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Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Russian_Cowboy » Mon 31 Jul 2006, 00:56:27

Just as a note, for what I know, Russia and Saudi Arabia are converting most of the revenue from exporting oil and gas (almost all of it in the case of Russia) into bonds issued by the US and European governments. I am talking about hundreds of billion dollars a year here. This explains why Russia and Saudi Arabia remain relatively poor countries despite making fabulous money selling oil and gas abroad. Hence, the debt bomb will not explode in the near future despite the spike in the oil price and the debt-based Western economy will keep chugging along. Additionally, the price of oil will keep growing for a while as the proverbial demand destruction in the Western countries will be delayed by many years.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 03:34:41

I hope you have enough gold and silver coins to pay for your healthcare, too?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')espite all the talk about the shaky future of Social Security, its potential shortfall isn't the biggest risk for future retirees. They should be worrying about Medicare instead.

The government's health insurance plan for retirees is on a crash course with the realities of an aging population and an increasingly expensive medical system. It's projected to go bust in 2020.

That's 20 years earlier than the Social Security fund is expected to become insolvent, and -- boomers: are you getting this? -- only 14 years away.


The Employee Benefit Research Institute is reporting that today's typical Medicare-covered retired couple needs $295,000 in the bank just to cover health care throughout retirement. And that's assuming that they have Medicare to depend on.
Get ready for the Medicare crunch

I am waiting for the realization to come that it is not US governments that are to blame, but US citizens. The greatest intergenerational theft ever is taking place right now and you guys are either sleeping or focussing on side issues. Wake up!
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Doly » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 03:41:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')The government's health insurance plan for retirees is on a crash course with the realities of an aging population and an increasingly expensive medical system. It's projected to go bust in 2020.


That's what I've always said: if there is a dieoff, it will be because medical care will be going south. The problem won't be that we'll forget how to treat things, just that most people will have access only to the most basic care.

My advice? Medicine isn't rocket science. Get a good foundation of medical knowledge, and on top of that put a layer expertise on whatever are the ailments of your family. Even if you have access to little care, knowledge can still help a lot to do right a lot of things. And nobody is stopping you from using herbal remedies if you have problems to get hold of the modern pills. Especially if you know the herbs in your area.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 03:59:06

I think, that the problems of US high cost of healthcare is mainly due to greed of health care proffessionals.
It is quite likely that most of medical operations for poor and middle class will be carried out in countries like Cuba and most of pharmaceutical remedies will be imported from countries like Mexico, China or India.
They are chemically identical with US branded products and prices are in range of 10-20% of US price with potential of future fall.

In reaspect of surgeon skills you will also find out, that Cuban doctors can successfully perform 90%+ of medical procedures of those which their american counterparts can do.

Shortly: Facing lack of cash US health system will be outsourced in exactly the same fashion like most of manufacturing sector was done.
The slight fall in quality of services will be statistically insignificant.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 10:25:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'I') am waiting for the realization to come that it is not US governments that are to blame, but US citizens. The greatest intergenerational theft ever is taking place right now and you guys are either sleeping or focusing on side issues. Wake up!


Well, don't blame this US citizen. I voted against Bush and for the guy who was at least talking about national health insurance.

Yes, the greatest theft ever is taking place. We pay our taxes and Bush transfers the money to Iraq, where he blows it up.

For the cost of Bush's adventure we could have set both Social Security and Medicare on their feet and made headway with a national health program. Instead we have nothing but armless boys.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Dukat_Reloaded » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 10:43:33

Was recorded in 1995, things havn't changed.

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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby onequestionwonder » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 11:02:15

Mr. Bill,

You seem to know a great deal. How did you become so erudite?

And answer a question for me.

What happens if the US scraps Medicare and Medicaid, and replaces it with a single-payer National Health Program.

I'm sure you will think it is a mistake, as the current US system is so vastly superior to what exists in Canada, France, Denmark, Sweden, uhhh come to think of it Cuba?

The super efficient market system of the US squeezes every drop of effectiveness out of health spending in the US. Drug companies struggle with the cutthroat competition the discipline of the market imposes on them. There has never, ever, been a better health care system, certainly not in Europe.

Things go on till they can't.

So tell me how a National Health Program wouldn't address the problems of Medicare and Medicaid, and a myriad of other vexing economic problems as well.

I'm sure you have many arguments.

What are they?
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 15:05:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onequestionwonder', 't')he current US system is so vastly superior to what exists in Canada, France, Denmark, Sweden, uhhh come to think of it Cuba?

The super efficient market system of the US squeezes every drop of effectiveness out of health spending in the US. Drug companies struggle with the cutthroat competition the discipline of the market imposes on them. There has never, ever, been a better health care system, certainly not in Europe.



I can't tell if you're serious or are just joking. The US doesn't even have a health system (except for those over 65), just a mishmash of private insurance plans, with half the money wasted on administrative overhead, advertising, forms, etc. And 50 million people have no coverage at all, including me. I'll take the Cuban system anyday.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby marko » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 15:32:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'A')ny of you own US savings bonds? I'm sitting on a pile of them and, since I no longer trust the US government's long-term solvency (or anything else about the US government), am thinking of cashing them in. Can you envision a scenario in which the US would actually renege on its savings bonds?


It is not so hard to imagine the US reneging on its savings bonds and other debt. But I think that it is much more likely that the US will just print money (or its electronic equivalent) with which to pay the debt. But the increase in the money supply will decrease the value of those dollars. So I think that the US will pay off its debt, all $8 trillion or so of it (more like $40 trillion if you count all of the unfunded obligations to future retirees). But when the US is done paying off that $8 trillion, $8 trillion will be about the price of a loaf of bread, or, if you are lucky, a nice meal. It has happened before, for example in Germany in the 1920s.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby onequestionwonder » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 15:43:06

"I can't tell if you're serious or are just joking. The US doesn't even have a health system (except for those over 65), just a mishmash of private insurance plans, with half the money wasted on administrative overhead, advertising, forms, etc. And 50 million people have no coverage at all, including me. I'll take the Cuban system anyday."

I was being sarcastic. Evidently I'm not very good at it.

And what you've written is exactly what I was referring to.

It wouldn't surprise me if MORE than 50% of what is spent on health care is "wasted," that is not truly necessary spending to actually deliver health care to a patient.

Though in the world of economics measurement I'm not sure any form of mostly white collar inefficiency is ever wasted.

Back to lurking. It just gets annoying to see the "Marketeers" post over and over.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 01 Aug 2006, 19:03:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onequestionwonder', '"')I can't tell if you're serious or are just joking. The US doesn't even have a health system (except for those over 65), just a mishmash of private insurance plans, with half the money wasted on administrative overhead, advertising, forms, etc. And 50 million people have no coverage at all, including me. I'll take the Cuban system anyday."

I was being sarcastic. Evidently I'm not very good at it.

And what you've written is exactly what I was referring to.

It wouldn't surprise me if MORE than 50% of what is spent on health care is "wasted," that is not truly necessary spending to actually deliver health care to a patient.

Though in the world of economics measurement I'm not sure any form of mostly white collar inefficiency is ever wasted.

Back to lurking. It just gets annoying to see the "Marketeers" post over and over.


Good for you.

Don't lurk. We (and certainly I) want you here.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 05:49:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onequestionwonder', 'M')r. Bill,

You seem to know a great deal. How did you become so erudite?

And answer a question for me.

What happens if the US scraps Medicare and Medicaid, and replaces it with a single-payer National Health Program.

I'm sure you will think it is a mistake, as the current US system is so vastly superior to what exists in Canada, France, Denmark, Sweden, uhhh come to think of it Cuba?

The super efficient market system of the US squeezes every drop of effectiveness out of health spending in the US. Drug companies struggle with the cutthroat competition the discipline of the market imposes on them. There has never, ever, been a better health care system, certainly not in Europe.

Things go on till they can't.

So tell me how a National Health Program wouldn't address the problems of Medicare and Medicaid, and a myriad of other vexing economic problems as well.

I'm sure you have many arguments.

What are they?


A marketeer? Is that like a well paid Mouseketeer? I suppose an erudite marketeer is better than being called an erudite baboon? Thanks.

Answers? Hmm, I think we have to get on the same page before we can start debating answers. The question of how to solve specific US problems like Medicare and Medicaid are, well, very US centric versus macro-problems like the US current account deficit which affect the rest of the world.

A while ago in response to just such a question I wrote a very long and detailed response as to what MIGHT be done to address these problems and I did not even get the courtesy of a debate or a rebuttal. And as I do not get paid for doing this, I guess Americans will just have to sort out their own healthcare debate. They are not likely to listen to me in any case.

As for the intergenerational theft it is quite clear that a segment of the population never had it so good, consumed so many resources in pursuit of their own happiness, then borrowed from future generations creating unfunded liabilities to keep on consuming, while taking early retirement and leaving behind debts for everyone else.

So if in my prolific writing I say something you do not agree with, or if I make a mistake in my analysis, then please let me know. If you have proposals, then let me know as well, and we can debate the merits of your plan. I am very interested in your non-market solutions to these problems. Thanks.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby onequestionwonder » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 11:02:31

"My" health care program is easy enough to describe.

1) Survey the rest of the world and identify the model that works the best.

2) Implement it here.

Now I'll "fix" Social Security, the other big entitlement (unless you also count flood insurance, ag subsidies, roads as entitlements. They usually aren't thought of as such, though how they differ isn't apparent to me. We'll be here all day though).

1) Raise retirement age to 72 (not 70). If there is some advance in medicine that greatly extends life expectancy, raise it again. Eliminate the early (currently age 62) retirement right now.

2) Tighten up the early social security retirement due to disability criteria. Review egregious cases that have already been approved. This system is already starting to suffer widescale abuse in my opinion. The fact that a drug/alcohol abuser can get this is ridiculous.

3) "Chump" people by playing with colas and inflation numbers. This program has already been implemented by the federal and all state governments.

4) Means test social security. If you have sufficient assets or income you don't get any. Fraud perpetrated to claim social security benefits when violating the means test, is forfeiture of assets and a five year prison sentence. Don't like the system? Call an 800 number. There is one line for the whole US, and it is outsourced to France. Or call your local representative in Congress. You'll have better luck with the 800 number.

Not a satisfying system, but it will be solvent. And my bleeding heart won't break because the spectre of totally impoverished elders pre-social security won't come back.

Now some general things.

1) Drown flood insurance and Grover Norquist in a bathtub.

2) Repeal not only the George W. Bush tax cuts, but implement the tax system that existed in 1980. The american economy is not as dynamic as it was then, unless financial masturbation is your style. 9 out of ten americans are in worse shape than they were then.

3) Send one of Negroponte's death squads to the economics department of the University of Chicago. None shall live. Then send it to the world bank and the IMF. Rinse and repeat on the none shall live.

Some general things.

If you are a died in the wool, Ayn Randian sign of the dollar worshipper, let's break off a good portion of the US so you can finally have a part of the world to run exactly as you see fit. Countries throughout the world can export their dynamic entrepenurial freedom lovers, that don't want the government to hold them back to this place (apparently some evil bureacrat snuck into your home when you were a child and pissed in your wheaties, you just haven't been able to get over it). The process could be based on the Mariel boatlift when Cuba exported it's prisons to the US.

You can name it what you want. I'll call it "Shitworld." Peak oil and climate change notwithstanding, in 5 years you'll be practicing cannibals fighting battles with sharpened sticks over who has the most "animal spirits." The CEO chieftain will lead his managers in battle against the workers of another tribe. When the conflict is over one tribe will be the workers. Ancient manuals reprinted in the 1800's in the american south on Carthaginian slave holding - uhh management techniques will be consulted for the corporate edge they can give their users...

If the fundamentalists don't sacrifice you to the god of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob first. And I don't think you guys can take them in a fight.

I could go on to other things like peak oil, and an idea of mine that the US or state government should be the insurance industry.

But I've solved some of the problems of the US and I deserve a beer.

The thing is though, we'd have to agree on something, or have a common world view on something. A debate between us is pointless because we don't have enough in common to even argue or agree on what the likely consequences of something would be.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby MountainHiker » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 12:09:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onequestionwonder', '
')If you are a died in the wool, Ayn Randian sign of the dollar worshipper, let's break off a good portion of the US so you can finally have a part of the world to run exactly as you see fit. Countries throughout the world can export their dynamic entrepenurial freedom lovers, that don't want the government to hold them back to this place (apparently some evil bureacrat snuck into your home when you were a child and pissed in your wheaties, you just haven't been able to get over it). The process could be based on the Mariel boatlift when Cuba exported it's prisons to the US.

You can name it what you want. I'll call it "Shitworld." Peak oil and climate change notwithstanding, in 5 years you'll be practicing cannibals fighting battles with sharpened sticks over who has the most "animal spirits." The CEO chieftain will lead his managers in battle against the workers of another tribe. When the conflict is over one tribe will be the workers. Ancient manuals reprinted in the 1800's in the american south on Carthaginian slave holding - uhh management techniques will be consulted for the corporate edge they can give their users...


Good post.

I've been waiting for this bunch of folks to do just that my entire life. They always talk about creating their utopia, but never seem to have the ability, or cajones, to get the job done. I guess putting their own money on the line to buy a country, move there and develop the infrastructure to their standards is asking a little too much. Plus, it would require a bit of organization, cooperation and possibly even, gasp, centralized planning. It would be better to do it your way and have the government GIVE them the land to start it up. You know, kind of like the golden age of true Randian freedom in America when Europeans first came and found land for the taking (never mind those native folks).

Then I realized why it won't ever happen. Most Randians I've ever encountered are all professional mid- to upper management types who believe themselves well beyond minimum wage work or pay. I wonder who will occupy the janitor, waitress and hotel maid jobs in "Shitworld." Sure, they could entice our current flock of low-wage immigrants to their country, but my guess is they would have to pay a higher wage to pull them in since there are no other basic support services available. That of course would dig into profits, etc... Or, those grand institutions of slavery and indentured servitude would make a big comeback as you suggest.

I admit that I prefer a smaller government myself, but I'm not yet convinced that economic serfdom is the answer either.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby mattduke » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 12:52:05

And if somebody does not wish to participate in your system will you arrest them at gunpoint and drag them off to jail?
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby onequestionwonder » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 13:06:40

I don't have any plans to seize control of the US. And I don't have much hope of my system being implemented.

If it were it would be enforced exactly as the system of any country is. That is the fist is not so abstracted away into laws and courts and the legal system.

And to be blunt, the boat lift thing is hyperbole. I'd say rather "There is your perfect heaven. Don't let the door hit you in the butt on the way out."
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby marko » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 16:15:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'A')s for the intergenerational theft it is quite clear that a segment of the population never had it so good, consumed so many resources in pursuit of their own happiness, then borrowed from future generations creating unfunded liabilities to keep on consuming, while taking early retirement and leaving behind debts for everyone else.


This is an interesting idea, except that it is not clear to me that the theft is really across generations. I think that it is much more across class lines.

Let's look at this by generation, focusing on the broad socio-economic middle: The parents of the baby boomers grew up or came of age during the Great Depression. They scrimped and saved and worked to pay off their mortgages. Granted, most of them were able to retire comfortably, mainly because they retired when 1) there was a high ratio of workers to retirees thanks to the baby boom and 2) there was plenty of cheap fossil fuel. Most of this generation is now dead or very old. Few will survive post-peak.

The baby boomers grew up amid abundance. They have squandered their income and gone deep into debt to buy rolling living rooms and McMansions. However, few have yet reached retirement age; the oldest are just turning 60. This generation will suffer a declining standard of living as it pays off, or more likely, defaults on its debts, and the economy collapses with the debt bubble. Baby boomers will mostly not be able to retire on anything like the same terms as their parents, due to the coming economic collapse, the declining ratio of the working-age population to would-be retirees, and deepening shortages of fossil fuel.

As for the children of the baby boomers, they are screwed. They grew up amid the faux abundance of their parents' debt-financed consumption. When their parents' mortgages are foreclosed and the economy collapses, these younger workers will be left holding the bag. As fossil fuel becomes scarcer, their standard of living will plummet.

Yes, the parents of the baby boomers enjoyed a comfortable old age. The baby boomers enjoyed comfort from youth up to but not including old age. The kids of baby boomers enjoyed comfort in youth but not too far beyond. This is not a function of "theft," as I see it, but rather of the coincidence of when each generation lived along the Hubbert curve. Admittedly, baby boomers were irresponsible and imprudent, but since they grew up mostly in comfort and were led to expect a world of expanding opportunities, I don't think we can really blame them. They did not know what was coming.

On the other hand, I think a very strong case can be made for theft across class lines. Do I need to say it? The rich are stealing from the middle classes and poor. The dimensions of the theft are not yet fully known. But it is already clear that the distribution of real income has been shifting for a generation in favor of the ultra rich.

"Globalization" has allowed the moneyed class to play workers in different countries off against each other so that labor has to compete on the basis of price. In the name of "free trade," regulations that protected workers (including white-collar workers) and their livelihoods have been swept away. The people who have benefited have been the owners of finance capital, which has emerged as the dominant faction of capital due to its mobility and its power over both productive entrepreneurs and productive workers.

Meanwhile, central bankers, at the service of finance capital, have kept interest rates exceptionally low. This has encouraged workers to go into unprecedented levels of debt. (I use the term "workers" broadly to refer to all those who live primarily from their labor rather than from investing.) Much of this debt is mortgage debt. Meanwhile, in the US, new bankruptcy laws have made it much more difficult to escape from this debt. The result is a situation in which workers owe a growing share of their income to investors in the form of interest. Furthermore, in the coming economic collapse, investors will be in a position to foreclose on a vast amount of real estate when debtors are unable to meet mortgage payments.

This is a political economy that is expropriating the working classes and enriching the investor classes. To put it bluntly, those who do not work (or whose "work" consists of figuring out how to increase their financial assets at someone else's expense) are getting richer by claiming an increasing share of the wealth produced by those who do work, that is those who actually produce goods and real services. This, in my view, is theft across class lines and is leading clearly to a new form of feudalism or even slavery.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Ayame » Wed 02 Aug 2006, 16:44:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('marko', '
')On the other hand, I think a very strong case can be made for theft across class lines. Do I need to say it? The rich are stealing from the middle classes and poor. The dimensions of the theft are not yet fully known. But it is already clear that the distribution of real income has been shifting for a generation in favor of the ultra rich.


I read somewhere that wealth inequality nowadays is reaching the proportions that operated during the Roman Empire. I also read that America is devaluing it's currency faster than the Romans devalued theirs.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 03 Aug 2006, 04:12:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onequestionwonder', 'I') don't have any plans to seize control of the US. And I don't have much hope of my system being implemented.

If it were it would be enforced exactly as the system of any country is. That is the fist is not so abstracted away into laws and courts and the legal system.

And to be blunt, the boat lift thing is hyperbole. I'd say rather "There is your perfect heaven. Don't let the door hit you in the butt on the way out."



Marko wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')his is an interesting idea, except that it is not clear to me that the theft is really across generations. I think that it is much more across class lines.


Hello Marko, I do not really agree with you, but I respect your analysis which is thougthful and clear. On the otherhand, onequestionwonder has gone off on a rant without really proposing anything of value. That is the difference in my point of view. We can have different points of view. No one is right or wrong. But the analysis should be clear otherwise it is just articulate emotion spewing forth onto these pages.

onequestionwonder wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he thing is though, we'd have to agree on something, or have a common world view on something. A debate between us is pointless because we don't have enough in common to even argue or agree on what the likely consequences of something would be.

I agree. I just don't think our view of the world is the same. No point to keep beating a dead horse. Have a nice life.
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Re: Growth, inflation and the debt bomb

Unread postby Dukat_Reloaded » Thu 03 Aug 2006, 11:37:09

Great thread. The rich will be rich and the poor will be poor. It's allways been that way and allway will.

About the increasing retirement age to slove unfunded pentions, raise the retirement age high enough and you don't need to provide pentions, people will just work until they die, which in away I aggree with but on the other hand I don't. In an ideal society, the Disabled should be looked after, the elderly looked after but if at the end of the day, when the workers cut their meat and there isn't enough to go around, those who don't produce will miss out.

Do not rely on the Government to support you in the future as I'm quite sure they won't. If your close to retirement age or unable to work I strongly suggest increasing your liquidity by selling items you don't and scrimp and save the pention your currently reciving. How you invest your money is upto you, one of the greatest upside and low downside risks at the moment is precious metals, afew ounces of gold could last you quite afew years during an inflationary/depressionary environment to buy the bare essentials to live on.

There is no point in blaming the generation before you, yourself or your fellow man. Just accept what is what and make plans based on that. It's quite simple and if you plan correctly, you should have little to fear.
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