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July 28, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Let me just start with Tulsea Gabbert, because you served
as a CI director.

Speaker 1 (00:17):
For four years.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
What would having her in charge or in the role
of Director of National Intelligence mean for the intelligence apparatus
of the US government.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
She has been an apologist for five blutin Bischasade. So
many of our substant comments as well as previous actions
have called into question whether or not she has a
good understanding of global politics in the US role there.
But also she doesn't have any experience in intelligence.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
She has never served in the intelligence community.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
And the Director of National Intelligence is somebody who has
sits on top of.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
The eighteen departments and agencies and needs to orchestrate these
agencies so that they collaborate, so that they coordinate, so
that they're able to pursue the nationalist curty priority in
an effectible pass.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
It was irrefutable evidence that detail how President Obama and
his national security team directed the creation of an intelligence
community assessment that they knew was false. They knew it
would promote this contrived narrative that Russia interfered in the
twenty sixteen election to help President Trump win, selling it
to the American people as though it were true.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
It wasn't.

Speaker 5 (01:25):
The report that we released today's shows in great detail how.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
They carried this out.

Speaker 5 (01:30):
They manufactured findings from shoddy sources. They suppressed evidence and
credible intelligence that disproved their false In the January twenty
seventeen Intelligence Community assessment that President Obama ordered John Brennan,
who was CIA Director at the time, and the Intelligence
Community intentionally suppressed intelligence that showed Putin was saving the

(01:53):
most damaging material that he had in his possession about
Hillary Clinton until after her potential and life victory. The
report goes into great detail about the information that Russia
and Putin had which on Hillary Clinton, which included possible
criminal acts like.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
Secret meetings with multiple named.

Speaker 5 (02:13):
US religious organizations in which State Department officials offered in
exchange for supporting Secretary Clinton's campaign for the presidency, significant
increases in financing.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
From the State Department. There were high level DNC emails that.

Speaker 5 (02:28):
Detailed evidence of Hillary's quote psycho emotional problems, uncontrolled fits
of anger, aggression, and cheerfulness, and that then Secretary Clinton
was allegedly on a daily regiment of heavy tranquilizers.

Speaker 3 (02:41):
President is in Scotland, where he is representing us well.
He met with the President of the European Union, Ursula
Vonderleyan and made a deal that is so in ainly

(03:02):
good for us that it's almost hard to believe. The
President of the European Union. This is why you it's
a scarecrow effect because the President has been tough with
other countries who are smaller and frankly less important to

(03:23):
our trade relations. The European Union leadership understands, all right, guys,
we've got to get our stuff together, because a trade
war might hurt the Americans, but it'll hurt us a
whole lot worse. We've had a good run, we got
the better of the Americans. But this ain't Joe Biden anymore.

(03:43):
This ain't Barack Obama. They're not handing over the store
to us any longer. Here was the President of the
European Commission giving all all due to President Trump.

Speaker 6 (04:00):
And you're known as a tough negotiator and deal maker.

Speaker 7 (04:06):
What is it.

Speaker 8 (04:09):
And what is in front of us if we are successful?
I think.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
Let's go back.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
I love this exchange because it's so vintage quintessential Trump,
She says, you are known as a tough negotiator.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Trump likes tough.

Speaker 3 (04:30):
When you hear him refer to someone that he is praising.
The two things that are highest in Trump world are
to be beautiful and to be Trump and to be tough.
To be tough is it's very school yard language and mindset.

(04:53):
And this is why Trump is so effective. So many
people in the modern era I have gone to finishing schools.
Let's take Mitt Romney for instance, and they know which
fort to use, and they know the proper language to
use to avoid offending, and they can properly tie the
various knots on their neckwear, and they know on what

(05:20):
date you should no longer wear this color. But that's
not who we are. We are, at our root, very
simple creatures, boys and girls. Our needs, the things that
drive us, the things that attract us, the things that

(05:41):
scare us, the things that move us to take action
or avoid the fight or flight reaction. It is much
like the dog part where you watch dogs interact. Trump
understands this, and he understands that if you want to
accomplish things fast, you have to wield power. And he

(06:06):
does that with every fiber of his being. She says, yes,
he's a tough deal maker, and he says, but fair.
And she says, yes, tough, but fair, and he says that,
but that's less important. The fair is less important. What
he's doing here is preventing this thing, preventing the decorum.

(06:28):
He's kind of shattering the fourth wall. He's speaking directly
to you out there in the audience, having a little fun.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Right all right, listeners again.

Speaker 6 (06:40):
And you're known as a tough negotiator and deal maker
for front and what is in front of us.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
If we are.

Speaker 6 (06:51):
Successful, I think it would be the biggest deal each
of us.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
Has ever struck him.

Speaker 3 (06:57):
So I'm very much looking forward ever struck by anybody.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
That's true.

Speaker 7 (07:01):
Right now, we have that that goes to Japan. We
just struck a deal with Japan, as you know, and
they were very close to a deal with China. We
really sort of made a deal with China. But see
how that goes. And we have numerous other deals and
mostly I'm just going to George Tariff's and you know,
if there's not a deal per se, but people are
going to pay tariffs, and we're doing them at the

(07:22):
low end, at the high end because we don't want
to hurt anybody.

Speaker 1 (07:29):
It really is that big a deal.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
It is the biggest economic news and really the biggest
news in the country.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
US should be very the biggest news.

Speaker 3 (07:44):
The President's striking a phenomenal deal for our country with
the European Union. The European Union understood he meant business.
They understand they need America's marketplace to sell their products.
They understood that there has been a trade imbalance for

(08:06):
a long time. You would think that every American would
be rejoicing. We're going to have a fair playing field
to send our products to their consumers in exchange for
access to our market for their products. The media after

(08:27):
the deal was announced, and we'll get into some of
the terms of that deal, asked, well, okay, it sounds
like US is getting all the concessions.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
What are we giving them back?

Speaker 3 (08:41):
I mean, it's almost as if they don't want America
to win. This is what happens when you're guilt ridden.
This is what happens when you're ashamed of success. This
is what happens when you hate our country and believe
that our country needs to be knocked down a bit.

(09:03):
Bring some Muslim terrorists, bring some illegal alien pedophiles and
child traffickers, do some harm to America because we've had
it too good too long. There were American media who
feel this way, and they were in the room and
they asked, hey, well, well, hey, President of European Union,

(09:25):
didn't you get any concessions from the US. How come
Trump gets all the wins and you're not getting any.

Speaker 8 (09:34):
The starting point was an imbalance, a surplus on our
site and a deficit on the US side, and we
wanted to rebalance the trade relation, and we wanted to
do it in a way that trade goes on between
the two of US across the Atlantic, because the two
biggest economies should have a good trade flow to US.

(09:56):
And I think we hit exactly the point we wanted
to find, but enable trade on both sides, which means
good jobs on both sides of the Atlantic, means prosperity
on both sides of the Atlantic, and that was important
for us.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
I've told the story before many times, but the first
time I went to India and we went to the
tourist section of New Delhi. My wife, who had only
been in the United States for a year at that time.
Then my then girlfriend and I and I wanted to
bring some things back for my mom, my dad, my

(10:32):
brother and myself from India, and the tourist area was
also the highest in the highest level quality. Back in
those days, the Indian population couldn't afford the best made
Indian products. Those were fore's were called export quality. In

(10:54):
many third world and developing countries, the best products made
in the country are not sold in the count because
the people can't afford them. They're sold abroad. They're called
export quality. So we would go to these stoes, these shops,
and when they would see me there, let's say that
was an item that should sell for two dollars if

(11:19):
they don't have prices or anything. So if they told
me ten dollars, it was still cheaper than the thirty
dollars it would cost it an American shop, and I'd
go ten dollars. I'll take two of them. And my wife,
just purely on principle, was not going to let me
pay ten dollars. You should only pay two dollars. So
what we learned was a little system or she created.

(11:41):
When we go into the store, if there was an
item I liked, I would move it on the shelf
and she would later come and buy it herself, but
I watched her negotiate in a way. Dicker is the
word dsker, the old English word. The idea of negotiating

(12:01):
is alien to most Americans. Real negotiation. We like to
go into a store, have a price on an item,
pay the price, and leave. In almost every country around
the world, that is crazy. You argue it's exhausting. I

(12:23):
must admit it is exhausting. There are Americans who love
to negotiate, and they love to tell you. You know, you
can go to electronics store and whatever the price they
have on their refrigerator or television, if you ask for
a manager, you can negotiate with them.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
And people do. They love to do that.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
Most people in this country don't love to negotiate. Trump
loves to negotiate. I had a real estate firm in
the late nineties and one of the things we did
is we had brokers and sometimes they would be clients
and I would be involved in a deal. And let's
say house cost a million dollars or sort it's listed

(13:03):
for a million dollars, and my clients might be looking
in the range of seven hundred thousand, and if they'd say,
what about that house over there?

Speaker 1 (13:13):
I'd say it's listen for a million, and they go nevermind,
And I'd say.

Speaker 3 (13:15):
Well, it doesn't hurt for us to make an offer
for a seven hundred thousand. The broker for the seller
would say, I'm not even going to give that offer.
I'm not going to present that to the seller because
it's insulting, to which I would respond, and that house
is worth a million dollars. No, you listed the house
for a million dollars. That did not establish value. You

(13:37):
made an offer. Let me explain contracts one oh one.
I used to be a lawyer. You weren't. Let me
explain how it's worse. You made an offer to the
market a million dollars. Somebody pay me a million dollars. Well,
I don't accept your offer of a million. I make
a counter offer of seven hundred thousand. If you get

(14:00):
your feelings hurt over that. What's the number at which
less than a million dollars but more than seven hundred
thousand that you wouldn't get your feelings hurt? Because I'm
going to tell you you're a fish out of water.
You're incapable of negotiation. This is how big boys play ball.
All you have to do is let the seller know

(14:21):
and they can choose to reject it. But to get
your feelings hurt. You're so emotionally tied into the value
of this home. Most of the political world negotiates on
about that level.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
They're all ready to cry at any moment.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
They don't have any business experience. They've never needed to negotiate.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
The EU will.

Speaker 3 (14:43):
Pay the United States a tariff rate of fifteen percent
on their products on autos, auto parts, pharmaceuticals, and semiconductors.
The sectoral tariffs, the terraffs on the sectors on steel, aluminum,
and copper, will remain at fifty per Parties will discuss
securing supply chains for these products. The new terraf regime

(15:06):
will generate tens of billions of dollars in revenue annually
and help to close the long standing trade in bounce
been the United States and Europe by encouraging local sourcing.
The EU will invest six hundred billion dollars in the
United States over the course of President Trump's term. This
new investment is in addition to the over a billion
dollar EU companies already invest in the United States every year.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
The EU will.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
Double down on America as the energy superpower by purchasing
seven hundred and fifty billion dollars of US energy exports
through twenty twenty eight. This will strengthen the United States
energy dominance, reducing European reliance on adversarial sources that's Russia,
and narrow our trade deficit with the EU. We will

(15:50):
also bring some weaponry and it's a great deal for US.
As President Trump departed for Scotland on Friday, it's a
five day trip. Before he cut the great deal with
the European Union, he was asked a question about the meeting,

(16:14):
and this is as the ongoing Department of Justice investigation
into the Epstein.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
Case.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
A meeting being held with Gilaine Maxwell. She of course
the daughter of the failed Rupert Murdoch, if you will.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
I say Rupert Murdoch of England.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
Murdock pretty active and a competitor of Maxwell in England.
She came to the United States, took up with Jeffrey Epstein,
and was by all accounts his procurer. She's the only
person out of all of that to end up in prison.
There is talk now about a pardon, not by the President,

(17:05):
not by the Department of Justice and not by her lawyers,
not publicly. But I think she'd like to get out
of prison. I think she'd really, really like to get.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
Out of prison.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
And I think she sees her opportunity to drop a
dime on a bunch of people and get out of prison. Now,
is she going to drop a dime on foreign governments
if they're involved.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
But she'll give enough to take down the right people,
and she will be given a pardon or a commutation
of her sentence if nothing else. So, the President was
asked about the meeting between the Department of Justice and
Galaine Maxwell, and he said.

Speaker 9 (17:49):
This, Todd Glass is a great gentleman, a great lad's
a great lawyer. He's got a great heart. But he's
over there now. I don't know actly what's happening, but
I certainly can't talk about parts.

Speaker 7 (18:03):
Trust and you trust what she's telling him. She's a
convicted rappen or is eager to get out of prison.

Speaker 9 (18:08):
Well, you know, he's a professional lawyer. I think he's
been through things like this before. But you know, you
should focus on Clinton. You should focus on the president
of Harvard, the former president of Harvard. You should focus
on some of the hedge funds. Guys. I'll give you
a list. These guys lived with Jeffrey Epstein. I sure
as hell did.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
It's it's going to be interesting to watch this case.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
Go out to watch it. It continue on. She received
a sentence of twenty years in late June twenty twenty two.
She has suffered more than anyone at the hands of
the penal code. Tout all of this, there is the

(19:02):
constant assertion that the reason we can't know whether Bill
Gates was involved and all the other people who were involved,
is to protect the identity of the victims. This is
the silliest, most insulting reason that powerful people and perhaps

(19:24):
nations are being protected. If that was the case, we
would never prosecute anybody who committed a crime against children.
Our system is sufficiently capable of protecting the identities of
the victims and still prosecuting the bad guys. You know,

(19:48):
in Harris County where I live, the De Pelching Center,
which is all encompassing foster children, adoption, and all these
different things. They worked with the Harris County court system
decades ago to create a system where children who had
been molested or abused violence or sex would not have

(20:13):
to go into the courtroom and face their accuser. They
would be able to do it behind in front of
a camera, so they wouldn't have to be in the
room where they would be terrified of the person they were.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Accusing of having abused them.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
This is stupid. This needs to happen. People need to
be prosecuted. But first, the greatest punishment that will be
meted out to people, let's say, hypothetically Bill Gates is
going to be the shame and embarrassment of their involvement.

(20:55):
I don't believe with the legal horsepower they're going to
have behind them, that you're going to send many of
them to prison.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
I don't.

Speaker 3 (21:06):
Donald Trump talking about Bill Clinton multiple times, noting that
Clinton made twenty eight trips to Epstein Island.

Speaker 9 (21:14):
Bill Clinton new went to the island the eight times.
I never went to the island.

Speaker 6 (21:20):
Letter.

Speaker 9 (21:22):
I don't even know what they're talking about. Now, somebody
I coould have written a letter used my name, but
that's happened a lot. All you have to do is
take a look at the dossier, the fake Dassier.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
You know, Trump goes back with the Clintons, they were
once friends. I don't know how many people still care
about Bill Clinton. I don't Rush Limbaugh made a living
off of Bill Clinton in the early days of his
ascendants Clinton's campaign and then his eight years that that

(21:57):
was when Rush Limbaugh really grew to eight prominence. He
hit his stride during the Clinton administration. And I guess
we could argue that he was such a beacon of
the Democrat community and all, you know, he did all
this and he's never been punished. And then there's his wife,

(22:17):
and of course we hate her. We hate her, There's
no doubt about that. There is a collective hatred of
her that is intense, it burns with the heat of
a thousand white hot suns.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
But I don't know.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
How important Clinton is in the grand scheme of things
as people that are still involved in political business, pop
culture media, and that they be.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
Removed and punished.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
I mean, I'm I'm glad to see Bill Clinton shamed,
but let's be honest, I don't think you can shame
Bill Clinton any worse. I honestly don't think there's a
person in this country who doesn't believe that Bill Clinton
was on the Lolita Express and on Orgy Island. And

(23:13):
I think most Americans by most I mean eighty ninety
percent think Bill Clinton was probably engaged in sex acts
with underaged children in violation of the law, and that
he was promiscuous and took advantage.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
Of this.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
Debauched environment that Epstein both provided for free and then
filmed to have leverage over them. And I have no
doubt that Hillary Clinton had made some sort of peace
with all of this. So don't get me wrong, I'm
happy to see further shame brought upon Bill Clinton and
those who would defend him. But to me, that's not

(24:01):
the end goal here. The end goal is to prostitute
the people who were involved in that. You know, well,
it wasn't Trump, it was Clinton. It's not my binary system.
I want to see Bill Gates sent to prison. It's
Michael Berry. As President Trump arrived in Scotland, he warned

(24:27):
the continent they better get their immigration under control or
they will lose.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
Europe.

Speaker 3 (24:37):
These are the sorts of things that people are uncomfortable hearing,
but need to be said. The Middle Eastern invasion of
Europe is absolutely destroying once great cities and nations. You
cannot simply pick up entire populations and roped them down

(25:01):
into London or Paris or Berlin, or for that matter,
Copenhagen or Oslo without dramatically changing those countries for the worse.
Broken Third World countries are not just broken because they
don't have as much oil or the right river or

(25:22):
the right mountain, or a few bad apples are running
the country. Sometimes you have cultural deficiencies. Sometimes you have
cultures of backwardness, rape, violence, injustice, resentment, sloth. Not every

(25:51):
nation has what came to be known as the Calvinist
work ethic.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
Not every nation has.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
An appreciation for perpetuating the rule of law. You know,
in some countries they struggle to even line up to
go into a public place when there are lots of people.
Some countries, they struggle to figure out where to drive
on the road. In some countries, they don't protect women
from rape and abuse, or even allow women out into

(26:23):
public for their faces to be seen. Some countries they
don't protect children and their innocence, or the freedom of
people who worship differently to worship. And the very people
from the countries who don't do that will come to
this country and demand the freedom to invade and conquer.

(26:48):
And it is the white man's burden and guilt that
prevents him from being able to speak out on this issue.

Speaker 1 (26:56):
Until it is too late.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
So President Trump warning the continent that they better get
their immigration under control or they will lose their continent.

Speaker 9 (27:09):
I say two things to Europe. Stop the windmills. You're
ruining your countries. I really mean it.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
It's so said.

Speaker 9 (27:17):
You fly over and you see these windmills all over
the place, ruining your beautiful fields and valleys and killing
your birds, and if they're stuck in the ocean, ruining
your oceans. Stop the windmills.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
And I also, I mean, there's a.

Speaker 9 (27:32):
Couple of things I could say, but on immigration, you
better get your act together. But you're not going to
have Europe anymore. You got to get your act together.
And we you know, as you know, last month, we
had nobody entering our country.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Nobody shut it.

Speaker 9 (27:46):
Down, and we took out a lot of bad people
that got.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
There with Biden.

Speaker 9 (27:50):
Biden was a total stiff and what are he allowed
to happen? But you're allowing it to happen to your countries.
Then you got to stop this horrible invasion that's happening
to Europe. Many countries in Europe some people, some leaders
have not let it happen and they're not getting the

(28:10):
proper credit. I could name them to you right now,
but I'm not going to embarrass the other ones. But
stop this immigration is killing Europe and the other thing.
Stop the windmills killing the beauty of your countries.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
Poland is a nation that has decided they're not going
to be overrun by the Middle East. And when you
compare the rape statistics alone in Poland, just the rape
statistics alone, where you can look at any number of
other issues, welfare abuse, in ten years, Poland will be

(28:51):
a great European nation and France will be suffering in
the squalor of what looks like the market district of
San Francisco. Just add a whole lot more violence. President
Trump was not done with the issue of windmills. And
let me just say so. We tried once a year

(29:13):
to drive from Houston, Texas, up to Colorado. And when
we do, it's a beautiful drive. I love my state.
There's some wide open areas as you get toward the
North Panhandle and if you.

Speaker 1 (29:29):
Look at the if you look at the map.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
Of Texas, you'll see what looks like the handle of
a pan which we call the Panhandle, the northern little
sliver up there. When you get up toward that area
and Maillo in north, you'll see these areas that used
to be just blue sky, what you would call the
blue sky, you know, wide open skies that we sing

(29:55):
about in home on the range that you see in Montana,
and why for that matter of the Dakotas. And yet
the skies have been polluted by these windmills that are
absolutely awful and inefficient. And President Trump, to his credit,

(30:17):
hates inefficiency. So he went back to the point, We're
not building any more damn windmills in this country.

Speaker 7 (30:26):
And the other thing I say to Europe, we will
not allow a windmill to be built.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
In the United States.

Speaker 7 (30:31):
They're killing as they're killing the beauty of our scenery.
Our valleys are beautiful planes. And I'm not talking about airplanes.
I'm talking about beautiful planes, beautiful areas in the United States.
And you look up then you see windmills.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
All over the place.

Speaker 7 (30:49):
It's a horrible thing. It's the most expensive form of energy.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
It's no good.

Speaker 7 (30:53):
They're made in China, almost all of them. When they
start to rust and rod in eight years, you can't
really turn them off. You can't bear them. They won't
let you bury the propellers, you know, the props because
there are a certain type of fiber that doesn't go
well with the land. That's what they say, the environmental
let's say you can't bury them because the fiber doesn't

(31:13):
go well with the land.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
In other words, if you bury it, it will harm
our soil.

Speaker 7 (31:18):
The whole thing is a conjob. It's very expensive and
in all fairness, Germany tried it and wind doesn't work.
You need subsidy for wind and energy should not need
substy With energy, you make.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
Money, you don't lose money.

Speaker 7 (31:33):
But more important than that is it ruins the landscape.
It kills the birds. They're noisy.

Speaker 6 (31:40):
You know.

Speaker 7 (31:40):
You have a certain place in the Massachusetts area that
over the last twenty years had one or two whales Washershaw,
and over the last short period of time they'd eighteen. Okay,
because it's driving them local, it's driving them crazy.

Speaker 1 (31:58):
Now windmills will not.

Speaker 7 (32:00):
It's not going to happen in the United States, and
it's very expensive, and I would love to see I mean,
today I'm playing the best course I think in the world.
Turnbury even though I own it. It's probably the best
course in the world. Right And I look over the
horizon and I see nine windmills. Like great at the
end of the I said, isn't that a shame?

Speaker 1 (32:21):
What a shame.

Speaker 7 (32:22):
You have the same thing all over all over Europe
in particular, you have windmills all over the place. Some
of the countries prohibited. But people ought to know these
these windmills are very destructive.

Speaker 1 (32:35):
They're environmentally unsound.

Speaker 7 (32:38):
Just the exact opposite, because the environmentals they're not really environmentalists.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
They have political hacks.

Speaker 7 (32:43):
These are people that they almost want to harm the country.
But you look at these beautiful landscapes all over all
over the.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Know the world.

Speaker 7 (32:54):
Many countries have gotten smart.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
They will not allow it.

Speaker 7 (32:57):
They will not It's the worst form of energy, the
most expensive all the energy. But the window should not
be allowed.

Speaker 9 (33:08):
H
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