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We now know without a doubt that Obama, Brennan, Clapper, and Comey were attacking our democracy, all while accusing us of attacking democracy. We know these things because director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has released hundreds of documents revealing that the mindful objections of senior intel officials were ignored. Foreign spies were given a US government endorsed platform to smear Trump with abject lies. They used these lies to illegally spy on the Trump campaign. Former CIA director John Brennan lied to congress about his role. The cover up effort was real. Now that director Gabbard has revealed the truth, where will it all lead?

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General Flynn discusses the investigation against him, attributing it to his knowledge of various government sectors. He highlights his efforts to bring transparency through audits and reforms. The movie he mentions aims to reveal truth and warn against potential socialist influences in America. Flynn emphasizes the importance of the upcoming election in shaping the country's future.

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Speaker 0, Speaker 1, Speaker 2, Speaker 3 describe awave of alarming claims about the Trump administration and its opponents. They say multiple administration members are living on military bases, including Steven Miller, Kristi Noem, JD Vance, and others such as Chris Rubio and Pete Hegseth, with bunkers in Maryland–DC area and above-ground facilities connected to large underground bunker complexes. They assert these moves are not for nuclear war but to survive a broader threat, and they claim the Continuity of Government (COG) system has been activated, signaling a serious threat described as part of the Podesta Plan and related plots. They recount that Flynn contacted them with NSA intercepts provided to Central Command and Army Special Operations in Florida showing “globalists on the phones,” with names not disclosed by Flynn or other sources. They allege Democrat strategists talk about killing conservatives and using drug cartels to trigger violence, implying plans to deploy cartels and hit squads to eliminate Trump administration officials, law enforcement leaders, corporate leaders, and media and thought leaders. They claim the threat has escalated from six to a dozen to fifty and then to a hundred Trump administration officials and their families living in hardened bases. They state these bases include bunkers for the State Department and Pentagon officials and are connected to Sidar in Maryland and other sites that can survive a nuclear war. They argue the Podesta Plan and related “Hollywood propaganda” explain mass-media and entertainment content that fantasizes about violence against conservatives, white people, and Christians, and they reference current articles about an “assassination culture.” They recount Flynn’s March warnings about major bounties through drug cartels (notably Venezuelan) and MS-13 as muscle for the operation, and they claim subsequent arrests and indictments, with documents recovered from cell phones showing bounties of up to $50,000 for ICE and border patrol mid-level leaders. They state this evidence has been documented and corroborated by journalists and government sources, and they reference Kash Patel’s alleged efforts to quash investigations into foreign involvement or accomplices, which they say then became news. They claim dozens to hundreds of Trump administration officials and their families have moved to military bases, and they insist the U.S. military is actively targeting drug cartels on multiple fronts, including in Venezuela, Mexico, and within the United States, with ground operations and lethal actions against cartel members described as “on the ground.” They assert Trump has authorized actions against Maduro and drug boats, and they describe bounties on people (including Elon Musk) and say the military is hunting cartels and associated threats. They position themselves as being at the top of lists of targets, with Flynn reportedly near the top after the Trump family, and they claim they have credible sources and a broad view of national security that includes these ongoing, hidden confrontations. They reference MTG (Marjorie Taylor Greene) and Bill Maher discussions as connected to these developments, and they indicate a plan to have MTG on the show. They emphasize the severity of the threat and their role in reporting and interpreting these events, framing it as a necessity to inform the public about the ongoing, high-stakes conflict.

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I sent a couple of FBI agents to the White House to interview Flynn. In a more organized administration, like Bush or Obama, you'd have to work through the White House counsel to get approvals. But I thought, let's just send them over. We called Flynn and said we were sending a couple of agents over and hoped he'd talk to them. He said sure. They interviewed him in a conference room at the White House situation room, and he lied to them, which he plead guilty to. I don't think he knew why they were coming over. We didn't tell him, just said we were sending a couple of agents to ask some questions and hoped he had a few minutes to talk. He said sure.

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The speaker discusses the distrust towards General Flynn by the CIA and FBI. They mention the challenges faced by the administration due to subversion and deception from within. The speaker reflects on the difficulties of navigating Washington DC politics as an outsider, highlighting the struggle to identify trustworthy individuals in a landscape of deceit and self-interest.

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I sent a couple of FBI agents to the White House to interview Flynn, something I probably wouldn't have done in a more organized administration like Bush or Obama, where there was a process to go through the White House counsel for approvals. Instead, we called Flynn and said we were sending a couple of agents over and hoped he would talk to them. Nobody else was present during the interview, which took place in a conference room at the White House situation room. He lied to the agents during the interview, which is what he pled guilty to. We didn't tell him what the agents were coming over for, only that they wanted to ask him some questions and if he had a few minutes to sit down and talk to them. He said, sure.

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An individual sent two FBI agents to the White House to interview a senior official, Michael Flynn. This action bypassed typical protocols involving the White House counsel, which would have been followed in administrations like those of George W. Bush or Barack Obama. The speaker believed it was early enough in the administration to circumvent the usual process. A call was placed to Flynn, informing him that a couple of agents were being sent over to ask him some questions, to which Flynn agreed. The agents interviewed Flynn in a conference room at the White House Situation Room, and Flynn allegedly lied to them during the interview. He later pled guilty to this. Flynn was not informed about the specific purpose of the agents' visit beforehand.

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Donald Trump attempted to appoint me as deputy director of the CIA, but Gina Haskill, who was involved in the Russia investigation, opposed it, claiming it would jeopardize her position. This was ironic, given her role in the controversy. Former officials expressed concern not about specific plans but about Trump's unpredictable whims and ideology. There’s significant political corruption at high levels of government, with the administration seemingly prioritizing Trump's personal interests and misusing intelligence and law enforcement authorities. Investigations, like the one into Cash Patel, often rely on anonymous sources, leaving individuals uncertain about their status. My own experience involved a lengthy investigation without my knowledge, only revealed years later through a notification from Google. Most people in the intelligence community and law enforcement are committed to their roles.

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It's an honor to be here today. I'm grateful to President Trump for nominating me to serve as the Director of National Intelligence at a time when trust in the intelligence community is at an all time low. For too long, faulty intelligence has led to costly failures, such as the invasion of Iraq. The American people elected Donald Trump as their president twice, yet the FBI and intelligence agencies were politicized to undermine his presidency and falsely portray him as a puppet of Putin. Title one of FISA was used illegally to spy on Carter Page. Tony Blinken was the impetus for the 51 former senior intelligence officials' letter dismissing Hunter Biden's laptop as disinformation to help Biden win the election. James Clapper lied to this committee in 2013, denying the existence of programs that facilitated the mass collection of Americans' phone and Internet records, yet was never held accountable. The CIA spied on congress and the FBI abused its power to surveil Catholics who attend traditional Latin mass. Just twenty four hours after I criticized Kamala Harris, I was placed on a secret domestic terror watch list called Quiet Skies. This must end. President Trump's reelection is a clear mandate to break this cycle of failure and begin to restore trust in those who've been charged with securing our nation.

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Michael Flynn, a former Defense Intelligence Agency head and Trump national security advisor, was an intelligence community surveillance target, as was staffer George Papadopoulos. The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPFCI) released a report in 2018 that cleared Trump of colluding with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election. Sources close to the House Permanent Select Committee, led by Adam Schiff, continued working covertly out of a small room in Langley. They had access to raw logs and communications from agencies like the CIA and the National Security Council.

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Svetlana Lokova recounts a years-spanning, shadowy influence operation that she says began long before the public Russiagate narrative took hold and continued to unfold through high-level intelligence and political circles in the United States and the United Kingdom. She argues that a coordinated conspiracy, involving American and British intelligence figures, political operatives, and foreign partners, was designed to undermine Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, demonize him in the public sphere, and ultimately reshape U.S. politics in ways that persist to today. She explains that the conspiracy starts with the idea of weaponizing Russia as a pretext to derail Trump. In September 2015, Hillary Clinton’s circle tied to Strobe Talbott and to London-based figures including Richard Dearlove and Christopher Andrew decides to dust off “the old Russian handbook” and pursue a plan to run with Russia as the central smokescreen. Svetlana notes that General Michael Flynn, then head of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) under Obama, was already engaging with Russia on matters of security and terrorism, and that Flynn’s Moscow trip in December 2015, arranged through the DIA, became a focal point of later accusations. She emphasizes that the trip was conducted under normal security procedures, with defensive briefings and debriefings required for someone of Flynn’s level of clearance. A key tie-in is the Cambridge operation she herself experienced. In 2015 she was an academic at Cambridge University, where she formed connections with MI6’s Richard Dearlove, Cambridge-based MI6-linked figures, and CIA asset Stefan Halper, who had Cambridge cover as a professor. She describes what she calls “bump” encounters—unexpected introductions that later produced routine reports. One such meeting introduced her to John McLaughlin, then acting CIA director, who allegedly expressed admiration for Russia and who later became a conduit for information within the FBI and CIA. Alan Collar, a London-based FBI liaison (Ligat) and a contact to Cambridge, also emerges as a pivotal figure; Svetlana recalls that Collar later sought to have Halper’s help in various capacities, including a potential PhD placement at Cambridge. Svetlana underscores how the operation leveraged a web of relationships: Christopher Steele in Britain, Halper in the U.S., McLaughlin, and MI6 heads like Dearlove, all part of what she describes as a “newsroom-to-FBI-to-CIA” loop. She explains that Steele and Halper acted as confidential informants for the FBI and CIA, with Steele’s dossier and Halper’s reports forming the backbone of what would become the Crossfire Hurricane investigation. She contends that the plan was not simply to accuse Trump of wrongdoing but to create a narrative of foreign interference—Russian involvement used to undermine Trump’s legitimacy and to give cover for the political takes of the Clinton-Soros alliance. The narrative continues with the infamous 2016 timeline. Svetlana recounts how the Hillary Clinton campaign, with Soros backing and with John Podesta’s circle, leveraged a “two-pronged” approach: demonize Trump through a public narrative of Russian interference and simultaneously seed a parallel set of claims about Trump campaign contacts with Russian intelligence. The plan, she says, was documented in internal emails circulated through Soros-linked channels and high-level Clinton aides. An August 2016 Oval Office meeting reportedly included Barack Obama, Susan Rice, James Comey, and John Brennan; Brennan allegedly noted that Hillary’s plan to distract from her email scandal involved tying Trump to Russia and ordered or supported steps to surface contacts between Trump advisers and Russian intelligence. This, she says, culminated in the opening of Crossfire Hurricane, justified by Downer’s May 2016 meeting with George Papadopoulos in London, which fed the FBI’s launch of an overarching inquiry into the Trump campaign. Svetlana emphasizes the mechanics of the operation: a cascade of “two-source” corroboration that failed to exist in reality but was manufactured through coordinated reporting. Stefan Halper and Christopher Steele allegedly provided separate but harmonized lines to the FBI and to journalists (for example, Washington Post and New York Times), with Fusion GPS coordinating research and payments, and with journalists feeding stories into the media while the FBI used those articles as cover to justify surveillance. She notes that the Steele dossier and Halper reports described contacts with Russian figures and asserted Kremlin orders, even while evidence mountains suggested the opposite or were non-existent. The operation allegedly relied on “ambiguous” or “dual-source” reporting to maintain plausible deniability and to keep multiple actors downstream of a single fabrication. Svetlana also describes internal institutional dynamics. She recounts that the Cambridge network included Gina Haspel (then head of the London CIA station) and Mike Morell (a senior CIA official) who allegedly used Cambridge as a front to pursue operations with university cover. The effort, she says, involved the use of “color revolutions” metaphors and methods—funding, organizing demonstrations, and controlling media narratives—through a transatlantic network that included British intelligence (MI6), American agencies (CIA, FBI, DHS), and at times Ukrainian actors. She asserts that the aim was not merely to affect the 2016 election but to create a “fog of war” (as she calls it) to obscure the truth, with the ultimate objective of removing Trump from power or preventing his influence in foreign policy. Two focal consequences are highlighted. First, the emergence of the Russia-collusion frame itself, built on forged or misrepresented evidence about Trump’s alleged ties to Russia and to Russian elites. Second, the use of this frame to drive real-world investigations, media coverage, and political pressure—culminating in the Mueller investigation and attempts to impeach or remove Trump from office. She contends that the Crossfire Hurricane investigation, and later the intelligence community assessment that purported Russian interference and Trump’s supposed collaboration, were built on manipulated or false premises, with the principal architects’ fingerprints on the evidence and the dissemination of the narrative across intelligence and media channels. In her discussion of the Mar-a-Lago documents and the Florida case surrounding John Brennan and other co-conspirators, Svetlana asserts that declassification by President Trump of Crossfire Hurricane documents demonstrated both the existence of the conspiracy and government overreach. She repeats a central point: the documents show a plan written down by Brennan and other aides to tie Trump to Russia, demonize him, and justify an ongoing investigation to undermine his presidency. She notes that the same players who orchestrated the scheme—Halper, Steele, Downer, Brennan, Clapper, Comey, and others—were allegedly involved in a broader pattern of off-the-books operations, funding, and information leaks designed to influence U.S. politics and foreign policy outcomes, with foreign allies in Britain and elsewhere participating in the broader maneuver. Svetlana’s overarching message is that accountability is possible but contingent on public attention and political will. She points to subpoenas and grand jury activity around Brennan and others as indications that the origins of the Russia investigation are formally being examined. She stresses that, despite the persistence of the conspiracy narrative, documents and testimony could reveal the truth behind the orchestrated campaign to disrupt the Trump presidency. She calls on the American public to demand accountability and to remain vigilant about the institutions and actors involved in what she describes as a continuing conspiracy, from Crossfire Hurricane to the later narratives surrounding Mueller and impeachment efforts, and into current political disputes. The dialogue closes with a personal appeal from Svetlana to the audience and to Lara Logan: the need to push for transparency and for due process, to scrutinize the roles of the people who allegedly manufactured and propagated the Russia collusion claims, and to insist on accountability for those who oversaw or participated in actions she frames as treasonous or seditious. She credits Lara Logan for ongoing coverage and expresses gratitude for the support of viewers and readers who seek an unflinching account of events, urging continued public scrutiny and a demand for principled governance.

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They discuss Flynn wanting to audit the Office of Net Assessments to learn who was being paid and why, citing a private book on tens of billions of dollars. They show a timeline where Stefan Halper, who is a now outed spy, was paid $211,000 in $15,411,000 dollars the next year, “just a couple of months before they secured the wiretap to spy on Carter Page.” They ask what was going on at the Pentagon or the CIA overseen by John Brennan that General Flynn wanted to audit and that put him in such a bad light with all of these people: “They wanted him out.” Flynn was “right on” and had “the best intelligence machine in modern warfare history,” noting waste and corruption in Washington’s intel bureaucracy and Al Qaeda resurging in Iraq, which became ISIS; Flynn was fired. They found “odd amount of money” moving through ONA, “hundreds of thousands of dollars.” Halper “was not a spy,” he “helped Christopher Steele make things up,” with “no sources” and “phony reports.” Rosenstein and Wray gave “crickets” when asked what they knew, and they questioned if hundreds of thousands had gone missing. They say the problem at ONA emerged in early 2018, with the “dirty cops” opening an investigation on the president that became the special prosecutor. “Remember Unbelievable.” The American people would know zilch about this if Donald Trump did not win; if he doesn’t win again, there will be no accountability, while the left, including Congress, media, FBI, and tech companies, are “all on the same page to take down Donald Trump.”

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"You wanna talk about an insurrection? This is a insurrection against the American people that was thwarted at multiple times." "He looked me in the eye and said, the truth of the matter is we took the playbook for psychological operations and information warfare that we would use against our enemies, and we turned it against the American people to undo the twenty sixteen election and to make sure they didn't elect Donald Trump in 2020." "Now that is a senior intelligence officer with more than thirty years of experience, a patriot who served in some of the most dangerous parts of the world, and he understood that the tactics of making something fake look real were ripped right up our out of our intelligence communities." "Our intelligence agencies not only harm Donald Trump, they were harming the American public, the national security interest of the American public."

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Following Trump's significant victory in the 2024 election, General Flynn issued a stark warning about potential threats to Trump’s safety and the necessity for immediate action against entrenched officials from the previous administration. He emphasized the importance of appointing loyal and capable individuals to key positions to prevent sabotage. Flynn expressed concern over ongoing plots against Trump, suggesting that if Trump had lost, he would have faced severe repercussions. He identified John Brennan as a key adversary and stressed the need for heightened security around Trump. Flynn called for a reform of government departments and urged vigilance against the ongoing threats posed by those opposed to conservatism. The discussion concluded with a reminder to stay alert and informed about the actions of political adversaries.

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Michael Flynn, a former DIA head and Trump national security advisor, was an intelligence community surveillance target, as was staffer George Papadopoulos. The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence released a report clearing Trump of colluding with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election. Sources close to the committee, led by Adam Schiff, continued working covertly in Langley. They had access to raw logs and communications from agencies like the CIA and the National Security Council.

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In a more structured administration, like those of George W. Bush or Barack Obama, sending FBI agents to the White House required navigating a formal process involving the White House counsel, discussions, and approvals. However, early on, I decided to send a couple of agents over to interview Flynn directly. We called Flynn, informed him that we were sending a couple of agents over and hoped he would speak with them. He agreed. The agents interviewed him in a White House conference room, and he lied to them, which led to his guilty plea. I don't think he knew the purpose of the interview. We simply told him that we were sending a couple of agents to ask him some questions and hoped he had a few minutes to speak with them. He agreed.

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Michael Flynn pleaded guilty for lying to the FBI. He understood the intel world and its funding, making him a threat. A political appointee felt pressured to change their assessment but refused. President Obama warned Trump to stay away from Flynn.

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Peter Alexander reports that former Obama administration officials confirmed President Obama warned then-President-elect Trump against hiring Mike Flynn during a meeting shortly after the election. This warning is significant, especially considering Trump's recent criticisms of the Obama administration regarding Flynn. Obama also raised concerns about North Korea during that meeting. In a related discussion, the timeline shows Flynn's retirement from the army in 2014 and his subsequent meeting with Trump in 2015. Stefan Halper, who received a $245,000 contract to study Russia and China, is seen as central to the "Russiagate" operation, particularly in targeting Flynn. Critics suggest Halper's research was subpar and that the funding may have been misallocated.

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I sent a couple of FBI agents to the White House to interview Flynn. In a more organized administration, like Bush or Obama, you'd have to work through the White House counsel to get approvals. But I thought it was early enough in the administration to just send them over. We called Flynn and said we were sending a couple of guys over and hoped he'd talk to them. He said, sure. Nobody else was there. They interviewed him in a conference room in the White House situation room, and he lied to them. That's what he pled guilty to. I don't think he knew why they were coming over. We just told him we were sending a couple of agents over to ask some questions and hoped he had a few minutes to sit down and talk to them. And he said, sure.

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Michael Flynn, a former Defense Intelligence Agency head and Trump national security advisor, was an intelligence community surveillance target, as was staffer George Papadopoulos. The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence released a report clearing Trump of colluding with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election. Sources close to the House Permanent Select Committee, led by Adam Schiff, continued working covertly out of a small room in Langley. They had access to raw logs and communications from agencies like the CIA and the National Security Council.

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From a firsthand account about the whistleblower within ODNI who worked for then, Obama's DNI, James Clapper, about how he refused to go along with this. "As a result, he was sidelined and cut out of this." "He was the cyber guy in the director, in the director of national intelligence, James Clapper's, team." "He was sidelined because he wouldn't play along with the lie that they were creating, and he did blow the whistle." "He raised this through the ICIG." "He raised this, tried to raise this with multiple members of congress, including senator Warner." "He never got calls back." "They were not interested in what he had to say and what he had experienced." "He even tried then to go and report this to the Department of Justice, under, president Biden and was refused." "No action." "They were not interested in taking action in this."

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The FBI was accused of treason and illegal spying, but the truth is that all of that was nonsense. I was wrong about the FISA process being handled in a thoughtful and appropriate way; I was overconfident. The Steele reporting played a central and essential role in the decision to seek a FISA order, but the FBI didn't conclude that Steele's reporting was bunk after talking to a sub source. As director, I wasn't informed on the details of the investigation. The inspector general did not find misconduct by any FBI people, but mistakes, negligence, and oversight. One FBI lawyer doctored a document. The inspector general did not find political bias or illegal conduct, but significant mistakes. The American people were given false information about the FBI. It is honest, and flawed. It's unclear if there was gross incompetence, negligence, or intentionality.

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A CIA contractor named Amjed Fassisi, who has worked at the CIA since 2008 and also at the NSA, claims that high-ranking officials within the intelligence community, including former CIA directors Mike Pompeo and Gina Haspel, colluded to withhold information from President Trump, believing him to be an "idiot" who would disclose sensitive information. Fassisi states that Trump is under constant surveillance, including his ex-wife, and that the intelligence community used human intelligence to investigate Trump's alleged collusion with Russia. He also claims that Israel, a U.S. ally, steals intelligence. Fassisi believes Trump will not be re-elected, preferring democracy over a "fucking madman." He acknowledges the CIA and NSA don't trust each other and don't share information. When confronted with these statements, Fassisi denies making them.

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An individual sent two FBI agents to the White House to interview a senior official, Michael Flynn. This action bypassed typical protocols involving the White House counsel, which would have been followed in administrations like those of George W. Bush or Barack Obama. The speaker believed it was early enough in the administration to circumvent the usual process. A call was placed to Flynn, informing him that a couple of agents were being sent over to ask him some questions, to which Flynn agreed. The agents interviewed Flynn in a conference room at the White House Situation Room, and Flynn allegedly lied to them during the interview. Flynn pleaded guilty to this. Flynn was not informed about the specific purpose of the agents' visit beforehand.

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I sent a couple of FBI agents to the White House to interview Flynn. This is something I probably wouldn't have done in a more organized administration, like under George W. Bush or Obama, where there was more process. Usually, the FBI would work through the White House counsel to get approvals. But I thought, let's just send them over. We called Flynn and said we were sending a couple of guys over and hoped he'd talk to them. He agreed, and they interviewed him in the White House situation room with no one else present. He lied to them during the interview, which is what he pled guilty to. We didn't tell him why they were coming, just that they wanted to ask some questions.
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