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Pack Rat wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:Pack Rat wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:Pack Rat wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:More blinded, bias, and myopic analysis by p-rat; what a waste of space.
Another word salad thrown about...your posts are empty of any meaning, matches the empty space between your ears.
Another pathetic, weak, and vacuous response by p-rat who rants and raves and launches another ad hominem attack. You are terrible at refutation, p-rat. Do you always claim "word salad" when you run out of ideas? That response is getting hackneyed by you, p-rat. But what can we expect from vermin like you? NOT MUCH more.
Vermin? Do you have a Mein Kampf book on your nightstand next to your single bed?
WoW. this is ANOTHER pathetic, weak, and vacuous response by p-rat.
This is getting old and fast; someone remind me to ignore this person.
OKAY, note to self IGNORE p-rat and p-mac for at least 24 hours.Vacuous? Where do you find these words? Do you actually speak this word in public?
Justplaywithyourself, you actually think that using obscure words make you sound right or intelligent?
Find? I know them. There is no "find" except to give the matter a moment of thought.
Having to educate poor, illiterate, and feeble p-rat is becoming a full time job. SAD that p-rat is so STOOOPID. And there is NO effort by me to sound or be more intelligent than you. That is OBVIOUS, with NO effort by me required.vacuous
1. : emptied of or lacking content. 2. : marked by lack of ideas or intelligence : stupid, inane. a vacuous mind.
KGNS on location: President Biden visits Brownsville, Texas
BROWNSVILLE, TX . (KGNS) - President Joe Biden and his likely Republican challenger Donald Trump are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border in Texas on Thursday.
KGNS News Assistant News Director Alex Cano is in Brownsville waiting for the president’s arrival.
As part of the president’s visit, a Laredo elected official will be in the same room as President Biden to discuss border security.
One of the topics on the table will be relating to the fentanyl crisis, a problem that has killed many in Laredo and surrounding communities.
Immigration and border security have emerged as hot political issues that are likely to be a big part of the presidential race this fall.
Trump’s campaign has claimed Biden’s trip to the border is a “last-minute, insincere attempt” to counter the former president’s visit to Texas.
After being briefed by border patrol agents and others on the ground, Biden said they "desperately need more resources."
Trump also met with local officials as well as Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, at the Rio Grande before speaking at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, where border-crossers have posed a major problem for authorities in recent months.
"This is a Biden invasion over the past three years," Trump said, citing crimes committed by migrants and referring to the issue at the border as a "war", in the latest examples of the increasingly inflammatory language he has used in recent months.
He pledged to bring back policies in place during his term in office, including the "Remain in Mexico" plan that required some migrants to wait in Mexico for the outcome of their U.S. immigration cases.
Several hundred Trump supporters gathered on street corners in an area overlooking Shelby Park, an area that has been commandeered to block migrants crossing illegally, carrying “Make America Great Again” and “Never Surrender” flags.
Biden took office in 2021 promising to reverse the hardline immigration policies of Trump, who was in office from 2017 to early 2021, but has since toughened his own approach.
Under pressure from Republicans who accuse him of failing to control the border, Biden called on Congress last year to provide more enforcement funding and said he would "shut down the border" if given new authority to turn back migrants.
The White House is also considering using executive authority to deny more migrants asylum at the border, a source familiar with the matter has said.
Republicans have said Biden could better enforce existing laws and take new executive action without the need for Congress to approve it.
jusplay4fun wrote:Biden can fix MUCH of the border crises with simple Executive Orders, just like HE CAUSED this current problem with his Executive Orders on Day One of his Administration.
Biden does not need the or any border bill to do anything about the border; he has the power and authority ALREADY.
Dukasaur wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:Biden can fix MUCH of the border crises with simple Executive Orders, just like HE CAUSED this current problem with his Executive Orders on Day One of his Administration.
Biden does not need the or any border bill to do anything about the border; he has the power and authority ALREADY.
That's just not true.
The waiting list for refugee claims to be heard is years now. That cannot be fixed without a vast increase in the number of tribunals, and those cannot be hired without congressional appropriations. While these people are waiting years for their case to be heard, there are only two choices: keep them in jails, which are already overfilled and likewise cannot be expanded without additional appropriation, or release them to fend for themselves, which leads to the familiar complaints that they are working illegally and/or engaging in criminal activities. I suppose there's the third option, of deporting them without a hearing, which is both illegal and inhumane, but doubtless some people would smile upon it.
Having your case heard in a reasonable amount of time is a hallmark of justice in any civilized society. This can't be accomplished with Executive powers alone. It needs a major overhaul of the immigration tribunals and a major expansion of them, all of which requires congressional action.
jusplay4fun wrote:Dukasaur wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:Biden can fix MUCH of the border crises with simple Executive Orders, just like HE CAUSED this current problem with his Executive Orders on Day One of his Administration.
Biden does not need the or any border bill to do anything about the border; he has the power and authority ALREADY.
That's just not true.
The waiting list for refugee claims to be heard is years now. That cannot be fixed without a vast increase in the number of tribunals, and those cannot be hired without congressional appropriations. While these people are waiting years for their case to be heard, there are only two choices: keep them in jails, which are already overfilled and likewise cannot be expanded without additional appropriation, or release them to fend for themselves, which leads to the familiar complaints that they are working illegally and/or engaging in criminal activities. I suppose there's the third option, of deporting them without a hearing, which is both illegal and inhumane, but doubtless some people would smile upon it.
Having your case heard in a reasonable amount of time is a hallmark of justice in any civilized society. This can't be accomplished with Executive powers alone. It needs a major overhaul of the immigration tribunals and a major expansion of them, all of which requires congressional action.
jusplay4fun wrote:A BIG part of the problem is that we, under Biden's rules and orders, ALLOW nearly EVERYONE in.
jusplay4fun wrote:The courts set up for such hearings are OVERWHELMED.
jusplay4fun wrote:Are we obligated to hear EVERY case in one month? one year?
jusplay4fun wrote:How many judges (and staff) will some 6 million cases OR MORE take?
jusplay4fun wrote:And are we, the USA, obligated to ALLOW into our country who shows up at our border?
jusplay4fun wrote:OR: Are we allowed to have a more orderly process?
jusplay4fun wrote: Are allowed to let in a MANAGEABLE number of immigrants each year?
jusplay4fun wrote:We had that in place, until the flow became A FLOOD across the US southern border with Mexico.
jusplay4fun wrote:AND Joe Biden is largely to BLAME for this flood, as I have already documented alleged previously in this very thread.
jusplay4fun wrote:What does Canada do, Duk? Allow in ANYONE? I doubt that.
jusplay4fun wrote:And are we allowed to control the COSTS of dealing with, housing, feeding, tranporting, educating, and MORE (medical, clothing) these persons?
jusplay4fun wrote:OR are we supposed to do ALL that for ALL these people? THOSE are the fundamental questions that have been largely ignored by Biden and his handlers.
Summary
The right to apply for asylum is enshrined in U.S. and international law. The qualifications resemble those for refugee status, but asylum seekers follow a different process.
Asylum claims have reached record levels in recent years, though they dropped early in the COVID-19 pandemic. In fiscal year 2022, the U.S. government granted asylum to more than thirty-six thousand migrants.
President Joe Biden pledged to restore asylum access that had been curtailed under President Donald Trump, but a historic surge in migration at the U.S.-Mexico border is challenging his plans.
The total number of asylum seekers almost quadrupled between fiscal years 2021 and 2022, with nearly five hundred thousand applications in FY 2022. Nationals of Cuba, Haiti, Venezuela, and countries in Central America made up the bulk of asylum applications; however, only slightly more than thirty-six thousand of those applications resulted in asylum grants. The past decade saw a sharp rise in asylum applications from Latin America, primarily Mexico and Central America, as migrants fled worsening violence, poverty, and political dysfunction. Of the pending asylum cases in the backlog, roughly a quarter are for migrants from the so-called Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras.
(...)
In FY 2023, the government denied nearly thirty-six thousand asylum applications, or roughly 50 percent of all asylum decisions made that year.
Critics, however, counter that the U.S. asylum system no longer serves its intended purpose. They argue that it enables “economic migrants,” or those who leave their home country in search of better job opportunities, to live and work in the country for years while their asylum claims sit in the backlog. Some Republicans have put forward legislation to reduce the number of asylum seekers in the system by expediting deportations or raising the minimum standard that migrants must meet to claim a credible fear of persecution.
(...)
Other countries likewise struggle to handle rising asylum claims. Canada has a comparatively open policy toward asylum seekers, most of whom can immediately apply for permanent residency and receive a host of benefits, including health care, after receiving protected status. However, the surge in asylum seekers entering Canada from the United States in recent years prompted the two governments to amend their safe third country agreement to expand authorities’ ability to turn away migrants. Similarly, some member states in the European Union, which has struggled with elevated migration from Africa and the Middle East since 2015, said they are tightening their borders amid surges of illegal migration. And in Australia and Denmark, authorities have faced criticism for using offshore processing centers.
What has Biden done?
Biden took office in 2021 promising to undo many of Trump’s restrictive asylum policies. He has ended the metering policy at ports of entry, restored asylum protections to victims of domestic and gang violence, and rescinded the zero-tolerance policy. His administration has also expanded TPS protections to several additional countries, raised the annual cap on refugee admissions, and created a family-reunification task force. The administration also ended the Remain in Mexico program after eventually winning the Supreme Court’s approval and launched a four-year, $4 billion initiative to address the drivers of migration from Central America, though some analysts say it has made little progress.
The historic influx of migrants at the southern U.S. border has challenged Biden’s plans. Fearing a migration surge after Title 42 expired in May 2023, the administration unveiled a restrictive new policy that allows the government to deny asylum to migrants who did not previously apply for it in a third country and to those who cross the border illegally.
But analysts say there is only so much the White House can do on its own. “Biden faces severe political pressure to effectively deal with the historic number of migrants at the border. Ultimately, it is up to Congress to pass legislation to overhaul a crowded, inefficient immigration system,” the Los Angeles Times’ editorial board writes.
ConfederateSS wrote: Vote for Kamala
mookiemcgee wrote:Just to add on the last point Duk made because it's one I've made in the past...
There is estimated to be 2.4 million farmwork jobs in the USA.
in 2022 the state department issued 298,336 temporary farm work visas (H2-A) for the entire United States. Employers that participate in the H2-A program wait at least 75 days from applying for a worker to a visa being issued to a worker they are matched with. The gov't decides which worker you are matched with, and the farmers.gov website indicates employers should expect that over and above the wages they are paying the workers the following costs are involved:
Labor Certification $100 + $10 per worker
Non-Immigrant Worker Petition Filing fee $460
Consulate fee $190 per worker (worker must be reimbursed in first paycheck)
Border stamp fee $6 per worker
Agent fees Approximately $100 per worker
Transport from home country to work site $400 to $650 per worker
Housing and livable fittings Approximately $9,000 to $13,000 per worker
Until America actually addresses the visa system fundamentally for the benefit of it's citizens and sovereignty, instead of focusing on what's happening at the border nothing can change. They could dig a giant moat and have sharks with lazers swimming in it next to a 50 foot electrified and Nuru massage gel covered wall for the entirety of the border, but US farms would still have 2.4 million jobs to fill and not enough US citizens willing to take those jobs due to low wages, low existing unemployment, transient/seasonal nature of the work.
moving 2m workers from 'illegals' to tax payers who you can kick right out when their visa is up without a asylum hearing and who aren't granted a path to citizenship seems like it would be something republicans would want, but the narrative they have created along the border would prevent moderate republican lawmakers from ever voting for something like that now because their own party/voters would roast them. It would just be spun as RINO's letting 'millions of illegals into our country to take our jobs and rape our children'.
jusplay4fun wrote:Yes, the problem has been going on since the LAST major reform and changes to the law, under Reagan in the 1980's, so the problem has been going on for some 40 years.{/quote]I allege and DOCUMENTED that this current SURGE (FLOOD) of immigrants started with Biden's Executive Orders on Day 1. I need not re-prove all that. You asked me about one year ago to prove it, I did, and you did not reply.
jusplay4fun wrote:Nearly everyone who crosses the border claims asylum, even if they are not eligible on the first look. What percent is turned away? ALMOST NO ONE.
jusplay4fun wrote:The process is NOT orderly.
jusplay4fun wrote:People merely get smuggled in and/or walk across NOW and ALL get a hearing date. THAT simple, NO order, we (at the border) hand them a "GET into the USA FREE CARD" and most will disappear into the US. I doubt most show up for their hearing. They are basically IN.
jusplay4fun wrote:You admit that we should have an orderly process. What we see at the border is certainly NOT orderly. It is a MAD RUSH to get across. The video posted earlier shows that; it may not happen that exact way, but it is symbolic of what is occurring. What happened when those who got to the large metal fence? They were handed one of those cards to show up to a hearing later AND LET IN. That is what happens ALL THE TIME. Essentially everyone who gets to the border is let in. How do you vet and check such a large number? NOT WELL.
An asylum hearing is a good idea, IN AN ORDERLY process. I have already said that process is not orderly. And now that folks see how easy it is to GET IN, we now have Chinese and Africans simply walk in and get a "card." This is NOT the intent or design of the system. The Border Patrol do not keep anyone out, they hand out blankets and water and cards to everyone AND FREE transportation, in a short time. And the illegal immigrants (correctly called by Biden, who tried to walk that label back, WITHOUT APOLOGIZING FOR THE DEATH OF LAKEN RILEY) get housed, fed, and likely medical attention while in the initial detention. Get IN FREE and GET FREE CARE, As I already said a long while ago.
jusplay4fun wrote:One basic difference is that while the US suffers from a HUGE surge, Canada does NOT and therefore Duk is not personally vested in the results in the US. His tax money does not fund any of this. I care what happens to my tax dollars.
jusplay4fun wrote:mookiemcgee wrote:Just to add on the last point Duk made because it's one I've made in the past...
There is estimated to be 2.4 million farmwork jobs in the USA.
in 2022 the state department issued 298,336 temporary farm work visas (H2-A) for the entire United States. Employers that participate in the H2-A program wait at least 75 days from applying for a worker to a visa being issued to a worker they are matched with. The gov't decides which worker you are matched with, and the farmers.gov website indicates employers should expect that over and above the wages they are paying the workers the following costs are involved:
Labor Certification $100 + $10 per worker
Non-Immigrant Worker Petition Filing fee $460
Consulate fee $190 per worker (worker must be reimbursed in first paycheck)
Border stamp fee $6 per worker
Agent fees Approximately $100 per worker
Transport from home country to work site $400 to $650 per worker
Housing and livable fittings Approximately $9,000 to $13,000 per worker
Until America actually addresses the visa system fundamentally for the benefit of it's citizens and sovereignty, instead of focusing on what's happening at the border nothing can change. They could dig a giant moat and have sharks with lazers swimming in it next to a 50 foot electrified and Nuru massage gel covered wall for the entirety of the border, but US farms would still have 2.4 million jobs to fill and not enough US citizens willing to take those jobs due to low wages, low existing unemployment, transient/seasonal nature of the work.
moving 2m workers from 'illegals' to tax payers who you can kick right out when their visa is up without a asylum hearing and who aren't granted a path to citizenship seems like it would be something republicans would want, but the narrative they have created along the border would prevent moderate republican lawmakers from ever voting for something like that now because their own party/voters would roast them. It would just be spun as RINO's letting 'millions of illegals into our country to take our jobs and rape our children'.
So what is your point, Mookie? Can you get enough workers to pick your grapes? Or does the system prevent this? Or is it difficult to get enough workers now?
Frankly, I did not look into the Ag issue, as I see this as relatively small compared to the other immigration issues.
ConfederateSS wrote: Vote for Kamala
mookiemcgee wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:mookiemcgee wrote:Just to add on the last point Duk made because it's one I've made in the past...
There is estimated to be 2.4 million farmwork jobs in the USA.
in 2022 the state department issued 298,336 temporary farm work visas (H2-A) for the entire United States. Employers that participate in the H2-A program wait at least 75 days from applying for a worker to a visa being issued to a worker they are matched with. The gov't decides which worker you are matched with, and the farmers.gov website indicates employers should expect that over and above the wages they are paying the workers the following costs are involved:
Labor Certification $100 + $10 per worker
Non-Immigrant Worker Petition Filing fee $460
Consulate fee $190 per worker (worker must be reimbursed in first paycheck)
Border stamp fee $6 per worker
Agent fees Approximately $100 per worker
Transport from home country to work site $400 to $650 per worker
Housing and livable fittings Approximately $9,000 to $13,000 per worker
Until America actually addresses the visa system fundamentally for the benefit of it's citizens and sovereignty, instead of focusing on what's happening at the border nothing can change. They could dig a giant moat and have sharks with lazers swimming in it next to a 50 foot electrified and Nuru massage gel covered wall for the entirety of the border, but US farms would still have 2.4 million jobs to fill and not enough US citizens willing to take those jobs due to low wages, low existing unemployment, transient/seasonal nature of the work.
moving 2m workers from 'illegals' to tax payers who you can kick right out when their visa is up without a asylum hearing and who aren't granted a path to citizenship seems like it would be something republicans would want, but the narrative they have created along the border would prevent moderate republican lawmakers from ever voting for something like that now because their own party/voters would roast them. It would just be spun as RINO's letting 'millions of illegals into our country to take our jobs and rape our children'.
So what is your point, Mookie? Can you get enough workers to pick your grapes? Or does the system prevent this? Or is it difficult to get enough workers now?
Frankly, I did not look into the Ag issue, as I see this as relatively small compared to the other immigration issues.
You think it's small? 20-30% of undocumented people currently in the US are employed in AG. It's the biggest sector and it's not particularly close. It's estimate there are around 8 million undocmented people in the US laborforce, 25% of that is 2 million people. There are roughly 2 million illegal border crossings a year into the US. The US employer demand for farmwork is 2.4 million jobs/year, 300,000 visa per year are issued.
You really don't think that's relevant? Have I made a point yet?
by Dukasaur on Sat Mar 23, 2024 11:54 amjusplay4fun wrote:
Yes, the problem has been going on since the LAST major reform and changes to the law, under Reagan in the 1980's, so the problem has been going on for some 40 years.{/quote]
I allege and DOCUMENTED that this current SURGE (FLOOD) of immigrants started with Biden's Executive Orders on Day 1. I need not re-prove all that. You asked me about one year ago to prove it, I did, and you did not reply.
I vaguely remember the discussion. I recall that I didn't consider your "proof" to be a proof. I wish I could remember more detail, but I certainly wasn't convinced.
Re: Biden causes Crisis at the US-Mexico Border
Dukasaur wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:
It was Biden's words and actions at the very start of his Administration that ENCOURAGED immigrants.
Which words? Please indicate exactly which words you think encouraged people to immigrate.
#1
Remarks by President Biden on Border Security and Enforcement
HOME
BRIEFING ROOM
SPEECHES AND REMARKS
Roosevelt Room
11:54 A.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Hi, everybody. Sorry to keep you waiting. There’s a lot going on.
Today, I’d like to — the Vice President and I would like to talk you about how my administration is dealing with our situation in the southwest border.
Now, these actions alone that I’m going to announce today aren’t going to fix our entire immigration system, but they can help us a good deal in better managing what is a difficult challenge.
On my first day in office, some of you may recall, who cover this area — and they cover it well — I sent Congress a comprehensive piece of legislation that would completely overhaul what has been a broken immigration system for a long time: cracking down on illegal immigration; strengthening legal immigration; and protecting DREAMers, those with temporary protected status, and farmworkers, who all are part of the fabric of our nation.
(...)
Today, my administration is taking several steps to stiffen enforcement for those who try to come without a legal right to stay, and to put in place a faster process — I emphasize a “faster process” — to decide a claim of asylum, someone who says, “I’m coming because I’m escaping oppression.” Well, there’s got to be a way to determine that much quicker for people who are credibly seeking protection from persecution.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-roo ... n%3B%20and
#2
President Biden has issued the following immigration-related Executive Orders (EOs) and administrative policy changes since his first day in office:
Proclamation on Ending Discriminatory Bans on Entry to The United States – January 20, 2021
Executive Order on the Revision of Civil Immigration Enforcement Policies and Priorities – January 20, 2021
Preserving and Fortifying Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) – January 20, 2021
Proclamation on the Termination Of Emergency With Respect To The Southern Border Of The United States And Redirection Of Funds Diverted To Border Wall Construction – January 20, 2021
Executive Order on Ensuring a Lawful and Accurate Enumeration and Apportionment Pursuant to the Decennial Census – January 20, 2021
Memorandum Reinstating Deferred Enforced Departure for Liberians – January 20, 2021
US Citizenship Act of 2021
DHS Statement on the Suspension of New Enrollments in the Migrant Protection Protocols Program – January 20, 2021
Proclamation on the Suspension of Entry as Immigrants and Non-Immigrants of Certain Additional Persons Who Pose a Risk of Transmitting Coronavirus Disease – January 25, 2021
Executive Order on Creating a Comprehensive Regional Framework to Address the Causes of Migration, to Manage Migration Throughout North and Central America, and to Provide Safe and Orderly Processing of Asylum Seekers at the United States Border – February 2, 2021
Executive Order on Restoring Faith in Our Legal Immigration Systems and Strengthening Integration and Inclusion Efforts for New American – February 2, 2021
https://cmsny.org/biden-immigration-exe ... nd%20Yemen.
there are more, but these seem the most relevant
#3 More:
Key facts about U.S. immigration policies and Biden’s proposed changes
BY JENS MANUEL KROGSTAD AND ANA GONZALEZ-BARRERA
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads ... d-changes/
Since President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, his administration has acted on a number of fronts to reverse Trump-era restrictions on immigration to the United States. The steps include plans to boost refugee admissions, preserving deportation relief for unauthorized immigrants who came to the U.S. as children and not enforcing the “public charge” rule that denies green cards to immigrants who might use public benefits like Medicaid.
Biden has also lifted restrictions established early in the coronavirus pandemic that drastically reduced the number of visas issued to immigrants. The number of people who received a green card declined from about 240,000 in the second quarter of the 2020 fiscal year (January to March) to about 79,000 in the third quarter (April to June). By comparison, in the third quarter of fiscal 2019, nearly 266,000 people received a green card.
Biden’s biggest immigration proposal to date would allow more new immigrants into the U.S. while giving millions of unauthorized immigrants who are already in the country a pathway to legal status. The expansive legislation would create an eight-year path to citizenship for the nation’s estimated 10.5 million unauthorized immigrants, update the existing family-based immigration system, revise employment-based visa rules and increase the number of diversity visas. By contrast, President Donald Trump’s administration sought to restrict legal immigration in a variety of ways, including through legislation that would have overhauled the nation’s legal immigration system by sharply reducing family-based immigration.
are those enough words and actions, Duk?
bastante para hoy...??
Pack Rat wrote:I hereby promote you to Lord of the copy/paste.
Trying to bring life from death...and your point is?
Pack Rat wrote:The real truth must be hard for you to swallow.
Pass the fukn Border Security Bill!
What This Bill Would Do
A “Border Emergency Authority” Adding a New, Restrictive, and Opaque Process until Border Crossings Reach Very Low Levels
The “trigger” authority—called the “Border Emergency Authority”—would enable the administration to summarily deport migrants who enter between ports of entry without permitting them to apply for asylum.
The new emergency authority could be activated if border “encounters” reach a daily average of 4,000 over a period of seven days and would become mandatory once border encounters reach over 5,000 over a period of seven days or 8,500 over a single calendar day. However, there are several other rules governing the use of the emergency authority, rendering it much less straightforward than the simple mathematics of crossings (for example, the so-called “discretionary” authority at the 4,000/day level would in fact be mandatory for the first 90 days at that level after passage). In addition, the bill defines “encounters” to exclude apprehensions of unaccompanied migrant children.
its positive steps in this direction are smothered by a new “emergency authority” that repeats mistakes made by the Trump and Biden administrations: making protection much less available for those in need, while failing to send a clear message to future arrivals.
(...)
Notably, this bill would not stop anyone from being allowed to set foot on U.S. soil. It would not, therefore, do anything to bring down “the numbers” on its own. The bill’s proponents hope instead that it will reduce the number of people who are allowed to stay in the U.S. outside of immigration custody, and therefore, through word of mouth, reduce the number of people trying to come to begin with.
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