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The extent to which corporate power has taken over the country can't be exaggerated. Thankfully, a slew of young authors know this.

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Rolling Over for Bush

By Molly Ivins, AlterNet. Posted May 11, 2006.


The extent to which corporate power has taken over the country can't be exaggerated. Thankfully, a slew of young authors know this.

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As I occasionally survey the pack of sycophantic shih tzus in the Washington press corps, wriggling on their bellies to kiss the feet of those in power, I feel plumb discouraged about the future of journalism.

It's like a cross between Versailles under Louis XIV and high school: obsequious courtiers flattering their way to favor, plus the silly cliques of the "in crowd" and "out crowd." On the other hand, I am greatly cheered by the young journalists in the blogosphere who have now whelped a perfect litter of books worth paying attention to.

For my marbles and chalk, the pick is David Sirota's Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government -- and How We Take It Back. Sirota is a new-generation populist who instinctively understands that the only real questions are "Who's getting screwed" and "Who's doing the screwing?"

The extent to which corporate power has taken over the country and is running the table cannot be exaggerated and must not be ignored. Sirota has not only collected much new and useful information, he has put it into a package that provides handy weapons to fight back. Si, se puede.

Eric Boehlert, who writes for the online magazine Salon, has taken on the MSM (mainstream media) and dipped it for ticks in his book, Lapdogs: How the Press Rolled Over for Bush.

He recounts some breathtaking journalistic malfeasance -- ignoring the Downing Street memos, the Valerie Plame case and many others. As usual, sins of omission dominate. The Washington press corps (which I think should be separated from "normal" parts of the press) is breathtakingly craven. In the face of intimidation and the lure of official approval, it has shown neither courage nor enterprise. I don't know how to account for this pitiable performance. One hears terrifying tales of when the press corps "turns," when it rips and attacks like sharks in a "feeding frenzy." Darn, not a shark in sight. The president's approval ratings are at 31 percent, and not a single shih tzu will yap at him.

Sometimes misunderstandings between bloggers and the MSM are the result of simple ignorance. For example, there was the recent volley of disapproval from bloggers about the MSM's failure to pay attention to comedian Stephen Colbert's brilliant riff at the White House Correspondents Dinner.

They weren't ignoring Colbert -- as I understand it, Colbert was the final speaker, and no paper can get much in after 10 p.m. on Saturday night. Stories have to be written, edited and printed, the presses roll and then the trucks roll. It's OLD media, kids -- we do not just punch a button at our shops.

It seems to me both MSM and the blogosphere could benefit from reading the new biography of Izzy Stone by Myra MacPherson, out in September. Because Izzy was pretty much the perfect journalist, we can all learn from All Governments Lie: The Life and Times of Rebel Journalist I.F. Stone.

What a pleasure! What a joy to read about the old dog on the hunt. Surprising, too. While Stone famously broke story after story by actually reading government documents instead of taking what the press was spoon-fed, MacPherson reminds us he was also a shoe- leather reporter, who went out to interviews, press conferences and the daily bash, where he occasionally harassed spokesmen.

Today, the bloggers seem to me to be breaking more toward opinion than journalism, which I think is a shame.

A noble exception is Josh Marshall's Talking Points Memo, which is completely on top of its chosen topics. Of course, Stone practiced opinion journalism, as do I, but with him the hard reporting always came first.

I have no objections to anyone breaking into the guild of journalism without the credentials of journalism school or experience on a print daily (though I highly recommend especially the latter). I do object to those who jump from political hackery to flackery and expect respect. Truly, if you can't cover a five-car pile-up on Route 128, you should not be covering a presidential campaign.

The danger of the blogosphere is reading only those you agree with. While there are right-wing blogs that are entertaining freak shows, it's hard to find substantial journalism there. I hate to list bloggers I like because I'm bound to leave out so many, but here goes: Daily Kos, Eschaton, Altercation, Political Animal and Media Matters.

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Molly Ivins writes about politics, Texas and other bizarre happenings.

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Rose Garden Roll Overs
Posted by: charlesfrith on May 11, 2006 1:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Put in simple language; get hold of any Rose Garden Q&A before Bush 43 and see what a pack of newshounds the Whitehouse Press Corp were. The current toothless mutts also reflect the notion that criticism of an Administration during times of pressure is unpatriotic. It isn't and it's time to tell the American people so.

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Molly, it's the rotting from within covered up by the dangers from without.
Posted by: Sojourner on May 11, 2006 1:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was bad enough that we allowed the vermin to gun down JFK, RFK, MLK, X and then discredit the counter-culture. But that disease has now spread through the likes of Nixon, Reagan, BushI, and BushII. Some of us remember the preWWII days before the military occupied this nation. Ike's military-industrial complex comment was taken as a directive for the future instead of a warning.

IF Stone is one of my heroes. The comparison with today is demoralizing. Yes, we still have enough good people to fight the rot. And it is as critical a time in our nation's history as the pre-civil war years.

Thanks for the promos for the good books and good online sites. I'd add the book reviewed here on AlterNet two days ago dealing with the global capitalist corporations driving American imperialism.

In a world where everything is for sale, and where almost everybody thinkis that's as it should be, because democracy only means being able to buy what you can afford to pay for--what we get for our money is rotten--rotten politics, healthcare, justice, etc. Even rotten religion. As that was my business in my active days, I am regretful to discover that my once proactive radical denomination now is run just like GM and Ford. Bureaucracy, bureaucracy, and more bureaucracy.

If anyone's complaining, it doesn't see the light of day. Bad news is verboten. And so we rot and don't even see it.

Thank you for constantly reminding us.

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"the bloggers seem to me to be breaking more toward opinion than journalism, which I think is a sham
Posted by: wawa on May 12, 2006 4:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think its a shame too Molly
and also an incorrect and limited generalization.

Maybe I am 'old' [52] and maybe you don't agree with me,

But I have INTEGRITY and PASSION, and you don't learn that in journalism school;
you either have it or you don't.

I am a PRO-BONO INVESTIGATIVE reporter and my only Editor is my Conscience


I have been to Israel Palestine three times since June 2005
and have REPORTED the FACTS ON THE GROUND from the West Bank.

How many USA journalists and editors have actually experienced Terminals and checkpoints?
How many have witnessed the illegal wall and it's effects on the economy and lives of innocent people denied the inalienable human right of movement?
How many have listened to and reported on what Hamas members really say?


How many journalists and editors have obtained and have 'the balls' to offer video that did not go through Israeli Military Censors with the infamous Vanunu who is undergoing a FREEDOM OF SPEECH trial in Jerusalem?

Look a little further Molly, before spouting limited generalizations;
Old Bloggers are doing more than spouting opinion-there are those of us who are doing exactly what the Forth Estate has been commissioned to do: REPORT THE TRUTH!



"You shall know the truth and the truth will set you free."
- John 8:32

http://www.wearewideawake.org/

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Colbert
Posted by: Brandoc-D'Ha on May 12, 2006 4:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It wasn't just newsprint who ignored Colbert..So did the talking heads on television "news". These ARE pre civil war years Sojourner.

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» These ARE pre civil war years. . . Posted by: peacefulaim
lulu
Posted by: Lulu Maude on May 12, 2006 4:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the clarification on the Colbert performance. I did notice that when the NYTimes did stoop to acknowledge it, the content focused on its un-funniness, though... it was personal, after all.

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blogging
Posted by: rsaxto on May 12, 2006 4:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blogging has its high points today but it is tiny in comparison with its boundless future. If we can get the current Bushie creeps out of office and have real elections in 06 and 08 blogs will lead the way to the real democracy of the future. In the near future we can graduate from just drawing a little blood in blogs and saw directly into the bone so that never again will democracy be as imperiled as it is in today's pre-successful impeachment climate.

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» RE: blogging Posted by: Barbara
» RE: blogging & dreaming Posted by: rsaxto
Reckon Bush Will Ever Admit His Wrong's?
Posted by: virgie on May 12, 2006 5:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Posted By: Virgie-on may 12, 2006- at 7:21 A.M.


Reckon, George Bush will ever admit his dirty dealings to be set free?
If, He keeps messing with iran and they bomb israel, God will surely come back and deal with Bush and all the other corrupters for all their neurotic evilness.
The Bible plainly says ...Your sins will find you out. And everyone will know them.
And we just do not believe that God will let israel be blown off the map.

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» RE: eckon Bush Will Ever Admit His Wrong's? Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com
THE PEEPHOLE PRESS
Posted by: cognitorex on May 12, 2006 5:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the elite of the quill profession to the sometimes cartoonish talking heads of T.V., as in from Dowd to Hannity, the media of America do scant little to educate the public.

Collectively they behave as if they were youth taking alternating peeps through a hole in the wall of the boys and/or girls gym locker room. Espying a calf or a buttock they clamor and jostle to press their eye to the peephole and set off en masse to repeat gossipy chatter as news. This game, which is passed off as a profession, is today so ingrained that there is little reasoned analysis and the public neither wants nor expects any.

(excerpt) "I Had A Dream" cognitorex.blogspot

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» RE: THE PEEPHOLE PRESS Posted by: cognitorex
As always, well said.
Posted by: Marjorie G on May 12, 2006 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for reminding the blogosphere this should be about the facts, with opinion and passion always welcome. This arena has done a great disservice to many readers who don't understand government, the rigors of an election, votes, and the many facts that should make most stories multi-layered, with shared blame.

We have bloggers who want their anger more than resolution. Their heroes falling on swords, politics as therapy or entertainment. There are short term and long term solutions that are counter-productive with circular firing squad blaming of all electeds.

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» Facts??? Posted by: chasaturn
Would love to Chat
Posted by: rkewen on May 12, 2006 8:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi Molly,
I enjoy your columns every chance I get, I love the way you can inject some humor into the truly sordid and evil goings on in Texas, inside the Beltway and in corrupt coporate America. I imagine I would really enjoy the opportunity to sit down and chat with you in some relaxed space.

You made a minor mistake regarding how journalism works, though, you wrote:
"Colbert was the final speaker, and no paper can get much in after 10 p.m. on Saturday night. Stories have to be written, edited and printed, the presses roll and then the trucks roll."

You are undoubtably correct about the time thing, which as I understand is also why announcements etc. that the administration prefers go as unnoticed as possible happen late Friday. The presses and the trucks part is right on too. But it is the middle of that quote where you went astray.

As Stephen Colbert pointed out the press doesn't have to write, just take stenography or (my idea) even better have Karl Rove or someone send the press release by email - you know, to save having to even type. Assuming that the White House or Pentagon or whoever has already edited, bingo - just spellcheck, if you did have to type and you're done. Actually maybe the administration could just prepare the whole thing, lay-out, formatting and all and just leave a space for the WaPo (or whoever) "journalist" to put his name for a byline.

I can tell you don't work that way Molly, but as Colbert implied with such biting focused humor, too many do. By the way, though as you mentioned it is so easy to forget someone on the list, just in case you are unaware of them (or some unfortunate reader here is) one really great blog that often brings enormous amounts of research and analysis to the table is firedoglake at:

http://www.firedoglake.com/

Christy Hardin Smith (formerly ReddHedd) is a former prosecuter herself and keeps the readers right on top of the ongoing Patrick Fitzgerald investigation regarding Plamegate. One of the areas Jane Hamsher writes about is the media whores, especially the Washington Post - being one of the leading reasons "Box Turtle" Ben "Home Schooled RightWingNut" Domeich's(sp?) column to balance out the WaPo's "liberal bias" was so short-lived.

Now here's a thought - I would enter a contest where the prize was to be locked in a (nice) room with you, Christy and Jane - and I'm not talking about an orgy. Dinner and conversation - I would maybe just listen except to pose the occasional question.

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Don't insult Shih-Tzus that way!
Posted by: SFRosalyne on May 12, 2006 10:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shih-Tzus are loyal lovable dogs - which cannot be said for the press corps. The DC press corps and corporate 'news' orgs are more like maggots greedily lapping the feces out of the hands of the BushStapo.

It is time for impenetrable walls of separation between business, religion and state. No business or business-critter in the history of human commerce has EVER had the honor and patriotism not to try to use the power of government to either A) distort or slant the marketplace to give them unfair advantage or B) try to turn the govenment into a subsidiary.

Economic treason is no different than spying for an enemy state or assassination of one of our political leaders - real Americans get hurt and die. Any economic or trade activity that bears shame, disnonor and harm to America or its people is simply treason - plain and simple. Treason for commercial gain should be punishable by the slow death corporate traitors and their stockholders foist upon ordinary citizens - a slow death by poverty.

Mussolini said it best: Fascism should more appropriately be called 'corporatism', since it is the merger of state and corporate power.

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Who runs the country?
Posted by: Lincoln fan on May 12, 2006 10:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It isn't news that the people don't run the country and that the corporate establishment does.

We need to take action. We must take control of our country. To make "government of the people, by the people, and for the people" a reality join The Lincoln Initiative. There are no contributions, no leaders, no registration, no organization, no meetings, and no hassle. Click on Join us today

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CIVILIZATION, NOT PARTSANSHIP, STOPS AT THE WATERS EDGE
Posted by: tonykuspa on May 12, 2006 12:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OTHER BOOKS WORTH A GROWL: "OVERTHROW", "CONFESSIONS OF AN ECONOMIC HIT MAN', AND "STATE OF WAR", TOWARD THE POINT OF MY TITLE.

We met at CLOUDS in Santa Cruz, CA, after your speech, and your Parisian eyeball caper paid for the Heinekens. I "shocked you" with a few bits about TV news items that are never followed up. One item was the fact that the FBI, had a mole inside the plot to truck bomb the WTC.

During the trial of the blind sheik et al, our guy was recorded saying to his FBI handler, that he could ruin the plot by making sure the bomb did not explode properly. I heard the FBI's actual voice tell our perfectly adequate HUMINT to do nothing because they would "take care of it". We now know that they allowed the bombing to take place and have been complaining ever since that they need more HUMINT funds.

When Dan Rather was in London, he was interviewed on BBC -- asked about thee Bush family ties to The Carlyle Group, Rther said: "If I told you what I know about Bush/Carlyle, I'd be lynched when I got back home". I guess ol' Dan is happy just to be alive these days, and has stashed an envelope somewhere to keep it that way.

Last week C-Span cut off a caller to Washington Journal just as the guy was telling about Jingo Georgie's Grandpappy handling NAZI funds all through WW2. That traitor became GOP Senator Bush, even though he had two corporations taken from him in 1942, for trading wih the enemy! What gives? Yes I know that Prescott's partner, Avril Harriman's brother was also officially cited for trading with the enemy, so is that why they escaped the "bi-partisan firing squad"?

Is it true that Sadaam Husssein was a houseguest of Bush 41 just before he grabbed power for us in Iraq? And that while he was here he received the KEYS TO THE CITY of Detroit, or do bloggers make such stuff up? I have this fun image of Barbara Bush cooking eggs for these HUMINT Kings, so many of which get their starts at Yale U., which seemingly/unseemingly has/had rowing coaches expert at "shell games". Tee Hee!

I subscribed to IZZY STONE'S newsletter for years. His wife was the at-home publisher. You didn't mention that he attended government hearings to get many of his nuggets. Remember he was the only one who told of the Army setting up a 200-man think-tank to brainstorm for ways to gobble up the "peace dividend" that everyone expected from ending the war in Nam, a billion or more per week? The winning scam was the "absolute necessity" of planning to fight TWO wars at a time! What a great way to honor the "lessons of the Vietnam War"!

Did you know that Milton Eisenhower gave his brother Ike the phrase "Military-Political-Industrial Complex", but that Ike decided to strike out "political". It must have smacked of an outright admission that we'd adopted FASCISM!

I note that our dictionaries have literally changed their take on he meaning of the word "fascism" to befog its increasing similitude to our great democracy. Robert Kennedy, Jr. also noticed this in his recent nature book. The only thread supporting the theory that we are not fascists is that we have two political parties, whereas Fascism requires a single party government. But what do we really have now? When the Dems aren't making legislative distinctions sans differences, they are excluded from all important meetings and decisions as standard GOP practice. One party rules.

I'd like to see a movie made of Stone's life. He was the last journalist, arguably, and would make more waves than that Murrow thing did. Great title, too: IZZY !

Great news, so far, about Kinky Friedman today. Is he worth a column yet? He's been my antidote against his brother-author, Tom Friedman of the NYT.

Please keep up your usual great work.
Tony Kuspa, Santa Cruz, CA

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There are no "good" corporations
Posted by: CounterCorp on May 13, 2006 12:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Corporations are designed to be self-interested and elitist to the point of being sociopathic; rationalizing that as somehow being necessary to generate a profit (it isn't) or increase so-called "shareholder value" (which is basically a modern form of feudalism) doesn't change that basic fact ...

www.countercorp.org

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In All Fairness. . .
Posted by: ZenX on May 13, 2006 1:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is great political journalism still being done by the Washington Post, The New York Times and magazines like Vanity Fair and Harper's. But all in all, the MSM is only reflecting the apathy and malaise of the general public.

One only has to listen to callers on CSPAN to realize that we have a nation that is so fearful of the elusive "terrorists" that we have signed our lives over to the government in hopes that they will project us from the latest boogeyman (now that Russia has retired from that role).

There are journalists who are holding government accountable. Helen Thomas is one who comes to mind. Her book, Watchdogs of Democracy? : The Waning Washington Press Corps and How It Has Failed the Public will be released in June. She is scathing in her criticisms of her own profession.

Ultimately, it is we who must take names and hold politicians accountable. And is we, the public, that allowed Vice-President and former Senator Gore to be beat up as "the inventor of the internet" while a neophyte Gov. Bush was given a free ride to "learn the job" of being a President. We allowed the Supreme Court to name Bush as our President without so much as a whimper of protest. Four years later, we allowed a decorated Vietnam veteran to be vilified while a National Guardsman with an uncertain service record was re-elected.

Since when are our phone records public information? Since when is listening to our phone calls acceptable? Since when do we forgive the government for allow people to drown in an American city? Since when do we allow the filthy lucre of corporate and private money to control politics?

The Press is just our eyes and ears in the monitoring of government. Why does the press get blamed when it is the American public that has become a quivering group of scared children? We voted these fools in office and we are the only ones who can vote them out. It is we who have failed ourselves.

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Name names
Posted by: ericksonml@sbcglobal.net on May 13, 2006 7:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please don't just refer to the anonymous 'DC press corps'. I want to know the NAMES and publications of the craven roll overs so that I can write letters of complaint.

It is a VERY powerful weapon to expose the actual names of people who hide in the crowd. Publish the names of the spineless in order of worst to least. Get members of the club to VOTE ON THE MOST SPINELESS!

PLEASE

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Change is The Answer!
Posted by: williameon on May 18, 2006 5:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The system must be reformatted.
It has to be redefined in modern terms
Keep the good
And
Out with the bad.
The Corp-pirites are BAD.
Out they go!
Only change can bring salvation
The Corp-pirites
Have taken over our Government.
We must take it back.
They have taken us into a deep dark hole
Of Terrorism and Fear!
We must dig ourselves out.
Fundamental to any positive change will be:
The decentralization of The Crass Media.
They have a strangle hold on information.
Information is the life’s Blood of any Democracy.
The Airwaves must be freed
Corporations must be broken up.
Into tiny little pieces.
A decentralization of all their wealth and powers is in order.
The Human Rights that were stolen by them
Must be rescinded.
The Military must be for defense only.
The Secret Police must be disbanded.
Spying on the People is wrong.
The Bill of Rights must be re-affirmed.
There is a lot of work ahead of us.
Change is the answer.
Fix it!
Or
Forever hold your piece.

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Military-Industrial-CONGRESSIONAL-Complex
Posted by: EileenMac on May 20, 2006 8:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On January 17, 1961, in his Farewell Address to the Nation, President Dwight D. Eisenhower stated as follows:

"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together."

Many know this quote, but what most do not know is that in its original writing Eisenhower identified the dangers of the influence of the "military-industrial-CONGRESSIONAL complex." He was advised to delete the reference to Congress prior to the delivery of his address to the American People.

One can only wonder if Ike had followed his original instinct for truth, would the American People been a more "alert and knowledgable citizenry", especially in regard to those we have elected and entrusted as guardians of our liberty and security?

Is it too late to realize that this "military-industrial-CONGRESSIONAL complex" is the same enemy that the Founders of this country tried to protect us against in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights?? I hope not.

It's time for a new "War of Independents"...Independent Americans who owe no allegiance to the one political party of the military-industrial-congressional complex that is both the 21st Century Democrats and Republicans and the special interests they are beholden to.

It is time for every American who does not wish to be either master or slave to this "military-industrial-congressional complex" to declare their independence from every political party (or at least the two headed monster of the Republicans and Democrats) and to seek out, encourage and elect only those Americans who are independent and free of all bondage to a political party and the special interests who hold them hostage.

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