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May 7, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Berry Show is on the air. Hello, Texas, and
good morning. It's Kirnie the Frow. Cookie time. No, it's
good morning, TZAR. Do want cookie time?

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Good morning Michael Berry, but no, you cannot use my bathroom.
Hello everybuddy. This is mile Old Hamilton and a good
morning to the TZAR. Good morning, Michael Berry. It's Sean Connery.
But you had a little radio show. Pity I wasn't
find it.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
Good morning, Michael Berry.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
I'm all jaked up on Mountain Dew.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
This is the Thornton Finch, wishing you a good morning.
Good morning, Michael Berry. Gild morning, Michael Berry. Good morning, Michael,
Good morning, Michael. Good morning, Zar, Good morning, Michael, Dave Salen,
Good morning, El Casino, Good morning, Michael. Hello, Hello are
you there? Good morning, You're Michael Berry. How you learned that?

(01:10):
I read it tomorrow month?

Speaker 4 (01:13):
Good morning, Texas, listen to this. Good morning Texas.

Speaker 1 (01:20):
Oh morning, your car, Good mor morning.

Speaker 4 (01:23):
Texas is on his day and we aren't happy to
be here to talk about everything. Good morning, We're not
wearing pants. Good morning, Texes. Good morning, Texas. Good morning, Texas.

(01:47):
Good morning, wake as.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Let speak.

Speaker 5 (01:52):
God, damn my career.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
We've had it from yesterday all through the night. Let's see.
Look out there, it is not raining right now. Talk
to somebody in downtown on my drive in and he
said it was coming down hard right there right that minute.
Don't know if it still is, but it was back then.
I've been giving a lot of thought to this. You

(02:26):
see these various news stories and unless you step back
and see it all as one and how it fits together.
I'll start by saying, if you take the original man
in his cave to be sheltered from the elements as

(02:48):
first priority being security and then food and man operated
as a unit, a man and a woman. Many species
do that, most don't the male and the female couple,
and they remained together typically for life, as before divorce
from mom. Couldn't get a divorce back then. In time,

(03:12):
he recognized that he was good at some things that
he had to do, cobbling his shoes, smithing the metals
to forge tools, to farm, to hunt, to garden, and

(03:34):
to provide for his own security. But he noticed pretty
early on that there are things he's good at and
things he's not as good at, or doesn't enjoy doing that.
If he lets someone else do that, he could trade them.
He could then he could specialize. He would have specialized
labor in his field, narrow the number of things he did,

(03:55):
and if there were enough of you, everybody do one thing,
so he could just be the baker or the gardener
or the farmer ranger, whatever that may be. And they
would trade, and the created units of trade. And so
one of the reasons they shortened the distance between them
and their neighbors was to create less slack less friction

(04:17):
in commerce. But it's also the case has been noted
that we are social animals. We like the fraternity, the fellowship,
whether that be drinking, carousing, storytelling, or worshiping. We also
found that one of the things that was necessary for
the species or for civilization was to teach your children

(04:40):
your language, your customs. And so they discovered that some
people were better at that. So they would create a
school and the kids would go to the school. And
one of the tasks that had been left to the
mother and father and the process of everything else they
were doing, was teaching the kids to varying degrees of success.
So in time the school was developed so as man

(05:02):
can joined together closer and closer, and eventually many of
them in cities very close. They found that there were
things they liked to do that they that required interaction,
and that was arts, for instance, whether that be music

(05:22):
or theatrical productions. Of course worship with the church. As
we talked about restaurants, I mean, think about a great
American life, not in the rural community, but the great
American life in the big city, which for so long

(05:43):
was something you could do in the United States if
you couldn't do it in some places around the world,
certainly not say Africa. You you could live in a
city and work in a city and have all of
these opportunities for leisure and enjoyment that required interaction in
public spaces and with other people. So you'd drop a

(06:08):
nickel for the newspaper boy whose name you would know,
and you'd just stop in at your favorite coffee shop
and you'd know people who worked there, and you'd have friends.
Maybe y'all meet for dominoes or a gathering veterans groups
or card playing or Masonic lodges, whatever else, and all

(06:29):
of those things are enjoyable. They're enjoyable things. Shopping for
some eating, meeting, working, worshiping, and for people. For the
vast majority of people. Now there are people who want
to be out in the country and left alone. Naturally,
no matter what happened in the city, some people end

(06:49):
up in that environment because they decide that is preferable
to what the city, the urban environment has become. And
by urban that now exclude that now includes ex urban
suburban what happened. You have to have social norms that
are enforced in order to make it such that you

(07:10):
can live that life. So the guy who beats people
up on the bus has to be removed, the guy
who steals from the store, the guy who stabs people,
the guy who rapes people, the guy who steals cars,
all the things that disrupt the platform upon which we interacted,

(07:31):
all of that has been destroyed. If you don't we
had a system for this. We had law enforcement, we
had a court system. We had a situation where somebody
didn't wait on the cops and beat this not out
of them. People don't want to do that now, partly

(07:52):
out of fear that they'll get in trouble like Daniel Penny,
partly out of they just don't want to be involved.
When all of that breaks down as it hacked clearly
half we'll talk about that they were all tears.

Speaker 6 (08:10):
Because I didn't get a single time start here, that
our country is failing you today invest.

Speaker 7 (08:18):
In Kleenex, ladies and gentlemen, and this is the Michael
Berry Show.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
We have a breakdown in the social order and the
systems that were created to maintain the social order, and
people suspect it is likely that they could be put
into a situation where they're beaten, killed, family member is

(08:56):
They will end up making the decision, often a great personal, emotional,
professional expense, to extricate themselves from that. Hence you see
the explosive growth into places like Republic Grand Ranch. You're
seeing communities come out outside of town. People say, I

(09:20):
don't need to walk to a coffee shop anymore. I
don't need to have a gas station thirty seconds away
right next door. People begin to value once it's threatened
their safety, security and calm. You only need to be

(09:40):
a victim of a violent crime one time, but you
got to live in fear of it. Twenty four to seven.
The social order has broken down, largely by design, partly
by naivete There are people who believe that the only
reason is scout Us ended up in prison was because

(10:04):
well they just didn't have the same chance you and
I did. Where in the process of him beating you
to death, do you change your mind? How many blows
to your head, how many bullets to your body? Do
you go, Well, maybe I'll worry a little bit less
about his upbringing. So here's a perfect example. ABC thirteen
has a story. Two people had their properties in Sunnyside

(10:26):
stolen through a fake deed process, and now they're frustrated
at how hard it is to get your property back.
It's your property. The guy has been charged with theft.
Who stole your property? Sunnyside is that's where Joyce to say,
just Sunnyside predominantly black neighborhood, lower entry point than some

(10:50):
other places around town, older neighborhood. And now you've got
this scoundrel in there stealing people's property through fake deeds,
and they're not getting their property back immediately. They're being
told go hire an attorney. But waite, if I'm the
victim of a crime, why do I have to hire

(11:12):
an attorney to be made whole? This does just makes sense.

Speaker 6 (11:19):
Lot and pretty why Sandra White remembers the day more
than five years ago when she tried to pay for
the property taxes on her lot and found out someone
else already paid it.

Speaker 8 (11:29):
It's bad because, unfortunately for some people, some people don't
always look at their tax rolls and know, and they
could be billing on the property.

Speaker 9 (11:39):
And then you have a.

Speaker 8 (11:39):
Whole nother Uh what do you call it? A mound
of someone has bought your property and they're building on it,
and how do you stop it?

Speaker 6 (11:46):
At that part, the college professor followed a long paper
trail and discovered the Augustin Ortega Junior had bought and
sold her a lot.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
No I mean because it's around the same time.

Speaker 6 (11:55):
James Burton also discovered that a lot that's been in
his family for decades also became Ortega's property. The two
lots are a block apart.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
It is very daunted.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
Both victims filed police reports, and this January Ortega was
charged with theft and forgery and remains in the Harris
County jail.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
We're gonna ask for fifty thousand dollars for each case.
Were posed to free trial releases.

Speaker 6 (12:18):
But the biggest headache now getting the properties back.

Speaker 8 (12:21):
Five year process and it's been almost two years. I
got the property back, but you have to spend a
ton of money with attorneys to maybe get your property back.

Speaker 6 (12:30):
Well, White managed to work through the complex, pay portrayal,
and get her lot back. Burton is still struggling, saying
he doesn't have the thousands of dollars it would take
to hire a real estate attorney to get his own
property returned.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
It just seems absurd that I have to pay to
get my property back, you know, when it's been found
that it was illegally taken.

Speaker 6 (12:51):
Real estate experts tell ABC thirteen the quickest way for
Burton to get the property back is to have Portega,
the suspect, voluntarily sign a property back over. We talked
to Ortek as attorney, and he says that's something he's
willing to discuss with the prosecutors.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
Oh okay, Well, the way for you to fix the
legal problem that's been caused for me by that guy
over there who caused it. The way for you to
fix it is for him to decide to undo what
he's done. This is a failure in the system. This

(13:29):
is a failure of human beings. Nobody wants to make
a decision any longer. Nobody wants to say that's wrong,
We're going to fix it. This is what makes them
go crazy over Trump. They created a system where, gosh,
it's just impossible to keep illegals out. It's most unfortunate.
But don't worry, because they're all good people anyway, That's

(13:52):
what they told us. Right. Here's another story, Nah, I'll
do that in a minute. Prohomas thugs at the University
of Washington take over the school's new engineering building because
they say the engineering building was funded by Jews and Boeing,
and they caused more than a million dollars of damage.

(14:12):
They vandalized walls, they glued doors shut, a shattered glass,
they destroyed new lab equipment, and you and I both
know nobody will be prosecuted. Nobody will be prosecuted. I've
seen multiple times in the last week where quote unquote protesters,
terrorists on campus, cops are in cities, cops show up

(14:35):
and they back the cops down. The cops look scared
for their lives. How would you like to be that
CoP's wife watching him in that situation if one of
these nut jobs takes out after him, what do you
think is going to happen. See this is why George
Floyd was so important. George Floyd created the situation where
officers are frightened of having to engage in this situation

(14:56):
because you can end up in prison for life. The
decision is not that of the officer as to the situation.
Officer is not in control of the situation. The situation
is in the control of the terrorist or the violent criminal,
because if he decides to escalate. So let's say, let's
say they start throwing baseballs, you can hurt somebody with

(15:17):
a baseball. Say the start throwing baseballs at the officers,
or knives for that matter, the officer at that point
can draw and fire because he's out numbered. These officers
were out numbered like six or seven of them to
five hundred. So at that point he's trying to talk
them back. If the protesters refuse to be talked back

(15:39):
and they keep closing in till the point that they're
close enough that they can strangle him to death, the
only way to stop that is lethal force. Right, officer
has to pull his gun and he has to fire,
and they are not allowed to do that. They're not
doing it, but if they started doing it, what would

(16:01):
be our reaction. Our reaction would have to be you've
got to crack some eggs.

Speaker 7 (16:08):
True around with. This is the Michael Barry Show.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
Take a look at the story out of Seattle, the
pro Hamas thugs. It's an interesting thing that's happened here.
This is a great example of branding. The Harmas crowd rebranded.
Nobody cared about Hamas except Middle Easterners. But Hamas managed

(16:45):
to use the tools of the left to make Hamas
the most celebrated victim right now. We've had Colin Kaepernick,
We've had trainees, we've had blacks, we've had women. Hamas
made themselves the most Shieshi. You get real cred for

(17:15):
being pro Hamas. Oh, Ukraine. Ukraine was there for a while. Yep,
good call. Hamas made themselves the the the cause celeb
You want to take on Hamas. You didn't have to
hate Jews to take on Hamas, but Hamas. This is

(17:36):
sad people that do honest, good hard working people. If
you go visit, I mean, there's some of the nicest
people in the world. They all and nothing wrong in
the region is sweetest people in the world. We ought
to bring half of them here and dump them on
your street. They're just sweet, wonderful, tender people, just lovable,
lovable people. You'd never met such last people in your life.
Wonderful people. This Hamas, they're wonderful. Now do they have

(17:59):
to kill a jew or a thousand? Yeah they do,
but it's not even their fault. They've been so darn
oppressed they don't even mean to. They gotta rape them,
They drag them through the streets while they're cheering the
girls that you remember what happened. But my goodness, alive,
can you blame them? They're just being humas, just you know,
manny being many hummas being humas. Just murder them, rape them,

(18:22):
drag them through the streets, torture them, hold them hostage
for a year, and just as the authorities are coming
down in the tunnel to save them, put a bullet
in a few of them's head, just for good measures,
so they can't tell what they were subjected to over
the last year. So there's a moss boy would love Hamas.
And there they are at the university. Why now, in

(18:42):
a strange, an amazing twist of fate, they've got all
the little white girls, the little white girls that are
all that you find these young white women that go
off to college and daddy's successful or not. It's different.
They arrive at the same place from different origins, and

(19:04):
they're footloose and fancy free and desperately in search of meaning.
And what happened was women used to grow up. Little
girl wanted to find her prints. She wanted to be
his wife and have his children and have a family.
But in the meantime, first we're gonna have babies, and

(19:25):
then we're gonna have and we're gonna we're gonna have
a wedding, so we're gonna have the celebrated party where
she is the princess. And then we're gonna get married,
and we're gonna go on a honeymoon and she's gonna
serve the domestic duties and I'm gonna be beautiful. He's
gonna love me. And then we're gonna make a baby,
and I'll have the bump. We'll take more photos, and
we'll have another round of parties, and here will come

(19:47):
the baby, and it'll be tough, but we'll do it
and everyone will pay attention. We'll have this baby, and
then in short order we'll have another baby, and then
we'll start with school and all the activities. And that
was a life, and it was a very rewarding life.
Was it perfect? No, neither's working at the plant or
anything else. But somewhere along the way in the sixties, seventies, eighties,

(20:12):
girls were taught that's for stupid people. Don't be stupid.
You need to have a career. You don't want to.
You don't want to in any way couple with a
man and be subjugated by him, some Adam and Eve crap.
You want to be your own person. You want to
compete with the boys. You never got daddy's attention anyway,

(20:34):
did you. He wanted a boy, and they told you
you couldn't do what boys can do. Well you can.
So they take up these causes and it's a very
cult like. They foment these in a very cult like way.
And now all of a sudden, they belong same thing
as a young black kid or his Panic kid in
a gang. Now they're in Antifa. They're in these gatherings.

(20:55):
They belong. They got when's our next gasutations being, they're
getting messages. It's clandestin. They're dressing in black and oh
h and in time before before long we got to
amp up the excitement here, right, we gotta really, we gotta,
we gotta make this thing intense. I'm not back in
Omaha anymore. Let's blow some stuff up, Let's tear some

(21:19):
stuff up. Let's kill a cop. All cops are pigs.
Let's kill a cop. Let's kill a person. Let's burn
something down so they get caught up. So Hamas has
got the little white girls here, that's who's doing this.
They've got them all hyped up. You know, they got
organizers and coordinators to run them in all. But that's

(21:41):
who they've got doing this. So now they've caused more
than a million dollars of damage at the University of Washington.
Universities have all been taken over, so that God forbid
they do. So they they're just like, please, please, don't
don't burn it down with us inside. How long does
it take until you start grabbing some of them out,
prosecuting them and sent them to prison, and if others

(22:03):
join in, you pull your gun. They killed Ashley Babbitt
for a whole lot less. That's what it's going to
take to retake American society. That's what it's going to
take the story from King five in.

Speaker 10 (22:15):
Seattle, busted glass, spray painted walls, brand new equipment, trashed doors,
glued shut.

Speaker 9 (22:22):
I was surprised by the extent that they took it to.

Speaker 10 (22:26):
This is the aftermath of an overnight engineering at the
University of Washington.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
That was like, Wow, what on earth happened?

Speaker 10 (22:34):
William No came here?

Speaker 11 (22:37):
Do you hear the testosterone levels? And so I wonder
if they're going to tell the whole WI sound. I
was very shocked and it wasn't my knives. They're not
being very solid.

Speaker 10 (22:48):
At the University of Washington.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
That was like, wow, what on earth happened?

Speaker 10 (22:53):
William No came here to study only to find these
signs and a security guard keeping watch out front.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
This saus closed. The signed us as closed. I didn't
expect it to be closed.

Speaker 10 (23:03):
Actually, The university says the building cost one hundred and
fifty million dollars to construct. Ten million of that came
from Boeing. It had only been opened for a few
weeks before protesters occupied the space Monday night.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
Protesters are demanding.

Speaker 10 (23:18):
That UDUB cut ties with Boeing over its work with
the Israeli military. The university released a statement condemning the violence, saying,
in part, the university will not be intimidated by this
sort of horrific and destructive behavior and will not engage
in group using condoning such instruction tactics.

Speaker 9 (23:35):
I was not surprised surprised by the attack, specifically because
these protesting groups have been vocal about their position to
this building and to some of the engineering programs.

Speaker 10 (23:48):
Mitsuki Shimo Mora says he was shocked by the amount
of damage.

Speaker 9 (23:52):
Vodinism against engineering buildings is an attack against engineering students
who just want to study about technologies. Makes that s
world up at the place.

Speaker 10 (24:01):
The university says damage to the equipment alone could cost
more than a million dollars. It hasn't even been used.
Some pieces are still wrapped in bubble wrap.

Speaker 3 (24:10):
Never thought this would happen, like actually, like locking yourself
into a building or barricading yourself in.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
It's just unheard of here.

Speaker 10 (24:19):
Twenty four classes have been moved elsewhere on campus, and
it's still unclear when students will be allowed back inside.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Kind of bummed out that's closed. I was hoping to
come here to study today, but I guess I have
to find somewhere else. But illpe it opens soon.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
I guess I'll find somewhere else, but soon as it opens,
I'll go right back in. Okay, like our qucy super.

Speaker 5 (24:44):
Chef the mac barry So.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
Two days ago, at four fifty pm, just before or
the Evening Show started, I posted the Facebook saying, tell
me the one news story that pops out at you today,
one thing that's in the news that you think is
a big story today, and please don't And amazingly they didn't.

(25:18):
You didn't, Please don't go look at the news. I
want to know what sticks in your mind right now
without checking, and I don't know thousand answers or so.
People responded, and they were very honest. Some of them said,
I don't know, maybe P Diddy trial or but do

(25:39):
you know what the number one thing that people thought of? Now?
Mind you, Trump did five major things that day. You
got the Ed Martin situation going on. You've got a lot,
You've got this, uh well, you've got a lot of cases,
big cases going on, big issues in the news, major

(25:59):
news stories, tectonic shifts in economies. You got India with
surgical strikes on Pakistan, active fighting, two nuclear powers. You
got Ukraine and Russia at the table to end the war.
You got mineral rights deals going on, You got a
lot of major stories going on. You can't keep it

(26:21):
all together, right, I mean, the P Diddy trial is
basically just a black celebrity Epstein story where people are
going to know the victims in this case, it's not
just twelve and thirteen year old girls. There are those,
but some of the quote unquote victims are dudes who
are rappers who sold their butt to get a hit.

(26:44):
It took a hit from am So that is why
I believe that on Monday at four point fifty pm,
with all the things going on, to the thing that
you remembered, most had happened that day. And Trump understands
this was him saying, I'm going to reopen Alcatraz. Willie
who knows it doesn't matter. The left lost their mind

(27:08):
and most Americans cheered. Why did Americas? Americans cheer because
Alcatraz has a reputation because that is the rock, that
is the Siberia, that is the place you send the ruthless,
violent offenders. We don't even want them on our soil.

(27:31):
We want them over there so they can't get away.
You understand the psychological impact Trump does. He understands what
drives people, He understands the psychological impact that we're going
after these bad guys and we're gonna lift them up.

(27:53):
And if they're here illegally, we're gonna send them down
to El Salvador. We're gonna film it. Okay, they did it,
but you know he got approved for that. And if
they're Americans, we're going to send them to Alcatraz. Oh,
this is good. This is high theater right here. This
is celebrity apprentice level understanding of how you script things

(28:14):
and build things and execute. Alcatraz is back open for business.

Speaker 6 (28:21):
If you get vaccinated, you are protected even with the
Delta varian.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
We know that as a fact. Hello Democrats, welcome back
to the rock.

Speaker 7 (28:31):
The vaccines we have do protect well against the delta varian.
So if ever, there was a reason to get vaccinated
right now now, late now, closing sales scene.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
Yes, I think Donald Trump is correct and that it's
kind of hard to believe they've got through six hundred
and fifty thousand emails in such a short period of time.

Speaker 6 (28:50):
Nothing I sent or received was mark classified. Well, what
I'm saying is it wasn't at the.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
Time closing cell blog. I did my job.

Speaker 12 (28:59):
I never discussed the single thing with my son about
anything having to do with the crane.

Speaker 1 (29:03):
No one is indicated I have.

Speaker 12 (29:04):
We've always kept everything separate, even though my son was
the attorney general of the state of Delaware. We never
discussed it, so there'd be no potential conflict.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
Closing sub blocking the rock to Trump is coming for you, America, America.
I gave my best to you. Your best losers always
whine about that. Best winners go home from Queen. This

(29:36):
is also the reason that the Trump administration, so opening
Alcatraz is yet another pop open your skull, look down
in there and wherever that synapse is, wherever that place
in the medulla oblongata, or wherever it is that deals
with fear and righteousness and goodness and fairness. He goes

(30:03):
right there and pushes a button, says we're going to
send the bad guys here over there. Okay, So your
brain processes that without even realizing, Oh, Alcatraz, that's cool.
I remember remember the movie. It's a good movie. Yeah,
I remember, man, Yeah, yeah, I mean they always trying
to swim out. But in your mind it goes back
to a very deep place, like if I were to

(30:26):
mention candied sugar, candied cigarettes or uh powdered donuts are
a hot, piping hot donut and a cup of coffee
or chocolate milk, or that burger you'd eat or that
bowl of cereal you haven't had in sixty years. But
if I describe it long enough and sitting in sitting
on the bean back chair in front of the Saturday

(30:48):
morning cartoons, and I hit the cartoon that's your favorite,
your brain is going to release them endorphins. It's just
what people are doing. Their understanding. Hey, all that tariff stuff,
I'm not sure if it's good or bad for the comming.
I I have no idea. I don't know if it's
going to hurt my job or my company. But I
know that the guy who's trying to keep me safe
from the bad guys is doing it. And you a

(31:08):
lot of bad guys here. Can't send them all Del Salvador.
Biden's administration created an app to get these people into
the country. Can you imagine that they commissioned and delivered
an app to get these people into the country. That's insane.
So what's Trump doing? We'll fly you home and give
you a thousand dollars. Here, here's an app to make

(31:30):
it happen. Want to get away? What's in your wallet?

Speaker 13 (31:36):
That's what we thought looking over your shoulder for immigrations
and custom enforcement to drop the hammer.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
Well.

Speaker 13 (31:41):
Now with a CBP one app, you can earn free
flights for you and your family to any destination on
the globe as long as it's your country of origin.
And now you can earn one thousand dollars cash back
per family member just by using the CBP one app.
If you use the app under the Biden presidency to
get into the country, you can also use it to

(32:02):
get safely out now before it's too late and you
won't be able to apply. Available free now at Google
Play and iTunes app stores. No fees or minimums, no
blackout dates any airline, no flying standby. Just submit your
intented to port on the CBP one app.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
What's gonna be in your wallet?

Speaker 13 (32:22):
Now?

Speaker 1 (32:23):
Welcome aboard something? And they said it couldn't be done.
Trump has stopped the flow of illegal aliens coming here
by land by asylum seekers. He's got people who were

(32:43):
here illegally who are going back now. I mean, you
think about this. He said it couldn't be done, and
he did it. And he did it almost overnight. He
proved it could work. Now, will we have fewer flea markets, Yeah,
yeah we will. We will. Will some people have to

(33:06):
find new employees, Yeah, that will happen. We'll think of
all the benefits of this.
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