TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @DailyNoahNews

Saved - May 7, 2025 at 1:37 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I find it amusing that people call Trump an embarrassment while overlooking Trudeau's long-standing ties with China. Mark Carney is a WEF insider, and Trump's "never say never" signals a shift away from globalism. Canada needs to focus on economic survival rather than optics amidst America First trade pressures.

@DailyNoahNews - Noah Christopher

Funny how they say Trump’s an embarrassment while forgetting Trudeau sold out Canada to China for years. Mark Carney’s a WEF insider, he was groomed for this moment. Trump’s never say never was a warning shot: globalism is dying, and sovereign deals are back. Canada should worry less about optics and more about economic survival under America First trade pressure.

Saved - January 25, 2025 at 5:16 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A user reported that criminal aliens deported from the U.S. are being dropped off in Guatemala, noting it is only the fourth day of Trump's presidency. Another user responded, stating that Trump is implementing necessary actions that should have been taken earlier. They highlighted that Guatemala, along with Honduras and El Salvador, is part of the 'Northern Triangle,' a significant source of illegal immigration to the U.S. They mentioned that these countries had signed asylum agreements with the U.S. in 2019, which were poorly enforced under Biden, but Trump is restoring them.

@bennyjohnson - Benny Johnson

🚨BREAKING: Criminal aliens deported from the United States are being dropped off by hundreds in Guatemala. It’s only day 4 of Trump being president. https://t.co/UIlL9T4BuL

@DailyNoahNews - Noah Christopher

Trump’s doing exactly what should’ve been done years ago. Guatemala, along with Honduras and El Salvador, is part of the 'Northern Triangle', a region responsible for a major portion of illegal immigration into the U.S. In 2019, these countries signed asylum agreements with the U.S., but enforcement was weak under Biden. Now, Trump’s restoring those agreements and making sure criminal aliens are sent back where they came from.

Saved - January 8, 2025 at 3:49 AM

@DailyNoahNews - Noah Christopher

Tucker Carlson: Ep. 103  Former Senate aide Tara Reade credibly accused Joe Biden of sexual assault. Now the DOJ is after her and she’s moved to Russia seeking political asylum. We spoke to her in Moscow. SHARE! FOLLOW 👉 @TuckerCarlson

Video Transcript AI Summary
I filed a lawsuit against the Biden DOJ for misconduct after they harassed me and sealed my FBI files. My attorney initially sought an investigation, but received no response, leading to a $10 million tort claim. The sealed case against me, which I learned about through a Twitter lawyer, has not been disclosed, and I feel infuriated as an American citizen. I believe my crime was speaking out about my experience with Joe Biden, who I accused of sexual assault. After being labeled a Russian asset, I sought political asylum in Russia due to threats against my safety. My daughter has faced harassment as well, and I am unable to return to the U.S. or attend her wedding. I continue to fight for accountability and justice.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So your lawyers have sued the Biden Department of Justice for misconduct. Tell us about the suit, why you filed it, what you hope to achieve by it. Speaker 1: Yeah. Well, my attorney actually, had filed a complaint with the inspector general about the way I was treated by the FBI and DOJ and how they were harassing me, and they didn't receive a response. Surprise, surprise. So, after we waited, there was no response. He filed a tort claim, and it's for $10,000,000. And the basically, what the outcome will be, hopefully, is that they will open my FBI files and then expunge them. And the criminal case that has been opened against me in Northern California, the one that's sealed, will be revealed, and because that was opened by DOJ and FBI, where they took all my Twitter communications, now x, it's called, but, Gmail, you name it, all my social media. It was taken under sealed warrants. The only reason I know about the sealed warrants and it was publicized is because a Twitter lawyer had called, and told me that this has happened, and they had made a motion in court to tell me. And, so this case had impaneled a grand jury, so it went pretty far. So it's just, like, shy of indictment. But what are they gonna indict me for? Well, they won't tell me. Now as an American citizen, that's infuriating. Right? Speaker 0: But, I I think a lot of I am confused. I think a lot of people watching this are confused. You, of course, are most famous for recounting in public your experience of sexual assault, and I think it was a sexual assault by then senator Joe Biden in an elevator when you worked for him. Speaker 1: Not an elevator. Quarter. Speaker 0: A quarter. I beg your pardon. And unlike a lot of people who make these claims, you have a con you have contemporaneous evidence in your mother's call to Larry King Live, which came out years later. It's an amazing story, and I think it's a credible story. But what did you do wrong? How did you wind up the subject of a sealed potential indictment of a criminal investigation by the US government? What what was your crime? Speaker 1: I think not shutting up. I think because I just wouldn't stop talking. I kept trying to push for an investigation. If you recall, j Jen Psaki Speaker 0: Yeah. Speaker 1: And she was she was asked one question one time. Peter Ducey, I think, asked the question, and said, you know, about me, about Tara Reid. And she said, oh, that's been litigated. It was never litigated, she lied outright. It's never been litigated. It's never been investigated. You know? And and I was asking for an investigator. All they did was pay money to have media hit pieces done on me. Speaker 0: But, of course, they did. And and you were attacked. The whole believe all women thing turned out not to be true, I guess. Right. Speaker 1: No. That's not true. There's no me too. Speaker 0: There's no me too. But in a a criminal investigation into you is a completely separate category Yeah. And really an escalation of a kind most Americans can't understand. Like, what why would they possibly be criminally investigating you? Do you know? Speaker 1: Well, there were 2. Yeah. I mean, 1 the first one was for perjury, when I was an expert witness, and it took me lawyers and 1,000 of dollars to clear that. They had to drop that case. And then they came at me with a sealed case, which I can't do anything about because I'm not even supposed to know about it. Speaker 0: So And this is the federal government? Speaker 1: Federal, the DOJ, FBI. And so Speaker 0: A seal so there is a Speaker 1: Sealed case. Speaker 0: It's so Soviet. It's hard to believe it's it's Yeah. What you're saying is true, but I I think it's checkable. There's a sealed case against you. They're investigating you for a crime. They won't tell you what the crime is. Right. But it clearly is a felony, or they claim it's a felony. Speaker 1: Right. Correct? And I posted the sealed warrant, so and that's been in the media. So the sealed warrant is visible. You can see the case number. Journalists have tried to look it up. My attorneys tried to look it up. No one will tell them what it is. Then they started coming at me, in more subvert ways, which was, you know, basically harassment, death threats, particularly it amped up when Marjorie Taylor Greene and, representative Matt Gaetz asked me to testify in the whistleblower's panel. Like, I was going to talk about how difficult it is to be a whistleblower because I'd been so targeted. And then when I was about to testify, you know, I'll get to that part, but when I was about to testify, things really amped up as far as threats and undermining me, and it was hard to get a job. People thought I was a security threat. There were, you know, innuendos. You know, my reputation was destroyed, and we've talked about this. So my attorney basically said, okay. That's that. You know? We're we're going to, you know, file this complaint. And this came after, you know, when I was here in Moscow, Russia, I, came here to publicize my book and to oversee the translation of it, and I did an interview with channel 1. And, channel Russian TV channel. Mhmm. And channel 1 is sanctioned, apparently. And, apparently, that was, I was here for vacation, so I packed literally for for 7 days, 5 days, Didn't have much with me. And then about midway through, I started getting, you know, messages that I was from former intelligence. They were trying to get me messages, whistle blowers. Like, look. You know, you're in danger of being indicted if you go back. I talked to my lawyers about Indicted for what? For FARA, the Foreign Registration Act, which is the same thing they went after Maria Butina for Speaker 0: and And Paul Manafort. Speaker 1: And Paul Manafort. And Maria Butina, if you read, there's a really good article called the spy who wasn't who really lays out why she wasn't a spy and she wasn't. She's now working for the state Duma, but, she was definitely targeted. But that set the president, Paul Manafort and her case Speaker 0: But wait. Just to be clear, you're an American Yeah. Who has accused the sitting president of sexually assaulting you while you worked for him Mhmm. As a young woman, and you have evidence to prove that that's true Right. Contemporaneous evidence Right. That is key. And all of a sudden, you're the criminal because you wind up in a foreign city and you do a TV interview. Is that am I missing something? Speaker 1: Well, they in 2019, if you recall, one of the smears that they made against me was that I was a Russian asset even though I had no ties to Russia. Immediately out the gate, that was the Biden campaign told that to the New York Times. They said that was their first response, not a denial, not, you know, anything else. They said, oh, she's a Russian asset. And that started in 2019 and got spread around, and then it continued on and and had a life of its own because it was spread by former Obama staff, Edward Isaac Dovier, people like that who have some clout on social media and people listen. So, unfortunately, there was that kind of overhanging it. So when I came to Moscow Speaker 0: So you make this allegation against the president of the United States, then a candidate. Mhmm. A credible allegation Once again, I wouldn't be talking to you if I didn't think it was credible. I think it is credible. Mhmm. I think it's true. And they don't even respond. They just accuse you of being a traitor to your country. Speaker 1: Immediately. That was the first response, not even a denial at first. So I thought that was interesting. Speaker 0: The media amplified those. Speaker 1: Oh, yes. New York Times amplified it. Washington Post did. Everyone did. Politico, you know, they did their they did their due diligence for their the empire, I guess. I didn't really understand the media at that time. Now you have to understand, I'm a regular citizen. I don't have a PR team. I don't have lawyers. I now I have a lawyer, but then I didn't, I didn't have resources. Speaker 0: Where were you living? Speaker 1: I was living in California, and, and I was really naive about, you know, the media, and now I understand. I think a lot of people in 2019, 2020 were still a little Speaker 0: Can you speak clear? It sounds like you've been a fairly liberal Democrat your whole life. Speaker 1: I was. I really had, you know, really believed. I worked for Leon Panetta as an intern. I worked for Joe Biden. I worked as a democratic operative on congressional campaigns. I was trained by Homeland Security. I was trained by Seattle Police to do to help with domestic violence. I was a train the trainer. I donated my time. I worked for for Democrats. I believed in it. Believed in it wholeheartedly. And so it's been heartbreaking when I came forward with evidence how I was treated and how I was still treated. Like, to this day, like, I just get I mean, I I get called right now a defector, a trader. I did back then before I left the US. Speaker 0: I keep stepping on your story, and I'm and I'm sorry. It's just it's just a remarkable story when Yeah. When you lay it out and Yeah. Give the timeline, it's just it's amazing what's happened to you. So so just back to where you were before I interrupted you. So you're here on vacation to get a translation of your book done. Speaker 1: Yes. Speaker 0: And you do an interview with local TV, and then you start getting messages from informed people who you trust. Tara, you're in you're in danger of being indicted. And what happens then? Speaker 1: Well, I would be put into a cage because with with the FAR Act, it's a backdoor into the Espionage Act, essentially. It's the federal Registration Act. So you have to register as a Foreign Speaker 0: Agent Registration Act. Speaker 1: Registration Act. It's administrative. They never used to even use it, but now they're using it as a backdoor into espionage. So so, you know, you might recall the Uhura Group. Right? Speaker 0: Very well. Speaker 1: That you've yes. Speaker 0: The black nationalists that we defended. Speaker 1: Right. They're being, sentenced this month up to 10 years in prison. And I've read through all their whole legal case, and, you know, I have a lot of grief, so I'm interested in those things. And you know what the charge is? Sowing discord. So I want people to really hear this because sowing discord shouldn't be a crime, and they shouldn't be able, but they're being, Speaker 0: actually sowing discord? Speaker 1: Sowing discord. That's the term under the FAR Act and the backdoor into the Espionage Act. And so they're facing up to 10 years in prison or more. Their passports have been taken away. The sentencing happens this month. They're, they have no ties to Russia. They simply spoke out against the proxy war against, you know, Russia via Ukraine. And for that, they've been punished. And, you know, what I want people to hear is that it's not just January 6 people that are being targeted by the DOJ. No. It's to the left. It's to the right. Speaker 0: That's right. Speaker 1: It's someone like me that just had a claim against my former employer that should have been investigated properly and should have been adjudicated in a proper way. And I should have been treated with some dignity instead of having my life torn to pieces. Speaker 0: So, again, back to to the to the story. You're in Moscow where we are now, and you hear that you could be indicted or punished under the Foreign Agent Registration Act for giving this interview with a local TV station. And what do you do? How do you respond? Speaker 1: Well, I wanted to look at all the data points. You know, I'm I'm not an impulsive person. I like to think, and I didn't have a lot of time. I mean, we're talking. I had to make this in a 48 hour window. Right? And so this was a lot of pressure, but I did. I took the time. I talked to my daughter for hours. I talked to my lawyer. I got more data points of other people who had opinions that were educated. And then I talked to Matt Gaetz, and I and I am forever grateful that he took my call, and, he was, you know, I I wanna give him some credit here because Speaker 0: The congressman from Florida. Speaker 1: Yeah. Because I was supposed to go the 1st week of June and walk with him on the senate floor to get my senate thing open, and I wanted to do that. And he advised me he didn't advise me. I I should rephrase that. He gave me information. He basically just said, you know, I'm worried about you. I'm worried about your personal safety, and, you're good where you are, you know, that kind of thing. And he was he just said he knew how those people operated, and so he was concerned about me. Speaker 0: Those people being employees of the US government. Speaker 1: Right. And he sits on the intelligence committee. So when a US congressman tells you something like that, it's remark that's a remarkable data point. Right? Speaker 0: That's a It is. Speaker 1: A remarkable data point, and I trust him. He could because he could've easily just said, oh, sure, they'll be fine. And I did ask him. I said, please, you know, congressman, can you help me can you get me off these charges? Can you and he said, no, I can't. I'm sorry. I can't. My hands are tied. I I don't even know what they are, and sometimes some of this intelligence isn't shared. But what I can tell you is just that, I understand how these people operate in. Yeah. I'm really worried about your personal safety because I had received death threats at that point. And you think about it, I'm not that well known, I would have been in the news maybe a day or 2, maybe you or someone else might have talked about me for a couple of times, but it would have been considered a conspiracy theory like Adam Rich, right, And his death? Speaker 0: Seth Rich. Right. Speaker 1: Seth Rich. Yeah. Seth Rich. Speaker 0: So I what I what I find so compelling and shocking about your story is that I still don't understand what you did wrong. Speaker 1: In their eyes, they see me as somehow being a traitorous is is the words that they use. I think, in the USA Today, there was a a former CIA agent who gave a quote saying that I my thoughts about America made him viscerally angry. Because I was talking about inflation. I was talking about the fact that there's 600,000 homeless. I was talking about the fact, you know, I I'm involved with geopolitics. I have a law degree. I'm interested in it. Speaker 0: So but you're an American. Speaker 1: You spent Speaker 0: your whole life in the United States. Mhmm. You worked for the sitting president Yeah. Who you say sexually assaulted you. Yeah. You're upset about the state of our economy. Yeah. How does that make you a traitor? Speaker 1: Apparently, it does. And apparently, my views about the proxy war against Russia via Ukraine. And in 2019, I had I had said, and this is true, that if Joe Biden was elected, that he would go to war with Russia. Speaker 0: You're right. Yeah. So just to bottom line, the path that you took for people who are hearing this for the first time, you decided you could not come home after that. Speaker 1: I decided, then, and then I had to figure out, well, what does one do? Because you can't just, like, decide to stay in a country without proper paperwork and a visa. Right? You can't just, like, oh, I'm just gonna hang out with you. Speaker 0: That would make you a stateless person. Speaker 1: Yes. Yes. So I I reached out, and I'm forever grateful to Maria Butina, because Masha helped me, and she helped me with the process of how to just the how to of applying for political asylum, which I did. And it took a few weeks. Only 10% of those cases get accepted, but they did their they do their due diligence, and they felt that there was enough of a problem where they had to give me Speaker 0: a sign. After speaking to a US congressman who sits on the house intel committee who told you he was worried about your safety. Speaker 1: Correct. Speaker 0: How hard a decision was that for you? That's a big decision. Speaker 1: It was a big decision, but it wasn't just what he said, and I don't wanna put this all on Speaker 0: Of course not. Speaker 1: MacKay's shoulders. Yeah. It was it was several peoples. And one, I can't really say who it was, but went to great risk to send me a message to say if you get off that plane, they're gonna take you into custody. For what? And violation of the FAR Act. Probably, they were talking about violation of sanctions. There was talk that I had red notices, which are, you know, arrest warrants, like, I could have been picked up in Istanbul. And By whom and for what? By the US proxy, by by, you know, that that's how they do it with Interpol. They arrest on behalf of the US, like in the UAE, in Dubai. So I had a lawyer who actually specialized in people that have that happen to them, and she got the red notices pulled. And so now those are gone now that I'm under asylum. But they'll extradite you from every country. So the only two countries that will not extradite an American back to America is Iran and Russia. Speaker 0: This is a really crazy story. Yeah. It sounds like you don't have any way to get your story to an American audience. Speaker 1: No. No. It's very difficult. I mean, I have a large, Twitter following, and I I have a podcast that I do. You know, but Speaker 0: But no one has called what what's so interesting to me is we have a supposedly free media in the United States as a backstop against a check against government overreach too much power in the hands of too few. And so it's supposed to be a self correcting system. If something truly crazy and totalitarian happens to an American citizen, our media is supposed to take an interest and alert the rest of the country so they know what's going on. So they can say, woah. Woah. Woah. Woah. I may not like Tara Reid. I I don't agree with her or whatever, but you can't do that. You can't arrest someone for no crime or for complaining about the president. Like, has anyone from the New York Times called you? No. Or politico politico? No. No. The daily beast to say, you know, just tell us what's happened with you. Speaker 1: Those those no. Of course not. Those they only do hit pieces. They only and they're they're working for the empire. There there's no question. They're just working for the, you know, as proxies to US government. I mean, I think, you know, some of the reporting that Matt Taibbi and Michael Shellenberger have been doing has been really valuable. Speaker 0: Yes. Speaker 1: Because they've been showing how there's think tanks, actual think tanks that basically put out articles to these, and then they reprint them. They don't even change them that much. So these are planted articles. Like, there was all kinds of lies told about me, that I lied about my education. Now, I never lied about my education, that I defected to Russia. I didn't defect to Russia. I was threatened with my life and my family, and I didn't want my family harmed. I didn't want, to be at risk of being put in a cage. And I can't tell you what that conversation was like with my daughter. That that it was hard. Speaker 0: Have you seen her? No. Why? Speaker 1: I can't. I can't. Under political asylum, I can't leave the borders of Russia, because, you know, like, I'm under the protection and to to be frank, I don't know when I can ever go back to the US. I don't know when there's a safe place. But what have you done? In their eyes, I've committed some sort of crime and I haven't done anything and that's the thing. I've never committed a crime. I'm not a traitor. I'm not a spy. I'm not a spy for Russia. I don't have tons of resources, I don't have a PR team. I just told the truth about Joe Biden. I told the truth about what he did to me, and I told the truth about the corruption, and I wouldn't be quiet about it. And I I was demanding to be heard. But let's say I'm not gonna get $83,000,000 like Eugene Harrell, or a perfume line like Stormy Daniels. Right? Or treated, like, with dignity in the press like those women were because they accused a Republican. No. I was attacked and Speaker 0: And no one has defended you? Speaker 1: Not really. Rose McGowan, she really has. Megyn Kelly gave me a platform a couple of times, of course, you have. Other than that, independent media. Even the lefties, even though the the me too reporters, silence. You don't see any me too reporters coming and telling my story, do you? Never once. They protect Biden. This is all about catch and kill. And if you recall, I went to Time's Up for help. Right? Time's Up. Roberta Kaplan, who just represented E. Jean Carroll. Roberta Kaplan had to resign from Times Up because she was smearing me and the Cuomo, you know, survivors of the people that talked about Cuomo, and because she did that she had to resign. Times Up was dismantled. And she went on to represent, you know, Eugene Carroll, and Eugene Carroll publicly said that she was going to now support Biden and give him money. Just it's unbelievable. Speaker 0: It's totally evil. It's completely evil. It is evil. Where does it I I just can't get past this question, and I don't wanna upset you, but of your daughter. I mean, you have a child in the United States. Speaker 1: Yeah. That's been hard. You know, I missed her graduation. She got her master's. They went after her actually while I was here in Russia. The 1st month I was here, a bunch of Democratic troll farms or whatever try doxed her photo, her work address, tried to get her fired. She was interning as a therapist. She's a therapist with children. She works with play therapy with children who've been traumatized, and they tried to get her fired, and they they were saying it out loud and calling the work, but luckily, you know, my daughter's work is, you know, not interested in those kinds of, you know, smears. So my daughter's fine, but, like, you know, having her face plastered everywhere because she's associated with me. My horse was almost kidnapped. They literally came and took him almost on a trailer, and luckily the owners of the stable were there. So I'm getting these calls at 3 in the morning in Moscow that my horse is being loaded on a trailer by someone I don't know who's going to take him for Joe Biden. That was what they were saying. They were taking him for Joe. Like, some so luckily he's safe, but, I mean, it's been sort of relentless. It's been, you know and I know public figures, you know, I don't consider myself a public figure, but other public figures do get harassed like that. But when you're a regular citizen like I am, it's it's really daunting, especially if we don't have the resources to protect yourself. Right? And which I didn't. Speaker 0: Do you expect to be able to see your daughter anytime soon? Speaker 1: I don't know. I I don't feel comfortable putting her Speaker 0: Yes. Speaker 1: In, you know, the spotlight again. She's about to get married. Speaker 0: Can you go to the wedding? Speaker 1: I can't go to the wedding. And, you know, I'm upset, but, you know, and I don't wanna be a victim here. I just I'm angry, and and I want Joe Biden to be held accountable. He's taken years of my life. He's destroyed it 3 times over, and I'm just I'm gonna continue to fight. Speaker 0: Tarik, thank you very much for talking to us. Speaker 1: Thank you. Speaker 0: Free speech is bigger than any one person or any one organization. Societies are defined by what they will not commit. What we're watching is the total inversion of virtue.
Saved - February 21, 2024 at 4:47 PM

@DailyNoahNews - DailyNoah.com

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Saved - November 12, 2023 at 3:30 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A college professor conducted an experiment using sound waves to play music that can only be heard inside your head. The students' reactions were intriguing. This raises questions about the government's potential to manipulate mentally unstable individuals for sinister purposes. The term "Voice of God" comes to mind.

@DailyNoahNews - DailyNoah.com

This professor bounces sound waves carrying music that can not be heard out loud but can be heard inside your head. This experiment was carried out at a college and I believe he played a Eagle's song. Look at the student's reactions. If a college professor can do this with a few hundred dollars, don't tell me our government isn't capable of activating mentally broken people to carry out heinous acts. "Voice of God" ring a bell?

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker explains that they will turn on a device that emits a 65 kilohertz beam, similar to a laser. They mention that the beam is not audible but can be made audible by adding a modulation. They assure that the high amplitude of the beam won't hurt anyone. They explain that sound waves can create sound when they have high amplitude, and in this apparatus, the sound is created within the beam itself. The speaker then demonstrates the device by playing music and scanning the room to ensure everyone can hear it. They also try bouncing the sound off the wall. The audience raises their hands to indicate they can hear it clearly.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So, we can't hear this. It's it's going I haven't turned it on yet. When I do, it's gonna blast out a 65 kilohertz beam. Because the wavelength is so small, it doesn't spread because 65 kilohertz has a wavelength like that. So it's gonna be in that sense similar to a laser. It just right out of the beam. Now how do we make that audible? Well, they put a modulation on top of the 65 kilohertz. There's a modulation. And now here's the next thing I tell you. That 65 kilohertz is very high amplitude. It won't hurt you. We don't think. Okay? We certainly can't hear it and we don't think it'll hurt you. And, it's very high amplitude. And what happens when you have 2 sound waves like this, sound plus sound can create sound, but only a high amplitude. At low amplitude, sound waves just travel right through each other. You may be sort of familiar with this. But at high amplitude, you can create sound. So what happens in this apparatus is the audio sound, the sound that you're gonna hear is actually created in the beam, not here. And because it's created in the beam, it says it stays in the beam, we have a beam now. So let me demonstrate this for you. Let me turn it on. And I'm gonna find the piece of music that we like. Yeah. You may not like it. The eagles? You like the eagles? Yes. Okay. Good. Oh, we have a we have a friendly audience this year. Yeah. I think they're just saying that to make us feel better. Right. Alright. It's worth the $2,000. It's not your it's not our money. Now, the sound that you're hearing is being created in this beam. It it almost sounds like it's coming from your head. So let me hit let me try to scan the whole outages so everybody gets to hear this. Absolutely remarkable. Keith, are you getting it? Let's try to point with more things. Let's try to bounce it off the wall. Raise your hand if you can very clearly hear it. I'm gonna try to bounce it off the wall. Look at where the hands are raised.
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