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March 27, 2025 • 31 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Luck and Load. Michael Very Show.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Trump can't handle strong successful women.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
You can't handle women, particularly strong women.

Speaker 4 (00:15):
Donald Trump, you never see him around strong intelligent women.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
I am woman. Here.

Speaker 5 (00:26):
We will undertake a large job and a large duty
that we have to fulfill that the American people expect
us to do by securing our border, to make sure
that our nation is a nation with borders or we're
no nation at all, and that we are making sure
that those criminal actors that are perpetuating violence in our
communities and our in our cities and towns and states

(00:48):
are removed.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
From this country.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
That there's consequences for breaking the law in our country. Again,
there has to be consequences, because when Americans break the law,
there's consequences, and that will be the priority. And that
is one of the reas that today the American people
have lost their trust. President Trump will build it back
and know that their federal government is accountable to them.

Speaker 6 (01:09):
Long they got here right on. Don't need any guns.

Speaker 7 (01:35):
Just the American people delivered quite an incredible mandate for
change in this election with the popular vote and the
electoral vote overwhelmingly saying hey, we want Donald Trump as president,
and we've had enough of the Harris Biden regime. Of course,
there's going to be resistance to change from the swamp

(01:55):
in Washington. I think that's kind of the point the
American people are saying, Hey, stop looking at yourselves, Stop
focusing on your own power, your own position, your own
bank accounts. How about we have leaders in Washington who
are actually looking out for the American people and on
every issue across the board. That's really what it comes
down to with what President Trump is trying to accomplish
is we have to make sure that our government puts

(02:18):
the interests of the American people first.

Speaker 8 (02:20):
Jesus not lost, not long, right, hide seven and nine,
not long, don't need guns.

Speaker 9 (02:45):
I will fight every day to restore confidence and integrity
to the Department of Justice and each of its components.
The partisanship, the weaponization will be gone. America will have
one tier of justice.

Speaker 10 (03:02):
We're all call lady, some callor names. You won't have
a calling let around me my day.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
Texas Congressman Brandon Gill asked Bill as not Bill Maher?
Why do I keep saying Bill Maher? Catherine Maher if
she thought white people should pay reparations do they are
they brought into this world owing black people money. This
is as evil as it gets here, folks, this is

(03:42):
really really bad.

Speaker 11 (03:45):
Listen to this.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
I think the white people should pay reparations.

Speaker 11 (03:48):
I have never said that, sir.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
Yes you did. You said it in January of twenty twenty.

Speaker 4 (03:53):
You tweeted, yes, the North, yes, all of us, Yes, America, yes,
our original collective sin and unpaid debt. Yes, reparations, yes
on this day.

Speaker 11 (04:02):
I don't believe that was a reference to fiscal reparations, sir.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
What kind of reparations was it a reference to.

Speaker 11 (04:08):
I think it was just a reference to the idea
that we all owe much to the people who came
before us.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
That's a bizarre way to frame what you tweeted.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
He then went on to ask her, the CEO of PBS,
I guess it is about her statement that America is
addicted to white supremacy.

Speaker 4 (04:28):
Do you believe that America is addicted to white supremacy?

Speaker 11 (04:32):
I believe that I tweeted that, and as I've said earlier,
I believe much of my thinking has evolved over the
last half decade.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Really, why did you tweet that?

Speaker 11 (04:42):
I don't recall the exact context, sir, so I wouldn't
be able to say.

Speaker 4 (04:45):
Okay, do you believe that America believes in black plunder
and white democracy?

Speaker 11 (04:51):
I don't believe that, sir.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
You tweet it.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
It's reference to a book you were reading at the time,
apparently The Case for Reparations.

Speaker 11 (05:00):
I don't think I've ever read that book, Sir.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
You tweeted about it.

Speaker 4 (05:04):
You said you took a day off to fully read
The Case for Reparations. You put that on Twitter in
January of twenty twenty.

Speaker 11 (05:11):
I apologies. I don't recall that I did. Okay, I
cleared doubt that your tweet there is correct, but I
don't recall.

Speaker 1 (05:18):
Okay, do you believe.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
That white people and inherently feel superior to other races?

Speaker 11 (05:23):
I do not.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
You don't.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
You tweeted something to that effect. You said, I grew
up feeling superior. Ha, how white of me? Why did
you tweet that?

Speaker 3 (05:32):
And that's amazing about that, this whole idea that whites
should be ashamed of who they are, and every culture
is proud of who they are. My wife is from India,
and Indians believe they're the smartest people in the world.
The Chinese believe they're the smartest people in the world.
The Japanese believe they're the smartest and greatest people on
the world in the world. The Russians believe that. Shame

(05:53):
on any culture who don't believe they're the greatest. Do
you go into the game ready to lose? Honestly, do
you compete in any way, shape or form. Your identity
should be that of a victor. What's happened is these
white people have a loser mentality and that's how nations die.
And if there wasn't a bias against whites, then why

(06:15):
did Kyle feather Bottom have issues with Great White Shark Week.
The following program is only made possible by contributions from listeners.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Like you the Mass Day Day Do you, I'm your host,
Kyle Featherbottom and you're listening to The Great White Shark Week.
On today's program, we will discuss the recent research done
by researches regarding the Discovery Channel's beloved Shark Week. Researchers
say Discoveries programming overwhelmingly featured white men as experts on

(06:49):
these majestic animals. White men emphasize negative messages about sharks.
All sharks except the Great White Shark. Is it a
coincidence that the Great White shark has been romanticized by
SIS white men? I think not. Let's take a deeper
dive into the Great White Shark. This killing machine swims

(07:11):
around the ocean as if he owns the world. He
devours everything in its path as most colonizers do. The
Great White causes havoc and leaves death in its wake,
just like SIS white men have done throughout history. Is
this a shark we should revere as a civilized society.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
So it is now being reported that it was Alex
Wong who added Jeffrey Goldberg to the signal chat so.
Alex Wong is is national security advisor to Mike Waltz.
Alex Wong is the Chinese Deputy National Security Advisor, married

(07:56):
to US attorney Candice Chu Wong, a Chinese woman who
was one of the key attorneys involved in prosecuting Jay Sixers.
This is all according to Laura Lumer. I've not confirmed it.
She tends to get pretty good intel. She has pretty
good sources. When people want to drop a dime on someone,

(08:18):
this is where they do it. Alex's wife is all
according to Laura Lumer, Alex's wife, Candace chu Wong, worked
under the Obama administration and the Biden administration as an
assistant US Attorney for the District of Columbia, where she
led the Violence Reduction in Trafficking Offenses Section for more
than two years. She was involved in the prosecution of

(08:41):
many J sixers during the Biden regime, under which she
was nominated to become a member of the United States
Sentencing Commission. Additionally, Candace chu Wong served as a law
clerk to Obama appointed US Supreme Court Justice Sonya so
to Mayor, making matters worse. Alex Wong worked for Covington

(09:03):
and Berling, which is one of the law firms the
President recently stripped of its security clearance and terminated all
their government contracts via executive order. On February twenty fifth,
Trump accused Covington of being involved in the weaponization of government.
I think Eric Holder spent some time there, if I
remember correctly. Given the Chinese connections, it really makes you
wonder if Jeffrey Goldberg was added to the Trumps signal

(09:26):
chat on purpose as part of a foreign op to
embarrass the Trump admin on behalf of China. Side note
Jeffrey Goldberg said a war plan was released that contained
precise information about weapons packages, targets, and timing.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
That was a lie.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
What Goldberg actually released, something he could have shared from
the start, is not a war plan. There are no names,
no specific targets or locations, and no coordinates. It basically
just says some F eighteens will strike a terrorist somewhere today.
Alex Wong needs to be investigated and terminated. Sure, fine, okay, good,

(10:06):
But here's the bigger question. This is Trump two point zero.
We saw what they did the last time. Our problem
is our people are too trusting. We don't know if
Alex Wong is the bad guy here. We do know
that Alex Wong is married to a woman who prosecuted

(10:27):
Jay Sixers and who worked under Biden and Obama. What
in the hell is going on? How do you still
trust these people? Well, he's really smart, he's got a
great resume.

Speaker 11 (10:44):
His Uh.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
When you raise these questions, the naive establishment swamp types
will go.

Speaker 12 (10:54):
Well, you know we're gonna have to keep him. We've
told him. You know, you got to keep you to you,
You got a bullseye on you. You got to keep your
head Bob Water. You know, you got to just work
hard and do the right thing. That's not how these
people work. Don't you understand why would you give him
access to this. I'm of two minds.

Speaker 3 (11:14):
I'm fifty to fifty that this thing was coordinated to
burn Alex wag I'm of two minds that maybe what
has happened here is that you've got some folks who
are eager to root out some folks that they're having
trouble getting. You know, maybe Mike Waltz went to bat

(11:38):
for Alex Wong. Maybe questions were raised, Hey, Alex Wall's
not the best choice here. He and especially his wife
have some very troubling ties. No, guys, leave it alone.
I'm protecting Alex Wong. He's my guy. I trust him.
I want him and some very smart people set a

(11:59):
try app where Alex Wong would add Jeffrey Goldberg to
the signal chat. You're basically carbon copying somebody on an
internal message involving the military. Now, look, we can argue
it's not war plans.

Speaker 11 (12:15):
It's not.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
It's not the kind of thing that would allow the
Yeamans the hutis most likely to defend themselves. But It's
not the kind of thing you wanted released into their hands.
So what has to happen is Alex Wall most likely
has to be fired. We need to understand why he

(12:40):
put Jeffrey Goldberg on there. I've heard every theory under
the sun. It's all spin. The system auto populates. We
know that the CIA, because they admitted to it in
their response, was intercepting Tucker Carlson's signal account. And their answer,
as he noted, was well, yeah, we needed to because

(13:03):
he was going to Russia. Yeah, we needed to spy
on an American citizen before he went to Russia. Well
what about all these other journalists went to Russia? You
justspile on them or did you? Either way, it's wrong.
So what we have here is a reminder early on,
let's use this. I feel like I'm parenting here. Let's

(13:27):
use this as an opportunity to turn this to a
positive and that What we will do here is we
will say if someone is questionable, if they are married
to someone who is questionable.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
This is an affirmative action. This isn't happy. Go look
we're at war here.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
If anyone is questionable, pass on and move it to
the next one. We're going to have trustworthy, loyal, talented
people who are pulling in the same direction. They share
our purpose. Period, end of story. That's what we're gonna
do here, Alex. You gotta go now. Trump is using

(14:17):
this as a learning experience, because you don't want someone
to fall on their sword like Pete hegseeth when he's
too young in the position. It's too hard to get
somebody passed, too hard to get him up to speed.
You got to take your lumps. You got to say
he's my guy. He's staying in the job. Period. They're

(14:40):
calling on Pam Bondy to investigate him, and she's ignoring that.

Speaker 11 (14:44):
That's what you ought to do.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
Remember when Jeff Sessions step down because he's a weenie
and a weasel.

Speaker 6 (14:49):
He was the.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
First attorney general, and that put a Democrat in to
investigate Trump. Yeah, we're not doing that anymore.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
For a seid, I can step into her update.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
Let's just we're on the subject of NPR. Before we
put that aside, Let's remember Tim Burschett, who's really emerged.
He's he's found a spine somewhere here. I didn't know
anything about him before, but he asked the CEO of
NPR and PBS, Catherine Marr about her tweet in twenty

(15:24):
twenty calling President Trump a fascist and a racist.

Speaker 13 (15:29):
Let me ask you, why did you call President Trump
a fascist and a deranged racist sociopath in twenty twenty.

Speaker 11 (15:36):
Conorsmon, I appreciate the opportunity to address this. I regret
those tweets. I would not treat them again today. They
represented a time where I was reflecting on something that
I believe that the President had said, rather than who
he is. I don't presume that anyone is a racist.

Speaker 1 (15:50):
Which you don't believe anyone is a racist.

Speaker 11 (15:52):
I don't start by presuming anyone as a racist.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
Now we've gotten into what her presumptions are instead of
focus on her action. You do not have the capacity
to be the head of the government funded radio and
television stations. If you say and do things like that, period,

(16:16):
end of story, it should all be shut down.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
But they'll take nsomme Street and then children won't be.

Speaker 11 (16:23):
Children no more.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
You're the same guy that wants dudes with the rock
hard weenie walking into class in a bikini to talk
to the kids about the boys being girls and the
girls being boys. I don't think you're worried about the kids.
I really don't. And we round out our NPR Fund
with Kyle Featherbottom weighing in on guns and how scary

(16:48):
they are. The following program is only made possible by
contributions from listeners like you.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
And I Must Day Day to you, you're listening to
why guns are scary? I'm your host, Kyle Featherbottom. Today
we will examine the effect that bullets and assault bullets
have on the human body. For those of you in
our listening audience that are unfamiliar with guns. A bullet
is a projectile that is spit out of a gun's
barrel or its front, as it were. Handgun bullets are

(17:17):
smaller than larger, scarier military weapon assault bullets like those
spit out by the AR fifteen. While still dangerous, a
handgun bullet will often pass through the person that has
been shot, unless, of course, the handgun has been used
by a police officer against a person of color. The
officer's inherent racism adds extra power to the velocity of

(17:37):
the bullet, turning it into a many assault bullet, thus
causing more damage than if the bullet was used by
a person of color against another person of color. The
assault bullet of a high caliber weapon like an AR
fifteen is so powerful that it has the heat of
molten lava. It will literally liquefy any organ it hits.
The effects on smaller humans are much worse. Those LoVa

(18:00):
bullets have been known to vaporize an entire little person.
We are nearing the end of this violent program, so
let's take a moment to clear our minds of any
fear that this discussion may have caused. But first I
have to remind you that following this show, Kelly Gleeson
will tell you how to preserve root vegetables for the winter. Now,
let's close our eyes and think about whatever it is

(18:21):
that brings you joy.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
Oh, never believe the Democrats nothing they say. It's all theater.
They say the things that they need to say to
get you to do what they need you to do
and to believe what you need to believe. People would
always say, you know, I understand you don't like Barack Obama, Michael,

(18:45):
but I think he's got a good heart. You still
say that, But him having a good heart allowed a
lot of white suburban moms to vote for him because
he has a good heart, and they want to believe
in somebody's heart. Health, heart, nice to have a good heart,
you know it's good.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
It's good that he has a good heart.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
So it doesn't. But he convinced you he did, and
that was important. But the Democrats that are so up
in arms over this at landing story. How about when
the Secretary of Defense, Lloyd Austin went missing for days,
remember this clown. How about when General Milly told that
this is frightening. When General Milly told Warren told China

(19:27):
he would warn them if we ever attacked them, He
has admitted that he told them, I will commit treason
if we ever attack you. If we are ever going
to attack you, I will alert you so that you
can defend against the attack that would cost the lives
of our men. But his loyalty is to China.

Speaker 13 (19:51):
Wonder why Chinese thought wrongly that the United States can
attack them. I am certain, guaranteed certain that President trumpet
no intent to attack, and it was my task to
make sure I communicated that, and the purpose was to
de escalate.

Speaker 11 (20:08):
Coming you shared all that earlier.

Speaker 14 (20:09):
Inderstand as part of that to say, did you or
did you not ask tell him that if we were
going to attack, you would let him know.

Speaker 13 (20:16):
As part of that conversation, I said, generally, there's not
going to be a ward. There's not going to be
attacked between great powers, and if there was, the tensions
would build up, that be calls going back and forth
from all kinds of senior officials. I said, hell, generally,
I'll probably give you a call, but we're not going
to attack you. Trust me, we're not going to attack you.
These are two great powers, and I am doing my
best to transmit the president's intent, President Trump's intent to

(20:38):
ensure that the American people are protected from an incident.

Speaker 11 (20:41):
That could escalate.

Speaker 14 (20:42):
I understand your intent, but I think you articulating that
that you would tell him, you would give him a call,
I think is worthy of your resignation. I just think
that's against our country that you would give our number
one adversary that information and tell him that.

Speaker 3 (20:59):
You don't need to say. I just think that, in
my humble opinion, just state your opinion. We know it's
your opinion. You weaken your position when you do that.
It's like you're afraid to take ownership of it. This
next one is Stephen Miller, who I like a lot
Deputy chief of staff or the president. I know we've
played this before, but we have Democrats that are coming

(21:19):
to the show daily. We know this, and they could use.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
The civics lesson.

Speaker 3 (21:22):
This is Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller explaining presidential power.

Speaker 15 (21:28):
You're a tempting me to say some very harsh things
about some of our media friends. Yes, it is true
that many of the people in this room for four
years failed to cover the fact that Joe Biden was
mentally incompetent and was not running. The contrary, it is
also true that many people in this room who have
used this talking point that Elon is not elected, fail

(21:50):
to understand how government works. So I'm glad for the
opportunity for a brief civics lesson. A president is elected
by the whole American people. He's the only official in
the entire government that is elected by the entire nation. Right,
judges are appointed. Members of Congress are elected at the
district or state level, which is one man. And the
Constitution Article two has a clause known as a vesting clause,

(22:11):
and it says the executive power shall be vested in
a president singular The whole will of democracy is imbued
into the elected president, that president that appoints staff to
then impose that democratic will onto the government. The threat
to democracy, indeed, the existential threat to democracy, is the
unelected bureaucracy of lifetime tenured civil servants who believe the

(22:35):
answer to no one, who believe they can do whatever
they want without consequence, who believe they can set their
own agenda no matter what Americans vote for.

Speaker 3 (22:44):
You have to you must never grow tired of stating
what you believe, why you're doing what you're doing. It's
not like you win that argument and move on. It's
a constant battle. Stephen Miller is in this battle.

Speaker 4 (23:00):
It.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
January twentieth, twenty twenty five is Liberation Day.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Michael Show.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
President Trump, in an interview on Newsmax, said that the
Ashley Babbitt shooting will be investigated. Hallelujah, hallelujah. It just
gets better and better and better. That woman was murdered.

(23:35):
Remember they thought they were going to get away with
not giving us the name of Michael Byrd, the murderer
who killed her, the police officer who was already a
problematic police officer. You think you and then and then
they did nothing. Derek Chauvain is in prison because George
Floyd had an overdose of fentanyl and he happened to

(23:58):
be the poor guy who had who had to respond
to the scene or one of the guys that responded
to the scene, and he's in prison for life. I
think the President will pardon him, and he should do
it sooner rather than later. Derek Chavan is in prison
for life. Michael Bird has been walking around free.

Speaker 11 (24:16):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
You know when you do awful things, when people witness
awful things, it creates a processing system in your brain.
This is why the children of battered women, you know
Dad beats mom, Those children will manifest that trauma later
in life in various different ways. But it's never good.

(24:42):
From self medication to modeling, to replication, duplication. It creates,
It creates some very very dark tendencies in people. We
all watched what happened to Ashley Babbitt. Thank god there

(25:04):
cameras now with moving pictures. We all see most of
the things happening. We see what we're told, we hear
what we're told, we see how they handle it, we
see how they feel about us. And I will tell
you there is a certain percentage of the population who

(25:27):
are so angry that if horrible atrocities were carried out
on the left the way they have it on the right,
that would be cheering. There is going to be a
candidate come from the right. There's going to be an authoritarian.

(25:47):
It's going to scare people. He's not going to look
like David Doo. He's not going to preach race. He's
going to look more like Joseph McCarthy. He's going to
call for the things that a massive portion of the
American public wants, is going to demand action, which he's

(26:13):
then going to deliver, and he's going to see a
ground swell of support. That's what happened with Trump in
twenty sixteen. It was just an iron fist and a
velvet glove. It was a little softer, a little more collaborative,
a little less frightening to the establishment. But they saw

(26:37):
they had the sense to know this was frightening to
their order, the concept of draining the swamp. Their greatest
hope when he won was he wasn't serious about it.
That was the hope. He doesn't really mean it, but
there will be.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
A tyrant.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
Who will be able to smile, who will be charming,
and who will be determined to take a pound of
flesh to see justice swiftly administered, and there will be
the support and the left will fight back. They have to.
This is war for them. For most Americans who voted

(27:22):
for Trump voted as Republicans. They just want it all
to end. They don't want there to be justice. Can't
we just let's just forgive and forget. Let's wipe the
slate clean, let's just start over. No, we must never
do that. That is the best way to ensure that
will happen again. We cannot forgive and forget. We cannot

(27:47):
simply slap them on the hand. We cannot simply fire them.
How is it that, if you're in a government position,
elected or in the government, that your punishment for committing
a crime is to lose your job. If you're working
at the factory, nobody says, Bob, you stole all this

(28:09):
money and you killed people, We're going to have to
punish you severely by firing you. No, No, that's not
how that works. If that's all you do. How you
get fired for coming to work? Trump, you get fired
for telling Susie nice boob job Susie, you get fired

(28:30):
for stuff that doesn't bankrupt the company. No, there's got
to be way more than that. I've watched. I can't
tell you how many elected officials I've seen where their
deal is struck that they will resign from a public
position in exchange for not being prosecuted at all, or

(28:55):
that the prosecution that's already begun will be withdrawn and
that'll be their punishment. Oh, just trying to get him
out of the government. What is the system of retributive justice.
There has to be a punishment. Losing your job is
not a sufficient punishment because that wouldn't apply to the

(29:17):
guy who doesn't have a government job. The only time
you think that's okay is if you hold people in
government positions higher than everyone else. The only time you
think that is okay if you believe that the highest
thing in life is to be in the government, and

(29:42):
the most severe punishment is to have that taken from you,
because it is a sickness.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
There's no doubt.

Speaker 3 (29:48):
There's a reason folks go to Congress and stay there
for the rest of their lives, no matter how early
they started. Joe Biden when he was twenty seven, and
you can't get him out of it. It's not like
they work hard. It's not backbreaking work. If it's so tough,
why can none of them leave it behind? They cannot
leave it behind. They have to stay in it. These senators,

(30:14):
they will lie, cheat, steal, divorce, kill, have killed, take
money from the most horrible people, do the most awful,
unspeakable things, because they must stay there. You ever think
about what is so great about what's there that they
cannot give it up? Does that ever cross your mind?
Because it should, It should be cause for concern frequently.

(30:39):
Why can't these people quit? Why couldn't find Stein walk away?
Why can't Pelosi walk away? Why can't Schumer walk away?
Why couldn't Biden walk away? Why why couldn't Kay Granger
walk away? Why can't McConnell walk away? Grassly all of them?
Lindsey Graham, I don't know, Lindsey Graham. Probably I'm not

(31:00):
saying that I'm ready for some pound of flesh. I'm
ready for some people to be sent to prison, not
just fieries, not just a great show. And I want
NPR and pbsd funded. I want it to be so
bad that the left is going crazy. I want it
to be so bad they can't believe this is actually happening.

(31:21):
I want them to feel how we felt when they
dragged Trump to court and tried to send them to prison.
I want them to feel it. I want them to cry.
I want them to lose their minds. I want them
to think it's the end of the world, because it
should be the end of their world. Thank you, and
good night.
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If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

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