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New Sexual Revolution: Polyamory May Be Good for You
http://news.yahoo.com/sexual-revolut...154751829.html |
Sea Slug’s Detachable Penis Grows Back Again and Again After Sex
http://gizmodo.com/5984010/sea-slugs...gain-after-sex |
Multiverse Confusion
I keep hearing about multiple universes.I keep asking myself how do intelligent people not understand the definition of the word universe?The universe is everything there ever was or ever will be.There can not be anything outside of that EVER.Please ask them to think of another word for a different dimensional realm other then insisting on misusing the word universe over & over in sloppy thinking & sloppy languaging.
What expanded my mind was how genius scientists can get away with saying something that is obviously wrong & no one mentions it. |
An adventure to get a few pictures taken....
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In my opinion, the world could use a lot more people like this guy... |
It expanded my mind a little today, to read about emergent theory. Like, you look at an atom of hydrogen and an atom of oxygen, and do you see anything resembling water? No. But put them together, and you get water. What's that about? The sum of two things is larger than their whole. Two things come together, and make something that has no resemblance to either of them.
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When I watched this series of videos, suddenly everything I have thought of as suffering, suddenly seemed so microscopic, so utterly unimportant in comparison to the horror and suffering these people, and victims of other natural disasters have faced, and I am left stunned. It is not that I was unaware of this horrible event, or did not feel empathetic before, it was listening to the survivors, while watching their videos, that really slammed it home. I am posting 5 of them here, the rest are available on Youtube. |
And this...
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PCBs in Fish and Shellfish
PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, are highly toxic industrial compounds. They pose serious health risks to fetuses, babies and children, who may suffer developmental and neurological problems from prolonged or repeated exposure to small amounts of PCBs. These chemicals are harmful to adults as well. Although they were banned from manufacture in the United States in 1977, PCBs are slow to break down and can persist in the environment at dangerous levels. PCBs accumulate in the sediments at the bottoms of streams, rivers, lakes and coastal areas. These chemicals can build up in the fatty tissues of fish and other animals, and in high concentrations pose serious health risks to people who frequently eat contaminated fish. Based on available data on PCB concentrations in fish, Environmental Defense recommends limiting consumption of certain fish . What are PCBs and where do they come from? PCBs are man-made chlorinated industrial chemicals also known by the trade name of Aroclor. There are 209 different PCB compounds (called congeners), which can be mixed in different combinations to yield different Aroclor compounds. These mixtures tend to be chemically stable and nonflammable, with high boiling points and electrical insulating properties. This combination of useful chemical properties made PCBs popular for a variety of industrial applications, including use in electrical transformers, hydraulic fluids, lubricants and carbonless paper. More than 1.5 billion pounds of PCBs were manufactured in the United States before they were banned, and some electrical equipment in use today still contains PCBs. Unfortunately, the same properties that made PCBs ideal for industrial use make them slow to break down in the environment. Most PCBs do not mix with water and settle into riverbeds, lake bottoms and coastal sediments. Here they can enter the food chain and bioaccumulate in invertebrates, fish, birds and mammals -- including people. Although these chemicals have been banned for many years, increased testing has recently shown that the problem of PCB-contaminated fish is widespread. According to the Environmental Protection Agency's National Listing of Fish and Wildlife Advisories, advisories for PCBs increased 177% between 1993 and 2003 (from 319 to 884). Thirty-nine states issued PCB advisories in 2003, up from 31 states in 1993. As of 2003, more than two million lake acres and 130,000 river miles were covered by some type of PCB advisory. Three states (Indiana, Maryland and New York) and the District of Columbia have issued statewide freshwater advisories, and seven states (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island) have issued statewide coastal advisories for PCBs.Statewide advisories urge people to limit their consumption of all fish and shellfish from freshwater or coastal areas. What are the health risks associated with consuming PCB-contaminated fish? According to EPA, contaminated fish are a persistent source of PCBs in the human diet. PCBs are not highly toxic with a single dose (as in a single meal), but continued low levels of exposure (for example, eating contaminated fish over an extended period of time) may be harmful. EPA rates PCBs as "probable human carcinogens," since they cause cancer in laboratory animals. Other tests on laboratory animals show damage from PCBs to their circulatory, nervous, immune, endocrine and digestive systems. A number of studies indicate that PCBs harm people, with fetuses and young children especially susceptible to the effects of PCBs on their developing nervous systems. For example, some recent studies found that: Children of mothers who ate fish with large amounts of PCBs from the Great Lakes had smaller head size, reduced visual recognition and delayed muscle development. A mother's exposure to PCBs and other chemicals was linked to slight effects on her child's birth weight, short-term memory, and learning. Older adults (49 to 86 years old) who ate fish containing PCBs and other contaminants had lower scores on several measures of memory and learning. How can I reduce the risks of eating seafood contaminated with PCBs? PCBs build up in fish and animal fat, and therefore proper cooking methods can help reduce your exposure: Before cooking, remove the skin, fat (found along the back, sides and belly), internal organs, tomalley of lobster and the mustard of crabs, where toxins are likely to accumulate. When cooking, be sure to let the fat drain away and avoid or reduce fish drippings. Serve less fried fish; frying seals in chemical pollutants that might be in the fish's fat, while grilling or broiling allows fat to drain away. For smoked fish, it is best to fillet the fish and remove the skin before the fish is smoked. |
Empowering Women to balance life
This expanded my mind today.I have repeatedly seen how one of the main things destroying our society is the removal of the feminine characteristics through making them negative traits has greatly affected our society.Our referencing qualities such as nurturing ,empathy etc. in a demeaning way eventually removes them from the balancing of life that was intended.This eventually leads to dehumanizing those possessing those qualities until they are acted against in a violent way.I love how Eve Ensler put that together with how we treat our earth.I think it started in the bible when they said "Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”This is the genesis 1.26.I so love what she did to make people aware & generate a space for more positive energy in the universe.I hope it can do something to help to protect the Ultimate Mother of all Mother Earth Many thanks to her & I hope people share this with everyone to get the thought out to reverse the trend.I hope you can locate an event near you to participate in on the website listed at the end.Namaste
http://www.care2.com/causes/eve-ensl...ofeminist.html Eve Ensler is famous for her development of The Vagina Monologues, which has become a worldwide sensation performed in dozens of languages, but she’s more than just a playwright. She’s also an activist who’s passionately concerned about violence against women, and recently, she turned her sights to environmental devastation and the connections between harming the environment and hurting women. Is she going to take up nature as her next critical cause? Ensler sees a parallel between the treatment of women and that of the environment, echoing observations and rhetoric made for decades. Just like women, nature is considered lesser when contrasted with men (as representatives of development and culture), and women are exploited, abused and discarded just as natural resources are. Sometimes these links are even more explicit, as Ensler points out with her work in the Congo, where women are deliberately made targets of violence to destabilize communities, making it easier for mining companies to take advantage of their resources. Her observations are reminiscent of some of the core ideals of ecofeminism, a social movement that also explicitly links violence against women with violence against the environment, seeing both as a consequence of patriarchy. By reducing both women and nature to raw resources for capitalist exploitation, ecofeminists argue, patriarchal society has created a world of subjugation and abuse. While ecofeminism has been criticized for failing to consider real-world conditions for women, and for leaning heavily on rhetoric linking women with traditionally gendered tasks, the movement has provoked fascinating discussion about how people interact with women and the environment. It is women who tend to suffer more in the wake of environmental devastation caused by exploitation of resources and related activities. Not just because women can be on the front lines of violence related to these activities, such as rising rape and domestic violence rates in mining towns, but also because women are often tasked with coping with the costs of climate change and environmental destruction. They’re the ones forced to go further afield to find water, fuel, and food to support their families, for example, while also performing routine household tasks. They’re also more likely to be living in poverty, which means they have decreased access to resources that might help them adapt. By explicitly identifying conservation issues, and climate change in particular, as women’s issues as well as environmental ones, Ensler is making an important point, and it’s one people may listen to thanks to her high profile. Women are disproportionately affected by environmental destruction, and yet don’t receive support or assistance to help them survive, whether that’s in the form of counseling for victims of domestic violence or assistance with locating clean-burning fuels. Fighting violence against women should also include addressing environmental issues, and vice versa, argue Ensler and many of those who share her sentiments. They argue that the treatment of women and the earth reflects a specific mindset that needs to be countered in order to achieve the goal of a safer and more peaceful society, and while this is only part of a much larger puzzle, it’s definitely a contributor to global issues that could benefit from a fresh take. Conservation and fighting violence against women aren’t just about changing routines and making new policies, but also about shifting mindsets. Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/eve-ensl...#ixzz2LyyFAagv |
http://www.ted.com/talks/elif_shafak...f_fiction.html
Listening to stories widens the imagination; telling them lets us leap over cultural walls, embrace different experiences, feel what others feel. Elif Shafak builds on this simple idea to argue that fiction can overcome identity politics. Elif Shafak explicitly defies definition -- her writing blends East and West, feminism and tradition, the local and the global, Sufism and rationalism, creating one of today's most unique voices in literature. |
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http://www.ted.com/talks/candy_chang...i_want_to.html
In her New Orleans neighborhood, artist and TED Fellow Candy Chang turned an abandoned house into a giant chalkboard asking a fill-in-the-blank question: “Before I die I want to ___.” Her neighbors' answers -- surprising, poignant, funny -- became an unexpected mirror for the community. (What's your answer?) Candy Chang creates art that prompts people to think about their secrets, wishes and hopes -- and then share them. She is a TED Senior Fellow. |
New Cars Increasingly Out of Reach for Many Americans
Looking to buy a new car, truck or crossover? You may find it more difficult to stretch the household budget than you expected, according to a new study that finds median-income families in only one major U.S. city actually can afford the typical new vehicle. The typical new vehicle is now more expensive than ever, averaging $30,500 in 2012, according to TrueCar.com data, and heading up again as makers curb the incentives that helped make their products more affordable during the recession when they were desperate for sales. According to the 2013 Car Affordability Study by Interest.com, only in Washington could the typical household swing the payments, the median income there running $86,680 a year. At the other extreme, Tampa, Fla., was at the bottom of the 25 large cities included in the study, with a median household income of $43,832. The study looked at a variety of household expenses, such as food and housing, and when it comes to purchasing a new vehicle, it considered more than just the basic purchase price, down payment and monthly note, factoring in such essentials as taxes and insurance. ( More From CNBC: 10 Super-Hot Cars That You Will Never Drive ) Bottom line? A buyer in the capital can purchase a car with a sticker price of $31,940, slightly more than the new vehicle average for the 2013 model year and about what it would cost for a mid-range Ford Fusion sedan or a stripped-down BMW X1 crossover. The buyer in Tampa? They'll just barely cover the cost of a basic Kia Rio, with $14,516 to spend. "If you live in New York City or San Francisco, you're probably going to have to pay a lot for housing, but you don't have to pay a lot for a car," said Mike Sante, the managing editor of Interest.com, a financial decision-making website. Affordability has been a matter of growing concern for the auto industry in recent years as prices have continued to move upward. Even the most basic of today's cars are generally loaded with features that were once found on high-line models a few decades back - if they were available at all - such as air conditioning, power windows, airbags and electronic stability control, as well as digital infotainment systems. They also have to meet ever tougher federal safety, emissions and mileage standards that have added thousands to the typical price tag. ( More From CNBC: Must-Have Super Car: $1.6 Million and Not Yet Legal ) "The average compact car of today has the features of a midsize model somebody might be trading in - but it may be just as expensive," said David Sargent, director of automotive operations for J.D. Power and Associates. That is one reason why many buyers have been downsizing in recent years, said Bill Fay, general manager of Toyota, though he added that "there is still a lot of affordability in the marketplace." Perhaps, but industry planners have come to recognize that they are targeting a much smaller segment of the American public than in decades past. That's one reason why most manufacturers are offering more downsized models. They also are working with their dealers to offer certified pre-owned programs where buyers can stretch their budget by purchasing a two- or three-year-old vehicle that has gone through an extensive inspection and, if necessary, repairs and replacements. Such vehicles may cost slightly more than a conventional used model but usually include a like-new warranty. ( More From CNBC: The Detroit Auto Show's Hottest Cars ) While the typical new vehicle will likely nudge up this year, Interest.com editor Sante stressed that car costs are one of the most controllable parts of a household's budget. "You're better off driving something more affordable and saving or investing the difference." If the typical new car costs $30,550, with an average monthly payment of $550, the five cities most able to meet - or come close - are: 1) Washington Average Household Income: $86,680 Affordable Purchase Price: $31,940 Maximum monthly payment: $628 2) San Francisco Average Household Income: $71,975 Affordable Purchase Price: $26,786 Maximum monthly payment: $537 3) Boston Average Household Income: $69.455 Affordable Purchase Price: $26,025 Maximum monthly payment: $507 4) Baltimore Average Household Income: $65,463 Affordable Purchase Price: $24,079 Maximum monthly payment: $468 5) Minneapolis Average Household Income: $63,352 Affordable Purchase Price: $24,042 Maximum monthly payment: $470 At the other end of the scale, those five cities least able to handle a car payment are: 21) Phoenix Average Household Income: $50,058 Affordable Purchase Price: $17,243 Maximum monthly payment: $348 22) San Antonio Average Household Income: $48,699 Affordable Purchase Price: $17,137 Maximum monthly payment: $334 23) Detroit Average Household Income: $48,968 Affordable Purchase Price: $17,093 Maximum monthly payment: $332 24) Miami Average Household Income: $45,407 Affordable Purchase Price: $15,188 Maximum monthly payment: $295 25) Tampa Average Household Income: $43,832 Affordable Purchase Price: $14,516 Maximum monthly payment: $282 |
Why is my country so far behind????
Gay Germany
Scene and Culture: Homosexuality is widely accepted in Germany and this is reflected in such things as a low age of consent, legal prostitution and their same sex partnership legislation. Germans are also a very open people which means they don't have hang ups about sex. Public nudity is acceptable and laws on pornography seem quite liberal. There are for example nudist areas in parks in the middle of Berlin and Porno cinemas in airports. There is a huge gay scene in Germany which is extremely liberal and caters to all tastes. In all the major cities you will find large numbers of bars, clubs, cafe, saunas and restaurants. For those seeking a slightly bolder gay scene Germany makes an excellent destination particularly Berlin and Hamburg. Legal Notes: 18 years of Christian Democrat government hindered advancement on gay and lesbian rights in the 80's and 90's. Following the 1998 election of a Social Democrat-Green coalition government extensive gay law reform was undertaken. In 1999 immigration law was reformed, in 2000 an anti-discrimination bill was submitted and in 2001 Germany passed gay partnership legislation granting registered same sex couples rights and obligations in areas such as inheritance, health insurance, immigration, name change and maintenance. These rights were augmented in 2004 to include pension and adoption rights. |
Expanded
This meditation : Positive Affirmations for well being-hyptalk (you tube)
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I just noticed this warning on a BBC News item...I don't know why this isn't done everywhere.
WTG BBC! http://i47.tinypic.com/nxue8l.jpg "Adverts are a major problem as they are trying to attract attention. One way is to make the material very active. Sixty per cent of photosensitive epileptics have their first seizure while watching television." |
I love Ted Talks
I watched this today & was really entertained while I was informed.
http://www.upworthy.com/watch-the-te...-or-two?c=upw1 She talks about gossip being sociology & uses a gay Egyptian king to illustrate it*G* |
http://www.ted.com/talks/allan_savor...te_change.html
Desertification of the world's grasslands, Allan Savory suggests, is the immediate cause of poverty, social breakdown, violence, cultural genocide -- and a significant contribution to climate change. In the 1960s, while working in Africa on the interrelated problems of increasing poverty and disappearing wildlife, Savory made a significant breakthrough in understanding the degradation and desertification of grassland ecosystems. After decades of study and collaboration, thousands of managers of land, livestock and wildlife on five continents today follow the methodology he calls "Holistic Management." In 1992, Savory and his wife, Jody Butterfield, formed the Africa Centre for Holistic Management in Zimbabwe, a learning site for people all over Africa. In 2010, the Centre won the Buckminster Fuller Challenge for its work in reversing desertification. In that same year he and his wife, with others, founded the Savory Institute in Boulder, Colorado, to promote large-scale restoration of the world's grasslands. |
what I noticed today:
As I was reading a thread today it became apparent that it was in a way a form of mirroring to others what they can not see of themselves.A cheaper & quick therapy in a way.By posting comments about others comments it illuminated to the poster more about their value judgements ,prejudices etc.I thought it was fantastic people could grow from something so simple.Very cool for me.It made me have a deeper appreciation for what kind of tool threads truly were.When one of us expands our awareness this becomes a little bit better place to live.Thank you
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Read the text here... one of the powerful parts of this spoken word: "to this day kids are still being called names the classics were hey stupid hey spaz seems like each school has an arsenal of names getting updated every year and if a kid breaks in a school and no one around chooses to hear do they make a sound? are they just the background noise of a soundtrack stuck on repeat when people say things like kids can be cruel?" |
Sick...No,really...Sick.
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Several shows on PBS.
Zimmeh |
My mother sent me this...
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/ass...al-gallery.jpg Five days before Christmas 1943, a helpless American bomber pilot locked eyes with a German fighter pilot over the frozen skies of Europe. The German pilot spared the life of the American, and both men would reunite and become friends 50 years later. Franz Stigler and Charles Brown started the war as enemies, but during a tense wartime encounter, both men discovered a higher call. The pilot glanced outside his cockpit and froze. He blinked hard and looked again, hoping it was just a mirage. But his co-pilot stared at the same horrible vision. "My God, this is a nightmare," the co-pilot said. "He's going to destroy us," the pilot agreed. The men were looking at a gray German Messerschmitt fighter hovering just three feet off their wingtip. It was five days before Christmas 1943, and the fighter had closed in on their crippled American B-17 bomber for the kill. The B-17 pilot, Charles Brown, was a 21-year-old West Virginia farm boy on his first combat mission. His bomber had been shot to pieces by swarming fighters, and his plane was alone in the skies above Germany. Half his crew was wounded, and the tail gunner was dead, his blood frozen in icicles over the machine guns. But when Brown and his co-pilot, Spencer "Pinky" Luke, looked at the fighter pilot again, something odd happened. The German didn't pull the trigger. He nodded at Brown instead. What happened next was one of the most remarkable acts of chivalry recorded during World War II. Years later, Brown would track down his would-be executioner for a reunion that reduced both men to tears. Listen to the story on CNN Radio Here |
The degrading treatment of indigenous people around the world still
Seeing tribes go from free, to gathered and hunted for sport, and currently being used by wealthy tourist companies as caged tourist attractions Money mistreats who it can to make more money I knew all this but the subtle reminder in a documentary in my cultural anthropology class opens my mind again to those things |
The Associations won't be happy to hear this...But that doesn't make it less true...
Obese heart patients 'do better' Obese cardiac patients are less likely to die than their normal weight counterparts, say researchers. This is despite them reporting worse health and being less likely to follow lifestyle advice, a study of more than 4,400 patients reported. One explanation is that doctors treat the disease more aggressively, the University College London team said. The British Heart Foundation also said that where people stored fat, not just general obesity, was important. It is not the first time researchers have pointed out this paradox, that being overweight or obese - a risk factor for heart disease in itself - can actually lead to a better prognosis. One theory has been that maybe such patients were fitter, despite their size - taking more exercise for example. To see if this was the case, researchers from University College London looked at data from patients who took part in the Health Survey for England or Scottish Health Survey. They found that, as with other studies, patients with cardiovascular disease who were obese or overweight were less likely to die over the next seven years than people of a normal weight who had the condition. In all 31% of patients were obese - that is with a body mass index of 30 or more - they reported in Preventive Medicine. Those patients tended to be younger but reported worse health and had more heart risk factors such as raised cholesterol and blood pressure, but were less likely to smoke. The researchers found that those who took part in physical activity at least once a week and did not smoke had a lower risk of death whatever their weight. But obese patients who did not stick to these healthy lifestyle recommendations still had a lower risk of death than normal weight patients who smoked or were inactive. BMI a 'poor marker' Study leader Dr Mark Hamer said they were trying to explain why obese heart patients seemed to do better by looking at lifestyle factors, but they found that it was not the case that obese patients were healthier. "We don't yet understand this paradox and we would clearly not advise patients to put on weight. "One of the more sensible explanations may be that when obese patients present to their doctor, they are given more aggressive treatment because they are seen as very high risk," he explained. "We do know, for example with cardiac rehabilitation, that the thing that absolutely works is exercise - that dramatically reduces risk even though you don't necessarily lose weight." Other work by the same researchers has shown that a certain proportion of obese patients have very normal health and are not at increased risk of heart disease. "BMI is quite a poor marker of what's going on," Dr Hamer added. June Davison, a senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: "It seems contradictory that one of the risk factors for heart disease may improve survival rates. "The reason for this link remains unclear, but it's possible that those with a higher BMI go to their doctor sooner and may be treated more aggressively. "Also, this study only measured BMI. When looking at health risk it's not only BMI that matters, but where fat is stored. "Carrying excess fat around the middle can produce toxic substances which can increase your health risk." |
Portraits of Refugees Posing With Their Most Valued Possessions
http://cdn.petapixel.com/assets/uplo...ria-1-copy.jpg http://cdn.petapixel.com/assets/uplo...dan-6-copy.jpg The most important object Dowla was able to bring with her is the wooden pole balanced over her shoulder, with which she carried her six children during the 10-day journey from Gabanit to South Sudan. At times, the children were too tired to walk, forcing her to carry two on either side. Portraits of Refugees |
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https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphot...75809255_n.jpg Broccoli: Decline in Nutrients % Change 1950 vs. 1999: 60% less calcium! Petrochemical Monoculture depletes the soil. https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphot...05991761_n.jpg |
I came across a web blog for Queer & Trans* people of color (QTPOC), the other day: Black Girl Dangerous.
Founding editor, Mia McKenzie, and her assistant editor Janani, co-host this very important news blog with others who contribute actively in raising maximum awareness on what life is like for people of color and the systematic oppression that QTPOC people face on a daily basis. I read on this particular site that a person should not copy and paste any item on their site to any other site, so I will leave a link below for those who would like to explore further. I highly recommend reading this blog. http://blackgirldangerous.org/about-bgd/ |
The class with the teacher of whom gravely offended me spoke about the topic at hand which enlightened me greatly.
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love being away from the office ... attending technical training all week ... skills upgrade ...
technology marches forward ...stayed tuned or be a "has been" geek dat get-go-gadgie :) |
This week I encountered two forms of entertainment (Bones Season 8, Episode 18, The Survivor in the Soap, & James Patterson's book, Cross Country), that sent me diving into refreshing my knowledge about what has happened, and what is happening in Sudan. Much of what I have read and watched has brought me to tears, anger, frustration, action, and commitment to further action.
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I'm reading a book i recently bought, "Third Sex Third Gender Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History" by Gilbert Herdt
I expanded my mind while journeying toward self awareness. I found out how how much the wrong views on human sexuality and gender Charles Darwin presented have crushed other gendered people in Western Society. He created the current standard for the two gender system and left no room for those of us who do not fit in. Because of him we are all called abnormal.. Thank you Charles Darwin for making it difficult. |
Feminist Thinkers and the Demands of Femininity: The Lives and Work of Intellectual Women by Lori Jo Marso
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