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Castro Spy Declares Opposition Is Disabled
Houston Chonicle and yahoo.com news ^ | April 23, 2003 | Anita Snow, AP

Posted on 04/22/2003 11:57:11 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

HAVANA - An undercover Cuban agent credited with giving some of the most damaging courtroom evidence against dissidents said the island's opposition movement has been shattered.

"The opposition is finished, it has ended, it will never lift its head again," Aleida de las Mercedes Godinez told The Associated Press.

"The opposition will never flourish again - never!"

Monday's interview with Godinez was the first in a series of government-organized interviews the agents are giving to the international media.

The families of some of the 75 dissidents who were quickly convicted and sentenced to jail earlier this month acknowledged the severe damage caused by the undercover agents, particularly Godinez.

She was a key leader of a coalition called the Assembly for the Promotion of Civil Society and had allied with the dissidents since 1994, sometimes working even as an independent journalist.

The dissidents were convicted on charges of being mercenaries working with U.S. diplomats to subvert Fidel Castro's government and were given sentences ranging from six to 28 years. The dissidents and the United States have denied the accusations.

Godinez had access to extensive information about many opposition groups and the individual dissidents, who were rounded up in March. Like many of agents, she came from a communist family long trusted by Castro.

"Everything was always very well directed by Cuban intelligence," she said.

Dissident economist Marta Beatriz Roque's family said Godinez's surprise testimony was key to her conviction and 20-year prison sentence. Godinez said Roque even gave her the logon and password to access her e-mails.

Godinez provided a rare glimpse inside Castro's intelligence network and demonstrated just how deeply loyal his agents were. She said she never felt any remorse or sorrow for her work even though she worked with some dissidents for years.

"Marta Beatriz was an objective of my mission," she said. "I could never be friends with a counterrevolutionary."

Godinez said Roque, also a leading member of the Assembly for the Promotion of Civil Society, handled as much as $5,000 every month from various groups in the United States that were funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

The USAID Cuba program has given more than $20 million to U.S. groups working with the opposition on the communist-run island since 1996 to bring about a peaceful transition to democracy.

Godinez, a former math teacher, said she received about $700 a month from U.S. organizations as head of the National Independent Workers Union of Cuba.

The bespectacled 49-year-old, with a crown of short brown curls, proudly showed off her new Pentium 4 laptop computer - sent to her last year by a Cuban-American organization in Miami and delivered by a U.S. Interests Section official.

The agents' superiors evidently allowed them all to keep the money and equipment they received from U.S. groups.

Godinez would not say what she will do next.

"That's secret," she said with a smile. "But I can say that I will keep working for the revolution."

Rest of article at yahoo.com news : Other agents were just as loyal as her. Dr. Pedro Luis Veliz Martinez, a 39-year-old internist and a member of a long-trusted communist family, told the AP in a separate interview Monday that he was first approached by an Interior Ministry official while doing late-night hospital rounds in 1996.

"I never had any doubts," Veliz said. "I am a revolutionary. I am Marxist-Leninist. I believe in communism."

After gaining the confidence of government opponents in the Liberal Party - and the organizations in Miami that support them, Veliz founded the Independent Medical College, a professional organization for dissident physicians, in 1999.

The agents were prohibited from telling anyone, even their families, about their missions. Veliz said his father, a longtime Communist Party official, was particularly upset to think his son was involved in groups that Fidel Castro's government calls "counterrevolutionary."

"I'm sure that it really hurt my dad," Veliz said.

But he said his father was especially pleased when he saw that his son was among the agents unmasked by the government after the trials.

The few leading government opponents still free have said they would try to regain their strength. The dissidents deny the charges they were convicted of.

"The dissident movement will grow because the source of dissent is inside Cuba and because the socio-economic situation is getting more difficult," veteran rights activist Elizardo Sanchez said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Cuba; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: castro; castrowatch; communism; cuba; cubandissidents; fidelcastro
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Cuba's Cruel Joke *** Without dollars, life is grim. People line up at dimly lit government distribution centres, ration books in hand - libretas, the government calls them - for their monthly allocation. The books, which were established in 1962 to "guarantee the equitable distribution of food without privileges for a few," entitle Cubans to 2.5 kilograms of rice, 1 kilogram of fish, 1/2 kilogram of beans, 14 eggs and sundry other basics at subsidized prices. Through the libreta, each Cuban also gets one bread roll a day. Every two months, a Cuban is entitled to one bar of hand soap and one bar of laundry soap. Fresh fruits and vegetables come infrequently; meat might come once or twice a year. Until the mid-1990s, children under seven were entitled to fresh milk, but fresh milk, like butter, cheese and other dairy products, is now off the shelves. Before the revolution, two litres of fresh milk cost 15 U.S. cents, well within the means of the poor.

Cuba, a country with a coffee culture, produces fine beans in its Oriente province, but not for average Cubans. The good stuff is sold to tourists and exported to earn dollars, or reserved for the Cuban elite, while the government imports cheaper beans, grinds them, mixes them with ground chickpeas, and doles out 28 grams per month - less than one ounce - to Cuban citizens. The government also exports high quality Cuban rice for dollars while importing a low-grade rice from Vietnam for its citizens. It exports 90% of its fresh fruits, directing much of the rest to tourists and others who can pay in dollars.***

Fidel Castro - Cuba

1 posted on 04/22/2003 11:57:12 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: All

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez gestures to supporters during a ceremony to open a new state food store in Caracas, April 22, 2003. Chavez has fired Planning Minister Felipe Perez after public disagreements over foreign exchange controls and other economic policies in the world's No. 5 oil exporter. REUTERS/Chico Sanchez

Terrorism's Western Ally***U.S. intelligence is still coming to grips with reports that Al Qaeda and other Muslim terrorist groups are setting up bases in Venezuela. A London newspaper reports Osama bin Laden has established a training camp on Venezuela's Margarita Island, a tourist destination that also has an Arab-Muslim community and a bad reputation as a hangout for smugglers and terror groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

The more you know about Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, and his list of friends, the less surprising this all seems. Footage shows Hugo hugging Iranian President Khatami. More footage shows Hugo hugging Libya's Moammar Gaddafy. By the way, you won't find any video of Hugo meeting, much less, hugging George W. Bush.

But Chavez has met with Saddam Hussein. In fact, he was the first foreign leader to visit Baghdad after the first Gulf War, and he expressed his admiration for Saddam. He has offered support to convicted terrorist Carlos "The Jackal." He considers Fidel Castro his mentor. He gives sanctuary to Colombia's FARC rebels, a group that is trying to overthrow the Colombian government and has also killed Americans.

Hugo Chavez came to power by tapping into frustration over Venezuela's corrupt political system. He was elected in 1998 by a landslide. Since then, Chavez has been engaged in what has been called a "slow-motion constitutional coup." He has abolished the senate, brought in Cubans as strike-breakers against the oil industry, and organized gangs to beat up opponents.***

2 posted on 04/23/2003 12:12:18 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: All
Cuban-style chokehold strangles Venezuela*** Outside the Cuban Embassy in Caracas, dozens of Venezuelans carried placards calling Fidel Castro an "assassin" and voicing their concern about the "Cubanization" of a nation once held up as one of Latin America's most long-lived democracies.

By Venezuelan standards, the protest Friday was small, but Castro's imprints on Venezuela continue to loom large. Clearly, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez prefers a Marxist dictatorship cloaked in a constitution that puts him in control of the economy, the courts, the news media and the legislative branch. "We voted for change, but we didn't vote for a revolution," Juan Fernandez told me recently. Fernandez was a key player in the nation's petroleum industry until Chavez fired him to put a political hack in charge. Fernandez's firing, and that of others, led to the failed coup against Chavez a year ago.

About 200 Venezuelans living in the Orlando area came out to hear Fernandez speak earlier this month about his blueprint for peaceful change. He is among those Venezuelans who are leading the charge for new, democratic elections, just recently meeting with Bush administration officials in Washington. But because Fernandez was among those who participated in the national strike against Chavez's government late last year, he's now a wanted man in Venezuela. Fernandez is among several prominent Venezuelans in the growing opposition movement whom Chavez wants to send to prison. His case remains pending. Fernandez's "crime" was simply to offer an opposing point of view. No guns, no secret plots, but a very public national strike seeking new presidential elections.

Since the strike ended, Chavez has moved aggressively to squeeze out businesses, big and small. Chavez has made it illegal, for instance, for Venezuelan businesses to pay in U.S. dollars for goods imported into the country or to get paid in dollars for exports even as the country's currency plunges downward. Venezuela watchers note that of the $1.3 billion that Venezuelans have sought in U.S. currency, the Chavez regime has released only about $30,000, mostly to cover living expenses for students studying abroad.

Chavez has used the failed strike as a pretext to clamp down -- not unlike Castro's move to nationalize foreign enterprises, seize all U.S. dollars and quash any dissent on the island in the early 1960s. Castro argued then that the revolution was under attack from Uncle Sam. Chavez, too, has tried to make that argument, even though polls continue to show that most Venezuelans want new presidential elections.***

3 posted on 04/23/2003 12:21:33 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: All
Hooray for Chavez's Peaceful Revolution!
A supporter of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez cheers near a military police line during a ceremony to open a new state food store in Caracas April 22, 2003. Chavez has fired Planning Minister Felipe Perez after public disagreements over foreign exchange controls and other economic policies in the world's No. 5 oil exporter. REUTERS/Chico Sanchez

___________________________________________________________

Hooray for Castro's Revolution………………..
Cuban citizens celebrate in Havana April 16, 2003 on the 42nd anniversary of a rally where Fidel Castro declared that Cuba would be socialist. Communist-run Cuba has imposed lengthy prison terms on 75 dissidents accused of collaborating with arch-enemy the United States, triggering a storm of international protest. Last Friday it executed three men who hijacked a ferry in a bid to reach Florida. REUTERS/Rafael Perez

4 posted on 04/23/2003 12:31:47 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
The agents were prohibited from telling anyone, even their families, about their missions. Veliz said his father, a longtime Communist Party official, was particularly upset to think his son was involved in groups that Fidel Castro's government calls "counterrevolutionary." "I'm sure that it really hurt my dad," Veliz said. But he said his father was especially pleased when he saw that his son was among the agents unmasked by the government after the trials.

What a warm, touching family story. Feel the love.

5 posted on 04/23/2003 12:37:53 AM PDT by friendly
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To: friendly
They grow up learning to rat on each other. That is rewarded. Nice, huh?
6 posted on 04/23/2003 12:42:40 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
One can imagine the family values in the liberal's paradise of Cuba, what with prostitution and theft being so fundamental now in the ferociously successful economy.
7 posted on 04/23/2003 12:46:50 AM PDT by friendly
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To: friendly
Castro boasted to Oliver Stone that "even our prostitutes are college educated."
8 posted on 04/23/2003 12:53:45 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Castro boasted to Oliver Stone that "even our prostitutes are college educated."

That's a coincidence.

In the liberal Ivy league and the law schools, even our college educated are prostitutes.

9 posted on 04/23/2003 1:13:34 AM PDT by friendly
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
"The opposition is finished, it has ended, it will never lift its head again," Aleida de las Mercedes Godinez told The Associated Press.

This should please Arlen Specter, Lincoln Chaffee, Jimmy Carter, Maria Cantwell, George Ryan et al. They got to do their bit in crushing freedom!

10 posted on 04/23/2003 1:15:04 AM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: friendly
In the liberal Ivy league and the law schools, even our college educated are prostitutes.

Oh, so true.

11 posted on 04/23/2003 1:19:50 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: nickcarraway
This should please Arlen Specter, Lincoln Chaffee, Jimmy Carter, Maria Cantwell, George Ryan et al. They got to do their bit in crushing freedom!

Opponents of US embargo on Cuba lament new crack-down on dissidents - It's Bush's Fault*** The measures by Castro's regime have raised international concerns. And those who advocate an end to the 40-year US embargo on Cuba say their job has been made more difficult. Brian Alexander, director of the Cuban Policy Foundation, said the arrests and moves to secure jail terms for the dissidents will have a negative effect "on the ability to move forward in the bilateral relationship by easing the embargo" -- at least "from short to mid-term."

While, according to Alexander, "lawmakers aren't clear about what's going on" the question also on people's lips is, "Is the charm offensive over? Is Castro now looking to provide some sort of crisis with the US? "And if Castro is, it'll be very hard to put priorities on rights to trade and rights to travel," added Alexander, whose organization wants an end to the embargo. "The worst time imaginable for (Castro) to undertake these actions is probably right now," said Alexander. "The momentum in the US for a change in Cuba policy is stronger than it's ever been ... and Castro's signal or message to all those who are working to ease relations with Cuba is to smack them in the face."***

12 posted on 04/23/2003 1:26:33 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
The only reason this person and his ilk are upset about the crackdown, is that it will get in the way of making concessions to Castro! He could care less about the victims.
13 posted on 04/23/2003 1:34:06 AM PDT by nickcarraway
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: nickcarraway; msimon; All
Castro crackdown has dismayed countries that thought the regime was easing its hard line.*** For Brian Alexander of the Cuban Policy Foundation, a group that wants the trade embargo lifted, Castro's charm offensive hit its peak last October when Havana hosted an expo of American agricultural products, which are exempted from the trade embargo. "The Cubans got quite a lot of publicity at the expo, and there was a sense that the movement to end the embargo was growing stronger," Mr. Alexander says. "Now they have hit their base of support in Washington with a sledgehammer. Politically, Cuba is making the embargo a third rail. Politicians who went out on a limb for Cuba are feeling stunned and apprehensive."

Indeed, less than a year ago, the House of Representatives voted to block the administration from enforcing a ban on Americans traveling to Cuba, a measure that was interpreted as bolstering support for lifting the embargo. But last week, the mood on Capitol Hill shifted dramatically. Both supporters and opponents of the embargo in the House voted unanimously, 414-0, to condemn Cuba. For all the criticism of the political crackdown, many see recent events as just one example of a more far-reaching curtailment of freedom on the island as Castro consolidates power for his eventual successor, considered to be his brother Raul.

For many, it began with a widely publicized antidrug campaign of in January. Days later, Cuba's state-run media carried stories of a wider crackdown against black-marketeering enterprises, from massive garment presses and private kitchens to unlicensed landlords and repair shops outside the island's state-run economy. The few licensed private entrepreneurs on the island also came under scrutiny. Most of the recently convicted dissidents were charged under Law 88, which promises tough sentences for Cubans convicted of conspiring with a foreign power. Those convictions and the summary execution of the boat hijackers, coming after a number of other incidents in which hijacked Cuban airplanes were given sanctuary in Florida, were seen as a reminder that Castro was unwilling to brook dissent. "This is the sort of housecleaning that other dictators from Stalin to Mao have been willing to do before they go," Mr. Suchlicki says.***

15 posted on 04/23/2003 1:55:04 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: friendly
A warm touching family story.

Rather like the Kennedys.
16 posted on 04/23/2003 3:07:22 AM PDT by tet68 (Jeremiah 51:24 ..."..Before your eyes I will repay Babylon for all the wrong they have done in Zion")
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
. "I could never be friends with a counterrevolutionary."


Something GW should remember when courting liberal voters.
17 posted on 04/23/2003 3:08:17 AM PDT by tet68 (Jeremiah 51:24 ..."..Before your eyes I will repay Babylon for all the wrong they have done in Zion")
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To: tet68
I think he has their number. Look how they're running around like chickens sans heads.
18 posted on 04/23/2003 3:14:20 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: All
Excerpted from Hillary Clinton and the Radical Left -Hillary Clinton and the Third Way …………..If you were active in the so-called "peace" movement or in the radical wing of the civil rights causes, why would you tell the truth? Why would you tell people that no, you weren't really a "peace activist," except in the sense that you were against America's war. Why would you draw attention to the fact that while you called yourselves "peace activists," you didn't oppose the Communists' war, and were gratified when America's enemies won?

What you were really against was not war at all, but American "imperialism" and American capitalism. What you truly hated was America's democracy, which you knew to be a "sham" because it was controlled by money in the end. That's why you wanted to "Bring the Troops Home," as your slogan said. Because if America's troops came home, America would lose and the Communists would win. And the progressive future would be one step closer.

But you never had the honesty-then or now-to admit that. You told the lie then to maintain your influence and increase your power to do good (as only the Chosen can). And you keep on telling the lie for the same reason.

Why would you admit that, despite your tactical support for civil rights, you weren't really committed to civil rights as Americans understand rights? What you really wanted was to overthrow the very Constitution that guaranteed those rights, based as it is on private property and the individual-both of which you despise.

It is because America is a democracy and the people endorse it, that the left's anti-American, but "progressive" agendas can only be achieved by deceiving the people. This is the cross the left has to bear: The better world is only achievable by lying to the very people they propose to redeem.

Despite the homage contemporary leftists pay to post-modernist conceits, despite their belated and half-hearted display of critical sentiment towards Communist regimes, they are very much the ideological heirs of Stalinist progressives, who supported the greatest mass murders in human history, but who remember themselves as civil libertarian opponents of McCarthy and victims of a political witch-hunt. (Only the dialectically gifted can even begin to follow the logic involved.)

To appreciate the continuity of communism in the mentality of the left, consider how many recent Hollywood promotions of the industry Reds and how many academic apologies for Stalinist crimes (in fact, the vast majority of recent academic texts on the subject) have been premised on the Machiavellian calculations and Hegelian sophistries I have just described.

Naturally, today's leftists are smart enough to distance themselves from Soviet Communism. But the Soviet dictator Nikita Khrushchev was already a critic of Stalin forty years ago. Did his concessions make him less of a Communist? Or more?

On the other hand, conservative misunderstanding of the left is only in part a product of the left's own deceits. It also reflects conservatives' inability to understand the religious nature of the progressive faith and the power of its redemptive idea. For instance, I'm often asked by conservatives about the continuing role and influence of the Communist Party, since they observe quite correctly the pervasive presence of so many familiar totalitarian ideas in our academic and political culture. Though still around and sometimes influential in the left, the Communist Party has been a minor player for nearly fifty years. How can there be a communist left (small "c" of course) without a Communist Party?

The short answer is that it was not the Communist Party that made the left, but the (small 'c') communist Idea. It is the idea, as old as the Tower of Babel, that humanity can build a highway to Heaven. It is the idea of returning to an Earthly Paradise, a garden of social harmony and justice. It is the idea that inspires Jewish radicals and liberals of a tikkun olam, a healing of the cosmic order. It is the Enlightenment illusion of the perfectibility of man. And it is the siren song of the serpent in Eden: "Eat of this Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, and you shall be as God."

The intoxicating vision of a social redemption achieved by Them-this is what creates the left, and makes the believers so self-righteous.

And it did so long before Karl Marx. It is the vision of this redemption that continues to inspire and animate them despite the still-fresh ruins of their Communist dreams.

It is this same idea that is found in the Social Gospel which impressed the youthful Hillary Clinton at the United Methodist Church in Park Ridge, Illinois. She later encountered the same idea in the New Left at Yale and in the Venceremos Brigade in Communist Cuba, and in the writings of the New Leftist who introduced her to the "politics of meaning" even after she had become America's First Lady. It is the idea that drives her comrades in the Children's Defense Fund, the National Organization for Women, the Al Sharpton House of Justice and the other progressive causes which for that reason still look to her as a political leader.

For these self-appointed social redeemers, the goal-"social justice"-is not about rectifying particular injustices, which would be practical and modest, and therefore conservative. Their crusade is about rectifying injustice in the very order of things. "Social Justice" for them is about a world reborn, a world in which prejudice and violence are absent, in which everyone is equal and equally advantaged and without fundamentally conflicting desires. It is a world that could only come into being through a re-structuring of human nature and of society itself.

Even though they are too prudent and self-protective to name this future anymore, the post-Communist left still passionately believes it possible. But it is a world that has never existed and never will. Moreover, as the gulags and graveyards of the last century attest, to attempt the impossible is to invite the catastrophic in the world we know.

But the fall of Communism taught the progressives who were its supporters very little. Above all, it failed to teach them the connection between their utopian ideals and the destructive consequences that flowed from them. The fall of Communism has had a cautionary impact only on the overt agendas of the political left. The arrogance that drives them has hardly diminished. The left is like a millenarian sect that erroneously predicted the end of the world, and now must regroup to revitalize its faith.

No matter how opportunistically the left's agendas have been modified, however, no matter how circumspectly its goals have been set, no matter how generous its concessions to political reality, the faithful have not given up their self-justifying belief that they can bring about a social redemption. In other words, a world in which human consciousness is changed, human relations refashioned, social institutions transformed, and in which "social justice" prevails.

Snip

And that is why they hate conservatives. They hate you because you are killers of their dream. Because you are defenders of a Constitution that thwarts their cause. They hate you because your "reactionary" commitment to individual rights, to a single standard and to a neutral and limited state obstructs their progressive designs. They hate you because you are believers in property and its rights as the cornerstones of prosperity and human freedom; because you do not see the market economy as a mere instrument for acquiring personal wealth and political war chests, to be overcome in the end by bureaucratic schemes.

Conservatives who think progressives are misinformed idealists will forever be blind-sided by the malice of the left-by the cynicism of those who pride themselves on principle, by the viciousness of those who champion sensitivity, by the intolerance of those who call themselves liberal, and by the ruthless disregard for the well-being of the downtrodden by those who preen themselves as social saints.

Conservatives are caught by surprise because they see progressives as merely misguided, when in fact they are fundamentally misdirected. They are the messianists of a religious faith. But it is a false faith and a self-serving religion. Since the redeemed future that justifies their existence and rationalizes their hypocrisy can never be realized, what really motivates progressives is a modern idolatry: their limitless passion for the continuance of Them. [End Excerpt] David Horowitz

19 posted on 04/23/2003 3:22:06 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: *Castro Watch
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
20 posted on 04/23/2003 5:10:48 AM PDT by Free the USA (Stooge for the Rich)
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