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New York Times Faces Backlash Over Trump Fatigue Article

Jeffrey Thomas

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New York Times Slammed Over Trump Fatigue Article

WASHINGTON, D.C. –  The New York Times is under heavy fire from conservative commentators after publishing a headline story claiming President Donald Trump, now 79, is showing “signs of fatigue” and facing the “realities of aging in office”. The article has sparked a fierce row over media bias, with critics accusing the paper of giving former President Joe Biden far softer treatment over his own well-known cognitive and physical issues.

At the same time, leading Democrats are pushing for Trump to release full medical records, including details of a recent MRI scan. The clash over transparency and presidential health has turned into a heated partisan fight, and interest is surging in search terms such as “Trump fatigue New York Times”, “Biden age coverage hypocrisy”, and “Trump medical records release”.

The New York Times hit piece, titled “Shorter Days, Signs of Fatigue: Trump Faces Realities of Aging in Office”, portrays a president who has eased back on his once relentless workload. Reporters Katie Rogers and Dylan Freedman tracked his public events and noted that Trump now tends to start his day around midday and finish by early evening, usually by 5 p.m., a noticeable shift from the long and chaotic days of his first term.

The article points to moments such as Trump appearing to nod off during an Oval Office press event on weight-loss drugs and looking drowsy during a recent Cabinet meeting. “Trump has always used his stamina and energy as a political strength. But that image is getting harder for him to sustain,” the piece claims, reminding readers that he is now the oldest person ever elected president.

Trump responded on Truth Social with a furious tirade, again branding the Times a “failing” paper and an “enemy of the people”, and taking a personal swipe at co-author Katie Rogers, calling her “ugly, both inside and out”.

He insisted, “I have never worked so hard in my life… Yet despite all of this the Radical Left Lunatics… did a hit piece on me that I am perhaps losing my Energy.” He highlighted a recent “perfect physical exam” and claimed he had aced a cognitive test.

According to White House visitor and schedule logs obtained by the New York Post, Trump has spent more hours in the Oval Office this year than Biden did in his final year as president. Allies have seized on those figures as proof that Trump is still working harder than his predecessor and that the Times is cherry-picking anecdotes to build a narrative.

Conservative Outrage: ‘Now the Media Cares About Age, Because It’s Trump’

The conservative reaction has been immediate and fierce, with right-leaning commentators accusing the Times of staggering hypocrisy. Fox News host Stuart Varney tore into the article on-air, calling it a “hit piece” and arguing, “The New York Times never said a word about Joe Biden’s obvious decline, stumbling on stairs, forgetting names, whispering incoherently. But Trump takes a nap? That is a front-page scandal.”

Even MSNBC’s Katy Tur, who is not known as a Trump supporter, questioned the focus of the story. On her programme, she remarked, “Trump is doing much more than Biden ever did,” contrasting Trump’s frequent press gaggles and media interactions with Biden’s more withdrawn approach during his presidency.

On X (formerly Twitter), the backlash broke into trending topics under hashtags such as #NYTHypocrisy and #TrumpFatigueFakeNews. One user, @iammarco75, wrote, “Katy Tur says Trump doing ‘much more’ than Biden ever did as NYT reports on president’s ‘fatigue’ – He’s doing a great job!” Another, @George85337002, vented, “FUNNY HOW THE FAKE NEWS NEVER CRITICIZED THE DEMENTED BIDEN BUT LOOKS FOR ANY OPPORTUNITY TO CRITICIZE PRESIDENT TRUMP.”

OutKick’s Clay Travis published a blistering column claiming, “The Times avoided criticising Biden’s mental decline but now scrutinises Trump’s schedule and Oval Office behaviour. It is enough to make you tear your hair out.”

This anger is not limited to a small pocket of commentators. USA Today columnist Glenn Garvin echoed the charge, asking why so many outlets downplayed concerns about Biden. He wrote that the media “ignored President Joe Biden’s obvious mental decline” but now focuses obsessively on Trump’s age and work habits.

The sense of a double standard meshes with a wider collapse in trust. A recent Rasmussen survey found that only 28% of Republicans trust mainstream media coverage about health and medical issues, down from 35% before the last election. On his podcast, Ben Shapiro called the Times coverage “selective outrage”, joking that “Biden wandered off stages and mixed up world leaders, and the press said nothing. Trump ends a rally early and suddenly it is an existential crisis.”

The frustration intensifies when set against the Times’ own polling and archives. A 2024 New York Times/Siena College poll showed that 73% of voters, including many who had backed Biden in 2020, believed he was too old for a second term. Even then, a lot of the paper’s coverage framed those concerns as voter “perceptions” rather than hard questions about fitness for office.

As one X user, @KJSpringer, put it during the latest MRI debate, “To hell with what the Democrats want. We put up with a freaking invalid in the white house for 4 years and the Democrats didn’t ask for crap.”

Democrats Turn Up the Pressure: ‘Release Trump’s Medical Records, Starting with the MRI’

While conservatives hammer the media, Democrats are trying to push the story in a different direction, focusing on full transparency around Trump’s health. Minnesota Governor Tim Walz helped ignite the latest row with a video on X that quickly went viral.

In it, he declares, “The President is unwell. Release the MRI results.” The clip, viewed more than 3 million times, refers to Trump’s October MRI at Walter Reed, which the White House called “preventive”, but has not fully explained.

Appearing on NBC’s Meet the Press, Walz pushed the issue harder. “Here we got a guy on Thanksgiving… ranting. This is not normal behaviour. It is not healthy… Has anyone ever had an MRI and had no idea what it was for?” he asked.

When reporters later asked Trump about Walz’s criticism, he shot back, “You mean the incompetent Governor Walz? I have no idea what they analysed,” before turning his fire on female journalists and making digs about their intelligence.

The demands did not stop with Walz. The Democratic Governors Association posted, “Release the MRI results,” on X, which quickly drew tens of thousands of views. Influencer Harry Sisson shared a photograph of Trump, captioning it, “He’s clearly not well… Release the MRI results.” Former Republican congressman and CNN commentator Adam Kinzinger also joined in, writing, “Time for full disclosure.”

A petition on Care2 calling for Trump to release his “FULL medical records” has passed 8,000 signatures. It lists visible bruising on his hands and his July diagnosis of chronic venous insufficiency as reasons for concern.

For many observers, this feels like a replay of 2024, when more than 200 doctors associated with Doctors for Harris urged Trump to match Kamala Harris’s detailed medical disclosures. At that time, Trump told CBS he would “very gladly” release his records once Biden dropped out of the race. Biden did step aside, but Trump has still not provided a full set of documents.

His October physical produced a memo from the White House physician declaring that Trump was in “exceptional health”, but the summary contained little detail about the MRI. Critics on social media have demanded more. Popular X account @JoJoFromJerz wrote, “The press needs to ask about this every single day.” Trump has now said publicly that he will release the MRI report, but sceptical voices like @atrupar argue, “There is no such thing as a preventative MRI. She’s lying.”

Others push back on the growing demands. An account named @TruthSeekerBPL pointed out, “Presidents aren’t legally required to release their medical records… Biden never released full medical records either.”

There is no law forcing presidents to share their full files. Ronald Reagan tended to release summaries, Bill Clinton provided full examination details, while both Trump and Biden relied on short doctors’ letters and selective information rather than full transparency.

Echoes of Biden: Critics Say NYT Went Soft on His Cognitive Decline

For many conservatives, the New York Times’ coverage of Trump only reinforces their belief that the paper treated Biden far more gently, especially when serious questions about his physical and mental sharpness emerged.

A major Times investigation in January 2025, titled “How Biden’s Inner Circle Protected a Faltering President”, acknowledged that top aides managed his “physical frailty”. According to that report, staff reshuffled his diary to catch him in better moods, cut meetings to shorter slots, and sometimes held back bad polling to avoid triggering stress. It quoted Biden adviser Mike Donilon, who warned as early as 2022, “Your biggest issue is the perception of age.”

A separate book extract published in May 2025 described Biden aides blocking a proposed cognitive test in 2024 out of fear it would draw more attention to possible decline rather than calm concerns.

Going back further, a 2022 Times piece, “President Biden Is Turning 80”, interviewed ageing experts but leaned towards reassurance, arguing that Biden’s background, habits, and lifestyle were in line with healthy ageing.

Even after his shaky 2024 debate performance, much of the commentary focused on context and normal slip-ups. A February 2024 opinion article by a neuroscientist argued that Biden’s stumbles and verbal lapses were “normal” for someone in their early eighties.

Only later, in October 2025, did a House Oversight Committee report accuse Biden’s team of a “cover-up”, claiming that his cognitive issues had undermined decision-making in office. The Times did cover the report, but conservatives insist the paper treated these concerns as political theatre in the pre-2024 period, rather than digging in with the same intensity it now directs at Trump’s schedule and nap habits.

Wikipedia’s entry on “Age and health concerns about Joe Biden” records that outlets such as the Times, CNN, and the Washington Post began discussing Biden’s age and health as early as 2019. Yet the coverage often included caveats and reassurances. A poll in 2024 showed 61% of Democrats wanted a younger nominee, but Biden advisers shrugged off calls for formal tests like the Montreal Cognitive Assessment.

After Biden left office, even some liberal commentators looked back with regret. Former CNN analyst Chris Cillizza admitted he “didn’t push hard enough… on his mental and physical decline.”

On X, user @BrokenBerean summed up the sense of repeating history: “Democrats elected Biden… Republicans will not release Trump’s… It is like watching the same play back to back.” Another user, @AnimalsRockOn, complained, “Trump could release the medical records at any time but refuses… Just like he refuses to release the Epstein files.”

A Country Looking in the Mirror: Age, Power, and Faith in the Press in the Trump Era

Trump will turn 80 in June 2026, and the latest controversy has refocused attention on America’s ageing political class. In 2024, voters faced a choice between two men in their late seventies and early eighties. Now, Trump holds the record as the oldest sitting president, and new polling suggests that age worries have only grown.

A recent New York Times/Siena survey found that 59% of voters are concerned about Trump’s fitness for office, up from levels during the 2024 race. At the same time, his job approval rating has slipped to around minus 14 points, according to a Times analysis on 5 December, with economic frustrations and cost-of-living pressures weighing him down.

Conservatives argue they have been proven right about media bias. They note that when Republicans shared clips of Biden freezing on stage or flubbing basic facts, many outlets dismissed them as “cheap fakes”. Now that similar age-related questions hover over Trump, coverage has become relentless. Trump’s team has responded with its own data, highlighting his packed diary and the amount of time he spends in the Oval Office compared with Biden’s last year.

Democrats, backed by figures such as Tim Walz, present the argument as a simple matter of public safety and normal behaviour. They say a president who spends late nights firing off angry social media posts and picking fights with reporters should welcome the chance to prove his health is sound, starting with that disputed MRI.

The New York Times has stood by its reporting. Editors insist the article reflects careful sourcing and direct observation. “Our reporting is accurate… Name-calling does not change that,” a spokesperson said, after Trump attacked the paper and its reporters online.

Within the paper itself, columnists are wrestling with the broader question. In a conversation published on 4 December, Times writer Bret Stephens asked, “What Is Going On With Trump?” and speculated that a second term would likely focus more on foreign policy and less on domestic battles, simply because of Trump’s age and experience.

On social media, the argument often reduces to one blunt point about double standards. As user @Charles07788205 wrote, “When every democrat demanding Trump releases his medical records… demand the same from Biden… you will have some moral high ground.”

As the noise grows, one theme cuts across party lines. Voters want honesty about the health and stamina of whoever holds the nuclear codes. Many feel burned by years of spin and half-answers around both Biden and Trump.

With midterm elections on the horizon, the question hanging over Washington is whether Trump will actually publish his MRI and fuller records, or whether the story will drag on with rumours, partisan demands, and selective leaks. Search interest in “presidential age transparency” keeps rising, a sign that the public is paying close attention.

In the end, the real verdict will not come from cable news segments or trending hashtags. It will come from a weary electorate, weighing energy, judgment, and trust as they decide how long they are willing to accept an ageing presidency at the top of American politics.

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Ilhan Omar’s ‘Exploding’ Wealth Investigated By Federal Authorities

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Ilhan Omar, Wealth, Investigation

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The House Oversight Committee, chaired by Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), has started an inquiry into Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and her husband, Tim Mynett.

The review centers on a steep rise in the couple’s reported household wealth and whether their financial disclosures meet congressional ethics rules. Federal authorities are also said to be involved, though the exact scope is still unclear.

Republicans point to Omar’s 2024 congressional financial disclosure as the trigger. In that filing, assets connected to Mynett’s business interests appear to rise sharply in a short period. Lawmakers say they want to understand where the money came from and whether the reporting was accurate.

Committee staff are reviewing Omar’s disclosures and related records. The main focus is on spousal assets tied to Mynett’s ventures that moved from low or near-zero values to multi-million-dollar ranges.

Chairman Comer called the increase unusual and said the committee may subpoena Mynett as part of the review. The committee is looking at disclosure accuracy, any outside income, business ties, and whether the filings meet federal ethics and transparency standards.

Reported assets that rose quickly

Public filings show large changes tied to two entities:

  • Rose Lake Capital LLC, a venture capital firm Mynett co-founded, was listed at $1 to $1,000 in 2023, then reported at $5 million to $25 million in 2024.
  • eStCru LLC, described as a California-based winery, moved from $15,001 to $50,000 to $1 million to $5 million during the same period.

Minnesota fraud

Those shifts led to estimates placing the couple’s combined net worth at roughly $6 million to $30 million. Earlier disclosures painted a very different picture, including periods around 2019 where Omar reported limited resources and debt, such as student loans.

Investigators also note that Omar’s House salary, about $174,000 per year, doesn’t explain the jump on its own.

The Oversight inquiry is unfolding while Minnesota faces a major fraud investigation tied to alleged misuse of federal funds in child nutrition and social services programs. Reports have linked the alleged wrongdoing to parts of the state’s Somali-American community, including areas in and around Omar’s district. Some coverage has suggested potential losses as high as $9 billion, including schemes connected to the Feeding Our Future program.

No public evidence has linked Omar or Mynett directly to that fraud case. Still, Republicans have pointed to the timing and location as part of a wider argument about weak oversight in programs Omar has supported.

President Donald Trump also commented publicly, calling Omar “crooked” and tying the wealth jump to the broader Minnesota fraud headlines. Conservative commentators and online influencers have echoed calls for answers.

Omar’s background and earlier scrutiny

Omar, a progressive member of the group often called the “Squad,” has represented Minnesota’s 5th District since 2019. She came to the United States as a Somali-born refugee and later became a U.S. citizen.

She has faced earlier criticism over campaign spending tied to Mynett’s former consulting firm, E Street Group, which received millions during her 2020 re-election effort. Their relationship began during a period when both were married to other people, which also drew public attention and ethical questions.

Omar has repeatedly said she is not a millionaire, calling those claims “categorically false” and framing them as part of misinformation efforts. In prior statements, she pointed to her husband’s independent business activity as the source of any asset changes. Her office has not given a detailed response to the latest Oversight review, and allies have described the probe as partisan pressure on progressive lawmakers.

Mynett’s ventures, including Rose Lake Capital, are now getting more attention. Reports say the firm removed advisor biographies from its website as scrutiny increased, including profiles tied to former Obama administration figures.

Other past business issues have also resurfaced in coverage, including a winery investment that has been accused in lawsuits of financial mismanagement.

What happens next and why it matters

House Republicans say the investigation is about ethics and transparency, and they argue that Congress has to hold members to clear standards. Critics see it as a political move in a GOP-led House.

So far, there are no charges, and the work appears to be in early stages, centered on document reviews and possible subpoenas. Some reports say the FBI was briefed on related suspicions in a prior administration, but public details remain limited.

With the 2026 midterm cycle nearing, the story is likely to keep growing. It sits at the intersection of debates over government oversight, fraud in federal programs, and financial reporting by elected officials. Oversight Committee members, including Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), have said they plan to push for answers on both the wealth questions and any Minnesota fraud concerns.

Omar remains active in Congress and continues to focus on foreign policy, social justice, and constituent services in the Minneapolis-area district she represents.

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Candace Owens Vindicated Over Erika Kira Ft. Huachuca Claim With New Evidence

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Candace Owens VINDICATED Over Ft. Huachuca

TUCSON, Arizona – Claims circulating online and on social media and talk on conservative podcasts are vindicating Candace Owens and are now pushing a growing claim that Erica Kirk, the widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk and the current CEO of Turning Point USA, has connections to Fort Huachuca in Arizona, a U.S. Army base known for its CIA intelligence training.

In many versions, the story claims she was at or near the base in the days just before Charlie Kirk’s assassination in September 2025. Some posts also repeat a label used online that calls Fort Huachuca a “CIA Training Camp.” Other threads add a side claim that her presence was tied to people connected to an unmade film project about defense and advanced technology.

Where the Allegations Came From

Much of the attention traces back to an exclusive interview on Candace Owens’ podcast in mid-December 2025. Owens interviewed a guest introduced as Mitch Snow, described as a retired U.S. Army staff sergeant and former combat medic. Snow said he had once pursued Special Forces training, but an injury ended that path.

Snow claimed he went to Fort Huachuca around September 8 to 9, 2025, because a long-standing gag order had expired and he wanted access to older personal records. He said he accidentally walked into a restricted area, was detained for hours, and then released.

In the interview, Snow said he noticed people he believed were linked to Turning Point USA. He claimed, with “95 to 99% certainty,” that he recognized Erica Kirk in the lobby of a hotel or nearby facility. He described her based on an older photo and said she wore her hair in a ponytail. Snow added that she was with a man he connected to the organization, possibly someone in security or a similar role.

He also claimed he saw Brian Harpole, described as Charlie Kirk’s head of security, leaving what looked like a high-level meeting. Owens and supporters later framed these sightings as happening the evening before, or the day before, Charlie Kirk was fatally shot in Utah.

How Candace Owens Has Framed the Base

Candace Owens has described Fort Huachuca as more than a normal military post. She has pointed out that it hosts military intelligence courses, often shortened in military use to MIT (Military Intelligence Training). In her telling, that kind of setting can include programs where civilians might be trained and used as intelligence assets.

Across several discussions, Candace Owens has stressed a difference between standard bases and installations focused on intelligence work. She has suggested the base could support quiet meetings and activities tied to defense-related topics.

Online discussion has also tried to connect the Fort Huachuca story to a dropped film or media project. In those threads, people mention defense contractors, fears about technology weaknesses (like EMP threats or power grid security), and claims about psychological operations training.

Some of those talk points refer to older material, including unrelated footage where Erica appeared in a 2013 documentary clip alongside former intelligence figures. Still, no public proof has confirmed that Erica Kirk had a direct role in any film project tied to Fort Huachuca.

Much of what circulates comes from forum posts, X threads, and clipped podcast segments that build on each other.

The allegations have sparked loud arguments online. Supporters, including Candace Owens, say the eyewitness story should be taken seriously, especially with ongoing questions about timelines, alibis, and the larger set of events around Charlie Kirk’s death.

Owens has said she prefers verified facts over emotional reactions. She has also said she checked parts of Snow’s account before running the interview, mentioning metadata, receipts, and other review steps.

Candace Owens has addressed why she did not challenge Erica Kirk about Fort Huachuca during a private multi-hour meeting in late 2025, saying she was still checking details and planned to follow up later.

Pushback and Questions

Critics, including some conservatives and mainstream outlets, have pushed back hard. Much of the response has focused on Snow himself, not on independently confirming or disproving the travel and location claims he made.

Detractors have pointed to his personal history, his medical discharge, and the limits of a “95% sure” identification. Some reports have grouped his story with wider conspiracy narratives around the assassination, calling it unverified and sensational.

Other coverage has also noted that rumors about Erica Kirk have spread since Charlie Kirk’s death, including claims tied to unrelated scandals or made-up stories, often without evidence.

Erica Kirk has publicly responded to conspiracy claims in social media posts and interviews. She has rejected what she described as disrespect from figures like Candace Owens and has said her focus is on protecting her family and running Turning Point USA.

She has also shared details, including flight records for associates, to push back on certain timeline accusations.

As of early 2026, no official findings have confirmed the Fort Huachuca sightings or any link to a film project. The story remains a major flashpoint in online conservative debate, showing how a single eyewitness account can spread fast after a tragedy, especially in a tense political moment.

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Former CNN Anchor Don Lemon Facing Charges Under Ku Klux Klan Act

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Don Lemon Facing Ku Klux Klan Act

MINNESOTA – The latest dispute involving former CNN anchor Don Lemon and activists linked to Black Lives Matter (BLM) has sparked a loud national argument. On January 19, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), led by the Trump administration, said it plans to seek federal charges tied to Don Lemon and others involved in a disruptive protest at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Investigators are reviewing possible civil rights violations, including the Ku Klux Klan Act (the Enforcement Act of 1871) and, in some public commentary, the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act.

The protest took place during a Sunday service at Cities Church. Reports say a pastor at the church has a role connected to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Demonstrators, including people tied to BLM Minnesota, walked into the sanctuary during worship.

They demanded answers over the death of Renee Good, a Minneapolis woman killed by an immigration officer earlier in January. The group disrupted the service, confronted people in attendance, and called for ICE to be removed from the area.

Don Lemon, now working as an independent journalist, livestreamed the moment on social media. He entered the church with activists and recorded what was happening as it unfolded.

Don Lemon later said he was doing his job, adding that he knew the protest was planned and went there to cover it. Critics said his actions looked less like reporting and more like taking part. Some described the scene as frightening for churchgoers, including families and children who were present.

Videos shared by BLM Minnesota and Lemon show protesters shouting demands and accusing the church community of backing “white supremacist” policies because of the alleged ICE link. Some parishioners said they felt scared, and one called it a brazen insult to their place of worship.

DOJ Response and Claims Tied to the KKK Act

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon spoke publicly about the case and said the DOJ intends to bring charges. She pointed to Don Lemon’s presence and argued he looked involved in what she described as a “criminal conspiracy,” not protected press activity.

Dhillon referenced the Ku Klux Klan Act, passed in 1871 after the Civil War, to fight violence and intimidation by groups like the KKK. The law was meant to protect basic rights, including voting and worship.

The statute bars conspiracies that use threats, intimidation, or force to block people from exercising constitutional rights. Here, DOJ officials say the church disruption may have interfered with the free exercise of religion, which is protected under federal civil rights law.

Dhillon said interrupting worship and violating the sanctity of a house of worship could meet that standard.

Some people have also brought up the FACE Act, which is more often tied to access to reproductive health clinics. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison rejected that idea, saying it doesn’t fit this situation. The DOJ has put the spotlight on civil rights protections related to religious practice.

President Donald Trump boosted calls for accountability by reposting messages online that pushed for tough penalties. Some posts compared the situation to cases where pro-life activists faced severe consequences under related laws. Conservative commentators described the incident as an “attack on Christians,” while others noted the irony of using a law associated with fighting KKK intimidation.

What This Could Mean for Don Lemon

Don Lemon has rejected the accusations and said he was doing legitimate reporting tied to immigration enforcement. In interviews, he criticized the church’s reported ICE connections and called the DOJ review political.

BLM Minnesota and other activists have defended the protest as a necessary response to immigration-related harm. Still, the protest split public opinion. Some see it as protected speech, while others view it as crossing a clear line by interrupting worship inside a church.

The situation sits at the crossroads of activism, immigration enforcement, and religious freedom. Legal analysts say using the KKK Act for modern protest cases is unusual, though it has been used in civil rights matters before. If federal charges move forward, the outcome could shape how the government handles future disruptions at places of worship.

As the investigation continues, the case highlights sharp divides over race, immigration, and the limits of protest. Don Lemon, once a major cable news figure, now faces possible federal scrutiny that could change the next chapter of his career after CNN.

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