MARTIN SCHULZ,
HYPOCRITE
EXTRAORDINAIRE!
Martin Schulz, German Social Democrat (SPD), and President of the European Parliament, has achieved a dubious prominence during the current Euro crisis by calling for the abolition of democracy in Greece, the removal of the Tsipras government and its replacement by unelected “Technocrats” which is probably as far as anyone can get from the original principles and objectives of German Social Democracy. Yet, Schulz seems to think that this is a useful contribution to the current hot debate in Europe over the damnable austerity policies of the Neo-Liberal Cabal running the EU and is manifestly contrary to the popular mood of the majority of the working population which has seen the demise of long established social democratic parties across Europe.
In October, 2012, Schulz visited Dublin and spoke at the
Irish Parliament, Dáil Éireann. His speech was riddled with rhetorical clichés
and declarations that most of us might agree with but lacked any concrete proposals that would be effective in realising the
grandiose objectives:
“It is my personal conviction that in this Union everybody has to live up to their commitments and be responsible for keeping their own house in order. This is one side of the coin. The other side of the coin is solidarity. If one family member gets into troubled waters, the others are called upon to offer a helping hand. Thus, personally, I believe that the Irish programme should be adjusted before the end of the year along the lines of the June European Council conclusions”.
“It is my personal conviction that in this Union everybody has to live up to their commitments and be responsible for keeping their own house in order. This is one side of the coin. The other side of the coin is solidarity. If one family member gets into troubled waters, the others are called upon to offer a helping hand. Thus, personally, I believe that the Irish programme should be adjusted before the end of the year along the lines of the June European Council conclusions”.
[This never happened and Schulz has never raised it in the
Euro Parliament, another broken promise of the Euro elite. It has recently been revealed at the Irish Parliamentary
Inquiry into the banking crisis of 2008, by former Taoiseach (Prime Minister),
Brian Cowen, that Trichet, then head of the ECB was leaking to the world Press
that Ireland had agreed to a bailout when negotiations had not yet started and
Trichet had sent a threatening letter to the Irish Government saying “a bomb
would go off in Dublin, not in Frankfurt”, if Ireland didn’t immediately agree
to a bailout arrangement as proposed by ECB/IMF; the same threats and bullying that has been applied to the Tsipras Government in Greece.When Trichet was in Dublin
last month to answer the parliamentarians questions he lied through his teeth
and denied everything except he couldn’t deny the letter which is now in the
public domain. Mr Cowen also confirmed the revelation of former Secretary General
of the Irish Department of Finance, Kevin Cardiff, at the Inquiry last week
that the US Secretary of the Treasury, Timothy Geitner, had vetoed Ireland’s
proposal to burn the bondholders of the failed and criminal Anglo-Irish Bank, a
proposal which had initially been agreed with the IMF, but, under pressure from
Washington and Geitner the IMF had backtracked and Ireland was left on its own.
So much for “solidarity” and Schultz’s claims of Germany helping Ireland which
are just another pack of lies from social renegade Schulz].
[Great, but where is
the “solidarity” now?]
“We want a supervision of banks that works and can, at a
later stage, be extended to insurance, pension funds and financial markets and
also be extended from the Eurozone to all EU countries.Ordinary hard-working people cannot be asked to shoulder the
follow-up costs of this crisis alone. The European Parliament with an
overwhelming majority believes that the financial markets have to deliver now
and they have to contribute to the follow-up costs of the crisis with a
financial transaction tax. In the view of the European Parliament, it is simply
a matter of moral decency and social justice.
The third lesson from the crisis is that we need a growth
pact to boost the economy and create jobs, in Ireland and in Europe. The
European Parliament believes that a more balanced approach is needed -
"Yes" to sustainable budgets but also "Yes" to growth
initiatives. The European Council is called upon not only to talk the talk, but
to walk the walk. It promised a growth initiative. It now has to deliver a
growth initiative. That is also a question of credibility. Fiscal stability is
necessary, but it needs to be backed up by other measures as well”.
[Again, worthy objectives but, no follow up]
“Today, we are faced with what could potentially become
another lost generation. Young people, as witnessed most recently in Spain or
Greece, are taking to the streets because they feel abandoned and outraged.
Their helplessness and despair in the face of seemingly all-powerful financial
markets coupled with alienation from the political institutions is the biggest
threat to democracy. Democracy lives when people know that they can take
decisions about their lives and that, by getting involved, they can change
society for the better.
I wish to say something about a trend that is worrying me
deeply. Times such as these, times of crises, are always times of the
executive. The pressure of events calls for swift action and leaves
parliaments, both national parliaments and the European Parliament, ever more
marginalised. Parliaments are increasingly seen as an annoying waste of time.
They are not. Parliaments are the guarantors of democracy. The big member
states, or those which consider themselves to be big member states, should not,
in the European context, be able to give lessons to the smaller countries”.
[Who is giving “lessons” to the smaller countries now?]
Unlike the Government, Sinn Féin from the very start of this
crisis has been advocating a write-down of private bank debt. Bank debt needs
to be separated from sovereign debt. The burden of bad banking debt, the
so-called legacy issue, which was foisted on the shoulders of the Irish people,
also needs to be removed.The continuation of this type of austerity, coupled with the
austerity policies in other EU states, will serve to hamper the prospects of a
strong recovery across the Union. Sinn Féin believes that a radical change in direction is
required and that the EU has its priorities seriously wrong. We agree with many
of President Schulz's comments. However, the EU can find €100 billion for bad
Spanish banks but only a pittance to tackle youth unemployment. President
Schulz has identified youth unemployment as the most serious problem facing the
people of the European Union. We welcome that statement, which is true.
“All of us, as European citizens, have much of which to be
proud. There has been relative peace across the Continent for decades now for
the first time in a long time and a growth in Europe's voice on critical issues
such as inequality, social justice, climate change and so on. Unfortunately,
the current economic crisis, in particular the manner in which European leaders
and certain European institutions have responded to it, has fundamentally
challenged the solidarity upon which Europe is built, as referred to earlier by
President Schulz.
I would like to use this opportunity to add the following point to the conversation on Ireland and Europe. Ireland never received a bailout and is not looking for one. However, we do need our €64 billion returned to ensure our recovery. I often hear expressed in the so-called creditor countries the common view that Ireland mismanaged its internal affairs, made mistakes and is now looking for other people's hard earned money to correct those mistakes. A mixture of economic and moral sentiment is expressed. During a recent conversation I had with a German economist he pointed out to me that the German translation of "debt" is the same as that for "guilt", which I found interesting.
While Schulz and the Eurocrats, the Neo-Liberal pigdogs, argue about rules and regulations, the Greek people suffer the worst impoverishment and hardship seen in Europe since the 1930’s. The brutality of these impositions is akin to what Greece suffered under the Nazi occupation in WW2 and shames the name of Europe as a civilised part of the World. It is time that these reprobates all resigned and were deprived of their overpaid extortions of the taxpayers money.
Down with the Brussels Dictatorship! Down with the Neo-Liberal Cabal!
The Irish Opposition
replied:
Deputy Gerry Adams
(Sinn Féin):
“For the past five years states across the European Union
and European institutions have been grappling with fiscal and banking crises. A
succession of summits has failed to deliver any concrete solution. The previous
Government informed us that the State was coerced into a European bailout by
the European Central Bank and other European leaders in 2010. It claimed that
EU institutions insisted that the Irish taxpayers should carry the burden for
the bad banking debts of private institutions and the banks.
In June this Government returned from the European Council
summit claiming it had secured agreement that this bad banking debt would be
lifted from the shoulders of Irish citizens. The Taoiseach called it a
"seismic shift" and the Tánaiste described it as a "game
changer". However, last week's statement by the so-called "Helsinki
three", the finance Ministers of Germany, Finland and the Netherlands,
that the ESM bailout fund would only deal with future banking liabilities, sharply
contradicts these assertions. This situation was made worse by the European
Commission President's, José Manuel Barossa's, very clear refusal yesterday to
back the Government's interpretation that the June agreement would deal with
legacy debts in the banking system.
I welcome remarks of the President of the European
Parliament on this issue today, though I note he couched them as his personal
opinions. I especially welcome his eloquent comments on the need for
solidarity. He said that the bigger member states should not give lessons to
the smaller ones and I agree. However, he will know that thus far, as far as
the leaders of the bigger European states are concerned, smaller states such as
this one can be treated with disdain and left to carry the burden of debts that
are not ours.
The European Union and member states need to focus on
stimulating Europe's economies and to encourage growth through stimulus
packages. There is no stimulus in any of what the Irish Government is doing. We
need to get people back to work. More important, we need to protect the most
vulnerable of our citizens by protecting public services rather than destroying
them. Sinn Féin has long argued that the role of the ECB needs to
be re-examined and that it needs to fulfil the role of a lender of last resort.
In recent months, the focus of attention of the larger states such as Germany,
the President of the Commission, Mr. Barroso, and Mr. Schulz, as President of
the EU Parliament, have moved increasingly towards a political and fiscal
union. Sinn Féin does not believe that fiscal federalism will stabilise the
euro. The current policy of austerity and bank bailouts has led to greater
instability in the Eurozone. The one-size-fits-all monetary policy was part of
the problem. A one-size-fits-all fiscal policy will only make matters worse.
Sinn Féin is firmly of the view that what is now required is a different
approach based on investment in jobs and economic growth. A social European Union is required, a European Union of
equals, one which protects our citizens, rural communities, young people and
most especially those who are marginalised and vulnerable”.
Deputy Stephen S.
Donnelly (Independent):
Stephen Donnelly T.D. (Independent) |
I would like to use this opportunity to add the following point to the conversation on Ireland and Europe. Ireland never received a bailout and is not looking for one. However, we do need our €64 billion returned to ensure our recovery. I often hear expressed in the so-called creditor countries the common view that Ireland mismanaged its internal affairs, made mistakes and is now looking for other people's hard earned money to correct those mistakes. A mixture of economic and moral sentiment is expressed. During a recent conversation I had with a German economist he pointed out to me that the German translation of "debt" is the same as that for "guilt", which I found interesting.
There is no doubt but that mistakes have been made in this
country. We have made mistakes and are working to correct them. However, the
interpretation that Ireland is looking for aid is incorrect and is damaging to
the solidarity of Europe and Ireland's ability, as a modern, developed society
and economy, to help Europe get out of the current crisis. The following tells
an interesting story. Ireland will borrow €67 billion from the troika. To date,
Ireland has poured €64 billion into failed banks, which, in my opinion, should
never have been given a penny. This €64 billion is the equivalent of the German
people being asked to put one trillion dollars into a failed banking system.
When, during a recent interview for a documentary exploring this issue, I put
this to a German journalist his response was, "There would be
revolution". This is what Ireland has done thus far. It is likely we will
do more. The banks have, in return, given this money to bondholders. This
numbers in this regard are, again, very interesting. Some €124 billion of
senior debt was held by the banks when the State guaranteed it. In Greece,
there was a 50% write down for senior bondholders. President Schulz is a
business man, having run a bookshop for many years. He knows that when a
bankrupt company is taken over the new owner meets with the company's creditors
and debts are written down. This is standard practice.
What one gets when one knits the three aforementioned figures
together is interesting: €67 billion is being borrowed from the troika,
virtually all of which is going into the banks and almost the same amount is
being given by the banks to the senior bondholders in terms of forgone losses.
This is what has happened: there has been a €67 billion circle of money from
the troika through Ireland to the international banks and investors. I have
spoken to many people about this and have, as I am sure have President Schulz
and other Members of this House, read many opinions on it. I have yet to read
an opinion which says that this was morally or economically correct. Yet, it
continues to happen. On Monday, we paid another €1 billion to senior
bondholders of a bank which would have gone bankrupt.
The Government is paying it but it does not want to do so.
The reason it is paying it is because it is afraid of what the European Central
Bank and the European Commission would do to Ireland in retaliation for not
covering the losses of professional investors. I have heard Mr. Schulz agree
this is not sensible. The counterargument goes that the €64 billion came in and
saved the Irish banking system. As Mr. Schulz knows, half of this money went to
a bank which no longer exists and which is under criminal investigation for
what it was doing. The other half of the money went to banks which still exist
but which are increasing charges and mortgage rates and are, in essence,
sucking the rest of the money out of the Irish economy. The money from the
troika achieved only one benefit, which was to avoid contagion to the European
banking system.
Mr. Schulz recently stated the Irish people need to have
some cause for hope for the future. This hope is not in a deal on the €64
billion or in its restructuring, it is in a return of the €64 billion. If this
happens we can, as a modern, sophisticated high-tech export-oriented economy,
contribute to the recovery of Europe. I thank Mr. Schulz for his support and I
hope he will be able to bring this simple message back: Ireland did not get a
bailout and Ireland is not looking for aid or benevolence. We need our money
back in order that we can contribute to the recovery of Europe”.
But, it was Joe Higgins, Leader of the Socialist Party, who
put Schulz in his place:
Joe Higgins, T.D. (Socialist Party) |
Deputy Joe Higgins
(Socialist Party):There will be much pomp, ceremony and chatter to accompany
the Irish Government assuming the Presidency of the European Union in 2013.
However, there will be no change in the disastrous and destructive austerity
policy being ruthlessly imposed on the Irish and European working class, middle
and low income workers, the unemployed, pensioners, the poor and the young. As
President of the European Parliament, Herr Schulz is effectively in a
power-sharing arrangement between social democrat and Christian democrat political
parties. Throughout Europe it is these parties, just like the Irish Government
of Fine Gael and the Labour Party, which carry out the economic diktats of the
financial markets which dictate policies that have left 25 million EU citizens
unemployed and threaten to turn the weaker capitalist economies, the so-called
peripheral states, back to Third World conditions.
We have the tragic irony that as the EU establishment boasts of being the most generous donor to the poorest countries on earth, features of this poverty, such as homelessness and even malnutrition, are reappearing in Greece, which is a member state of the European Union, as a result of austerity. These policies are being driven by the markets which dictate that the profits of speculators, bondholders and bankers take precedence over hundreds of millions of ordinary citizens. Today we have heard fine words about democracy, but we live in an economic dictatorship of the financial markets. The troika and the political parties of Social Democracy and Christian Democracy are agents of these financiers and speculators dictating that the people of Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Greece and others should have transferred onto their shoulders the debts of the global bankers and have their economic lifeblood drained to rescue the diseased system that is casino capitalism.
Have the political parties in Europe noted reports in the world financial press that while 25 million languish in unemployment, European big business corporations sit on €2 trillion of retained profits which they refuse to invest to create productive employment, not being confident of sufficient profit? Have they noted a report in The Guardian on research by the Tax Justice Network which shows that €16 trillion belonging to the global elite sits in offshore accounts, channelled there by the ten biggest international banks, including the vampire squid Goldman Sachs, for the benefit of this elite only? It is beyond time that a full frontal assault was made on this nauseating inequality and that we have not a puny transaction tax but a massive supertax on this wealth in order that it is channelled into job creation, major public infrastructure programmes which would create millions of jobs, research, the transformation of services such as health and education, and ending the draconian brutality and injustice of austerity.
The injustice that saddles the Irish people with the bad gambling debts of Irish bankers and developers and bankers in France, Britain and Germany is taking billions from the pockets of ordinary people here and, in the process, is wrecking the domestic economy with catastrophic results for jobs and services. Since the EU political establishment is the agent of the markets and austerity, ordinary people can only rely on their own power, and this is what our great historic Irish socialists, James Connolly and Jim Larkin, would say, as would the great German socialists, Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. The year 2013 will mark not only the Presidency by Ireland of the European Union but also the 100th anniversary of the great lockout when the Dublin working-class rose up in an historic and Herculean struggle against the employers, who were the elite of those days, to demand justice and a decent life.
When the political establishment which represents European capitalism descends on Ireland next year, as they will many times, they should be met with widespread mobilisation by the economic victims of the austerity they impose. Working class people will demand that the bailout of the bankers and speculators and crippling austerity are halted, and we will join with the millions of workers in Spain, Portugal, Greece and Germany where it is not commonly known that millions of workers languish in very low waged situations, to demand a different Europe not of the markets but of the people, a new genuinely democratic socialist Europe where we can end the obscenities of mass youth unemployment to which Mr. Schulz alluded and create a new and decent life for all European citizens”.
We have the tragic irony that as the EU establishment boasts of being the most generous donor to the poorest countries on earth, features of this poverty, such as homelessness and even malnutrition, are reappearing in Greece, which is a member state of the European Union, as a result of austerity. These policies are being driven by the markets which dictate that the profits of speculators, bondholders and bankers take precedence over hundreds of millions of ordinary citizens. Today we have heard fine words about democracy, but we live in an economic dictatorship of the financial markets. The troika and the political parties of Social Democracy and Christian Democracy are agents of these financiers and speculators dictating that the people of Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Greece and others should have transferred onto their shoulders the debts of the global bankers and have their economic lifeblood drained to rescue the diseased system that is casino capitalism.
Have the political parties in Europe noted reports in the world financial press that while 25 million languish in unemployment, European big business corporations sit on €2 trillion of retained profits which they refuse to invest to create productive employment, not being confident of sufficient profit? Have they noted a report in The Guardian on research by the Tax Justice Network which shows that €16 trillion belonging to the global elite sits in offshore accounts, channelled there by the ten biggest international banks, including the vampire squid Goldman Sachs, for the benefit of this elite only? It is beyond time that a full frontal assault was made on this nauseating inequality and that we have not a puny transaction tax but a massive supertax on this wealth in order that it is channelled into job creation, major public infrastructure programmes which would create millions of jobs, research, the transformation of services such as health and education, and ending the draconian brutality and injustice of austerity.
The injustice that saddles the Irish people with the bad gambling debts of Irish bankers and developers and bankers in France, Britain and Germany is taking billions from the pockets of ordinary people here and, in the process, is wrecking the domestic economy with catastrophic results for jobs and services. Since the EU political establishment is the agent of the markets and austerity, ordinary people can only rely on their own power, and this is what our great historic Irish socialists, James Connolly and Jim Larkin, would say, as would the great German socialists, Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. The year 2013 will mark not only the Presidency by Ireland of the European Union but also the 100th anniversary of the great lockout when the Dublin working-class rose up in an historic and Herculean struggle against the employers, who were the elite of those days, to demand justice and a decent life.
When the political establishment which represents European capitalism descends on Ireland next year, as they will many times, they should be met with widespread mobilisation by the economic victims of the austerity they impose. Working class people will demand that the bailout of the bankers and speculators and crippling austerity are halted, and we will join with the millions of workers in Spain, Portugal, Greece and Germany where it is not commonly known that millions of workers languish in very low waged situations, to demand a different Europe not of the markets but of the people, a new genuinely democratic socialist Europe where we can end the obscenities of mass youth unemployment to which Mr. Schulz alluded and create a new and decent life for all European citizens”.
As can be seen above, Schulz has been trading for years on a
purely rhetorical “progressive” social and economic policy but has produced
little or no actual progress in the living or social standards of the people he
claims to represent. In the current crisis he has contributed nothing of any
impact rather, exposed his hypocritical stance in the starkest terms by
proposing the abolition of democracy in Greece.
The Eurozone now faces its most serious crisis ever and the
political leaders are bankrupt of solutions as never before. A normal currency zone like the US Dollar or
British Sterling has a system of fund transfers (unemployment insurance, child
support payments, Social Security, subsidies, nationally-funded contracts and
investment projects) that compensate for differential rates of productivity
change in a currency zone.
But unlike these, the Eurozone is not a transfer union that provides that kind of automatic economic stabilisers across the entire currency zone. There is not, for instance, a Eurozone-wide system of unemployment insurance that automatically produces a transfer of funds from more prosperous areas to those that are being hit by economic hard times. In the absence of separate national currencies and without a transfer union, the only immediate way for a country in the Eurozone to adjust its competitiveness to match that of more competitive countries is through internal devaluation. Which comes down in practice right now to pushing down wages and salaries, increasing the proportion of part-time and temporary workers, making it easier to lay workers off, reducing employers' costs for benefits. In other words, the project of improving national competitiveness in the Eurozone right now is about reducing real income for most workers. This is a program that has been playing out for years, especially in the Eurozone periphery countries of Cyprus, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.
Competitiveness does involve labour costs but, it's not just a matter of such costs but also of productivity. Part of the inhuman Neo-Liberal ideology that currently has a death lock on the Conservative, Social-Democratic and Liberal parties in the Eurozone, is focusing all but exclusively on reducing real income. And of course this is naturally detrimental to labour productivity as who is going to work harder and innovatively for less income?
But unlike these, the Eurozone is not a transfer union that provides that kind of automatic economic stabilisers across the entire currency zone. There is not, for instance, a Eurozone-wide system of unemployment insurance that automatically produces a transfer of funds from more prosperous areas to those that are being hit by economic hard times. In the absence of separate national currencies and without a transfer union, the only immediate way for a country in the Eurozone to adjust its competitiveness to match that of more competitive countries is through internal devaluation. Which comes down in practice right now to pushing down wages and salaries, increasing the proportion of part-time and temporary workers, making it easier to lay workers off, reducing employers' costs for benefits. In other words, the project of improving national competitiveness in the Eurozone right now is about reducing real income for most workers. This is a program that has been playing out for years, especially in the Eurozone periphery countries of Cyprus, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.
Competitiveness does involve labour costs but, it's not just a matter of such costs but also of productivity. Part of the inhuman Neo-Liberal ideology that currently has a death lock on the Conservative, Social-Democratic and Liberal parties in the Eurozone, is focusing all but exclusively on reducing real income. And of course this is naturally detrimental to labour productivity as who is going to work harder and innovatively for less income?
The Germans have managed to keep the Eurozone together
through five years of destructive austerity policies, and even persuaded their Eurozone
partners to sign on to the Fiscal Suicide Compact that limits individual
countries' debts and deficits in a way that effectively requires a pro-cyclical
economic policy during recessions and depressions, exactly the opposite of what
is needed. (The Fiscal Suicide Compact is officially known as the “Treaty on
Stability, Coordination and Governance in the Economic and Monetary Union”
(2012).
Another consequence that has become widespread is a crisis for the social-democratic parties, which have been the main center-left parties in Europe for decades. The Greek Social Democratic Party PASOK damaged itself so badly by supporting the German austerity program that it formally went out of existence, refounding itself as the Ελιά–Δημοκρατική Παράταξη (Olive Tree–Democratic Alignment), or Ελιά/Elia for short. They considered themselves lucky in the Euro Parliament elections to lose only one-third of the votes that collapsing PASOK received in the previous national elections. The ruling Socialist Party in France saw the far-right National Front party take first place, and the Socialists came in third after the conservative UMP. In Spain last month, anti-austerity Mayors replaced the conservatives in the Capital, Madrid and the major city of Barcelona and many other municipalities after the local elections there. Conservative Spanish Prime Minister, Rajoy, is shitting in his pants after the Greek referendum as his rotten government is likely to be ousted in the next general election by Podemos, the anti-austerity alliance and the Spanish equivalent of Syriza. In Ireland, the EU bootlicking government of Fine Gael/Labour coalition is likely to be replaced by a Sinn Fein/Left anti-austerity alliance supported by the Trade Unions.
Another consequence that has become widespread is a crisis for the social-democratic parties, which have been the main center-left parties in Europe for decades. The Greek Social Democratic Party PASOK damaged itself so badly by supporting the German austerity program that it formally went out of existence, refounding itself as the Ελιά–Δημοκρατική Παράταξη (Olive Tree–Democratic Alignment), or Ελιά/Elia for short. They considered themselves lucky in the Euro Parliament elections to lose only one-third of the votes that collapsing PASOK received in the previous national elections. The ruling Socialist Party in France saw the far-right National Front party take first place, and the Socialists came in third after the conservative UMP. In Spain last month, anti-austerity Mayors replaced the conservatives in the Capital, Madrid and the major city of Barcelona and many other municipalities after the local elections there. Conservative Spanish Prime Minister, Rajoy, is shitting in his pants after the Greek referendum as his rotten government is likely to be ousted in the next general election by Podemos, the anti-austerity alliance and the Spanish equivalent of Syriza. In Ireland, the EU bootlicking government of Fine Gael/Labour coalition is likely to be replaced by a Sinn Fein/Left anti-austerity alliance supported by the Trade Unions.
While Schulz and the Eurocrats, the Neo-Liberal pigdogs, argue about rules and regulations, the Greek people suffer the worst impoverishment and hardship seen in Europe since the 1930’s. The brutality of these impositions is akin to what Greece suffered under the Nazi occupation in WW2 and shames the name of Europe as a civilised part of the World. It is time that these reprobates all resigned and were deprived of their overpaid extortions of the taxpayers money.
Down with the Brussels Dictatorship! Down with the Neo-Liberal Cabal!
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