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Category Archives: The Outer Loop

“It Doesn’t Have To Be This Way”

21 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

"Captive Audience", Bill Moyers, Digital Divide, Susan Crawford

I’ve just finished Susan Crawford’s Captive Audience:The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age, a recently published book that explains in clear language how telecommunications has become the new monopoly and why we are paying more for our connections to the Internet and getting less than people in other countries.

Susan, currently a professor at NY’s Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and a former member of the Obama administration, argues that like electricity, water, and other utilities, Internet access has become a necessity for all of us.

However, similar to our history with previous monopolies, a few companies now have gained control of this ‘new utility’, and unless we understand what is happening and do something about it, we will continue to have a Digital Divide in this country, we will continue to fall behind other nations in our high speed connectivity, and we will continue to pay a high price for our use of the Internet.

It does not have to be this way, Susan believes. In this short NY Times article in January, she wrote about what we could do to reverse this direction.

In her recent 25 minute interview with Bill Moyers, see above, Susan expands on her Times article and covers a number of the issues about which she writes in her book. Basically, she tells Moyers:

The Need: All Americans need a fast, cheap connection to the Internet.

Even though our country invented the Internet, we are quickly falling behind other countries in the delivery of access to the Internet. In a time when connectivity is becoming essential in all aspects of our lives, there is a growing Digital Divide between those with access and those without. Those of us who do have that access (generally in larger, urban areas) are paying high rates and those who cannot pay or live in places where it is not available are unable to connect to the Internet.

The Problem: A few companies control access in America, and it’s not in their interest to bring that fast, cheap access to us all.

Basically four companies, Comcast & Time/Warner (on the cable side) and Verizon & At&T (on the wireless side) have non-compete agreements resulting in lack of competition and therefore high prices. Our government officials have participated in allowing this situation to occur.

 

For those of you who want to delve more into this issue, Captive Audience is worthy of your time.

Although I initially started to read the book because of a friendship with Susan, I quickly found myself captured by the book. She tells us specifically how we have arrived at the place where America now has the worst of two worlds in our telecommunications, no competition and no regulation.

Lucky are the students who have Susan as a teacher.

And we would all be wise to listen to what she has to tell us.

 

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Obama – “Transparency President No More”

16 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

John Wonderlich, President Obama, The Sunlight Foundation, Transparency

Most readers of this website probably know I have long been a supporter of Barack Obama and even recently spent five days in Ohio working for his reelection.

Also, many of you know that my wife Ellen Miller has worked for years on the issue of money and politics and is currently the Director of The Sunlight Foundation, an organization she co-founded seven years ago to focus, among other things, on the issue of transparency in government.

So with those two acknowledgements, I link to a blog post by the policy director of Sunlight, John Wonderlich, where in he has come to believe President Obama is clearly now part of the problem of money and politics and cannot be taken as someone who can help clean up the system, something Obama promised to do when he ran for the presidency in 2008. If I remember correctly, he promised to have the most transparent administration ever.

Now, John says, “It’s time to stop worrying about how President Obama can help fix the system of campaign finance and instead worry about how we can fix what he has created.”

See the details of why John has come to this conclusion and why he now blames Pres. Obama for contributing to the problem in this short post, Transparency President No More.

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Walking. Knocking. Talking.

12 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in The Outer Loop

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Columbus, GOTV, Milo-Grogan, OFA, Ohio, Organizing for America, Re-Election of Pres. Obama

When friend Richard Margolies many months ago urged me to join him in going to Ohio to help canvass for the President, I quickly agreed. Richard had previously canvassed in PA, VA, IN, and OH and believed the balance of this election depended upon who would win in Ohio.

So, on Friday morning, Nov. 2, 2012, as the sun was just coming up, RM, who had driven to Ohio two days earlier to begin his canvassing, picked me up at the Columbus airport to begin a six day period I will never forget.

Starting Friday and continuing until Tuesday at 7:15 PM, we knocked on doors in the Milo-Grogan neighborhood (1.6 square miles, 2,610 inhabitants) of Columbus, a largely African-American neighborhood that in some places seemed to me like an ‘urban Appalachia.’

Our task was specific: we were to get Obama supporters and registered Democrats who had voted in previous elections to go to the polls and cast their ballots.

Each day we were given lists of individuals with their street addresses and a script and literature. Then, from 9:30-noon, 12:30-4 pm, and 4:30-7:30 pm, we knocked on doors, spoke with those who answered, left literature, and marked our lists, noting who had already voted (early), who had returned (or not) their mail in ballot, and who needed to be encouraged to get to the polls.

Continue reading »

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I Voted Today, Oct. 23, 2012

22 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in The Outer Loop

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

2012 Elections, DC Elections, Early Voting, Voting for Obama

Time Photo

 

I voted today in DC*

Readers of MillersTime will not be surprised by my vote to re-elect President Obama and Vice President Biden.

Although I am not blind to the Obama’s administrations failures to deliver on all of his promises, it seems clear to me, as The New Yorker points out this morning, that this election presents two significantly different approaches to governing:

For me, Romney, at best, represents a future that we have already seen. – one that failed in the last Bush administration.

For me, Obama represents a future in which I believe – one that strives for tolerance, fairness, and equality.

Both candidates are reasonable men, intelligent and devoted to our country.

However, Romney’s move to the right and move away from the more moderate positions he has held most of his life is of significant concern.

Obama, while less progressive than I would prefer, has shown a willingness to consider not only his  ‘base’ but also what is fair for all.

 

(* There are three ways to vote in DC: Absentee Ballot, Early Voting, or Election Day Voting. Check out the DC Board of Elections Voter Guide to see your options and all of the candidates and issues on the 2012 DC ballot.)

 

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Tent of Nations: “We Refuse to be Enemies”

20 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures, The Outer Loop

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Dahler's Vineyard, Daoud Nasser, Nasser Speaking Tour, Tent of Nations

Two long-time friends (from the mid 60s), both teachers and former Peace Corp volunteers, have been involved with a project for a number of years called “Tent of Nations,” (TON). Kay and Bill Plitt have talked with me about Daoud Nasser, his family farm outside of Bethlehem, and the impact their involvement with Daoud and TON has had on their lives.

Tent of Nations is the story of the lives and struggles of the Nassar family who live on a farm and peace center just outside of Bethlehem and whose motto is “We Refuse to be Enemies.” The Nasser family bought this 100-acres almost a 100 years ago (1916), then registered it and have been living on it and farming it since the Ottoman Occupation.

For most of these 100 years, Jews and Arabs lived side by side and were able to get along reasonably well together. With the various outbreaks of war between the Arabs and the Israelis from 1948 on, and with the expansions of Israeli settlements, the Nasser farm has increasingly been the focus of dispute and tension.

Now the farm, Dahler’s Vineyard, is led by the grandson of the man who purchased the land in 1916. He, Daoud Nasser, a Palestinean Christian, has struggled to make this plot of land support his family and also serve as a peace center and educational project for “People from different countries to come together and build bridges of trust and hope.”

Daoud Nasser will be in Washington, speaking about his grandfather’s dream, his father’s vision, and his own struggle to find a way of peace in a land filled with conflict.

Thursday, Nov. 1, at 7 PM Daoud will speak at The National Cathedral on Wisconsin Ave., NW, Washington, DC in the Perry Auditorium, (take tower elevators to the 7th floor).

Some links to further info:

About Tent of Nations

About Daoud’s Washington appearance

Bill Plitt’s blog “Peace with Justice,” includes posts on his various trips to Tent of Nations

2012 Conference on Israel & Palestine, NYC, Nov. 10 –  “Education: How Can We Embrace Our Common Humanity?”

Other Daoud Naser speaking appearances around the US

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“Transaction Man” – A Fair Portrayal of Mitt Romney

28 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ Leave a Comment

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Mitt Romney, Nichoals Lemann, The Mind of Mitt Romney, The New Yorker, Transaction Man

The current issue of The New Yorker, Oct. 1, has an interesting article on the strengths and weaknesses of the mind and the career of Mitt Romney.

I recommend Transaction Man: The Mind of Mitt Romney* to all, whether you are for or against him, whether you like or dislike him, whether you support Barack Obama, etc.

The author, Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia and also a writer for The New Yorker, has written what seems to me one of the better profiles of Mitt Romney that I‘ve read this campaign season.

(*The NYer article is behind a pay wall, and I’m not sure the link will get the whole article to you. In the link provided, you will at least get a summary of the article.)

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Understanding Mitt Romney

26 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ Leave a Comment

The current issue of The New Yorker, Oct. 1, has the best article I’ve read to date on the of the mind and of the career of Mitt Romney.

I recommend Transaction Man: The Mind of Mitt Romney to all, whether you are for or against him, whether you like or dislike him, whether you support Barack Obama, etc. I suspect you will come away from the somewhat lengthy article knowing more than prior to reading it.

At least I did.

The author, Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia has written what seems to me simply the most objective and fair profile of Mitt Romney that I know of this campaign season. If you start it, read it all the way through.

 

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Questions for Pres. Obama and for Candidate Romney

16 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 2 Comments

Two articles I found particularly interesting and worthy of readers’ time in this morning’s NY Times lead to questions for both President Obama and Candidate Romney.

Assuming that generally both articles can be taken largely as valid, then what occurs to me are the questions below:

  1. Mr. President, in David Firestone in his Sunday Observer NY Times article “Don’t Tell Anyone, But the Stimulus Worked,” he asks why you and the Democrats have not discussed this success. I would add that you also (in your convention speech) did not give much mention to your other successful accomplishment – The Affordable Health Care Act (“Obamacare” ).

Thus, my questions: Mr President: If these are indeed true successes, why have you not let the country know about them? Why have you not told these stories?

  1. Mr. Romney, in David Leonhardt’s Capital Ideas NY Times column this morning (Do Tax Cuts Lead to Economic Growth?), he repeats a question he asked prior to the convention to Mr. Ryan: “Why a cut in tax rates would work better this time than last time?” Then, in his final paragraph, he writes: “But when you dig into Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan’s proposals and you consider recent history, the fairest thing to say is that, so far at least, they have laid out a plan to cut taxes. They have not yet explained why and how it is also an economic-growth plan.”

Thus, my questions: Mr. Romney: Specifically, why do you believe your tax cuts will have different consequences than any of the ones in the recent past? How is your plan to cut taxes in any way an economic-growth plan?

As always, I invite (thoughtful?) responses from MillersTime readers too.

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Five Big Questions – Can You Help?

16 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Family and Friends, The Outer Loop

≈ 1 Comment

I have a long time solicitor friend, Dave Stang (now retired), who is planning a course on “The Five Big Questions.”

As is his wont, he has solicited me, and others, on how we would answer the questions he will present and discuss with the group he and a colleague are ‘conducting’ in October.

So, I thought I’d throw out these questions to MillersTime readers to see if any of you would be willing to take a shot at answering one or two of them, or even all five. I have just sent him my answers to his “Five Big Questions.”

Even if you don’t want to answer these questions, you might have some suggestions for articles, books, films, etc. that Dave might include in his syllabus that speak to one, or more, of these five questions. I’m sure he would appreciate any suggestions you might have along those lines.

If you are interested, I suspect Dave would be willing to send a link to his syllabus, once he has completed it, to any MillersTime reader who wants to see it.

You can write Dave directly (davidpstang@cs.com) with your answers, suggestions, ideas, and/or request for a syllabus.

The Five Big Questions:

1. How do I know what I think I know is actually true?

2. Where did I come from?

3. Who am I?

4. What is my life’s purpose?

5. What happens to me when I die?

Thanx.

Richard Miller

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Why I’m Voting to Re-Elect Pres. Obama

13 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ Leave a Comment

For me, the 2012 Presidential Election is a no brainer.

(I know. I know. Some of my good friends will say it’s because I don’t have a brain. There, I said it before some of you had the chance to remind me.)

Aside from my being in love with Michelle, and aside from being disappointed with some of the actions Pres. Obama has taken and has not taken, there is no doubt in my mind that he is the better choice for the country of the two candidates in this election. (Disclosure: I voted for him in 2008. Probably not a surprise to many of you.)

Despite the title of this posting, however, I’m not going to list my reasoning (tho I reserve the right to do so at a later date), but instead, I refer you to an article I read this morning in the Oct. 2012 issue of Vanity Fair magazine by Michael Lewis.

Obama’s Way is a profile Lewis wrote after having unusual access to the President. For me, it captures many of the qualities I thought I saw in candidate Obama in 2008, with the added perspective of what he has learned from three and a half years of being in office.

See what you think.

Update – 9/15: There has been a bit of ‘inside the Beltway’ discussion about Michael Lewis’s access to the President and his agreement to allow the President the right to approve all quotes. The NYTimes wrote about this the other day in a blog post A Journalist With Rare Access to Obama Had to Play by Quote Rule.

 

 

 

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Trying to Decide?

31 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by Richard in The Outer Loop

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Gov. Romney, Pres. Obama, The Bailout, The Deficit, The Middle Class, The Undecided Voter

(Updated 9/1)

A poll out this morning (8/31) from the Associated Press says “nearly a quarter (my emphasis) of all registered voters are either undecided about the presidential race or iffy in their support for a candidate.”

There is also a poll out yesterday from Rasmussen which puts the number of undecided at 5%.

So which is it?

I’m not sure, but I don’t think it really matters. The underlying message of the polls tell us is that there are enough undecided and ‘iffy’ voters that how they decide to vote will determine who our next president will be.

On the one side, there are those who voted for Obama, in part because they felt a change was needed from Pres. Bush, and Obama seemed to capture many of the voters who were “in the middle.” Now, there is disappointment by many of these folks with Obama, with the continued state of the economy, and with questions whether Obama can really lead the country out of the mess we’re in.

Not all of these folks, I think, are ready to give up on Obama, in part because he is likeable and in part because there is some recognition that he was handed a terrible situation which was then compounded by a Republican decision and campaign not to cooperate with him to solve our nation’s problems.

I also suspect that a portion of the undecided folks are not sure of former Gov. Romney, who seems to be a competent and a solid guy but who has four problems:

1) he is being heavily influenced by the very people who refused to tackle our financial problems over the past three and a half years, some of whom want to dismantle the major programs that have benefited large numbers of our society, and some of whom are far to the right of Romney.

2) he is supported by the very wealthy businessmen and corporate interests who have benefited from the policies of the last decade while large numbers of middle class folks (and a large number of the undecided?) have suffered, raising the question “who does Romney truly represent?

and closely allied

3) he is a very, very wealthy man who may not truly understand the problems of most Americans (refusing to publish his tax returns for 10 years plays into this) and adds to the question of whose interests does he/can he truly represent.

4) he has not made a case for how he would go about reversing and solving our problems, as people understand simply cutting more taxes and cutting programs has not worked, despite the Republican mantra that that is the answer.

So it seems to me, the election is still to be won or lost.

As readers of MillersTime hopefully know, I often look for articles, data, facts that are not always widely covered in the media. In that vein, here are four recent ones that I believe are worthy of your attention, especially if you are in the 5-25% who may still be making up your mind:

1. Economic Report Card on Pres. Obama’s First Term, The Economist, Sept. 1.  This report seems to me to be devoid of rhetoric and the fairest analysis I’ve seen. Be sure you see the ‘report card’ at the end of the article even if you don’t read the entire column.

2. The Deficit. While I don’t agree with many folks who seem to believe that the budget deficit is our major problem (I think the trade deficit is more of a long term problem), take a look at this one chart in this WaPo article if you truly want to understand what is driving our national debt.

3. The Bailout. Many folks, I believe are confused and/or do not understand this issue. There is a website that just focuses on the data. It is easy to understand, and you can learn for yourself how the bailout money has been spent (including in your own state).

4. The Shrinking Middle Class. For me, the decline of the middle class is one of the most worriesome short and long term issues that faces our country. In a recently released study, the reputable Pew Research Center confirms that “the middle class is poorer, earning less and shrinking.”

As always, I encourage MillersTime readers to comment, respectfully, on any or all of this post.

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We’re Screwed, No Matter Who Wins?

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by Richard in The Outer Loop

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Grover Norquist, Koch Brothers, Mitt Romney, Pres. Obama, Roger Stone

I’m generally not one to believe in conspiracies or fall for the first negative story about someone or something I don’t like anyway.  But putting together a few stories from the last few weeks leads me to be quite worried about where we’re headed in this country.

1. As (if) you watch the Republican Convention this week in Tampa, keep in mind something Grover Norquist (one of the more important persons in the Republican world and one who most Americans don’t know), said at the CPAC convention earlier this year (Feb. 11):

“All we have to do is replace Obama…We’re not auditioning for someone to tell us what to do,” he declared. “We know what to do. We just need a president who can sign the legislation that the Republican House and Senate pass. … We don’t need someone to think. … We need someone who knows how to hold a pen.”

As you know, Romney will be chosen this week as the Republican presidential nominee. Whether or not Norquist is correct (that Romney will do as he is told), if the House and the Senate are in Republican hands and Romney wins, Congress will likely drive the agenda. Not Romney.

2. Another article which didn’t get much coverage, but which, if true, means the Executive Branch will be further indebted to a very few, very wealthy individuals, ones with a very specific agenda.

Roger Stone (go here to learn more about this long time Republican consultant, turned libertarian) a few days ago wrote in his The Stone Zone:

“I’ve waited a few days to lay out my analysis of the selection of Paul Ryan for the VP slot on the Romney ticket. Unlike politicos like Dick Morris who bad-mouths the selection privately and shills for it publicly, I’ll tell you what I really think. My sources tell me David Koch played a key role in Ryan’s selection and that Koch’s wife Julia had been quietly lobbying for Ryan. The selection was cemented at the July 22nd fundraiser Koch held for Romney at the former’s sumptuous Hamptons estate.”

According to Stone, “Koch pledged $100 million more to C-4 and Super PAC efforts for Romney for Ryan’s selection.” (For the entire article, go to The Stone Zone.)

3)  And according to Joel Kotkin’s article, The Screwed Election: Wall Street Can’t Lose, and America Can’t Win, it doesn’t even matter if Obama wins the election. Wall Street wins whether Romney or Obama is president.

A very recent example of what Kotkin writes about, the power of business to affect policy, in this case, the Obama administration, can be seen in this NYTimes article: Ties to Obama Aided in Access for Big Utility. (Hat tip to RW for pointing out the article).

If any of the above, never mind all three, are true, it’s kind of discouraging.

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“It’s Not Fair”

20 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by Richard in The Outer Loop

≈ Leave a Comment

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Benjamin Hale, The Veil of Ignorance, The Veil of Opulence

Folks who sometimes read MillersTime may know that I’m on a lengthy journey to understand how we know what we know and particularly how come good folks can differ so much on issues of politics and religion (See earlier posts here and here.)

Whether these differences come from nature or nurture, from a genetic source (some folks believe this), the ‘environment’ in which we live, the influences of class, wealth, education, etc., or are related to our life experiences, the one constant seems to be is that we all have our particular lenses through which we see the world.

But that doesn’t answer the basic question. It just peels back the onion a layer. We still have to understand our lenses and from whence they come.

In a recent article Benjamin Hale, a philosophy professor, writes about two doctrines of fairness, a universal view and a first person view: ‘The Veil of Ignorance’ and ‘The Veil of Opulence.’  For me, this article adds to my understanding of the lenses through which we look at the world.

Take a look.

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A Range of Articles on VP Pick Cong.Paul Ryan

13 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

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Cong.Paul Ryan

Well now that the ‘Sunday gasbags’ (Calvin Trillin’s wonderful phrase about the Sunday morning TV political ‘know-it-alls’) have had their say — as well as lots of others on cable, on radio and in national and local newspapers on why Ryan is a good or bad choice and what that choice means — here are about a dozen articles that will help inform you about Cong. Ryan. These were written over the last few years, by reporters who have had time to look into Ryan and who he is).

1. Paul Ryan Reading Guide: The Best Reporting on the VP Candidate, ProPublica,* Aug. 11, 2012.

In one place, these are the best I’ve found, ranging from the one I (belated) cited by The New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza (a good place to start), The New York Magazine, The American Conservative, Weekly Standard The Atlas Society, The NY Times, Foreign Policy, etc.

(*If you don’t know of ProPublica, it’s worth putting it on your radar. It calls itself “an independent, non-profit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest.”

Disclosure: My wife Ellen is on their Journalism Advisory Board along with Jill Abramson, executive editor of the NY Times, Robert Caro, David Gergen and others.)

2. Nine Reasons Romney’s Choice of Paul Ryan for Veep Is Smarter Than You Think, by Don Hazen, Alternet, Aug. 13.

Executive Editor of the very liberal Alternet, Hazen disagrees with his colleague and others who were gleeful that Romney “played right into the Obama message on how the Romney agenda harms the middle class.”

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Some Background on Paul Ryan, Republican VP Pick

11 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by Richard in The Outer Loop

≈ Leave a Comment

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Rep. Paul D. Ryan

Update – Sat. 2:30: Ignore the link to the article cited below (the dotted line) by Kalefa Sanneh. I confused Ron Paul and Paul Ryan. No wonder I’ve stayed away from ‘breaking news.

The New Yorker, however, did recently profile Cong. Paul Ryan. The correct link to the correct article is here.

Sorry for the confusion, and thanx to the alert MillersTime readers who pointed out my confusion(s).

————————————————————————————————

Sat. 10 AM: Former Gov. Mitt Romney announced today that he had picked House of Representative Paul D. Ryan from Wisconsin as his VP running mate.

To begin to get to know more about Cong. Ryan, see The New Yorker‘s 5,000+ word profile written by Kelefa Sanneh Feb. 27, 2012.

 

 

 

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