Archive for MichelleGonzalez

Poetic People Power: “The Revolution Will Be…”

Poetic People Power will premiere its 9th annual show titled “The Revolution Will Be…” at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe. Poets include Tara Bracco, Erica R. DeLaRosa, Andy Emeritz, Frantz Jerome, Shetal Shah, Jonathan Walton and Justin Woo.

Date: May 25, 2011
Time: 7 PM
Venue: Nuyorican Poets Café, 236 East 3rd Street, NYC
Admission: $15 online or at the door.

Poetic People Power is an ongoing project that combines poetry and activism. Each year, poets are commissioned to write new poems about timely social or political issues. In light of recent events, this year’s show focuses on protest and revolution. Join us as our poets bring their creativity to the stage! More info at www.poeticpeoplepower.com

Poetic People Power is made possible in part with public funds from the Manhattan Community Arts Fund, supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and administered by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.

"The Effect of Media on the Global Movement for Women's Rights – focus on Muslim Worlds": A Panel Discussion

Monday, May 9, 2011 at 6:30 pm ET
The Paley Center for Media (25 W. 52nd Street, New York, NY)

IN PERSON

Qanta Ahmed, Associate Professor of Medicine, SUNY-Stony Brook; Author, In the Land of Invisible Women
Maha Awad, International Television Host and Producer
Danielle Lurie, Filmmaker, In The Morning
Negar Mottahedeh, Associate Professor, Program in Literature Duke University – Reading Film Fiction
Catinca Tabacaru, Executive Director and General Council, Women’s Voices Now

The Paley Center in partnership with Women’s Voices Now and the Rubin Museum will examine how women in Muslim worlds are using media to illuminate their personal and cultural environments. The panelists will consider what happens to a previously closed society that now confronts the free-flowing information of the Internet, as well as how women are using all types of media to struggle for civil, economic, and political rights. The discussion will also focus on the recent uprisings in the Middle East and the role played by women using social media and the Internet. Before the discussion, several films from different genres will be screened to exemplify the diversity of these women’s response.

Follow the live tweets @PaleyCenter on Twitter and use #MuslimWomen and #PaleyLiveNY to join the conversation!

“Resurrection” by Cristina Dominguez

I lay where the grass dips between burial plots, my hip fits right in the groove. Separating effaced tablets, between grave, stone faced bed-mates, I am a frayed red ribbon book-mark—claiming her space, the living between the dead. They tell me I can’t stay here all night. I need to get used to sleeping in my own bed, but they don’t know how beds haunt me, how beds are more like coffins for me, how I’m more alive here with ivy curling in between the toes of my finally still feet.

Too heavy to stand I roll over each mound, with each twirl I push my face deeper into the ground and when I am right on top of them I pause to face them. Words don’t need to be spoken, they are written, the veins in my eyes, they crawl out onto my cheeks into the soil moistening the sockets of their skulls where marigolds will grow. “Just this once” one concedes. I bed down in the moss and the spiral strands of my hair land among the flower-weeds.

I rest my head on prayer, my worries are strung on cramped bent fingers reaching for a pen. The morning fog stretches like an opaque plastic bag over my face. I mouth Hail Mary but am signing my poems, omens for the coming of the queen.

Slams and clicks beneath my fingertips, aisles and rows of embossed tablets, each say my name. This is the altar where I lay to rest my dead, this is the place where I will live.

May 18th – Mentor Up: A Vision for the Future of Mentoring!

The New Agenda, a non-profit organization dedicated to “improving the lives of women and girls by bringing about systemic change”,  will be hosting it’s annual event on May 18th in NYC at the Rubin Museum of Art (150 West 17th Street).  “Come hear how social media will shape the future of mentoring. Superb evening program – including videos, a mentoring vignette and surprise appearances. Come see familiar faces!”

Here are some steps that the organizers have set up for all that are interested in the event:

1. Attend! from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm on May 18th ($250; or $35 for women under 30)

2. Join the Benefit Committee

3. Can’t make it?  DONATE whatever you can afford – no amount is too small

4. Sponsorship –  list your organization, company, shop, restaurant, etc. in our Event Journal

Interested in attending but can’t afford the full cost?  Don’t worry!  Email the organizers and they will work with a sliding-scale to arrange a fee that works for you.

Feminist Activism 2.0: Shelby Knox Talks Online Organizing

Tuesday, May 10, 2011, 6:30 PM

NOW-NYC hosts a special workshop with leading feminist activist, Shelby Knox, who will give the inside track on igniting change in the blogosphere and beyond.  Learn how to sharpen your blogging skills and tap the power of social networking for good.  Join us for expert advice on how to be an effective activist and revolutionary thinker on the web.

RSVP: contact@nownyc.org | 212-627-9895

Location: 150 West 28th Street, Suite 304, NYC (@7th Ave)

$5 Suggested Donation

About Shelby Knox:

A seasoned feminist organizer, Shelby Knox knows how to utilize social media and blogging to inspire individuals and make change.  With more than 8,000 followers, it’s no wonder Forbes listed her as one of “20 Inspiring Women to Follow on Twitter.”  Today, Shelby is the Director of Organizing for Change.org, where her online petition in response to the irresponsible reporting of a New York Times journalist covering the gang rape of a young Texas girl received national attention and forced the Times to issue an apology and follow-up story.

Speaker Christine C. Quinn Reports to the LGBT Community

Speaker Christine C. Quinn

Reports to the LGBT Community

April 2011

April 5, 2011

Dear New Yorker,

While 2011 got off to a great start, with some terrific victories and announcements on both the local and national fronts, we’ve recently seen a rise in LGBT-related hate crimes in New York City.

We have a new LGBT and HIV/AIDS liaison on board here at the City Council, Carlos Menchaca.  He and my office have been working closely with the NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force and advocates to respond to the recent assaults in Queens and the West Village.  We’re also redoubling our efforts to combat hate and violence in our city.

If you or anyone you know has been a victim of a bias-related crime, please call 911 and/or report it to the NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force at (646) 610-5267.

And please feel free to contact Carlos if my office can be of any help to you.  You can reach him by phone at (212) 788-5646 or by e-mail at cmenchaca@council.nyc.gov.

Below are some of my office’s recent activities on issues of concern to the LGBT and HIV/AIDS community.

HATE CRIMES BULLETIN

On the morning of March 12th, a group of young men viciously attacked and killed Anthony Collao simply because they thought he was gay.

This cowardly act of violence took the life a young man who was proud of who he was and much loved by his family and friends.

I know the Queens community is as outraged as I am that another hate crime has occurred here in our City.  A vigil for Anthony was held on March 24th in Woodhaven near the site of the murder.  To read more, click on the links below:

http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Queens-Teen-Beaten-to-Death-in-Alleged-Bias-Attack-118017664.html
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42262213/ns/local_news-new_york_ny/
http://www.queenscourier.com/articles/2011/03/16/news/top_stories/doc4d80b5db09779753712089.txt
http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2011/03/25/Vigil_Held_for_NY_Hate_Crime_Victim/

I’d like to thank the NYPD for taking swift action in this case.  I’d also to thank the Queens community for rallying together and remaining strong in the wake of this horrible attack.

Shockingly, another incident occurred two weekends ago when Damien Furtch was violently beaten in the West Village.  To read more, click on the links below:

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=news/local/new_york&id=8043090
http://www.lgbtqnation.com/2011/03/police-seek-attackers-in-latest-anti-gay-assault-in-new-yorks-west-village/
*http://www.dnainfo.com/20110330/manhattan/man-attacked-outside-west-village-mcdonalds-apparent-hate-crime-reports-say

While thankfully Damien is alive and recovering, these acts of violence are completely unacceptable, and we must continue to use every tool available to us to combat hate and violence in our city.

If you or anyone you know has been a victim of a bias-related crime, please call 911 and/or report it to the NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force at (646) 610-5267.

SPEAKING OUT AGAINST KILLINGS IN UGANDA

On January 26, 2011, David Kato, a gay rights activist, was savagely bludgeoned to death in Uganda.

Kato was the face of Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), an advocacy group actively campaigning against the country’s controversial Anti-Homosexuality Bill.

Kato’s death as the result of the prevailing climate of homophobia in Uganda – a charge the government refutes.

I joined hundreds of New Yorkers at vigil in February to speak out against this brutal killing.  To view a clip on YouTube, click here.

THE CALL FOR MORE INCLUSIVE ST. PAT’S PARADES CONTINUES

Our citywide call for inclusive St. Patrick’s Day parades continued this year.

I wrote letters to several parade committees, including those that oversee the Staten Island, Brooklyn (Park Slope) and Manhattan St. Patrick’s Day parades.  In each letter, I expressed my extreme disappointment and concern that the Irish LGBT community still isn’t being allowed to march openly in a respectful and identifiable way.  I also expressed hope that we could begin a respectful dialogue and find common ground, so that all of us can celebrate together and walk side-by-side as we do every year in Sunnyside, Queens, at the St. Pat’s for All Parade.

In an historic move, Irish Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore officially met with Irish LGBT New Yorkers. This is the first time in history that the Irish Government has officially taken a meeting with the LGBT Irish.  His message was clear: “Exclusion is not an Irish thing,” and was proud to say he supports an inclusive St. Patrick’s Day parade.

As reported in the Irish Voice, foreign minister Eamon Gilmore said it best:

“What these parades are about is a celebration of Ireland and Irishness.  I think they need to celebrate Ireland as it is, not as people imagine it. Equality is very much the center of who we are in our identity in Ireland.”

You can read more about our fight for more inclusiveness by clicking on the links below:

http://www.gaycitynews.com/articles/2011/03/18/gay_city_news/news/doc4d8114aed13a5869325140.txt
http://www.gaycitynews.com/articles/2011/03/18/gay_city_news/news/doc4d83c90b36a9f486919930.txt

You can also read the letters I sent to the parade committees in Brooklyn Park Slope and Staten Island.

SAVE THE DATE: JUNE 16th CITY COUNCIL PRIDE EVENT

Pride Month is fast approaching. Please mark your calendar for Thursday, June 16th at 5:30 p.m. as Council Members Rosie Mendez, Daniel Dromm, Jimmy Van Bramer and I host our 2011 Pride Celebration.  Invitations to be sent out shortly.

WHITE HOUSE AND DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE STOP DEFENDING DEFENSE OF MARRIAGE ACT (DOMA)

This past February, we achieved a major milestone in our fight for equality with the announcement that the White House and the U.S. Department of Justice will no longer be defending the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA).

Like many Americans, I was happy to see President Obama and Attorney General Holder take this historic and long overdue step on behalf of the LGBT community.

While we have much more to accomplish, we should be proud that our community has come together to successfully advocate for what is right for America.  Congress should waste neither its time nor its limited resources trying to protect this discriminatory law.

UPDATE ON MARRIAGE EQUALITY CAMPAIGN

As reported by Capitol News this past week (http://www.capitaltonight.com/2011/04/quinn-in-albany-continues-same-sex-marriage-lobbying) meetings with the Governor’s office on marriage equality are continuing.

We’re very hopeful that in the near future, New York will pass Marriage Equality, allowing LGBT couples, many of them with families, to legally marry and access all the rights and privileges.

We will be hosting marriage equality panels in all five boroughs to rally folks and build support for our campaign.  We will keep everyone posted and alert you to any actions you can take to help us achieve marriage equality once and for all.

IMPORTANT VICTORY IN TRANSGENDER MARRIAGE LICENSE CASE

On March 8, 2011, we achieved an important win in our fight for equality when the City Clerk’s Office announced that it is was implementing guidelines to ensure that transgendered New Yorkers aren’t discriminated against when applying for a marriage license with their partner.

This case stems from a complaint my office received from a transgender opposite sex couple who was refused a marriage license by the City Clerk’s Office.

In addition to implement new guidelines, the City Clerk’s Office will also be providing training for staff.

I want to thank the City Clerk Michael McSweeney and his office for moving quickly to ensure that other transgender couples won’t face this type of discrimination.  I also want to thank the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund for the critically important work they are doing to help make our city devoid of discrimination.

STATEMENT ON LACK OF COMPANY-WIDE TRANSGENDER POLICY AT WALMART

While our city continues to take steps to protect the rights of all New Yorkers, Walmart has shown yet again it’s a poor fit to do business in NYC.

The world’s largest retailer no only excludes transgender people in its non-discrimination policies, but they also don’t voluntarily offer domestic partner benefits to its LGBT employees, only doing so when required to by state law.

Walmart’s lack of inclusion in its diversity policies are the very antithesis of what we in NYC want and expect from our corporate partners.

2nd ANNUAL RESPECT FOR ALL WEEK

Our second annual “Respect For All Week” (RFA) was a huge success!

During RFA week (Feb. 14-18), we called on advocates and schools to combat bullying and bias-based harassment by providing training and programming.  While this one week highlights the critical need for tolerance and understanding, we must encourage this positive behavior all year round, and I would like to thank everyone for continuing to make this a priority in their daily lives.

With our collective leadership, the NYC Department of Education has expanded on our commitment to the RFA mission by:

  • expanding school safety teams to include an RFA liaison to help address harassment, intimidation and bullying;
  • identifying and formally recognizing schools with strong programs about diversity and anti-bullying; and
  • establishing a best practices manual for principals on harassment, intimidation and bullying.

You can read more about RFA week and these new expansions by clicking on the links below:

http://schools.nyc.gov/Offices/mediarelations/NewsandSpeeches/2010-2011/rfaweekrelease021811.htm
http://www.qgazette.com/news/2011-02-23/Front_Page/Ferreras_Visits_Local_Schools_In_Show_Of_Respect_F.html
http://www.queenscourier.com/articles/2011/02/22/news/top_stories/doc4d641f81efd53766005149.txt
http://foresthills.patch.com/articles/respect-for-all-week-at-forest-hills-high-school
http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2011/02/18/wide-ranging-anti-bullying-effort-underway-at-nyc-schools/
http://www.wnyc.org/articles/wnyc-news/2011/feb/18/city-schools-expand-anti-bullying-initiative/
http://www.ny1.com/content/news_beats/education/134236/doe–city-to-step-up-anti-bullying-programs/
http://gothamschools.org/2011/02/18/as-city-expands-anti-bullying-effort-union-warns-of-backsliding/

For more info about Respect for All, including next year’s RFA Week (February 13-17, 2012) and ways to get involved in these efforts, please contact Carlos Menchaca in my office at (212) 488-5646 or cmenchaca@council.nyc.gov.

I TALK BECAUSE: NATIONAL WEEK OF PRAYER FOR THE HEALING OF AIDS

The “I Talk Because” HIV/AIDS Awareness campaign continues and during the National Week of Prayer (March 6-12) for the healing of AIDS, we were able to hear from some of our City’s clergy and lay leaders.

+++ See Reverend Butts Talk About HIV/AIDS because…

http://www.youtube.com/user/Italkbecause#p/c/25F5B0E06341FBC6/71/pFTX3jdqnzw

Why talk about HIV/AIDS to the people in your life?  We know that open and honest conversations can help prevent new HIV infections and reduce the stigma attached to people living with HIV/AIDS.  Today, over 100,000 New Yorkers are living with HIV/AIDS, and thousands don’t even know they’re infected.

Join the conversation!  Film and upload your own testimonial.  Let us know why it’s important for you to talk about HIV/AIDS with the people in your life.

1. Begin your video with “My name is _________ and I talk about HIV/AIDS because…….”
2. Upload your video to YouTube today.
3. Email the URL of your video to italkbecause@gmail.com.

For more info, call Carlos Menchaca at (212) 788-5646.

SUPPORTING THE HARVEY MILK STAMP

A growing grassroots movement is currently underway to honor the late Harvey Milk with an official commemorative stamp.

As the first openly gay person elected to public office in the U.S., Harvey Milk blazed the path that made it possible for so many openly gay public officials, including myself, to serve in office.  His refusal to back down and accept second-class status continues to inspire generations of Americans across the country.

If you’d like to join this campaign, feel free to use my letter of support to draft your own and send it to:

Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee
c/o Stamp Development
U.S. Postal Service
1735 North Lynn Street, Suite 5013
Arlington, VA 22209-6432

For additional information, call the National Campaign Director at 602-469-6310
or email harveymilkstampdir@cox.net.

LOOKING AHEAD

Whether combating hate, building inclusiveness or continuing our fight for marriage equality, we still have our work cut out for us if we’re going to build on the progress we’ve seen this year, and I look forward to working with you on these and other fronts in the weeks and months ahead.

In the meantime, please feel free to contact our new LGBT and HIV/AIDS liaison, Carlos Menchaca if my office can be of any help to you.  Again, you can reach him by phone at (212) 788-5646 or by e-mail at cmenchaca@council.nyc.gov.

Sincerely,

Christine C. Quinn

Speaker

NYC Council

Treat Yourself to a Night on the Town this Thursday at Trinity Pub – All Proceeds Go Towards SAFER!

Help the students of SAFER fund a free training for an exceptional activist or group taking direct action on their campus during Sexual Assault Activism Month!

Time: Thursday, April 28 – 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Location: Trinity Pub (UES)
229 East 84th Street #1 New York, NY

Happy Hour Specials until 8:30pm!!! Special raffle prizes! SAFER Board members behind the bar!

All tips/proceeds go towards Students Active For Ending Rape!

Raffle Prizes!
*One Rabbit Habbit from Babeland
*New Merch from Riot Grrl Ink
*3 personal training sessions with Andrew Ginsburg
*One tray of home-made baked goods from Valerie’s Kitchen
*Free private yoga session with Domenick Schiavone
*Burda Style package: BurdaStyle “Stiches” t-shirt and Sewing Kit and BurdaStyle Bow-Tie Kit
*4,000 years for choice Emma Goldman poster
*5 gift certificates for 4-week Introductory class at NY Jiu Jitsu
**Do you have a NYC-local prize to donate? Let us know!**

Can’t make it to the event? You can support us by donating online

This Month…

SAFER is challenging campus communities to recognize this SAAM as Sexual Assault ACTIVISM Month and pledge to change how their campus prevents and responds to sexual violence.

Young people have a right to a safe college campus that is free of sexual violence. Join SAFER in moving from awareness to action by holding colleges and universities across the country accountable during Sexual Assault ACTIVISM Month (SAAM) 2011!

Pledge to Take Direct Action this April!

The Right to be Sexy in the Bedroom and on the Street!

Are you ready to be double-teamed? The Line is teaming up with Hollaback! (Suggested Donation $10)

We have a right to look as sexy as we want, with no repercussions! When our bodies and sexuality meet activism, we can take back control and turn victimization on its head.

Join us on April 21st from 7:30 to 9:30 pm for a screening of The Line at the Museum of Sex‘s subterranean locale (233 5th Avenue, 27th Street, New York, NY). Sip elderflower cocktails at the sleek Laboratory/Bar space and join a post-film discussion with sultry panelists discussing sexuality rights and activism. Panelists include Emily May of Hollaback! Twanna Hines of Funky Brown Chick, Andrea Plaid of Racialicious, Tara Ellison of Third Wave Foundation and NOLOSE, and Nancy Schwartzman, director of The Line.


Your Panelists:

Nancy Schwartzman is the director and producer of documentary films The Line (2009) and xoxosms (April 2011 release), as well as the director of The Line Campaign, a multimedia campaign to promote sex-positive dialogue about relationships, sex and consent.

Emily May is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Hollaback!, a movement dedicated to ending street harassment using mobile technology, fighting against the notion that street harassment is culturally acceptable.

Twanna Hines is is a Manhattan-based writer and sexual & reproductive health / rights advocate, hailed as one of “the internet’s sultriest sharers” by the Village Voice, details about her rendezvous have been printed in Glamour magazine and she has made media appearances including on CNN, NPR and Gawker.com

Andrea (AJ) Plaid has the distinction of being the first Sexual Correspondent for Racialicious, the award-winning blog on race and pop culture. Her work on race, gender, sex, and sexualities has appeared at Change.org, Bitch, and Library Journal and her posts have been republished at Penthouse.com, Colorlines, BlogHer, and New American Media. Andrea’s writing also appears in the just-published anthology Feminism for Real: Deconstructing the Academic Industrial Complex of Feminism, edited by Jessica Yee. She has been quoted in Washington Post and Chicago Tribune. She has lectured at John Jay College of Criminology as well as participated in Harvard’s Feminist Coming Out Day 2011 as a guest panelist. She also owns an eco-friendly safer-sex kit company, Freak Kits. Andrea lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Tara Ellison is the Deputy Director of the Third Wave Foundation and a board member of NOLOSE, a fat queer and trans organization. Among other types of activism and advocacy, Tara has also been blogging about things like race, class, gender, activism, sex, and sexuality for a decade.

Palestinian and Jewish Women from Israel: A Dialogue On Feminist Peace Activism in the Midst of Conflict

Women in Black Union Square presents:
Palestinian and Jewish Women from Israel
A Dialogue On Feminist Peace Activism in the Midst of Conflict
with Hannah Safran and Ola Shtiwi

April 26, 7-9 p.m.
The Community Church
40 E. 35th Street (between Madison and Park avenues)
(Assembly Room) (wheelchair accessible)

Women have been the backbone of much of the political resistance in the Middle East. Women have led the struggle for a just peace in Israel/Palestine. This event will bring the voices, experiences, activism and perspectives of women so often absent from the U.S. public discourse on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.

Ola Shtiwi earned her LL.M degree in international human rights law at the University of Notre Dame in 2010 and her LL.B (JD equivalent) from the University of Haifa in 2002. She coordinated the legal department of Kayan, a Palestinian feminist organization based in Haifa. Ola started her human rights work as an advocacy coordinator in Women against Violence, a Palestinian organization based in Nazareth. Her work included advocating for Palestinian women’s rights among Palestinian and Israeli policy makers.

Hannah Safran is a long-time feminist and peace activist who combines grass-root activism with academic research. Her book on the history of the Jewish suffrage movement in 1920’s and the feminist movement in Israel in the 1970’s was published in 2006. She teaches women’s studies at Emek-Yisreel College and at the extension of Leslie University in Israel. She is a member of Isha L’Isha the Haifa Feminist Center and has been active at Women in Black the Coalition of Women for Peace.

Co-sponsored by Jewish Voice for Peace, Jews Say No, NYU Students for Justice in Palestine, Brooklyn for Peace, Code Pink

*For more information, email wibny@googlegroups.com*

Strike down barriers to abortion access in a triborough bowling blowout on Sunday, April 17th!

What is a Bowl-a-Thon?

A fundraising tri-borough bowling party that you can be a part of by joining a team or sponsoring a bowler! There will be contests, prizes, and bragging rights for the highest scoring team and for the team that raises the most funds! Not to mention a great afternoon spent bowling and hanging around with awesome people who want to help make a direct difference in the lives of women.

Manhattan – Bowlmor Union Square
Brooklyn – The Gutter 200 N. 14th St
Queens – 34th Ave Lanes 69-10 34th Ave

Don’t live in NYC?  There are bowl-a-thons happening all over the United States!  Click here to find your local event.

How do I get involved?

Join a team or support a team! Teams of 6 will be bowling and fundraising for fun and to raise money for The New York Abortion Access Fund. NYAAF fills a vital health care gap by helping women get the health care they want and need. We believe that every woman should have the right to shape her own life and the right to care for herself and her family with dignity. The money you raise will have a direct impact on women’s lives.

Why should I get involved?

Women are in need more than ever, access is being restricted and threatened more than ever. Without your help women who reach out for help won’t be able to access the abortion they need because of a couple of bucks. The bowl-a-thon accounted for half our budget last year and without the funds we raise through this bowl-a-thon, clinics will be forced to turn women away.

New York is a haven for women who need and should have access to a safe abortion. The bowl-a-thon is a great and fun way to make sure that it stays that way.

The bowl-a-thon is an exciting opportunity to raise money for the New York Abortion Access Fund and also to have a great time with activists in NYC!

Haven’t bowled since high school? Or EVER? Not a problem! The bowl-a-thon is about access, not prowess. There’s no pin count: the goal is to help women and girls with the resources they need to make the right decision for their lives. And it’s the most fun you’ll ever have in rented shoes!

Want to support this grassroots event but you’re too busy to bowl? Donate to one of the NYAAF teams or to an individual!

Together, we’ll strike down barriers to abortion access.

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