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June 26, 2025 • 33 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's been Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse
Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. We'll touch on
a couple of these immigration things. We are going to
discuss the leaks, the leaks from the Pentagon about just
how damaged were the nuclear sites. We'll do a bunch
of emails, all that and so much more coming up

(00:20):
on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now, just a
couple final things on this. I mentioned that the two
things the two main reasons why we have animal after
animal after animal assuming political office in this country. Our
American students are taught that America sucks in the university
system and the mass importation of foreigners that has watered

(00:45):
down and destroyed significant portions of our culture. So now
in certain places it's like we don't have a culture.
And here's the thing about what I said. You know,
I said, those are the two things the communists know.
Those are there are two things. Why do you think
it is? Every now and then you'll get some dirty

(01:06):
commedy suggesting free college for everybody. Everybody, everyone should get
to go for free. Why do you think they want that?
Why do you think the communists in this country. Trash
trade schools, trash blue collar work. No, you got to
go to college.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Why do you think it is?

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Why do you think it is that every single Democrat
runs state in this country hates homeschooling or private schools. No,
everybody has to go to the public schools where we
can get our hands on you. And why do you
think it is every communist in this country speaks like

(01:44):
this about foreigners.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
I remember the first day I read about the deportations
to El Salvador of the of the alleged trend or
Aqua members, for whom no evidence was ever presented that
they had anything to do with Trendy Aragua. And I
remember saying to Mike, like, I wish I didn't feel
so gutted, and I wish I could stop thinking about

(02:08):
these guys being scared in El Salvador. And then I
was somewhere I was. I was in Westchester. It's usually
a baseball headline.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Democrat Rep. Dave requests one point six million dollars in
taxpayer funds for a left wing group that teaches illegal
aliens how to dodge ice. Democrat members of Congress are
so committed to these foreigners, they're bringing in as much

(02:42):
of your money as possible to hand it out to them,
and teaching them how to stay here. Headline New Mexico
Democrat judge resigns after ice arrests alleged Trend de Aragua
member in his home. You do remember this story, right,
A judge, a judge who allowed an illegal alien Trend

(03:07):
de Aragua member to live with him. And there are
pictures with the gang member and the judge's wife. The
Communists understand what I said the first hour. They understand
it is one hundred percent true. They understand their true power,
their lasting power that will eventually lead to their complete

(03:31):
takeover of this country if they are not stopped. Their
true power is their ability ability to educate your children
oftentimes you pay them to do so in college, and
their ability to replace patriotic Americans with foreigners who can
be bribed easily. That is what is happening, and that

(03:51):
is more important than anything else. You woke up this
morning and you found out that some psychocommune is probably
going to be the next mayor of New York, and
you wanted to know how, and you wanted to know why,
and you wanted this stuff stopped. This is why this
stuff happens. This is exactly why this stuff happens. And

(04:15):
if you took that away, if you could fix the
universities or eliminate the universities, if you could stop the
mass importation of foreigners, the Democrat Party would disappear. It
would disappear overnight, at least this modern version of it.
You'd probably get a better version that would rise, that
would be more representative of blue collar people and stuff
like that, like it used to be. But whatever this

(04:37):
disgusting comedy version is would disappear like that. That's a fact.
Let's do some emails. Remember you can email the show
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. All right, so I
went over last night in detail about my technique for
killing a cheetah hand to hand, and there was some pushback.

(04:59):
I got things like this, Jesse, Beware of the cheetah's
hind legs. They pull those rear legs up by their
face and have significant force when they extend them. The
claws are extremely sharp and will eviscerate you. Puncture a
lung or heart. They're not gonna puncture my heart, those
claws aren't that long. Or a femoral artery now that

(05:21):
I could see could happen. Additionally, they can flex and
extend their hind legs in rapid succession. They can also
spin their bodies rapidly to get better footing and leverage.
I think you need to get it on the ground
on its back with all your weight on it to
minimize its use of legs. Grip the neck high, squeeze

(05:43):
as hard as you can. You know what, I actually
don't hate that. I I've thought a lot about applying
the rear naked choke. Here's my concern with the rear
naked choke going to be more difficult to get the
rear naked choke clinched in than it is to just

(06:05):
wrap my hands around the throat of the cheetah. And
in an attempt to get the rear naked choke in,
I really run the risk of this, and this is
why I've rejected this method. I'm not saying I would
never do it whenever I get in my cheetah fight,
but this is why I've rejected this method. Mainly in
my attempt to cench in the rear naked choke, my

(06:27):
forearm is going to be ware right underneath its mouth.
What if it wraps its mouth around my forearm and
bites down hard, which of course it would because my
arm is going to be right there. What that has
the potential to do is tear enough tendons in my forearm,

(06:48):
tear enough valuable stuff in my forearm that my arm,
my hand becomes useless. And if I become one handed,
I'm going to lose. That's what I can't I can't
afford to lose the power, the incredible power in my hands.
That's my only point. What Chris Jesse, I love you, brother,
but one hundred and forty pound cat against an unarmed

(07:10):
man will result in a dead man. The cheetah is
three times faster than a human man and solid muscle.
It will instinctively protect its neck. If you did manage
to wrap your hands around its neck, he could easily
break free. You've never seen my hands, Okay, you've never
seen anyway. He would kick your guts out. Okay, Now
that I will say, the best argument, the best argument

(07:35):
I've seen is the hind legs maybe tearing at an
artery on my legs or tearing apart my guts I
as I was choking it. That is a concern that
is a concern, but remember it's one hundred and forty pounds.
The cheetah weighs more than my wife. It's one hundred
and forty pounds. Look, they have weight classes in boxing

(07:59):
and nam MMA and things like that for a reason,
and it's not to protect the bigger fighter, just simple mass.
I'm not even saying that I'm solid muscle like the cheetah,
although I kind of am. I'm just saying just wait alone,
I'll just lay on it. I can do it. Jesse,

(08:19):
remind everyone to eat at McDonald's tonight because the left
e comedies are boyconning McDonald's to back their DEI policies.
All right, if you insist. Hey, Jesse, I heard a
guy who thinks we should apologize to Japan. Can you
talk about the rape of Nang King in Unit seven
thirty one? I guess I could do a little of that. Yeah,

(08:41):
good point. Jewish meats are Chris before we get into
Japan and that kind of stuff. And actually, I do
want to address the NATO comments that were kind of weird,
and I probably should address the Pentagon leaks before I
completely derail the show and talk about Japan and Unit
seven thirty one and all this stuff, or I before
I get into that, I should probably address a couple

(09:03):
more newsworthy items like NATO and the Pentagon. But Jewish
producer Chris is backing me up on this. I'm shocked
to say, but he's like, Hey, it's one hundred and
forty pounds. I'm telling you we could do this. I'm
telling you this is something that I could do. Not
we you probably can't. But now that I've thought about
it for long enough, and now that I have my
technique down, we can do this anyway. Did you hear

(09:26):
what the NATO chairs said to Trump?

Speaker 4 (09:28):
For too long one ally, the United States carriage too
much of the burden of that commitment, and that changes today,
President Trump. Dear Donald, you made this change possible. Your
leadership on this has already produced one trillion dollars an
extra spending from Europe and ally since twenty sixteen, and

(09:51):
the decisue today we'll produce trillions more for our comedy
fence to make us stronger and fairer by equalizing space
between America and America.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
He also called him Daddy, and Trump was.

Speaker 5 (10:09):
Asked about it.

Speaker 6 (10:10):
Mark Richard, the NATO chief who is your friend. He
called you daddy earlier. Do you regard your NATO allies
as kind of children?

Speaker 5 (10:21):
No, he likes me.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
I think he likes me. If he doesn't, I'll let
you know. I'll come back and I'll hit him hard. Daddy.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
Anyway, Let's talk about the leaks at the Pentagon, because
I'm so unbelievably uncomfortable right now. Maybe that means something
different in European. I really I can't say believe. It
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
Member.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
You can listen to the show. You can download it
if you missed a single second this brilliant programming. You
can download it on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. All this stuff
is free, and if it's all free, the show is free.
Let's talk about our government. Let's talk about a conversation
I had with a senator today as it pertains to

(11:10):
the federal government, the deep state, if you will, the swamp,
whatever word you want to put on at the blob.
There's a lot of different words for it, because leaks
in the government are on people's minds. And before I
get to the hegsas stuff, the Pentagon leaks I was
asking this senator. I said, hey, we just found out
the Federal Bureau of Investigation. They found out that China

(11:36):
was getting involved in our twenty twenty election, and they
covered it up because they wanted Joe Biden to win.
And I said, look, I want this organization completely disbanded.
But if we can't do that, I at least want
some people in the FBI to go to prison. I

(11:56):
mean that kind of action should result in the end
of the organization period, no matter what. People have to
go to federal prison for a long time for doing
that with your position at the FBON. And you know
what he said to me. He said, Jesse, let's talk
about Pam Bondi for a second. I said, okay. He said,
Pam Bondy had to fire a bunch of people with

(12:17):
the DOJ when she first got there because they were
clearly communist activists. Okay, Good said Jesse. She can't find replacements.
She can't find qualified non communist replacements who will be
willing to take a position at the DOJ to do

(12:40):
that type of thing, because A there aren't very many
of them because law schools produce communists, and b the
law fair that has taken place against people who have
served the Republican Party has been so pervasive by the
communists in our legal system, them dragging people into the

(13:01):
courts suing them. Remember, the process can be the punishment.
You don't have to be convicted of a crime or
something like that, or or lose your lawsuit to have
legal action be devastating. How much money do you have
right now in the bank. One guy the Senator was
telling me about Democrat law fair against him has cost

(13:25):
him personally a million dollars in legal fees. If he
never goes to prison, if he never loses his lawsuit,
he's still out a million dollars. Communists in this country
are so aggressive and evil that people are afraid to
take DOJ positions that will put FBI agents in prison.

(13:49):
That's how deep the deep state is. Now, let's talk
about this.

Speaker 7 (13:54):
And it was produced by the Defense Intelligence Agency, which
is the Pentagon's intelligence arm And it is worth noting
that it is a very early assessment. The strikes were
only a matter of days ago, and the intelligence community
is still gathering intelligence. They are still working to come
up with a full comprehensive picture of what exactly happened. Here,
but based on a battle damage assessment that was carried

(14:15):
out by US Central Command, essentially looking at the images
and looking at what was actually damaged. The Defense Intelligence
Agency has assessed that the core components of Aron's nuclear
program are largely intact and that Iron's nuclear program has
essentially only been set back by months.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Pete HEGs Seth addressed that there's a reason the.

Speaker 8 (14:35):
President calls out fake news for what it is.

Speaker 9 (14:38):
These pilots, these refuelers, these fighters, these air defenders. The
skill and the courage it took to go into enemy
territory flying thirty six hours on behalf of the American
people in the world to take out a nuclear program
is beyond what anyone in this audience can fathom.

Speaker 8 (14:55):
And then the instinct, the instinct of CNN, the instinct
of the New York Time Times, is to try to
find a way to spin it for their own political reasons,
to try to hurt President Trump or our country. They
don't care what the troops think, they don't care what
the world thinks. They want to spin it to try
to make him look bad based on a leak.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Of course, we've all.

Speaker 8 (15:16):
Seen plenty of leakers, and what a leakers. Do they
have agendas and what do they do? Do they share
the whole information or just the part that they want
to introduce. And when they introduce that preliminary a preliminary
report that's deemed to be a low assessment, you know
what a low assessment means? Low confidence in the data

(15:36):
in that report. And why is there low confidence? Because
all of the evidence of what was just bombed by
twelve thirty thousand pound bombs is buried under a mountain,
devastated and obliterated.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
So if you want to.

Speaker 8 (15:49):
Make an assessment of what happened at four Doah, you
better get a big shovel and go really deep because
Iron's nuclear program is obliterated.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
And he said, this is there a leak investigation?

Speaker 10 (16:02):
Of course, we're doing a leak investigation with the FBI
right now because this information is for internal purposes battle
damage assessments, and CNN and others are trying to spin
it to make the president look bad when this was
an overwhelming success.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Elak investigation, eleak investigation that is necessary because our federal
government is full of communist subversives who will need cap
any effort, any effort made to save this country. This
is what we are up against, a vast network of

(16:38):
communist activists in positions of power who will use their
positions of power to protect the communist revolution and to
hurt the right. This is our challenge, and this is
why I'm moving on and I'm doing emails and I'm
finally going to answer the guy's question about Japan and
Unit seven thirty one and things like that.

Speaker 4 (16:57):
Hang on.

Speaker 5 (17:00):
Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. Remember you
can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com
whatever you would like, love, hey, death threats.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
Ask doctor Jesse questions for Friday. I figured that's enough
heavy news for at least a little bit on the show.
So let's do some heavy history, all right, Jesse. I
heard a guy who thinks we should apologize to Japan.
Can you talk about the rape of name king and
Unit seven thirty one?

Speaker 4 (17:31):
All right?

Speaker 1 (17:31):
So those are two separate things, but I feel like
talking about it, so we'll go ahead and talk about it.
Let's do Unit seven thirty one. First. Here's the most
basic history I can give you World War two. A
lot of people think World War Two begin in Europe.
It's hard to say. When things begin, right, different people

(17:52):
have different ideas about it. A lot of people think
World War Two begin at the beginning of World War One, right,
they say it was the same war. But Japan was
inside China conquering portions of China a long time before
Hitler's tanks rolled across the borders of Europe. Okay, Japan

(18:16):
was this rising imperial power. They didn't have enough resources
for their people. They hated the Chinese. The Chinese hated them.
There's all kinds of historical hatred there. And Japan's looking
across that little stretch of water and saying, well, why
don't we just go take some of it? And they
started to do that, all right. So inside of China

(18:41):
there was something called Unit seven thirty one. And one
of the most interesting parts of Unit seven thirty one
was how it ended, to be honest with you, But
we'll get to that in a minute. Unit seven thirty
one was this. It was an experimentation center for the
Jabapanese military and intelligence community to figure out weapons, equipment,

(19:10):
things that worked, things that didn't work. Now, that is
the most benign explanation of what happened at Unit seven
thirty one. I can give you. But that's how the
Japanese government saw it. What are we doing here while
we're doing biological weapons testing and we're figuring out the
human body organs how they work, amputations were medical care.

(19:36):
That was how the Japanese government looked at it. But
it's the thing about not just racial superiority. I was
about to call it racial superiority because that was a
big thing for japan back then. They did believe they
were a superior people to all others, and they thought
they were far superior to the Chinese, who they regarded

(19:57):
as rats or dogs. That's just how they thought them.

Speaker 4 (20:00):
But it really.

Speaker 1 (20:01):
Applies to any kind of superiority, and throughout human history,
the worst atrocities take place when there is this way
of thinking that this entire group of people they are
less than us, they are less than we are. And
every single race has participated in this, every single religion

(20:23):
has participated in this region. So this is not unique
to Japan, but that was the way of thinking in Japan.
So if you're in Japan, if you're a Japanese, if
you're part of the Japanese government, and you want to
learn about biological weapons, biological weapons are something that have
always fascinated people. Can we use disease as a weapon.

(20:47):
Can we use it on them? Can we use it
on them and make sure it doesn't blow back on us?
What can we do with this stuff? So you feel
like you're racially superior. So they started kidnapping Chinese people.
This is one of the parts of it that it's
just amazing. They would just go grab men, women, children, babies.

(21:12):
They would grab them and drag them to this place.
It was a former fortress. This place known as Unit
seven thirty one. It was incredibly secretive. If you were
on a train that went by it, the shades would
all be it was required. The shades would all be
drawn blackout shades. You're not going to be able to
look out at it. That's how secret of this place was.

(21:35):
And what they would do there is just some of
the most medieval horrible stuff you can imagine. And they
did it for research purposes. I've told you this before.
For instance, frostbite, they wanted to know how that works.
Can you rehab after frostbite? Your basic things that you

(21:57):
would think would help troops. Yeah, that sounds good, except
they would dump ice all over or dump water all
over somebody in the freezing cold, then let their arm
freeze into a solid block of ice and then break
it or then let it thaw cut it off. That honestly,
the stuff that they did, there a lot of it.

(22:19):
I can't go into because there are children listening. But
amputations organ removal without anesthesia. Imagine you're a Chinese peasant
one day work in the rice fields. The Japanese military
shows up, throws you in the back of a truck,

(22:41):
drives you over to Unit seven point thirty one, where
they strap you down to a table and proceed to
start cutting out your liver without any pain medication. Yeah,
the Japanese wanted to use the play on the Chinese.
This was a thing that they did and tried to do,

(23:03):
And so they tried to gnats and injecting people with
diseases and then sitting back and studying them through a window.
How they die, How long did it take them to die?
The things they would do to women, I'm not going
to go into again because there are children listening, but
you can use your imagination. And if the women got pregnant,

(23:29):
the babies too. It is one of the darker chapters
in world War two. And I say that with full
knowledge that World War Two had a lot of very
very dark chapters. I don't know that I would. I
don't know that I would allow children under the age
of fourteen fifteen to read a book on Unit seven

(23:53):
thirty one. That's how dark it is. And I mentioned
the ending of it, about how it might be the
worst part of it. You want to hear something terrible.
The researchers, lots of them, got off scott free. Scott
free maybe putting it strongly. But the Soviet Union, they

(24:14):
were very interested in this research for obvious reasons. Hey
did you.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Guys figure something else? Figure out something with all this
biological weapons stuff.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
So the Soviets, oh yeah, they put the researchers through
trials and things like that, but they send them to
prison for two years and then bring them into the
fold wanting to acquire that knowledge. And before you start
screaming at the radio, it figures those dirty comies. We

(24:46):
did the same thing the United States of America, concerned
about the Soviet Union, concerned about Soviet Union weapons programs,
biological weapons programs, the United States of America grabbed these
same researchers and brought them into the fold because we

(25:10):
wanted access to the knowledge the Soviets now had because
of these researchers. It's it's an ugly it's an ugly story,
a gory story. It's not one of my favorites I love.
I'm fine with battle stories and war stories and stuff
like that. But ob is the member of the family

(25:31):
that she'll sit down and watch shows on surgery. Hey, Jesse,
you have to come. Look there, they're cutting a tumor
out of this guy's stomach. Now, I'm good, thanks, not
interested at all. But it's a lot of that kind
of stuff, only as dark as you can possibly imagine.
And what I just gave you was the PG version

(25:52):
of it again, because children are listening, and I don't
need to give everybody a bunch of freaking nightmares. And
I certainly don't want parents angry yet me for telling
some dark things about it. But it's a dark, dark
period of time, and if that's stuff, if you're into it,
I don't, like I said, I did not enjoy reading
about it, but maybe you will. Go'll pick up a
book on it. Is the Jesse Kelly Show with me.

(26:16):
You're humble, Cheetah Choker. Jesse Kelly hosting this thing as
I always do. Remember, you can download the show iHeart
Spotify iTunes. You can also email the show Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. So one more thing on this
little bit of history, and then we're going to get
back to some politics and other things. The rape of

(26:38):
nan King or the Nan King massacre or nan Jing massacre,
but it goes by a bunch of different names.

Speaker 6 (26:45):
What happened.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
I'm gonna explain what happened, and I'm gonna tell you.
I'm gonna warn you ahead of time. The way I
explain some of this might sound like a defense of
what the japan Is did. You shouldn't take it as
a defense. You should take it as an explanation. I
already explained about the racial superiority aspect of the Japanese

(27:13):
in World War Two. They felt that they were a
superior people and far superior to the backwards, stupid, low
down Chinese. That was just how they thought. The Japanese
eventually go into Shanghai. They are going to go fight
the Chinese in Shanghai. It's called known as the Battle

(27:33):
of Shanghai. It's got a couple different names, but you
go look it up as fascinating thing. And it was
a very very very rough affair. Chinese were fighting, the
Japanese were talking in the streets, urban combat, hand to
hand combat. There's a river. People are dying in the river,

(27:55):
being massacred in the river. Americans died during this whole affairs. Fascinating.
It's really a fascinating thing most people don't know about.
Maybe I should do a history on it sometimes. But
the Battle of Shanghai is what it was. The fighting
was fierce, as I mentioned, but the Japanese eventually win.
They win and the Chinese army is in full retreat.

(28:19):
I mentioned the fierceness of the fighting for this reason.
When you read about military atrocities throughout history, and this
could apply. I remember our Alexander, the great history we did.
This applies to ancient history when it comes to sieges. Long, violent, miserable,
bloody military campaigns oftentimes can result in military atrocities. Because

(28:47):
you as a soldier, I know, maybe if you've never
been one, maybe you're a good person. Don't think you
could ever be this, But I'm telling you right now,
when you go through enough misery, enough death, enough blood,
when it's gone on for long enough, not only are
you changed, but your blood gets up. Someone's getting your

(29:11):
blood up. Your vengeance meter starts peaking, and you will
do things in that moment that in a normal, isolated
situation you would never even consider doing. Why are sieges
ancient sieges? Why do they so often result in massive

(29:34):
murder and rape and looting and burning? And this is
the norm of a siege Because after you're done finally
breaking through the walls, getting hot oil poured on you,
watching your friends die, it's gone on for six months,
the food has sucked, life is miserable, everything's horrible, and
you finally get a chance to get your hands on

(29:57):
the people who did that to you. Human beings can
turn into savages in that moment. It is a human
nature thing that it's one of the terrible things about us.
But it is real. I have, on a much, much,
much lower level, nothing like this, experienced it myself in

(30:17):
my own life. It happens, your blood gets up, and
someone's going to get hurt. When that kind of thing happens.
You combine that, Okay, So the Japanese win in the
Battle of Shanghai, Combine the fact that they just went
through this hard fought street to street hand to hand
fighting affair. Combine the fact that their blood is up

(30:41):
with the fact that they already think the Chinese are lesser,
lower animals, rats, dogs, whatever word you want to put
on it, you have a recipe right there for a massacre.
That's just the bottom line. Now, it's a long road

(31:02):
from Shanghai to Nanking. The Chinese army that is escaping Shanghai,
remember they're routing, they're in full retreat. They are oftentimes running,
oftentimes throwing down their weapons, Oftentimes they're putting on civilian clothing,

(31:25):
dropping their uniforms. Hey, I don't know anything about the
Chinese army. That's an aspect of this as well. The
Japanese army gets in hot pursuit and they start massacring
every Chinese person they can get their hands on. They
are Remember this is a China. It's very tempting to

(31:46):
think about China as just the big cities like Shanghai
and Beijing in these places, but the vast majority of
China is rural. It's a very rural place, tiny little
villages all over the place. At least it was back then.
Not as much now, but at least it was back then,
and the Japanese army would wipe out entire villages. And

(32:07):
I'm not going to once again go into the things
that happen to the women before they were killed, the
children before they were killed. To this day, you can
go see mass graves as they would kill everybody. Dig
a big hole, put the bodies in there, put a
big dirt mound on it. They are having competitions, competitions

(32:28):
that are being reported on in Japanese newspapers back home,
Competitions to see who can cut off the most heads
with their samurai sword. This is not an isolated one
or two time incident. They are killing and torturing and
doing horrible things to every Chinese person they can get

(32:51):
their hands on as they pursue the retreating Chinese army
back towards Nang King. Now, in Nang King, they are
aware the Japanese army is coming, and their government basically
leaves and they pretty much put in charge of Nan King,
the maintenance of Nan King, the governance of Nan King

(33:13):
a Nazi John Robbie is his name, Rabi Robbie. Have
heard it a bunch of ways. R Abe John Robbie,
he's a Nazi.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
Now.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Remember Japan and Germany their allies at this time. But
Robbie's kind of running the show for the Chinese in Nanking.
What happens next, we'll touch on briefly, then we'll get
back to politics. Hang on,
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