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A Smart Solution to the Diversity Dilemma
The American ^ | August 12, 2009 | Jason Richwine

Posted on 08/14/2009 11:33:20 AM PDT by GOPGuide

Science is telling us that ethnic diversity causes significant problems by diminishing valuable social capital. What then should we do about it?

It was not the kind of message a Harvard seminar expects to hear. Ethnic diversity causes a lot of problems, our guest speaker told us. It reduces interpersonal trust, civic engagement, and charitable giving. It causes us to disengage from society, like turtles shrinking into their shells, reducing our overall quality of life. The more diversity we experience in our lives, the less happy we are.

I came to Harvard to study public policy in the fall of 2004. All of the first-years like me had to take a special seminar class where we would discuss the philosophy of science and the nature of good research. The best class days featured established scholars who would come to present their own papers, which were real-life examples of good research.

The guest speaker who came to discuss diversity was political scientist Robert Putnam, who is something of a celebrity in academic circles. With the publication of his 1995 article “Bowling Alone,” Putnam helped bring the issues of social trust and civic participation to the forefront of social science. His article became a popular book, also called Bowling Alone, in 2000. Written for a general audience, the book chronicled the rapid decline in civic engagement that had taken place in the United States since 1950, and argued that communities without strong social ties are less happy and less successful. The article and the book garnered Putnam numerous media appearances and spawned reams of response articles in academia.

So how did Putnam come to conclude that ethnic diversity is so problematic? The answer begins with the notion of “social capital,” which Putnam defines in simple terms—“social networks and the associated norms of reciprocity and trustworthiness.” Social capital turns out to be an exceptionally valuable commodity. Building complex networks of friends and associates, trusting others to keep their word, and maintaining social norms and expectations all grease the wheels of business by enabling cooperation.

But the value of social capital goes well beyond economics. Many of the activities from which people draw the most deep and lasting satisfactions are stronger and more prevalent in areas with high social capital. People living in these places tend to have more friends, care more about their community, and participate more in civic causes. Where social capital is greater, Putnam says, “children grow up healthier, safer, and better educated; people live longer, happier lives; and democracy and the economy work better.”

After Bowling Alone, Putnam’s next step was to determine why some communities have more social capital than others. To find out, he helped organize a large nationwide survey of social capital indicators that sampled about 30,000 people from a broad array of cities, towns, and rural areas. By collecting demographic information about the individuals and the places they lived, Putnam hoped to gain insight into what makes for a trusting and neighborly community.

When he spoke to my class in 2004, Putnam had started to analyze the survey data, but he had not yet published any findings. He began by telling us about one result he encountered that was thoroughly upsetting to him—the more ethnically diverse a community is, the less social capital it possesses. When a person lives in a diverse community, he trusts everyone less, including those of his own ethnic group. In describing the behavior of people in diverse areas, Putnam told us to imagine turtles hiding in their shells.

Putnam walked us through how he came to his conclusion. At first, it was just a simple correlation. Looking at his list of the most trusting places, Putnam found whole states such as New Hampshire and Montana, rural areas in West Virginia and East Tennessee, and cities such as Bismarck, North Dakota and Fremont, Michigan. Among the least trusting places were the cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Houston. The most trusting places tended to be homogenously white, while the least trusting places were highly diverse.

Putnam told us he had been fairly certain the correlation would go away once other factors were taken into account. But it didn’t. He entered a long list of control variables into regression analyses that predict elements of social capital such as neighborly trust and civic participation. Many factors—especially younger age, less education, and higher poverty and crime rates—seem to damage community relations. But none of these factors could explain the robust, negative relationship between ethnic diversity and social capital. Sounding almost defeated, Putnam told us that ethnic diversity is not merely correlated with certain community problems—it causes them.

After finishing his presentation of the data, Putnam began a class discussion. He asked us whether we thought that all relevant scientific findings, no matter how disagreeable, deserve a public airing. Perhaps he was just trying to get us to think about difficult issues, but Putnam seemed genuinely conflicted himself. His concerns were rooted, understandably, in his personal politics. A man of the Left, he told us that he was deeply worried about being seen as advocating some form of “ethnic cleansing,” or being associated with the far Right in general.

Whether he really valued our advice or not, I remember stating my own view, which is that democracy and freedom are built on the assumption that ordinary people can and will process important information. Self-censorship reminds me of Plato’s philosopher-kings telling “noble lies” to the unwise masses. If we take self-government seriously, then important information should be made available to all.

I’m not sure whether Putnam agrees with me, but he did finally publish some of his findings in a 2007 article. Though he began the article with some questionable reassurances that diversity offers long-run benefits, he pulled no punches in regard to its many “short-run” costs. He warned in particular that immigration makes the United States and Europe more diverse every year, and that incorporating immigrants into our communities would be one of the central challenges of the 21st century.

The public reaction to this was surprisingly quiet. Some reporters summarized the findings, but the issue quickly disappeared from the pages of newspapers and magazines. Among academics already familiar with Putnam’s work, there was perfunctory agreement that our society needed to work harder to foster community, but few new ideas were ever offered. Anecdotally, most scholars outside of Putnam’s field, not to mention the general public, have never even heard of his most recent findings.

Consider how surprising this is. Achieving diversity, especially ethnic diversity, is an explicit goal of virtually all major corporations, universities, and government agencies. The U.S. Supreme Court has declared that diversity is a “compelling state interest” that overrides legal prohibitions on race-based school admissions. Top politicians routinely utter some version of the phrase “diversity is our strength” in speeches. Our immigration policy even features a “diversity lottery” that randomly offers green cards to foreign nationals whose primary qualification is that they come from exotic countries. Two years after Putnam wrote publicly about diversity’s problems, and at least five years since he has been presenting his findings informally, nothing has changed. We still treat diversity as an unqualified good.

The sensitivity of the topic probably discourages an honest conversation about the problems of diversity, but it is difficult to come up with solutions when we do not talk about the problem. So let’s have the discussion, considering all the evidence. Eventually, we should work toward an objective accounting of diversity’s strengths and weaknesses. The results could tell us how much (if any) further ethnic diversity is worth pursuing.

My goal here is a more modest one, which is to explore how we can use immigration policy to make future diversity, whatever level we choose, more manageable. I am going to assume that some amount of immigrant diversity is valuable or inevitable, or both. Given that assumption, our goal should be to carefully select diverse immigrants who do the least harm to social capital. If immigrants could possess certain characteristics that tend to increase social capital, then the impact of ethnic diversity could be at least partially mitigated.

I intend to focus on one such important characteristic—how smart the immigrants are. Intuitively, it is not a stretch to believe that smarter people are better at organizing networks and understanding the long-term benefits of cooperation, and a burgeoning academic literature confirms that intuition. IQ, a construct that psychologists use to estimate general intelligence, has been separately linked to elements of social capital, such as sophisticated ethical thinking, altruism, planning for the future, political awareness, adherence to informal community standards of behavior, and cooperation for the greater good. Despite this research, the direct link between intelligence and social capital has been drawn only in a handful of technical articles. It is time to bring the IQ-social capital link out of the academic journals and into the policy debate. Doing so could help us deal realistically with the problems Putnam has identified.

-------------------

The social attitudes of citizens are the building blocks of social capital, and IQ plays a role in shaping many of them. For example, psychologists have developed measures of moral reasoning that overlap substantially with IQ. When confronted with a moral dilemma, a person operating at the lowest level of moral reasoning would consider only his own self-interest. As moral reasoning becomes more sophisticated, people tend to give more consideration to community welfare, and to apply abstract principles to resolve moral dilemmas. Because of the cognitive demands of such reasoning, smarter people are much more likely to transcend simple self-interest in their ethical thinking. People who do so are likely to be better neighbors and better citizens.

Intelligent people are also likely to be more altruistic, which could help form tighter bonds within communities. In one recent study, researchers presented a group of undergraduates with a series of situations in which they get one amount of money and a stranger gets another amount. Then they had the undergraduates rank their order of preference for each situation as the amounts of money change. Altruistic people were defined as those who preferred less money for themselves in order for a stranger to receive a higher amount. The most altruistic people scored nearly 8 points higher on an IQ test than the least altruistic people.

Another trait important for maintaining social networks is the willingness to plan for the future rather than live for the moment. Last year, two Yale psychologists systematically reviewed the best studies of the relationship between IQ and “delay discounting,” which means acting impulsively. The typical experiments surveyed by the authors involved a series of hypothetical offers of cash (or some other reward) made to participants with known IQ scores. Each offer would consist of a lesser reward in the present versus a larger reward at some future date. The authors of the survey concluded that higher IQ people are almost always found to be less impulsive.

It makes intuitive sense that smarter people should be able to internalize future rewards more easily. They are probably more future-oriented because they can better manipulate their surroundings, whereas incompetent people exert less control on their future, making it murky and unknown. Whatever the cause, the impulsivity of low-IQ people has serious implications for social capital. People in less intelligent populations will be less willing to set up networks for potential long-term payoffs, make personal investments in the community, and follow basic norms of behavior with the expectation of future reciprocity.

We have seen that smarter people tend to be more ethically sophisticated, altruistic, and future-oriented. All of these traits are theoretically useful for creating social capital, but are smart people actually better citizens and neighbors in practice? For real-world evidence, we should turn first to civic participation, a major component of social capital. Various survey data indicate that IQ is an important and independent predictor of voting, membership in various social organizations, daily newspaper reading, and tolerance of free speech rights. It is clear that smarter people tend to value and participate in the political process more.

Outside of politics, a revealing behavioral link between IQ and social capital comes from The Bell Curve. Many people remember Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray’s controversial bestseller for its discussion of racial differences in IQ, but the book was mainly about the ways in which a person’s intelligence helps to shape his attitudes and behaviors.

One of the behavioral measures the authors examined was something they called the middle-class values (MCV) test. People pass the MCV test if they do all of the following—graduate from high school, avoid jail, stay married to a first spouse, maintain employment, and wait until marriage to have children. There are no formal laws against illegitimacy, divorce, or idleness, but there is a stigma against these behaviors among middle-class people. People who pass the MCV test are obeying social norms whose strength depends not on law enforcement but on social capital. They are following an implicit social contract. In Herrnstein and Murray’s words, middle-class values reflect “ways of behaving that produce social cohesion and order.”

Herrnstein and Murray divided people into five cognitive classes based on their performance on an IQ test. Among people in the highest cognitive class, 74 percent passed the MCV test, but just 16 percent passed in the lowest class. This relationship between IQ and middle-class values remained strong even when the authors compared people who grew up in the same household environments.

The last and most important behavioral link between IQ and social capital is cooperation. Garett Jones, an economist at George Mason University, recently authored a clever study of prisoner’s dilemma games played on college campuses. The game usually involves two people who could achieve the best overall payoff through cooperation, but who are each tempted to betray the other for a greater personal gain. The catch is that both players betraying each other results in the worst possible outcome for each. It is easy to see how selfishness and suspicion can ruin the chances for cooperation in this scenario.

Prisoner’s dilemma games have been played as experiments on college campuses to test all sorts of hypotheses over the years. The key insight made by Jones is that average SAT scores for each college are known, and the SAT is a good proxy for IQ. Jones correlated the proportion of students who cooperated in the prisoner’s dilemma at each college with the average SAT score of the college.

He found a substantial and robust correlation. To illustrate, schools with SAT scores around the national average of 1000 cooperated about 30 percent of the time when faced with the prisoner’s dilemma. Top-flight colleges with average SAT scores around 1450 cooperated about 51 percent of the time. The study strongly suggests that groups with higher levels of intelligence are better at cooperating, and cooperation is one of the most important elements of social capital.

In summary, higher IQ people appear to be more morally sophisticated, altruistic, and forward-looking. They exhibit higher levels of civic participation, more strongly adhere to middle-class behavioral standards, and cooperate more readily. This evidence, taken as a whole, confirms that intelligence and social capital are strongly related.

Some clear policy implications follow. What we want are immigrants who are most likely to be cooperative, trustworthy, and concerned about the welfare of the community. No one has any simple, reliable way of ascertaining whether an individual possesses these qualities. But we do have a simple, reliable way of measuring another quality that is correlated with them—cognitive ability, as measured by an IQ test or an educational credential. The smarter our immigrants are, the more likely they are to trust and cooperate, and the less likely they are to subtract from our existing stock of social capital. Selecting immigrants for intelligence (or a proxy indicator like education) could lessen the negative impact of ethnic diversity on American society.

This proposal works especially well in the broader debate over immigration. Many economists have advocated that the United States de-emphasize family preferences in favor of skill-based selection, much as Canada and Australia have already done. Though few people ever describe “skill” selection as a search for people with high IQs, immigrants with advanced degrees and sought-after talents are usually quite intelligent.

Skill selection is a desirable way of addressing the problem of ethnic diversity because it is already a policy option on the table. More intelligent (or educated) immigrants would be more productive workers, and they would also have a much less objectionable social impact on the United States due to their enhanced ability to cooperate. Putnam’s concerns about deteriorating social capital form another argument for immigrant skill selection.

When Robert Putnam came to my class five years ago, he presented some surprising and provocative results. But even more surprising is that his findings, public for at least two years, have generated so little substantive discussion among policymakers. The challenge that ethnic diversity poses to 21st century communities is significant, and meeting that challenge requires robust public discussion and debate. That discussion should include not just how we deal with the diversity of our current population, but how we can ensure future diversity causes as little harm as possible. Selecting intelligent immigrants is the smart way to begin.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: diversity; immigrantlist; immigration
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1 posted on 08/14/2009 11:33:20 AM PDT by GOPGuide
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To: GOPGuide

One of my Type O Negative concert tees has an image of fascist hordes marching in droves.

The back says “Diversity Equals Destruction”.


2 posted on 08/14/2009 11:38:59 AM PDT by Salamander (Like acid and oil on a madman's face, reason tends to fly away..............)
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To: GOPGuide
I knew all of the above about 30 years ago. In fact just about any thinking person knew what this author is saying. It's common sense that doesn't seem so common nowadays.

Anyone with a triple digit IQ could tell you that the type of diversity these social engineers are talking about is weakness. And yet society goes along with it to a very great extent.
3 posted on 08/14/2009 11:39:00 AM PDT by truthguy (Good intentions are not enough!)
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To: truthguy

The only reason Putnam can talk is that he has tenure. Although if he talks too loudly, he will meet the same fate as Larry Summers.


4 posted on 08/14/2009 11:50:35 AM PDT by freespirited (The Surgeon General has determined that Harry and Louise are dangerous to your health.)
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To: GOPGuide

Consider how surprising this is. Achieving diversity, especially ethnic diversity, is an explicit goal of virtually all major corporations, universities, and government agencies. The U.S. Supreme Court has declared that diversity is a “compelling state interest” that overrides legal prohibitions on race-based school admissions.

If diversity causes social breakdown, you can imagine the impact when governments and coporations openly discriminate and force diversity upon a population.


5 posted on 08/14/2009 11:52:18 AM PDT by CoastWatcher
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To: truthguy

Me too. My parents taught me all this when I was a child in the early 60’s.


6 posted on 08/14/2009 11:54:57 AM PDT by Ammo Republic 15
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To: GOPGuide
Intelligent people are also likely to be more altruistic, which could help form tighter bonds within communities.

I disagree with that premise. Intelligent people tend to be more successful, thus have more capital at hand to share in acts of volitional charity. Altruism is a mental disorder. It compels involuntary charitable acts without concern for the consequences to oneself.

7 posted on 08/14/2009 11:55:01 AM PDT by Myrddin
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To: truthguy

I think it’s possible that the movers and shakers directing the left’s agenda to make America into a socialist nation may have always known this also. It would fit right into their motive to weaken America, the better to overthrow our established democratic government. A version of “divide and conquer”. There is a list of goals to be reached in order to enact communism I’ve seen here at FR, and I seem to recall that racial conflict in order to weaken society was on the list (in other words, probably). Which makes the phrase “Diversity is our strength” thoroughly Orwellian. The marxists have always known that forced diversity would weaken us.


8 posted on 08/14/2009 11:55:38 AM PDT by mrsmel (Put the Gitmo terrorists near Capitol Hill.)
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To: GOPGuide

Yeah and Yale wont allow the Mohamed cartoons to be printed in a book about cartoons, afraid of diversity not celebrating it.


9 posted on 08/14/2009 12:06:32 PM PDT by junta (Conservatives, the word "racism" is now ours.)
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To: GOPGuide
Birds Of A Feather Flock Together.
10 posted on 08/14/2009 12:14:10 PM PDT by blam
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To: mrsmel
...There is a list of goals to be reached in order to enact communism I’ve seen here at FR,...

This might be what you remember seeing:

http://www.uhuh.com/nwo/communism/comgoals.htm
11 posted on 08/14/2009 12:33:41 PM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: GOPGuide

Genesis 11:1-9 (NIV)

The Tower of Babel

(1) Now the whole world had one language and a common speech. (2) As men moved eastward, they found a plain in Shinar and settled there.

(3) They said to each other, "Come, let's make bricks and bake them thoroughly." They used brick instead of stone, and tar for mortar. (4) Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves and not be scattered over the face of the whole earth."

(5) But the LORD came down to see the city and the tower that the men were building. (6) The LORD said, "If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. (7) Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other."

(8) So the LORD scattered them from there over all the earth, and they stopped building the city. (9) That is why it was called Babel--because there the LORD confused the language of the whole world. From there the LORD scattered them over the face of the whole earth.

Whether you consider this story the literal truth, an allegory, or simply an attempt by human authors to explain why people speak different languages, the message is clear. Diversity of language is not a blessing but a curse. Diversity of language does not help people work together more effectively but makes it impossible for them work together effectively. People have known this for thousands of years.

12 posted on 08/14/2009 1:18:21 PM PDT by Question_Assumptions
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To: CoastWatcher

Just another example of the fact that the entirety of the leftist ideology is based on lies.


13 posted on 08/14/2009 1:23:17 PM PDT by MrB (Go Galt now, save Bowman for later)
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To: Question_Assumptions

Not just language, CULTURE (of which a common language is a huge part).

Even if someone speaks your language, yet has a different value system than you have, you aren’t going to trust them fully.


14 posted on 08/14/2009 1:25:05 PM PDT by MrB (Go Galt now, save Bowman for later)
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To: GOPGuide; All

FYI

Most Voters Say Immigration Reform Not Likely to Pass
Thursday, August 13, 2009

Voter preferences are clear, however. By a 70% to 22% margin, voters say that gaining control of the borders is more important than legalizing the status of undocumented workers already in the country.

Three-out-of-four voters believe that the federal government is not doing enough to secure the nation’s borders. Roughly the same number want cops to check the immigration status of all offenders during traffic stops. Sixty-seven percent (67%) also say that if law enforcement officers know of places where immigrants gather to find work, they should sometimes conduct surprise raids to identify and deport those who are here illegally. On another hot button topic, 77% of voters nationwide oppose drivers’ licenses for undocumented immigrants.

Sixty-eight percent (68%) of voters nationwide say that those who knowingly hire illegal immigrants should be punished. By a 48% to 36% margin, voters say the same about landlords who rent to illegal immigrants.

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/immigration/most_voters_say_immigration_reform_not_likely_to_pass


15 posted on 08/14/2009 1:32:17 PM PDT by AuntB (Tired of D & R globalist power brokers? How 'bout HEARTLAND AMERICA PARTY? It's a state of mind!)
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To: CoastWatcher
The problem is not diversity per se, it is promoting diversity for the sake of diversity and nothing else. The company for which I work is fairly diverse because we sell worldwide. We may be a little heavy on Asian representation because our owners are Japanese and a little heavy on African American representation because our plants are located in areas of the country where African Americans are a larger share of our population. But the weird thing is that every single one of our AA employees is in an intact family compared to around 20% of them nationwide.

So we essentially have ethnic diversity but shared values, in a positive sense of sharing.

Your innercities like LA have ethnic diversity and shared values only in the sense that they are suckling off the government teat and competiting with each other for tax dollars. This, not the ethnic diversity itself, is at the root cause of social breakdown. However, the various ethnic "community organizers" are those which organize the social breakdown through their confrontational methods to maximize their take.

16 posted on 08/14/2009 2:07:00 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Are there any men left in Washington? Or, are there only cowards? Ahmad Shah Massoud)
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To: MrB

Absolutely. And much of what is currently called “racism” is actually a conflict of culture, not physical features such as skin color.


17 posted on 08/14/2009 2:11:43 PM PDT by Question_Assumptions
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To: Question_Assumptions
From the article:
The most trusting places tended to be homogenously [sic] white, while the least trusting places were highly diverse.

Restated - those places with a homogeneous Western Culture were most trusting, with the highest level of social capital, than those places with any dilution of that Western Culture.

And what culture is the left trying to destroy? Yep.

Notice he didn't find any "homogeneous" places that weren't "white" (ie, Western Culture) that had a high level of social capital. So, if it was a matter of homogeneity - some all black neighborhoods would have a higher social capital score than a mixed neighborhood.

I'm certain that the researcher would discover that the "social capital score" would be directly correlated to the "Western Culture score" for the area in question.

18 posted on 08/17/2009 6:04:47 AM PDT by MrB (Go Galt now, save Bowman for later)
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To: MrB

What needs to be added is that trust isn’t universal among “whites”, either. There is a significant range of trust between different white ethnicities and it drops off quite a bit even in Eastern Europe and in the Southern parts of Europe, for example and there are groups like the Irish “Travellers” that test the tolerance of those around them.

You also need to notice that there is a tremendous amount of trust in Japan, which is not quite “Western Culture”. I would argue that it rivals, if not exceeds, the trust and social capital in the United States. The amount of things that get left out in the open in Tokyo without getting stolen and things done as a matter of trust was mind-boggling when I lived there. Further, if you look at immigrant black communities from the Caribbean and parts of Africa have substantially more trust than urban African American communities.

So I agree it’s a matter of culture as well as homogeneity but it’s not just Western Culture and it’s probably counter-productive and unnecessary to invoke race at all, even as a proxy for culture.


19 posted on 08/17/2009 5:38:41 PM PDT by Question_Assumptions
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To: Question_Assumptions

I think that it is culture more than anything else that
seperates people. You wonder what some people are teaching
their kids about the proper way to live in this society.
I taught my kids what my parents taught me that will work
for them and make them into responsible people. If you
were brought up in a culture that doesn’t value the same
things and have standards of conduct that reflect where
you live now, you’re going to be diverse alright.


20 posted on 08/17/2009 5:55:24 PM PDT by jusduat (probably lost)
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