Congressman And Former Trump Advisor Calls For Hearings On Media Bias, Threatens To Start Pulling FCC Licenses
from the trash-talking dept
It's always the people neck deep in partisanship that make the most noise about unfairness. In a move that bodes well for free speech, Rep. Kevin Cramer is calling for hearings to sort out this "problem" with "biased" media. Cramer also spent some time as Donald Trump's energy advisor, so it's a good guess he feels his candidate hasn't been treated fairly by The Liberal Media™ -- an entity that's always useful for easy scapegoating when things go south for candidates, legislation, etc. on the Republican side. (The liberals/left do the same when stuff goes wrong for them. Everyone does it. The only difference is the scapegoat.)
Rep. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) sent a letter to the heads of the four "major" TV networks—CBS, NBC, ABC, and Fox—threatening to hold a hearing "to explore network media bias in coverage of the 2016 presidential campaign." To justify this grandstanding and overreaching display of concerned government, Cramer cites a recent Gallup poll which put Americans trust in "media" at around 32 percent and also asserted only 37 percent of Americans think the media's coverage of the 2016 campaign has been "balanced."
Cramer's biases are clear, but he seems blissfully unaware of them. Presumably Fox is being added to this hearing's lineup for the same reason criminal informants get swept up during law enforcement raids -- to prevent any suspicion arising from its exclusion. While Cramer cited the Gallup poll, he also added in more feelings of his own, stating the media (both sides, I guess) is engaged in "surreptitious propaganda" which somehow violates its "moral" duty to inform the public without taking sides.
Rather than allow adults to address the open question of "moral" obligations, Cramer has issued threats with the weight of the federal government behind them. He brought up the Fairness Doctrine, only to drop it moments later, stating that a "free system" is only possible with unbiased media.
Media bias is something universally hated, but it's never not a partisan issue. Everyone agrees bias -- at least too much of it -- is bad. Those wanting to see it gone usually just want the other side to change, not the ones that confirm their world view. Rep. Cramer is no different, and seeing as he has somewhat of a vested interest in Trump's success, his official offendedness is incredibly suspect.
Hearings aren't the only thing Cramer threatened. He also hinted he would start pulling FCC licenses if things didn't change while implying that the First Amendment is mostly for protecting speech he likes.
So instead of wielding the Fairness Doctrine as a means of forcing the networks to rid themselves of all political bias (which would be impossible to quantify, not least because bias is in the eye of the beholder), Cramer threatens their "the use of federally-allocated spectrum" afforded by their FCC licenses, writing "Your FCC license and the liberty that comes with your First Amendment rights are not a license to broadcast anything you want or in any way you choose."
That's an odd interpretation of the First Amendment. There are very few modes of expression that aren't protected by it and "always running down my guy" isn't one of those exceptions. Not that it matters. As Reason's Anthony Fisher points out, Cramer's more angry than informed.
Cramer appears to have not read the FCC's website, which explicitly states (emphasis theirs), "We license only individual broadcast stations. We do not license TV or radio networks (such as CBS, NBC, ABC or Fox) or other organizations with which stations have relationships (such as PBS or NPR), except to the extent that those entities may also be station licensees."
[...]
Though Cramer might want to use the FCC as his own task force, the FCC's website also states the commission "cannot prevent the broadcast of any particular point of view. In this regard, the Commission has observed that 'the public interest is best served by permitting free expression of views."
So, the FCC won't be doing any of the things Cramer imagines he can make it do, and any attempt to force the issue would look exactly like what it is: an attack on free speech disguised as a call for "fairness."
Bias will always exist in the media. That's because humans are biased creatures and some of it bleeds over into the profession, no matter how much they might aspire to loftier ideals. And, of course, there are always those who don't even aspire to these ideals and wallow in fully-biased reporting.
But it's not as if dragging down the Big Four to Cramer's level would have much of an impact immediately, much less a lasting one. Only a small minority of Americans get their news exclusively from these outlets. Many more get them from a variety of other sources, all with their own preferences and biases. And humans, being humans, tend to be drawn to viewpoints that agree with their own. Hollering about FCC license and moral obligations won't do anything to make the news more fair -- not when there's a market on both sides of the political aisle hungering for a slant that agrees with their own.
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Filed Under: congress, fcc, first amendment, kevin cramer, media bias, news
Companies: abc, cbs, fox, nbc
Reader Comments
The First Word
“Speaking of ratings and trust...
Cramer cites a recent Gallup poll which put Americans trust in "media" at around 32 percent and also asserted only 37 percent of Americans think the media's coverage of the 2016 campaign has been "balanced."
The same group that he's getting his 32% number from also puts public approval of congress at a whopping 18%, suggesting that even if the public was on board with censoring unpopular news groups they likely wouldn't want or trust congress to be the ones deciding who gets silenced.
Maybe he's just annoyed that more people trust the news than trust him, and are more than twice as likely to say that the media is doing a good job as say that congress is?
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Speaking of ratings and trust...
Cramer cites a recent Gallup poll which put Americans trust in "media" at around 32 percent and also asserted only 37 percent of Americans think the media's coverage of the 2016 campaign has been "balanced."
The same group that he's getting his 32% number from also puts public approval of congress at a whopping 18%, suggesting that even if the public was on board with censoring unpopular news groups they likely wouldn't want or trust congress to be the ones deciding who gets silenced.
Maybe he's just annoyed that more people trust the news than trust him, and are more than twice as likely to say that the media is doing a good job as say that congress is?
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Trust of the media
I don't think Americans 'trust' of the media has to do with how they handle political discourse, I think it has to do with their failure to challenge the many things government does that fail our Bill of Rights intended purpose and the wishy-washy way they are compliant in dealing with government in order to maintain 'access'.
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There is media bias
Even then, there will be some bias, but not on the scale we're seeing today.
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And none more so than politicians.
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poll which put Americans trust in "media" at around 32 percent
did i miss where he referenced polls which reflect america's trust in congressmen?
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Weeeell, Fox the broadcast station isn't the same thing as Fox News, but yeah, it'd be hard to accuse them of liberal bias with a straight face.
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Re:
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Re: Speaking of ratings and trust...
Ultimately, both "the media" and "Congress" are amorphous groups, and polling of whether people trust or approve of them is not very informative.
Generally, people hate Congress but like their Congressman, hate the news media but like the news source they watch or read every day.
The important question isn't whether people disapprove of a given institution, it's why.
"Because they're biased" is an answer, but still not a specific one. Cramer, presumably, believes the media are biased toward liberal causes and politicians. I believe they're biased toward headlines that grab ratings and stories that please advertisers. We both believe there's a bias, but we have a very different interpretation of what that bias is.
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Media Bias is necessary
I want bias in the media, and I want it on both sides. No one is more committed to revealing the corruption of people than those that hate them.
An no, I will never agree to any form of government oversight 'controlling' who gets to say their piece and how much of that piece has to be balanced by 'opposing views'.
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Unhappy events abroad have retaught us two simple truths about the liberty of a democratic people.
The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is Fascism—ownership of Government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power."
-FDR April 29th 1938
He maybe an asshole but he's not wrong, break up the Trusts!
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Re:
It's all perspective! Only a nub wastes time bitching about the obvious bias that exists. Use it instead to temper your belief of the garbage they spew.
Fox is no more or less biased than the rest of them. Their biased arrow just points a different direction, which is the only sin for some. You can be corrupt as fuck, well as long as it serves your purpose.
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Re:
"two simple truths about the liberty of a democratic people."
We are a republic you tool.
And you should read up what the founding fathers said about "Democracy"! It was not pretty.
No nation survives a democracy, because once people learn that they can vote themselves largess... well, lets just say, "The People" have learned, but wisdom was not!
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Re: Re:
Please tell me what the founding fathers thought.
and as for "the people" voting themselves largess who should they be voting it for? small numbers of oligarchs? or as is becoming more common aristocrats?
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I actually agree
All I could say to my family and friends is to listen to the candidates rather than to the media.
What the media did fail the American people this election and there should be consequences. What a mockery this constitutionally protected profession has made of the media.
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Ignorance of the law is no excuse to be in congress
Actually, that's exactly the point of the first amendment.
There are limitations (porn, obscenity, etc.) which might make his statement true in some technical sense, but the thing he wants to eliminate, bias, or more benignly "opinion", is exactly what the first amendment protects, in particular when it comes to politicians and the government.
Perhaps what we need is an agency that reviews what our representatives say to evaluate their understanding of our laws and constitution. Whey they demonstrate ignorance, they are required to attend remedial classes.
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Do you have trouble connecting dots or something? I am not trying to be condescending I am flat out telling you to get a fucking clue and read some history!
But here are a good couple to mention.
http://www.bartleby.com/73/1593.html
"“A Republic, if you can keep it.”"
My man ~Ben Franklin!
And here is some J. Quincy Adams action too.
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/49810-i-do-not-say-that-democracy-has-been-more-pernicious
"“I do not say that democracy has been more pernicious on the whole, and in the long run, than monarchy or aristocracy. Democracy has never been and never can be so durable as aristocracy or monarchy; but while it lasts, it is more bloody than either. … Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide. It is in vain to say that democracy is less vain, less proud, less selfish, less ambitious, or less avaricious than aristocracy or monarchy. It is not true, in fact, and nowhere appears in history. Those passions are the same in all men, under all forms of simple government, and when unchecked, produce the same effects of fraud, violence, and cruelty. When clear prospects are opened before vanity, pride, avarice, or ambition, for their easy gratification, it is hard for the most considerate philosophers and the most conscientious moralists to resist the temptation. Individuals have conquered themselves. Nations and large bodies of men, never.” "
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Bias?
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Most of what the right calls the "left leaning news" isn't left leaning at all. It's simply insufficiently right-leaning for them.
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I don't see why not?
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
America is in fact a democracy. Yes, it's ALSO a republic. The two are not mutually exclusive. "Republic" simply means that it doesn't have a monarch.
While you're trashing democracies, have a look at some republics. The USSR. East Germany. Iran. North Korea. Etc..
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The point is that the people viewing, judge the direction of lean based entirely upon their own views. This fact is implied by both your comment and the person you responded too.
Be honest, your mom dropped you on your head, didn't she? We won't judge here, we just call you stupid!
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Re: Media Bias is necessary
On some issues, sure. It's perfectly reasonable to weigh, for example, the value of government programs against their economic cost. (If we did it honestly, and factored in who was paying the cost and who was receiving the value.)
But on some issues, it's simply a matter of who's factually right and who's factually wrong. We can have a debate about how best to deal with climate change, but any debate about whether climate change is real is a false one.
And of course the right-versus-left divide is largely an artificial one, and not a particularly helpful one except in reinforcing the status quo. There are disagreements which cross party lines; censorship, copyright, and spying are three that we read about routinely on Techdirt, and they all have their supporters and their detractors across both major parties and beyond.
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So you've produced exactly one quote by a Founding Father on the subject of democracy. Cool.
It's true that the United States is a constitutional republic, not a pure democracy. But we choose our representatives (and some of our laws) through democratic elections. The next time I see someone say "it's a republic, not a democracy" and actually have a point to make instead of just derailing a conversation, it'll be the first.
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Re:
I'm gonna say it's because there are only 24 hours in a day.
It's hard to focus on any one scandal when there's always a new one right around the corner.
While I'd have preferred to see a deeper dive into any number of Trump scandals, I don't really buy the argument that the media didn't cover his scandals.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
There in my post is a link to a person that said this was a Republic and NOT a democracy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_states
Check out Wiki too! They actually have a section for what form of government America is.
A "Constitutional Republic".
Your bar for "Democracy" is too fucking low! Just being able to vote is not the proper benchmark. Sure there are some similarities, but a lot of fucking things have similarities, yet this is why we have names for being able to identify those differences.
Hey, you know what else we have? Something called a dictionary. Consider picking one up?
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Re: Ignorance of the law is no excuse to be in congress
Well, no, because then you're doing the exact same thing: enforcing some individual's personal interpretation of the law, at the expense of somebody else's First Amendment rights to say whatever dumb-ass thing he feels like.
By all means the media should hold politicians accountable for saying things that are clearly wrong. But you lost me at "required to attend remedial classes".
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Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
What about debating the effect of humans on climate change?
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Two can play this "I refuse your reality and substitute my own" bullshit!
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Re: I don't see why not?
Protip: the way around the "shall make no law" part when it comes to the Second Amendment is that the phrase "shall make no law" appears in the First Amendment, not the Second.
The Second Amendment is the one that starts with "A well-regulated militia".
Some people believe in it, some don't, and some people misquote it while talking about how important it is to believe in it.
http://www.theonion.com/article/area-man-passionate-defender-of-what-he-imagines-c-2849
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Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
If you allow people to bend your mind to the point were you willing participate in the destruction of your own country then you get what you deserve.
We all reap what we sow! No exception!
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Biased media equals super Pac
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Re: Re: I don't see why not?
So I mis-quoted slightly, but you conveniently left off the "shall not" part entirely. Some people like to believe very much in the parts they like and ignore the parts they don't. We either are, or are not a country under the rule of law. So we obey all of the law or none of it. To have each person cherry picking the laws they obey is anarchy.
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Re: Re: I don't see why not?
"shall not be infringed" which is equivalent to "shall make no law" so they were not completely off base here. Just syntactically incorrect.
Which means so much as asking a person to wait 1 second or running a background check before they can get a firearm is unconstitutional.
You are technically correct however and it is damn sad to see another ignorant citizens flapping their worthless yap about a Constitution they didn't even both to read.
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Bias be damned, laziness and quality is the issue.
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Yes, but some people view factual statements as biased. I've already used the climate change example. There are people who see factual statements about climate change and say they have liberal bias. Those people are objectively wrong.
Similarly, Trump calls it bias when polls show him losing. (He is not talking about statistical bias; he is saying that the polls are intentionally skewed to look bad for him.) The polls may turn out to be wrong, but it's absurd to say that Fox News has intentionally skewed its numbers to favor Hillary Clinton.
Reporting on facts is not bias. Not liberal bias, not conservative bias. Interpreting facts may be biased, but that's not the same thing.
And yes, there are liberals who claim conservative bias from factual reporting (say, poll numbers about Clinton's perceived trustworthiness -- coverage of those may be self-fulfilling, perhaps, but most people really do see Clinton as untrustworthy; trustworthiness is an opinion, but the polling data on people who hold that opinion is a fact). More often, I'd say liberals claim conservative bias from media outlets whose real bias is toward profit, not any particular political ideology.
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Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
Also a bullshit debate. There's scientific consensus on human-caused climate change. The "debate" is a manufactured one, a distraction, and a waste of time.
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Re: Bias be damned, laziness and quality is the issue.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
An argument is a series of connected statements intended to establish a proposition. It isn't just contradiction.
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Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
What about the people who aren't allowed to vote because the legislature passed restrictive voting laws that disenfranchise minorities? I think it's pretty hard to blame them for the outcome of an election.
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Re: Re: Ignorance of the law is no excuse to be in congress
You do make a good point though. We have arrived where we are today because the people don't demand a certain standard of competence out of our elected officials. If we did that, the media would more or less respond as needed. Too many people are willing to overlook various transgressions as long as the transgressor is espousing policies we like. The media, but more especially the people should seriously make a much bigger deal out of holding our representatives to higher standards -- across the board!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odB1wWPqSlE
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Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
Well, no.
There's significant debate as to what the Second Amendment actually means; there's a school of thought that says that the "well-regulated militia" clause is there for a reason and that the law is only intended to apply to people who serve in militias (which no longer really exist in the way they did when the Constitution was written).
Which is a moot point. Because your opinion and my opinion don't determine what the Bill of Rights means; the Supreme Court is the final arbiter, and the Supreme Court has ruled that the Second Amendment grants a right to private gun ownership.
But the Supreme Court has also upheld some restrictions on gun sales.
So you can say that any restriction whatsoever on gun sales is unconstitutional, and you're entitled to that opinion. But it's not true in any objective or meaningful sense.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
There used to be a scientific consensus that traveling faster than Sound was impossible.
Ford was laughed at.
Copernicus got little respect.
And Einstein once said... "Two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity. And I am not sure about the universe"
Guess which part of that quote you likely belong to?
You saying there is a scientific consensus does not make it true. There is so much political action on climate change that getting a clear answer will be impossible now. We need to call it the "Church of Climatology" instead, and many there are that worship at its altar.
By this time this year we should have already seen catastrophic trouble per your God "Al Gore"!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
But, then again, I have no room to talk. I have been running my mouth a whole lot without success either. We must keep trying!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
Writing after the ratification of the Constitution, but before the election of the first Congress, James Monroe included "the right to keep and bear arms" in a list of basic "human rights", which he proposed to be added to the Constitution.[107]
Patrick Henry argued in the Virginia ratification convention on June 5, 1788, for the dual rights to arms and resistance to oppression:
Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are inevitably ruined.[108]
While both Monroe and John Adams supported the Constitution being ratified, its most influential framer was James Madison. In Federalist No. 46, he confidently contrasted the federal government of the United States to the European kingdoms, which he contemptuously described as "afraid to trust the people with arms." He assured his fellow citizens that they need never fear their government because of "the advantage of being armed .."
From here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
Also, I don't have time to run it down now, but I believe the SCOTUS has affirmed the right to bear arms as an individual right. There are many, many writings and quotes by the founding fathers as to what was meant so the meaning is very clear.
Any debate on that is not true and provably false.
Did I say that right? Does that shut down the discussion now?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
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perhaps you should read what I posted again since you didn't understand it the first time.
"To the Congress:
Unhappy events abroad have retaught us two simple truths about the liberty of a democratic people.
The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is Fascism—ownership of Government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power."
-FDR April 29th 1938
as for franklin maybe give the full quote
"The deliberations of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 were held in strict secrecy. Consequently, anxious citizens gathered outside Independence Hall when the proceedings ended in order to learn what had been produced behind closed doors. The answer was provided immediately. A Mrs. Powel of Philadelphia asked Benjamin Franklin, “Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?” With no hesitation whatsoever, Franklin responded, “A republic, if you can keep it.”
http://www.ourrepubliconline.com/Author/21
This is not an argument against democracy it's a waning that it will be difficult.
this is fiction but if an actual president gave this speech their approval would be well above 50%
" For the last couple of months, Senator Rumson has suggested that being President of this country was, to a certain extent, about character. And although I've not been willing to engage in his attacks on me, I have been here three years and three days, and I can tell you without hesitation: Being President of this country is entirely about character.
For the record, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU, but the more important question is "Why aren't you, Bob?" Now this is an organization whose sole purpose is to defend the Bill of Rights, so it naturally begs the question, why would a senator, his party's most powerful spokesman and a candidate for President, choose to reject upholding the constitution? Now if you can answer that question, folks, then you're smarter than I am, because I didn't understand it until a few hours ago.
America isn't easy. America is advanced citizenship. You've gotta want it bad, 'cause it's gonna put up a fight. It's gonna say, "You want free speech? Let's see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil, who's standing center stage and advocating at the top of his lungs that which you would spend a lifetime opposing at the top of yours." You want to claim this land as the land of the free? Then the symbol of your country cannot just be a flag. The symbol also has to be one of its citizens exercising his right to burn that flag in protest. Now show me that, defend that, celebrate that in your classrooms.
Then you can stand up and sing about the land of the free."
I once asked a Trotskyist why he was, he told be it was because he wanted the state to take care of him with no effort or commitment on his part, I found this amazing since Trotsky was a committed Communist and believed in autonomy from the state and self determination of all people and communities. Working with reason and good will towards a collective future that is better than now.
Franklin and Adams never met John D. Rockefeller but if they had they would have lined up with Trotsky and Marx against him.
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Your attempt to dazzle me with a bit of linguistic legerdemain was unsuccessful. I think it went over your head there fella. What I consider "meaningful substance" has nothing to do with your incomplete definition of "argument".
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The bit about "majority rule tempered by minority rights protected by law" (via a constitution, bill or rights etc.) aren't specific to republics. Non-republic democracies have those too.
You might want to take your own advice and read your own citations some time.
And grow up.
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We are not a democracy because people do not directly elect laws into power. That is a democracy. We elect people that are supposed to "Guards of our future Security" as per the Declaration of independence.
Instead what has occurred is that "The People" have gone completely coward and now ask the government to guard us like cattle instead of guarding our future. They burn and waste the future instead while the poor clamor for handouts given by candidates that shake crumbs from the table for the sycophantic voting dogs below!
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My people perish for lack of knowledge. My country falls because it is packed with the ignorant and lost people that think because they can find a similarity between the definitions of something then it must be that.
Occam's Razor applies here. Constitutional Republic is the easiest and MOST ACCURATE DESCRIPTION. Calling it a Democracy is general and meaningless term. It is important to refer to the country in the format as described by its founders. The reason is so that the masses are less confused.
The entire constitution is a prime example of this. The founders are on record for what they meant for each amendment. So how to you get people to misunderstand? Over time you get them to use words in ways they should not be used until they become officially a part of the definition now.
Look up the etymology of words, they really do mean something.
The real definition of an actual Democracy is one where the People DIRECTLY VOTE IN THE LAWS! We do not do that here. We vote in representatives, therefore we are a republican people not a fucking democratic one!
But hey, who am I to try to correct the vast sea of ignorant people that do not care to learn much less try to understand!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
Some fat. And very little has changed.
No, there wasn't. Bullets did it. Rockets did it. Bullwhips did it. The scientific consensus was that it was possible, just not easy.
Most everyone trying something new has someone laughing at them. That has nothing to do with scientific consensus.
...from the church. What's your point?
There's broad scientific consensus on human-caused climate change. Get over it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
...er, it is? Are you denying that high-fat diets can lead to heart disease?
And it was disproven. That's the thing about scientific theories: they're testable. If new, repeatable testing proves them to be invalid, then they're invalid. But if all the available evidence points in one direction, that's the one you accept until proven otherwise.
Yes, because religious conservatives refused to accept science that didn't support their political views.
Well, he may or may not have actually said that ( http://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/18140/did-einstein-say-two-things-are-infinite-the-unive rse-and-human-stupidity-and ), but my recollection is that Einstein was pretty big on believing in scientific evidence for things.
And you saying "people who didn't listened to scientists turned out to be wrong" doesn't make the point you think it does.
Well, bullshit. Temperature measurements are objective data. If you choose to disbelieve because they contradict your personal political views, then you're proving my point.
http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2016/climate-trends-continue-to-break-records
For the record, I voted Nader, but are you suggesting there haven't been any catastrophic climate events over the course of the past fifteen years?
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"...A republic (from Latin: res publica) is a sovereign state or country[1] which is organized with a form of government in which power resides in elected individuals REPRESENTING THE CITIZEN BODY[2][3] and government leaders exercise power according to the rule of law.
No it is not a direct Democracy but it is a democracy and Representative are expected to represent.
They may not represent the people but wasting time on semantics instead of organizing is a deflection of responsibility and changing from people should not act in their own interest to but should instead give up on democracy and give over power to an elite few to complaining about the unfairness and oppression of the poor is a pretty big flip
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And, yes! Factual statements are biased, that is kinda the nature of it and for good reason too. Bias is not inherently a negative word even though people just assume that is due to years of spewing from certain folks. Bias can be positive, neutral, or negative.
Someone having a bias towards helping someone is a positive bias in general.
Someone having a bias toward mustard over mayo is a neutral one.
Someone having a bias against someone based on political ideology is a negative one.
Trustworthiness is both opinion and factual. You can mathematically calculate the number of times a person lives up to their word or just lies and produce an actual number. Additionally, since the grading process is often produced by opinion that makes it very subjective, however it can be said that people can be technically evaluated on trustworthiness.
I have no problem with media being biased, I can read between the lines. It would be hard for them to pull the wool over my eyes.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Media Bias is necessary
Sure.
There's also consensus that the Earth is round, gravity exists, and organisms evolve into more complex organisms (another example of scientific fact that conservatives claim is liberal bias).
There's scientific consensus on the subject of man-made global climate change. That will remain so until and unless it's proven otherwise.
You seem to think that pointing that out is some kind of rhetorical victory. It isn't. "Sometimes scientific consensus turns out to be wrong" is not an argument, any more that "sometimes it doesn't" is. Generalizations about other historical theories aren't relevant to the question of whether or not man-made climate change is real. The specific scientific -- scientific, not political -- arguments in favor of anthropogenic climate change are relevant, and they're the only thing that's relevant.
(And lest it appear that I'm not backing up my claims with evidence: I put a link to a NASA article in my last post but it's waiting on moderation.)
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It's one description. Constitutional Democracy is another. Both are accurate. They are not mutually exclusive. "Republic" means that you don't have a monarch.
Your claim is akin to saying that a Ford F-150 isn't a "motor vehicle" because it's a "truck."
Non-republic democracies also have constitutions. Canada for example, generally described as a "Parliamentary Democracy."
Canadians don't directly vote in the laws. They vote in representatives - MLAs at the provincial level and MPs at the federal level. Canada is a democracy, but NOT a republic.
Again, your link - "They actually have a section for what form of government America is" - backs what I'm saying.
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Nice try.
A judge ruled that North Carolina's new voter restrictions were specifically targeted to stop methods of voting that were commonly used by African-American voters. That's not my opinion, it's the judge's.
The same thing's going on right now in Arizona, with Latino voters. And hey, for some up-to-the-minute news on voter disenfranchisement efforts going on right now, here's NBC: http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/2016-election-day/election-2016-tracking-reports-voting-problems-ac ross-united-states-n673236
You're the racist here: you're saying that if people aren't permitted to vote, it must not be because politicians discriminated against them based on their race, it can only be because they're stupid. To hell with that and to hell with you.
The "people who protest against racism are the real racists" line is cute, and I look forward to your series of examples of all the horrible things Democrats did prior to 1970. But nobody buys that dumbass argument except the choir you're preaching to.
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Never heard of it. Thaddeus R R Boyd, of Tempe, Arizona. It's not exactly a secret; this is my real name, and the reason it appears in blue is that you can click on it and go to my real blog.
You're the only one busting out ten-dollar words to try and impress people here, champ.
I wasn't trying to "dazzle" anybody. You're right that something went over somebody's head, but you don't seem to understand what it was.
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Nowhere do I make the argument that not letting them vote is because they are stupid. Again, you are projecting your feelings on others. If they want to vote, they can get an id. I give them plenty of credit to assume they know how to get an id if they want one.
You put great stock in how judges rule. I wonder how much stock you put in the judges that ruled slavery was ok?
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I see a group of what I can equate to "Religious Zealots" saying there is a consensus. I hear them all of the time, yet somehow, despite my absolute respect for science I have yet to be convinced.
Here is a most excellent quotes by Freeman Dyson.
"Troubles arise when either science or religion claims universal jurisdiction, when either religious dogma or scientific dogma claims to be infallible. Religious creationists and scientific materialists are equally dogmatic and insensitive. By their arrogance, they bring both science and religion into disrepute. The media exaggerate their numbers and importance. Media people should tell the public that the great majority of religious people belong to moderate denominations that treat science with respect, and the great majority of scientists treat religion with respect, so long as religion does not claim jurisdiction over scientific questions."
Right now the global warming zealots are nothing but a bunch of religious nutters claiming jurisdiction over a scientific theory. Correlation does not equal causation, a principle you nutters have yet to understand. But hey, anything you can use to advance the agenda is fine, lie or truth amiright?
Regarding the fat, there is way too much to go through here, but there are more than enough recent clinic trials, experiments, findings and what have you that have more than debunked the "politician" lead war on fat from so long ago. But that still did not stop the entire nation from demonizing fat and manufacturers started putting sugar into everything driving the nations diabetes problem forward and up! But hey, watching idiots like you that think that PseudoScience is settled and that's that just drives me insane.
You don't give a fucking shit about the science, if your Gods told you that we will be ejected from orbit next year if we don't get those carbons down you would be in this forum spewing that one too!
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Well no, he's using the right words, because it's a direct quote. If he used different words, it wouldn't be a direct quote.
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Fair enough. Sometimes it's hard to tell.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
If you need to defend yourself against the state it is already time for a revolution and asking permission is dumb.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
You...seem to have stopped reading my post after the second sentence there, buddy.
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Re: Speaking of ratings and trust...
Not that long ago a poll put it in the single digits.
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I see a group of what I can equate to "Religious Zealots" saying there is a consensus. I hear them all of the time, yet somehow, despite my absolute respect for science I have yet to be convinced.
It's pretty clear you have little or no respect for science, otherwise you would already be convinced just like the vast majority of actual scientists who specifically study the climate.
Question: despite the mountain of evidence already right in front of your face, what would it take to convince you?
(Not that anyone actually will give a fuck about the "demands" of somehow who is unable to form an argument without resorting to ad homs. But it will be fun to watch!)
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Use the car analogy correctly like so.
You are calling a Ford-F150 a conveyance. Sure that is true, but it hardly describes what it actually is. Know what else qualifies as a conveyance? A canoe, helicopter, jet, train, truck, and bicycle. So calling it a democracy is descriptive meaninglessness... a fucking corporate BUZZWORD!
Democracy does not exist any fucking place on the planet. There is no such beast, it is pure fantasy created by people corruption the definition of it.
Did you mean "Representative Democracy?"
Words have a fucking meaning, and the word Democracy means fucking nothing, it has been so watered down by you clowns that it now means every government where someone votes.
Hint Hint, most people in these "Democracies" do not like the internal spying that is going on in their nations. See their "Democracies" actually doing anything Democratic with that? Gasp! Did you just realize that they actually are NOT democracies now? Hell no, you can't be reasoned with.
Now if you want to call them "Pseudo Democracies"... now I can agree with that!
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So, it's been determined that NC's voter restrictions were not just racist but were designed to be racist.
Thad disapproves of these racist restrictions.
You approve of these racist restrictions.
Yet you're claiming that he is the racist?!?!?
What the actual fuck?
You can delude yourself, but it's not gonna work on the rest of us.
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But tell me, what do you make of a judge that says slavery is ok? Or do you just accept what a judge says as gospel too?
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I did enjoy the show, and Thad was the QB for the team but was a typical mindless jock. I was drawing a parallel between him and you because of your name as a childish insult. I thought the series was pretty decent in the humor department you might check it out if you have some spare time.
Trust me, I have no illusion that I am impressing anyone at any time. Like you I work in IT, I have been successfully beaten into submission by that terrible environment. I am working on making my own way in life and plan to leave IT entirely in the next 5 years. The dunning-Kruger effect is rife in I.T.
Trust me, you missed my intent my a wide margin, I don't know if you are trying to drag the conversation a particular direction or what, but you are not on the same track as myself.
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But tell me, what do you make of a judge that says slavery is ok?
Don't be mad that judges aren't ruling the way you want them to anymore. At least they have finally opened their eyes. Maybe someday you will too.
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Are you a climate scientist? If not then then same applies to you. You need to shut the fuck up since you have no way to prove they are not lying or just mistaken.
You look at the evidence and see one result, I look at the same evidence and have come to a different conclusion. That is just how it works. Calling evidence proof when you actually cannot prove it turns you into a Pseudo-scientist!
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You are not actually engaging him on the subject, instead you are deflecting and misrepresenting things.
All this behavior does is make you look like an idiot!
he directly made the case that you are treating minorities like a bunch of invalids. Address that on it merit and stop being deflectional or obtuse.
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We are a constitutional republic which makes American citizens republican and not democratic.
The people are not directly or indirectly for that matter involved with the creation of laws. We just vote in people to represent us, instead they create and vote on laws.
Everyone is watering down the meaning of democracy to the point it means nothing. Under your obtuse definition my going to work is a democracy because I vote every morning to go and they vote every morning to let me! YAY DEMOCRACY!
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Maybe he is pushing for Pai's seat.
I don't get *any* of my news from the four listed. It has been well over a decade since I even watched a network news show, much less from these four.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
"The People" are always the final arbiter, read the fucking Declaration of Independence. The thing about the US Government is that there is no such thing as a final arbitration over the law or have you failed history? Which I am thinking you did. SCOTUS can be handed its ass by congress or the president, and if both team up against SCOTUS together, then they can really clean some clocks. The President could nominate new Justices, there is no limit set in the Constitution, and congress can confirm them. Put in enough to cause SCOTUS to take the case back and render a different vote on the subject. That does not even take into account all of the cases were SCOTUS has over turned 'stare decisis' either.
Here is how to understand the 2nd Amendment in the current American way to talking, it was very different back then!
"We the People reserve the right to keep and bear arms at all times, without infringement, so that we can form a militia at any time we require to fight all enemies foreign and domestic."
That is a 100% syntactically accurate rewording of the 2nd Amendment. The reason the 2nd is brought up, is because it serves a perfect test to find out who among us is running around with the wrong dictionary, poor comprehension, or political agendas!
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Even in your twist, a Ford-F150 is still, regardless, a conveyance. And a truck. And a motor vehicle. The terms are not mutually exclusive.
America is a Representative Democracy, just like Canada is. The difference that makes Canada a non-republic is that Canada has a monarch.
The USSR, East Germany, Iran, China and North Korea are/were all republics. Being a republic doesn't stop the internal spying. Being a democracy doesn't fully stop it, but giving the people a democratic vote - a vote with real power - even indirectly via representatives - has the best track record.
There's nothing pseudo-democracy about America. It's a democracy. And a republic. The two terms are not mutually exclusive.
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he directly made the case that you are treating minorities like a bunch of invalids. Address that on it merit and stop being deflectional or obtuse.
You're so right...it's common knowledge that voter ID laws are meant to address white voter fraud. Exactly the folks who can't afford or necessarily have transportation to get ID (during the one day a week the places are open).
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Here, tell me what the CIA says the US form of Government is. Here is link. Did you catch any of these words in there? Democracy, Democratic, democratic like? yea I missed it too!
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2128.html
It amazes that you tools are fighting against verified proof! You can call us a Democracy or "Scooby Snacks" if you want... will not make any of it factually true.
There is nothing democratic about our Republic. We elect people, they do whatever the fuck they want and that is all! Now you could say that some of our states might be Democratic, but not the US Gov itself. Have you been confusing the two?
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No! No! No! No! That's Not Enough!
Hastings was removed because he was identified as a threat to the state, and when Trump becomes president, we've got to root out these people immediately.
They need to be prosecuted and jailed when possible, and car crashed and suicided when not.
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Re: No! No! No! No! That's Not Enough!
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scientists_opposing_the_mainstream_scientific_assessm ent_of_global_warming
Not "Christian Scientists." We're talking physicists, meteorologists, climatologists and geologists, among numerous other distinguished individuals in their respective fields. Including a number of Nobel Laureates.
Just because it's "mainstream" doesn't mean it's true. A lot of mainstream consensus that we were justified in going into Iraq because Saddam had WMDs and was allegedly involved with 9/11. A lot of mainstream consensus that America was totally going to win in Vietnam. A lot of mainstream consensus that if you like you doctor, you could keep your doctor, and you premiums would never go up.
And a lot of mainstream consensus that a career criminal who was fired for being too corrupt for WATERGATE of all things is somehow better for the nation's leadership than an eccentric billionaire who doesn't have a PC filter.
At what point do we start standing up and saying that the mainstream consensus about the mainstream consensus is a jet stream of free-flowing bullshit?
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Re: Biased media equals super Pac
As usual, the world is a business, Mr. Beale.
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[irony intensifies]
And here we have an IT guy claiming that the US is not a constitutionally-limited democratic republic based on their vast knowledge of and experience in... IT work?
Surely even you must recognize the irony here?
Look, you seem hung up on the fact that the US is a representative democracy rather than a wholly direct democracy, but both are still democracies (the clue is the word democracy in there).
And even then, plenty of laws are passed through direct democracy in the US. Are you familiar with ballot initiatives?
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It's not an assumption. The NC legislature requested information on what kinds of IDs various racial groups held the most, and then passed a law making the types of IDs held more by blacks invalid as voter ID and requiring the types of ID held more by whites. The law is explicitly designed to make it harder for black people to vote.
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Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
Kind of like saying "democracy" instead of "republic".
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Sounds fun, but no.
http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/foxcanada.asp
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Jeeze way too many lobbied interests involved in controlling and shaping what people think. Bipartisanship is destroying this country. It really feels like the beginning days of Fallout Shelter years away from nuclear disaster.
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Not all people come to the same conclusion while reviewing the same evidence.
Yet somehow the people who look at the evidence overwhelmingly come to the same conclusion. Weird, huh?
People with more knowledge are harder to convince.
You're right. People like actual scientists who specialize in climatology. As a group they would be pretty hard to convince. Yet somehow they have been.
Are you a climate scientist?
Nope. Are you? I'm not an air conditioning repairman either. But when 99 of 100 people who have been trained, experienced and specialize in repairing air conditioners tell me the same thing, I kinda think they're probably right. Then again, I'm not full of hubris.
I look at the same evidence and have come to a different conclusion.
By all means, please elaborate on how the mountains of evidence has led you to a different conclusion. I'll get the popcorn! This will be fun.
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Sorry I started a fight in the middle of your white power partaay.
[taking liberties with a Forrest Gump quote]
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So Putin-esque dictatorship now your homeboy has won? Or are we going more Kim Jong-un?
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unbiased
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Yet somehow the people who look at the evidence overwhelmingly come to the same conclusion. Weird, huh?"
Most people believe and have evidence in a God or Gods. Does this amount to proof in your book too?
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Your new link merely states that America is a republic. I've agreed with this all along. It says nothing to dispute that America is a democracy. The two are not mutually exclusive. America is both.
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now I know why I hate all of you people so much...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: I don't see why not?
The "well-regulated militia" clause is there for a reason, but in my assessment, that reason is not about limiting the right to bear arms to people who are members of such a militia.
My parsing of the Second Amendment into more modern language comes out as something like "because we need people to be experienced in using weapons so that they can be ready when they need to assemble into a militia for defense of the free state, and because we need to have weapons available for the militia to use and it's not practical to keep a stockpile ready all the time, the government may not restrict people from owning and using weapons".
If you look at it from a perspective that assumes that there is not and will not be any such thing as a standing army, and that therefore any military force will necessarily arise out of the civilian populace on demand, the whole thing makes a lot more sense IMO.
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Bzzzt. That's called *faith*, not evidence.
Try harder.
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