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Ex-GOP Lawmaker: Trump Is “Illegitimate President,” Should Be Impeached
#1
Ex-GOP Lawmaker: Trump Is “Illegitimate President,” Should Be Impeached

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019...ached.html
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#2
Vote fraud in which the President is complicit would be absolute cause to remove the President upon impeachment.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#3
Slate is the same as using the National Enquirer as a source.
It really is all mathematics.

Turn on to Daddy, Tune in to Nationalism, Drop out of UN/NATO/WTO/TPP/NAFTA/CAFTA Globalism.
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#4
(05-30-2019, 11:03 AM)Kinser79 Wrote: Slate is the same as using the National Enquirer as a source.

For a guy who regularly cites a couple of off-beat pundit types, complaining about a straight story in any publication is a bit of a push.  When the story cites direct quotes, it's hard to fake it -- unless the "person" being quoted is also a fake.  I don't think that's the case here.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#5
(05-30-2019, 11:03 AM)Kinser79 Wrote: Slate is the same as using the National Enquirer as a source.

No -- it isn't.

[Image: main-qimg-12f43747967c9c690a3f29e6bb5ecd29]
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#6
You know the US is doomed when Americans would rather attack those who defend freedom instead of criticizing the government that is enslaving them.
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#7
(06-02-2019, 08:26 AM)Torma Wrote: You know the US is doomed when Americans would rather attack those who defend freedom instead of criticizing the government that is enslaving them.

Meaning what, exactly?
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#8
Usually these people's 'freedom' implies the right to keep and bear arms. The correlation between gun ownership and political freedom is weal.

It's rarely about freedom from poverty, ignorance, or cops being more trigger-happy around blacks.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#9
(06-05-2019, 11:07 PM)vine Wrote: Is freedom anything but the right to live as we wish? Nothing else!

That definition of freedom is actually the definition of anarchy.  If everyone had always lived for him or herself, and nothing else, we would all still be living in caves ... assuming we survived as a species, of course.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#10
(06-06-2019, 09:49 AM)vine Wrote: Americans used to believe in freedom.

http://www.naplesnews.com/story/opinion/...427082001/

Now Americans would need to be mentally ill to think tyranny won’t get worse.

Who would have thought in 1980 that the USA would soon have curfews, gun bans, NSA wiretapping, checkpoints, forfeiture, the end to the right to silence, free speech bans, torture, kill lists, no fly lists, searches without warrants, private prisons, mandatory minimums, 3 strikes laws, DNA databases, CISPA, SOPA, NDAA, IMBRA, FBAR, FATCA, TSA groping, secret FISA courts, and Jade Helm?

During the Wild West in the US, everyone could carry guns, businesses were not licensed, no one had Social Security numbers, there were no sales, income, or property taxes, and drugs, alcohol, smoking, gambling, and prostitution were legal.

There was little government, yet people lived and had freedom.
Your grasp of history leaves a lot to be desired.  First, gun bans were common in the "old west".  You didn't just waltz into town packing heat.  Unlicensed businesses, as you call them, regularly produced and sold products that poisoned or maimed their customers, and got away with it.  Others merely sold useless products that made them money in exchange for nothing.  And you're bitching about Social Security?  Half of the elderly population would be dead if not for SS, and most of the rest would be burdens on their children -- assuming they lived long enough, of course.  Taxes were low, but services were almost nonexistent.  Houses regularly burned to the ground, criminals regularly avoided capture and forget about streets and other amenities.  There were none.
I could go on, but why bother.  If living in a shithole is your idea of greatness, there are still a few of those still around.  Emigrate.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#11
(06-06-2019, 10:12 AM)David Horn Wrote:
(06-06-2019, 09:49 AM)vine Wrote: Americans used to believe in freedom.

http://www.naplesnews.com/story/opinion/...427082001/

Now Americans would need to be mentally ill to think tyranny won’t get worse.

Who would have thought in 1980 that the USA would soon have curfews, gun bans, NSA wiretapping, checkpoints, forfeiture, the end to the right to silence, free speech bans, torture, kill lists, no fly lists, searches without warrants, private prisons, mandatory minimums, 3 strikes laws, DNA databases, CISPA, SOPA, NDAA, IMBRA, FBAR, FATCA, TSA groping, secret FISA courts, and Jade Helm?

During the Wild West in the US, everyone could carry guns, businesses were not licensed, no one had Social Security numbers, there were no sales, income, or property taxes, and drugs, alcohol, smoking, gambling, and prostitution were legal.

There was little government, yet people lived and had freedom.

Your grasp of history leaves a lot to be desired.  First, gun bans were common in the "old west".  You didn't just waltz into town packing heat.  Unlicensed businesses, as you call them, regularly produced and sold products that poisoned or maimed their customers, and got away with it.  Others merely sold useless products that made them money in exchange for nothing.  And you're bitching about Social Security?  Half of the elderly population would be dead if not for SS, and most of the rest would be burdens on their children -- assuming they lived long enough, of course.  Taxes were low, but services were almost nonexistent.  Houses regularly burned to the ground, criminals regularly avoided capture and forget about streets and other amenities.  There were none.
I could go on, but why bother.  If living in a shithole is your idea of greatness, there are still a few of those still around.  Emigrate.

Thank you. The image of the Wild West, with gunslingers bringing trouble into town, is an exaggeration. Mining towns such as Tombstone may have been extremely violent, and the termini of cattle drives were raunchy places in which cattle drovers got their pay and often got rowdy. But all in all, there are good reasons for such states as Nebraska and Utah not having violent Westerns set in them. The settlers of Nebraska and Utah were not violent people and did not tolerate violence.

Some of the calls for putting the bad patent medicines out of business came from... the Big Business of the time. Those badly-labeled medicines often consisted of alcohol and opiates good only for masking pain without curing the cause. People using those medicines often became monsters as is often the case among addicts. To be sure, the medical profession had its role in insisting that people see a physician about maladies from tuberculosis to diabetes that physicians could treat. If one had terminal cancer, then the physician would prescribe the appropriate level of opiates as needed.

I do genealogy, and I have seen the ads for those patent medicines. If those medicines were as good as they were claimed to be, then if we still had them we would have no cancer, and people would be living into their 140s by now. Haw! Haw!

...I think that we are freer because working-class children are in schools instead of the factories and mines. Social Security was intended to get the elderly, who as a rule were not good workers and often made a workplace more dangerous, out of the workforce and create more opportunity for younger workers. The rate of fatal and crippling accidents for workers over 65 in industry had to be incredibly high.


Taxes seem to be a consequence of prosperity. The highest tax rates are generally in the most prosperous countries. The absence of taxes indicates either a country with a small population and a great store of resources (example: Saudi Arabia), a Marxist state in which profits from state-owned enterprises support a monstrous regime (North Korea is the only remaining pure example of such), and... basket cases unable to tax or serve the People.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#12
vine,

Think for a minute. Your whines about collusion between government and business is the worst kind of crony capitalism, and a direct result of ordinary voters favoring just that. If you elect people to govern you who believe that business should be left to its own devices, this is just what you get. This time, it started in Nixon, Ford and Carter, but erupted in earnest with Ronald Reagan -- but its origins are much older. The Great Depression ended the first experiment in unfettered private enterprise, and big government was the response. Was it perfect? Of course not. It's an institution created and run by human beings, but things got demonstrably better. Business, especially big business, hated it.

So now, we've had 50 years of returning to the old model. You, obviously, hate it. Your answer is hands-off. Really? Power exists in a wealthy society, and someone will wield it. Leaving it to the good graces of the avaricious to be good and do good is beyond naïve. It's insane.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#13
(06-06-2019, 06:58 PM)vine Wrote: Wow.

Americans are so enslaved that they think government agents are holy gods, but since the elites and the government are the same now, asking for government protection from businesses is like asking a thief to watch your house when you go on vacation.

FAA regulates airlines, but airplanes still fail.

It's when airlines choose to dominate markets without concern for profitability (such was the problem with Braniff Airlines) that they fail catastrophically. American Airlines and United Airlines may be near that point.

Quote:SEC regulates stockbrokers, but markets still crash.

It's not the stockbrokers who start the bubbles that implode in panics.


Quote:FDA regulates drugs, but drugs are still dangerous.

That is why many pharmaceuticals remain 'prescription only'. All pharmaceuticals are technically poisons.


Quote:EPA regulates the environment, but the EPA pollutes.

Big business pollutes. Vehicle exhausts and chimneys pollute. The EPA is not and never was intended to be a police force in every board room and every manufacturing plant.


Quote:The USSR was a Socialist utopia, but the Soviet Union was polluted.

Under Stalin the Soviet Union was a Hell... according to Marxism-Leninism, natural resources are worth no more than the labor that goes into extracting them, and nobody is accountable for pollution. Besides, there was no 'environmentalist party in the old USSR' as there was but one Party.


Quote:Maybe the real reason there are food stamps now is because food and banking corporations lobby for them.


I concede that companies such as Safeway, Kroger, Wal*Mart, Publix, Aldi, Spartan-Nash, and Meijer prefer that poor people have food stamps that allow them to buy food as profitable sales for the stores than that they shoplift.

Quote:Maybe the real reason tax filing is so difficult is that tax preparation corporations lobby for complicated tax forms.

Before there were canned, cheap computer programs for filing taxes.


Quote:Maybe the real reason there are laws against ridesharing is because taxi cab companies lobby for regulations against competition.


I see plenty of park-and-ride lots at freeway interchanges for people who share the cost of 60-mile commutes. Where I live, plenty of people have commutes that long -- or even longer.

Quote:Maybe the real reason there are mandatory vaccine laws now is because pharmaceutical corporations lobby for them.

It couldn't be that those illnesses kill and cripple people? No, it could never be that simple.


Quote:Maybe the real reason the US is a police state now is because private prison corporations lobby for it.

Police states have reasons other than profits for jailers -- like suppressing those who criticize the official leadership, as in China, Cuba, Thailand. Watch the lead-ins into Saturday Night Live and ask whether such satire of a President is good for a trip to some American equivalent of a gulag.


Quote:Maybe the real reason the US is a warmonger now is because defense corporations lobby for wars.

On this I have some concurrence -- we need to watch the warmongers who profiteer from war. Tens of millions of lives of 'expendable' people for trillions in profit? For amoral, greedy people with connections to the political leadership, such is all too tempting.
Maybe the real reason there are mandatory health and auto insurance laws now is because insurance companies lobby for them.

Quote:Maybe the real reason there are bailouts and subsidies is because corporations lobby for them.

No, it is because the politicians are all scared of another time like the 1930s.


Quote:Maybe the real reason there are government student loans and grants now is because colleges lobby for them.

The escalating expense of college education has nothing to do with quality. Overpaid professors? Professors used to have a dream existence, but that is over. They are terribly underpaid. What happens? As in Big Business, the bureaucratic elites insist on ever-increasing compensation for treating people badly as customers and employees.

You are onto something here. Karl Marx said that ownership was the cause of all exploitation, but bureaucratic power can do great harm to social equity even without any plutocrats owning the assets. Marx missed the concept of the nomenklatura that appeared in socialist societies, American Big Business, and now non-profit activities such as colleges and universities.

Got a cure? It may take another Great Depression that forces people to start small enterprises in the cemetery of corporate behemoths seemingly too big to fail -- and compels people to insist upon government operation with a concern for economy and efficiency.


Quote:The government takes away your freedom, but won’t protect you.

So don't deal drugs!


Quote:The way to deal with danger today is to do what worked in the past.

Slavery used to exist. Religious persecution used to be commonplace. Mining and manufacturing used to be more dangerous. Don't  get me into a discussion of how dangerous cars and roads were in the 1930s.

As for those poorly-labeled but heavily-advertised and worthless nostrums of about 120 years ago good only for masking pain from curable diseases even of the time -- no thanks!

Quote:Government needs to be small and people need to take personal responsibility and embrace freedom.

That is for voters to decide. Personal responsibility is not something to impose upon small children by letting them run wild and learn the hard way. I'll pass on the alleged freedom to molest children, use or deal narcotics, or do stock or bank fraud.

Quote:Being dangerous is not in the best (interest) of companies.

Big Business is a human institution, and it is no better than the people in them. At times people cut corners to cut costs or to sell more. When such efforts kill or sicken people, those who make those decisions belong in prison. Note that I have a thread on business failures, and I lauded Kellogg's Corporation for going after Peanut Corporation of America for selling bad peanut butter. The company had gone bankrupt, but some figures got long prison terms for selling bad peanut butter to Kellogg's.

One of the most basic rules of business is: do not hurt your customers, direct or indirect.

That's why we have laws against dealing street drugs.


Quote:The big difference between private business and tyranny is that you can boycott the free market, but the government forces you at gunpoint to do something or not do something.

When Big Business is a monopoly and intertwines with government, we can have only bad results.


Quote:Look not to the politicians; look to yourselves.

Bad politics can kill people through persecutions, wars, and famines. Yes, watch the politicians -- and choose wisely.

Liberty is always dangerous, but it is the safest thing we have.

What do we need government for anyway?

Quote:Everything the free market does is better than what government does.

The competitive market or the market in which Big Business is free to do what it wants? That is a big difference. Very little of the American economy is truly competitive anymore.

Quote:Would you rather graduate from Harvard or the University of New Mexico? Would you rather own a Yugo or a BMW?

If you don't have the grades and board scores, then you may be stuck going to a mediocre college and ending up a letter carrier. Not a bad career, but you won't get rich. If you can't afford a BNW, then consider yourself lucky to be able to buy a used Ford Taurus.


Quote:If a private association like the MPAA can regulate movies, why can’t the private market regulate other things?

The MPAA regulated movies over content -- no profanity, no glorification of villains, no overt sexuality, no ridicule of religion. One was a prohibition of interracial relationships on screen, which would preclude a biopic about the origin of our 44th President.

It's up to you and me to decide that you have no desire for pornography.

Quote:When the TSA fingers your asshole and pulls your cock, is the real purpose to protect you or to make you feel like a degraded slave?

Drug mules have put bundles of illegal drugs up their anal orifices and vaginas. 

Quote:When people smoke now, people just call the police on them, but people in the past either took some personal responsibility and ignored smokers, moved away from smokers, or asked smokers to go somewhere else. The problem with a police state is everyone now is either or a slave or a criminal. Who pays the taxes to pay for tyranny?

The vast majority of Americans are now non-smokers. Non-smokers often find cancerweed smoke unpleasant.


Quote:If smoking is dangerous, can’t nonprofits raise funds to pay for educational campaigns that warn of the dangers of smoking instead of outlawing smoking?

They do put up ads such as billboards.


Quote:Can’t people use the BBB to verify if a business is good or not instead of forcing companies to pay fees to get a government business license?

The BBB is good for determining the appropriateness of dealing with businesses that have been around for some time. It cannot rate professional practices. Complaints to the BBB are usually over gouging and non-performance.

Quote:Can’t private charities funded by volunteer donations provide homeless shelters and soup kitchens instead of being at forced at the point of a gun by the government to pay taxes that fund welfare?

In theory they can, but in a really-nasty economic downturn they would be swamped.


Quote:Can’t people use guns to protect themselves instead of relying on the Gestapo?

I would feel safer in the UK, where there are no legal firearms, thank you.


Quote:Can’t neighborhoods hire private security firms to protect their homes?

You would need a neighborhood taxing authority, or you would need it funded in a gated community through rents and residents' fees.


Quote:Can’t the free market provide toll roads?

Toll roads are usually government operations, and the private part comes from leasing the toll roads to outside entities (as with the Indiana Toll Road and the Chicago Skyway). There are situations in which toll roads are appropriate -- as when the people using the toll road are different from the people paying the taxes to support them or the facility is in two different jurisdictions (most bridges across the Hudson and Delaware Rivers) , when the facility is unusually expensive to build and maintain (typically bridges and tunnels), where costs of real estate acquisition or environmental damage (including devaluation of surrounding property) are unusually high)... otherwise, toll facilities are usually much more expensive to build and maintain than free routes.

Two-lane blacktops with unlimited access are completely unsuited to tolls. 

Quote:Can’t the free market provide private airports?

Not for giant jetliners or military aircraft.


Quote:Can’t the free market provide private schools?

Not without the profit.


Quote:Can’t the free market provide disaster relief instead of FEMA?

We would need compulsory private insurance that in many cases would be exorbitant.


Quote:Can’t the free market run delivery services instead of the USPS?

FedEx and UPS handle very specialized letters. The postal service would not handle some toxic waste that I collected (a stool sample) for determining whether I have colon cancer. FedEx did. There used to be DHL and Flying Tigers which got merged into bigger outfits.


Quote:Can’t the free market run railroads instead of Amtrack?

[/quote]


Many people cannot fly or drive. I would take Amtrak again.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#14
(06-08-2019, 08:38 PM)Jumpy Wrote: Americans are whistling down to the concentration camps.

Except for the internment of Japanese-Americans and residents of Japanese origin during WWII, thoroughly shameful and unnecessary, have we had concentration camps?

Of course I distrust President Trump. He may show signs of seeking dictatorial or despotic power, but there is resistance. He is making the mistake of destroying freedom within his own Party before throttling the other, and he has yet to succeed in shutting down opposition in the media.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#15
Tyranny can be stopped. We had a free election in 2018, and the electorate gave President Trump and his political acolytes quite a lesson.

Add to that, the states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin now have state officials who owe Donald Trump nothing. They will not do any dirty work such as voter suppression on his behalf.

An unusual number of people voted in a midterm election -- mostly new, younger voters who voted heavily against Trump.

The President with the most dictatorial and despotic tendencies stands, so far, to lose 'bigly' in 2020, taking many other pols down with him.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#16
Hey march,
Would you like a bitter pill with that Kool-Aid?
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#17
It sounds like kathaksung again.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#18
(08-16-2019, 05:48 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: It sounds like kathaksung again.

… except the English is better.  Otherwise, the same
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#19
(08-17-2019, 08:59 AM)march Wrote: Nazis say Trump was only making a compromise when he banned bump stocks.

Nazis will say Trump was only making a compromise when he bans silencers.

Nazis will say Trump was only making a compromise when he makes gun background checks more invasive.

Nazis will say Trump was only making a compromise when he bans revolvers.

Nazis will say Trump was only making a compromise when he bans rifles.

What do you gain if you lose everything?

Nazis are...

completely irrelevant to contemporary American politics!

To most Americans, Nazi Germany is the totalitarian regime that they best know due to all the book and film coverage of Nazi deeds. They do not know the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China, or any other "socialist" (Commie) state unless they are from there. They do not know Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath fascist regime.

Try again. Compromise is part of the political process when it works well. One side getting whatever it wants shows a gross imbalance in political reality.

If I must choose between "gun rights" and law and order, then I will take law and order without which all the enumerated rights that the Bill of Rights and the unmentioned rights that common law grants.

The only involvement that neo-Nazis have in American politics is to make a mockery of them with murders.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#20
(08-17-2019, 07:23 PM)march Wrote: Does anyone get the feeling that anyone supporting the police state now is a paid NSA shill?

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2...l-networks

Identity theft is a despicable practice. I am surprised that people are not yet sued for it in courts of law.

If used in larceny (let us say someone takes access to my credit card by fishing for my keystrokes and then orders a new wardrobe), then that person has committed a crime suitable for criminal prosecution. I'm probably going to get a call from the card company with a message like this:

This is (name withheld) from Wachovia Bank*. We have noticed unusual activity on your account in which someone using your credit card data has made big purchases at Montgomery Ward*, Sunny Spa Massage Parlor (fictional), and Steak and Ale* in the Greater Memphis area. This is uncharacteristic of your recent spending habits. Then I tell the bank officer that I have not been in Greater Memphis for years, and that the charges are fraudulent and when prompted say that I will sign an affidavit to the effect, and consent to the arrest of the imposter. Do the crook goes to Sound Warehouse* and attempts to buy a large collection of recorded music and is busted.

Aw, too bad. Mr. Big Spender gets to go to jail, go directly to jail, and not get to enjoy the new stuff. Too bad that he got to enjoy the massage parlor and the surf-and-turf...

*defunct entities, as I do not give free advertising.

Identity theft can do harm to a reputation in academia or public life... why must people cheat? So if you are a neo-Nazi, why must you pose as Rabbi Menachem Schneersohn (deceased) and claim that one has inside information that Jews are all criminal conspirators against gentiles instead of citing the usual Nazi sources like Hitler, Goebbels, Streicher, and (Alfred) Rosenberg?

We are going to see clearer measures against identity theft for any purpose... and recognize it is a despicable, and often criminal practice.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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