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What do Americans think of their allies?

looking at some of the comments in the US election thread and some general trends in the states.. seems like nearly half think universal health care and more taxes is socialism, and socialism is bad.

what do these Americans who think things through this way view lovely Scandinavia, a country with nice blondes, high HDI index, low corruption, lots of universal health care and other state involvement at the cost of high taxes, same for Japan, Korea, to a lesser extent, most of Europe.. are they Soviet Union bad too? ๐Ÿ™‚

how about Singapore, ruled by the People’s Action Party that was rooted in communism and still maintains heavy state control in the economy.

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By: chuck1981 - 3rd December 2008 at 03:39

Sorry GA, I’ll leave my standup routine at the door ๐Ÿ™‚

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By: Grey Area - 2nd December 2008 at 23:44

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Gentlefolk,

If you really must rant, please do your best to keep it at least vaguely on-topic. Or, failing that, at least make it entertaining.

Thank you

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By: swerve - 2nd December 2008 at 12:30

BTW, as an American, It is funny to hear of the “American Rebellion” ๐Ÿ˜€ , brothers divded by a common language, something like that I guess ๐Ÿ™‚

Most people here find the phrase”American Revolution” very odd, as that summons up thoughts of the overthrow of a domestic government, as in France, Russia, or China, & it is considered inappropriate for the US war of independence (the commonest term). I think the majority wouldn’t understand which war was referred to by it.

As far as I know, flourishing trade was considered by both countries as a very good reason for not fighting each other.

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By: chuck1981 - 2nd December 2008 at 02:03

“Some” time? How about >100 years? 30 years after the end of the American Rebellion, the UK & USA were at war. A little over 30 years later, American politicians were openly advocating war (“Fifty-four Forty or Fight!”), & the RN was preparing to re-commission ships from reserve. 15 years after that, they had armed stand-offs. A few years later, they were moving ships & troops around in threatening ways yet again.

I know, I should have used a better term to specify the timescale. But, after those 100 years and scuffles, especially after the War of 1812, what happened?

More and more trade becoming an ever important concern? I know over the years there have been scuffles, but it seems as if they were “put down quietly” if you know what I mean.

BTW, as an American, It is funny to hear of the “American Rebellion” ๐Ÿ˜€ , brothers divded by a common language, something like that I guess ๐Ÿ™‚

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By: FalkeEins - 1st December 2008 at 14:36

I am no pinko, I’d like to see the scum and toerags offed at once, I don’t believe in long jail terms for mass murderers and child killers/molesters
The above makes me sound right wing nazi Daily Mail. I hold no political direction at all.

..now you’re making some of our friends on this thread sound like sensible human beings…

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By: swerve - 1st December 2008 at 13:20

BTW, Could someone point me towards a good book that really truly explains why GB and the US became such ” buddy buddies” so soon after the revolution?

PS: I know it took “some” time, but holy crapola, this relationship, to me, cemented overnight.

“Some” time? How about >100 years? 30 years after the end of the American Rebellion, the UK & USA were at war. A little over 30 years later, American politicians were openly advocating war (“Fifty-four Forty or Fight!”), & the RN was preparing to re-commission ships from reserve. 15 years after that, they had armed stand-offs. A few years later, they were moving ships & troops around in threatening ways yet again.

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By: Proctor VH-AHY - 25th November 2008 at 21:28

Hasn’t the thinking world renamed the USA to the USSA (ie to the United Socialist States of America) in view of the mamoth purchase of of equity by the USSA government into formally completely private banks. I think it used to be called nationalisation of banks.

The USSA has a system that has just snapped and we have yet to see the new model. I don’t think a system based on credit works any more.

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By: old shape - 25th November 2008 at 00:19

Well, if you’re going to have a “General Discussion” forum (not something I’ve contributed to before, IIRC) then perhaps O/T “thread creep” is not strictly applicable… But I think it’s finished creeping now in any case.

Aye.
Discussions wander naturally. If we get into a topic that was originally related, can’t be expected to start a newun. Can we?

Anyway.
On topic.
Dewerring the Conflict, the Falklands that is (See note 1 for thread creep) a very close friend of mine in 2 Para shot and killed an American mercenary on the Argentinian side. My friend is not prone to telling tall tales about any subject, ne’er mind one so graphic. The detail of how his troop knew they were Americans is not for here. Our allies are not always 100% I suppose I’m saying. I wonder if the same mentallity of mecenary would now join the Afghans or the Iraqis?
There were other US Mercenaries that were captured too, but I don’t know what happened to them.

(Note 1) Sorry, can’t call it a War because if Mrs T called it a War, the policy of paying the soldiers widows a War Pension would enact, and that’s less than what they got/get.

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By: hpsauce - 24th November 2008 at 20:53

Well, if you’re going to have a “General Discussion” forum (not something I’ve contributed to before, IIRC) then perhaps O/T “thread creep” is not strictly applicable… But I think it’s finished creeping now in any case.

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By: Grey Area - 24th November 2008 at 19:23

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A rather severe case of thread creep here, chaps!

Back on topic, please.

Thanks

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By: old shape - 24th November 2008 at 17:41

Why would anyone go to the considerable trouble, risk and so on, of doing this, when as you say a few lines further on,
– ? Yes, I already knew how easily obtainable guns were for criminals โ€“ thatโ€™s precisely my point! Our growing mountain of anti-gun legislation does NOTHING โ€“ nada, zilch โ€“ to stop criminals from having whatever guns they want. All these laws simply disarm the public, preventing them from defence of self and property if they are threatened. The number of crimes committed with guns found to have been stolen from licenced gun-owners has always been only a very small percentage of the total.

Yes, and No. Pre-1967 you bought a Shotgun Cert at the Post Office, then went to the gun dealer and bought as many shotguns as you wanted. Only cheapskate robbers carried sawn-offs though: it was actually the case (Iโ€™ll provide the figures if you want) that handguns were always the armed robberโ€™s weapon of choice, because theyโ€™re far more compact & concealable. The fact that handguns were controlled, and shotguns were not, simply made no difference. With shotguns being more or less freely available, was there a massive social problem with gun violence? No โ€“ and from your remarks you clearly remember the period โ€“ there was not. Shotguns became controlled after โ€™67 because Roy Jenkins, Home Sec at the time, saw a sneaky opportunity to do so after some bad guys (you might recall this) shot & killed three London coppers. Did these toerags use shotguns? No โ€“ they had criminally-obtained handguns, never licencedโ€ฆ There were calls to re-introduce the death penalty, to which Jenkins was opposed, so to make it seem he was doing something tough (and as a distraction) he severely restricted shotguns. There you go.
Weโ€™re not going to agree on this, clearly. Iโ€™m glad to hear you hit that toerag with a rake. You know what would happen now, donโ€™t you โ€“ the cops would immediately charge you with assault, the toerag would probably get off with a slap-on-wrist, and might sue you into the bargain.

I am tending to agree with you on most points. Your vast knowledge of the law and the consequences of having/not a more liberal approach to ownership will outweigh my experienced distrust of the toerag society and those which try and administer it.
As an aside, I’ve just got some Spam Emails for replica HandGuns!

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By: hpsauce - 24th November 2008 at 10:32

I’m not certain about you having the guns at home, simply because of the possibility of a toerag stealing it..

Why would anyone go to the considerable trouble, risk and so on, of doing this, when as you say a few lines further on,

And by the way, Guns are really easy to buy on the street, ยฃ100 would get you a decent hand arm.

– ? Yes, I already knew how easily obtainable guns were for criminals โ€“ thatโ€™s precisely my point! Our growing mountain of anti-gun legislation does NOTHING โ€“ nada, zilch โ€“ to stop criminals from having whatever guns they want. All these laws simply disarm the public, preventing them from defence of self and property if they are threatened. The number of crimes committed with guns found to have been stolen from licenced gun-owners has always been only a very small percentage of the total.

Do you remember when you could buy a 12-Bore from the catalogues such as Littlewoods?โ€ฆ..But after that period, a lot of armed robbers used them as the weapon of choice.

Yes, and No. Pre-1967 you bought a Shotgun Cert at the Post Office, then went to the gun dealer and bought as many shotguns as you wanted. Only cheapskate robbers carried sawn-offs though: it was actually the case (Iโ€™ll provide the figures if you want) that handguns were always the armed robberโ€™s weapon of choice, because theyโ€™re far more compact & concealable. The fact that handguns were controlled, and shotguns were not, simply made no difference. With shotguns being more or less freely available, was there a massive social problem with gun violence? No โ€“ and from your remarks you clearly remember the period โ€“ there was not. Shotguns became controlled after โ€™67 because Roy Jenkins, Home Sec at the time, saw a sneaky opportunity to do so after some bad guys (you might recall this) shot & killed three London coppers. Did these toerags use shotguns? No โ€“ they had criminally-obtained handguns, never licencedโ€ฆ There were calls to re-introduce the death penalty, to which Jenkins was opposed, so to make it seem he was doing something tough (and as a distraction) he severely restricted shotguns. There you go.
Weโ€™re not going to agree on this, clearly. Iโ€™m glad to hear you hit that toerag with a rake. You know what would happen now, donโ€™t you โ€“ the cops would immediately charge you with assault, the toerag would probably get off with a slap-on-wrist, and might sue you into the bargain.

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By: old shape - 23rd November 2008 at 23:23

My oh my.
You clearly want your gun back. You are a member of a Gun club I presume, it’s members are all keen shooters and responsible owners therefore. This is good and is how it should be. I’m not certain about you having the guns at home, simply because of the possibility of a toerag stealing it, no matter how strong the cabinet is. I hit a burglar with the business end of a Garden Rake, in the days when the Police thanked me for it. If I had a gun, he would be dead. He would only deserve to be dead if he was a total toerag murderer / rapist….but I couldn’t possibly know that at that time. If he had a gun, I would be dead. He would be more likely to have a gun, being a toerag.
And by the way, Guns are really easy to buy on the street, ยฃ100 would get you a decent hand arm. The bullets would cost you a lot more though, about ยฃ400 for 25.
Do you remember when you could buy a 12-Bore from the catalogues such as Littlewoods? I do, my brother had 2. He also had an old 16 bore, and we often went shooting for Rabbits, Pigeons and other vermin. I’ve been there, I know how enjoyable shooting is as a hobby. But after that period, a lot of armed robbers used them as the weapon of choice.

As for proving facts on literacy, this is impossible. The only measure is exam results, and the exams are softer now than my day and your day. Different stuff is measured, appalling grammar and spelling is now OK if the context is correct etc. The School leavers and Post Grads that come to our place are the best of the bunch and are full of exam results but are thick as two short planks when it comes to common sense, adapting to free thinking (Outside the box) and other attributes I look for.

As for my “Police state” comments, yes I am very serious, but others will beat me to it anyway. And I did not say in any way shape or form an execution by Armed Police. Catch the Toerags, fair trial, kill the guilty with some sport. The killers of Baby P should be killed in public by the Arch Bish of Canterbury, and he’d get an upgrade for it too.

Perhaps after about 10 years of total freedom on gun ownership the nation would settle down. If we all had a firearm, the initial 5 or 6 years or more would see a massive increase in deaths from them. Nobody will take the gamble for those years, especially as it is more than Parliament and therefore it does not exist in UK long term planning.

At the end of the day, you and your fellow pukka gun enthusiasts should be allowed to proceed with your hobby. The proletariat should not be allowed to freely buy them.

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By: hpsauce - 23rd November 2008 at 10:34

I donโ€™t think weโ€™re getting anywhere, but I feel the need to correct some misapprehensions โ€“ and without wishing to be rude, you do tend to make sweeping statements! I know something about the history of firearms legislation (a subject close to my heart, as a keen shooter) and regard it as an essential study for anyone interested in the decline of liberty in this country.

No way can you compare your grandfathers day to today. (a) We had the death penalty, and yes it was a deterrant (b) there was a common sense of decency and respect within society. Also, most men had seen their pals blown to pieces by a war and so knew the consequences of a bullet to a body.

I didnโ€™t compare the times so much as suggest that people, on the whole, are no better or worse now than they were then. I donโ€™t see how they could be: human society would never have been able to function at all had the great majority of people not been fundamentally decent and willing to co-operate with one another. If you have any evidence of social regression, Iโ€™d be interested to learn about your sources. Similarly, what is your evidence for suggesting that the death penalty was a deterrent? Even when execution took the most disgusting medieval forms, or one could be transported for minor theft, it never stopped people from murdering one another or stealingโ€ฆ And Iโ€™m talking about pre-WW1 Britain BTW: the only โ€œgun controlโ€ laws here were puny and had hardly any effect, but during WW1 temporary controls on gun ownership were imposed (logicโ€ฆ? weird!) then in 1920 the first Firearms Act was passed, not because of armed crime, which was very rare, but because the Establishment thought all those chaps returning from the Trenches might emulate the Bolsheviks โ€“ i.e official paranoia + distrust of ordinary people.

You seem to believe that todays society is no better or worse than those of yesteryear. This implies that educational standards and parenting responsibility are on a par, which they certainly are not. They are both far lower.

Iโ€™ve pointed to the far lower incidence of armed crime pre-1920 but I donโ€™t delude myself that it was a Golden Age, and neither should you: ordinary life was often rough & tough, and like now there were plenty of city areas where it was unwise to venture at night โ€“ unless you had a revolver in your pocket, which a great many people did. Yet gun crime was remarkably scarce, far less common proportionally than it is now. I just donโ€™t know where you get your convictions from to do with education, parenting etc โ€“ literacy rates are certainly higher now, and despite tabloid headlines about Baby P etc, I doubt extremely that parenting has declined. If you have stats that say otherwise of course, Iโ€™d be interested.

Why, even HP Sauce is carp [sic] now compared to the real stuff of the 60’s!

A very fishy claimโ€ฆ I wouldnโ€™t know, hate the stuff, probably havenโ€™t consumed any since the โ€˜60s!

I’m also sure that the majority of people are decent upright and non-threatening…….but they are not the ones buying guns.

Precisely my point. The toerags have always been free to obtain and use whatever guns they wanted, since laws only affect the law-abiding, and these days guns are being used with hugely greater frequency in crime than ever before. Our succession of Firearms Acts has merely resulted in decent people being disarmed & oppressed. The State cannot defend you: the police certainly cannot. Itโ€™s interesting to note that the rate of โ€œhotโ€ burglary (i.e. burglary when the homeowners are in the house) is far lower in the USA than it is here (from memory, around 13% compared to well over 50%) because US burglars know householders are liable to be armedโ€ฆ

โ€ฆ a properly armed Police force, let them take out the scum. Left to society, this society, it would get out of hand. โ€ฆ. I’d like to see the scum and toerags offed at once, I don’t believe in long jail terms for mass murderers and child killers/molesters (Especially at about ยฃ2,300 PER WEEK) of taxpayers money to keep the basads warm and fed. Some of these should be killed on live television, with a phone-in to pick the method of death. Profits to the victims.

Please tell me youโ€™re not serious. This is scary stuff! You want an armed police force, and you want them to execute suspected criminals summarily, perhaps on TVโ€ฆ? This is a particularly nasty recipe for a police state โ€“ and I donโ€™t think public execution would form any more edifying a spectacle than Big Brother. Youโ€™re inconsistent.

But I still wouldn’t trust the majority of UK citizens with a gun.

The only possible assumption, in a free society, is that the great majority of people are perfectly trustworthy, decent and responsible. Nowhere in the civilised world do I know of the sort of anarchic mayhem you seem to associate with an armed populace: it wasnโ€™t the case in pre-WW1 Britain, and it doesnโ€™t apply either to e.g. the much maligned USA where, as Iโ€™ve said, the most heavily armed bits (Vermont, New Hampshire, the Dakotas, Arizona etc etc) are the most free from gun crime. I want my handgun (Colt 1911 Series 70, .45ACPโ€ฆ) back, without having to give anyone a damn reason, least of all the government โ€“ but one excellent reason could be that I could look after myself and my family in extremis, since nobody else can.

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By: chuck1981 - 23rd November 2008 at 06:37

HpSauce,
Yes, I’m also sure that the majority of people are decent upright and non-threatening…….but they are not the ones buying guns.

Funny thing is, in the US, they ARE the one buying the firearms…….

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By: old shape - 23rd November 2008 at 00:40

HpSauce,
No way can you compare your grandfathers day to today. (a) We had the death penalty, and yes it was a deterrant (b) there was a common sense of decency and respect within society. Also, most men had seen their pals blown to pieces by a war and so knew the consequences of a bullet to a body.
You seem to believe that todays society is no better or worse than those of yesteryear. This implies that educational standards and parenting responsibility are on a par, which they certainly are not. They are both far lower. In some areas of course they are better, no more sending kids up chimneys for tuppence a year etc. (Unless you’re in China).
Why, even HP Sauce is carp now compared to the real stuff of the 60’s!
My bleak view of society is based on the fact that the toerags now affect the life of lots of other innocent people. Even the old fashioned mugging now involves the victim getting a knife in the neck.
Yes, I’m also sure that the majority of people are decent upright and non-threatening…….but they are not the ones buying guns.

I don’t normally sit on the fence on such matters but I’m in support of a properly armed Police force, let them take out the scum. Left to society, this society, it would get out of hand. If guns were on sale this week, how many on the BNP list would presently be dead?
I am no pinko, I’d like to see the scum and toerags offed at once, I don’t believe in long jail terms for mass murderers and child killers/molesters (Especially at about ยฃ2,300 PER WEEK) of taxpayers money to keep the basads warm and fed. Some of these should be killed on live television, with a phone-in to pick the method of death. Profits to the victims.
But I still wouldn’t trust the majority of UK citizens with a gun.
The above makes me sound right wing nazi Daily Mail. I hold no political direction at all.
I travel abroad frequently to Yerp and USA. I used to be always surprised at the respect I get abroad, younger people call me sir until they know my name etc.
Back to London and you come down to Earth with a bang. Disrespect, spitting, swearing even a general scruffiness of people (Which to reflects no respect for themselves therefore no respect for anything or anybody else).

Please don’t mistake my age and experience for cyncism.

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By: hpsauce - 22nd November 2008 at 20:18

Free to be armed would fail in UK. Unless it was VASTLY scrutinised, which therefore makes it “Not Free” anyway.
Sorry, but the nation holds too much anger to be allowing free range guns. Road rage, pub fights, gangland, revenge etc.
US has this lot, and they have guns. Their murder rate is already too high, so imagine if they didn’t have the death penalty as a deterrant?

You seem to suggest that we have degraded in some way, and are prevented from riot & pillage only by authoritarian government. Yours is a very bleak view of society, and not one I share: the toerags are only a small minority, as ever. The overwhelming majority of people are decent, upright, and represent (armed or not) no threat to othersโ€™ rights or peace of mind. In my grandfathersโ€™ day, there was no meaningful impediment to anyone who wished to buy and carry a gun, and the contemporary absence of violent crime on our streets supports this โ€“ it was far less frequent then than, regrettably, it is now, while at the same time firearms ownership was extremely common. Renewing our former freedom to be armed as we choose would simply restore the balance, because at present there is nothing to stop the baddies from impinging on your rights at gunpoint: criminals donโ€™t obey laws, and are free as ever to obtain and use guns. There is a compelling argument for all our Firearms Acts since the original one in 1920 having served practically no useful purpose whatsoever.
Switzerland has a rate of armed crime involving firearms very close to our own.
The USA has a rate of violent crime in general (i.e. not directly connected with guns) far higher than ours – it’s a more violent society. But those parts of the USA where gun ownership by ordinary people is most common, are also the parts that have the lowest levels of gun crime, while places that restrict handgun ownership very tightly (e.g. NYC which until our 1997 Act had had tougher handgun laws than the UK since 1911…) are often awash with gun crime. And so on. Me, I trust the overwhelming majority of my fellow citizens to own guns, as they always used to, without imperilling public safety, and I reject State claims that gun bans are for my own good as dangerous police-state garbage.
BTW I’m not convinced the death penalty is a deterrent.

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By: old shape - 22nd November 2008 at 19:47

I share your contempt for Trash TV (I hardly watch the box at all myself) but I don’t think we’re any more stupid, as a nation, than previously; the forbears of those folk watching Big Brother and getting pissed on Stella were, 200 years ago, watching public hangings and getting pissed on ale… A key mark of a free society is that its citizens are free to be armed, and historically only despots & tyrants forbade this. Switzerland is OK in this respect, while the UK, well, go figure… I dare say the Swiss don’t let just any draftee have an assault rifle – the dodgy and terminally stupid won’t get a look in.
kato writes:

I wasn’t aware of that – very interesting. Sounds perfectly reasonable to me: if a country is worth being a citizen of, then it’s worth helping to defend, and those who won’t or don’t should acknowledge this with a penalty.

Hmm. No.
Free to be armed would fail in UK. Unless it was VASTLY scrutinised, which therefore makes it “Not Free” anyway.
Sorry, but the nation holds too much anger to be allowing free range guns. Road rage, pub fights, gangland, revenge etc.
US has this lot, and they have guns. Their murder rate is already too high, so imagine if they didn’t have the death penalty as a deterrant?

If the UK were to have guns, it would also need the death penalty bringing back.
(In public for certain types of criminals IMO)

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By: hpsauce - 22nd November 2008 at 16:43

Sounds perfect, apart from the weapons at home thing. The average UK intellect is now too far shot to allow this. When 100% brain-dead TV such as Big B or Soaps is constantly top of the ratings, you know the schooling has failed.

I share your contempt for Trash TV (I hardly watch the box at all myself) but I don’t think we’re any more stupid, as a nation, than previously; the forbears of those folk watching Big Brother and getting pissed on Stella were, 200 years ago, watching public hangings and getting pissed on ale… A key mark of a free society is that its citizens are free to be armed, and historically only despots & tyrants forbade this. Switzerland is OK in this respect, while the UK, well, go figure… I dare say the Swiss don’t let just any draftee have an assault rifle – the dodgy and terminally stupid won’t get a look in.
kato writes:

Switzerland is probably the only country in the world that requires its (male) citizens to pay a tax if they can’t serve themselves – both conscript recruits and reservists. And that for about any reason – be it that they are unfit for service, or be it that they are (as reservists) living outside the country.

I wasn’t aware of that – very interesting. Sounds perfectly reasonable to me: if a country is worth being a citizen of, then it’s worth helping to defend, and those who won’t or don’t should acknowledge this with a penalty.

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By: bazv - 22nd November 2008 at 16:20

Which was the whole point of the comment. It was in response to a poster claiming that the US does it. You have just demonstrated what happens when you dont bother to read back through a thread.:mad:

I think that you misunderstood the other poster you are alluding to,I can tell that you spend a lot of time on the Modern Military forum and you are over reacting somewhat ๐Ÿ˜‰

regards baz

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