky was the last state to ban public executions. In August 1936, the Daviess County sheriff oversaw the public hanging of Rainey Bethea, a Black man who was convicted of raping a white woman. More than 20,000 people attended, according to The New York Times. Eighteen months later, the state’s governor banned public executions.

    How the Constitution defines treason

    Treason is the only crime defined in the Constitution. Article III, Section 3 says:

    “Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort. No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the Testimony of two Witnesses to the same overt Act, or on Confession in open Court.”

    This crime is rarely prosecuted. Volokh said of the Instagram’s post claim, “It is not enough to not timely protect and defend the Constitution, or to break one’s oath. To be guilty, one has to actually levy war against the U.S., or intentionally assist their enemies.”

    According to the Congressional Research Service’s Constitution Annotated, the framers defined treason that way to “prevent the politically powerful from escalating ordinary partisan disputes into capital charges of treason.”

    “‘Capital felony treason’ is gibberish, since the Constitution (and English law) distinguished treason from felony more broadly (very different punishments),” Larson said. “And ‘fail to timely move to protect and defend’ is devoid of any substantive content.”

    We rate the claim that people convicted of treason would be “taken by the posse to the nearest busy intersection and at high noon hung by the neck until dead” False.

    PolitiFact News Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.



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  • Can 49ers make one more big addition?

    SANTA CLARA – The NFL’s saloon doors swing open Monday for free agency, and the 49ers still have enough money to buy a round. Perhaps one last round.

    Next year’s payroll will take on a big-ticket extension for quarterback Brock Purdy. Already loaded with a bevy of highly paid stars, the 49ers’ roster remains very much within a championship window.

    Enough salary cap space exists – or will be created — to splurge on a free agent or two. Or perhaps their aggressive nature leads to another big-time trade, like the March 2019 move for pass rusher Dee Ford.

    General manager John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan can’t sit idle. It’s not their style. And it would be an injustice to not add, oh, that final piece after being so close – literally a fourth-and-1 stop – from winning the Super Bowl.

    So expect another plea to CEO Jed York for his blessing on free agency spending, for another run at the franchise’s sixth Lombardi Trophy – three decades after their fifth title.

    This goes beyond budgeting for a Brandon Aiyuk extension at, say, $25 million or more per year — the going rate for a top-flight wide receiver.

    Where could they strike for this year’s big shot? Odds are it will be a lineman – offense or defense, on the edge or in the interior. Don’t rule out other areas of need: cornerback, wide receiver, tight end, linebacker and return specialist. Linemen could be the priciest.

    If the 49ers go after a franchise-tagged player again, eight exist this year, including edge rushers Josh Allen (Jaguars) and Brian Burns (Panthers), and cornerback L’Jarius Sneed (Chiefs).

    Other defensive linemen slated to hit free agency: Chris Jones (Chiefs), Danielle Hunter (Vikings), Jonathan Greenard (Texans), Bryce Huff (Jets), Leonard Floyd (Bills), Yannick Ngakoue (Bears), Andrew Van Ginkel (Dolphins), Jadeveon Clowney (Ravens), and, Romeo Okwara (Lions). All pale in comparison to the potential pairing of Nick Bosa with his older brother Joey, whose tenure with the Los Angeles Chargers could be in financial peril but also would cost the 49ers another chunk of equity.

    When it comes to offensive linemen, this 49ers regime has shied away from multi-year moves in free agency, aside from center Weston Richburg in 2018; left tackle Trent Williams arrived via trade as the 2020 draft ended. Laken Tomlinson, two years after leaving for the New York Jets’ riches, is available and likely more affordable.

    Historically, the 49ers haven’t been afraid of a “big move” at the turn of each league year in March. A quick recap from the Lynch/Shanahan regime:

    2017: The massive roster overhaul began with a parade of free agent arrivals, led by Pierre Garçon, fullback Kyle Juszczyk, and kicker Robbie Gould. Brian Hoyer arrived as their bridge quarterback, until Jimmy Garoppolo came aboard in an October trade.

    2018: After making Garoppolo the NFL’s highest-paid quarterback, the 49ers dipped into free agency for cornerback Richard Sherman, running back Jerick McKinnon, and Richburg.

    2019: Ford, the Chiefs’ franchise-tagged pass rusher, came in exchange for a second-round pick (and an $85 million extension). Complementary parts for an NFC Championship run arrived in free agency with linebacker Kwon Alexander and running back Tevin Coleman.

    2020: Trading defensive tackle DeForest Buckner for the Colts’ first-round pick backfired, but, in the 49ers’ defense, they were able to pay stalwarts Arik Armstead and Jimmie Ward while using that top pick on Javon Kinlaw. Free agency amid COVID’s outbreak trickled in only defensive end Kerry Hyder, guard Tom Compton, and wide receiver Travis Benjamin. Money, after all, still needed to go to George Kittle in an August extension (five years, $75 million).

    2021: All the drama centered on the 49ers rewarding Williams with the largest contract for an NFL offensive lineman (six years, $138 million). Fullback Kyle Juszczyk also re-signed, and enough money was left over for the free agency pulls of center Alex Mack, linebacker Samson Ebukam, and defensive end Arden Key. By mid-July, Fred Warner got his second contract (five years, $95 million) as a homegrown star.

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  • Biden Administration Takes Step To Curb Credit Card Fees, Bridge Racial Disparities

    The ambitious plan, announced on Tuesday, March 5, aims not only to alleviate immediate financial burdens for consumers but also addresses the systemic inequities faced by those residing in predominantly Black or African American and Hispanic or Latino communities.

    By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

    In a move to confront racial disparities in credit terms, the Biden administration has unveiled a proposal to cap credit card late fees at $8, challenging the longstanding issue of “junk fees” that disproportionately affect people of color and minorities. The ambitious plan, announced on Tuesday, March 5, aims not only to alleviate immediate financial burdens for consumers but also addresses the systemic inequities faced by those residing in predominantly Black or African American and Hispanic or Latino communities.

    Recent studies have shed light on the stark differences in credit terms, revealing that cardholders in these minority-majority neighborhoods face lower credit limits and higher interest rates than their counterparts in predominantly white areas, even considering factors like credit scores and income. One analysis of a diverse sample of cardholders uncovered troubling trends, including credit limits for those in majority Black and Hispanic zip codes, which were, on average, $3,412 and $4,285 lower, respectively. Also, interest rates for individuals in these zip codes were, on average, approximately 1.3 and 1.4 percentage points higher, respectively.

    Beyond the immediate financial relief for consumers, the White House said the proposed regulation aligns with the broader mission of the Biden administration to dismantle systemic economic disparities. By reducing excessive fees, particularly those impacting people of color, the administration aims to create a more level playing field and alleviate the financial burdens marginalized communities face.

    The disparities in credit terms impact the upfront costs of credit and have broader implications. Individuals in the majority Black and Hispanic zip codes often carry their credit card balances for extended periods, leading to higher overall costs. Lower credit limits can also result in elevated credit utilization rates, potentially contributing to lower credit scores.

    As part of a comprehensive strategy, Biden announced that his administration is forming a new “strike force” to combat illegal and unfair pricing across various sectors, including groceries, prescription drugs, health care, housing, and financial services. Officials said the multifaceted approach underscores the administration’s commitment to dismantling systemic barriers and promoting financial inclusivity.

    While the proposal is expected to save Americans up to $10 billion annually, the White House said its potential impact on racial and economic disparities signifies a critical step towards building a more just and equitable financial system.

    “Credit card companies collect billions of dollars in excessive late fees at the expense of economically vulnerable families every year,” Chuck Bell, advocacy program director at Consumer Reports, said in a statement. “It’s simply unfair to impose a steep late fee penalty that far exceeds the credit card company’s costs, especially when someone is just a few hours or a couple of days late making their payment.”

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