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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  September 11, 2023 7:00am-8:01am PDT

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>> gilbert fran cos granatos -- and hearing that moment of silence in new york city is so powerful, and today, nearly 3,000 people lost their lives on the deadliest attack on american soil. and today, marking lives lost
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and keeping promise to never forget. cnn's brynn gingras is at the plaza in lower manhattan. brynn? >> and kate, you said it, powerful. i have to tell you that at the ground zero and the hallowed ground, you will see the people walking around and placing flowers near the names of the etched names here, and when the bell sounds, the gravity of the moment settles in. now, you can hear the people reciting the names of nearly all 3,000 people killed on 9/11. to give you some little thing to look out for as you are watching coverage of this, look at the people who are reciting the names that are younger. they tell me that they made a purpose to have people of younger generations come out here to read those names to,
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like you said, kate, never forget and reminder of the generations not alive on 9/11 of the lives lost and the history here that changed of course, new york, this country and the entire world. so it is something to look out for, and we understand that vice president kamala harris who is no longer here, but she was here to be a part of the ceremony and some new york city dignitaries to my right, and an nypd honor guard who has been at attention since this began at 8:30 this morning, and the families coming by with the respects, and some with the pictures of the loved ones on t-shirts and some survivors of 9/11 paying respects to those who they lost here at the ground zero, and so it is emotional scene here on 9/11 and coming up at another moment of silence at 10:03, and
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so i will stop at this moment. we will listen in soon as the moment of silence is right upon us. >> denise marie gregory. donald h. gregory. florence moran gregory. pedro grahan. >> michael gregory. the reading of the names has happened every year since 2002 and i was there for the first year, and been down there almost every year, and it is remarkable how similar the ceremony is almost every year and that is why it is so poignant, and we will always read these names, and now over to shanksville,
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pennsylvania, where flight 93 crashed there. >> christian adams. [ bell tolls ] gee bae. [ bell tolls ] todd m. beamer. [ bell tolls ]
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allan anthony bevan. [ bells toll ]
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mark bingham. [ bells toll ] >> diora francis bodley.
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>> sidney bradshaw. [ bells toll ] >> mary r. britain. [ bells toll ] >> thomas e. burnett jr. [ bells toll ]
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>> william joseph cashman. [ bells toll ] >> my sister jgeorgine corrigan
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merrisay. [ bells toll ] remembering all of those who crashed from flight 93 in shanksville, that was destined for the us capitol, but because of the heroism of those on board, it crashed in shanksville, pennsylvania. sara? and now, kim jong-un is believed to go meeting with vladimir putin, and the kremlin did confirm that he is to meet in coming days, and there could
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be a deal to have putin gathering weapons to fight ukraine. and now, paula, what do you know as far as kim jong-un is getting to russia? >> sara, what we have learned is that there is a train carrying jim jong-un from vladivostock where the russian president putin is, where he is at an eastern economic forum, and we have heard from the kremlin, and the state-run media in north korea that the two are going to be there together in coming days, and they are saying that they will have a one-on-one meeting, and it is a meeting that neither seoul nor
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washington welcome, because it is to hammer out the final deals of an arms deal, and u.s. intelligence and south korean intelligence believe they are close to some kind of arms deal, and the belief is that russia would gain ammunition or small arms out of this deal that they would then be able to use on the front lines in ukraine and in return, the u.s. officials believe that north korea would be able to secure some satellite technology or some nuclear submarine technology from russia. so both sides are really standing to gain from this strategic alliance, and it is mutually beneficial and not just militarily, but politically, these are two countries that are isolated by the west at the moment. they are two countries sanctioned heavily by the west, and they are united by a common enemy, the united states. so certainly, these two countries getting together is not something that washington
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welcomes. sara. >> washington or south korea or some of the other folks in the region is going to be watching and certainly ukraine is going to be watching. thank you, paula hancocks. >> and joining us is senior managing editor kim dozier. and with a meeting of kim jong-un and vladimir putin, and it is expected that they are working towards an arms deal, and what could this meeting if kim jong-un is on the way to russia, what could it mean for ukraine? >> well, it means more weaponry headed ed from north korea to russia to maintain the tank war against ukraine and also the kind of mines that have made the counter offensive slow going,
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because it has mined areas that it has taken. and the other problem is that russia has the kind of technology that north korea wants to perfect the nuclear programs as paula was saying. and the kind of weapons technology that is going to threaten the entire asian region, and another thing that is happening is that a lot of countries have stuck their neck out for the u.s. and west sanctioning russia, and the sanctions hurt early on, but the target of sanctions will find another way to do business. right now, we are seeing russia together with north korea and china becoming a new trade nexus that can replace some of those avenues that were meant to harm moscow and try to change its behavior. >> it is an interesting way of putting it. focusing in on the trade agreement, kim, mark milley spoke with the bbc and he said
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that ukraine has six weeks before the weather turns and starts to hamper the counter offensive and this is how the chairman put it. >> there is still a reasonable amount of time, and 30 or 45 days worth of the fighting weather left. the rains will come in, and it is going to become very muddy and difficult to maneuver, and then at that point, the deep winter, and then at that point, we will see where things go. >> milley is half-full on the glass perspective, but what can be pulled off militarily? >> many analysts are talking about how the winter moves in, you can't move as fast. the cold weather, the rains that mire tanks and tank tracks, et cetera, but when it is the joint chiefs saying it, ukraine does not appreciate it. because it is a kick to the
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morale they didn't need. another way the look at it is that they are within the month according to others they have spoken to from taking territory to regularly hit the sole ground transport point from russia to crimea to where russia brings in supplies, and so if they can hit that, then throughout the winter, they can keep the screws on russia, and that would be something, and a real win. the fact of the matter is that this has turned into a long grinding war, and war of attrition, and nobody wants to talk about that. nobody wants to acknowledge the fact that at least it feels like in some of the upper halls of the biden administration that this was never going to be fast. >> yeah. i wanted to ask you then on this, kind of on this point of the joint declaration of leaders that comes out traditionally of
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every g20 summit that this year's statement is watered down and silent of any condemnation of russia's invasion of ukraine, and the response was clear and biting, and ukraine was clear to the partners who wanted strong wording in the text, but at the same time the g20 has nothing to be proud of in the russia's aggression against ukraine. this is what secretary of state tony blinken said on cnn defending the statement. >> the fact that we have a statement coming out collectively, again, affirming the importance of ukraine, and the territorial integrity and sovereignty speaks loudly, but what really speaks loudly is the leaders in the room itself. so if you were on the receiving end of what so many of them said, and you were in the russian seat, it is pretty clear where the rest of the world stands. >> that is not how ukraine sees
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is it, and why didn't they go further with this joint statement? >> well, going into the g20, the u.s. and india, the host, they were worried that there would not be a statement at all coming out of this, and that russian and chinese influence could stop it altogether, and so for them, within the bureaucratic, and diplomatic world, it was a victory, but look, we are further on in the war, and the shock has worn off that helped to contribute to the stronger statement a year ago, and another thing that is happening is that president biden is becoming a lame duck president with bad poll numbers, and they are saying that maybe we better hedge our bets because the next president may be pro russia. >> thank you, kim dozier. and now, 2,500 people are confirmed dead in morocco after
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that deadly earthquake. many more are declared missing. more on the recovery mission there. and now, mark meadows and his bid to move the case to federal case was deny and what that might mean for donald trump to do the same thing. we will dig deeper. d proffered by his old backup qb. and if we profoffer it, we know you'll proffer it too. have you been behind me this whole timime? yep. j.p. morgan wealth management knknows it's easy to get lost in investment research. get help with j.p morgan personal aisors. hey, david! ready to get started work with adviso who create a plan with you, and help you fin the right investments. so greatetting to know you, let's take a look at your new investment plan. ok, great! this should have you moving in the right direction. thanks jen. get ongoing advice; and manage your investments in the chase mobile app.
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that struck hard in the atlas mountains. this footage is from inside of one building, and whole chunks of walls are missing as you can see there. cnn's sam kiley is on the ground seeing the devastation, and hearing from the people in shock from the tragedy unfolding all around them. >> reporter: another victim bu buried, returned to the earth that killed when it shook. more than 2,000 people have perished in the worst moroccan earthquake in over 100 years. most of the deaths were in villages in the atlas mountains where homes cracked and crumbled late on friday night. the pancaking of these buildings down the side streets here killed 2,500 people, and three
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or four are still believed to be buried in the rubble, and this is a pattern repeated throughout the province, and it is looking very often like an air strike, and the collapsing buildings here looking like holes as if they were hit by russian bombs in ukraine, but this is an all too natural disaster. at least three elderly people are entombed in their hotel room. and after the quake, the phone rang for an hour and a half until the battery died, too. >> i am here, too, because i have lost the best things in my life, my mother and father, i have lost here. >> reporter: his grief turns to the government. >> they have no plans, but only
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words. it is a balloon of words. they have only words. that's all. >> reporter: aid is arriving, but slowly. in asni, nearby, authorities tell me that 27 people were killed in the quake, and 1,200 lost their homes. the brother and sister said that when they were in the house, she was in the bath when the series of explosions broke out, and there was no shaking of the ground. she said that it felt like a blast from a kalashnikov automatic rifle, and it was a sense that the place had been hit by a war, and they had no idea that they were suffering from an earthquake. luckily for them, they evacuated the family very rapidly, and nobody in their family was killed, but in the village, there was -- 27 people were killed. the house is now abandoned.
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the fatima led a group of women to find a group of women and help before help arrived. roads were cut by landslides, and relief operations will focus to get to them. firefighters considered searching for the bodies underneath the hotel. their conclusion is disappointing. amid the rocks and shattered masonry, it is too dangerous to rescue the dead, so for now, sammy's parents will stay buried where they are. now, kate, the response of the moroccan government has gotten under way in full. they have a field hospital here established with the capability of 30 beds, and surgical facilities, and psychological
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services, and even a laboratory, and they are trying to get up into be the mountains, because it is up there where we don't know the dire effect of this earthquake. so far, 2,500 dead, and about that same amount, 2,500 seriously injured, and it is conservative figures, because we haven't gotten up there to know how much more, kate. >> thank you, sam, for being there in middle of it all. for more on how to help the victims in morocco, go to cnn.com/impact. sara. >> right here, pictures of ground zero in new york, and the children are reading out the names of the people who have perished. it is 22 years since the terrorist attacks. the moment of silence is set to begin in a few minutes, and we will bring it to you in a few moments.
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we have been pausing all morning to remember the attacks on september 11th. it was at 8:00 a.m. eastern time that the north tower collapsed and 102 minutes after it was struck by a hijacked plane. it was the first tower hit, the second tower to fall. all morning long we have been watching and listening to the names of those lost read aloud. it is an annual tradition. let's listen in. [ bells toll ]
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[ moment of silence ] >> karen anne kincade -- those are the names read aloud again, and once again truly a day to remember. sara. republican presidential candidate ron desantis meeting the families of victims at the
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memorial in new york, and of the sprawling republican field, desantis is one of the few candidates marking day publicly. mike pence and vivek ramaswamy is also going to be at the 9/11 memorial today, and what else do you expect today? >> we did see ron desantis at the memorial this morning, and he was talking to people there this morning and he is also going to be meeting with the families of the victims of 9/11, and we have heard him on the campaign trail often say that it was september 11th and those terrorist attacks that day that prompted him the join the military. that is what caused him to go into the military service and he served as a jag in the navy for several years. we know in the first debate in milwaukee, casey, she had her
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son as a special guest in the debate, and we will also expect to see many candidates including vivek ramaswany who has floated some conspiracy theories who will take part of a debate later today, and mike pence will be in iowa later today, and he is going to be taking part in several events in iowa as he is going to commemorate several events today. as former vice president, he took part of several of those events while he was in office. >> and also, vice president kamala harris was there earlier this morning. kate. >> and could the people who helped donald trump win in 2016, and could they help to win in 2024 or could they have an
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keep on believing in yourself. it is never too late. if you're out there to wonder if you could be an snhu graduate today is the day to find out. visit snhu.edu. >> this morning, president biden is on the way to anchorage, alaska, where he is going to be observing the anniversary of 9/11. as you know, the president is wrapping up a g20 summit in asia and vietnam, where he was wrapping up a summit on china where he feels that the
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administration had some wins there, but it quickly became a target for the republicans running for the white house. >> it was a win for china today, and biden really should have pushed hard to acknowledge what he acknowledged a year ago that russia invaded a pro-american freedom-loving country. that is a fact. and to deny a fact a year late ser giving a win to russia, and china is gloating, because they are looking at taiwan as it is happening, and it is a shame. >> as he is returning home he is returning home to the low poll ratings, but maybe it is not going to be the determining factor this time around. and harry enten is joining me, and so is the past, present and future an interesting look at what you are seeing within the numbers and first of all, historically, how does approval play in the election? >> you were talking about the joe biden approval ratings, and i want to look at the august
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approval ratings, and look at biden. 39%. that is the second worst on record at this point, and only jimmy carter in 1979 had a worse approval rating, and he went on to lose to ronald reagan, and then joe biden now and why such a big deal that joe biden's approval rating is so low at this point? well, it is because the elections involving incumbents are referendums, and so was the 2004 and 2012 more feelings about the incumbent or the challenger. back to 2004, it is the incumbent, and so 2012, it is the incumbent, so with joe biden, and analysts like myself say, the low approval rating is the incumbent.
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>> that decisive and not a lot of gray area, but there are more numbers that you are looking at, and is there something else that people could be leaning on in how they vote? >> well, normally the elections are about the incumbents, but ask it about this year, is the current vote about feelings of donald trump or joe biden? we have a switcheroo here. many more of the voters are saying that the 2024 vote choice is going to be about donald trump, and 59% than joe biden 34%, and of course, donald trump's approval is south of 34%, and then some say, we may have lower approval ratings, but donald trump's is going to play a bigger role. >> i will call it the wild card and data point that i don't know what to do with. >> and people like myself will look to the special elections, and leading up to the bigger election, because it is going to tell us which way the proverbial winds are blowing.
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and looking at the special election so far, and the democrats are outperforming joe biden's baseline by six points, and we expect them to be doing considerably worse than joe biden given how low the approval rates are, and considerably better, and maybe it is because the political winds are not blowing against the democrats, but blowing towards and for democrats, because maybe donald trump is sort of tilting the political environment in a way that we are not used to, because these are, kate, very unique times. >> it is a unique look into the past, but it is kind of strange data points that we have in the electorate now. >> they are weaving in and out, and i am not sure which way to make of it, but we have 14 months the go, so we will see how to make it. >> thank you, harry. sara? >> we expect to hear from georgia interference case, and it could tell us more of when former president donald trump's trial is expected to start. this is after the former chief
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of staff lost a bid to move his case to federal court. the judge says that the charges against mark meadow have to do more with the political activities than the former job at the white house. >> and special counsel, and at donald trump's first trial, and the legal analyst, and i should have said the name first, because that is a long runway there. and ambassador norm izen is with us, and i want to put that as the third part there, and i wanted to read the part of the decision here, norm, because this could leave a mark going forward and even if he took on duties that he took on carried out as former chief of staff, such as managing phone calls, and managing the president's time, he has also failed to see how any of the acts that were related to the indictment did not relate to any of the acts in
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his duties as chief of staff. so how is that is going to color the movement of the case to federal court or the other people's case? >> well, if it is political, you don't go to political court, but only if it is official. the judge has definitively said that the complex of activities that are the subject of fani willis' indictment were political and not official. so it is fatal now to donald trump's effort to get to federal court, and jeffrey clark, and some of the so-called fake electors, and this is also the core issue in the liability case. so, was this aggressive political and legal moves, because it may have foreshadowed
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the legal moves that the clients will face when they get in front of the jury. >> so norm is basically saying that the other defendants who are trying to do this don't have a shot in hades, and i almost said the other word. norm, i do want to ask you what we are seeing politically and legally with jim jordan trying to call in fani willis, and fani willis saying, hey, you are interfering with the case, and how unusual is this? >> sara, what the republicans are attempting to do in the majority of the house of republicans is utterly unprecedented, and i know that, because when i worked for the house judiciary committee, there is red lines, and one of the red lines is that you cannot interfere with a open investigation, and look, when i
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was in the middle of robert mueller's investigation, i never would have written him a letter, because it is tantamount to threatening him. it is not going to meet the legal test by jim jordan as to what he is allowed to do, and fani willis smacked him down d and rightfully so. >> so we are watching two cases scheduled to be tried on october 23rd at this point. kenneth chesebro and sidney powell and waiting on the others, and look, norm, mark meadow lost the fight to go to federal court, and that case is going to be appealed, i would imagine, and does the state judge have to wait for that case to go through appeals to schedule everything else that he is going to have to deal with? >> no, john.
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the federal law of removal is that the case can proceed through the state court, because we have the strongest federalist system when it comes to criminal cases. the allegation here in the indictment is that donald trump and the 18 others broke georgia law. that is an offense against the people of georgia. so the cases can continue and judge mcafee has jumped every sign and he is sending both of them to trial at their request for a speedy trial at their request. the 11th circuit could give med dose some relief slowing things or slowing it, because he has a weak case. >> thank you, norm eisen.
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coming up, novak djokovic and a masterful performance capturing 24th grand slam, and topped only with a grand slam open win by coco gauauff. that is next. f wildfires. now's the time to see what america's largest 5g network can do for yourur business. okay everyone, our mimission is to provide complete balanced nutrition for strength and energy. woo hoo! ensure, complete balanced nutrition wi 27 vitamins and minerals. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. ♪ ♪
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and manage your investments in the chase mobile app. 36-year-old novak djokovic won his 34th grand slam which is the most of any man any time at the us open. and coy wire who is behind a phenomenal special on the football season is here, but we are talking tennis first. >> we have to talk tennis, and how fortunate to be living in a time to be seeing so many g.o.a.t.s, greatest of all times. and tom brady is no longer with
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us, but -- >> well, he is, but not playing. >> and djokovic, and played da kn daniil medvedev who upset carlos alcaraz who was the former number one, and then he ran over to give a young fan a hug, but it was his daughter. and he had a shirt, kobe bryant who was his biggest hero. >> when i was struggling the most and every time i would look at my daughter sitting courtside facing me, and the bench where i was seated, she would give mae smile and face pump, and that
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would of course melt my heart and give me this kind of energy and strength, and also playfulness that i needed in that moment. >> and we have to talk about someone else reaching their greatness, coco gauff, and reach ing the grand slam as a teenager since serena. and here she is at 19 winning the first coveted grand slam title. >> i think that everyone in the country was behind her 10,000 percent, and a great thing to see. >> and we have to mention football, and bittersweet day for the patriots because they lost to the eagles, but, here is a handkerchief, john, and tom
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brady was there, and he won 6 of the 7 super bowl rings there, and he is going to be inducted into the hall of fame there, and he finished career in tampa, but he had strong words for the fans in foxborough there yesterday. >> one thing that i am sure of, and that will never change is that i am a patriot for life. >> you do need my handkerchief now, right. >> such joy. >> and to hear that, and incredible stuff, john, but we go from one goat to another, and tonight, we have aaron rodgers formerly of the green bay packers. >> and he has one compared to seven. one. one is good. >> four-time league mvp, but brady does not have that many, and they are playing my former team, the bill, as, and we wille what happens.
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>> you made john tear up, and you throwing me that ball or what. okay. we will see what happens here. you guys, come on, let's go. go, gators and rams. okay. anyway. this morning, hurricane lee is strengthening back to the category 3, but anyway, what impact here, and derek van dam is tracking the storm, and can you walk us back to what you are see, because it is an awfully big storm. >> i wanted to comment on the storm that you casually threw away, and the executives up there saying, what is happening. don't break anything. >> they are upset. >> and this is hurricane lee, and 120-mile-an-hour sustained winds which is category 3, and the official forecast track as of 11:00 a.m. this morning and a few takeaways, and it is a weakening storm as it approaching the canadian maritime into northern new england, and so we have to know
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that it is the wind field with lee is going to expand in size considerably, and remember that the impacts from this storm are going to be felt well away from the center. the potential is increasing for the tropical storm force winds along the new england coastline for the upcoming weekend, and something to monitor. we have noticed increase in probables across new england. >> and new england and bermuda is in trouble there, and we know that you will be watching it for us. thank you for going through that, and i know that my football skills are won ky, but they are not bad for the record. thank you, derek van dam. kate? >> and now, the manhunt, and the escaped prisoner was spotted, but altered appearance. he is clean shaven, and we have more devevelopments coming up jt ahead. here, i'll take e that! woohoo!
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