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Opinion: Congress is forgetting the most important part of progress – Deseret News
Posted: June 19, 2020 at 7:43 am
Senate Republicans and House Democrats have been furiously drafting their own versions of police reform bills. On that, they seem to be united. But in a classic case of Washington dysfunction, the partisan divide is barring reasonable compromise from consideration.
Both bills overlap on substantive reforms new training requirements for police, increased accountability, limiting chokeholds but leaders from one party seem wholly unwilling to consider anything from the other. At this rate, election-year politics will keep the country from seeing the changes it needs now.
Republicans argue the Democrats proposal is too overreaching and too reliant on government action. Democrats respond that the Republican bill is too narrow.
The Democrats want to federalize all of these issues, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said, by way of typical Democratic overreach to try to control everything in Washington. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi withheld little in her rebuttal: For the leader of the Senate to say, Its going nowhere, we dont want any of that, is really disgraceful and really ignores the concerns of the American people. I feel very, very disappointed by the dangerous statement made by the Republican leader of the Senate.
The White House doesnt seem to be mending the divide, either. Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said earlier this week that including qualified immunity is a nonstarter a legal doctrine that is central to the George Floyd case and prominent in the Democrats bill. Further, President Donald Trumps Tuesday afternoon announcement of his police reform executive order turned into an opportunity to take jabs at the Obama administration and, specifically, his opponent this November.
Despite Washingtons squabbles, the situation on the ground isnt going away. The killing of Rayshard Brooks at the hands of an Atlanta police officer, who on Wednesday was charged with murder, only fan the flames of unrest, and the need for police reform seems more pressing than ever.
During this week 162 years ago, Abraham Lincoln delivered his timeless House Divided speech. At the time of the address, America was splintering over the issue of slavery and the Souths hints at secession. Lincoln then an up-and-coming Illinois politician en route to a failed campaign for a U.S. Senate seat was far from a household name.
The speech was radical and too strong for some, including Lincolns law partner, William H. Herndon, who viewed Lincoln as morally courageous but politically incorrect. Lincoln appeased his questioning companion by saying this: The proposition is indisputably true ... and I will deliver it as written. I want to use some universally known figure, expressed in simple language as universally known, that it may strike home to the minds of men in order to rouse them to the peril of the times.
At a crucial moment in our nations fight for racial equity, its leaders should reflect on Lincolns message. The Senate majoritys partisan jabs at the House and vice versa are largely political hyperbole. The two proposed bills seem to be of the same hue. Talk to each other and get to work.
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Opinion: Congress is forgetting the most important part of progress - Deseret News
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Racism, microagressions, non-inclusive culture, no opportunities, turn independent – BAME pros open up about working in PR – PR Week
Posted: at 7:43 am
The research, which tracks the careers of 17 BAME PR professionals, highlights cases of racism, microaggressions and unconscious biases they have regularly faced, while having to work in an inflexible culture that denies them opportunities and fair progression.
An alarming conclusion of the study is that individuals eventually set up their own shop to continue a career in PR or leave the industry altogether.
The research highlights a worrying set of common experiences. These include BAME practitioners being afraid to make mistakes; not being comfortable to act as themselves; having to work harder for fewer opportunities; and everyday casual racism.
Talent is judged to a different standard to that of white colleagues, and there is a lack of support when they speak up.
The study provides a sobering reflection of an industry in which levels of ethnic diversity fell from 11 per cent in 2015 to eight per cent in 2019.
Despite countless industry panel discussions diagnosing the problem and pledging to do better, the industry has gone backwards, argues CIPRs Diversity and Inclusion Forum chair, Avril Lee.
The PR industry agrees that diversity is important for attracting the best talent to bring fresh thinking, creativity and insights into new audiences, but our actions speak louder than our words, she said. And our actions are building a profession of white private-school alumni; we are less diverse than weve been for the past five years.
An often overlooked problem is that practices within the workplace are damaging the industrys ability to retain talent after they rise through junior ranks. Many leave to become independent practitioners, which BAME talent regards as a solution to challenges in the workplace and an opportunity to channel a common entrepreneurial spirit within BAME communities.
This move to independent working may be viewed as a success for some individuals, but represents a loss to the PR industry as it further reduces diversity and role models among senior ranks within existing firms, perpetuating a cycle that reinforces shockingly low BAME representation among leadership of the largest PR consultancies.
Its not that there is a lack of will or love for the profession, as the majority of BAME PR professionals recommend the industry.
Today, BME PR Pros founder Elizabeth Bananuka launched a new Blueprint initiative to provide a kitemark and guidance to agencies to get their houses in order. This report highlights that a lot of work is needed.
PRWeek has summarised some of the key forms of day-to-day discrimination that BAME practitioners reveal in the CIPRs Race in the PR Workplace: BAME lived experiences in the UK PR industry report.
The report found that racism is a significant factor having an impact on the working lives of BAME professionals and these often take the form of microaggressions, which build up over time and negatively affect individuals subjected to them.
Some felt that the quality of their work was under constant scrutiny, and they didnt feel trusted to do the job because they were different from their white, middle-class colleagues and the associated elite culture within the industry.
This treatment reflected the institutional racism BAME practitioners felt as if their work wasnt valued in the same way.
Microaggressions are subtle, indirect and possibly unintentional, which makes them difficult to address through policies and procedures.
In one instance, a BAME practitioner was subject to inappropriate comments about her hair, but felt uncomfortable and unable to address this because she feared falling into the stereotype of Black African people being aggressive.
Here are some lived experiences from BAME practitioners:
I feel there is a real misunderstanding of what racism is. Its politically incorrect now to be overtly racist so it is repressed in people and they divert the conversation. You cant invalidate someones experience just because you cant relate to it. They say: Oh, theyre always playing the race card and victimising themselves, theyre just lazy. Some people say racism doesnt exist. If you cant have a conversation about it, we cant get anywhere. Its important to acknowledge and embrace our differences; do not suppress them. Make people feel welcome.
My life in that organisation would have been so much easier if I had just never said anything about diversity. Just not raised my head above the parapet and made myself stand out. They just think youre trouble. I realised that they thought I was the problem.
When I was at a small PR agency, I directly experienced racism from a client. All my work was signed off by a more senior staff member within the agency and by the client lead. There was never any question that my work was not good quality, but this specific client kept rejecting it. In the end, my boss at the agency called a meeting with me and the Client Director and said that they had reviewed all my work and they could see no other reason for this clients complaints other than he was being racist. My boss then went on to say that whilst they wanted to drop the client, they couldnt afford to and therefore could I continue to work on the account, but that they would attend all the meetings in my place. Ultimately, I didnt feel that they had my back and so I left shortly after this.
BAME professionals do not feel like they can be themselves at work and are under pressure to conform to a certain 'white culture' mould.
The PR industry maintains existing cultural norms and fails to encourage more diverse thinking. BAME professionals said they need to fit into a certain mould to progress, conforming to a monoculture of white, middle-/upper-class privilege.
They are made to feel they dont belong, from having different backgrounds and experiences growing up, to having to say the right things or speak the right way, to their physical appearance.
There is a pressure to act and behave how they thought a white British person would.
There appears to be a correlation between ones socio-economic background and individuals work experiences and career prospects. Some respondents expressed the importance of parents social circles and the favours game that came with it. A successful career in PR is deemed to be about who you know, not what you know.
I was constantly having to prove my commitment and skills above and beyond others, to prove I was good enough. I always took the emergency phone home at Christmas, stayed late at work and was always willing to go the extra mile.
Even when I got headhunted for the next job in a consultancy, I still felt like an imposter, even more so. They were even more prestigious than my previous agency. Everyones parents had such prestigious jobs; it was overwhelming. I think the bigger problem for PR is keeping BAME people in the industry. Even if they get better at attracting BAME people into PR, they will still feel like an outsider, that they are not good enough to be there, then they wont stay there, because theyll find the culture hasnt actually changed at all.
Agencies would never take me on, full stop. I think that is a bias, not just colour but a certain type of person. I didnt fit that type and didnt look like them. At senior levels, its all men, so thats me out too.
Many BAME pracitioners unshackle themselves from an industry that holds them back to set up their own consultancies.
BAME professionals said that their day-to-day experiences are affected by a lack of diversity, being deprived of opportunities for certain tasks and projects, as well as working on more prestigious accounts. At best, progression feels slower. This issue affects BAME professionals at all stages of their careers and has led to many leaving their roles and/or deciding to establish themselves as independent practitioners.
The role had been promised to me, but it never materialised, and I got myself another job instead. As I left, I discovered that the job had been given to a more junior colleague who Id been informally mentoring. The woman who secured this position is white, privately educated, went to a top university and is well-spoken, she fitted the mould. There was no formal interview process as it was an interim position (initially). It felt like they kept me at a certain level but didnt want to promote me into that final leadership position.
There are certain things Ive wanted to work on here and havent got them. I havent got anyone here whos got my back yet. I havent had the opportunities here I thought I would.
I did experience unconscious bias as I became more senior, with senior management recruiting in their own image and me feeling my face didnt fit.
We dont have enough BAME people in senior positions, I think it's unconscious bias. We dont, therefore, have enough senior mentors and role models around to show us how we need to develop to get into senior positions. There are mentors at the junior and mid level but less and less as you progress through the industry.
The issue is not with the marginalised groups, were not the ones who have a problem with working with other people. But it falls to those marginalised groups to do all of the work in an organisation. Its not my unconscious bias, as a Black woman from a council estate, that other people are unable to hang out with people who dont look like them, its their unconscious bias that stops the progression.
It made me so angry and completely dented my confidence. But after a couple of months, it is what turned me around and was the turning point in my career. I now realise that it is not an industry that has allowed me to be myself and this is such a shame. We should be celebrating and embracing the diversity that BAME people could bring, rather than shutting it out. I morphed into what I thought I should be and now, as I launch my own PR brand, being myself sits at the very heart of what I am trying to do.
Download: Race in PR: BAME lived experience in the UK PR industry
Read next:Working in a majority white organisation robbed me of my mental strength I am still recovering
And this: It's the industry stopped telling us we're not the right fit
And this: PRWeek reflects on diversity in the industry
PRWeek UK is committed to having a more diverse selection of commentators in our articles, and is compiling a list of BME (black, Asian and minority ethnic) PR professionals who are willing to be quoted. To be added to the list, please email john.harrington@haymarket.com and include your specialist areas of expertise, and/or preferred subjects for commentary.
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Column: 10 days before the election, politicians tentatively start to campaign (in public) – Buffalo News
Posted: at 7:43 am
When Gov. Andrew Cuomo and company sat down to develop the states Covid-19 reopening plan, we aren't sure into what phase they inserted politicians return to campaign trail.
Were also not sure if state regulations will require pols to wear masks and follow social distance rules, though we are certain the campaigner-in-chief wont abide by any of them.
But it is clear that after almost three months of politicians constrained from all the hand-shaking and baby-kissing requirements of successful campaigning, New Yorks Democrats and Republicans are returning ever so cautiously to the public arena.
Weve been doing road rallies and our parades through towns, said Nate McMurray, the Democratic candidate in the June 23 special election for the 27th Congressional District. I dont want to bring 100 people into a crowded room, but well be doing stuff outside.
Like every other aspect of life in America since mid-March, the business of campaigns and elections has taken a hit. Fundraising was relegated to computer screens instead of the up close and personal affairs you get for $50 (photo op with the candidate for $500, of course).
Many observers believe President Trump would have ventured into the 27th for one of his patented rallies just to prove that Republicans are alive and well in deep blue New York. But the coronavirus nixed that scenario, too.
So for most of 2020, campaigning has been relegated to social media and television, since rallies and personal interaction have become politically incorrect.
Thats not the way our politics works, nor should it. More than anyone, Trump recognizes that gathering about 12,000 people into a hockey arena as he did in Buffalo in April of 2016 works. Such events create an energy a buzz and thats why last week he returned to the rally business, too.
All of this will prove especially interesting in the 27th District, where the campaign is entering its home stretch. Democrat McMurray faces Republican Chris Jacobs in the June 23 special election for the vacancy created by the 2019 resignation of Republican Chris Collins. In a simultaneous GOP primary, Jacobs must run once more against Stefan Mychajliw and Beth Parlato. (Everyone got that straight two elections on the same day?)
During the campaigns last days, the four contenders will at least attempt to personally connect with voters in the time-honored traditions of American politics.
Many of the restaurants arent open, but well go to town parks, Parlato said, adding she will offer coffee and doughnuts to potential voters at one event and hot dogs and ice cream at another.
Its opening up, she said.
Mychajliw has campaigned for the last year, so he is already a familiar face throughout the district. Jacobs, meanwhile, is also tiptoeing back into traditional mode.
I went to Livingston County the other day and talked to about 15 people all while socially distancing, he said. Thats the most people Ive seen in awhile. I would love it to continue.
Still, Covid-19 hovers over this most fascinating pair of elections. Voters remain wary of very public polling places, despite the super-sanitizing procedures planned by county boards of elections. So they have turned to absentee ballots, eschewing another American tradition of greeting their neighbors in the local school gym or fire hall.
More than 100,000 voters in Erie County alone have requested absentee ballots for June 23. Unprecedented.
Another tradition free-wheeling debates in which the candidates show their true colors appears lost this year, too. Though Jacobs and McMurray squared off in a lively session last week over Channel 4s airwaves, the three GOP primary contenders at last report will not debate. WBBZ-TV had hoped to stage what would have been a rip-snorter, but station officials could only get Mychajliw to agree. Cant blame that development on Covid just cold feet.
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Who’ll pay for America’s and Trump’s FIVE YEARS OF HELL? – Bayoubuzz
Posted: at 7:43 am
On June 16, 2015, the future President and his wife rode down the escalator at Trump Tower in New York City and the political world will never be the same. The occasion was the presidential announcement speech of Donald Trump. Previously, Trump had considered running for President in 1988, 2000 and 2012. Each time, the allure of his real estate and media businesses kept Trump away from the race. This time, he felt it was his last chance to run and he seized the opportunity.
The announcement speech was made before a packed crowd of boisterous supporters. The speech was pure Trump. He railed against bad trade deals and open borders. It was surely politically incorrect, and the media was appalled.
As a television personality and real estate mogul, Trump was not a threat to the media, in fact, he was an amusing curiosity who garnered mostly positive coverage. As a presidential candidate, Trump was a threat to the typical politics as usual system operated by the entrenched political establishment of both parties and supported by the corrupt mainstream media.
As an independently funded businessman turned presidential candidate, Trump was a wild card. He did not need to make deals for donations. He could give voters his unvarnished opinion on the issues and that is what has made him so popular.
His initial speech as a candidate infuriated the media for it was very politically incorrect. Regarding Mexico, Trump said, Theyre bringing drugs, theyre bringing crime, theyre rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.
Immediately he was criticized and ostracized by NBC and the Miss Universe pageant. Amazingly, he stood firm and did not apologize, what most Republican candidates do during a controversy. He did not apologize and later did not apologize when he was eviscerated for criticizing the war record of U.S. Senator John McCain. Both controversies would have sunk every other candidate.
Trump faced unrelenting negative media coverage and constant hostility from the establishment of the Republican Party. The party elders were in favor of any of the other 16 candidates that were running against him. They could not defeat him and to their dismay, he won enough delegates for the nomination.
It did not stop party insiders from trying to steal the nomination from him at the convention in Cleveland. Fortunately, he prevailed and rode into the general election against a very unpopular opponent, Hillary Clinton.
During the presidential campaign, the media and the Democrats unveiled their secret weapon that they thought would surely destroy his campaign, the infamousAccess Hollywoodtape. Trumps controversial comments were taped without his knowledge on a bus at a TV production in 2005. It was released at a time to maximize damage to Trump. Surely, his opponents thought this would finally destroy him.
Instead, he fought back at the next presidential debate and brought with him three women who had accused Hillarys scandalous husband of varying degrees of sexual assault, including rape. He defused the scandal but in the final weeks faced a news media arrayed against him and an opponent that outspent him by a 2-1 margin. There was even social media and search engine manipulation engineered to harm his chances of victory.
Not surprisingly, the media never gave Trump any shot of beating Hillary. This surely diminished his turnout, which was the goal. They touted the polls showing Hillary comfortably ahead of Trump. On Election night, their faces of anguish were unmistakable and priceless when he was declared the victor.
Most winning presidential candidates receive a honeymoon, but not Donald Trump. He was harassed from the very beginning. From the efforts to overturn the results of the Electoral College to the boycott of his inauguration to the womens march in Washington D.C. to the phony Steele dossier being revealed by a deceitful media, Trump was under constant attack.
It has never gotten any easier for the President. The Steele dossier, paid for by the Clinton campaign, led to a two-year Mueller investigation to determine whether Russia colluded with the Trump campaign. It found no collusion and no obstruction could be proved.
In the investigation, Trump colleagues were badgered, indicted and imprisoned for activities that had nothing to do with Russian collusion. In contrast, Hillary Clinton was exonerated for sending top secret and confidential emails on an unsecured computer. Members of a biased Department of Justice who attempted the de-facto coup dtat of the President were never penalized with criminal indictments.
While the Mueller probe was ongoing, investigations were launched into his relationship with Stormy Daniels, his tax returns, his businesses, and his private foundation. All were conducted by a partisan House of Representatives.
Eventually, his phone call with the leader of Ukraine was leaked and investigated. This led to hearings and his eventual impeachment by the House of Representatives without a single Republican vote. The Senate trial resulted in a partisan vote to convict the President that generated only one GOP vote, well short of the necessary margin for removal.
Immediately thereafter, the Covid-19 crisis forced the government to shut down and the President has been blamed for everything from the disease deaths to the economic woes of the country.
The George Floyd murder has sparked incredible protests that led to disastrous riots. As the President tried to restore order, he was blasted by critics for threatening to use the U.S. military.
No matter what he does, his many opponents will criticize him. Independent analysts show that the mainstream media coverage of Trump has been 95% negative.
Now the media is hyping a second wave of the virus and criticizing his upcoming rally in Tulsa, even though they commended the Black Lives Matter protesters.
As he faces re-election, the odds are stacked against him and the polls show him losing to the unimpressive and clueless Joe Biden. Make no mistake, there will be a full court press to defeat him in November.
Nonetheless, Americans would be wise not to count out the man who has defied all expectations from the day he came down the escalator.
Jeff Crouere is a native New Orleanian and his award winning program, Ringside Politics, airs locally at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and at 10:00 p.m. Sundays on PBS affiliate WLAE-TV, Channel 32, and from 7-11 a.m. weekdays on WGSO 990-AM &www.Wgso.com. He is a political columnist, the author ofAmerica's Last Chanceand provides regular commentaries on the Jeff Crouere YouTube channel and onwww.JeffCrouere.com. For more information, email him at[emailprotected]
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Who'll pay for America's and Trump's FIVE YEARS OF HELL? - Bayoubuzz
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The Best Time-Wasting Applications Around – IMC Grupo
Posted: at 7:43 am
Just because an application or game doesnt make the top 25 list doesnt make it a piece of junk. There are hidden gems all through the lists that are worth checking out. In true mining spirit here are a few uncovered rough stones that will become the prize jewels of any app collection. Being free doesnt hurt one bit either.
Waiting is never fun. Often when people wait for something they read, watch TV or even play a game. But what is to be done when the waiting is done in public with no books, televisions, game systems or casino bonus to be had? The answer lies within the IPhone/IPod Touch.
Wattpad is an amazing little app that allows the user to search through a large database of electronic books. Users can download the books they want to read to the library contained in the application. Then the next time a user has to wait in line, in traffic of even for dinner this nice, little, educational time-waster will be available to pass the hours away.
Probably the biggest time waster on the planet is television. It consumes free minutes like a fire consumes oxygen. Now users can reach that vegetative state in the comfort of, well, anywhere, provided you have an IPhone or an internet connection.
TVUPlayer gives users access to virtually 100s of channels, both foreign and local. Gone are the days of waiting for relax-time. It offers channels in practically every genre including horror, cartoons, nostalgic television and movies.
The only drawback is there isnt any way to find out what is currently playing. There is no channel guide or episode listing to label the program being streamed.
Capcom has made its presence known throughout the gaming community. They have also pushed onto the IPhone and IPod Touch with a classic title and a contemporary hit.
Mega Man II is available in both full version and as a free demo as is Resident Evil: Degeneration. Mega Man II is widely regarded as the best Mega Man title of all-time. Aging gamers and purists alike see the 80s smash hit as a landmark in console gaming. Resident Evil: Degeneration was developed for play in handheld gaming and represents the first RE title to venture onto the IPhone and IPod Touch.
Both are excellent time consuming applications for your pocket.
Whats the sense in trying to download books and stream TV without a strong enough internet connection? There isnt any. Now with Speedtest, a free app, users can test download and upload speeds for WiFi connections. This testing app is very useful when checking on a new WiFi connection you have joined.
Apples past couple of versions of the iPhone features advanced capabilities that are particularly well-suited to the apps now being developed by everyone from professional developers to your next-door neighbor. While many of the apps are usefulthings like restaurant finders, the weather channel and shopping list makerit seems the most popular of them are simply fun time-wasters.
The negative connotation of the word addiction disappears apparently when it comes to computer games and now apps. The more addicting an app is (hence, the more time wasted with it) the more it is downloaded from Apples App Store. Developers tout their own apps addictiveness as a selling point. Theres even a term for the addiction affliction: appiphilia.
The following are seven apps that at least one user finds inordinately habit-forming. Not all of them are gamesthe traditional culpriteither! Whether or not these fuel or quell users appiphilia, or simply fritter away some time on a much-deserved break from real life, is up to themhopefully. Proceed with caution.
A highly addictive musical agility game based somewhat on guitar hero, its free price will no doubt be offset by the tunes one ends up purchasing to keep playing. It has wonderful graphics.
Feeling voyeuristic? This app brings up 100s of live cams from around the world, by category. From landscapes to beaches, the Eiffel Tower to the Egyptian pyramids this app is an armchair international trek, and sneakily addictive.
It is about as politically incorrect as can be, but heck, theyre cartoon pygmiesthat the gamer (as God) gets to strike with lightning, feed to the sharks, and drop kick into the volcano while trying to keep his or her pygmies alive and well. Hmmstrangely amusing.
Remember the classic? Tilting the steel ball around the holes? Mastering your self control? This is it, with astounding movement thanks to iPhone technology and endless mazes to conquer thanks to user-added levels. Several hundred hours of concentrated effort, minimum.
At the more expensive end of the app budget, but worth it for those who watch the TV version (to which this is loyal, down to Merediths Lets play!) and think they know all the answers. Reach 250,000 just once and its impossible to stop til youve won.
Access to thousands of police band radios from around the U.S. may not sound intriguing to everyone, until theyve practically participated (albeit from a distance) in their first live armed robbery arrest.
Proof that the simplest things are often the most enjoyable, Doodle Jump features a goofy little dude jumping up platforms with the users aid. Childish graphics and some shooting round out a game that will astound in its silliness (and yesaddictiveness).
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A Conversation with Bethann Hardison – Daily Front Row
Posted: at 7:43 am
Activist and former model, Bethann Hardison, has been a longtime fighter for diversity in fashion and some have called her the industrys conscience. Shes spent countless hours on panels and doing behind-the-scenes work to improve our industry and country. As the Black Lives Matter Movement has grown in recent weeks, I was curious what Hardison had to say about everything going on so I called her earlier this month and again last week to talk about the issues facing our world today and what the industry can do.
I have such admiration for you as a leader and just wanted to talk to you for a couple of minutes and hear your perspective about everything going on and maybe some words of encouragement, how we can all do better. Im curious what your outlook is. Do you think things will be different after these couple of weeks?Do you want to know if I think this is going to be different? Immediately? I think things are already different. In my entire life, I have been someone who was a bit militant in my early years before you were born. I have gone down roads of demonstrating, rioting and marching and this is the first time, I have never experienced it close up even within the city and the swelling of it. [Hardison is currently residing in Upstate, New York] The rallying environment of it. I have never seen it like this. This is something completely different. This is not the way we the people riot. I believe that strongly and I dont care what anyone thinks. Somebody else came here and got involved and is utilizing it to do whatever their intent is. We dont riot like that, we dont go on tour. At first I was upset because its my city, but in the end it comes with the territory. One may be demonstrating peacefully, one may be destroying stores, one might be burning down buildings, whether its to my liking or not, its all part of the revolution. Its not like a question of What do you think will happen? Well, Im not sure. When everyone can watch and see an officer with his knee on someones neck while someone is asking for a breath to be taken because the oxygen is leaving him. Everyone saw that. So it has had an effect on everyone. With the unrest, that was something that helps to put the mayonnaise on the bread. The truth of it is that everybody is now having to feel the need, they maybe always had solidarity, but now they have to raise their hand and show that they are stepping up. They will now do something different in their company and be more conscious of certain things. Thats what is most important to me.Whats affected you the most?The racism started with COVID-19 when minorities were hit the hardest. Even before racial injustice that everyone is marching for. With COVID-19 making everybody be in place, sit in the seat, be quiet, dont go far, dont go out of the house, but many of us were not able to do that because they couldnt isolate. That gives you an opportunity to be aware. Then this thing happens. Mr. Floyd dying is one thing, the destruction of the stores and the cities is a whole other thing. It has an effect. For me, I am quite annoyed because I am a born and bred New Yorker and I dont like my city being destroyed because I dont blame or imply that, the fact Mr. Floyd lost his life is not greater but this is beyond that, this is some other stuff. We get angry, we stay in the neighborhood and we care for our own. We dont go far. We dont get that kind of energy. So will things be different? Yes in some conscious way it will be, everything maybe wont be so blatant. Maybe we cant make huge changes in everything but there will be people, there will be companies who dont want to be on the wrong side of it. Im saying to everybody that they have a voice to be heard. Be on the right side of history. Dont worry about what people on the Internet are going to say. Show up and do the right thing loud. Let people know that you care. The haters are still going to question you but you dont want that to stop you from actually standing up and saying the right thing. Its very difficult for white people to talk about racial issues and not everyone can do that. I understand that. It is a very difficult subject, you dont want to say the wrong thing, you dont want to be wrong, you dont want to not step up, you dont know what to say, but you just dont want to come off as politically incorrect. You have to have the courage and have people of wisdom around you. It just doesnt necessarily come with the territory. Not every human being is wise, no matter what color we are.What do you think of the recent initiatives from the CFDA to support black talent? Were you content with what they issued?It is a great initiative. Put the key in the car and the motor turns on. Anytime somebody gets that to happen its brilliant. We are seeing a mandate from an organization because sometimes it takes a moment, the right time to happen, for people to be able to find the right way to stand up. I think with these initiatives they stayed in their lane. I tell everybody please just stay in your lane, dont start going outside of trying to solve things that are beyond you. Stay where you can control and actually do it, dont bite off more than you can chew. Run your own race. I think they stayed right in their frame of where they could be effective. I am happy that the CFDA also chose the NAACP because thats old school establishment. The CFDA is not in charge of designers, they cant make designers do anything. All they are is a council, theyre an umbrella. Designers, brands, and retailers still have to do their own thing.What else do you think the fashion community can do right now?That is the kind of stuff I deal with every day. I like what the Gucci Changemakers are doing, of course, because Im a changemaker. They have been doing philanthropic work for some time. Nobody knows it because they just do it. The Gucci Changemakers have sponsored different organizations in the United States to help underserved communities and give 20 scholarships to students who are interested in the business of fashion or fashion design. Thats what brands can do when they can: give scholarships. Now, who does that? It is very important to stand very strong in a point of crisis. You have to be very heels in the sand. Dont waiver. Your language should be if they want to question you, they can. They can always talk back but the point is that you have to stand strong. It is a great moment for any brand to make improvements and do more.
Iman and Bethann Hardison (Getty Images)
Are you feeling optimistic about things?Somebody asked me that yesterday and I said I am feeling hopeful. Hope is not a word that I normally use. Ive never doubted in my mind the reason why I was so devastated in 2016 once I learned the results of the election of the President of the United States, I knew it was for 8 years. May I be wrong. Everyone said it wasnt possible but I never doubted two terms and I have never wavered from this thought. I can only think of plan B. What are you gonna do when this is the way you didnt want it to go down? I dont have the freedom or the good mind to be hopeful because I am just thinking about circumstances. I dont look at that like Oh my god, we are all going to die, Im moving! Im leaving America! I havent gotten that far. At the end of the day, I am a New York City kid who likes my country even though we have a really tough moment right now. Really tough. Everybody in the world can see why its tough. They see who is the lead horse. For me, I just think you have to be very strong, wise and prepared. Some people arent saying the most peaceful things but its not over just because it doesnt look so good for awhile. Its not the end. It might take a moment to get to the next light. We certainly dont want this administration and this gentleman. If its going to change surely we need to see a change in the White House. I would even take the Senate if I can get the Senate!Im hoping for both!I am so proud of my local government, my governor, my mayor, so many people have woken up and smelled the coffee. A lot of things will be done differently and its not just about race. Society is different than what it was a few months ago. I only hope people have taken advantage of the pause. Whether you were solo [during quarantine] or doing schooling with your kids, that has helped make things change. Things arent going to be exactly the same again. I dont know how many people are dying to hug other people and kiss other people, but I think things have changed. We have something to put our minds to with fixing basic education, racial injustice, and police brutality.Lots of work to be done!
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How to Name and Brand Your Cannabis Business – Cannabis Industry Journal
Posted: at 7:43 am
Once you have your product and your business model conceived in the legal cannabis industry, its time to brand your endeavor. Branding is what will differentiate your company from others in the same cannabis space. Its a reflection of what you value and why customers should care about your company.
When branding your cannabis business, the first place to start is defining your brand identity. Working off your original business plan, you need to determine what your company stands for and how this reflects the services or products you provide. Formalizing your brand will create a foundation for all of your marketing materials, collateral, imagery, packaging and design. This will allow you to better reach your target market and build customer loyalty in the competitive cannabis marketplace. Brand identity includes your companys voice, tone, visuals, values, and mission. These core components work together to demonstrate how customers perceive your brand. It can help to personify your brand and illustrate its personality.
From healthcare to leisure, there are many emerging markets within the cannabis industry. Its important to know the subtle differences between each type of cannabis business. Knowing your market will help define your identity.
Your business name is your first impression on customers. Landing on a memorable name that speaks to your customers is a crucial decision that affects your bottom line. Reports have demonstrated that a strong name performs up to 33 percent better on the stock market than weaker names. These marginal advantages cannot be ignored in an industry that continues to ramp up. Its important to select a name that will be both powerful and overcome any social stigma associated with the cannabis industry.The cannabis industry is fresh and innovative and so should your brand and name.
One of the first steps in this process is to review naming constructs. Most brands fit into one of five styles: classic, clever, pragmatic, emotional or modern. The style needs to reflect your brands tone and values. It should also appeal to your dedicated audience. Using what you produced about your cannabis companys identity, you should begin the brainstorming process. You can utilize online tools such as a brand name generator to spark the brainstorm. Squadhelps generator is powerful in that it analyzes the accessibility, depth and functionality of each name idea.
The cannabis industry is fresh and innovative and so should your brand and name. Creative names are what customers respond to. Its what will set you apart from the bland and sterile. Remember your name doesnt solely have to describe your product or service. Your brands name should, however, evoke genuine emotion.
According to Motley Fool, here is a list of the 10 largest cannabis stocks in 2020:
The majority of these names involve nomenclature and cannabis buzzwords. But they also include names completely unrelated to the industry, proving an original name can drive success.
Love at first name is real. Its easy to fall for a name relying heavily on personal preference. But thats why audience testing is so important. Through proper audience testing, you can gauge whether your favorite name resonates with your key demographic or if theres another name that better hits the mark. You may also discover that your name is actually offensive or politically incorrect, a fail you truly want to avoid in todays cancel culture.
One example of this was a startup called Bodega, a San Francisco company that specialized in tech-enabled vending machines. The founders believed the name was a nod to corner stores heavily established throughout New Yorks boroughs. Instead, the company received extreme backlash for exploitation and cultural appropriation of these beloved mom and pop stores. In 2017, The Verge said that Bodega is either the worst-named startup of the year, or the most devious. Tapping into diverse audience surveys and polls provides valuable feedback to avoid catastrophic launches such as this.
When you finally settle on a name you want to be sure that youve run through a final functionality checklist.
There are three main parts of functionality to review when naming your cannabis business:
A highly functional name are ones that are easily remembered and often referred to in conversations.
The industry as a whole can be a complicated space to understand. Creative branding is an opportunity to educate potential customers about this novel industry as well as debunk myths. After all, two in three Americans support the legalization of recreational cannabis, according to a 2018 Gallup poll. This illustrates that theres still a population that needs additional cultivation.
By following these steps, your impactful brand name will promote interest and stand out in an industry that shows no sign of slowing down.
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The 10 best TV car ads of the 1980s and ’90s – CarAdvice
Posted: at 7:43 am
For car lovers, nostalgia is a key part of the enthusiast experience. After all, how can one appreciate the automotive creations of the present without the context of the past?
And if you're craving a journey back in time, there is perhaps no better way to traverse the decades than via the audiovisual treasure trove that is vintage car commercials.
While today's car ads are typically elaborate, high-concept affairs dominated by sleek slogans, celebrity cameos and cinematic camera angles, the 1980s and 90s were a far simpler time.
Marrying the decades trademark excesses with the limited technical capabilities available retro car ads from this era were simultaneously cheesy and brilliant, with a healthy dose of hyperbole for good measure.
So cast your mind back to when motor shows dominated the calendar, sedans ruled the streets and Tesla was just the name of a Serbian-American inventor. Here then, are the 10 best TV car ads of the 80s and 90s, in no particular order.
"Designed to stir the soul and not much else," was the catchphrase for this brilliant commercial showcasing how smooth Lexus' flagship sedan was capable of hitting 145mph (233km/h) without so much as rattling a tower of champagne glasses.
The clever clip cemented the Japanese luxury brand's arrival in the US market and, to celebrate 30 years since its anniversary, Toyota president Akio Toyoda recreated the champagne clip in 2020 (you can watch the new version here).
You're unlikely to ever find something as quintessentially 80s as Datsun's 'Black Gold' tribute to its 10th anniversary edition 280ZX.
A moustache to rival Tom Selleck's, a woman who looks suspiciously like a young Debbie Harry, a synth-laden soundtrack and lashings of gold lighting were the perfect way to celebrate this extremely extra limited-edition sports car.
This ad is regularly touted as the greatest car commercial of all time. We're don't disagree.
Remember how we mentioned hyperbole? Well this is perhaps the best example of it: Land Rover showcasing its off-roading prowess by having a Defender scale the vertical wall of a dam.
"Next time you're late for work, it's worth remembering that nothing nothing gets in the way of a Land Rover," a movie-level voiceover declares over the commercial's epic soundtrack.
Back in the 80s and 90s, competition between car brands was less of an unspoken understanding and more of an overt challenge.
Take, for example, this 1987 American Volvo ad for the Swedish marque's turbo-powered 740 wagon, which literally pits it against a Porsche 944 in a drag race.
The kicker? The not-so-humble tagline: "To you they're completely different cars but to a radar gun, they look exactly alike."
These two ads for the BMW 325i Convertible look more like scenes from blockbuster Hollywood romance movies than car commercials, given how much attention is given to the antics of the good-looking lead actors.
Still, our personal favourite is the second clip, in which an unidentified woman covers herself in suntan lotion while sitting in the drop-top car, as a man's voice declares that the 325i is "the ultimate tanning machine". Because, priorities.
Towards the ends of the 90s, car commercials started becoming more elaborate, high-concept affairs.
Take, for example, this 1996 Nissan advertisement, which saw the Japanese carmaker win over a generation of American kids with its play on the classic Barbie and Ken romance.
Spoiler alert: Barbie ditches Ken in favour of GI Joe and his kick-ass red 300ZX. Can you blame her?
Talk about a big build-up. For "the most advanced production car on the planet", Chevrolet had to go big or go home.
Hence this Tron-inspired epic about the Corvette that came with its own custom theme song, plus one-and-a-half minutes of an extremely 80s voiceover listing off its many, many attributes.
Four speakers?! We're sold.
Because this list was sorely missing a local entrant, and because "must be stuck in third" remains eminently quotable to this day.
Simple, powerful and incredibly sassy, this Porsche entrant is a masterclass in advertising.
The ad opens on the title, "What to feed a Porsche 944 Turbo".
The answer? "For lunch, a Porsche 944 Turbo generally prefers Ferraris, although it has been known, occasionally, to snack on Corvettes." Boom.
It's teeters on being politically incorrect at points, but this ad was a hilarious way to communicate Volkswagen's reliability message.
It's best if you just watch it yourself and let the toffy British voiceover do the talking...
Which 80s and 90s car ads are we missing? Tell us in the comments!
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The White-Guilt Cult – National Review
Posted: at 7:42 am
Protesters in Brooklyn, June 12(Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images)A look at woke religiosity
Cary, N.C., June 7. Amidst nationwide Black Lives Matter protests, a black man and woman are seated on a park bench while a white woman wearing a sweatshirt that reads LOVE takes to her megaphone. We repent on behalf of, uh, Caucasian people, she says. A small crowd of white people comes to kneel before the two seated black folks, who are co-pastors of a local church. Some of the kneelers wash the feet of the black people. A white man with an English accent solemnly intones, Its our honor to stand here on behalf of all white people, . . . repenting, Lord, for our aggression, Lord, repenting for our pride, for thinking that we are better, that we are above. Police officers join the ritual. Several people start audibly weeping, or keening, as the speaker continues. Roughly a rozen people join in the gesture and kneel before the black couple. We have put our necks, put our hands, our knees, upon the necks of our African-American brothers and sisters, people of color, indigenous people, says the English man. Lord, where we as a church, a white church, have used you as a persecution towards black people, Lord, as weve burnt crosses, as weve burnt churches, . . . weve used it as a weapon against people of color.
Its been coming for some time, this transmutation of white guilt into a cult, a religion that borrows from and intersects with Christianity but substitutes its own liturgy. In the Nineties, liberal white Hollywood filmmakers began to nourish a fantasy that black people were imbued with magical powers, and they built stories around angelic or Christlike black redeemers who stood apart from and above this fallen race we call humanity. Will Smith in The Legend of Bagger Vance, Cuba Gooding Jr. in What Dreams May Come, and Michael Clarke Duncan in The Green Mile served as spiritual and/or actual caddies to troubled white men, guiding them toward salvation.
Today those magical negro films, as Spike Lee dubbed them, get ridiculed by the critical intelligentsia, but the same impulse is visible in different form. White people continue to have difficulty perceiving blacks as individual human beings, instead conferring on blackness a holy quality. Fallen white people can get closer to the divine by showing due deference in any way they can. Books that promise to assist white people with the project of metaphorically scourging themselves White Fragility, How to Be an Antiracist bounded up the best-seller lists. Black Americans report, with more annoyance than appreciation, that white friends are calling them nervously, seeking absolution.
The original sin in the White Guilt Cult, the New Church of Anti-Racism, is to be, uh, Caucasian people. Parker Gillian, a young black college graduate in Chicago who is in no need of financial support (she grew up in affluence, she told the Washington Post), says that someone from work texted out of nowhere to ask, Whats your cash app? and then pinged $20 into her account, unasked. It is so exhausting being everybodys one black friend right now, tweeted a comedian named Sarah Cooper. Black people observing such displays by their white acquaintances can be forgiven for wondering: Is it really a friendship if one party is groveling, throwing money, and begging to wash the other partys feet? If anything, the Great Awokenings response to the George Floyd killing seems to be bolstering racial barriers rather than eradicating them. By making a religion of anti-racism, white people carry on with the longstanding project of othering black folks.
Anti-racism is the most critical element of a broader new Woke Orthodoxy whose other elements include environmental apocalypticism, feminism, and a severing of sexual identity from genetic indicators. Settling on a term for the new religion will take some time. Wesley Yangs suggestion (seconded by Ross Douthat) of the Successor Ideology is clunky, anodyne, and a bit euphemistic given the righteous, roiling fervor and unnerving credulousness that define the cult. As Dmitri Solzhenitsyn writes in National Review Online, a YouTube prankster named Smooth Sanchez who walks the streets of New York demanding that white people kneel before him and declare their privilege receives surprising compliance, even as he signals his charlatanry by referring to George Floyd as George Foreman.
Ben Shapiro notes astutely that the new woke religion rushes in to fill a God-shaped hole in secular hearts. Devotees immerse themselves in the sacred texts of Ta-Nehisi Coates and Ibram X. Kendi (n Ibram Henry Rogers of Queens), books designed to make white wokesters writhe with a kind of ecstatic anguish. Indoctrination in early childhood is taken up as a parental duty (Kendis new board book for toddlers, Antiracist Baby, is a hot seller), parishioners engage in ritualistic incantation of sacred phrases (Hands up, dont shoot, I cant breathe), and there are mass displays of penitential self-abasement. All over the country, guilty white crowds have gathered to reenact the circumstances of George Floyds horrifying death. Scores, even hundreds, of parishioners in the new faith prostrate themselves on the ground, hands behind their back, repeating Mama and I cant breathe. Sometimes police officers joined these displays, kneeling or prostrating themselves for the sanctified period of time: eight minutes, 46 seconds. Floyds death is a kind of new Crucifixion, his final words the new My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
The new clergy consists of black thought leaders (Coates, Kendi, Stacey Abrams) and those white people who loudly proclaim themselves allies and proselytize for the organizing dogma, which is that everything is racist. Those who question orthodoxy are kept at bay, derided as conservatives who are arguing in bad faith if not actual racists. For example, one is not to ask Why are black people so upset about one white cop killing a black man when black men are at much more danger of being killed by one another? wrote John McWhorter in his 2015 essay Antiracism, Our Flawed New Religion. The answers are flabby but further questions are unwelcome, McWhorter added. The much-promised conversation on race consists of repeating points in the catechism to enhance their power phrases such as I must do better, white privilege, systemic racism, white supremacy, allyship.
There is more dogmatism in this ideology than in most of contemporary American Catholicism, writes the Catholic columnist Andrew Sullivan. And more intolerance. Question any significant part of this, and your moral integrity as a human being is called into question. As the fierceness of old religions fades, a corresponding desire for a new righteous fury rises. The fervor sweeping through the South (but not just the South) to pull down statues seen as blasphemous to the new faith loudly echoes the 16th-century rampage through the monasteries that burned icons and laid waste to stained glass. Each successive wave of iconoclasm will take more and more historical monuments until either the new Reformation ends or all blasphemous iconography has been destroyed, with the logical endpoint being Mount Rushmore, with its quintuple heresy: Washington and Jefferson held slaves, Teddy Roosevelt is damned as a racist, the land the monument sits on was seized from indigenous peoples, and the sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, was friendly with the Ku Klux Klan.
My friend Kevin D. Williamson writes that cancel culture is a game, the point of which is to impose unemployment on people as a form of recreation. The line is amusing but, I think, not quite right: The impulse is more religious than recreational. How satisfying it must be to understand that one can send out a tweet and within hours destroy someones life for losing her temper for a minute while walking a dog in Central Park (former New York financial analyst Amy Cooper), for having posed as a Puerto Rican for a Halloween party 16 years ago (ousted Bon Apptit editor Adam Rapoport), or for having tweeted Working out is so gay more than a decade ago (Cond Nasts no-longer head of lifestyle-video programming Matt Duckor). That last example recalls Sullivans remark that politically incorrect language has become the equivalent of old swear words, referring to formerly shocking words such as goddamn that have long since lost all potency. Take the principles of Woke in vain and you invite instantaneous ritual chastisement the most thrilling, ecstatic element of the woke religion. The techno-narcissistic innovation of the Wokesters is that they have made themselves, as a collective, their own godhead, equipped with the authority to wield and unleash the thunderbolt of righteousness on blasphemers here and now, on their own authority. There is no need to be anxious about whether the right decisions will be made by the Deity in the hereafter; the new Social-Justice God is merciless and swift. Every day ending in day is now Judgment Day.
So rigorous is the new religion that the unrighteous can be vaporized simply for not chanting the liturgy, or for not sounding off loudly enough. White silence equals violence is one new precept gaining currency. The president and the chairman of the Poetry Foundation were forced to resign for no other reason than that the nonprofit had published a disavowal of racism considered insufficiently robust. The two executives were denounced in an angry open letter as having been responsible for nothing but watery vagaries that added up to ultimately, a violence. How exciting it must be to upend the meanings of words in service of the greater cause of smiting ones perceived enemies, or even whatever suspected counterrevolutionaries there may be among ones sworn allies. No one dared to be the first to stop applauding a Stalin speech.
Sullivan holds that it is, in fact, impossible not to have a religion if you are a human being. Its in our genes and has expressed itself in every culture, in every age, including our own secularized husk of a society. The old liberal consensus built around prosaic proceduralism fairness, equal treatment, dependence on the slow and imperfect operation of the machinery of justice made for a frustratingly dull religion. All that stuff amounts to so many watery vagaries in the era of the Great Awokening. Declaiming, denouncing, and destroying that is where transcendence lies.
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Now They Want To Take Christopher Columbus Away From Downtown BR – The Hayride
Posted: at 7:42 am
So reports WBRZ. Columbus is too politically incorrect for the current crop of softheaded activists roaming our streets, you know
The Christopher Columbus statue on the corner where Government Street meets the river was donated by the Greater Baton Rouge American Italian Association in 1992 to then-Mayor Tom Ed McHugh.
Its stood there for nearly three decades, but it could soon come down.
The fate of the statue will be a topic of discussion for the mayor-presidents commission on race equity and inclusion, set to meet this month.
The commission will look into renaming or removing potentially offensive or oppressive government entities like street and building names or statues.
He introduced sickness to the land, genocide to the land, slavery, and he even raped and mutilated a lot of the people that were already here. And this statue here makes it seem as if we are complacent with slavery and racist antics that happened in the south, and we are not complacent with it at all, Breyonna Grant said.
In the meantime, Breyonna Grant and Camren Linson started a petition addressed to the city council and governor calling for the removal of the statue as soon as possible. It now has more than 1,200 signatures.
Were asking for 10,000 or 5,000, and after that, we will march to the state capitol to demand justice, Linson said.
Though the city-parish doesnt own the statue, the fountain it sits in is city property. So the statue could at least be moved elsewhere with a vote.
Grant and Linson say they are not interested in destroying the statue and would be happy if the city removed it from public view.
It is imperative that as the state of Louisiana we set an example and remove all monuments that represent racial inequality, injustice in America and also white supremacy, Linson said.
So who are Breyonna Grant and Camren Linson?
Heres Breyonna Grant, from her Facebook
And heres Camren Linson, also from her Facebook
If theres any significance to blue lipstick we dont know what it is.
Both of these ladies apparently graduated from Texas Southern. Grant lives in Atlanta now, while Linson lives in Baton Rouge.
The petition barely has more than 1,000 signatures so far, so its a long way from being particularly relevant. But with the local TV stations now giving it play its a matter of time before that number grows.
And with Baton Rouges mayor Sharon Weston Broome having set up that commission on equality and justice, it should be little surprise if someone takes this ball and runs with it.
We have a suggestion, which is that the folks in St. George ought to get with the Baton Rouge American Italian Association and pick a site at which to feature the Columbus statue. It needs to be on private land and a historical preservation foundation set up and funded for the upkeep of the monument so that if the protest mobsters want to attack the statue theyll be trespassing on private property and therefore subject to arrest.
Christopher Columbus isnt recognized because he enslaved or raped or mutilated people he came in contact with in the New World. Hes recognized because he did what previous explorers could not cross the Atlantic and spread Western civilization beyond Europe. Because of Columbus exploits the world became a far richer place.
The people denying this mans achievements are doing so for a very simple reason they hate America. They hate everything about our history, because theyve been poisoned into believing that this is a country founded on racism and violence.
And their arguments are so horrifically bad that anyone who disagrees with them is, in their view, then in turn branded as racist or violent.
All of human history is replete with racism and violence. Racism and violence are endemic to every society which has ever existed on Earth. No other country could measure up to the standards these people want to impose on America.
But since Baton Rouge is quickly devolving into a dead city the Grants and Linsons will have all to themselves if they want it, maybe theyre right. Maybe Christopher Columbus ought to be moved out of downtown. Lets find him a neighborhood in the suburbs where people proud of their national heritage will appreciate him more.
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