tv Velshi MSNBC August 30, 2020 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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of patriot prayer, a far right group based in portlandr clashed with protesugrs in the past. authorities say gunshots rang out around 9:00 p.m. local time in downtown portland. when police arrived on the scene they found one person dead with a g/6$!=q wound to theñi chest day 94 of protests inl it is just part of a series of storms converging over the american landscape, some are natural xddisasters or man-made and all of themt( leavingq ports of the country in shambles. the few rye of hurricane laura 3 uncovered in sections of texas and louisiana destroying large swaths of realc estate. leaving many without poweuj water and others without homes. >> atq this point you just pray and bew3 thankful for what yoult and who you can rely on. >> praying for thejf folkse1 th lost more than you did? >> oh yeah. >> absolutely.e1q e1 ulqár"ent trump touringw3e of the areas that are hardest hit by thefá storms on saturday
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earlier in the day, later he was interacting with localsxd following a pressfáñr briefing thexd sort that only president trump could deliver in a time of a crisis. >> i want them over here. these are the guys.."k"táq&lñi i getlp 10,000. >> you can't make this stuffçó autographing things to be sold on ebay. as of thisr still inflicting a death toll on the nation of about 1,000q soul per day. overall, the united states closing in on 6 millionrc/s confirmed cases, more than 183,000t( people have nowt( die from the disease andxdxd at thi rate closefáçóe1 to 250,000 mil lives to coronavirus by election
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day. a storm created by injustice and tension. @&h(lc yesterday a seventh straight daá foe shooting ofu(v downt( the street andq killed t people and made it back to illinois, antioch. heé( walked past police. high fives andñi water. so it has to be two different systems. because if that would have been a brown boy we all know what th outcome would have been.c he'd have never made it back to wherever he wasñi tryingñiñr to. >> and the man he's talking about killedxntwo people in the3 protest, a vigil held last night
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in kenosha for two people killed in the protest, police say they took a person in custody after the vigilr have a weapon and nbc news learned that president trump plans tolp travel to kenosha on tuesday. not to meet with the family of the man shot with police or protesters, but to meet with lad enforcement. nbc'sñr shaquille brewster join epxde1 xdjfnow. >> reporter: you set up a lot right there. the protests jfyesterday, massi between 1,000 to 2,000 people and we saw who was there,t( we w the family of mr. blake, political leadersqñ
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>> myñ that's unconscionable i(áq any country and we must stop this. this is 200. >> we have got to remember what john lewis tollxd us. to keep an eye on the prize. >> way more people are peaceful and want toxd make lasting chan itx @&h(lc% >> reporter: you mentioned that news that we heardi] overnightf which is that the white house is announcing that president trump will be making a visit to kenosha on tuesday. as you said, he'll be meeting
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with members ofnb law < enfor, businesslp +owners,fá>.& word r or not he will meet withqd family of the mr. blake. ujju)jrj veryçó limitedñr and gone afteru now, nbc news has not confi thiso7o but united states is reporting that vice president biden is planning a trip to kenosha on monday, he's had a call withc the familyok of mr. blake. the fatherq@$f mr. blake said $atñi c essentially earned the name of uncle joe, the moniker with the friendliness and nature of that call, but you know this is a s&h
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heading into november. went for president obama twice and swung to president trump who won itxd by less thanñiq 1% in 2016. this is a place that you can expect to see a lot of attention and it seems like both candidates now planning trips here on the ground. ali? >>e1 yeah. kenosha county, it was qvery, e close inlpjfxdt(qxd 2016. 47.5% forr 47.2% forxd hillary clinton.fá that was a flip for the last tw1 elections voting for barack ob! you have a lot on your hands in kenosha and also been keeping an eye onjf p.ávló.t overnig4m more violence there and a person was killed.
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can you tell us about the situation you know overnight inr portland? >> reporter:xdçó a lot ofe1 twe from president trump from portland. helj been calling on them to call in the feds and heok continued toi] do that thisq morning but in portland yesterday essentially is a protestq ofe1 supporters, a carn we know that group has clashed
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with black livesñr ma?i %ñ protesters in thelp past. they're investxd gathing that shooting that was captured on - video. it is just the latest situation, latest example of the tension. thee1 storms that this country facing rightu ali? >> shaq, thank you for youró[ reportig5 we'll say on both of thesel stories. joining us now, rolands7 marti host andce1çó managing editor or roland martin. and thank you both for being here this morning. roland, i have kind of lost track oft( number of tweets thi president isn't this morning. the overwhelming majority are
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retweets, some from prominent@ú% far right characters and conspiracy theorists having to do wit(d portland and of cours as shaq just saidc he'll go to kenosha. m5uz many of them that we're no showing you the tweets. this is a line by line list. i calls foroment whi leadership,xdxde1 roland.xd often we turn to the president for this leadership. we are seeing something elseq entirely. >> whitefáok @oerica has to ans the question, what are youfá go] to do? why am i saying that?çó let's be honest as possible. 69% or so of the total electorate in november will beq whitei] ñramericans. what donald trump is lpdoinfé he doesn't mind what's going on in portland and kenosha and he
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i like to come from #d historicl standpoint and that'sxd about vigilantism. it's not new in our country. it started with slavelp patrols when poor white menok were hire to oversee blackxd slaves. then we fast forwarde1 to the civil rights movementw3 >o9 civil rihe kkk vementw3 >o9 which was saturated - officers. now herelp we are in 2020q when < okay? and then we have alpçó 17-year- white boylp come fromxd another state into wisconsinfá and justq
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embraced by the police instead of stopped for being theçó mp>> sonja pruett is a professo of criminal justice atfá=sm sjuá police and police organization and administrat) sonja, there is a solutionxd in lie with policefá and i fear often, we he had this conversation, that the things that haveçó happened ove the last several months in america haveb. made everybody, made9iáát people think all police are bad. how do we fix this for the good police out there? what's the structure and the organization that needs to change injf order5a to make pog good and to bring out the good in the police thañt are out thee who i believe do risk their lives for our public safety and this point all being painted the prominence of these ecause
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incidents we're talking about? >> soysrz going to makeçó it simple. violence is complicity. if you are a white person, if you are a black police e1office if you are nott(ñzv standing ft is right then your silence is complicity in this mess that we are in right now and it's a dangerous mess. we are at the urgency of now and this is what i tell people. vote, vote, votelñáxd vote, vot. if peoplr( don't understand the intersection, here it is. you vote for a ;"sq)iff, a mayo and a county executive who then picks a policeo police chief. you vote forg pick the people who are going to do the right thingxd in theseñi situations and that is pass these laws that will hold police officers accountable for whatq they do and then also holdñi
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accountable those +v8pleñi who e in charge by withholding federal funding, by withholding state funding. those are thexd things that we n do. >> ali, ixd agree with sonja or allfá of that. >> these are some tough times. go ahead. look what happened in atlanta. when you had theçó protests the% when they actuallye1 fired thos1 cops. >> buffalo. >> retiring. in buffalo. in lgr when will they standxd up and s what happened here is wrong? sure, a few retired cops say that but that's the problem. the blue wall and donald lr
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this thing is so -- first ofq all, we are so polarized and iu blyc=e1e1e1 off!;im9ñt the okay? whichi] i have been one.5a@@&h(% which i have< that ie1 told you about last ti we spoke where i'm like we need to turn over the applefá cart a find the good apples because outnumbering the bad qapples. i don't know how to say this but i'm going to talk to myu
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it is hundreds ofq years to figt thisq battle so now what are we going to do? >> the dog whistle does work,w3 ali. donald trump knowse1xd it and we is doing it andokr wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania, north carolina, florida, arizona. that's what hqk5ñ doing. he is appealing to white nationalismñi and white fear to ñ) him re-elected. that's why thexdlp onus stop log for black people to save america again. the onus on white america, areg you going to reject donald trump's racist appeals? no democrat hasçóçó gotten a sie lyndon johnson in 19e1xd 64. ask the xdquesti
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nine weeks before the presidential election, the director of national intelligence dni john ratcliffe, a guy a story unto himself, told congress he will not provide in-person briefings to them about foreign election interference. there's concerns over leaks according to an intelligence official speaking to nbc news but democrats are not buying that. the democratic presidential ticket calling it a move of security. they're saying that this is a
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shocking abdication of the responsibility to keep the congress currently informed and a betrayal of the public's right to know how foreign powers are trying to subvert our democracy. end quote. joining me now, nbc news national security and intelligence correspondent ken delanian. ken, we'll be talking to jackie speier momentarily but members of the congress have been telling me and i'm sure that they have class if ied information about the degree to which russia is interfering in the election and information they wish was shared with the american people so in the context of more interference, we are hearing of less briefing to congress. >> yeah. that's right, ali. this is another norm shattering moment in the trump administration. i have been covering intelligence for ten years and never seen anything like this.
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a decision to deny in-person briefings on a particular subject. and look. the issuere this notion of leaks doesn't pass the logic test. there's still a danger of leaking in written information. i think the more telling explanation from john ratcliffe, a former republican member is that he want it is intelligence community to speak with one voice on the question of foreign election interference and don't want officials getting behind closed doors with lawmakers where they're able to grill him and question him about the intelligence products because that has revealed we are told that in fact russia is the main danger here. democrats said publicly according to the intelligence while the administration mentioned china and iran as wanting donald trump to be re-elected, russia is only
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country that's actively intervening to help donald trump on social media and a threat to hack and leak and interfere with election processes and it's a mump greater threat than sort of generalized interference of china with propaganda and democrats saying that vocally. trump and the min i don't knows don't like it and now trying to curb the information flow to those lawmakers who have a legal right to get the information. >> molly, ken was just talking about the director of the national counter intelligence and security center that gave the briefings in person to congress that caused all of this alarm and they wanted to know more and asked him to do so not in camera but publicly. the director ratcliffe sent a letter in which he says i believe this approach, not briefing them in person, ensures that the information odni provides the congress is not misunderstood or prolit sized
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and better protect the sources and methods from additional unauthorized disclosures or misuse. that doesn't make sense to me. doesn't make sense to me that somehow the written documentation is reliable, less susceptible to leaking than in-person briefings where people ask questions. >> i think you oar right and ken has it right. this is about writing it down and completely controlling the message that's coming out or potentially coming out about what the threats are in particularly the information domain, the foreign threats on the u.s. election and i think the concern that we have when we're looking at just the written product is what we saw in the second sort of sta immaterial that came out from ebanina of china and russia and iran doing things against the election but russia is doing very serious things and put
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china at the top of the list and iran in there to dillute it. >> which is -- which is politicizing, right? >> it is editing what's coming out of the intelligence community's product to present a slightly erroneous view to the american people and why lawmakers are so upset. what we need now, yes, the people that collect the intelligence and the people who are supposed to be doing the things to help stop the campaigns against the united states are still doing those things, the intelligence agencies are still doing their jobs but what we need, the greatest defense for the american people is a public facing assessment of those threats to individuals, to vo r voters so they know the narratives to influence them to all see it more clearly and without that we're in 2016. >> ken, what can these lawmakers with access to this information do? because i've spoken to adam
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schiff, senator richard blumenthal, spoken to others who are on the intel committees saying that this information does not need to be classified. to molly's point, americans have to know that the russians are actually doing this. by the way, this distraction of iran and china caused people to say, hey, everybody is doing it. when in fact, the folks with access to the intelligence say the problem remains russia. >> well, ali, i mean, the sort of nuclear option for members of congress with classified information they feel must get to the public is go to the floor of congress and read it. but that's a very serious step, it could get them kicked off the intelligence committee and a step i have not seen members willing to take. in terms of leverage to get these executive branch officials in front of the committee, they
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issue subpoenaed but they take a long time to enforce and we are ten weeks from the election and no time for that. they have other leverage. the committee members ask for changes in programs and budgets and things they need approval for. congress can certainly slow that down but this is a game of chicken and the trump administration shown itself willing to do almost anything to work its will in terms of this issue of election interference. donald trump's dni was fired because a member of the staff briefed congress saying the russians want to win and now it's clear that donald trump and people around him don't want the full picture of intelligence and in terms of what the russians are doing to get to all members of congress. >> thank you. ken and molly, lead writer of great power and stand up republics.
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cases are climbing at the university of alabama now with the coronavirus is very much an active threat with many more than 1,000 students testing americans positive since the start of an on campus classes last week. the death as well as economic toll blairly making a blip at the republican convention as 1,000 people crowded at the white house without masks or social december tansing. on msnbc this week, candidate joe biden slammed president trump's response. >> the biggest issue is people died of covid. over 1,000 yesterday again. 1,000 people a day. worse off than any other country in the world right now. it is old hat talking about injecting bleach. there's no rationale.
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this guy doesn't even science, at least if he heard it he doesn't understand it. he just seems to be incompetent. >> joining me now founding director of national center for disaster preparedness at colombia university. we started to talk about the effect of unrest and catastrophe on children and refugee kafrs and a thing that you made me understand is that both the lack of consistency and the prolonged absence of education are damaging in a very long term way to children so with that in mine, the understanding that most people share the view they don't want the kids away from education for a lorng time and want a consistent approach, how should we be thinking about the return to school? >> good morning. so this is probably the biggest and most controversial challenge we face since the pandemic began
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which is a very, very heart wrenching personal decision that parents need to make. is it safe to go back in the classroom knowing that as you said that they need their education. it is no doubt about that and kids can go back to school. we did a report on this but schools have to be extremely obsessive about making sure that every single safety measure is in place in the classrooms if parents are going to send their children back and those include the obvious keeping children appropriately separated, everyone wearing masks and if anyone can sick they need to go home, including students and teachers. every classroom has excellent ventilation so the air turnover is repeated multiple times in the hour. those require engineering inspections and the reality what has to make sure is in place before kids go back, ali. >> which is complicated because
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even in normal times we have a lack of appropriate funding for public schools so ventilation, water, cleanliness are problems at the best of times. we have new information, stephen hahn said the fda was prepared to authorize a vaccine before phase three clinical trials were complete if officials believed that the benefits outweighed the risks. the reason i connect this to what you just said is we sort of trust the institutions to guide us in times like this and lots of things that happened that cause us to wonder about the politicization of institutions. there's a real issue with getting a vaccine out before it's fully tested to be safe. >> absolutely. this is not the first time that the fda has bowed to intense political pressure from the white house. this is extraordinary. recently they allowed doctors to
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prescribe unproven medications for covid patients in the hospital including remdesivir and using the plasma, what's call convalescent plasma of pooh 'em th-- people to had the disease. both of those medication approvals have not been tested and it's just outrageous that the fda has become so politicized that they're allowing the white house to determine what is done and not done. that's not the way it's supposed to be. the fda should be the checkpoint to make sure that everything that's out there that's ever given to a patient is the result of appropriate testing. the fact to put out a vaccine without having enough trials in human beings is pretty scary, actually. and people need to pay attention to this. >> yeah. we don't need -- we have a lot of people in this country who don't encourage people to get
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an actor truly personifies the superhero he or she plays on the screen. chad bick boseman passed away after a four-year colon cancer battle. boseman gay us everything he had. including a performance in marvel's critically acclaimed "black panther." he embodied t 'challa and much more than the black panther. while hi fought his battle with cancer largely on his own he made sure others didn't have. he made visits to st. jude's children's hospital with toys, joy and an infectious positive attitude. in a 2018 interview he was overcome with interview talking about the motivation that he drew from two young boys, both with terminal diagnosis. >> throughout our filming, i was communicating with them.
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knowing that they were both terminal. and -- and what they said to me is, and the parents said, they're trying to hold on to this movie comes. and -- to a certain degree, you hear them say that and you're like, oh, like, wow. that's -- like, i got to get up and, i got to go to the gym and go to work and when i found out that they -- yeah. it's -- it means a lot. >> so here's the thing. in that moment, unbeknownst to most of the world, boseman was fighting the same battle. chadwick boseman did more with his time on earth than many of
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us could hope to do in a lifetime. he starred in seven movies all while privately receiving treatment for colon cancer. throughout his career he played the roles of pivotal characters, james brown and jackie robinson and thurgood marshall. activist and friend of this show put it on twitter, what generosity, and love, to look out at the end of your life and decide, i'm going to live my legacy now. he chose to tell black stories with the time he had left. what a stunning gift. what a stunning life. >> tech: at safelite, we're here for you
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international leaders at his own golf club in florida? it sounded to most people like a brazen attempt to personally profit off the presidency and he eventually dropped the idea when even some republicans pushed back, which doesn't happen that often. when he was trying to make it happen, one of the arguments in favor of the idea was it would actually save taxpayers money. this is the president's son, eric trump, executive vice president of the trump organization, making that case last year in an interview with yahoo! finance. >> why is it not a conflict of interest to have the g7 at trump national doral versus camp david where it's been in the past? >> because we would be doing it for nothing and a lot of people love south florida, it's the right time of year for it, and we've got a spectacular property. >> no one denies it's spectacular, but it appears to be a conflict, doesn't it? >> when they do g7s, this is one other thing people don't ever give us credit for, any time the
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government comes, my father travels, they stay at our properties for free, cost for housekeeping, we have to legally charge government something. so everywhere he goes, if he stays at one of our places, the government savingses a fourtune because we charge them like 50 bucks. >> let me tell you about the reality. "the washington post" reports donald trump has visited his own properties 271 times since he took office. taxpayers have paid trump businesses more than $900,000 during that time, including room rates for the secret service, required to travel with the president, up to $650 per night. a little more than the 50 bucks. in one case "the post" uncovered the secret service had to book
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rooms for two weeks ahead at a time. since the start of his administration trump has blurred the lines between his companies and the federal government, doing very little to distinguish his business and his presidency and that continues. with me is one of the journalists who has taken a deep dive into the situation, david farenthold. david, this has become your beat now. what's the reality now, what eric trump says or what you dug up? >> what eric said, nothing of it is true. i've looked at receipts for hundreds and hundreds of hotel room stays by government officials at trump properties and i have yet to find even one that fits eric trump's description. every single one was higher. usually the trump organization charged the government as much
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as they were legally allowed to under normal federal per diem rules or more, adding on resort fees. they got as much as they could and sometimes more than they would be legally allowed to out of the government. >> david, there's two issues here. one is the first issue that we heard about when donald trump held that press conference held before he took office, he said he was putting everything into a blind trust run by his sons, but now we know how intertwined his sons are with the business. issue one is the president profiting off the presidency. issue two, these are not members of his club. these are you and me paying this bill, we're not given a choice in the matter. >> that's right. these are effectively transactions were trump is the buyer and the seller but he doesn't have to pay. he gets to choose if the federal government stays at his clubs
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and his businesses get to choose what to charge those people and we, the taxpayers, pay the bill but we don't even get to see the bill. the only reason we're seeing these records, that we now how much we're actually paying the federal government, is because we put in public records requests and in some cases sued the government to get these records. if we hadn't done that, we wouldn't know any of this, about how our money is being spent. >> you've ruffled some feathering in doing so, a white house spokesperson says "the washington post" is blatantly interviewing with the business of the trump organization and it must stop, please be advised we are building up a very large dossier on the many false david farenthold and other stories, they are a disgrace to journalism and the person people. there's so much there that's interesting, the white house talking about how you're interviewing with the business of the trump organization, be advised, the use of the dossier. but the idea that the white
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house is carry organization's water on this, it's not the trump organization thatth's the white house, the government of america. >> that's what's so stunning about this. the question that we asked that produced that statement was, is donald trump entwining his business and his white house, is he breaking the promise he made at the beginning of his term never to mix the two. and what we got was a statement that confirms the breaking of the promise. we couldn't ask for a better illustration that that promise is shattered, gone by the wayside, that the white house's spokesman is telling me a message on behalf of the trump organization, how much closer could the two possibly be. >> i hope you thanked them for clearing that up. david, good to see you as always, david farenthold is a pulitzer prize winning reporter for "the washington post," who is interviewing with the business of the trump organization, planning. up next, congresswoman jack jackie speier.
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we'll have more "velshi" after a quick break. real progress? when you're affected by schizophrenia, you see it differently. it's in the small, everyday moments. and in the places, you'd never expect. a little sign of hope. the feeling of freedom. and once these little moments start adding up, that's when it feels like so much more. it feels like real progress. caplyta effectively treats adults with schizophrenia. and it's just one pill, once a day, with no titration. caplyta can cause serious side effects. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about fever, stiff muscles or confusion, which can mean a life-threatening reaction
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or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be permanent. dizziness upon standing, falls, and impaired judgment may occur. most common side effects include sleepiness and dry mouth. high cholesterol and weight gain may occur, as can high blood sugar which may be fatal. in clinical trials, weight, cholesterol and blood sugar changes were similar to placebo. so if you're affected by schizophrenia, have a conversation with your doctor about caplyta today. i'm a verizon engineer, and i'm part of the team building the most powerful 5g experience for america. it's 5g ultra wideband, and it's already available in parts of select cities. like los angeles and in new york city. and it's rolling out in cities around the country. with massive capacity, it's like an eight lane highway compared to a two lane dirt road. 25x faster than today's 4g networks. in fact, it's the fastest 5g in the world.
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