[✔️] July 28, 2022 - Daily Global Warming News Digest

Richard Pauli Richard at CredoandScreed.com
Thu Jul 28 08:45:11 EDT 2022


/*July 28, 2022*/

/[  Big change, quick too.  Wonder why? ] /
*Manchin, in a Reversal, Agrees to Climate and Tax Package*
The West Virginia Democrat, a holdout on his party’s domestic agenda, 
said the package would reduce inflation, a concern he had cited in 
rejecting it just weeks ago.
By Emily Cochrane
July 27, 2022,
WASHINGTON — Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia, 
announced on Wednesday that he had struck a deal with Democratic leaders 
on a domestic spending package that includes climate and energy programs 
and tax increases, less than two weeks after abruptly upending hopes for 
such a deal this summer.

In a statement, Mr. Manchin, who had been his party’s main holdout on an 
expansive social policy, climate and tax package, confirmed his support 
for the measure in a statement that did not provide detail on its 
precise elements. But in the statement, he signaled support for climate 
and energy programs, as well as some tax provisions, all of which he had 
previously suggested he could not support because of concerns about 
inflation.

It was not clear what had changed his mind about the plan, which only 
weeks ago he had said he could not back until he saw more economic data 
next month.
“Rather than risking more inflation with trillions in new spending, this 
bill will cut the inflation taxes Americans are paying, lower the cost 
of health insurance and prescription drugs, and ensure our country 
invests in the energy security and climate change solutions we need to 
remain a global superpower through innovation rather than elimination,” 
Mr. Manchin said in a statement.

Mr. Manchin pointedly christened the bill the Inflation Reduction Act of 
2022, making a clear distinction between it and the ambitious 
multitrillion-dollar domestic policy plan President Biden proposed and 
Democrats in Congress spent most of last year toiling to pass.

“Build Back Better is dead, and instead we have the opportunity to make 
our country stronger by bringing Americans together,” Mr. Manchin said. 
“I will do everything I can to usher in a new era of compromise and 
common sense that will make America more energy secure, financially 
sound and a more united country for this generation and the next.”

Democrats had resigned themselves to passing a narrow package aimed at 
lowering the cost of prescription drugs and extending expanded 
Affordable Care Act subsidies before leaving for the August recess, 
after Mr. Manchin privately told party leaders this month that he would 
not support any climate or tax proposals in the short term.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/27/us/politics/manchin-climate-tax-bill.html



/[  Scientific American ]/
*‘Zoe’ Becomes the World’s First Named Heat Wave*
Blistering temperatures ranked as a Category 3—the most severe tier—in 
Seville, Spain’s new heat wave system
By Chelsea Harvey, E&E News on July 26, 2022
CLIMATEWIRE | The world’s first named heat wave hit Seville, Spain, this 
week, pushing temperatures past 110 degrees Fahrenheit and earning the 
most severe tier in the city’s new heat wave ranking system.

Heat wave “Zoe” has brought scorching temperatures to the southern part 
of the country for the last few days, particularly the region of 
Andalusia where Seville is located. Even in the evenings, the Spanish 
meteorological service recorded temperatures that hovered in the mid-80s 
in some areas — an extra stress on the human body, which relies on 
cooler nights to recover from high daytime heat.

Zoe is the first named heat wave to hit Seville since it officially 
launched a new pilot program last month for naming and ranking heat 
waves, similar to hurricanes (Climatewire, June 22). Only the most 
severe heat waves get names, designated this year in reverse 
alphabetical order. After Zoe, comes Yago, Xenia, Wenceslao and Vega.
The worst of the heat is expected to begin tapering off today. But it 
has posed a significant risk to human health while it’s lasted, 
according to proMETEO Sevilla, Seville’s new heat wave ranking system.

The program is a collaboration between the city of Seville and the 
Atlantic Council’s Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience 
Center (Arsht-Rock), with other partners including the Spanish Office 
for Climate Change and several Spanish universities and research 
institutes. It takes a three-tiered approach to categorizing heat waves 
in Seville, with Category 1 as the lowest ranking and Category 3 as the 
most severe.

The system has specific criteria for each category, involving not only 
daytime temperatures, but also nighttime lows, humidity and the heat’s 
expected effects on human health. Each tier triggers a set of emergency 
response services, like issuing weather alerts, opening cooling centers 
and dispatching community health teams to check on vulnerable populations.

Spain has been grappling with extreme temperatures for much of the 
summer already. High heat broke local records around the country last 
month, and the first two weeks of June were the hottest on record in the 
country, according to the Spanish meteorological service.

Across the continent, this year was Europe’s second hottest June on 
record, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.
Extreme heat returned again earlier this month. Cities across Spain 
broke monthly temperature records and wildfires sprang up on the landscape.

Record-breaking temperatures also roasted other parts of Western Europe, 
where heat waves are intensifying as much as four times faster than they 
are elsewhere in the midlatitudes (Climatewire, July 18). Temperatures 
in the United Kingdom skyrocketed above 104 degrees, breaking the 
country’s all-time temperature record multiple times in a single day 
(Climatewire, July 20).

Climate change is causing heat waves to become more frequent, more 
intense and longer-lasting all over the world, increasing the risks to 
human health. Seville’s new naming and ranking system is intended to 
heighten public awareness about the dangers of extreme heat.
It’s currently the only system with a naming component. But other cities 
are following suit with similar ranking programs. Athens, Greece, 
recently announced a new system for categorizing heat waves, while 
several cities across the United States are launching similar pilot 
programs of their own, including Los Angeles, Miami, Milwaukee and 
Kansas City, Mo.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/zoe-becomes-the-worlds-first-named-heat-wave/



/[ From Aljazeera asks some important questions - one answer is maybe  ]/
*Will extreme weather spur world leaders to act on climate change?*
  June 26, 2022
It’s been a long and painful summer for much of the world. Blistering 
heatwaves in Europe, Asia and the Americas have left thousands dead, 
buckled roads and runways and fueled wildfires and floods across the globe.
  - - video - https://youtu.be/yBlYPcWdkfI
Scientists overwhelmingly attribute the widespread heatwave to climate 
change. They warn that rising global emissions from fossil fuels will 
continue to warm the planet and spur even more extreme weather events.

But many countries and populations continue to be surprised and 
unprepared for what they face. In wealthier nations such as the U.S. and 
in Europe, this is in part because politicians are worried about the 
fallout of limiting oil and gas development amid a global energy crisis 
and high fuel prices.

It’s been worse for poorer nations that have borne the brunt of climate 
change for years. They need to invest in technology and resilient 
infrastructure to adapt to an increase in floods, heat waves and 
cyclones. But funding long pledged by richer countries has not 
materialised. Without it, some 62 million South Asians alone are 
expected to be displaced by climate change in the next three decades, 
according to one report.

In the coming years, leaders face tough choices. Limiting emissions will 
be costly politically, but climate change experts say doing nothing will 
cause even more suffering. Speaking this month, United Nations Secretary 
General Antonio Guterres warned that “half of humanity” is now in the 
“danger zone” when it comes to droughts, extreme storms, floods and 
wildfires. He added that, “No nation is immune. Yet we continue to feed 
our fossil fuel addiction. We have a choice. Collective action or 
collective suicide. It is in our hands.

In this episode of The Stream we ask, Will extreme weather spur world 
leaders to act on climate change? Join the conversation.
In this episode of The Stream, - https://youtu.be/yBlYPcWdkfI -- we are 
joined by:

    Kendra Pierre-Louis, @KendraWrites
    Senior Climate Reporter, How to Save a Planet (A Gimlet & Spotify
    podcast)
    Nausheen Anwar, @nha3383
    Professor of City and Regional Planning, Institute of Business
    Administration (IBA)
    Dr. Mariam Zachariah, @ZachariahMariam
    RA, Grantham Institute- Climate Change and the Environment of
    Imperial College

https://www.aljazeera.com/program/the-stream/2022/7/26/will-extreme-weather-spur-world-leaders-to-act-on-climate-change


/[ Meanwhile, Harvard Business Review makes a statement ]/
*We Can’t Fight Climate Change Without Fighting for Gender Equity*
by Jamie L. Gloor, Eugenia Bajet Mestre, Corinne Post, and Winfried Ruigrok
July 26, 2022
Summary.

    Gender equity and environmental sustainability may seem like
    unrelated issues, but research shows that they are in fact closely
    intertwined. Women and other underserved groups are
    disproportionately impacted by the global climate crisis, but they
    are also uniquely positioned to lead the fight for sustainability.
    In this piece, the authors offer six strategies to help business and
    political leaders empower women and address environmental challenges
    through an intersectional approach to sustainability. Ultimately,
    they argue that to tackle climate change (as well as the myriad
    other sustainability challenges that face today’s organizations),
    leaders must acknowledge the complexity and interconnectedness of
    these issues — and work to develop integrated solutions that will
    improve them all.

https://hbr.org/2022/07/we-cant-fight-climate-change-without-fighting-for-gender-equity



/[ Kansas Cattle rotting in the ground ]/
*Exclusive: Thousands of U.S. cattle buried, dumped at Kansas landfill*
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO, July 26 (Reuters) - Top U.S. cattle feeding companies sent 
1,000-pound carcasses to a Kansas landfill, where they were flattened by 
loader machines and mixed with trash, after a June heatwave killed 
thousands of cows, documents seen by Reuters show.

Other cattle were buried in unlined graves, a feeding company said.

Neither is a typical method for disposing of bodies. But so many cows 
died in the unusual heat and humidity that facilities that normally 
convert carcasses into pet food and fertilizer products were 
overwhelmed, prompting the state government and cattle feeders to take 
emergency measures. read more
The mass deaths and subsequent scramble to deal with decaying bodies 
sparked a push for changes in the meat industry in Kansas, the 
third-largest U.S. cattle state.

Kansas is forecast to see more high temperatures that can stress and 
potentially kill cattle this summer, adding to the myriad problems 
caused by increasingly extreme weather linked to climate change.

Although state officials authorized companies to dispose of carcasses at 
the Seward County Landfill in Liberal, Kansas, they are now considering 
alternatives to decrease the risks for foul smells and other problems if 
more deaths occur, the landfill's director said...
Seward County Landfill Director Brock Theiner estimated the dump alone 
took in roughly 1,850 to 2,000 dead cattle.

*FLATTENED CATTLE, PUTRID SMELL*
Landfill workers used loading equipment with steel wheels to flatten the 
cattle to about eight inches and mixed the bodies with garbage, a 
process that took nearly three weeks, Theiner said.

"After you run them over they'll go flat, but they're gonna sponge back 
up," Theiner said. "You get a mass of 'em and you get on it, and it's 
like running a piece of equipment on top of a water bed. It moves."

Kansas temporarily suspended requirements that carcasses be covered by 
at least six inches (15.24 cm) of dirt or trash each day due to the 
unexpected deaths, Theiner said. The carcasses had a putrid smell up 
close, he added.

"Once you got in it, whew!" he said. "I have a couple operators that 
have iron guts."

Landfills are the last resort for carcasses because of complications 
with smells, animals digging in trash, and difficulties covering the 
bodies immediately, Theiner said. Kansas officials are exploring whether 
more cattle could be composted at feedlots instead, he said.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment did not respond to 
questions.

Cactus Feeders, which says it handles 4% of U.S. fed cattle, sent 
carcasses to the dump, as did Cobalt Cattle, Meade County Feeders and 
Irsik & Doll's Sunbelt Feed Yard, department records show. The 
companies, which fatten cows on grain before slaughter, had no comment.

Grant County Feeders in Ulysses, Kansas, shipped carcasses to the 
landfill because rendering plants were full, said Tom McDonald, an 
executive with owner Five Rivers Cattle Feeding - the world's largest 
such company which counts meatpacker JBS SA (JBSS3.SA) among its customers.

Cows that die of heat stress are not processed into meat for human 
consumption but can normally be converted into animal food, fertilizer 
and other products.

Moving forward, Five Rivers will feed cattle less grain, a high-energy 
ingredient, and more hay and silage when temperatures rise to minimize 
their internal heat, McDonald said. The company is not considering other 
steps like adding shade, he said, because the mass deaths were rare.

Cattle Empire, a feedyard in Satanta, Kansas that supplies Tyson Foods 
(TSN.N), put carcasses in landfills and buried others in unlined pits 
with the mineral lime to break down the bodies faster, veterinarian Tera 
Barnhardt said.

Burying cattle in unlined pits is one of the riskiest disposal methods 
because waste can seep into groundwater, said Hannah Connor, senior 
attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity.

Kansas allows unlined burials near Cattle Empire because the groundwater 
is deep down, Barnhardt said.

All told, at least 617 cattle were buried by Cattle Empire, Friona 
Industries, NextGen Cattle and Clark County Feeders, state documents show.

Hot, humid air gave the animals the feeling they were suffocating, 
Barnhardt said.

For cattle that survived, some are eating in unusual patterns that can 
diminish their ability to gain weight, veterinarians said.

"Cattle are somewhat still struggling," Barnhardt said. "We really 
compromised them."
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/exclusive-thousands-us-cattle-buried-dumped-kansas-landfill-after-deadly-2022-07-26/



/[ one valid criticism of mass media - and please hold the polar bears ]/
*Maybe don’t illustrate your stories about lethally hot weather with fun 
beach pics*
New research finds the visuals of heat-wave news coverage are more 
likely to put a positive spin on extreme heat than the articles themselves.
By SARAH SCIRE July 26, 2022
As heat waves become more common, more intense, and more lethal, the 
contrast between news articles that spell out the impact of extreme heat 
and their accompanying “fun in the sun” photos becomes more jarring.

In a newly released pre-print, researchers looked at how newsrooms were 
visually representing climate change and extreme heat by analyzing 
roughly 250 pieces of online news coverage about the 2019 heat waves in 
France, Germany, the Netherlands, and U.K. (That’s “canicule,” 
“hitzewelle,” “hittegolf,” and “heat wave,” respectively.)

For the research, both the image and text were evaluated for positive, 
negative, or mixed valence. A negative valence presented the heat wave 
as worrying, risky, dangerous, and/or inconvenient, while a positive 
valence invoked concepts like vacation, leisure, and relaxation. In the 
images, researchers also looked for themes. Was the white-hot sun 
beating down? Did the photo show cracked earth? Were humans in frame and 
were they having a good time?...
- -
Across all four countries, 31% of the accompanying images were what the 
authors deemed “positively valenced” — in short, they showed people 
having fun in the sun. Although not the majority in any country, the 
single most common type of image in each country was photographs showing 
people enjoying themselves near or in water.
Images with people swimming, sunbathing, or splashing around accounted 
for 33% of U.K. coverage, 27% in the Netherlands, 26% in France and 22% 
in Germany. (Some were iconic enough to jump borders; photos of people 
in fountains in front of the Eiffel Tower popped up in all four 
countries.) Here’s a bar graph the researchers made using a “typical 
image” from each country’s dataset:..

.There was a stark contrast between texts (less than 1% of the actual 
articles positive) and images (again, nearly one-third were positive) in 
the news coverage. Saffron O’Neill, the paper’s first author and an 
associate professor of geography at the University of Exeter, said that 
once she started noticing the “fun in the sun” type photos, “it’s hard 
not to see them every time a heat wave is forecast.”
- -
The paper included some examples — and the one accompanying this piece 
probably counts, too:..

https://www.niemanlab.org/images/Screen-Shot-2022-07-22-at-4.29.11-PM-700x537.png
So what can journalists do? Is there something especially difficult 
about finding photos for stories about heat waves?

“I don’t think there’s anything inherently tricky about heat waves that 
makes them difficult to visualize — compared to, say, visualizing an 
abstract concept like ‘climate change,'” O’Neill said. “I think we only 
need to look at other places in the world to see how we could visualize 
extreme heat differently. For example, the Indian-Pakistan subcontinent 
heat wave earlier in 2022 produced a wealth of very different types of 
heat wave image to the ‘fun in the sun’ images which are so dominant in 
Europe and North America.”

So what can journalists do? Is there something especially difficult 
about finding photos for stories about heat waves?

“I don’t think there’s anything inherently tricky about heat waves that 
makes them difficult to visualize — compared to, say, visualizing an 
abstract concept like ‘climate change,'” O’Neill said. “I think we only 
need to look at other places in the world to see how we could visualize 
extreme heat differently. For example, the Indian-Pakistan subcontinent 
heat wave earlier in 2022 produced a wealth of very different types of 
heat wave image to the ‘fun in the sun’ images which are so dominant in 
Europe and North America.”

Among the European outlets studied for the paper, one newsroom was 
singled out for special praise.
“Climate solutions imagery was absent throughout almost the entire 
dataset, except for one outlet — the Netherlands local and regional news 
organization Algemeen Dagblad (AD),” the authors wrote. AD avoided some 
of the worst heat wave tropes and used visuals with themes that the 
researchers ended up categorizing as “health and wellbeing” and “other” 
far more than other outlets. (Some of the ones included in the study 
pictured elderly people eating ice cream inside of a care home, a young 
family dealing with the heat at home, an air-conditioned town hall made 
available for vulnerable locals, and a green space project designed to 
reduce the urban heat island effect.)

“The AD photographs effectively brought climate change, and heat 
extremes, closer to home; in ways which opened up the visual discourse 
to concerns of justice and equity,” the authors wrote. “It may be that 
as a local and regional outlet, AD focused on local stories of how 
people were coping with the heat, and commissioned freelance 
photographers for specific images to accompany these stories.”

For more discussions about visualizing climate change, you may want to 
check out this Reading the Pictures conversation about an effective 
series or browse Climate Visuals. You can read the full paper here.
https://www.niemanlab.org/2022/07/maybe-dont-illustrate-your-stories-about-lethally-hot-weather-with-fun-beach-pics/ 




/[ activism ] /
*End Fossil Occupy*
“Why we’re stepping up from strikes. Youth movement: radical and ready 
to occupy!”
Schools and universities all over the world are planning to take school 
strikes one step further and occupy our campuses to demand the end of 
the fossil economy.Taking a lesson from student activists in the 1960s, 
the climate justice movement’s youth will shut down business as usual. 
Not because we don’t like learning, but because what we’ve learned 
already makes it clear that, without a dramatic break from this system, 
we cannot ensure a liveable planet for our presents and futures.

Why occupy? Because we’ve marched. We’ve launched petitions. We’ve 
written open letters. We’ve had meetings with governments, boards and 
commissions. We’ve striked. We’ve filled squares, streets and avenues 
with thousands and , all together, millions of people in every single 
continent of this Earth. We’ve screamed with all our lungs. Some of us 
have even participated in blockades, sit-ins, and die-ins. And just as 
it seemed the seed for deep and radical social transformation was taking 
root in the midst of the massive 2019 climate mobilizations, COVID-19 
came, and our momentum drastically decreased. What didn’t decrease, 
however, was the greenhouse gas emissions, the exploitation of the 
global south and the unimaginable profit produced by the fossil fuel 
industry.

It’s no secret that our enemy, the fossil fuel industry, rules the 
world. And it is far from falling; in fact, it is stronger than ever. 
Proof is a recent investigation by The Guardian that revealed to the 
world that the fossil fuel empire has 195 “carbon bomb” projects that 
threaten our hope for a global warming of up to 1.º5C, the safe barrier. 
That’s right, despite our politicians and institutions’ indeed hilarious 
show at COP26 in 2021, the biggest oil companies are on track to spend 
103 million dollars on planetary destruction projects every day for the 
rest of the decade. What’s more, the climate crisis is not a fair 
crisis. The latest IPCC reports show that the ones who are most affected 
by climate change are often the ones who have done the least in causing 
it in the first place. As young people born right at the edge of the 
biggest catastrophe in human history, it is our historic responsibility 
to rise up to stop it.

So, what do we do? Since giving in to defeatism will never be an option 
for us, we must now organize at a massive scale. We need to create a new 
peak of mobilization, similar and even bigger than 2019. If we were 
waiting for a sign, this is it. With temperatures climbing faster and 
faster, we have never been  so certain that mobilizing bigger than ever 
is not only possible: it is existentially necessary

We cannot repeat previous mistakes. We need to be more disruptive than 
ever to business as usual, as that’s our only chance for survival. The 
youth’s innovation and creativity, combined with a fierce appetite for 
disruption and liberation, has the potential to change the world. As a 
global generation of students, we need to disrupt business as usual, and 
start with the spaces where we have the power to mobilize and organize – 
our schools and universities. Sometimes they are directly implied in the 
destruction business, as is the case of the many Universities that 
invest in the fossil fuel industry such as Oxford, Stanford, Princeton, 
Yale, McGill, Northwestern, MIT, etc. In other cases, they are 
indirectly linked to it. They train us for a world which has no future, 
a world of fossil capitalism. They want us to sit in school and learn as 
if everything was fine. But the world we are learning for – the world 
which created the climate crisis – has no future. The big question of 
our generation “How do we create a world without climate catastrophe?” 
will not be answered by sitting in school.

The bottom line is: we can’t keep pretending everything is alright, 
studying as if the planet wasn’t on fire. As other students did before 
us – from the students of May of ‘68 in France to the Arab spring, from  
the Chilean Penguin Revolution and Primavera Secundarista in Brazil to 
Occupy Wall Street, we will stop our business-as-usual lives to show our 
governments and society that we need to change everything, now. From 
Lisbon to California, from Perú to Germany and from Madrid to the Ivory 
Coast, we call on young people to get together and  organize an 
international revolutionary generation that can change the system.

Between September and December 2022, we will occupy hundreds of schools 
and universities worldwide to end the fossil economy at international 
level under the callout to action “End Fossil: Occupy!”. We invite 
anyone and everyone to join us and organize occupations in their school 
or universities, as long as they follow our 3 principles: youth-led 
occupation, climate justice framework, and occupy until we win. We will 
revive the youth movement, create new alliances, radicalize, engage the 
whole of society to support and occupy, & envision the world we want – 
where life and not profit is at the center – through this sparking 
international action moment. We will rise up in justice and liberation 
to crush the fossil fuel industry. We shall have no doubt: the youth are 
a revolutionary subject. We will turn the tide, change history, and 
smash the fossil economy.

We are here. We are radical. We are ready to occupy.
- -
What ?
Between September and December 2022, the climate justice movement youth 
is going to occupy hundreds of schools and universities all over the world.
We will not give in until we achieve the end of fossil fuels era.

Our Demand: End Fossil…!
Our goal is to change the system by ending the fossil economy at an 
international level. Depending on the local context, the demands can 
vary between end fossil extraction, fossil finance, fossil funding, 
fossil infrastructures or others.

Why ?
The youth movement has showed its strength over the last few years, but 
emissions keep increasing as time to act shortens. The climate justice 
movement has the power to change the world, and the youth movement has 
the power to end fossil now.

The fossil fuel industry is one of the most important pillars of the 
system. If we dismantle it, we can lead the way to stop climate change 
and ensure a just transition for all peoples.

We believe each group of society should mobilize where it can to build a 
mass climate justice movement that will win. Thus, we will use the 
spaces we have – schoolsand universities – to organize the change of the 
course of history. We will use these occupations to fight for our 
presents and futures, which are only possible through demanding the 
immediate end of fossil fuels.

To occupy is to disrupt normality, and to disrupt is to shout loud and 
clear to the rest of society that our house is on fire. We will occupy 
to demand the end of fossil fuels. We will disrupt schools and 
universities because we can no longer pretend normality is fine: our 
duty as youth is to fight. We will occupy to prove that another world is 
possible, collectively showing and envisioning the just society we want 
to create: free of oppressions, and where the life is at the center, not 
profit..

We take our inspiration from innumerous historical examples, from the 
Penguin Revolution in Chile in 2006 and the Primavera Secundarista in 
Brazil in 2016, to the huge mobilizations following May 68 all over the 
world and many others that showed us that students have the power to 
deeply change society. We aim at nothing less: we start as students, but 
we want all society to take action for climate justice.

Who ?
Anyone, from any part of the world, who wants to organize local school 
occupations on the end of this year is very welcome to do so, as long as 
they agree to participate to achieve our core demand, and follow our 3 
principles.

https://endfossil.com/




/[The news archive - looking back]/

/*July 28, 2022*/

July 28, 2012: Physicist Richard Muller, long known for accusing climate 
scientists of data manipulation, writes an opinion piece for the New 
York Times acknowledging that he cannot disprove the monumental evidence 
pointing to human activity as the main driver of climate change. Days 
later, in an interview with Betsy Rosenberg, Muller continues to smear 
acclaimed climate scientist Michael E. Mann.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/30/opinion/the-conversion-of-a-climate-change-skeptic.html?pagewanted=all

http://www.bradblog.com/?p=9453


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