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August 14, 2025 • 32 mins

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

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Of the attack.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
The seal is still up.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
I got no reading.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
Sure, All up, all crap, Hold.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
Up, take a base of back green foot, the whole etective.

Speaker 4 (00:30):
Caper.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
We haven't even shipped the seven.

Speaker 4 (00:33):
It's a cross to our nation's capital into a sanctuary jurisdiction.
That's the other thing. We have to get rid of
sanctuary cities as quickly as possible. We're going to do
it too. We have to because it's sanctuary for criminals,
releasing illegal alien gang members onto the streets.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
In twenty twenty two.

Speaker 4 (00:49):
Nearly seventy percent of criminals arrested in Washington went unprosecuted.
That's not going to happen with the group we have
standing aside and standing behind me.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
This is liberation Day in DC, and.

Speaker 3 (01:01):
We're going to take our capital back.

Speaker 5 (01:03):
President Trump declaring a public safety emergency in DC, painting
an apocalyptic picture adamant crime is spiraling out of control,
but his depiction stands in stark contrast to the official figures,
which show crime in the Capitol is actually in decline.
Violent crime recently hitting a thirty year low down twenty

(01:26):
six percent since last year. Burglary down nineteen percent, murder
down twelve percent.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
The murder rate.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
You can't keep saying violent crime is done. With the
murder rates up to the average. Verson the murder RUP's
about life and death. You don't brag about a rising
murder rate.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
I agree with you, Migan.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
They're falling into the trap of defending what's indefensible.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
It's a trap. Yes, it's a trap.

Speaker 6 (01:50):
I mean, if it's not a winner politically to say, oh,
you're wrong, look.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
At the data.

Speaker 6 (01:56):
Because you know, one violent crime happens in a very
heavily popular part of the city. People hear about it,
and it's visceral. They don't want it.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
President Trump has revealed that he has been asked to
host the Kennedy Center Awards show Boom. You don't have
to ask him twise. I've been asked to host.

Speaker 4 (02:21):
I said, I'm the President of the United States. Are
you fools asking me to do that? Sir, you'll get
much higher ratings. I said, I don't care. I'm President
of the United said I won't do it. They said please,
And then Susie.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
Well said to me, starting right, at a house. I said, Okay, Susie,
I'll do it. That's the power she's got. You imagine
Donald Trump hosting an award show. I mean The Apprentice.
People forget he didn't just show up with The Apprentice
and say you're fired. He was the producer. He was

(02:58):
the brains behind it. He was driving this train. It
would be the highest rateed awards show in decades. It would.
It would. It's not only Maga who would watch. Everybody
would watch. It would get Super Bowl numbers just to

(03:18):
see what he would do. The people who love him
are gonna watch, people who hate him are going to watch,
and everybody else is gonna be like the heck, it
might be interesting. It would be like the final episode
of mash. It would be Who Shot j R? Kind
of numbers. People would tune in just to see what

(03:42):
he's gonna say.

Speaker 4 (03:50):
He has wonder ability, I don't have.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
He slips, he can slip.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
This guy goes on a beach and he lays down
on one of those you know six ounces they weighed
six ounces that he can't lift it.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
The best part about Trump hosting an award show is
how he weaves his zingers into things. How he weaves
his commentary and insults and a fake brag, and sometimes
it's not fake, sometimes he means it. And a little
edgy comment here, and a little pope there and a

(04:33):
little fun here. It's good. The format is going to
be perfect for him.

Speaker 4 (04:46):
And I just want to thank you because you have
very very special people. You were here long before any
of us were here. Although we have a representative in
Congress who they say was here a long time ago.

Speaker 3 (05:01):
They call her a Pocahontas. But you know what, I
like you, man.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
I'm so excited about football season about this time every year,
I get fired up, can't wait football. I'm not one
of these people that goes crazy for a particular team.
I found that I enjoy the game more if I
just watched the game for the craftsmanship of it, for

(05:34):
the quality of the competition. That drives people crazy because
they want you to be like them, which is a
miserable sports fan who is miserable when their team loses
and even more miserable when they win because they have
anxiety over the next game and they're always wanting the
coach fired. And I just enjoy watching this crazy thing
that we still get to have in our society. The

(05:56):
left hasn't ruined yet. I mean, can you imagine? And
then I turn on Fox News in the background today
and I look up on the screen and their promotion
for It's about to be football season. That's what people
are talking about. Taylor Swift joins Kelsey Brothers podcast. I'm
so tired of Taylor Swift. I'm so tired of the

(06:19):
Kelsey Brothers. I'm so tired of that whole thing. And
then people say, well, it's good for the game, you
get more girls watching. The last thing I want is
more girls watching football. You go to a bar with
your buddies to have a drink and watch the game.
There's always some girl there who's trying too hard to

(06:42):
show you that she's a sports fan. So she screams
and hollers and talks in the most vile, disgusting way.
You kiss your kids with that mouth. And she's always
some single woman and you know the type, right, you know,
And she's screaming and hollering like she's trying to act

(07:02):
like she knows something about football, and just make it stop.
Lucky you. The Michael Verie Show continues much your Lucky
Day at the President's Kennedy Center announcement. You made a

(07:23):
statement that is incredibly true and it is something that
is important to understand. And this is the collapse of
the left when they went woke. You know, first, let
me play the audio. This is going to be five twelve,
President Trump. The Academy Awards drew big numbers until they
went woke.

Speaker 4 (07:44):
Look at the Academy Awards against lousy ratings. Now it's
all woke. All they do is talk about how much
they hate Trump. But nobody likes that. They don't watch anymore.
That just to have forty five million people watching. Remember
the Apprentice first season, The Apprentice had forty two million people.
The Academy Awards had forty one million people. We were

(08:04):
the second show to the super Bowl. But since then
the Academy Awards have gone down to I think they've
gone down to numbers that are like a regular show
because it went well.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
So there has been a trend lately. After the Sydney
Sweeney ad that She's got good genes ad, you had
all these fat, ugly black women on national television talk
shows like on CNN talking about how this was very

(08:39):
upsetting and what it was really about. Was there was
a white woman in an ad, an attractive white woman,
and the ad has generated millions of dollars for the
company American Eagle and What's happening. These are the people
who fund talk radio. These are people who pay my bills.

(09:01):
These people who play pay Clay and Bucks bills, and
Shawn's bills, and Glenn's bills, and Jesse's bills and Mark
Levin's bills. These are the people. These are the companies
and individuals who make up the vast majority of our country,
and many of them are in fact white, although plenty aren't.
There plenty of black people who say, Hey, I want
to be on that side over there. I don't want

(09:23):
to be over here in the inner city, gang banging,
Obama loving Kamala Tosuck and the crowd. That's not who
I am, and I don't. I don't like it. I
don't want to get shot. So anyway, there is there
has been an awakening to use the woke. No, there's
been an awakening of people. So the Sidney Sweeney ad happens,

(09:44):
and then and then from there, these sororities apparently they've
been doing this for a while. I didn't know this
they make their little video. So you've got all these
cute little white girls answering the blazing saddles question. Yeah,
they're on a diversity campus in cutoff blue jeans, doing
choreographed dance moves and probably driving the boys on campus

(10:10):
crazy with with how cute they are. And so there
they are. You know, there's Clemson, there's Alabama, there's South Carolina.
They're all they're all making their their their videos, and
it's making the left crazy. And the reason is they
don't want white people to be beautiful. They don't want

(10:31):
white people to be a part of the culture. And
white people bought into this. And the reason this must
be stopped is if you tell people that they're in
the majority and they understand it, they will no longer
consent to the martial law of cancel culture in our society.

(10:55):
People will stop self censoring. The greatest accomplishment of the
Left was not woke culture cancelations of people. It was
the byproduct, which was by design. It is the self censorship.
Because you see, the left can't police you all the

(11:18):
time everywhere in every place, there aren't enough of them.
But if they can make you afraid to speak your mind,
then you become your own self censor and you do
their job for them. And that's that's why it's important
for them to have some trophies. If they get a trophy,

(11:41):
if they if they ruin somebody's career. Jimmy the Greek
said a bad thing. He's a racist. No he's not.
This guy over here's a racist. This guy's a misogynist,
this guy's a transphobe, this guy's islamophobe. No, he's just
a person who notices all these Muslims coming in and
demanding special treatment when their culture doesn't give special treatment

(12:04):
to anyone, and nobody required them to come here. And
that's just an opinion of a person. You're an islamophobe. Oh,
I'm sorry, my career has been ruined. Let me not
speak out. And then everyone around you says, oh, I
don't ever want to talk. I just want to watch.
Because if people react to what they see going on
in this country and they simply state their opinion as

(12:26):
to what's happening, there would be an overwhelming backlash to
what's happening and he would have to stop. So the
trick is, the trick to all of this is to
make people so scared to speak out. Well, now we're
seeing the reverse. Once people start expressing themselves, then all

(12:52):
of a sudden, it empowers other people. Hey there's somebody
else like me that feels the way I do. They're everywhere,
every mechanic shop, They're in every household, they're in every church.
And so now that those people are empowered to say,
we're not gonna watch the Academy Awards. We're not gonna
watch a group of people lathering each other up over

(13:15):
their leftism. They don't even talk about whether it's the OSCARS,
Academy Awards, CMA's. They don't talk about the art anymore,
the movie, the song, TV show, or it's all now
about let me show you how I can care about
the people in some country I've never been to, fifteen
countries away, and the rest of you should care and

(13:36):
look at my crocodile tears. Because their agent told them,
you've got to show your social awareness. You can't just
be an actor or a singer or an athlete. Colin,
you gotta take a knee. You gotta be bigger than that.
You got to you got to stand for something else
and have everyone you know think you're you're you're the

(13:57):
best anyway on that subject. President Trump, I really do
think he does these sorts of things to tweak the left.
I think he enjoys it, but I also think it's
very calculated, because when he tweaks the left, he makes
them angry, and that's when they make mistakes. This is

(14:18):
Donald Trump talking about always having wanted a Kennedy Center
award but never getting one, and then he says, next year,
maybe we'll honor Trump. Well, that leads the left. Hey
gonna give him some award he got done, and here
he is just chuckling at him, just laughing in their face.
Nineteen seventy eight.

Speaker 4 (14:37):
The Kennedy Center Honors have been among the most prestigious
awards in the performing arts.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
I wanted one. I was never able to get one.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
This year.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
It's true. Actually I would have taken it if they
would have called me.

Speaker 4 (14:48):
I waited and waited and waited, and I said, the
hell with it.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
I'll become chairman. I'll give myself an honor.

Speaker 4 (14:54):
Maybe I'm gonna honor next year, we'll honor Trump.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
Okay. The Michael Verie Show, Trump at the Kennedy Center
pressor made a statement. It really affected me. I spent
a lot of time in DC. I worked there as
a as a young lawyer. I went there as a

(15:20):
high school kid. I raised the money for my little
town to pay for myself to go and get to
hang out in Congress and get to learn about our government.
And I'm one of these goober nerds who believes in
the American ideal. We went as a group, the group

(15:41):
of students. I it was a it was a conference
you went for young leaders to learn about leadership and
our government. And I was I was very impressed with
one of the mentors. And this was like young life
or a boy Scout leader or you know, your youth coach.
You know, as a young man, I was seventeen years old.

(16:03):
You're impressed by guys a little older than you have
their stuff together. And I don't remember the guy's name.
But we went to the Jefferson Museum and it's a
beautiful museum. It's kind of it's kind of odd to
get to because it's in an island with the road

(16:24):
around it. But while we were there, I was very
impressed with this fellow and he said he turned his
back to the Jefferson to the museum that has Jefferson
has a quote on the wall, and he proceeded to
recite the words that were on the wall, and man,

(16:46):
I was so impressed. I was a high school debater.
I said, I got to do this. I said, how
did you learn that? He said, I was about your age.
I was at a government camp just like you are,
not this one, but different one. And I looked up
on that wall and I determined that I was going
to memorize those words. And I sat here until I did,

(17:10):
and I thought, then I'm going to do the same
darn thing. So he and the group went to leave.
U sad, I'm gonna stay here. I'll walk back. That
was fine, and I learned it, and since that day
I have memorized what is on the wall of the
Jefferson Memorial. And it's about the need for government to
adapt to new problems, new solutions, a new way of thinking.

(17:34):
And it goes like this, if I can remember it.
Some men look to constitutions with sanctimonious reverence and deem them,
like the ark of the Covenant, to sacred to be touched.
They ascribed to the men of the preceding age a
wisdom more than human, and assume what they did to
be beyond amendment. Laws and institutions must go hand in

(17:55):
hand with the progress of the human mind. We might
as well require a man to wear the coat which
fitted him as a boy, as for civilized society to
remain ever under the regime of their ancestors. Now, at
seventeen years old, I was so impressed with that monument
and with those words, and with our capital and our government.

(18:17):
I believed in the American ideal. And then I went
back years later as a young lawyer, and the city
was still a point of great pride, but I began
to see the legal side of it and less of
the Even though I worked at an FDA firm, I

(18:38):
was very much entranced and entrenched in being a good lawyer,
and so I was focused on the legal community in DC.
But all the while I was very I lived at
the University Club, which was next door to the Russian Embassy,
and every evening antonin Scalia Clarence Thomas was Howld heflin

(19:01):
what was the guy's name from the old Democrat from
from Alabama. There was a guy named Paul Allen who
was a gun runner. I don't think he admitted to
be a gun runner, but he was. And some of
these guys is his old guy, James Toronto, who ended
up at the Wall Street Journal. And that was how
I first met James. He would wear a smoking jacket.

(19:21):
But I got a photo of me and and in
between Scalia and and Thomas at the at the Cigar
Lover's dinner, and they were so nice to me, and
I was I was just I was like a puppy.
I was just so impressed with them. I still am.
I had such adoration for these great patriots, these great
contributors to America's jurisprudence, and here I was a baby lawyer.

(19:44):
Scale invited me to his office my wife and I went.
I said, would be okay if I hired a photography
and photographer and he said, I'd be honored. And so
he finds out my wife is from India and he
had just come back from being in India and they
had asked him to sit in with the Supreme Court
as a guest judge. And he was so honored by this.
He talked to her about India and she had just
come from India. Oh it was great. Anyway, I I

(20:08):
mean call me silly. I want to be proud of Washington,
d C. I remember walking those streets as a seventeen
year old kid. I didn't I didn't want I didn't drink.
I didn't want to, so we would finish for the day.
The other kids would go and drink. I'm not judging them,
I'm not criticizing them. I didn't drink and drink twelve.
I was almost thirty. I was twenty nine. But I

(20:29):
was so in awe. I mean, I felt like a
character in literature. You know, I felt like little Philip
Careyon of human bondage, you know, just walking the streets,
or or himing way and finding, you know, forcing myself lost,
or losing myself in a foreign place, or f Scott Fitzgerald.
I just I just imagined myself in this, in this,

(20:50):
in this amazing moment in time. And here was our capital.
And then and then our capital turned vile and nasty
and filth, the full of filthy, nasty, violent people. And
then it was no longer. The buildings are still there,
but it was no longer this grand, glorious, wonderful place.

(21:11):
And you know, somebody made the comment, I can't remember
it was the other day. Why shouldn't Washington, d C.
Feel like Disneyland. Why couldn't it be a place that
you go as a tourist, used to see the cherry blossoms,
used to you'd you'd go go down the Potomac and
fly into National Airport right there, next to the to
the to the Capitol, walk the Capitol, you see our government,
you sit in the gallery. Why why shouldn't that be

(21:33):
the case? Why can't that be the case? Well, it can,
that's just it. It can and it should. And I think
Trump really gets that. And you know, he has a
developer's mind, a developer's sensibility. When he sees something, he
thinks to himself, you know, with the cot of paint,
that could look good. Clean this thing up, put a

(21:56):
little border on that, put a put a bowl on. Hey,
we would make the let's dress this thing up, let's
make it nice. And I can do that, That's what
he's thinking. I can do that. I can make our
capital a place we're proud of. Again, don't forget what's
going on here, folks. July fourth of next year is
the two hundred and fiftieth. It's to bi centennial. It's

(22:21):
I mean two hundred. Let's see yeah, two hundred fiftieth.
He he is mindful that we want to get DC
cleaned up, not just for all the time, but for this.
I mean, if San Francisco can clean up, if Gavin
Newsom can clean up San Francisco for Shi Jingping and
his visit and make it look nice and get all
the homeless people off the streets, so we can do

(22:43):
that in Washington, d C. And not just for the
two hundred and fiftieth, but for all the time. We
can make our capital something we're proud of again. We
can believe in our capital. We could be proud of
our capital. I know these sound like such Pollyanna silly
things to say, but I believe it. I told you
that whole story to tell you. I love this country.

(23:05):
I love our capital, I love our documents. I love
what we gave the world. I love what we gave
the world. I love that the world learned from us
about the rights of man and self governance. And know
we're not perfect, but I love these things. I believe
in these things. I really do, I deeply. I know

(23:25):
it sounds like I'm such a senate, but it's out
of a sense of frustration. I'm the coach who loves
his team and wants them to win. I'll bet you
we've got ten thousand sweet little ladies of seventy or
more that would make a pound case that you could
eat cold and enjoy. Michael Ryshow. We don't talk enough

(23:52):
about Marshall Tucker Band, Charlie Daniels. How about Charlie Daniels
name checking, Alma Brothers, Whipping Post. Can't you see Marshall
Tucker Band. We do talk about Skinner because how awesome

(24:12):
they are CCR. I mean, what a, what a, what
an amazing time in music that this this southern rock genre.
And what's funny to me? How many people will say, ah,
you like all that southern rock, southern rock or southern rock,

(24:35):
and they don't like it and they like more traditional rock.
So what I'll do is to let their guard down.
I'll ask them, Oh, do you like so and so?
Oh you like this so and so? Okay, all right,
but you like Smoke on the Water okay, all right,
Well what do you think that the genesis of that is?
And you think Jim Jim Dandy is clever? But oh okay,

(24:58):
really okay? And then you bring it around to Tom
Petty and they don't realize that Tom Petty was birthed
in a tube at a Southern rock recording facility. Tom
Petty was the next iteration of Southern Rock. But I

(25:20):
digressed because yesterday President Trump at the Kennedy Center announcement
was talking about cashless bail. I'm going to play this
clip and then I want to talk about cashless bail
because when you you know, the reason they couldn't, the
reason illegal immigration wasn't stopped for so long is even

(25:42):
the Republicans didn't believe it could be stopped. I would
constantly get the following refrain or repost, and it was
it's too comprehensive, it's too many pieces. You can't just
stop the people from coming in. Why can't you wait,
can't that's not problem the problem coming in, Yeah, it
is putting people coming in. First. First, we got to

(26:03):
stop people coming in. No, no, no, no no. You
got to go after the companies that are hiring them.
We can do that on Tuesday, but on Monday, we're
stopping them from coming in. No, no, no, because you
got to stop the people that are that are that
are that are hiring them. Okay, well we can do
that too. But now you've you've you've created another group

(26:25):
to fight against it. So what people would do is
create all these different hurdles to why the problem can
never be solved, and then they say, we have to
have we can't, we can't. How about we just close
the border. No, no, in order to do something, you
want something done about illegal immigration. So in order for
us to pass a bill that'll say it's addressing the

(26:47):
legal immigration, we want it to be a comprehensive bill.
Well you know what that means. That means putting a
bunch of junk in there that we don't want. But
as long as it's a common prehensive bill, you go, well,
I don't like these four things over here, but at
least we're getting some border enforcement, so I guess we'll

(27:09):
do all these other things. And that's that's the way
Congress likes to work, and that's how they get bad things.
That's how Obamacare came through. And so everybody had a
problem with this or that piece, but then they got
a goodie over here. Maybe the congressman got a post
office name for him in his town and like that,

(27:30):
in a community center, a highway something. So that's what
ends up happening here. So listen to this as an example. Bell.

Speaker 4 (27:41):
We want to make it so that people if they're
if they murder somebody, they're in jail, they don't get.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Out on no bail.

Speaker 4 (27:48):
They say, we don't want that. We want people to
murder somebody, and they immediately are released and they go
out and murder somebody else. Speak problem, A tremendous problem.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
By the way, we're going.

Speaker 4 (27:57):
To go for statutes in DC and then ultimately for
the rest of the country. Well, that's not going to
be allowed because it was when they did the cashless
bail thing that the numbers really started going up in
this city, in New York, in Chicago, to Los Angeles,
no matter where they have it, the numbers went through

(28:17):
the roof.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
So we're going to meet with them, of course, I'd
like to meet with them.

Speaker 4 (28:21):
We're going to tell them all these good things and
they're going to tell us no, and then we're going
to go out and we're going to vote it in
by the Republicans because I don't believe that we I
don't believe that anybody is capable of making a deal
with these people.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
They have gone crazy. So here's what happened, cashless bell bail.
The ai L was one of these things cooked up
in a George Soros think tank laboratory. And then they
bring the liberals out to you know, Aspen or Marcus

(28:55):
Vineyard or San Francisco or Sonoma, and they have these
conferences and they are this is what we're gonna roll out.
We're gonna roll out, We're gonna cut all the We're
gonna cut the wieners off all the boys, and it's
gonna make the right crazy. But the more we do that,
the more we keep them from distracted from what we're
doing over here, which is cashless bell, global warming, take

(29:15):
over the energy industry, take over the healthcare industry, take
over the food supply. But we'll keep them focused on
the boys getting their wieners cut off because that will
really really upset them. So that's what they do when
a person is arrested. So let's say there's a man
beating up a woman, and hypothetically, we'll just create a

(29:42):
hypothetical what's the crazy. Okay, let's imagine the guys I
don't know black, just make that up and less imagine
we'll just just for the sake of hype. The woman's black,
all right, and they live in this area, and there
are two poor black people, a man and a woman,
and he doesn't like something that she's done, so he

(30:05):
starts beating up on her, and at some point he
pulls out a knife and he stabs her, and twenty
five people watch it happen. So now she's all bloody,
and the cops pull up and they witness it, and
so they arrest him and they bring him down. In
the past, he would have to post a bond, he'd
have to pay bail in order to get out until

(30:29):
the trial. And well, the left decided, well that's not fair.
If he's not rich, he shouldn't have to go to
all his trouble. So this became a okay, well let's
let him out. He still got blood all over him
from what just happened, but we don't want to upset
black people and democrats. And so what do you think
he does when he gets out. If he didn't kill
her already, he's going to kill her now because she's

(30:51):
the witness and anyone else who saw it. There's your
crime problem right there.

Speaker 4 (30:56):
As an example, bail. We want to make it so
that people have there. If they murder somebody, they're in jail,
they don't get out on no bail. They said, we
don't want that. We want people to murder somebody and
they immediately are released and they go out and murder
somebody else. Speak problem, A tremendous problem. By the way,
we're going to go for statutes in DC and then

(31:16):
ultimately for the rest of the country.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Well, that's not going to be allowed because it was when.

Speaker 4 (31:21):
They did the cashless bail thing that the numbers really
started going up in this city, in New York, in Chicago,
to Los Angeles, no matter where they have it, the
numbers went through the roof.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
So we're going to meet with them, of course, I'd
like to meet with them.

Speaker 4 (31:38):
We're going to tell them all these good things and
they're going to tell us no, and then we're going
to go out and we're going to vote it in
by the Republicans because I don't believe that we I
don't believe that anybody is capable of making a deal
with these people.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
They have gone crazy. That is what went wrong in
this country. That is everything that went wrong in this country.
And the President's going to in that nonsense. We're going
to put those people in a cage because that's where
they belong. People like that are rabbit animals. When they
commit their crime, they get put in the cage and
they don't get out
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