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Monthly Archives: July 2017
American Muslims growing more liberal, survey shows – WENY-TV
Posted: July 26, 2017 at 1:46 am
By Daniel Burke CNN Religion Editor
(CNN) -- American Muslims are growing more religiously and socially liberal, with the number who say society should accept homosexuality nearly doubling during the past decade, according to a major new survey.
American Muslims are also more likely to identify as political liberals and believe there are multiple ways to interpret the teachings of Islam, the survey found.
Conducted by the Pew Research Center, the survey of 1,001 American Muslims depicts a community in tumult, with the vast majority disapproving of President Donald Trump and worrying about the direction of the country. Even so, many remain hopeful about their future in the United States, the survey found, despite persistent anxiety about Islamic extremism and religious discrimination.
The wide-ranging survey, which was released on Wednesday, uncovers a range of opinions on everything from religious practices and politics to terrorism and social values. In addition, Pew found that the American Muslim population has been rising steadily for a decade, adding about 100,000 people per year. An estimated 3.35 million Muslims now live in the United States, just 1% of the overall population.
The survey interviews were conducted in English, as well as Arabic, Farsi and Urdu, between January 23 and May 2, 2017. The average margin of error is plus or minus 5.8 percentage points.
Some of the study's findings won't surprise people paying attention during the acrimonious 2016 presidential election, in which Trump repeatedly cast suspicion on American Muslims. Of the 44% of American Muslims who voted in the election, nearly 8 in 10 voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton. Just 8% voted for Trump.
The survey, conducted in the days and months following Trump's inauguration, potrays a Muslim community still largely wary of the President. Nearly 7 in 10 say Trump makes them feel worried, and 45% say he makes them angry. Nearly three in four Muslims say Trump is "unfriendly" toward members of their faith, and nearly two-thirds are dissatisfied with the direction of the country.
That's a stark contrast from 2011, when Barack Obama was President. Then, 64% of Muslim-Americans told Pew researchers that Obama was friendly toward Muslims and more than half were satisfied with the direction of the country.
Attitudes toward homosexuality
But the study's most significant findings may be religious and social, not political.
In 2007, just 27% of American Muslims said society should approve of homosexuality. This year, more than half (52%) said the same, a leap that surprised even scholars who study Islam in America. Likewise, 10 years ago, 57% of American Muslims said there is more than one way to interpret Islamic teachings. In 2017, 64% agreed.
American Muslims were also slightly more likely to identify as politically liberal (30% now vs. 24% in 2007). Nearly two-thirds identify as Democrats and a similar number believe in a bigger government that provides a host of services.
Asked about the essentials of the faith, an overwhelming percentage of Muslims, like Christians, said believing in God was most important. But issues like working for social justice (69%) and protecting the environment (62%) also scored high in the list of essentials for American Muslims.
There's some debate among scholars about whether American Muslims' increasing liberalism on issues like homosexuality is the result of recent immigrants' assimilation to mainstream American values or the rise of native-born millennials, who, like their non-Muslim peers, are more tolerant of the LGBT community.
But while millennial Muslims are more likely than foreign-born Muslims to say homosexuality should be accepted (60% vs. 49%), both groups saw an increase of more than 20 percentage points in the last decade, Pew found.
After a Muslim-American shot and killed 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando last year, American Muslims were forced to come to terms with gays and lesbians in their mosques and families, prompting conversations about homosexuality and Islamic teachings, said Zareena Grewal, who studies the American Muslim experience at Yale University.
"After the Pulse shooting, Muslims were coming out of the closet across the United States, and the Muslim community, in public and private, was grappling with the issue in a much more honest way," Grewal said.
But Ihsan Bagby, a professor of Islamic history at the University of Kentucky, cautioned about over-interpreting Muslim attitudes on homosexuality, saying many Muslims may be simply signaling support for another group often maligned in America.
"The struggle of the LGBT community has been very similar to the struggle of Muslims, and in fact the LGBT community has been very supportive of Muslims," Bagby said. But even while aligning politically, many Muslim organizations would not accept homosexualtity as an "acceptable lifestyle for Muslims," the scholar said.
A gender gap
The study uncovered a significant gender gap in the way Muslim-American men and women perceive discrimination and the country's direction.
Muslim women are more likely than men to say it is harder to be a Muslim in the United States today (57% vs. 43%); much more likely to say Trump angers them (54% to 37%); and significantly less likely to believe that Americans are friendly towards Muslims (44% vs. 65%).
That's probably because American Muslim women, particularly those who wear a hijab, are more readily recognized as Muslims and thus potentially subject to discrimination, experts said.
According to the Pew study, two-thirds of Muslim-Americans whose appearance is identifiably Muslim report experiences of discrimination, from a generalized sense of being treated with suspicion to being singled out by airport security to being attacked and called offensive names.
More likely to condemn extremism
Since the 9/11 attacks, a number of conservative commentators have condemned American Muslims for not denouncing terrorism strongly enough. In fact, Pew found that not only are Muslim-Americans increasingly anxious about Islamic extremism, they are also more likely than other Americans to say that violence can never be justified.
More than 8 in 10 American Muslims said they were at least somewhat concerned about global extremism in the name of Islam, a 10 percentage point increase from 2011, when Pew conducted a similar study.
Nearly 3 in 4 said there is little if any support for extremism among American Muslims. Just 6% said there is a great deal of support for it, and 11% said there is a "fair amount."
Likewise, more than 75% of American Muslims say violence can never be justified to further a religious, social or political cause. That's compared to 59% of Americans overall who said the same.
Silver linings
Despite the widespread belief that their community faces widespread discrimination, nearly half of American Muslims (49%) said someone had expressed support for them because of their religion during the past year. And more than half said Americans in general are friendly toward Muslims, even if many Americans, according to surveys, consider Islam outside of the American mainstream.
Nearly 9 in 10 said they were proud to be both American and Muslim, and a large percentage believe that if they work hard they can succeed in the United States, the study found.
The vast majority said they were satisfied with the way their life is going, and 82% are American citizens, including 4 in 10 who were born abroad.
"Muslim Americans express a persistent streak of optimism and positive feelings," the study's authors said. "Overwhelmingly, they say they are proud to be Americans, believe that hard work generally brings success in this country and are satisfied with the way things are going in their own lives -- even if they are not satisfied with the direction of the country as a whole."
TM & 2017 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.
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Democrats please progressives with left-leaning policy agenda – McClatchy Washington Bureau
Posted: at 1:46 am
McClatchy Washington Bureau | Democrats please progressives with left-leaning policy agenda McClatchy Washington Bureau But the most important audience for their Better Deal program was the party's increasingly vocal liberal wing, which has blamed the party's electoral wipeout in recent elections on the establishment's perceived political timidity and fealty to ... |
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The real liberal critique: Republicans aren’t liberals – The State
Posted: at 1:46 am
The State | The real liberal critique: Republicans aren't liberals The State James Fallows, in The Atlantic, describes their behavior as the most discouraging weakness our governing system has shown since Trump took office. He singles out Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse for scorn because he leads all senators in his thoughtful, ... |
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Free-Market Thinking Is Key for States to Avoid Financial Disaster – InsideSources
Posted: at 1:46 am
Its shocking to see the budget horror stories coming out of two of the nations leading states. Illinois and Connecticut are in fiscal freefall, and their leaders are taking the exact wrong approach in their misguided efforts to turn things around. If they were smart, they would look to the example of states like Florida to discover how to weather fiscal storms.
Illinois faces a staggering budget gap of close to $10 billion, a crisis worsened by a state pension program funded at just 37 percent and credit downgrades that leave the once-proud state just one step above junk status. Saddled with their blue-state mentality, Illinois lawmakers are doing what they do best, trying to solve the problem by raising taxes somehow thinking they can dig their way out of the hole theyve created.
Connecticut, meanwhile, must cope with a roughly $2 billion budget hole and the departure of key employers like General Electric and Aetna. Applying the same erroneous approach as their brethren in the Land of Lincoln, politicians in Connecticut are considering bringing back toll roads in hopes of raising enough revenue to get their budget in balance. They seem to think that if only they extract a little more from their taxpayers, they can make their financial problems magically disappear. They clearly are forgetting the well-known definition of insanity: Doing the same things over and over, but expecting different results.
Largely overlooked amid the medias unrelenting focus on the Trump White House was the publication this month of an invaluable comprehensive research study by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. Mercatus annual Ranking of the States by Fiscal Condition points directly to a conclusion that Illinois, Connecticut, and so many other struggling states should begin to embrace that conservative fiscal principles lead to prosperity.
As the President and CEO of Floridas oldest and largest policy think tank, this reality is no surprise to me. For 30 years, The James Madison Institute has worked alongside our policymakers, elected leaders, and citizens to embrace the principles of limited government, free markets, rule of law, and the protection of private property. This approach unmistakably is working. The Mercatus research team, among the most comprehensive and professional in the nation, spent several months dissecting the finances of each state in five separate categories and across dozens of specific financial indicators, and ranked Floridas fiscal condition Number 1 in the nation.
To be sure, this type of success does not happen overnight. Florida has been blessed with tremendous, conservative leadership over the past 20 years, championed by the likes of Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Rick Scott, among others. Over those two decades, we have seen Florida succeed and thrive despite unrelenting challenges. The housing crisis and the Great Recession hit Florida harder than just about every other state, and it was the conservative free-market principles embraced by the states leaders that helped us rebound faster than anyone.
Moreover, from 1994 to 2014, more than $125 billion in annual adjusted gross income migrated to Florida from high-tax states like Illinois and Connecticut. That economic benefit is coming here not in spite of the policies of the states government, but because of them. In just the seven years under Governor Rick Scott, Florida has added well more than 1 million private sector jobs. State legislators have enacted sound and practical tax policies designed to keep government overreach at a minimum and prosperity at a maximum.
The numbers tell a compelling story. Floridas annual state budget of roughly $83 billion pales in comparison to that of New Yorks $150 billion. So what has the Empire State gotten for all those billions? A ride swerving around the potholes of the New York Turnpike suggests the answer is: not much.
Mercatus new report should hit politicians in Illinois, Connecticut, New York, and other liberal states like a punch in the gut. Whether they pay heed is yet to be seen, but I would be surprised if they do. However, no one should be surprised by the rankings from the report and Floridas premier standing. Freedom works every time its tried.
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Raise the Debt Ceiling Now, or Face Another Post-Summer Crisis: Meadows – The Fiscal Times
Posted: at 1:46 am
The Fiscal Times | Raise the Debt Ceiling Now, or Face Another Post-Summer Crisis: Meadows The Fiscal Times Meadows, chair of the far-right House Freedom Caucus, said in an interview it would be a mistake to postpone action on authorizing increased borrowing authority for the Treasury. He argued that the White House and Republican congressional leaders have ... House Conservatives Target Jobs at Congressional Budget Office House Could Vote on CBO Amendments This Week |
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Oddfellow’s Casino – The Quietus
Posted: at 1:44 am
Essentially the project of one David Bramwell, a northerner relocated to Brighton, Oddfellow's Casino have released seven albums in their 15-year existence and take their name from Ambrose Oddfellow, a Victorian freakshow host whose moustache Bramwell inherited from a great-aunt. The author of several books focussing on notable eccentrics and regional oddities, and the creator and presenter of quirky documentaries for BBC Radios 3 and 4, Bramwell found a kindred spirit in John Higgs, whose most recent book, Watling Street, explores notions of Britishness by way of the country's oldest road and the events that occurred along its route. Higgs commissioned Bramwell to write a song to accompany the book, and 'The Ghosts of Watling Street' forms the centrepiece of this album. It also features a spoken-word contribution from the great Alan Moore, who intones, "We have wandered too far from some ancient totem - something central to us, that we must find our way back to."
Oh, Sealand is clearly concerned with the question of Britain, but avoids any easy answers. Its clearest statement comes in the opening track, 'Land of the Cuckoo', where over ominous, pulsing bass, Bramwell sings: "There's a fox in the schoolyard/ they're in the hospitals now" in a barely veiled warning against allowing profit-focussed corporations to insinuate themselves into essential public institutions. The song 'Sealand' is described as an unofficial anthem for the independent principality of Sealand, the micro-nation founded on a disused Maunsell Sea Fort seven miles off the Suffolk coast. Seized from rival pirate radio broadcasters in 1967, its story is one of dubious and desperate free enterprise combined with English eccentricity at its most belligerent and aggressive. If the track sounds more like a lament for lost dreams than a celebration of island utopias, the line "We'll take this land by force" undermines any idealistic ideas about Sealand's history. Instead the song raises the question of what exactly constitutes a nation, and draws implicit parallels with the larger island this libertarian outpost in the North Sea defines itself against.
Musically, Oddfellow's Casino deals in tuneful, anglocentric and mildly experimental electro-acoustic pop that joins the dots between Pentangle and The Pet Shop Boys, Basil Kirchin and British Sea Power. There are echoes too of the literate, introverted indie of Animals That Swim or The Lilac Time. 'The Ghosts of Watling Street' is the album's most radio-friendly moment, riding a confident and catchy guitar riff and a bucolic melody worthy of Fried-era Julian Cope: you barely notice the missing chorus, which just never arrives.
The seven-minute 'Down in the Water' is the other strong pop moment, enlivened by Rachel James's soulful vocals, Numan-esque synths and a stomping glam rhythm. Images of drowned villages and people sleeping underwater become Jungian totems of sublimated sexuality. 'Swallow The Day' is pastoral psychedelia of the lightest kind, while 'Danu' is a spoken-word piece following the course of the River Don over a bed of electronic drones and sparse piano. The determined fuzz bass of 'Children Of The Rocks' contrasts with the unadorned piano and plaintive vocals of 'Josephine', a simple love song that uses imagery of the English landscape to convey its emotional message.
Matters come to a head on 'Penda's Fen', which expands on the themes of Alan Clarke's justly acclaimed 1974 BBC film - itself a complex allegory of history and sexuality, folklore, fantasy and family ties - to become a song about conflicted feelings of national identity. Beneath the motorways and factories, the politics and the patriotic posturing, there remains something older and primal. 'I am your son," Bramwell sings, over an uncharacteristically squalling electric guitar riff, "how can I show my love?"
Do we have to go back to go forward? Is it necessary to reclaim the Britain of Blake and Boudicca from the flag-waving xenophobes, or are all notions of nationality best left behind as we progress into a future where borders become irrelevant? Is Sealand something worth fighting for? John Higgs recently defined the opposite of terrorism as wonderism: affecting change through deliberate acts of joy and wonder. Oh, Sealand is a wonderist intervention in the name of a different definition of Britain: one where mystery is currency and love, rather than fear, is what unites these islands' disparate tribes.
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We have unrealistic expectations of a tech-driven future utopia – Recode
Posted: at 1:44 am
A version of this essay was originally published at Tech.pinions, a website dedicated to informed opinions, insight and perspective on the tech industry.
No one likes to think about limits, especially in the tech industry, where the idea of putting constraints on almost anything is perceived as anathema.
In fact, the entire tech industry is arguably built on the concept of bursting through limitations and enabling things that werent possible before. New technology developments have clearly created incredible new capabilities and opportunities, and have generally helped improve the world around us.
But there does come a point and I think weve arrived there where its worth stepping back to both think about and talk about the potential value of, yes, technology limits ... on several different levels.
On the positive side, theres a sense that technologies like AI or autonomous driving are going to solve enormous societal issues in a matter of a few years.
On a technical level, weve reached a point where advances in computing applications like AI, or medical applications like gene splicing, are raising even more ethical questions than practical ones on issues such as how they work and for what applications they might be used. Not surprisingly, there arent any clear or easy answers to these questions, and its going to take a lot more time and thought to create frameworks or guidelines for both the appropriate and inappropriate uses of these potentially life-changing technologies.
Does this mean these kinds of technological advances should be stopped? Of course not. But having more discourse on the types of technologies that get created and released certainly needs to happen.
Even on a practical level, the need for limiting peoples expectations about what a technology can or cannot do is becoming increasingly important. With science-fiction-like advances becoming daily occurrences, its easy to fall into the trap that there are no limits to what a given technology can do. As a result, people are increasingly willing to believe and accept almost any kind of statements or predictions about the future of many increasingly well-known technologies, from autonomous driving to VR to AI and machine learning. I hate to say it, but its the fake news of tech.
Just as weve seen the fallout from fake news on all sides of the political perspective, so, too, are we starting to see that unbridled and unlimited expectations for certain new technologies are starting to have negative implications of their own. Essentially, were starting to build unrealistic expectations for a tech-driven nirvana that doesnt clearly jibe with the realities of the modern world, particularly in the time frames that are often discussed.
In fact, Id argue that a lot of the current perspectives on where the technology industry is and where its headed are based on a variety of false pretenses, some positively biased and some negatively biased. On the positive side, theres a sense that technologies like AI or autonomous driving are going to solve enormous societal issues in a matter of a few years. On the negative side, there are some who see the tech industry as being in a stagnant period, still hunting for the next big thing beyond the smartphone.
Neither perspective is accurate, but ironically, both stem from the same myth of limitlessness that seems to pervade much of the thinking in the tech industry. For those with the positive spin, I think its critical to be willing to admit to a technologys limitations, in addition to touting its capabilities.
On the negative side, there are some who see the tech industry as being in a stagnant period, still hunting for the next big thing beyond the smartphone.
So, for example, its okay to talk about the benefits that something like autonomous driving can bring to certain people in certain environments, but its equally important to acknowledge that it isnt going to be a great fit for everyone, everywhere. Realistically and practically speaking, we are still a very long way from having a physical, legal, economic and political environment for autonomous cars to dramatically impact the transportation needs of most consumers. On the other hand, the ability for these autonomous transportation technologies to start having a dramatic impact on public transportation systems or shipping fleets over the next several years seems much more realistic (even if it is a lot less sexy).
For those with a more negative bias, its important to recognize that not all technologies have to be universally applicable to make them useful or successful. The newly relaunched Google Glass, for example, is no longer trying to be the next-generation computing device and industry disruptor that it was initially thought to be. Instead, its being focused on (or limited to) work-based applications, where its a great fit. As a result, it wont see the kind of sales figures that something like an iPhone will, but thats okay, because its actually doing what it is best designed to do.
Accepting and publicly acknowledging that certain technologies cant do some things isnt a form of weakness its a form of strength. In fact, it creates a more realistic scenario for them to succeed. Similarly, recognizing that while some technologies are great, they may not be great for everything, doesnt mean theyre a failure. Some technologies and products can be great for certain sub-segments of the market and still be both a technical and financial success.
If, however, we keep thinking that every new technology or tech industry concept can be endlessly extended without limits everything in my life as service, really? were bound to be greatly disappointed on many different levels. Instead, if we view them within a more limited and, in some cases more specialized, scope, then were much more likely to accurately judge what they can (or cannot) do and set expectations accordingly. Thats not a limit, its a value.
Bob ODonnell is the founder and chief analyst of Technalysis Research LLC, a technology consulting and market research firm that provides strategic consulting and market research services to the technology industry and professional financial community. Reach him @bobodtech.
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The teacher protecting marine turtles in the Seychelles – CNN International
Posted: at 1:43 am
Though she was born and raised in the Seychelles, it wasn't until she started working for the local Marine Conservation Society that she witnessed her first nesting sea turtle.
"Every encounter is like my first one," Didion says. "I go a little bit crazy and then I remember I need to measure the turtle, watch out for what she is doing, so every encounter is like the first one for me."
Four years ago, she left her job as a science and maths teacher to start a family. Along the way she discovered an unexpected passion for marine conservation. Through a warm smile, she admits that while teaching she'd use any excuse to get her science students outside, encouraging them to play in the dirt and explore.
"It's always been in me, the environment had been calling me for some time," she says.
The Seychelles archipelago hosts one of the largest remaining global populations of the critically endangered hawksbill turtle, and significant populations of the endangered green turtle.
In 1994 the Seychellois government made it illegal to harm, kill, or be in possession of sea turtles, including their meat and their eggs. The penalty is up to two years in prison and a fine of up to $37,000.
But despite the strict laws, Didon says poaching is still a major issue because of the country's traditional appetite for turtle meat.
"Some people would say it's in the culture, but in terms of population we know that the turtle population had gone down, and the human population has gone up, so of course there is going to be some sort of problem there," Didon says.
October marks the beginning of the nesting season in the Seychelles, when female hawksbill and green turtles emerge out of the comfort of the Indian Ocean to lay their eggs on the very beaches where they hatched.
During the nesting season, Didon and her colleagues can be seen patrolling the beaches where they know turtles might come to nest. If there are no turtles on the beach, they look for tracks and the tell-tale signs that a female has laid her eggs.
"Sometimes it's very apparent that the turtle has nested," she says. "You can see sand thrown around, but sometimes if you are not too sure, it's quite good to just feel the sand and if you feel loose sand, this gives you an indication that there is a nest there."
If a nest is found, its precise location is recorded using GPS, to monitor its status until the hatchlings appear after a two-month incubation period.
Despite no longer teaching in a classroom, Didon says a big part of her job is educating others about the plight of sea turtles and other local marine wildlife. During the off season, she visits schools and hotels to host awareness programs and presentations.
"I want future generations to be able to see all these lovely things that we have, like the wildlife," she says.
"People have kids, I have kids, and I would want them to grow up maybe doing the same job that I'm doing."
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Caribbean Holidays 2017 / 2018 | First Choice
Posted: at 1:42 am
UNESCO-listed sights, mountains cloaked in rainforests, and streets lined with ramshackle rum bars holidays to the Caribbean give you a tropical getaway with a twist.
All you have to do is mention the Caribbean and youll be met with chatter about coconut trees, soft sands and cyan-blue waters. But, this cluster of islands is about more than just fly and flop holidays. Waterfalls, rainforests and lively towns it ticks all the adventure boxes. Not to mention the rum.
This tiny island has some big-name beaches. The most popular of which Palm and Eagle regularly top all sorts of worlds best lists. The west is buzzing with shops and clubs, but the east is almost crowd-free. Youll also get some Dutch vibes, especially in the sherbet-coloured capital, Oranjestad.
Barbados definitely has the X Factor. Celebrities like Simon Cowell flock here year-round. And, while its the most British of the islands, its not all afternoon tea and cricket. Its dotted with sugarcane fields, all-night clubs, roadside rum shops, and pearl-white beaches, so whatever youre looking for, its got it.
Dramatic scenery comes as standard in the Dominican Republic. If you can tear yourself away from the palm-fringed beaches, there are waterfalls to scale, waves to surf and humpback whales to spot. Come-dark, this islands got a buzzing edge with shops and bars blasting merengue music.
Jamaica has some serious musical roots. You can move to chilled-out reggae rhythms on the white sands of Seven-mile Beach, listen to the cascading sounds of Dunns River Falls, or rev it up on a Jeep safari through the mountains. And don't forget to sample that spicy jerk chicken and sweet rum.
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Caribbean Reef Life – a field guide for Caribbean diving …
Posted: at 1:42 am
Caribbean Reef Life of The Bay Islands, Honduras; a new reef identification book and field guide for Caribbean diving enthusiasts, by photographer and author Mickey Charteris. This 350-page guide book showcases the amazing underwater diversity of The Bay Islands and the entire Western Caribbean, with over 1000 species in full color, and descriptions for each species. It is anessential companion on any diving trip to the Bay Islands or anywhere in the entire region. Caribbean Reef Life covers all aspects of a coral reef ecosystem, from Marine Plants, to the Sponges and Corals, Invertebrates, Reef Fishes, as well as the Marine Mammals and Turtles. Even the juvenile, male and female and colour varieties are shown and described. For each species group there are plenty of fun facts, identification tips and extra information for divers wanting to know more about Reef Life.
Caribbean Reef Life is constantly updating it's collection of species. Come back every month to see new albums of what thefantasticallydiverse coral reefs surrounding Roatan have to offer:
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