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May 19, 2025 • 29 mins

We discuss Donald Trump's celebrated Middle East tour, and how it seems to have impacted his outlook on the Gaza war. We also discuss the P. Diddy trial and how most commentators are getting it wrong. Note: Some adult topics.

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. You're listening to Red Pilled
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(00:25):
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that are out there that speak to your values. So
we want to get into this Trump Middle East trip

(00:48):
because I found it fascinating how well these guys are,
how good they are at welcome parties.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
They really went all out.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
They went all out. You saw in I think it
was Dubai or the world's tallest building. I think that's
in Dubai. They lit up the building with they have
I guess this ability to do some kind of lighting
of the entire building, and they made it into an
American flag. It might be three D mapping. I think
it's probably some kind of lighting system. On the actual

(01:21):
because I don't know if you can actually light the
tallest building in the world with three D mapping. I
think that's probably lighting on the actual building. And they
also because you know how much Trump likes the YMCA song.
This was in I believe Saudi Arabia, they started playing
the YMCA song during his arrival. So this is a

(01:51):
Muslim country playing a lgbtqu song and they're.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
On their traditional garb. They're all wearing white and their headgear.
They look cool. I think it's it's a cool uh
cool garb.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
You know, it's a fascinating thing to watch how these
people are wooing him. And I thought this was kind
of the moment of the trip, is when he basically
put is putting a nail in the coffin of neo conservatism.
Here he is getting a speech at the Saudi US
Investment Forum.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
The transformations have been unbelievably remarkable before our eyes. A
new generation of leaders is transcending the ancient conflicts of
tired divisions of the past and forging a future where
the Middle East is defined by commerce not chaos, where
it exports technology not terrorism, and where people of different

(02:47):
nations religions and creeds are building cities together, not bombing
each other out of existence. We don't want that, and
it's crucial for the wider world to note this great

(03:07):
transformation has not come from Western interventionless or flying people
and beautiful plains giving you lectures on how to live
and how to govern your own affairs. Now, the gleaming
marvels of Riad and Abu Dhabi were not created by
the so called nation builders, neocons, or liberal nonprofits like

(03:31):
those who spent trillions and trillions of dollars failing to
develop Kabal, Baghdad so many other cities. Instead, the birth
of a modern Middle East has been brought by the
people of the region themselves, the people that are right here,
the people that have lived here all their lives. Developing

(03:52):
your own sovereign countries, pursuing your own unique visions and
charting your own destinies in your own way. It's really
incredible what you've done. In the end, the so called
nation builders wrecked far more nations than they built, and
the interventionalists were intervening in complex societies that they did

(04:15):
not even understand themselves. They told you how to do it,
but they had no idea how to do it themselves. Peace, prosperity,
and progress ultimately came not from a radical rejection of
your heritage, but rather from embracing your national traditions and
embracing that same heritage that you love so dearly.

Speaker 1 (04:38):
His speech got applause after applause. Here's like one long
applause that he got. I mean, they was just it
was like a big love fest.

Speaker 4 (04:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
I think he's from his last administration. He built a
pretty strong relationship with Saudi Arabia. But this is one applause.
It was like an over almost forty second applause of
his speech. And to see this kind of this relationship
kind of blossoming, I thought was kind of an interesting development.

(05:10):
Now while he was on this trip, he was kind
of commenting about the situation in Gaza, which I also
kind of thought was interesting that it made me reflect
back to the days that he was getting attacked during
the twenty sixteen campaign when he said he didn't want
to take sides on the issue because if he did,

(05:31):
he wouldn't be able to negotiate peace. And I think
this is kind of playing out right now. But here
he is talking to Brett Baar during this trip.

Speaker 5 (05:40):
Look, people are starving, you know, you see what's going
on right now, people are starving. One of the things
that one of the three great leaders that I saw
two nights ago said to me, please help the people
the Palestinians. I said, other than the Avis, What do
you mean by that? He said this starving and he

(06:01):
meant it with his heart starving. So I've already started
working on that. It's a deep problem, but we'll get
it solved.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
And he didn't stop there on the plane. He also
talked to media about it.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
The IDF was planning to send in tens of thousands
of more troops and expand the war in Gaza, especially
if there wasn't a ceasefire while you were here.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
Do you support that?

Speaker 4 (06:26):
Well, we're going to see what happens. I think a
lot of good things are going to happen over the
next month, and weather to say, we have to help
also out in the palace, and you know a lot
of people are starving on Gaza, so we have to
look at both sides. But well, we got to do.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
A good job. Feels like there's this kind of push
for peace, you know, and I feel like he's.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
In the Middle East by Trump once again.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
I think what he's doing is he's listening. There's a
lot of people on the right that have been talking
about this issue for a very long time, whether it
be Candice Owens, Joe Rogan has been talking about this,
even THEO Vaughn, who has become this kind of force
within the podcast space.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Within the kind of talk, huge, huge guests.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Huge talent on he had been affleck He's he's been
having the kinds of Hollywood talent that you wouldn't normally
see on a kind of a right of center podcast.
But here he is talking about the situation in Godsa
just kind of show you kind of maybe the pressure
that's being applied Trump.

Speaker 6 (07:26):
It's a genocide that's happening while we're alive here in
front of our in front of our lives, people like
putting their kids back together probably like, you know, one
of the sickest things that's ever happened. And uh, and
I'm sorry if I kind of haven't said about it.

(07:46):
I've tried to talk about it and learn about it.
I just wanted to say something. I don't even know
what to do, you know, And it's crazy because our
country is also complicit in in it. You know, it's
in it and has been for a long time, and
and it's just kind of interesting because then you just realize, oh, well,
I'm just a Yeah, I'm a member of this country,

(08:06):
but I'm just what we want sometimes doesn't matter. Yeah,
So just praying for those people and just the grief
that that is all going to cause. You notice, like,
what are we doing?

Speaker 1 (08:24):
So he's you know, getting pretty emotional there. You know,
it seemed like he was about to cry. And you
have Rogan kind of have been talking about this for
quite some time, which I think is why he's been
getting a lot of heat from various quarters in regards
to the kind of guests that he's been having on
about talking about this issue. And I just think at
the end of the day, you see this kind of
growing groundswell of people kind of speaking out about this war,

(08:47):
wanting peace, and a lot of people have been radicalized
about this issue, about this Israeli Gaza issue, and the
youth seem to be on the side of peace. I mean,
I think it's very very clear when you have a
guy like Yay putting out a song, this Kyle Hitler song,

(09:08):
and you see young people singing it enthusiastically on camera.
You see remixes of this song coming out. There's a
country version out, there's a classical version out, there is
banjo version out. You're seeing this kind of groundswell of
people coming out, and I think it's related. I think

(09:31):
it's related to what you are seeing in Gaza and
the and the and the war that's happening there. I
don't even know if you can necessarily call it a war.
It is a war against Hamas. The place needs to
be rid of Hamas. This they have been nothing but
a negative impact on the Palestinian people, and I understand

(09:54):
the desire and the effort to remove them from that area.
But there is an enormous force out there that is growing,
that has been pushing for a ceasefire for quite some time.
You know, I've been wanting a ceasefire there for quite
some time. But you're seeing this happen, and now you're
starting to see Trump respond to this. And it's not

(10:17):
just anti Zionists are talking about this. You have other
Jews that are talking about this. They want to cease
fire there. And I think that there is a group
of people here in the United States that don't want
to have anything to do with this any part in
this war. They don't want American dollars to be spent
on this, and it's now it seemed like it's starting

(10:38):
to impact Trump. Trump is kind of good at kind
of schmoozing, and when he's around certain people, he will
say things that to schmooze them because he knows that
he's going to say something that they want to hear.
So maybe that's some of it, but it is something
that I think it's beginning to grow. You see this
shift happening on the right where there is this huge

(11:01):
segment of this anti war movement happening on the right,
and they blame a lot of these kind of Middle
East conflicts on Israel. And I think that at the end
of the day, there needs to be a ceasefire, and
I think there needs to be a real debate over
these issues, not using censorship to quiet people, not using

(11:24):
your power in the media to shut people up, but
to have a real debate because there is Israel is
in a quagmire. There you have people that are willing
to hide in schools and hide in hospitals. I've heard
this one reporter that I respect kind of was talking
about the situation when she was there and she saw
these kind of terrorists go into this hospital and they

(11:46):
were wondering why the idea wasn't following them them there,
and they were like, well, because they're they're in a hospital,
we can't shoot on it. And so they're in this
is horrible situation. How does this get solved? I think
at the end of the day, you have so many
of these people kind of speaking out now because they
just don't want American involved in it.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
I'm one of those people. I don't want to see
American dollars go to either side. I really really don't.
But I also don't want to see Trump, you know,
in the pocket of Qatar, in the pocket of Israel.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
There's been some talk about that.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
I don't want that either.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Yeah, you know. And it's one thing if it's private charity,
if you give to someone like the IFCJ, which you know,
gives bomb shelters and food to vulnerable people. If you
give to the Central Kitchen, which gives food to the
people that are starving in war zones like Gaza. But
it's another thing when the federal government is giving that

(12:41):
money private charity and federal government are two different things,
and I could understand why people would just want that
kind of giving to be private.

Speaker 2 (12:48):
You know what else is I don't like this idea
that when you talk about this situation you really get
attacked from all sides. We have really gotten to the
place with this particular situation that it's very very touchy
to a lot a lot of people. You can't say
anything about that, or then you're an anti semi Oh
you can't say anything about that, or else you want,

(13:08):
you know, children in God to dying. It's like you
can't say anything.

Speaker 5 (13:11):
No.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Well, we were talking about this pretty early on when
this conflict happened, and I noticed that one of the
things that I was saying very I'd see this argument
of Okay, Israel has a right to exist, and my
whole argument on that is that no government has the
right to exist. America doesn't have a right to exist.

(13:32):
If you have power and you can hold the territory,
that's what makes a government and that's what makes a state.
And I remember mentioning that early on, you know, right
after the horrific attacks in Israel on October seventh, and
we had a bunch of people come at us saying like,
how can you say that Israel does have a right
to exist. I'm like, no country has a right to exist.

(13:55):
They don't. It's it's you create your boundaries through force,
and you know, might makes right. If you can hold
your territory, you basically exist because of that. And so
anytime you're right, anytime you talk about this issue, it
comes with these decades long conflicts that have been going
back and forth, and I think at the end of
the day, Americans just don't want to be involved in it.

(14:19):
They also want peace. They don't want, you know, Israel
to get bombed. You don't want Gosins to get bombed.
You want this to stop. You want there to find
some kind of like stability there. And I think it's
kind of interesting to now see Trump talking about this
because that message seems to have been getting to him.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Yeah, it does. If there was a lot of people,
i think minority that were very, very upset on the
right that Trump went out there when being Mark Lebban,
he was flipping out.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
There's a lot of people on the right that were
flipping out. And you also had the Free Press, which
is Barry Weiss's media outlet, putting out a story about
how Katar bought America. At the end of the day,
I'm anti war. I don't want to see civilians bombed period,
anything that can stop that. But I do understand how

(15:11):
messy this situation is. But at the end of the day,
I think Americans just they don't want their dollars thrown
into another Middle East conflict. Let's take a quick break
and we're going to get into the Ditty trial because
I've been seeing some kind of weird takes on this trial.
It's gonna be kind of interesting to get your take
on this, Adriana, Let's talk about this right after the break.

(15:37):
This is red pilled America's faan Boogie. Be sure to
check out What's an American. We got four parts out
right now, and I think we're gonna end. I think
we're gonna have two more in the series. But check
it out, share it with your friends and family. So
I want to get into this Ditty trial a little
bit because we've spoke a little bit about the Diddy thing.
We watched a documentary I think it was on HBO

(15:58):
on Ditty and his Downfall, and we had been talking
about Diddy for quite some time here in Famboogie and
about how we had heard years ago we had this
guy working with us back in our advertising days. He
used to give us information about Diddy because he worked
with Ditty at one point.

Speaker 2 (16:18):
And down with that.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
The information that we have he would he gave us
was that, you know, the talk of the town was
is that he was gay. So we had been kind
of that had been on our radar since the early
two thousands, that he might potentially be gay. And then
you start hearing, you know, I think Kanye went at
him during his whole kind of in twenty twenty two.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
And he, by the way, according to fifty cent, Kanye
is gay too.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
Well, I think he's already admitted to giving his cousin blowjobs.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
So it would for six years that's gay. I would
say it is, yeah, that's gay.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
But that's just my opinion. Kanye was calling him a fed,
a fed, and so now fast forward to his house
gets raided. He had a lawsuit come out against him
about this. This one producer came out, excuse me, it
wasn't a producer. Might think I might have been a singer.
It came out. I think he was a gospel It

(17:12):
might have been a gospel guy came out and did
a lawsuit against him. Then Cassie filed a lawsuit against him,
and he settled with her like within twenty four hours.
And then a video came out where that you actually
see him hitting her and kicking her at a hotel.
He's a towel wrapped around his waist.

Speaker 2 (17:29):
I think she got twenty million dollars.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
It was a big, big, big payout. Well, then his
house gets raided by the Feds and there's all this talk.
I think the first thing they kind of float out
there is the baby oil story and how he just
has gobs and gobs and gobs of baby oil.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
Well, they removed a ton of baby oil when they
raided the house. So he's been charged with sex trafficking
and racketeering. And basically his defense is saying that he's,
you know, the only thing that he is is he
he's an abuser, you know, domestic violence that he did,
he did do that, but that they are targeting him

(18:09):
for his sexual preferences, which sound pretty freaky, more freaky
than a regular freaky, like it's like freaky freaky gross.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
Yeah, but we watched this documentary and I will say
this after watching that HBO documentary about Diddy, about Diddy
and his downfall, I was not impressed. I thought that
it didn't give up any new information. It was kind
of like, this guy's a thug, he's has a thug history,
and then there's they put forward these women that had

(18:42):
these claims against him, but the claims were to me,
didn't have any credibility. The women one of the women
that they kind of used for the longest time, they
kind of introduced early in the show and they don't
show her until later on in the series. She didn't deliver.
She seemed like she was a gold digger. She wanted
to be associated with him because of his money and power.

(19:02):
So so I was unimpressed at the end of that documentary,
and so far, I'm kind of unimpressed with this case
from what I've been seeing so far. I think that
he is an abuser. I think that he should get
charged for that and a drug addict. Yes, he should
obviously be getting charged for assault. It's right there on camera.

(19:22):
I don't know if it meets the statute of limitations,
but it's very clear that you don't hit a woman
the way that he was hitting her and not have
done that before. That's not a first time.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
That wasn't a first time offense.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
Clear kind of a guy, you know. But all of
the other stuff about the sex trafficking and the rico stuff,
what you're seeing now. I want to read some of
these texts the defense have put forward. This is text
between Cassie and Diddy. So one of the texts Sean P.
Diddy Comb's texts Cassie and says, I miss you already,
and she says me too. He says, when do you

(19:56):
want to freak off?

Speaker 6 (19:58):
Lol?

Speaker 1 (19:59):
She says, lol, I'm just going up to change. I'm
always ready to freak off lolol. And then he responds,
you tell me the day you choose, and Cassie responds,
it can be whenever, and p did He says, name
the night and Cassie responds, I feel like the weekend,

(20:19):
a Friday night would be best, so we'd want time
to recover for the work week. This upcoming weekend is
the only one I have until the twenty eighth, did
he respond. Okay, I'm on it. Cassie responds, but if
you can't, we can always do it during the week.
You know, that doesn't matter. To me and did he
respondse Friday, it is I wish we could get jewels here.

(20:44):
I think jewels might be a sex worker because see
what he would do is is he'd bring these sex
workers in on it, and they would have these kind
of crazy drug filled sex parties.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
Yes, with a lot of baby oil, with a lot
of baby Cassie testified that they would use as many
as ten large baby oil bottles because he really liked
her have that slicky, slicky look.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
Where would all the baby oil go?

Speaker 2 (21:07):
I mean, did they have a harp down or like
on the bed? Did they change the mattress every time?

Speaker 1 (21:12):
Like what I'm saying, like if they were doing it
at a hotel now apparently, and this is the thing.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
That's going to it must have been soaked.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
This is the thing that's going end up taking out
him out that Continental hotel where he's seen beating up Cassie. Yeah,
I think that was a freak ofugh. So the argument
is is that she was at the freak off, she
didn't want to be there, she left. He comes running
out with a towel, beats her up, and then drags
her back.

Speaker 2 (21:37):
Okay, see you know more about this than I do.
I thought I had some info, but you've got the real.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
I've been listening to various people that have been paying
attention to the case, and I've been reading some of
the kind of evidence that's been coming out of the case.
So what you're clearly seeing in these text messages is
that it sounds like, at least in this instance, she
was into the freak coughs.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Because she says to her about jewels, I want to
get jewels here. Then she says, maybe we could. I
don't know him that well. And then Diddy says, want
me to call him and feel him out, and she says,
I can do that. Yeah, so she knows him well
enough to reach out to him so that she.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
And his other freak coughs.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Yeah, this that's weird.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
So you know, I've been hearing people. I saw Megan
Kelly kind of talking about this, and she's talking about
how disgusting P Didty is, and I agree, P Didty
is disgusting. I think at the end of the day,
he has lived a degenerate lifestyle and he was unrepentant
until he got caught. Okay, that's the key. He was
doing this for a very long time, he's been involved

(22:39):
in shenanigan's. He's decided to live this lifestyle, and if
he goes down because of that, then I'm not going
to lose any sleep over it. I don't think that
he had this crazy sex trafficking business. He might have
had some kind of blackmail thing going on, because if
his videotaping some of these things, perhaps.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Well allegedly he would drug people and then involve them
in his sexual shenanigans or rape them. That's sort of
the allegation.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Well, we'll see if that evidence. I haven't seen anything.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Of that in the trial yet, and.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
There's't been any leaks on that, and usually there is
some kind of leaks on those companies, and.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
Some guys came out and say, like, you know, he
drugged me and raped me.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
We'll see, we'll see if that comes out in evidence.
But at the end of the day, the thing that
I have an issue with this is that Cassie knew
what she was getting into with this man, nobody with
any credibility. And this is where I kind of part
ways with Megan Kelly, because Megan Kelly is painting out
Cassie as this kind of innocent, sweet girl that was

(23:44):
just kind of like naive to everything. There is no
way having been involved in the kind of hip hop
world and putting on concerts and being around that community
for a very long time, there is no way that
she did not know about this guy's reputation and about
potential the thug aspect of him, and about the sexual

(24:06):
side of him, because even we heard about this back
in the day. Okay, so she entered into this situation.
If my daughter had come to me and said I'm
going to start dating P Diddy, I would have raised
Holy hell and stopped it with everything that I have.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
Yeah, I know, of course, but we don't know anything
about Cassie's parents.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
We don't know anything about pet Cassie's parents. But she
is but she is a human being that was making
decisions and making decisions to be with this man.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
Yeah, she was doing that of her own way.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
And there was even one point I believe this came
out in the case that her future husband called her
while she was having sex with P Diddy. Yeah, so
this is somebody that saw me. This is somebody that
saw somebody with power wanted to ride those coattails, and

(25:03):
my opinion, ride those coat tails and got involved with
this man. So I guess the point that I'm trying
to make here is that there's no real good people
in this situation.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
I mean, I think a lot of people say that
she was very very young when she got involved with him.
That you know, once you get into an abusive relationship,
there's you know, it does something to you to your mindset.
Maybe there's fear. But having lived the life that I've lived,
knowing people that I've known in the industry, I mean,
I will tell you that, I one, you are part

(25:37):
of the entertainment industry or you know people very closely
involved in it, you know that weird stuff goes on sexually.
I'm not going to name any names, but there is
a person that we knew very well. He was quite famous,
and you know, one time he went into the bathroom
with a tranny that was wearing a pink wig, and
he came out and he was very very intoxicated, and

(26:01):
he had pink hair stuck in the zipper of his pants,
and he was, you know, allegedly a straight man. Yes,
so weird stuff goes on. And Cassy knew that about Giddy, Yes,
and she went in willingly. She was nineteen years old.
She was not a child. She may have been young,
but she wasn't you know, she's not cognitively impaired. She's
not Joe Biden.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
So I do have a hard time with the idea
that she was this prisoner.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
And I also the issue that I have with it
is as if we build a culture that says, to
the women out there, you will be pitied if you
get involved in these kinds of situations, even if you
should have known you shouldn't have been involved with this man,
you will have more women getting in those kinds of situations,

(26:51):
and there will be more victims. Is the point that
I'm trying to make you feel.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
There needs to be accountability for that devisions.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
Yes, and she made the very poor decision of getting
involved in this man, participating in these freak offs apparently
according to these texts willingly, and she was living that lifestyle.
Now she should have gotten out. And there's yes, Okay,
you don't understand, you know, the kind of power situation here,

(27:22):
and you don't understand sexual assault and that a lot
of people, everyone will say that.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
She was a victim of domestic abuse.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Okay, but she she was living this kind of degenerate lifestyle,
and she was reaping benefits from being in this kind
of degenerate lifestyle. And that should not be looked past
because the more you do that, you start creating more
the situation where more women will put themselves in that
position because they there's a way out. Oh I was

(27:50):
a victim.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Yeah, and you know what else, She didn't have any
kids with him. She wasn't like tied to him, yes,
you know, yes, was he paying her bills? Yes, but
she had had some success before. You know, she had
a very popular song. She's gorgeous. She was not tethered
to him in any way other than that that financial.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
The power, the power, the power. He was married to
another woman at one point and was still kind of
having a relationship with her. Wasn't bringing Cassie forward publicly,
wasn't willing to bring her forward publicly. When when his wife,
his ex wife died, he publicly said that how much
he loved her, and that hurt Cassie. There's those texts
came out and she said she was hurt by that.

(28:32):
Should he have hit her, should hit should there have
been abuse? And that of course not. He should be
spend jail in time for those kinds of crimes. But
the more that we condone women getting involved with these
kinds of men and living these kinds of degenerate lifestyles,
I think is going to create or a decade.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
By the way, yes, for a decade.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
It wasn't a short period of Timeah.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
It was a velvet trap for her.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
That's it for this week's edition of Famboogie. Please check
out What's an American? We got four parts up. We're
going to be having at least two more come out
over the course the next couple weeks. Share it with
your friends. If you want to become a fanband member
and support storytelling, go to Redpilled America dot com. Click
join in the top menu and become part of the Fanbam.

(29:21):
We need you guys, so you have to support what
you love or it fades away. Guys, Thank you so much.
Enjoy the rest of your week and until next time.

Speaker 2 (29:29):
Goodbye everybody, Bye everyone,
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