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Two Thumbs Up for Jim Caviezel
What amazing news that Jim Caviezel, who played Christ in Mel Gibson's astounding movie "The Passion of the Christ," has
turned down an opportunity
that might have made him a multi-millionaire. The 35-year-old actor refused to sign on for roles in TV commercials and a T-shirt deal that were worth an estimated $75 million. "I think if I had given way on just one scheme, I would have been tempted to do more," explained Caviezel, who said he wanted to remain true to his Catholic beliefs. "It would have been the easiest thing in the world to make that kind of money quickly."
There's nothing wrong with making money (Loose Canon would love to make some--honestly, of course), but it is just astounding and inspiring that an actor would forsake this kind of money because he thinks it might corrupt him. If seeing him play Christ has had such a profound impact on many (including LC), then actually playing Christ must have made a really deep impression on him.
I had no outlet to express my admiration for the movie, so allow me to get on my soapbox (or into my pulpit?) and utter a few words now: It was the backdrop to Lent for me, making the banal version of the Stations of the Cross unbearable while adding so much to the solemn Veneration of the Cross on Good Friday.
If you haven't seen it, blue staters, be broadminded and do so. As for the alleged anti-Semitism, since seeing the movie, I came across an old hymn ("I See the Crowd in Pilate's Court) that expresses perfectly how the Christian reacts to the scenes of Christ being scourged:
"I see the crowd in Pilate's hall,
their furious cries I hear;
their shouts of 'Crucify!' appall,
their curses fill mine ear.
And of that shouting multitude
I feel that I am one,
and in that din of voices rude
I recognize my own."
By the way, I found this on a
wonderful web site
that gives you access to Anglican hymnals from 1861 through the 1960s. You can even listen to the tunes played on an organ.
Two Thumbs Up for John Ashcroft
I must chide my colleague the Swami for his unkind remarks about John Ashcroft's press conference.
Even though it's hard to imagine terrorists not wanting to stage a Madrid-style (or bigger) event before we go to the polls, Swami believes that the AG is making these statements for political reasons: He writes: "This kind of fear-mongering should have this reaction: 'Hey, pal, why scare us? Why not just nab the terrorists?'"
May I point out to Swami that every time Ashcroft does nab somebody, folks (perhaps folks Swami knows Uptown?) set up a howl about their civil liberties? In the matter of nabbing, by the way, I'm willing to bet that Swami would not agree with this realistic policy
suggested by Peggy Noonan
in a column headlined "Let's Catch Them Now" in the Wall Street Journal:
"It's kind of crazy out there," Peggy writes. "So this might be a good time to say: Let's do our best as a people to catch and imprison terrorists. Let's get 'em. Let's make it our highest national priority. Let's find those who mean to end the lives of hundreds, or thousands, or tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands, of innocent people. Then, once it looks like all or most of the bad guys are captured, let's turn our national attention to studying how we could have done it better, more gently, more justly, more competently. But first the capture, then the criticism."
Archpriest
This just in
: "A Vatican statement said the pope had appointed [Cardinal Bernard] Law to be the archpriest of the Rome Basilica of St Mary Major, one of the most important churches in the Italian capital. The archpriest is the senior figure in a cathedral or a basilica, responsible for how it is run and usually presiding at many of the services."
I was one in that more recent the din of voices baying for Law's resignation--and in this case, I think the din had it right. I had originally suggested that the cardinal walk barefooted to Jerusalem, but this strikes me as about right. It can't be easy going from Archbishop to Archpriest (wonderful title, though), and I'm satisfied. Others, no doubt, won't be.
Ten Commandments Judge
Believe it or not, Loose Canon is not pleased with Judge Roy Moore, the Alabama justice who was ousted when he refused to remove a 2.6-ton granite block with the Ten Commandments on it he had put up in the state Supreme Court building. He is
now appealing his case
to the Supreme Court. While Loose Canon recognizes that, had he erected a statue featuring, say, artistic condoms, he might be a martyr to free speech and have a whole 'nother set of friends, LC is also against people putting up 2.6-ton monuments of their own accord on public property. Loose Canon also doesn't approve of somebody doing this kind of foolish thing presenting himself as a Christian martyr.
I Was Too Nice, Part 2
Maybe the crocodile tears I shed for nutzoid former veep Al Gore over his public bid for a permanent slot in bedlam (I refer to his meltdown speech) were unwarranted.
Heck, even hard-hearted
Maureen Dowd is laughing
at Gore.
"John Kerry's advisers were surprised and annoyed to hear that Mr. Gore hollered so much, he made Howard Dean look like George Pataki," Dowd wrote. "They don't want voters to be reminded of the wackadoo wing of the Democratic Party."
I Was Too Nice
A short time ago, Loose Canon commented on
Senator Fritz Hollings' column
attributing Bush's Iraq policy to an effort to attract Jewish voters. Though I found the senator's remarks troubling, I was squeamish about labeling the senator's comments anti-Semitic.
I was too nice.
The
Weekly Standard's report
on Hollings' defense of his column on the Senate floor is pretty shocking:
In the course of [the defense) he (a) groused that "you cannot have an Israel policy other than what AIPAC gives you around here"; (b) insisted on the "legitimacy" of his notorious reference to the late Howard Metzenbaum as the "senator from B'nai B'rith"; and (c) revealed that just "the other day" he'd asked his staffers how they supposed they'd react were the Israeli army to bulldoze their families' homes. "Wouldn't you want to cut their throat?" Hollings said he asked his aides. And "They said: 'In a New York minute.'"
"When Sen. Hollings retires home to South Carolina at the end of this year," the Standard concluded, "we hope he takes his staff along."
Quit Shouting
Every Sunday, after hearing somebody read the lessons badly, I think: This is just the sort of thing chanting was invented to prevent. Why can't we have sung lessons and a sung gospel? But instead, we have to listen to somebody proclaiming!
Preachers seem to think that, if they just use enough exclamation points, they can convince us that this 2,000 year old story is true.
A piece in
Crisis Magazine
headlined "Fourteen Easy Ways to Improve the Liturgy" seems to share my discomfort with all this desperate declaiming: "These days, conventional guidebooks on liturgy emphasize 'proclaiming' and broadcasting one's voice... Ironically, experts in the advertising world have found that the low voice actually draws out the attention of the listener."
Other wise suggestions: Shorten the sign of the peace (this doesn't apply to me--I've found that by simply whispering, "I have ringworm," I can avoid shaking hands with all but the most rabid peacers), don't force people to sing during communion, and don't attempt a rousing good-bye. (Unfortunately, this article is one of the ones in the issue that was not made available online.)
The Other Scandal
Abu Ghraib isn't the only scandal in Iraq deserving of the media spotlight. The other scandal is the United Nations' oil for food program--which should have been called the oil for palaces and kickbacks program. Intrepid reporter Claudia Rosett, who has been doggedly pursuing the scandal, seems to have the story almost to herself. Nobody else seems to want to speak ill of the East River Debating Society. Don't miss
Rosett's latest National Review piece
on the stalled investigations of the scandal no one wants to talk about.
Who Let Him Out?
Joking aside,
Al Gore's manic speech
yesterday demanding that various Bush administration officials be sacked was a sad spectacle. You can't help thinking that Al Senior's relentless pushing of his only son and namesake had a profoundly negative impact. I tend to agree with
John Podhoretz of the New York Post
, who believes that pore Mr. Gore is genuinely cracked. Look at the disturbing picture of Gore speaking, posted on
Drudge
and
Lucianne
, and be thankful that this guy wasn't subjected to the pressure of being president on Sept. 11.
Why I Disagree With St. Paul (and John Paul) on Gossip
Even somebody in an infallible office can get things all wrong: Pope John Paul II's
call for regulations
to ensure that media is truthful and offers undistorted views of the family and morality shows how badly the Vatican understands how the media works. "Thanks to modern technologies, many families can directly access vast resources of communication and information and take advantage of it for education, cultural enrichment and spiritual growth," the pope is quoted saying. But the pope adds that the media can "cause grave harm to the family when they offer an inadequate or even distorted vision of life."
If the pope is saying that parents should monitor what their kids watch on TV, that's fine. But otherwise the best regulation for the media is.competition. I don't like any attempt to regulate the press. That's why I am a big supporter of the blogosphere and even of the positive role of gossip (yes, I know: It's the one subject on which I disagree with anti-gossip epistler St. Paul) as an astringent in the public arena.
A good
piece in Reason magazine
makes the (counterintuitive) point that gossip is good and that the circulation of gossip in places like the
Drudge Report
is actually a benefit to journalism. Reason used the rumor that John Kerry had had an affair with an intern, an item that made a brief splash on Drudge before retiring into oblivion, to make the point:
By day five [of the Kerry-intern rumor] it was all over but the shouting about What This Means for Journalism.
"There definitely is a media food chain," the oft-quoted, dour media critic Tom Rosenstiel told The Boston Globe's Mark Jurkowitz in one of the dozens of ethics postmortems. "What you get is...the bad journalism driving out the good."
Rosenstiel has it backward. If there was indeed no affair (and Drudge continues to suggest there was, pointing out that Kerry's oral denial is much weaker than Monica Lewinsky's signed affidavit), having the story vetted and slapped down by elite news organizations before it could gain political traction should be hailed as a triumph of substance over scandal.
I've always been amused by the notion among some Catholics that the Church could somehow "harness" the media and make it a force for good. But really, the media is (as it should be) a system of competitive people trying to get good stories.
Don't get me wrong: I think many members of the media are biased and sometimes despicable. I just happen to think that the only antidote is more competition. FOX is a good start.
The Burden of History
Was a Spanish bishop right to remove a 14th century statue of St. James "the Moor Slayer" from his cathedral? Read the Christian Science Monitor's
intriguing piece
on Spain's debate about the relationship of its Christian and Islamic heritages.
Relax! The Christians Won't Get You!
I was intrigued by a piece by my dear colleague-in-crime, the
Swami
, who noted that a group of conservative Christians are going to try to take over a state.
Quoth the Swamster:
"ChristianExodus.org has been established to coordinate the move of 50,000 or more Christians to a single conservative state in the U.S. for the express purpose of reestablishing constitutional governance."
Several southern states were mentioned as places for these Christians to take over and establish their nefarious plan.
As someone who keeps in touch with her roots, I've got news: There are already people there. I can't quite see the Episcopalian-dominated Mississippi Delta giving up without a fight.
I predict many years of wandering in the wilds.
It's Really Bad When They Don't Even Want Your Money
Anglican leaders in Africa have long been recipients of the financial largess of the Episcopal Church in the United States. But now they've called upon their benefactors to "repent" of having consecrated an openly gay bishop.
Saith the prelates of Africa
: "In a May 17 statement issued on behalf of 18 Anglican provinces in Asia, Africa and Latin America, Archbishop Peter Akinola of Nigeria said Episcopalians have 'cut themselves adrift' by consenting to the election of openly gay Bishop V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire."
"This deliberate disobedience of the revealed will of God in the Holy Scriptures is a flagrant departure from the consensual and clearly communicated mind and will of the Anglican Communion," Akinola said.
Easier Grader
I may have been too downbeat about the president's speech last night. Not everybody shared Loose Canon's disappointment.
Andrew Sullivan
gave Bush a B+. Sullivan felt the president had done what needed to be done.
Perfidious Networks
Why am I surprised? I missed the first few moments of President Bush's Iraq address last night because I foolishly had assumed that the networks--which have been trying to use Abu Ghraib as a WMD against the Bush administration for weeks on end--would automatically carry the address. Silly me--it wasn't newsy enough for them. It was also, as
Tom Shales
pointed out in his report on the speech in the Washington Post, the last night of the May ratings sweeps. But it was outrageous that they didn't cover the speech anyway. Is it really better to watch women in bathing suits eat larvae than to hear the president speak on the most troubling matter before us right now?
On the other hand (and I only heard the speech on radio--I don't have cable), the address was not one of Bush's finer moments. If you're correcting an error, you don't restate the error. But I still think that Bush should have addressed the (I think erroneous-see the
Kondracke article
I quoted previously) notion presented in the press that we're in a quagmire.
Instead the president got bogged down in such minutia as the news that our embassy in Iraq will have regional offices. He just dropped in that Iraq is now producing 2 million barrels of oil a day. There were a few good moments, as when the president said that elections are the "best defense against the return of tyranny" or when he referred to "this hard-won ground."
After the speech, the C-Span callers seemed to divide into two categories--angry people who sounded as if they'd been reading the Nation magazine, and defenders of the president. "I'm 72, and if he'd take me, I'd go to Iraq," said my favorite caller, a veteran.
Of course, the thing that will matter in November will be the state of Iraq, not the speeches about Iraq. Lincoln was saved by a late-breaking Union victory. Of course, as
Michael Barone points out
, Lincoln didn't have to contend with the same kind of press corps we have today.
Those Were the Days
I've already predicted that there will be Watergate-style investigations if George W. Bush wins a second term. The clan is already gathering. Carl Bernstein is the latest Watergate honcho to emerge from mothballs--and
he says that Bush is even worse
than Richard Nixon!
There Is a Hell
Quote from one of the soldiers
involved in the abuse at Abu Ghraib: "The Christian in me says it's wrong, but the corrections officer in me says, 'I love to make a grown man piss himself'." Too bad the Christian didn't win out in this battle. Too bad he viewed his work as a corrections officer in such sadistic terms.
Meanwhile,
columnist Dennis Prager
: "For if there is a hell, those who murder and torture the innocent while praising God are surely the first to go there." Prager, one of my favorite columnists, is speaking specifically of Islamic torturers; I feel certain he would agree that those who torture in the name of Christ are also in deep doo doo.
Deja Vue
At the end of my post on the horror of Abu Ghraib, I reiterated my unwavering support for the war. Citing a
piece by Mort Kondracke
, I joined the Roll Call executive editor in hoping that the media and others will not lose the war for us. A correspondent on the message boards suggests that what I was saying is that the media fabricated the Abu Ghraib scandal that has turned many against the war.
Not at all what I was saying.
Let me explain by quoting from the Kondracke piece (as perhaps I should have done in my original post): "The American establishment, led by the media and politicians, is in danger of talking the United States into defeat in Iraq. And the results would be catastrophic," he wrote.
It would not be the first time that the media has snatched defeat from the jaws of victory:
"In 1968--by no accident, a U.S. presidential election year," Kondracke wrote, "the Viet Cong launched a massive countrywide offensive in South Vietnam, invading the U.S. Embassy complex in the process.
"By every military measure, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces devastated the Communist forces. (It's all recorded in the late Peter Braestrup's masterful book 'Big Story.') Yet the U.S. media reported the episode as a U.S. defeat, helping convince the American establishment that the war was unwinnable.
"In this respect, there is a real danger that Iraq could become like Vietnam--a self-inflicted defeat. Public support for the war is down, and even conservative columnists such as David Brooks and George Will are implying that Bush's aims are unachievable."
We went to the war for moral reasons, and if we succeed, the world will be a better place. I hate to think what will be the consequences if we fail.
Along these lines,
Bill Kristol and Lewis Lehrman
had a good piece, headlined "Crush the Insurgents in Iraq," in yesterday's Washington Post. "The central battle in the war on terror is Iraq," they wrote. "Unless we win that battle, we will see America itself, and the world, shift disastrously into neutral in the broader war."
"Cursed Are the Peace Makers"
We hawks are a dispirited bunch right now. I ran into one of the better known journalistic hawks--who shall remain nameless--in the 'hood Friday afternoon. We talked about what a disaster a loss in Iraq would be, both for us and the people of Iraq and about how beleaguered hawks are in Washington right now.
English hawks are also having a hard time. Writing in the Spectator, James Delingpole, in a piece titled "
Cursed Are the Peacemakers
," deplores the "pea-brained" peaceniks and isolationists who are filling felled trees with "defeatist sniveling."
"For me, the final straw came when--as I so often do at difficult geopolitical times--I turned for consolation to the weblog of Andrew Sullivan and found that even this wise, articulate, principled defender of the war had suddenly come over a touch wobbly. The next day, admittedly, his resolve had been stiffened by all the 'Et tu, Sully?' emails he'd had from his readers. But by then the damage had been done. 'Bloody hell, I thought. ...""Of course, I appreciate as much as the next struggling hack the need to be flexible with one's opinions. The Abu Ghraib scandal definitely helped create a seller's market for stories on the lines of 'How terribly, terribly guilty I am for having supported the war, now that I realize we're just as bad as them.' More recently, the vile beheading of Nick Berg has created an equally strong market for ones going, 'Oh no, hang on. They are worse than us after all.' Maybe--money-grubbing whores as most of us are--it's too much to expect any journalist to demonstrate virtues like consistency, responsibility or maturity. But I do think in the case of Iraq we ought to struggle to make an exception. It is, after all, the issue on which our security and stability for the next 50 odd years most depend."
Loose Canon of the People
I used to consider myself a bit of a snob. No more. Without shifting one iota on my positions with regard to my view of the sorts and conditions of all mankind, I find that I am now a veritable populist. As a woman of the people, I have been shocked at the number of times the words "Wal-Mart" and "trailer park" have come up in discussions with friends about the events at Abu Ghraib.
While I certainly agree with those who suggest that the moral education of those who abused prisoners must have been deficient, I can't believe that the problem is that the perpetrators didn't go to nice prep schools.
(N.B.: This is by no means a plea for leniency for those who made the wrong moral decision.)
The Cardinals and Mrs. Kennedy
In an op-ed headlined "
The Altar Is Not a Battlefield
" in Sunday's Washington Post, Victoria Reggie Kennedy, the Washington lawyer who is married to pro-choice Senator Edward M. Kennedy, takes on the Roman Catholic prelates who are threatening to deny Communion to pro-choice Catholic pols. Mrs. Kennedy outlines the usual arguments, including the complaint that there has "been no talk of withholding Communion from pr-death-penalty Catholics."
She makes one blooper I can't let pass.
"Where is the logic or moral justice in punishing those who allow a person to make a private moral decision," she writes, "while remaining silent about those who authorize the government to take a life and thereby deprive a human being of his God-given right of salvation?"
Capital punishment deprives nobody of the chance of salvation. In fact, I would argue, based on having interviewed two strikingly non-repentant death row inmates years ago, that a man who knows he is going to die is more likely to prepare to meet his maker than one who busies himself writing Amnesty International every time a guard looks at him crossways.
A Big Fat Sermon on Gluttony
Is nothing sacred? First, the Big Mac gets blamed. Now a
headline in the San Diego Union-Tribune
asks, "Isn't It Time for Religion to Examine Its Role in Expanding Waistlines?" According to the story, "Jewish holidays can be summed up with: They've attacked us, we won, let's eat," says Rabbi Leonard Rosenthal of Tifereth Israel Synagogue in San Carlos. "Food is considered to be an integral part of every single celebration. Breaking bread is also big in Christianity."
I'm struggling to drop some pounds, but things could be worse: What if I were a Baptist? According to the story, Baptists are the fattest denomination. Jews, Muslims and Buddhists are the least overweight.
E-pistles
Loose Canon wants to reply to a couple of posts on the message boards.
Beliefnet member fromoz is glad that I expressed horror over the abuses at Abu Ghraib: "I'm moved that Charlotte also seems to have some feelings," fromoz says, adding, "However I cannot fathom how she distinguishes--how she can write about the prison system in Iraq being a horror while she's seemingly able to shut herself off from images of innocent civilians being mutilated and humiliated outside the prison."
Well, with the caveat that war is not about our feelings, I have a question for fromoz: Were you able to shut yourself off from knowledge (there were few images available for the public) of the humiliation and mutilation that went on under Saddam?
It was worse, and it held no hope of anything better.
"As for Charlotte Hays, the 'Onward Christian Soldier' bit suggests that she would like a Muslim Christian War as well," writes another Beliefnet member. "You will notice in this scandal that all of the officers involved have been transferred, discharged or hidden away in the confetti leaving the enlisted personnel to suck up the blame. We want George W. Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld charged with Crimes Against Humanity in the World Court of Law."
Even though I do want to win the war on terror, a "Muslim Christian War"--whatever that might be in this day and age--is the last thing I want. The next to last thing I want is to try American officials in an international court, an institution beloved of the politically correct.
Before condemning the Bush administration for "crimes against humanity," shouldn't we get all the evidence about the crimes against human beings at Abu Ghraib?
The Horror
As we head into the weekend, it's time for me to eat crow. I am embarrassed to have been one of those who believed that the treatment of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib most likely fell far short of torture. The
new information
about what went on in Abu Ghraib in this morning's Washington Post changes everything. It was a chamber of horrors, an embarrassment to a civilized nation that went to Iraq for the right reasons.
The cruelty and sexual perversion are sickening. The videos reportedly include images of guards "forcing detainees to masturbate, and standing over a naked prisoner while holding a shotgun." One hooded prisoner, apparently distraught at being forced to engage in this activity, "repeatedly slams his head into the green metal, leaving streaks of blood before he ultimately collapses at the feet of a cameraman."
It is of Joseph Conrad's novel "The Heart of Darkness," about the brutality of one man in the face of the utter breakdown of civilized norms, that I'm thinking this morning. For the record, I support the war, and like Mort Kondracke,
writing in Roll Call
, hope that the media and others won't lose it for us.
The Wrong Enemy
I can't get over the ugly behavior of the 9/11 families that have chosen to direct their venom at the good guys.
Undoubtedly mistakes were made on 9/11, but the
appalling treatment of former mayor Rudy Giuliani
yesterday by angry 9/11 families was inexplicable. Giuliani was testifying before the increasingly absurd 9/11 commission, which was holding its increasingly absurd hearings in New York yesterday.
One would like to feel sympathy for Sally Regenhard, whose firefighter son perished in the attacks, but it's difficult after the performance she turned in yesterday:
"My son was murdered because of your incompetence!" she shrieked at Giuliani. During the mayor's remarks, Regenhard, who had plenty of company from other angry and vocal survivors and family members, held a sign proclaiming Giuliani's words "Fiction."
Barring some startling revelation, however, it is Ms. Regenhard & Co. who live in a world of fiction. "Blaming George Bush or Bill Clinton at least has some logic. Blaming Rudy Giuliani has none,"
writes Paul Beston
of the American Spectator.
What's behind their strange behavior? Trendy anti-Americanism? Stockholm Syndrome? Or just a wrong-headed expression of grief.
The Devil's (Virtual) Workshop
When Beliefnet editor-in-chief and co-founder Steve Waldman was starting the website, he asked me if I thought the
Sacrament of Penance
could be done on the phone or Internet.
I never figured out if Steve was being serious or just pulling my leg, but I nearly jumped down the phone or over cyberspace at the very idea. Outrageous idea, I sputtered.
Stuffy old me.
An Internet Church launched this month.
Reuters reports
that an outfit called the "Church of Fools" went live last week. Apparently, you can use your computer to interact with a little picture that sings, prays, and shouts, "Hallejulah." As far as I know, the picture does not make the sign of the cross, genuflect, or snore during the homily.
Alas, like the Ship of Fools, the CoF promptly sailed into trouble. Reuters reports that it has "fallen victim to a plague of virtual demons, some of whom have been logging on as Satan and unleashing strings of expletives during the sermons."
Toldja it wouldn't work, and it's not just that I don't want somebody hacking into my sins during virtual confession.
Our Crowd
I don't blame Jewish leaders for being "
rattled
" about Senator Fritz Hollings's
strange editorial
charging that Bush launched the Iraq war to curry favor with Jewish voters. "Bush felt tax cuts would hold his crowd together and spreading democracy in the Mideast to secure Israel would take the Jewish vote from the Democrats," the South Carolina Democrat wrote in a May 6 column in the Charleston Post and Courier. This is just plumb wrong.
Invading Iraq was never going to get "the Jewish vote" for George Bush, and he had valid reasons for going into that patch of hell that are related to the larger war on terror.
As others on Capitol Hill jump onto Hollings bandwagon, I guess we have to ask if the column was anti-Semitic. It was clearly anti-neo-con, which some regard as a synonym for Jewish. Hollings names several leading neo-cons by name, including the columnist Charles Krauthammer, who supported the war.
Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League is
calling upon Hollings to recant
what he has said. That's Foxman's job, but I'm squeamish about calling anybody else anti-Semitic without hard proof; it's a toxic charge. But in the absurdity of the Senator's claim, and at a time when anti-Semitism is on the rise in Europe and elsewhere, the Senator is, at the very least, skirting pretty close to the line.
By the way, I want to recommend a book on the rise of anti-Semitism. It's hard to get but well worth it if you can: "
The Great Hatred
," by Maurice Samuels. One of the hallmarks of anti-Semitism, as I recall it from this seminal book, is that it attributes unrealistic powers to Jews.
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