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People's Response To Merriam-Webster's 2024 Word Of The Year Just Proved Their Point
Dec 10, 2024
Merriam-Webster dictionary nailed it with their 2024 Word of the Year selection that accurately defined the divisive reaction to the 2024 presidential election results.
The dictionary's account on X (formerly Twitter) declared this year's Word of the Year was, "Polarization," and joked:
"About half of you might take issue with this."
The not-so-subtle decision reflected the evenly split political divide among Americans that resulted in confusion and lots of finger-pointing in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump's victory for a White House comeback.
Merriam-Webster defines polarization as "division into two sharply distinct opposites; especially, a state in which the opinions, beliefs, or interests of a group or society no longer range along a continuum but become concentrated at opposing extremes.”
This year, the word was invoked in various media headlines from diametrically opposed political perspectives.
Conservative Fox News reported that “Vance's debate answer on immigration crisis shows voter polarization," while more liberal cable news channels like MSNBC stated, “The 2024 presidential election has left our country more polarized than ever," according to Merriam-Webster.
The use of polarization wasn't limited to describing division exclusively in the world of politics.
For instance, Forbes observed that “cultural polarization" was "becoming a pressing challenge" in the workplace. In pop culture, the word was used in reference to the public's split opinions regarding Taylor Swift's use of her private jet.
The dictionary's editor at large, Peter Sokolowski, told the Associated Press:
“Polarization means division, but it’s a very specific kind of division."
“Polarization means that we are tending toward the extremes rather than toward the center.”
Merriam-Webster selects the Word of the Year based on the frequency of word search and usage on its website, which attracts roughly 100 million pageviews per month.
Sokolowski added:
“It’s always been important to me that the dictionary serve as a kind of neutral and objective arbiter of meaning for everybody."
“It’s a kind of backstop for meaning in an era of fake news, alternative facts, whatever you want to say about the value of a word’s meaning in the culture.”
The internet agreed that half of us were wholly on board with the year's word choice.
‘Polarization’ is Merriam-Webster’s word of the year: ‘Something everyone agrees on’
[image or embed]
— The Guardian (@theguardian.com) December 9, 2024 at 1:10 PM
Sad but true.
— tfodor.bsky.social (@tfodor.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 10:01 AM
Polarization & brain rot. Yeah. That defines this year a lot. Disinformation too, though.
— Oeishik (@oeishik.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 4:16 AM
The other half weighed in.
It should have been "fascism" but y'all are too gutless to ever say it...
— Darek (@darekb.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 6:10 AM
It's how the Two-Party Dictatorship maintains it's death grip on American Politics
— Kris Weinschenker (@krisweinschenker.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 5:19 AM
It's time for a 3+ Party system....2 parties, or more accurately 1 Party and 1 Cult is never going to deliver a functioning government, of the people for the people.
— MdWTH (@md-wth.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 4:33 AM
No Merriam-Webster "Polarization" is too simple. Everything is polarising even when the world was stable. I choose: Myopia That's the theme of 2024 in a word.
— TacTwo (@tactwo.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 1:48 PM
Excellent choice! Except 2025 may say “hold my beer!”
— Lisa Linkowsky (@lisalinkowsky.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 1:17 PM
Honorable mentions for 2024 Word of the Year included "demure," "totality," "allision," and "weird."
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Nancy Mace Rages After Nobody Will Print Her Transphobic Holiday Wrapping Paper Design
Dec 10, 2024
South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace was called out after sharing a photo of her anti-trans wrapping paper design to lament that "no company" would print it due to its "offensive" nature.
Mace, who has courted significant controversy for her efforts to bar Sarah McBride, the first transgender member of Congress, from using the bathroom that corresponds with her gender identity, shared on social media that she attempted to create custom wrapping paper, seemingly intended for raising campaign funds.
She included a photo of the design, which featured a repeating pattern alternating between her campaign logo and a graphic with the text, “No [image of balls] in our stalls.”
She wrote:
“My team just informed me that no company would make this wrapping paper for us because it’s too ‘offensive.' What I find offensive is men in women’s bathrooms. But anyway, who would’ve bought this wrapping paper?”
You can see her post below.
@NancyMace/X
She was swiftly criticized.
Mace has ramped up her transphobic attacks since House Speaker Mike Johnson announced that transgender women would be prohibited from using women's bathroom facilities at the U.S. Capitol.
Johnson's announcement followed a proposal from Mace shortly after Delaware elected Democrat McBride as the first openly transgender member of Congress. The proposal appears to target McBride, who secured Delaware's lone seat in the House.
In turn, McBride criticized the GOP, saying that "every single time we hear the incoming administration or Republicans in Congress talk about any vulnerable group in this country, we have to be clear that it is an attempt to distract.” She encouraged listeners to consider "what they’re doing to pick the pocket of American workers, to fleece seniors by privatizing social security and Medicare. Look at what they’re doing, undermining workers.”
This week, McBride joined legislators and activists from across Delaware to rally the LGBTQ community and advocate against what they described as threats to their freedoms. Acknowledging the challenges the community may face in the next four years, McBride emphasized Delaware’s role as a leader in advancing equality. On a federal level, she pledged to continue fighting for the LGBTQ community’s right to live free from discrimination.
She emphasized that she thinks "we recognize the fundamental humanity of every single one of our fellow Delawareans, regardless of background, regardless of identity, regardless of political persuasion."
She concluded her remarks by acknowledging that "the story of our movement, the story of our community, the story of this country is the story of advocates, activists and effective and compassionate elected officials working together to right the wrongs of our past, to address injustice, to bring about change that once seems so impossible."
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'Coda' Star Apologizes After Selena Gomez's Classy Response To His 'Emilia Pérez' Criticism
Dec 10, 2024
Actor Eugenio Derbez walked back his harsh review of Selena Gomez's Spanish in the new musical crime comedy film Emilia Pérez after she responded with class to the tough criticism of not being a fluent speaker.
Gomez stars as Spanish-speaking character Jessi Del Monte, the wife of a cartel kingpin who undergoes gender-affirming surgery to start a new life as the titular Emilia Pérez.
The Only Murders in the Building actor said she studied Spanish for six months in preparation for her role, which eventually garnered her a Best Actress nod in a critically acclaimed movie that was named one of the American Film Institute’s top 10 films of the year.
She mentioned having lost the ability to speak the language fluently since moving to California at a young age to pursue a Hollywood career.
Amid positive buzz for Emilia Pérez, Derbez, who was born and raised in Mexico City, appeared on Gaby Meza’s podcast Hablando de Cine, and criticized Gomez's Spanish-speaking performance, calling it "indefensible."
The CODA star continued:
“I was there [watching the movie] with people, and every time a scene came [with her in it], we looked at each other to say, ‘Wow, what is this?’”
The interview, conducted in Spanish, was shared in a TikTok video seen below.
@elviboreo Eugenio Derbez habla de la actuación de Selena Gómez en la película “Emilia Pérez” #eugenioderbez #selenagomez #emiliaperez #peliculas #cine #hablandodecinecon #fyp #paratiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii #parati #parat #viral #selena #tendencia #farandula #cinefilos #entretenimiento #podcasts #entrevista #hollywood #movies
In the comments section, Gomez responded to the criticism leveled at her, writing:
I understand where you are coming from..I’m sorry I did the best I could with the time I was given."
"Doesn’t take away from how much work and heart I put into this movie."
@elviboreo/TikTok
Fans had her back.
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
Derbez took Gomez's clapback to heart and shared the following message on his TikTok page.
His statement read:
"I truly apologize for my careless comments—they are indefensible and go against everything I stand for. As Latinos, we should always support one another."
The 63-year-old continued:
"There's no excuse. I was wrong, and I deeply admire your career and your kind heart."
"Emilia Pérez deserves to be celebrated, not diminished by my thoughtless remarks. I'm walking away from this with an important lesson learned," Derbez added.
@ederbez/TikTok
Social media users shared their thoughts.
@elviboreo/TikTok
@ederbez/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
@elviboreo/TikTok
During Gaby Meza's podcast episode, the host acknowledged Gomez as a “very talented actress" and “very good singer."
But the praise ended there.
She dissected Gomez's performance to expose her imperfect Spanish.
"Spanish is neither her primary nor secondary language nor fifth," said Meza, adding:
"And that’s why I feel she doesn’t know what she is saying, and if she doesn’t know what she’s saying, she can’t give her acting any nuance. … And that is why her performance is not only unconvincing but uncomfortable.”
Derbez nodded in agreement, saying:
“I’m glad you’re saying that because I was saying, ‘I can’t believe no one is talking about it?’”
He also couldn't fathom why Gomez's performance was receiving praise and generating awards buzz.
Gomez was awarded the Cannes Film Festival’s Best Actress prize, along with co-stars Karla, Adriana Paz, and Zoe Saldaña, Sofía Gascón—who became the first trans actress to win at Cannes.
Derbez theorized that non-Spanish-speaking audience members didn't question Gomez's performance in the film because they were too focused on reading subtitles and were oblivious to the uninspired performances.
“I feel like what happens is they don’t speak Spanish,” Derbez maintained.
“If you watch a Russian film or a German film that is subtitled in Spanish and you see someone [speaking in the original language], you say, ‘Oh, look. OK. How interesting.’”
He also undermined the film's French director Jacques Audiard, who based Emilia Pérez on his opera libretto of the same name that was loosely adapted from the 2018 novel Écoute by Boris Razon.
Derbez said of Audiard's film:
“I feel like he did a very interesting experiment. I liked the film apart from Selena’s [scenes] that jump at you because it has manageable things."
"But I was saying, ‘How strange because if the director doesn’t speak English or Spanish and the movie is in Spanish and English, and it takes place in Mexico and you don’t understand the culture.’"
"It’s like if I wanted to make a film in Russian without knowing the culture or Russian and speaking in French.”
Gomez grew up speaking Spanish but said she gradually lost her fluency when she and her family moved to California from Texas.
"I got my first job at 7, and most of my jobs from that point on were English," she recalled with NPR, adding, "I just lost [my Spanish]. That's kind of the case for a lot of people, especially Mexican American people."
She intends to revisit her roots with integrity, which is why she spent nearly half a year dedicated to taking Spanish lessons in preparation for her role.
"I wish I just knew a lot more than I do. But I think that's why I try to honor my culture as much as possible—from releasing an album in Spanish to wanting to pursue this movie," she said.
Gomez noted that Emilia Pérez won't be the last project she does that involves Spanish.
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Trump Dragged After Claiming He 'Started Using' The Word 'Groceries' During The Election
Dec 10, 2024
President-elect Donald Trump was dragged after claiming he "started using" the word "groceries" during the election—before asking, "Who uses the word?"
Trump, in an interview with Meet the Press host Kristen Welker, emphasized the soaring grocery prices affecting millions of Americans as a pivotal factor in his victory over Vice President Kamala Harris in the race for the White House.
But then things got weird.
He said:
"I won on two things: The border and more than immigration. They like to say immigration. I break it down more to the border but I won on the border and I won on groceries."
"Very simple word, groceries. Like almost – you know, who uses the word? I started using the word – the groceries. When you buy apples, when you buy bacon, when you buy eggs, they would double and triple the price over a short period of time, and I won an election based on that."
"We're going to bring those prices way down."
You can hear what he said in the video below.
He was swiftly mocked.
Grocery prices could get much higher during the second Trump administration if Trump follows through with plans to impose hefty tariffs.
In a separate comment to Welker, he falsely claimed that tariffs "cost Americans nothing." However, the overwhelming majority of credentialed economists reject the notion that tariffs provide a net benefit.
Most argue that consumers in the country imposing the tariffs ultimately bear the cost, facing higher prices for imported goods and for domestic products made with foreign-sourced raw materials. Additionally, if the targeted country retaliates with its own tariffs on U.S. goods, American producers can see a decline in exports.
If fully implemented, North American tariffs could significantly impact household expenses. For example, Mexico supplied 69% of U.S. vegetable imports and 51% of fresh fruit imports in 2022, meaning grocery prices could rise sharply. New tariffs on Canada might also increase gasoline prices, particularly in the upper Midwest, which depends heavily on Canadian crude oil.
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People Break Down Their 'I F*cking Knew It!' Experiences
Dec 10, 2024
Sometimes you feel like you just know something is true, even if you can't prove it.
You may find out you're completely wrong. People usually don't like to talk about or acknowledge when that happens.
But people love sharing the times their instincts or preconceived notions were correct. We love being right so much that we inflate the times our biases are confirmed over the times we were wrong.
This is especially true about stereotypes we cling to. People love to brag about how intuitive they are, conflating the 1 time we were right while weignoring the 100 times we were wrong.
Reddit user Unique-Landscape-202 asked:
"What was your biggest 'I fucking knew it' moment?"
Locked In
"I’m a huge Atlanta Falcons (NFL) fan. During Superbowl 51, they got a 28-3 lead over New England."
"I absolutely 100% KNEW the Falcons would lose that game."
"In the 3rd quarter, when our entire sideline was celebrating and essentially congratulating each other on this huge win, the camera panned to Tom Brady on the sideline with his head down in deep thought."
"It was then, that I knew we’d find a way to lose that game. Tom became the definition of 'locked in' for that intense focus."
~ OldNational
Bennifer 2.0
"When Ben Affleck married JLO, the whole world knew they would divorce."
"Everyone, but them, just knew."
~ Pure-Guard-3633
Secondhand Smoke
"Grew up being told I have asthma and that I needed to use inhalers all my life. Thought something wasn’t right—I never really trusted my parents judgement fully."
"As I got older, I realized I didn’t need the inhalers as much. It was just cause they were smoking cigarettes around me while I was a kid!"
~ irandom97
Income Inequality
"Always had a certain feeling about a former coworker in the accounting department. Just a sneaking shady vibe I couldn't shake."
"One day the head of HR accidentally printed a document that showed the salary and raise/bonus/profit sharing structure of every single employee to a shared printer instead of his office printer, and I found it."
"Shady coworker was getting paid WAY less than I expected her to be making for all the work she was legitimately doing. Like despite my suspicion about her, she was actually a seemingly good employee and had worked her way up to a role with significant responsibility."
"The moment I saw her pay structure, I knew she was making money off the company in other ways. There was NO WAY she was settling for that salary after being there for so many years and for the work she did."
"I just....knew."
"Fast-forward a few years and turns out she'd been embezzling significant amounts of money from the company. Submitted false expense reports to pay for everything from groceries to gas to food delivery to vacations, and no one caught it because she was the head of the department."
"All came to light when a new junior employee saw a suspicious Amazon expense and brought it to the COO. Investigation led to the discovery of 10s of thousands of dollars in embezzled funds.
"I quit soon after the discovery, but I hear they're pressing criminal charges against her. Somehow I just KNEW!"
~ kitteh_pants
Sibling Rivalry
"My sister and I had a big fight about something, and after it escalated, I told her, 'You’re not borrowing my dress (she wanted to wear it to a wedding), find your own'. A day later, I went to my cupboard to get my clothes out for the next day, and my dress was gone."
"I said to my parents, (she had moved out to live with her boyfriend, but I still lived at the family home) 'Has (sister) been over this morning?' Parents said no, they hadn’t seen her. I thought this was weird because that dress was always on its hanger—it can’t have just disappeared."
"I called my sister and said, 'Did you take my dress?' She responded that my dress was very ugly and that she hadn’t taken it, she didn’t need it anymore since I was a b*tch, and she’d bought her own which was a lot nicer."
"I said, 'Okie dokie, well, where is mine then? The exact one you wanted to borrow is missing now'. She became irate and was furious that I was accusing her of stealing."
"I asked, 'Where else would it have gone?' She replied I better check my clothes pile in my filthy room. Which wasn’t filthy, it just had clothes on the floor because, well, where do clothes go when you’re a messy 20-year-old?"
"We had another argument, this time about the dress being missing. She was adamant that I was extremely rude, accusing her of stealing, and I was angry because she had slinked into my parent's house unbeknownst to any of us and taken it."
"Anyway, she goes to the wedding and posts a photo of her outfit, and indeed, it’s not the dress that is missing. It’s a different dress."
"One week later, we’d sorted our other differences, and she demanded an apology for the accusations of stealing. So we sort things out, I apologise, we’re cool."
"So I go to her house after work. At this time, I’m working in hospitality (stiff, formal uniform), so the usual routine was always that I go over to her place to hang out, and I change into some sweatpants and another of her shirts to be comfortable."
"It’s just normal for me to grab something out of her closet. But this time, she flies into her room and pushes me out of the way, saying how dare I go through her things. I say, 'What are you on about‽‽ I’m getting some pants!'."
"She says, 'I don’t go to your house and wear your things!' I said, 'Why are you hysterical about this? What’s in there‽‽' And it dawns on me… 'It’s my dress, isn’t it? The one you made me apologize for accusing you of stealing!'."
"Her boyfriend at the time, who was lying on the bed, said, 'The jig is up (sister); just give it to her.' She couldn’t believe he would out her like he just did and became irate at him at this point."
"I pulled her out of the way, flung her cupboard doors open, and there it was. My dress. She really had snuck into the back door of our parents' house and taken it when I was right down in the other end of the house, snuck out again, and gone home with it."
"I looked back at her and said: 'I f*cking knew it'."
"She only bought a new one for the wedding after she realized I knew mine was missing. She planned to wear mine then sneak it back into the house, until me discovering it was missing ruined her plans. She made sure to post the photo of the new dress to 'prove' her innocence."
~ snagsinbread
Accurate Diagnosis
"I watched a lot of Maury Povich as a child, before he turned into Jerry Springer 2.0. They had several episodes about children with Tourette’s Syndrome."
"Around the same time, my younger brother was going through testing for a possible learning disability. I told my mom he had Tourette’s, based on the show and his symptoms."
"She got really upset with me about it. But lo and behold, when he finally got a diagnosis—it was Tourette’s."
~ saratonin84
Say What?
"Was gaslit by my ex for six years telling me I was hard of hearing. She would mumble things constantly making me ask her to speak up."
"She said I was old and my hearing was going etc... even though I never had to ask people at work in a busy office to speak up or repeat things."
"After six years, she f*cked up though. We live in Hawaii, and some of her college girlfriends came out to visit and stay with us."
"After two days, her and her friends are walking and talking when finally one of her girlfriends snaps and yells, 'Why are you talking so quietly? What the hell is wrong with you? No one can hear you! You never talked under your breath before, ever! What the hell?'."
"She looked at me and knew her a** was busted. So for years and years, it was just a petty, passive-aggressive way to put one over on me, I guess."
"This was a thirty-year-old grown a** woman. Ill never understand it."
~ ssshield
Which Came First...
"I was planning a month-long work sabbatical as I had been with the company for 10 years. In the lead-up to the date I was going to start my sabbatical, I kept procrastinating for one reason or another on making the final arrangements."
"I couldn't shake this sense of dread for some reason. I even mentioned it to my boss about a couple of weeks before in our 1:1. I told her I hadn't ever been away from work for so long."
"She reassured me that it would all be good. We then talked about how next time we'd discuss my career plans for the upcoming year. I can't emphasize enough that when we talked about this, it sounded like it was going to happen, but I felt off about it."
"Fast forward a week, and I get an invite from my bosses boss. It was a Zoom meeting with our VP of engineering to lay me off."
"Were they laying me off just because I wanted to take a break—my first in 10 years?"
~ staticjak
Academic Fraud
"There was someone in my PhD cohort who worked a few labs down the hall from me. They always seemed to get positive results with no protocol troubleshooting, and the results were always the sort of thing that journal editors looked fondly upon."
"Somehow this person was 2X as productive as even the super smart, 60+ hour per week working, creative grad students in others lab."
"This person won pretty much every graduate, then postdoc award you could get and ended up a professor at a well-regarded university with a huge startup grant."
"A year in to them starting their faculty position, their former postdoc lab—upon not being able to repeat any of their experiments or build on the data submitted—figured out that the person had fabricated or fudged at least 60% of their lab results that had been published in top tier journals."
"We're talking outright fabrication, not just a slightly too contrast-enhanced micrograph or blot. The university reported this to the funding agencies and there was a full investigation. The person lost their grants, and the university fired them."
"In talking to someone in the person's PhD lab (different from the postdoc lab that exposed them as a fraud), it turns out a similar thing happened in that lab. There were some really questionable western blots that had been overly processed and cropped in ways that were definitely misleading."
"At least one master student burned a year trying to build on that faked work and got nowhere."
"Turns out one of the golden children of my PhD program and someone who was featured by funding agencies as the next big thing had built their scientific career mostly on lies and it took ~10 years for anyone to really catch on."
"There are some really great scientists who just happen to land on fruitful projects... but no one is that productive and lucky all the time."
~ spicypeener1
Cold Case
"When I was a kid, the day after Christmas I would always check out the pawn shops near my grandparents house so I could spend my Christmas money on used video games. There was one where the owner was very chatty but always gave off a creepy vibe."
"Couldn’t quite pinpoint why but his shop always felt uncomfortable."
"Eventually, it came out that he had murdered his ex girlfriend in the basement of the shop. He got away with it for almost fifteen years until his son testified against him."
"I f*cking knew it!"
~ IAmNotScottBakula
Criminal Enterprise
"A town I lived in had a 'Fast Fashion' store take up shop on the far end of the commercial district, too far to get any foot traffic. The displays in the windows never changed, and I never saw a single person going in or out."
"Every time I drove by I said to my partner, 'That place HAS to be a front for something'."
"One year later, it was busted for being an illegal grow operation."
~ cyclejones
"There was an Italian restaurant owned by an Italian family in town. It was rumored they were running a backroom casino."
"Turns out there really was a casino on an upstairs floor. When it was busted it didn't affect the restaurant because that upstairs floor couldn't be accessed from the restaurant itself."
"Also, they couldn't really charge anyone with anything big because there wasn't any cash kept on site, so they couldn't prove the gambling was for money. They got charged with something like running an unlicensed arcade or business, not gambling."
~ spiff2268
Communication Lockdown
"We had a couple private Facebook groups at work for internal communications. Just asking co-workers for help on tasks, stuff like that."
"Came in one morning to find we were locked out of the Facebook groups."
"Me: 'This doesn’t feel right. Something’s happening'."
"Co-worker: 'You’re just being paranoid. It’s just a computer glitch'."
"The upper management showed up mid-morning to start handing out layoff notices."
~ originalchaosinabox
Potential Pyramid
"About 15 years ago I was hired to assist on an inventory and appraisal of the wine collection of a guy who lived in the Caribbean and ran a bank there, specializing in selling long-term, high-yield CDs."
"I went down and spent a week doing that and spending time with him and some of his very few employees, none of whom seemed to do very much work at all."
"As soon as I got back I set up Google alerts for the guy's name and Ponzi scheme. A month later, it started going off like crazy; he'd been indicted, assets frozen, fled in his private jet, and eventually got picked up at a cheap motel in Canada."
"A year or so after that I got interviewed by the FBI, mostly questions to establish who of his 'employees' I had met, some questions about his lifestyle—presumably to try to make a tax fraud case, although they ended up just getting him on Ponzi charges."
~ EggCzar
Mother's Instinct
"When my son was 14, he lost 30 lbs within a few months. I wasn’t terribly concerned out of the gate because he started on the heavy side and also because he seemed to be working for the weight loss."
"However, he went to Mexico for a week with his dad and came back 10 lbs lighter and alarm bells started going off because my brother is a type 1 diabetic."
"Kiddo had an awful migraine-like headache, so I decided to take him to his pediatrician to have a blood sugar run. I expressed my concerns and the doc pooh-poohed me, spending a lot of time congratulating my son on his weight loss."
"She was resistant to running a blood sugar, but I insisted. Sure enough, type 1 diabetes with a dangerous blood sugar of nearly 500."
"Sometimes moms just know. Also, f*ck that doctor."
~ beatrix0
Have you ever known something was true, even if you had no proof? What happened when you were proven correct?
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