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Be Angry. But Be Angry At The Right People: GNR [1]
['This Content Is Not Subject To Review Daily Kos Staff Prior To Publication.']
Date: 2025-02-01
I’m angry. A lot. More than I would like. Furious, really. Mostly, I am angry at Trump and the people who surround him. As much as I don’t like to let anger overtake me, it is really hard not to be angry. I find it impossible to know what they are doing and not feel furious. I try to remind myself that MLK felt anger. He was filled with rage. But what he did with that anger was what mattered. Rather than letting the anger turn to hatred, he reminded himself that he was angry because of his love for people. He reminded himself that his anger came from love. And he took his righteous anger and turned it into action. So, that seems as good a reason as any to feel ok about this unavoidable anger. At the same time, I am trying to keep the target of my anger where it belongs. I was speaking to a colleague who was furious at our institution for not doing more to protect students, staff, and faculty at this time. I’ve also seen people furious with Democratic leaders who aren’t doing enough. I’ve see fury with people who didn’t vote. I’ve seen fury with Biden for getting out of the race and/or not getting out quickly enough. and I, myself, have felt furious at people who didn’t do as much as I did to try to get Kamala elected. And, if I am being honest, that is an awful lot of people to be mad at. This anger worries me, because it isn’t where our anger should be focused. I saw this quote by Peter Sagal and agree with it: x May I suggest something radical? Have mercy on people. Even on here. What’s happening is unprecedented, so politicians, journalists, public servants etc are doing their best to adjust. Not doing exactly what you think they should doesn’t mean they’re giving up or giving in. — Peter Sagal (@petersagal.bsky.social) 2025-01-29T14:59:57.233Z Have mercy on people. Recognize that just because they aren’t doing what you think they should be doing, doesn’t mean that they aren’t fighting and on our side. This doesn’t mean you can’t push politicians to do what you want. It doesn’t mean blind acceptance. But it does mean that we have to work together. And it does mean that we have to show one another grace. And, mostly, it means that we need to keep our eyes on the prize and remember who the real enemy is. Because that is the only way that we win. Getting through this Here are some pep talks that helped me this week: Chop Wood, Carry Water Don’t get me wrong: everything is still pure chaos, but I’m feeling quite reassured after what happened in the last 24 hours. Why? First, we’re seeing signs of life out of Democratic leadership. They’re feeling the heat, finding their sea legs, and starting to resist and push back in ways that matter. Is it enough? No. Can we stop pressuring them to do better? Absolutely not. But they’re hearing us, and the above image is one piece of proof that, because of us, the needle is moving in the right direction. Second, Trump’s rescinding of the funding freeze is a big deal. Make no mistake—it was because of political blowback. You know who created that blowback? YOU! And people like you all across the country. Nice work! And for those of you, by the way, who say “I have a Republican representative—they don’t care what I think,” read this! The TLDR is that their phones were ringing off the hooks, and they cared. Team Trump’s subsequent bungling of its own messaging about whether or not the rescission was real (Robert Hubbell has a good recap here) was just icing on the cake. We are being reminded that, as AOC remarked recently—and I’m paraphrasing—these people are evil but they’re also chaotic and inept. This is already working in our favor. This is not to say we’re out of the woods on federal funding cuts—we’re not. There’s forest, in fact, on every side. But we just found a path that may eventually lead out of it. In short, The Trump Administration hit a limit on what the American people would accept, and they backed off quickly. This is a win, and it’s important information for all of us. They’re not invincible, and they do respond to public outrage. Good. A Personal Message from the MeidasTouch Co-Founder But out of this darkness, I already see signs of hope. Our resistance grows stronger each day and our collective purpose becomes clearer. We win small battles, which lead to winning big battles, which has the hope of inspiring the nation and the world to win this war for democracy. There is a reason the MeidasTouch Network as an independent network is growing faster now than any corporate media network in the world. Together, with you the Meidas Mighty, we are proving that a people-powered network can defeat the disinformation Death Stars created by the billionaire oligarchs. No one said this will be easy. But Meidas Mighty, I give you my word. We will fight shoulder to shoulder, every day, and we will win in the end. The truth will prevail. Love will prevail over hate. Democracy will prevail over fascism. Whether it’s my nephews, my family, my Meidas Mighty family, or all those looking for a voice in this perilous moment, let me commit all that I have, and every fiber of my being, to put it all on the line for you. It’s time for “we the people” to let our voices be heard. Dan Savage: The next four years are gonna suck. But they’ll suck worse if we let the news cycle — and the man who dominates it — drain the joy from our lives. We need to pay attention and we need to stay in the fight. Because of course we do. But we should spend as much time as we possibly can over the next four years with friends and lovers doing things that bring us joy. Anyone who tells you that making time for joy — however you define it — is a distraction or a betrayal has no idea what they’re talking about. During the darkest days of the AIDS crisis, we buried our friends in the morning, we protested in the afternoon, and we danced all night. The dance kept us in the fight because it was the dance we were fighting for. It didn’t look like we were going to win then and we did. It doesn’t feel like we’re going to win now but we could. Keep fighting, keep dancing. Surprise of the Week It is no surprise that, despite the denials, Project 2025 has served as a blueprint for Donald Trump’s second term. What has been surprising is how incompetently it has been handled by an administration that had months to prepare. We were told that this time Trump’s team was more seasoned, experienced and prepared. We were told that Elon Musk was a genius who would apply his special talents to the government. Instead, this was a week of stumbles and bumbles — ranging from the two lawsuits mentioned above to the odd effort to pay federal workers to resign. And then there was Trump’s unhinged press conference after the tragic airline disaster. He is beatable We had a major battle this week and we won! First a judge stepped in:
The first big attack on federal government assistance blew up in the White House’s face bigly.
There are two things we already knew would define the second Trump administration: a stunning level of incompetence, and a brazen willingness to flat out lie to the public, especially when they need to cover up their incompetence. Incompetent people in charge of trillions of dollars is terrifying on its own. And the last two days proved how badly they can damage our country and how far the White House will go to gaslight us about it. They’ve also proven how well resistance to this insanity works. Congressional offices were flooded with calls from constituents, nonprofits, emergency workers and students. The “rollout” of the freeze went so poorly that the White House went into damage control on Tuesday, then people like Trump advisor Stephen Miller and Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt worked furiously to rewrite the story of what just happened and lie brazenly to the public. I don’t think we should let that slide, so this is what actually went down. In the end, the public pressure grew too great, and the OMB wound up completely rescinding its original memo. I love this for them. This has exposed something important to remember: The people who are in charge still don’t know what they’re doing, and in an effort to please their higher ups, they are shitting the bed and forcing an embarrassing clean-up of the mess.
“A Weak President”: Trump’s Chaos Strategy Implodes in Epic OMB Fiasco
As Trump backtracks on his funding freeze, the author of a new piece on his “chaos strategy” explains why this is already failing—and how it reveals him as both authoritarian and weak.
From Choose Democracy:
He didn't back down because it was a good idea. It wasn't a change of heart. It wasn't a feint. It was a genuine administrative coup that — for now — has been thwarted. He backed down because people pushed back — getting media to do their job and alert us to an impending problem, calling Senators who (more or less) found their spines, lawyers challenging the coup, telling the story of the many who would suffer under such an order, joining last-minute DC protests… We'd like you to pause before your inner cynic speaks up (the one that says "he'll try another version" or "look at all the other things he's destroyed and people suffering"). The point is stunningly important: Trump can lose when we fight. He is not invincible and he is not all powerful. It doesn't mean we will win every fight. But it does mean that anyone who is telling you it's hopeless is wrong. Folks need to get this message: our feelings are valid, but any conclusion that says it's over is wrong. They, too, will get a chance to join and we hope they do.
And, don’t go back to that BS of him playing 3d chess. It isn’t the case. We CAN beat him. Not every time — but a lot.
Trump has convinced the press, the GOP, the business community, and some Dems that he is a political force, the polls say otherwise
Donald Trump is very bad at doing the job of president, but he is quite good at playing the role of president. His nonstop barrage of executive orders and displays of power serve only to curate the image of political strength, while he lacks the strength itself. this idea that Trump has a mandate or some massive reservoir of political capital is complete bullshit. There is a counter-narrative based on the polling, history, and recent political dynamics, which shows that Trump is a paper tiger with low approval ratings, making the classic mistake of overplaying his hand. I am not trying to sell you a dose of uncut copium in this dark moment. Trump is indeed the second Republican since 1988 to win the popular vote. He won all seven swing states and made substantial gains in some of the Bluest parts of the country. I don’t want to downplay the scale of our loss or the work we must do to make a comeback. But we also can’t develop the right strategy unless it's based in political reality, not in the fiction Trump wants us to believe. FiveThirtyEight’s average has Trump over 49% (and they used some very R-leaning polls to get there), but even that number is lower than any previous president. Trump’s net approval is 43 points less than Obama's. Even George W. Bush, who lost the popular vote and then went through a divisive post-election process that ended in a controversial Supreme Court decision, had a net approval rating four times higher than Trump. Of course, increasing polarization lowered the ceiling for every president. Fewer members of the other party are willing to say they approve of the president. However, Joe Biden, who barely won the Electoral College, had a net approval nearly 15 points greater than Trump. The only candidate in history with a lower incoming approval rating than Trump in 2025 was Trump in 2017. Most voters hate what Trump is doing. According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll: 70% oppose renaming the Gulf of Mexico;
62% oppose the January 6th pardons;
60% oppose imposing tariffs on Canada;
59% oppose ending birthright citizenship;
56% oppose leaving the Paris Climate Accord; and
52% oppose delaying the TikTok ban. Trump made it impossible for people to focus simultaneously on each individual action. Over time, Democrats will have the opportunity to make the case to the public that Trump is pushing unpopular ideas. Trump is in a unique situation. He is a newly elected president replacing someone from the opposite party, but he is also a lame duck entering. In their second terms, presidents tend to have shorter honeymoons and less time to accomplish their agenda before the party starts focusing on the midterm elections. And that’s where it gets tricky for Trump. He is governing with very narrow and unwieldy legislative majorities. This will make passing legislation to keep the government open — let alone cut taxes, secure the border and everything else he wants to do — challenging and politically costly. If Democrats stick together in opposition, Trump can only afford to lose a couple of votes on any given bill. Additionally, Democrats have a very strong chance of taking the House majority in 2026. Presidents tend to perform poorly in their second midterm; and because of changes in our coalition, Democrats have real turnout advantages in non-presidential elections. We saw evidence of this trend in Iowa on Tuesday night when a Democrat picked up a state Senate seat in a district Trump won by 21 points in November. If Democrats win the majority, Trump will never pass another law without Hakeem Jeffries' permission. Trump is dangerous. I am not dismissing the threat. It is very real, but he is not the political colossus he claims to be. Democrats can find comfort and develop courage by taking a realistic view of his many, many weaknesses.
Trump Is the Least Popular Modern Prez for a Second Time
President Donald Trump enters office for the second time with bottom-of-the-barrel approval ratings—second among modern presidents only to himself in 2017, according to Gallup. The report is based on the first poll done on each president’s approval rating, which started in 1953, when President Dwight Eisenhower was first elected. The only other president with a lower approval rating than Trump was himself, with a 45% approval rating when he entered office for the first time in 2017. However, Trump did smash a polling record this year, with a historically high disapproval rating of 48% upon the start of his second term. His previous inaugural disapproval rating in 2017 was a then-record-smashing 45%.
The first round of polling in the Trump administration are in, and the findings are not good.
These are bad numbers. Really bad. Yes, Trump has a net positive approval rating, but historically, a newly elected president should enjoy a honeymoon period with a net approval rating in the +20 range. even Trump’s historically weak support may already be eroding due to his most controversial executive actions. He is literally leaning into the least popular parts of his agenda. Voters who gave Trump a second chance, like a bride with buyer’s remorse, appear to be having second thoughts already. Tough honeymoon.
Fox Host Delivers Reality Check About Trump’s Rough Start
Fox News co-host Jessica Tarlov criticized the lack of competent leadership shown by the White House amid its confusing, legally murky actions, saying the rollout of Donald Trump’s agenda has been “complete chaos” and “is not being managed in any sort of orderly fashion at all.” On Wednesday’s broadcast of The Five, Tarlov reacted to the whiplash-inducing events over the last few days, which saw the administration earlier Wednesday ultimately reverse course by rescinding its order freezing federal grants.
The Justice System
As I said last week, the justice system is our new BFF. Yes, the SCOTUS has a lot of bad actors but even they make some good decisions AND a tiny portion of decisions even go there AND Biden and Schumer got more judges through than any other admin.
Lawsuit claims systems behind OPM governmentwide email blast are illegal, insecure
lawsuit filed in federal court Monday alleges that the Office of Personnel Management set up an on-premise server to conduct last week’s mass email blast to federal employees and store information it received in response without doing a privacy impact assessment on the system as required by law. Filed by two anonymous federal employees in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the class-action lawsuit calls for OPM to stop the use of the system until the agency can show that it’s lawfully conducted a privacy assessment.
Transgender inmate sues over Trump's order curtailing LGBT rights
transgender woman serving in a federal prison has filed a lawsuit arguing that President Donald Trump's executive order directing the U.S. government to recognize only two, unchangeable sexes and requiring inmates like her to be housed in men's prisons violates the U.S. Constitution and federal law.
Quaker groups file suit over the end of policy restricting ICE arrests in houses of worship
A group of Quaker congregations is suing the Department of Homeland Security for changing a policy that prevented Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from carrying out operations in so-called “sensitive locations” such as houses of worship, playgrounds, schools and hospitals without approval from supervisors. The policy, which had been in place under multiple administrations — including during President Donald Trump’s first term — was rescinded last week.
Litigation Against Trump’s Schedule F Order Escalates With Third Lawsuit
Democracy Forward, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and American Federation of Government Employees — the largest federal employees union — filed a lawsuit to block President Donald Trump’s Schedule F executive order. The Schedule F order, which was signed on his first day of office as part of a sweeping EO to implement changes to the federal workforce, strips tens of thousands of civil service employees of their employment protections. It’s the third lawsuit challenging Trump’s Schedule F EO. In each lawsuit, the plaintiffs argue that the Trump administration violates the Administrative Procedure Act by stripping federal employees of civil service protections.
Special Election JOY
Our best predictor of winning the midterms in 18? Our special election performance in 17. It is early still, but so far, so GREAT!
x We got the majority back in the Minnesota Senate !!! MN state Senate District 60 was supposed to go our way, but I don’t think anyone expected it to go our way this completely — Ariella Elm (@ariellaelm.bsky.social) 2025-01-29T03:39:38.455Z
and this one
x THE DEMOCRATS HAVE FLIPPED IOWA'S #SD35: Mike Zimmer (D)- 51.8% Katie Whittington (R)- 48.2% THIS WAS A TRUMP+21 DISTRICT! — Uncrewed (@uncrewed.bsky.social) 2025-01-29T03:06:01.612Z
how?
x From a Reddit thread reacting to this win. Hope it inspires people! — kaokien (@kaokien.bsky.social) 2025-01-29T04:18:52.039Z
In Iowa our candidate won 52%-48% in a district Trump carried by 21 points in November. It’s a 25 point overperformance.
In Minnesota our candidate won 91%-9% in a district Harris carried 83%-14%. It’s a 14 point overperformance.
Democrats do great things
Yah, yah, not everyone is doing everything you want. I get it. But a lot of Dems ARE doing great and more will join them!!
BREAKING: Illinois Democratic Governor J.B. Pritzker throws down the gauntlet to Donald Trump and vows to "stand in the way" if federal authorities try to break state law while carrying out his mass deportation raids. This is what real leadership sounds like… "Well, let me start by being clear that when we're talking about violent criminals who've been convicted and are undocumented, we don't want them in our state, we want them out of the country," Pritzker said on CNN. "We hope they do get deported and if that's who they're picking up, we're all for it." "They show up with a warrant and we're going to hand over people who are in our prisons or in our jails who fit that description," he added. "Now, what they're also doing though and it's quite disturbing, is they're going after people who are law-abiding, who are holding down jobs, who have families here, who may have been here for a decade or two decades," said Pritzker. "And they're often our neighbors and our friends and why are we going after them? These are not people who are causing problems in our country and what we need is a path to citizenship for them," he went on. CNN's Dana Bash then asked him about a Trump administration memo that alludes to prosecuting state officials who fail to comply with federal immigration authorities. He didn't hesitate in responding. "Dana we're going to follow the law in Illinois and federal law too. We expect them to do the same," said Pritzker. "I'm very afraid that they will not follow the law. The reason they put a memo out like that is-- That's already the law. Everybody, we have to follow federal law, we have to follow state law otherwise we're potentially subject to prosecution. Of course we all know that." "They're just putting that out because they want to threaten everybody," he added. "They want people to step back and let them do whatever they want to do, the federal officials, and the reality is they can't break the law." He added that Illinois state officials simply will "not coordinate" with federal officials to help them arrest undocumented people who do not have warrants. This is what the governor of every single blue state needs to do. They have real power to resist Trump and protect innocent people from his cruel, family-destroying policies. They have a moral responsibility to do so. History is watching
US Sen. Elizabeth Warren
And as always, US Sen. Elizabeth Warren continues to completely decimate Trump on his corruption, and long list of failed promises. Just last night, Warren blasted Trump: “his failure to even try and move in the direction of lowering [grocery] costs is a betrayal of the American people.”
Tammy Duckworth
US Sen. Tammy Duckworth has been taking on Republicans in ways few others could. A Purple Heart recipient, who lost her legs and severely injured her arm in battle, Duckworth said: “Trump is despicable. He doesn’t deserve to be commander-in-chief.” On cabinet picks, Duckworth took the gloves off, saying Tulsi Gabbard is “compromised,” and doubts “she could actually pass a background check.” Duckworth’s also sounding the alarm about the most unhinged nominee, Kash Patel—warning he’d use “law enforcement to seek retribution against his political enemies.”
Jasmine Crockett
Then there’s US Rep. Jasmine Crockett, who truly knows how to command an audience. Crockett constantly takes on Marge Greene, Nancy Mace and the rest of the maga cult—during hearings and in public. In Crockett’s DNC speech, she said Trump “is a career criminal, with 34 felonies, 2 impeachments, and 1 porn star to prove it.” “If you’re looking for me to sugarcoat the reality we’re facing, I can’t do that,” Crockett recently told Harper’s Bazaar.
AOC
US Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) has been an extremely effective messenger, who triggers maga at a baffling level. AOC’s slams get viral news coverage, and she knows how to cut through the nonsense better than most anybody out there. Just last week, AOC called out the Broligarchs who once criticized Trump, saying they’re now in a “kiss-ass race,” and enjoying “a billionaire feeding frenzy.” AOC also dropped the mic on Donald, calling him “the quintessential New York con man.” When Trump threw a tantrum about Colombia’s president refusing to accept deported immigrants, AOC said: “Trump is about to make every American pay even more for coffee,” and cause inflation to be “worse for working class Americans.” Spot on.
Senate Democrats ready formal resolution to condemn Trump's pardons of Jan. 6 defendants
A group of Senate Democrats will attempt on Monday to raise the political pressure on Republicans to condemn President Trump's pardon of violent Capitol insurrectionists. CBS News has learned senior Democrats will seek to pass a resolution by unanimous consent that formally denounces the pardons of the rioters who were convicted of assaulting and injuring police on Jan. 6, 2021.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced that he’s stockpiling abortion medication.
Virginia’s Democratic-led Senate passed constitutional amendments on abortion and voting rights, as well as a resolution repealing a now-defunct ban on same-sex marriage. The Democratic-led Virginia House of Delegates passed similar legislation on all three issues earlier this month
The Resistance is Strong
School Systems Across US Declare They Will Not Comply With Trump's Anti-Trans Executive Order
On Thursday, multiple school systems and representatives issued statements rejecting Trump’s executive order that directs schools to discriminate against transgender students or face legal consequences. The order, released Wednesday, labels transgender identity as an “anti-American ideology” and mandates discrimination in bathrooms and locker rooms while threatening teachers with criminal charges for supporting trans students’ social transitions. In response, school officials across the country are making it clear: they will not comply, and they remain committed to protecting the rights of their transgender students. As Trump’s executive orders take effect, the greatest immediate threat isn’t their legality—it’s premature compliance before they can be challenged in court. Most of these orders function more as legal intimidation tactics than enforceable law, relying on the chilling effect of DOJ threats to pressure hospitals, teachers, and institutions into abandoning transgender people before the legal process even begins. But resistance is already mounting. These school districts, and others, recognize the stakes and are refusing to fold, standing firm in their commitment to protect transgender students—students who lack the institutional power to fight back on their own against an administration determined to erase them.
Community is Our Superpower
“What are you most proud of?” was the last question I asked of postcard writers during interviews to gather their stories and document their work. Interviewers like me expected to hear postcard writers’ stories about the number of postcards they had written or a list of candidates they had supported. But no. Time and again they said they were most proud of the community they helped build. The grassroots groups build a sense of community in different ways. Some do it through ongoing programs like Network NOVA weekly live podcast, Friday Power Lunch or Markers for Democracy 3 mornings a week Zoom postcard writing sessions. Others do it through online reader interaction. Substack newsletters like Simon Rosenberg’s Hopium Chronicles, Robert Hubbell’s Today’s Edition Newsletter and Jessica Craven’s Chop Wood, Carry Water have become as much community hubs as information sources. People often belong to more than one group. If grassroots activists are asked to put down their group affiliation they often inquire: which one? This crossover and cross-pollination are welcome, common, and encouraged. The beauty of today’s grassroots is that there is no top-down structure that controls it. A common lament by campaign veterans is that the volunteer army built by the Obama campaign was terminated after the campaign. Today’s grassroots are decentralized, which means no organization or individual can pull the plug. As Democrats regroup and chart a way forward, we need to remember that we're already doing the important work every time we gather. Though authoritarian leaders will try to divide us, we need to keep on. It's up to us to help the grassroots grow. As any arborist will tell you, the roots are the most important part of the tree. We are the roots of democracy. We are the roots of any campaign. We are the grassroots.
What The Loyal Opposition Does
At some point earlier this week, Civil Discourse crossed the 500,000 subscribers mark. More than half a million of you now subscribe and read the newsletter. It really lifts me up to know that there are so many of us who care about the future of this country. And we’re going to continue to sustain each other and find a path forward. There is no point in pretending this is going to be easy, because it won’t be. But we do know that sunlight continues to be the best disinfectant. The Trump administration has already been forced to rescind its spending freeze after days of public outrage following extensive reporting and commentary on it. Two federal judges ordered the freeze stayed as well. Although stretched thin, it’s entirely possible that the rule of law isn’t dead just yet. In addition, we should never give up on the force we can bring to bear as voters and concerned citizens. We should never back off.
Sacramento school district resists Trump directive to allow immigration agents in schools
Sacramento City Unified School District officials presented a united front Wednesday to affirm safety for undocumented students, encouraging families to continue sending their kids to school in the face of fears stoked by President Donald Trump’s directive to allow federal immigration agents on school campuses. The goal was to keep undocumented kids, whose families may fear that their children’s schools are vulnerable to ICE raids, coming to class every day. Under California law, all children have a right to a free public education regardless of their or their parents’ immigration status. “To our families, we ask you, please send your children to school despite the anxiety and fear being pushed upon you,” Board President Jasjit Singh said. “Know that this is a safe place. We are here to teach, care for and guide all 38,000 of our students to reach their goals, and we will not let anyone get in the way of that.”
‘Hold the line, don’t resign’: Federal workers encourage each other not to accept Trump’s buyout offer
The Trump administration has offered a buyout to around 2 million federal employees and claims they can stop working and still receive pay through the end of September, but workers are rallying each other on Reddit to stay onboard, arguing their presence is “the last line of defense against fascism.” “We watched this goon try to overthrow the government on live tv four years ago,” one poster, whose comments have been upvoted tens of thousands of times on r/fednews, wrote. “Now, we are witnessing him try to overthrow it from within.” “I didn’t dedicate years of my life serving this great country to be bullied into quitting my career by a bunch of fascists,” the user, Odd_Rough_9723, wrote. “We are being led by the same types of people our grandparents fought against in WW2. They don’t care about us, regardless of the fact that one-third of us are veterans and many are military family members.” Another popular post about the buyouts is an image of the Statute of Liberty with the slogan, “Hold the Line! Don’t resign!” The chatter online eventually seemed to get Trump ally Elon Musk’s attention, who shared a post on social media complaining federal employees waste time at work by complaining on social media.
Inspiration
some photos of acts of kindness
Oh, also
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