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Media Is Mum About Mexican Anti Wal-Mart Riots
Sweetness & Light ^ | May 5, 2006 | N/A

Posted on 05/05/2006 11:03:29 AM PDT by Sam Hill

Why is our one party media not telling us who is behind the riots in Mexico and why they are rioting?

Here's a prime example of the purposeful lack of information from the DNC's Associated Press [excerpted]:

Photo

Villagers clash with police in the village of San Salvador Atenco, about 31 miles east of Mexico City May 3, 2006. Violence erupted in the village this morning after police arrived to evict a small group of street vendors and villagers rallied in their support. The clashes have left at least two dead so far, an dozens injured, and the villagers are holding 8 policemen hostage, according to local media and witnesses.

Mexican police take control of riots

By Eduardo Verdugo, Associated Press

SAN SALVADOR ATENCO, Mexico — Hundreds of federal, state and city police officers fired tear gas and crashed through human barricades to take control of this rebellious town early Thursday, hours after protesters severely beat several authorities and took six agents hostage.

The police made it to the central plaza in front of city hall about 7 a.m. local time, Mexican news media reported.

International television broadcasts showed officers repeatedly beating protesters, including some who already had been taken into custody.

An Associated Press photographer sustained bruises on his head and body after being clubbed Wednesday by a group of police officers who were trying to keep him from taking pictures. He was not seriously injured, however. Police also beat and tackled at least one cameraman from the Mexican Televisa network
...

Benitez and a spokesman for the Federal Preventative Police said Thursday that a federal police agent was beaten to death. Hours later, however, Mexico state Gov. Enrique Pena Nieto called television newscasts to say the officer remained hospitalized in grave condition. Benitez on Thursday said he could not confirm the officer's death.

Television images from helicopters overhead showed residents repeatedly punching and kicking the semiconscious officer in a beating that continued even after he had been put inside an ambulance that was taken over by local residents.

Mexican media reported that at least three dozen police officers were injured, though federal and state police spokesmen could not agree on an exact number. Pena Nieto told Televisa, Mexico's largest network, that as many as 50 officers were wounded, but that only about 12 sustained serious injuries.

Rebel leader Subcomandante Marcos said that the Zapatista Liberation Army of southern Mexico will go on red alert to support Atenco residents...

In the old days it was the job of reporters to report who, what, where, why.

However we won't get any of that basic information from the AP and the rest of our DNC controlled media because they hate Wal-Mart almost as much as the Communist rioters.

But here's the why:

Photo

Machete-wielding peasants from the town of San Salvador Atenco attend a rally at the ruins, just a few miles north of Mexico City, Teotihucan, Mexico on Tuesday, April 25, 2006. Zapatista rebel leader Subcomandante Marcos held a meeting at the ancient pyramids of Teotihuacan on Tuesday with protesters who opposed the building of a Wal-Mart-owned store nearby.

And here's the who:

Photo

Student supporters of the Zapatista National Liberation Army, EZLN, carry a banner calling on a boycott on U.S. owned multinational companies during a march in Mexico City, Mexico on Monday May 1, 2006. Zapatista leader Sub Comandante Marcos joined calls to boycott U.S. goods in what was dubbed a 'A Day Without Gringos', an action timed to coincide with a call for immigrants to boycott work, school and shopping in the United States.

Photo

Members of the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) hold up their machetes as they protest in front of the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City, Mexico on Monday May 1, 2006. The leader of the EZLN, Sub Comandante Marcos, joined calls to boycott U.S. goods in what was dubbed a 'A Day Without Gringos', an action timed to coincide with a call for immigrants to boycott work, school and shopping in the United States.

And, yes, those are machetes.

Funny how our media didn't tell us about any of this.

I guess they think it makes their side look bad.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: newsblackout; unions; unodemayo; walmart
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It's funny the things our media refuses to tell us.
1 posted on 05/05/2006 11:03:32 AM PDT by Sam Hill
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To: Howlin; Deb; kcvl; Mo1; Enchante; nopardons; veronica; KJC1; stocksthatgoup; mewzilla; backhoe; ...
What is very telling is that the leftwing is proud of this, but our media is doing their best to cover it up.

From the Communist rag, The Progressive:

Teoti-Wal-Mart. (Wal–Mart in San Juan Teotihuacan )

The Progressive

3/1/2005; Ross, John

Each winter solstice, tens of thousands of revivalist Indians, New Age acolytes, and just plain tourists don cameras, feathered head dresses, or simple white cottons and tramp to the top of the Pyramid of the Sun in San Juan Teotihuacan to soak up the rays and revitalize their bodies and souls for the coming year. Teoti-Wal-Mart

Teotihuacan flourished for nearly a millennium between the second century BC and 700 AD. In the year 500, half a million people lived in the city, which covered an expanse of eight square miles, larger even than Rome. Having harnessed underground streams, the rulers of Teotihuacan created Mexico’s first corn culture. Queztalcoatl, the plumed serpent, a deity ubiquitous in ancient Mesoamerica, ruled over Teotihuacan, and his priests maintained the balance of the agricultural seasons and upheld the sun in the sky through human sacrifice.

As I climbed the 247 steep stone steps divided into four narrow tiers to the pyramid’s summit, many of my fellow pilgrims expressed their umbrage at the new Wal-Mart, in plain sight down below, just 2,000 meters away. “It is like an invasion, a new conquest,” opined Rafael, a young computer technician from Cordoba, Veracruz.

“Falta de respeto” (a lack of respect), a middle-aged woman missing her two front teeth spat. “This is Mexico, you know.”

“What a horror! They insult the Gods! Quezalcoatl must be furious!” said Mexico City grade school teacher Xenia Marquez, extending her arms towards the weak December sun at the very apex of the Pyramid of the Sun. Her tirade was interrupted by the tingling of her cellphone.

The saga of the resistance to the Teotihuacan Wal-Mart is a picaresque footnote in the battle against the global leviathan. “Wal-Mart has profaned the City of the Gods, and there are no deities in Mesoamerica that can protect it,” darkly warned Miguel Limon-Portillo, the celebrated translator of Aztec poetry. Whereas in the U.S., such disputes are apt to be settled before permit appeals and zoning boards, the Teotihuacan Wal-Mart touched a raw national nerve, and so this war was fought a la Mexicana.

Having jumped the gun on NAFTA by buying into the 122-store Bodega Aurrera chain here in 1992 and taking it over five years later, Wal-Mart now owns 687 superstores in seventy-one Mexican cities under the marquee logos of Wal-Mart, Bodega Aurrera, Superama, and Sam’s Club–plus fifty-two Suburbias (a more upscale department store chain) and 235 Vips restaurants. Total Wal-Mart sales of $10.8 billion in 2003 dwarfed the $8 billion taken in by the next three retailers together. And Wal-Mart, the largest U.S. employer, is also Mexico’s biggest job generator, accounting for 101,000.

As in the U.S., the bottom line is gospel for Wal-Mart in Mexico, and no unions or other troublemakers are tolerated on the premises. Non-union Mexican Wal-Mart “associates” earn an average of 13 pesos an hour (about $1.20) as compared to $9 for their nonunion U.S. counterparts.

“It is not good for our sovereignty that all our clothes and our food come from another country,” asserts Vicente Yanez, director of the National Association of Self-Service Stores. (More than 2,000 McDonald’s also stain the Mexican landscape.)

A full decade after NAFTA kicked in, the commercial physiognomy of Mexico is often indistinguishable from that of its neighbor to the north.

Not many months ago, polleros (people smugglers) in Tapachula, Chiapas, on Mexico’s southern border, wheedled $5,000 each from six Guatemalans and two other undocumented workers whom they promised to deposit safely in the United States.

Moving through Mexico stealthily in an old bus with its curtains drawn and slipping immigration officials the obligatory mordida (little bite, or bribe) to ease through the checkpoints, the smugglers arrived in Chihuahua City, 100 miles south of the U.S. border, drove out to an upscale suburb, and dropped their load off in front of an enormous Wal-Mart, informing the clueless clients they had arrived on “the Other Side.” The Wal-Mart shared the gleaming mall with a Wendy’s, a KFC, even an Applebee’s, and the ten-plex “Hollywood” Cinema.

“It looked just like how it looked on television” a rueful indocumentado told Froilan Meza of the local Chihuahua Herald.

The Civic Front to Defend the Teotihuacan Valley (Frente Civica) first got wind of Wal-Mart s plans very late in the game after concrete trucks started pouring a foundation less than two kilometers from the pyramids. Activists immediately suspected a deal had been cut between the conglomerate, the municipal government, and the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), without whose permission the project could not go forward.

On October 1, 2004, Lorenzo Trujillo, a middle-aged teacher, the self-styled “spiritual guide” Emma Ortega, and Emmanuel D’Herrera, a poet and professor, set up camp at the Wal-Mart site, rolled out their petates (straw mats), lit copal incense to the guardian figure of Coatlicue, a sort of Aztec Shiva, and, in classic lost-cause Mexican struggle posture, declared themselves on hunger strike. Their sacrifice made an impact in a nation that bridles at dubious NAFTA encroachments and has been galvanized by the plight of its Indian cultures after ten years of Zapatista rebellion.

Mexico State Governor Arturo Montiel, a dark horse presidential hopeful of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which ran Mexico for seven decades and would like nothing better than to take back power in 2006, was a big booster of the new Wal-Mart store. He boasted it would bring 3,000 new jobs to this run-down region. But local street sellers and market vendors figured their livelihoods were jeopardized by super-store competition and joined the fray. Street fights ensued between those who opposed the project and those who did not want to bus twenty miles away to other towns to do their shopping. When the Frente Civica camp was attacked by angry construction workers, the three hunger strikers moved to the ruins. A second strike began on the sidewalk outside the INAH’s Mexico City offices.

By now, lots of fingers were being pointed at the INAH for having declared the Wal-Mart site of “no archeological value.” One fired construction worker, Martin Hernandez, told the national left daily La Jornada that he had seen broken pieces of pottery and other items being hauled from the construction site and was ordered to keep quiet about the destruction.

Soon Rigoberta Menchu and Sub-comandante Marcos were commenting on the desecration. The Teotihuacan Wal-Mart was a ready-made flashpoint for indigenous organizations such as the National Association for Indigenous Autonomy, which pointedly asked if the Catholic Church would allow a megastore to be thrown up at the door to the Vatican.

Francisco Toledo, Mexico’s most luminous painter, who had single-handedly kept a McDonald’s out of Oaxaca city’s colonial plaza (which like Teotihuacan is a UNESCO World Heritage Site), drew pictures of monkeys pushing shopping carts beneath the pyramids of “Teotihualmart,” as social critic Carlos Monsivais tagged it. Union leaders came to express their support of the hunger strikers and to remind the press of Wal-Mart’s antiunion bias. Anarcho-punks, anthropologists, and comedians expressed their outrage, and cabaret star Jesusa Rodriguez told of the “Hualmartas, a tribe from the north.”

As the uproar mounted, Wal-Mart worked around the clock to get the new store up and running before October was out. And as the deadline approached, tempers flared. On October 24, militant farmers from nearby San Salvador Atenco, who had fought off a proposed international airport with their machetes three years previous, clashed with police just outside the ruins. A police car and three motorcycles were torched.

When on October 30 Wal-Mart was finally ready to throw open its doors, there were seventy customers in line before 9 a.m. A sound truck had been circulating through the small city for days advertising free gifts and big bargains. But just before opening time, a team of INAH workers appeared on the scene and demanded entrance in order to drill for last-minute samples. Two meter-deep holes were perforated between cash registers six and seven as store stockers stopped to gawk. The samples yielded only sand and fragments of twentieth century brick, and Wal-Mart received the INAH’s blessings to open for business.

But the perforations had left a gaping chasm in the megastore’s floor, and Wal-Mart public relations officer Claudia Algorri decided the inauguration would be postponed until after the long Dia de los Muertos weekend, Mexico’s traditional celebration of its dead.

Over the weekend, the Frente Civica built altars to their ancestors and prayed that the gods of Teotihuacan were tuned in.

When customers once again flocked to the megastore the following Tuesday morning, 250 riot cops were on hand to greet them. The first scuffling occurred after the mob tried to take the doors, and Wal-Mart officials had to calm the public with free Cokes, French fries, and “little cakes,” according to La Jornada. Then the link to the satellite, which would connect the Teotihuacan cash registers with Wal-Mart headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas, went down–the gods must have been listening. For six hours, the crowd hung around the parking lot under the blazing sun. A family quarrel broke out and noses were bloodied, the Jornada reporter noted. Finally, at about 3:30, customers were allowed to grab a shopping cart, and the consumer frenzy was consummated. But sales were not brisk. Many people had come just to gander at the marvels of modern merchandising contained within this temple of plastic.

That night, a band of toughs dismantled the Frente Civica encampment by the ruins. D’Herrera, then in the fourth week of his hunger strike, was rousted from his petate, and three students were slashed by a razor-toting thug. The Teotihuacan Wal-Mart was officially in business.

By December, the Teotihuacan Wal-Mart was booming. Although “Nueva Wal-Mart” (the corporation’s Mexican handle) has posted no outside store sign to avoid controversy, the interior is unmistakably a prototypical Sam Walton-style emporium stocked to the roof beams with mostly Chinese-made items.

Given the season, the toy aisles were packed with parents shopping. Of six customers questioned, all fervently concurred that Wal-Mart prices were the lowest in town. Princess Barbie was on sale for 288 pesos (about $20), He-Man action figures for 162. But a giant yellow Hummer toy weighed in close to 4,000 pesos. A miniature Wal-Mart megastore marked down to 988 pesos was drawing oohs and ahs. Elsewhere in the aisles, Black & Decker irons were going quickly at 97 pesos, and U.S. grown tomatoes and apples were holding their own against local produce.

Miguel Angel Nieves, a young custodian whose father worked rebuilding the Pyramid of the Moon in the 1960s, exalted the prices and the products. “Before Wal-Mart opened, we would shop in the street or in the central market, which is owned by one man,” he said. “The prices were high–and, well, it wasn’t very clean.”

Out in the parking lot, Victor Acevedo, a local anthropologist who affects handmade Indian accessories, was sheepishly loading merchandise into his battered Volkswagen bug. “I don’t like the idea of Wal-Mart being so close to the pyramids,” he said, “but where else am I going to shop?”

Mexico is a four-millennium-old civilization with a culture as obdurate as granite and obsidian. When the Europeans came, they pulled down most of the Aztec temples. But the majestic pyramids of Teotihuacan remained. And so they will remain long after all the Wal-Marts in Mexico crumble into dust.

Veteran reporter John Ross has lived in Mexico City’s old quarter for many years. His latest volume, “Murdered by Capitalism: A Memoir of 150 Years of Life and Death on the American Left, “is published by Nation Books.

http://www.highbeam.com/library/docfreeprint.asp?docid=1G1:129972360&c trlInfo=Round19%3AMode19b%3ADocFree%3APrint&print=yes


2 posted on 05/05/2006 11:05:33 AM PDT by Sam Hill
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To: Sam Hill

Important to perceive this method of dealing with private vendors as more proof of the feudal state Vincente rules.


3 posted on 05/05/2006 11:07:58 AM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: Sam Hill

I was in Toluca Mexico yesterday, there was peace and quiet at the local Wal Mart. Don't get all hussied and bent out of shape, people here in Mexico MARCH all of the time. If it ain't about the SAINTS or Virgens, there are radio stations that predict marches, 10-12 a day in MExico all kinds of people stirred up about something. Pay no attention, move on. The press just makes it worse, so let's be glad of the MSM didn't put this one on the front page. May l, we marched for Labor, May 2, The Virgen, in a blue dress, May 3 was the Cross, and everyone with a Cross. May 4 was the Black Christ, and May 5, we are now doing Puebla and the French. The only Mexicans who work are the ones who went to the USA>


4 posted on 05/05/2006 11:09:30 AM PDT by rovenstinez
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To: rovenstinez

Yes, welcome to a third world banana republic. Unfortunately, Los Angeles is now barely ahead of Toluca when it comes to rule of law and civilized society. Do you think the media would still back the mexicans if they knew that they were praying to a pyramid?


5 posted on 05/05/2006 11:16:45 AM PDT by bpjam (Now accepting liberal apologies.....)
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To: bjcintennessee

ping


6 posted on 05/05/2006 11:17:55 AM PDT by ImaTexan
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To: Sam Hill
I was visiting El Paso, Texas about this time of the year in 2004. My Son was at Ft. Bliss and getting married. We went to the Wal-Mart there (it was a huge one). Most of the people in the Wal-Mart were from Mexico, you can generally tell them from the Tex-Mexicans. Also, over half the cars in the parking lot has auto tags from Mexico. Apparently, those Mexicans loved that Wal-Mart a nd could not find cheaper prices on their side of the border.

Southern Mexico is different, most of the people are illiterate Indians that have been told by the Marxists that America is evil. Still, many want to come here to live and work.

Interesting dichotomy. Protest American business but in practice love the same business.
7 posted on 05/05/2006 11:20:50 AM PDT by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: rovenstinez

You know, I know how they feel about seeing Wal-Mart next to their ruins. It's just not right! Nor is it right for drivers going down I-95 to continually see, "You're 50 miles from South of the Border. You're just 45 miles from South of the Border! Senor, you're just 35 miles from the South of the BORDER! Senorita, did you know that you're just 25 miles from the South of the BORDER?" UGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!


8 posted on 05/05/2006 11:24:17 AM PDT by hamiltonbee
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To: Sam Hill

interesting


9 posted on 05/05/2006 11:25:05 AM PDT by moehoward
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To: Sam Hill
I've boycotted WalMart for years, but you know what? On May 1st, guess where we were? WalMart, Target, and Stater Bros :-D The media sucks. On the 12pm news, KABC (local 7)showed Ted Hayes speaking out in Leimert Park, which was the starting point for the Minuteman caravan. The 5pm news, managed to cut him out entirely. What was left to show was an attempt to portray Jim Gilchrist as a moron.

Did I mention that I think MSM sucks?

10 posted on 05/05/2006 11:26:12 AM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (I care for my pets better than Vincente Fox cares for his own citizens)
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To: hamiltonbee

Don't the Mexicans like cheap Chinese products?


11 posted on 05/05/2006 11:26:39 AM PDT by null and void (Hillary!™ would have been a big astronaut. Say that slowly)
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia

"Southern Mexico is different, most of the people are illiterate Indians that have been told by the Marxists that America is evil. Still, many want to come here to live and work."

Whew for a second there I thought these were the people coming to the USA in droves. But I sees it's just the blue eyed castillians coming to america. Just like the "merchants" from Cuba. Oh, wait! The communistas sent the eurotistas packing in Cuba. Last I looked the eurotistas are still in charge in Mexico. that means we are getting....Hey wait a doggone second here! I smell a rat.


12 posted on 05/05/2006 11:27:47 AM PDT by kinghorse
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To: Sam Hill

Mexicans in the northern states of Mexico buy goods in US Walmarts (if there are none in Mexico near them) and then sell the goods back in Mexico. Some people make a living that way.


13 posted on 05/05/2006 11:28:31 AM PDT by Draco
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To: null and void

Hahaha!


14 posted on 05/05/2006 11:28:49 AM PDT by hamiltonbee
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To: Sam Hill

reference ping


15 posted on 05/05/2006 11:30:23 AM PDT by TLI (ITINERIS IMPENDEO VALHALLA, Minuteman Project AZ 2005, Texas Minutemen El Paso, Oct and April 2006)
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To: Draco

"Mexicans in the northern states of Mexico buy goods in US Walmarts (if there are none in Mexico near them) and then sell the goods back in Mexico. Some people make a living that way."

These are probably the noble "street vendors" mentioned in some of the articles and photo captions.


16 posted on 05/05/2006 11:30:52 AM PDT by Sam Hill
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To: Sam Hill
As I climbed the 247 steep stone steps divided into four narrow tiers to the pyramid’s summit, many of my fellow pilgrims expressed their umbrage at the new Wal-Mart, in plain sight down below, just 2,000 meters away. “It is like an invasion, a new conquest,” opined Rafael, a young computer technician from Cordoba, Veracruz.

“Falta de respeto” (a lack of respect), a middle-aged woman missing her two front teeth spat. “This is Mexico, you know.”

“What a horror! They insult the Gods! Quezalcoatl must be furious!” said Mexico City grade school teacher Xenia Marquez, extending her arms towards the weak December sun at the very apex of the Pyramid of the Sun. Her tirade was interrupted by the tingling of her cellphone.

The saga of the resistance to the Teotihuacan Wal-Mart is a picaresque footnote in the battle against the global leviathan. “Wal-Mart has profaned the City of the Gods, and there are no deities in Mesoamerica that can protect it,” darkly warned Miguel Limon-Portillo, the celebrated translator of Aztec poetry.

This seems to confirm what I have read in the past, that few if any of the people who protest the Teotihuacan Wal-Mart actually live there.

17 posted on 05/05/2006 11:32:30 AM PDT by untenured
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To: hamiltonbee
Hey, it's a free country! You could close your eyes when you drive by them.

Wait...scratch that.

18 posted on 05/05/2006 11:37:50 AM PDT by SquirrelKing
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To: Sam Hill
Zapatista leader Sub Comandante Marcos joined calls to boycott U.S. goods in what was dubbed a 'A Day Without Gringos', an action timed to coincide with a call for immigrants to boycott work, school and shopping in the United States.

No gringos, no pesos. Comprende?

19 posted on 05/05/2006 11:43:39 AM PDT by snarks_when_bored
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To: All
From a preposterously glowing (and mendacious) write up of the group in Wikipedia:

Zapatista Army of National Liberation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The EZLN represents the rights of the indigenous population, but also sees itself and is seen as part of a wider anti-capitalist movement. The neozapatistas oppose globalization, or neoliberalism, the economic system advocated by the Mexican presidents from 1982 to 2000. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), is an example of neoliberal policy, and spawned the 1994 Zapatista revolution because those who would later become the EZLN believed that it would destroy the rights of Mexico’s impoverished indigenous community. The group takes its name from the Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata; they see themselves as his ideological heirs, and heirs to 500 years of indigenous resistance against imperialism.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zapatista_Army_of_National_Liberation

In actuality they are violent Communists bent on overthrowing the Mexican (and US) government.

20 posted on 05/05/2006 11:48:06 AM PDT by Sam Hill
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