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Tl;dr: Perpetual Chaos Is Always The Result Of Centralized Power
Banks, Governments and Corporations Are The Same Thing
Authoritarianism, Communism, Fascism, Feudalism, Crony-Capitalism, Socialism etc. Are The Same Thing: Centralization.
These terms are used to obscure the truth. The truth is: power corrupts and incentives lead to outcomes. If a system is corruptible it will be corrupt.
The state is not a benevolent protector of the people but a mechanism that distorts markets, erodes liberty, and perpetuates crises for its own expansion.
Thinkers like Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, FrĂŠdĂŠric Bastiat, Carl Menger, Joseph Schumpeter, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, and modern voices such as Ron Paul and Saifedean Ammous have long warned that government interventionâwhether through monetary manipulation, prohibition, or militarismâcreates unseen consequences that harm individuals while benefiting entrenched elites.
Voltaireâs defense of free speech and individual rights underscores the classical liberal ideal: a society of voluntary exchange, not coercion.
The assertions here âMexican cartels, enabled by prohibition and state complicity, have inflicted more harm on Americans than any foreign adversary; that U.S. foreign wars serve ulterior motives rather than public interest; and that a deeper structure of centralized power (banking, intelligence, corporate) deliberately maintains profitable chaos âare not mere conjecture. They align with verifiable data and the logical implications of interventionism.
This essay assesses these claims objectively, highlighting how prohibition and endless wars exemplify Bastiatâs âseen vs. unseenâ: we see the âfight against drugsâ or âspreading democracy,â but unseen are the black markets, blowback, and inflation that enrich the powerful at the expense of the people.
The Drug War and Mexico: Prohibition as the Root of Cartel Power
Prohibition does not eliminate vice; it empowers criminals. As Mises argued in Human Action, interfering with voluntary exchange distorts prices and creates artificial scarcities, spawning black markets and violence. The U.S. drug war, launched decades ago, has followed this script precisely.
Mexican cartels, primarily Sinaloa and CJNG, supply nearly all fentanyl entering the U.S., per the DEAâs assessments.
Provisional CDC data show U.S. drug overdose deaths dropped to around 80,000â87,000 in 2024 (a 24â27% decline from 2023âs peak of ~110,000â114,000), yet synthetic opioids like fentanyl remain the primary driver, accounting for ~60% of fatalities.
Cumulatively, over 1 million Americans have died from overdoses since 2000, far exceeding combat deaths in all U.S. wars combined.
This is not abstract terrorism; it is direct harm from a neighboring pipeline fueled by demand and prohibition-enforced profits.
U.S. efforts against Mexico remain inadequate: bilateral extraditions and seizures occur, but no decisive action disrupts the flow. Why? The drug war sustains massive bureaucracies (DEA budgets), private prisons, and asset forfeitures.
Major banks have laundered cartel billions with impunity. Wachovia (now Wells Fargo) admitted to processing $378 billion in suspicious funds, paying a fine without prosecutions; HSBC settled for $1.9 billion after facilitating cartel money flows, yet continued operations.
These are not oversights but features of a system where corporate and state interests align, as Hayek warned in The Road to Serfdom: central planning breeds cronyism.
If protecting Americans were the goal, prohibition would end tomorrow.
Legalization and regulation, as in Portugal or Uruguay collapse black-market premiums by 70â90%, slashing violence and overdoses while allowing adults free choice.
Government decree does not make something more or less appealing, it creates and incentivizes black markets, criminality including violence.
Cartels would pivot to other rackets (extortion, trafficking), but lose their primary revenue, much as alcohol prohibitionâs repeal gutted mafias.
Instead, the state clings to control, using the crisis to justify surveillance and spending.
Middle East Wars: Interventionism and the Petrodollar Empire
Ron Paul, echoing the Foundersâ non-interventionism (âpeace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nationsâ), has long argued that modern U.S. foreign policy creates blowback. It benefits global powers and large industry at the insistence of entrenched interests; it does not benefit America or its people.
Iraq and Afghanistan posed no direct threat to the homeland. Zero Iraqis hijacked planes on 9/11. Yet trillions were spent, thousands of U.S. lives lost, and hundreds of thousands of civilians killed, for vague notions of âdemocracy".
These wars enforce dollar hegemony, tied to central banking. Mises and Hayek viewed fiat money and central banks as enablers of inflation and war: without sound money (gold standard, per Mengerâs theory of moneyâs organic emergence), states print to fund adventures, taxing citizens covertly.
Post-invasion Iraq saw its central bank restructured under U.S. oversight; Libya under Gaddafi held massive gold reserves and flirted with a gold-backed African currency challenging the dollar. Post-NATO intervention, chaos ensued, with the central bank fragmented.
The ulterior motive is clear: not liberty, but control over resources and monetary dominance.
Schumpeterâs creative destruction (when old, inefficient ways get wiped out by better ideas) thrives in free markets, not state-orchestrated wars that enrich defense contractors while destroying wealth.
State intervention to âprotectâ consumers from deception quickly morphs into state control over information, prices, and choices: Hayekâs fatal conceit in action. Mises insisted only individuals, not planners, can judge truth.
The marketâs self-correction: reputation, boycotts, whistleblowers etc. remains the only reliable, non-coercive path; any government âshieldâ eventually turns inward against the people it claims to defend.
Venezuela: A Convenient Confluence of Incentives
Venezuela exemplifies mixed motives masked as humanitarianism. The U.S. recognized GuaidĂł as âinterim presidentâ, imposed sanctions, and accused Maduro of corruptionâall while Venezuela holds the worldâs largest oil reserves and trades outside the dollar (with Russia, China, Iran).
From Hoppeâs private property ethic and Ron Paulâs non-intervention views that align with many American founding fathers, early U.S. presidents, this is aggression against a sovereign nation.
Sanctions starve civilians, not leaders. If countering China/Russia were priority, why provoke them abroad while ignoring direct harms at home?
Venezuela has a state-owned central bank, no connection to the world's central banking cartel (the federal reserve, IMF or world bank) control, its defiance of dollar orthodoxy threatens the petrodollar hegemony and invites pressure. Historically countries operating outside the world's most powerful central banking system, including the U.S. have faced pressure and ultimately chaos brought on by these powerful forces.
True defense of American interests would prioritize borders and liberty: end prohibition (starving cartels), avoid entangling alliances, and audit domestic corruption (e.g., government tolerance of drug routes).
The Deeper Structure: Centralized Power Maintaining Chaos
The most parsimonious explanation is deliberate tolerance. Central banking (the Fed, per Ron Paul and Ammousâs The Bitcoin Standard) enables endless deficits for wars and welfare, eroding purchasing power.
Corporate cronies: banks laundering billions, pharma pushing opioids, big food peddling poison; virtually all modern markets are walled gardens that profit from chaos and oppression. Governments and intelligence agencies have always facilitated this.
This is divide-and-conquer: crises justify control, âcrumbsâ (stimulus, wars on abstractions) appease masses, while elites accumulate. As Bastiat noted, the state lives off plunder; free markets voluntary.
If for the people, weâd end the Fed for sound money, end prohibition and return to non-intervention. Instead, Americans become fodder, overdoses and black markets fueling criminality, soldiers abroad while the soap opera sold to the masses perpetuates corruption and the financial-industrial powers.
It's always sold as safety. They will even cause the problem, cause chaos to sell the idea that they need to give you safety. Look up "Operation Northwoods".
Theyâll always yell, âYou need a big gun to fight the big bad wolf.â
But Mises nailed it: the moment you give one pack the power to print money or spy, they become the wolf.
Real defense isnât centralized payroll soldiers. Itâs armed, healthy, educated neighbors, encrypted networks, voluntary militias.
People already do it. Look at the Swiss: no empire, just citizens who own guns and keep their gold, and no one invades them.
Misinformation? Market-proof money fixes thatâsound money doesnât let tyrants flood headlines with fresh cash.
Terror? A free society repels it with borders that can open or shut with vigilance, not permanently locked ones that rot from internal corruption.
The stateâs offer is always: âTrust us to rob you slower than they will". History says no, every time people have bought that, they've been robbed twice, from outside and from within.
The fear they peddle: âItâs already too late, let them get stronger and weâre done.â
But Hayek would call that a death spiral argument.
Every time we âinterveneâ to stop Russia/China, what do we do? We print trillions, hand them to defense contractors, erode our own dollar, breed enemies who werenât enemies before, and China just keeps buying our debt while Russia sells gold-backed oil.
Non-intervention isnât surrender. Itâs withdrawal from the game.
Let Russia keep Venezuela. Let China buy oil in yuan.
Watch their systems rot from the inside: no sound money, no freedom, no creativity. Just top-down rot that implodes faster than any empire we fund.
We donât lose if we stop feeding the beast. We lose when we keep proving weâre better slaves than they are.
Most folks hear ânon-interventionâ and think âweakness".
But the real weakness is thinking we can control the world without becoming its prisoner.
Historyâs full of empires that âhad toâ act and ended up bankrupt, hated, or both.
Better to stand on our own soil, armed, free, and solvent.
In Voltaireâs spirit: defend liberty against coercion. The solution is peace through freedom: markets, not mandates; peace, not empire.
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Non-Interventionism and the Ethics of Military Action and Sanctions
The recent images of Venezuelaâs new leadership embracing diplomats from Iran, China, and Russia have reignited debates about proxy wars, alliances with adversaries, and the role of U.S. foreign policy.
Critics of non-interventionism argue that these ties expose a pre-existing anti-American axis, one that exploits Venezuelan resources to bolster global threats, potentially turning the country into a strategic launchpad against the United States.
They contend that sanctions and pressure are necessary to disrupt this coordination, much like refusing to do business with a domestic criminal enterprise.
A distinction here is critical. A corrupt government reigning over millions of people is not the same as criminals inside of a nation with upheld and just laws.
Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, FrĂŠdĂŠric Bastiat, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, and modern voices such as Ron Paul offer a historically accurate and rational view: interventionism, including military action or broad sanctions, manufactures the very dangers they claim to prevent, while violating principles of individual liberty and non-aggression.
Regardless of the story people are relentlessly sold, intervention is never altruism or for protecting the homeland.
Intervention is always to benefit the world's most powerful. It perpetuates war and those causing harm.
Through the convenient appearance of good intent, and even if some good is done, the harm to those helped always outweighs the good, and those profiting from the intervention always make it difficult to see that fact.
Resource control (oil, pipelines, food, drugs, metals, minerals), division (foreign, domestic or geopolitical), uncooperative governments, opportunity for profits from endless war and defiance of the petrodollar trigger action; naked genocide without strategic value does not.
Blowback and the Creation of Alliances
Ron Paul has long described âblowbackâ as the unintended consequence of aggressive foreign policy: meddling abroad breeds resentment and pushes targets into the arms of rivals.
In Venezuelaâs case, ties with Russia, China, and Iran predated the heaviest sanctions, but intensified precisely because U.S. actionsâfreezing assets, blocking dollar-based trade, and imposing oil embargoesâleft Caracas with few alternatives.
Mises, in Human Action, emphasized that human behavior follows incentives: when legitimate markets are closed, actors pivot to whatever remains open.
Sanctions do not isolate a regime; they force it to seek sponsors who ignore Western rules, accelerating alliances that might otherwise remain transactional and limited.
Hayek, in The Road to Serfdom, warned of the âfatal conceitâ of central planners who believe they can orchestrate global outcomes.
Washington assumes it can squeeze Venezuela without pushing it toward multipolarity, but reality defies such control. The result? A self-fulfilling prophecy where pressure strengthens the very bloc it aims to weaken.
Were These Alliances Inevitable, or Manufactured?
Interventionists claim Venezuelaâs pivot was ideological and premeditatedâChĂĄvez and Maduro were always aligned with anti-American powers, using oil wealth to fund adversaries regardless of U.S. actions. Thus, non-intervention would have allowed unchecked growth of a hostile proxy on Americaâs doorstep.
The non-interventionist response: alliances of convenience harden into necessity only under duress.
Mises would argue that states, like individuals, respond to scarcity.
Venezuela sold oil to China and Russia early on because they offered favorable terms, not because of some grand anti-Western pact.
Heavy sanctions amplified this dependence, turning loose trade partners into lifeline providers.
Without embargoes, private markets (U.S. companies buying Venezuelan oil at competitive prices) would dilute any incentive to subsidize foreign powers.
Ron Paul echoes this: âTrade isnât approval; itâs competition.â
Open exchange empowers domestic entrepreneurs and consumers, eroding a regimeâs monopoly far more effectively than isolation.
Moreover, fears of Venezuela as a âlaunchpadâ rely on speculation.
Its military is dilapidated, its economy crippled. Historical parallelsâlike Cuba during the Cold Warâshow that proximity alone does not equate to existential threat.
Hoppe, drawing on the non-aggression principle, would dismiss preemptive action as unjustified initiation of force.
The Moral Dilemma: Trading with âEvilâ Regimes
Perhaps the sharpest objection: sanctioning a rogue state feels like refusing to fund a criminal.
If a leader like ChĂĄvez, Maduro or the current interim regime harms citizensâthrough hyperinflation, repression, or starvationâwhy legitimize them by trading?
Doesnât commerce prop up the oppressor, akin to buying from a domestic cartel?
Bastiatâs âseen vs. unseenâ illuminates the flaw here. The seen: trade flows to the regimeâs coffers.
The unseen: sanctions devastate ordinary people first, entrenching the leaderâs power as the sole distributor of scarce goods.
Punishing an entire nation for its governmentâs sins is collectivist logic, treating millions as complicit hostages.
Mises rejected this: individuals, not states, are the moral units.
Free trade bypasses central control, enriching private actors and fostering black markets of liberty (information, goods, ideas) that undermine authoritarianism.
No government, no military industrial complex has ever undermined authoritarianism, they sell good intention to perpetuate their power through war.
Hayek added that boycotts distort knowledge: planners cannot distinguish âregime fundsâ from civilian livelihoods without harming innocents.
Sanctions starve the population, breeding desperation that rallies support around the dictator (âLook what America does to usâ).
Ron Paul: âWe claim to fight for freedom, but collective punishment is the opposite.â
Targeted measures: freezing personal assets of leaders and Interpol pursuits avoid this moral pitfall, focusing force on aggressors without collateral plunder.
Humanitarian Intervention: Saving Populations or Masking Ulterior Motives?
A frequent justification for U.S. actions against Venezuela including sanctions, recognition of and action against opposition figures including other adversarial nations, and threats of further pressure is framed as humanitarian: the regime has inflicted mass suffering through economic collapse, shortages, and repression, driving millions to flee.
Intervention, proponents argue, is necessary to âsaveâ or âliberateâ the population from tyranny, much like removing a brutal dictator to end widespread harm.
Such claims are selective and often pretextual.
States never act from pure altruism; interventions align with strategic interests of the most powerful: resources, geopolitics, or monetary/industrial dominance while genuine atrocities without those stakes are ignored.
Consider the patterns: In Rwanda (1994), nearly a million were slaughtered in genocide while the world, including the U.S., stood by: no oil, no pipelines, no threat to dollar hegemony.
Yemenâs crisis, with U.S.-backed blockades contributing to famine and millions at risk of starvation, draws minimal calls for direct intervention.
Chinaâs treatment of Uyghurs prompts sanctions and rhetoric but no military action.
Yet when a country like Venezuela defies petrodollar norms and sits on vast oil reserves, âhuman rightsâ suddenly demand urgent response.
Mises observed that governments intervene when it serves power elites, not abstract morality. Humanitarian rhetoric masks self-interest.
Hayek warned that invoking the âgreater goodâ to justify force abroad sets a precedent for its use at home: once coercion is accepted for âsavingâ foreigners, it erodes liberty everywhere.
Ron Paul extends this: true compassion doesnât come from bombs or blockades that worsen suffering; it comes from voluntary aid.
Even in extreme cases: genocide or mass starvation, these thinkers reject broad intervention.
Military action or comprehensive sanctions do not liberate; they perpetuate the global war machine, escalate chaos, kill innocents, and create power vacuums (as in Libya or Iraq).
Some might point to Hong Kong, Singapore or Viet-Nam. These countries grew from free markets and voluntary exchange, not imposition or force.
Alternatives exist: private charities delivering aid without strings, open borders for refugees, information flows to empower dissent, or targeted support for victims to resist internally: all non-coercive and precise.
In Venezuela, sanctions framed as âpressure for democracyâ have primarily harmed civilians, deepening the crisis they claim to alleviate.
The regime endures, enriched by black markets and rival backers, while ordinary Venezuelans suffer most.
Non-intervention refuses the false choice of âdo nothing or invadeâ, it chooses freedom: let people trade, migrate, and rebuild without external coercion manufacturing more misery.
War isnât a tool. Itâs a magnet. It pulls in contractors, mercenaries, arms dealers who never bleed, they just bill.
The only justified fight is the one the victims themselves start.
When the people rise, thatâs not chaos. Thatâs correction.
We donât help them by dropping hell from the sky, the military industrial complex has never profited from peace.
We help by getting the hell out of the way. Not perpetuating an eye for an eye, which is hell on earth.
You wanna help? Send food. Send bitcoin. Send truth.
If food canât get there, thatâs a sign youâre already in someone elseâs battlefield.
Now youâre not delivering aid, youâre starting a convoy war.
And the second you roll in with guns âjust to protect bread,â youâre not humanitarian.
Youâre an occupying force with sandwiches.
People will shoot the convoy.
Theyâll blame the food. Then theyâll blame the donors.
And next, aid becomes a flashpoint instead of a lifeline.
The rule is simple: if you canât send rice without a rifle escort, donât send anything.
Let the regime answer for empty tables. Pressure builds fastest when the stomach growls and no one to blame but the guy on TV.
âNo, do not let kids starve." Is compelling, it's gut wrenching.
But the moment someone shows up armed, youâre no longer the savior.
Youâre just another gang, a foreign army, it is war.
People stop trusting when the bullets start flying.
Helping with force? That just buys the corrupt another week of justification, adds to divisive propaganda which fuels war and garners support.
Let the people choose the revolution. Not rent it from Raytheon.
âweâre just giving them toolsâ or âone sniper shot and itâs over.â sounds noble.
But who decides whoâs the âgood guysâ? The same CIA that armed bin Laden?
The weapons of mass destruction lies to justify 1 million Iraqi civilian deaths?
Or the toll on our own people and soldiers fighting endless unethical wars based on false pretense?
All costs of living always rising. Massive tax rates and soaring debt.
We have crumbling infrastructure, all markets are walled: terrible food, unaffordable real estate, terrible healthcareâeverything. No competition possible.
We get endless inflation as they print money without end.
The world's strongest military at war endlessly, for what, for who?
And what happens the second those guns turn on us, or on each other?
We, through righteous good intention, become (are) the seed sowers for the worldâs arms dealers.
Every "revolution" not carried and chosen by the people becomes sponsored by Lockheed and any other interest that stands to profit, often massively, and they are incentivized to do what it must to profit indefinitely.
The minute you pick a side with bullets, you own the fallout.
And the fallout is never âone shot", itâs refugee camps, civil war, drug lords with M-16s, and us paying the tab, while industries and the most powerful continue to prosper.
âSwift removalâ and "precision strikes" sounds surgical. But bombs donât come with surgical gloves, they drop on apartments, schools, hospitals.
And every civilian death? One more recruit for whoeverâs left standing.
Bastiat: what you see is the tyrant toppled. What you donât see is the vacuum, the new strongman.
Addressing Leader Corruption and Adversarial Strengthening: Why Intervention Fails
A common rebuttal persists: even if sanctions harm civilians, they are justified because leaders like ChĂĄvez and Maduro have hijacked national oil wealth, turning state resources into personal fortunes while funneling profits to adversarial powers (Russia, China, Iran) that could arm against or wage war on the U.S.
Allowing unchecked trade, critics argue, directly funds corruption and global threats, perpetuating evil indefinitely.
Intervention, though imperfect, offers a ârealisticâ path to disrupt this cycle and force change.
This view underestimates how intervention sustains the very problems it targets.
Mises, in his analysis of incentives, would note that nationalized industries inherently breed corruption: when a regime monopolizes resources, leaders inevitably siphon profits.
Including the U.S., power always corrupted. Incumbents and those closest to power always benefit, not a free market. And the general public is sold a narrative to justify, obscure and distort that reality.
Sanctions do not break monopoly of any group or government, they reinforce it by restricting legal trade, driving oil sales into opaque black markets where discounts benefit smugglers and rivals, not the people.
The regime pockets more relative power (controlling scarce imports) while blaming shortages on âimperialist aggression,â delaying internal accountability.
Ron Paul highlights the blowback: by framing the U.S. as the aggressor, interventions gift dictators a unifying enemy, strengthening their grip and justifying alliances with anti-Western powers.
Without sanctions, open markets would compete directly: private firms buying oil at fair prices, paying local workers, and eroding the stateâs stranglehold.
Corruption thrives in closed systems; free exchange exposes and dilutes it.
Hayekâs knowledge problem applies here too: no foreign planner can surgically separate âregime profitsâ from national economy without collateral damage.
Attempts to âforce privatizationâ through pressure or regime change is historically always used to install compliant puppets, not genuine markets, repeating the cycle of centralized control under new management through a dishonest image of change sold to the public.
The âidealismâ charge ignores historyâs lesson: regimes like Venezuelaâs persist not despite intervention, but in part because of it.
External pressure provides endless excuses for failure (âItâs the blockadeâs faultâ), postponing the day when citizens attribute suffering solely to domestic tyranny.
Lift interventions, and the regime drowns in its incompetence, no foreign villain to rally against.
Internal revolt or reform becomes inevitable, as seen in quieter collapses (Soviet Union) versus intervention-fueled chaos (Iraq, Libya).
Non-intervention is not passive tolerance of evilâitâs strategic refusal to subsidize it.
True realism recognizes that propping threats through blowback or funding them via black-market premiums weakens America more than any hypothetical war chest.
Strength lies in solvent markets, secure borders, and leading by libertyâs example, not endless entanglement that manufactures enemies while eroding freedom at home.
The Principled Alternative: Non-Intervention as Strength
Another question arises: how do you give consequence to a drug dealer in Detroit, but then buy oil from a drug lord dictator in Caracas?
The answer Mises gives: You donât. Because a nation isnât a criminal.
Itâs a contract between millions of people who didnât all sign up for Chavezâs Marxism.
So when you sanction, youâre not cutting off the cartel boss, youâre cutting off the mechanic, the nurse, the kid who just wants rice, shielding the corrupt leaders from the full accountability they deserve.
Youâre punishing the hostages to hurt the kidnapper.
Bastiat: âSociety is exchange. You cut exchange, you create violence.â
And Hayek: âYou canât boycott a whole people without making them hate you more than the one youâre trying to punish.â
Itâs not pacifism. Itâs precision.
If Chavez is a criminal, treat him like a warlord. Freeze his personal accounts.
Let Interpol hunt him. But donât bomb the village to kill the bandit.
Non-interventionism is not isolationism or moral indifference. It is the extension of the non-aggression principle to foreign policy: no initiation of force, including economic warfare against civilians.
Trade, diplomacy, and example, not bombs or blockades, are the tools for promoting peace, wellness and liberty.
In Venezuelaâs story, sanctions did not weaken the regime; they fortified its narrative of victimhood and deepened ties with U.S. rivals.
Sanctions directly harm the people, they exacerbate desperation and entrench the criminals.
The intent is to harm/weaken the dictator but it always harms the people, and the dictators don't care, they become more ruthless, more entrenched with other unethical powers foreign and domestic while such agreements and examples only fuel growing conviction against those imposing the sanctions.
Ending intervention dissolves the glue: without a common enemy, opportunistic alliances fray. Markets reward productivity, not plunder.
As Bastiat noted, society thrives on voluntary exchange. When states monopolize it, chaos follows.
True defense of American interests and human dignity is in leading by example: free markets at home, open hands to those abroad. Not empireâs iron fist.
Peace through freedom is not just the ethical choice, it is the only choice compatible with liberty, reason, and reality.
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Dude 𼲠Awesome đđžđđžđđž
I see most centralizing forces as drops of ink đŤ in a glass of drinking water. They're poisonous.
"If protecting Americans were the goal, prohibition would end tomorrow..."
"Sanctions starve civilians, not leaders...why provoke them abroad, while ignoring direct harms at home..."
Wow, powerful. đ
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This is awesome. I encourage you to read this, to the end.
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