Colin Endorses Obama

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="6"><center>
Colin Endorses Obama</font size></center>


Washington Post
By Chris Cillizza
October 19, 2008

After months of hints and speculation, former Secretary of State <strong>Colin Powell</strong> endorsed the presidential candidacy of <strong>Barack Obama</strong> this morning, a huge vote of confidence in the Illinois Democrat with just 16 days left before the November election.

"He has both style and substance," Powell said of Obama on NBC's "Meet the Press". "I think he is a transformational figure."

As we wrote on Friday, the <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/thefix/2008/10/why_the_powell_endorsement_cou.html">Powell endorsement carries huge symbolic importance</a> -- not only is he a former high-ranking member of President Bush's Cabinet but he also was the most visible face in making the case for the war against Iraq.

Powell's endorsement complicates any attempt by <strong>John McCain</strong> and others within the Republican Party to cast Obama as naive on world affairs and unready to lead in a dangerous time. Obama now has a ready retort: "Well, Colin Powell seems to trust my judgment; that's why he endorsed me."

In politics, timing is everything and Powell's endorsement comes at a sweet spot for Obama.

Yesterday in Missouri <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/10/18/obama_draws_100000_in_missouri.html">he drew an estimated 100,000 people to a St. Louis rally</a>, and then this morning his campaign announced that <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/thefix/2008/10/obama_the_150_million_man.html">it had raised a stunning $150 million in September alone</a> -- more than double his best previous month of cash collection. And now, an endorsement from a man who is -- arguably -- the most popular political figure in the country.

Did we mention the election is in 16 days?</p> <a id="more"></a>


http://voices.washingtonpost.com/thefix/2008/10/powell_endorses_obama.html?nav=rss_blog
 
Colin Powell Endorses Obama

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:cool:
 
after watch meet the press this morning, that old Public Enemy song "Brothas gonna work it out" kept playing in my head :lol:

FearofBlackPlanet.jpg
 
:hmm: Yeah man, I think it's kinda interesting how we "black folks" are somehow unable to vote for OBAMA because we like what he has to say, it has to be because his is black . Cris Rock made a reference to that point in his last stand up routine.
Gen. Powell has been a Republican for YEARS, now they turn their racist backs on him because he doesn't agree with the direction they are headed in???:confused: :angry:
Well at least THEY (republicans) still have that House-N-word in Minnesota!!
 
I knew it wouldn't be long before the BGOL Photoshopist went to work.

Good job m10 v; I can't wait to see the rest of BGOL Original campaign literature.

QueEx
 
I knew it wouldn't be long before the BGOL Photoshopist went to work.

Good job m10 v; I can't wait to see the rest of BGOL Original campaign literature.

QueEx


Thanks QueEx. I did this months ago before Obama had selected his running mate but it seemed appropriate to bring out the BGOL dream ticket after his endorsement.

It's funny to me that they are trying to paint Obama as such a wild-eyed socialist liberal because all the Black Republicans I know are supporting him not because he's Black but because they agree with the man's policies.

Most of the hate I see directed to Obama on the board is not because of his issues per se but is obviously coming from contrarians who will disagree with the majority of the board just to be disagreeable.
 
<font size="5"><Center>
Powell endorses Obama as 'transformational'</font size></center>



081019_meetpress_allen.jpg

"I think he is a transformational figure," Powell
said. "He is a new generation coming ... onto
the world stage and on the American stage.
And for that reason, I'll be voting for Senator
Barack Obama." Photo: AP



PO L I T I C O
By MIKE ALLEN &
JONATHAN MARTIN
October 19, 2008


Retired Gen. Colin L. Powell, one of the country's most respected Republicans, stunned both parties Sunday by strongly endorsing Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for president on NBC's "Meet the Press" and laying out a blistering, detailed critique of the modern GOP.

<center>Powell said the election of Obama would "electrify the world."

"I think he is a transformational figure," Powell said. "He is a new generation
coming ... onto the world stage and on the American stage. And for that
reason, I'll be voting for Sen. Barack Obama."
</center>

As a key reason, Powell said: "I would have difficulty with two more conservative appointments to the Supreme Court, but that's what we'd be looking at in a McCain administration."


<font size="4">It Was Not About Race</font size>

Powell, once considered likely to be the nation's first African-American presidential nominee, said his decision was not about race.

Moderator Tom Brokaw said: "There will be some ... who will say this is an African-American, distinguished American supporting another African-American because of race."

Powell, who last year gave Republican John McCain's campaign the maximum $2,300, replied: "If I had only had that in mind, I could have done this six, eight, 10 months ago. I really have been going back and forth between somebody I have the highest respect and regard for, John McCain, and somebody I was getting to know, Barack Obama. And it was only in the last couple of months that I settled on this."

"I can't deny that it will be a historic event when an African-American becomes president," Powell continued, speaking live in the studio. "And should that happen, all Americans should be proud — not just African-American, but all Americans — that we have reached this point in our national history where such a thing could happen. It would also not only electrify the country, but electrify the world."

Obama communications director Robert Gibbs said the two men spoke for 10 minutes at 10 a.m. and that the candidate thanked Powell for his endorsement and said "he looked forward to taking advantage of his advice in the next two weeks and hopefully over the next four years."

Obama spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the campaign had not been told of the endorsement in advance. "We didn’t know until Gen. Powell spoke on 'Meet The Press,'" she said.


<font size="4">Two Good Men; Which One Do We Need, Now</font size>

Powell, making his 30th appearance on "Meet the Press," said he does not plan to campaign for Obama. He led into his endorsement by saying: "We've got two individuals — either one of them could be a good president. But which is the president that we need now — which is the individual that serves the needs of the nation for the next period of time.

"And I come to the conclusion that because of his ability to inspire, because of the inclusive nature of his campaign, because he is reaching out all across America, because of who he is and his rhetorical abilities — and you have to take that into account — as well as his substance — he has both style and substance, he has met the standard of being a successful president, being an exceptional president."


<font size="4">Palin Not Ready</font size>

Powell said that he is "troubled" by the direction of the Republican Party, and said he began to doubt McCain when he chose Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate.

"Not just small towns have values," he said, responding to one of Palin's signature lines.

"She's a very distinguished woman, and she's to be admired," he said. "But at the same, now that we have had a chance to watch her for some seven weeks, I don't believe she's ready to be president of the United States, which is the job of the vice president. And so that raised some question in my mind as to the judgment that Sen. McCain made."


<font size="4">Powell's Endorsement & Centrists</font size>

The endorsement is likely to help Obama convince skeptical centrists that he is ready to handle the challenges of commander in chief, and it undercuts McCain's argument that he is better qualified on national security issues.

The Arizona senator, appearing on "Fox News Sunday," sought to minimize the endorsement by noting his support from other former secretaries of state and retired military flag officers.


</font size="4">Is Powell "Getting Back" at Bush ???</font size>

"This doesn’t come as a surprise," McCain said. "But I'm also very pleased to have the endorsement of four former secretaries of state ... and I'm proud to have the endorsement of well over 200 retired generals and admirals. I respect and continue to respect and admire Secretary Powell."

While McCain only reiterated his respect for Powell when asked about the move, others in the GOP were more candid.

One prominent conservative who knows both McCain and Powell said that for all the secretary of state's criticism of McCain and his praise of Obama, the move had less to do with the two candidates for president than the current occupant of the Oval Office.

"Powell cares a lot about his reputation with Washington elites, and he thinks he was badly damaged by his relationship with the Bush administration," said this Republican. "So this is a way to make up for what he regarded as not being treated well by the Bush administration, not being given the due deference he thinks he deserves."

And that Powell would make his decision known in the closing weeks of the election, as it becomes increasingly clear that Obama is the favorite, reflects a calculated political move, says this source.

"Let's be honest — do we think Powell would be doing this if Obama had been trailing 6 or 7 points in the polls?" the source asked, deeming Powell's endorsement "a profile in conventional wisdom."


<FONT SIZE="4">Limbaugh: Endorsement About Race</font size>

A friend of the former secretary of state sharply dismissed the idea that Powell's move had anything to do with making up for his service in the Bush years.

"Anybody who is making the argument about 'rehabilitation' was not listening to what he had say today," said the friend, suggesting Powell made clear that he was unhappy with the state of the party. "It's absolute horseshit."

Rush Limbaugh suggested Powell's move was very much related to Obama's status as the first African-American with a chance to become president.

"Secretary Powell says his endorsement is not about race," Limbaugh wrote in an e-mail. "OK, fine. I am now researching his past endorsements to see if I can find all the inexperienced, very liberal, white candidates he has endorsed. I'll let you know what I come up with.

"I was also unaware of his dislike for John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia. I guess he also regrets Reagan and Bush making him a four-star and secretary of state and appointing his son to head the FCC. Yes, let's hear it for transformational figures."


But others in the party were less dismissive, acknowledging the heft of the respected retired four-star general and the popularity he enjoys across the country.


<font size="4">Just How Big Is Powell's Endorsement ???</font size>

"The Powell endorsement is a big deal," said Scott Reed, Bob Dole's campaign manager in 1996 and a close friend of McCain campaign manager Rick Davis. "It has been bantered about since August and shows both Powell and Obama know how to make an impact in the closing days of a tight campaign."

Kevin Madden, a GOP veteran who was the press secretary for Mitt Romney's presidential bid, said that "Colin Powell was a proxy for our party's ability to persuade Democrats and independents to join a center-right coalition of ideas built around economic conservatism and a strong national defense. The endorsement is emblematic of the challenges we face as a party when it comes to winning back these voters."

"What that just did in one sound bite — and I assume that sound bite will end up in an ad — is it eliminated the experience factor," said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Republican, in an appearance on ABC's "This Week with George Stephanopoulos." "How are you going to say the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the former national security adviser, former secretary of state was taken in?"


<font size="4">If Ayers is a Washed-up Old Terrorist Then
Why Does McCain Keep Bringing him up ??</font size>

Powell, 71, also used his "Meet the Press" appearance to criticize McCain and his campaign for invoking the former domestic terrorist William Ayers.

"Sen. McCain says he a washed-up old terrorist — then why does he keep talking about him?" Powell asked.

"They're trying to connect [Obama] to some kind of terrorist feelings, and I think that's inappropriate," Powell said. "Now I understand what politics is all about — I know how you can go after one another. And that's good. But I think this goes too far. And I think it has made the McCain campaign look a little narrow. It's not what the American people are looking for. And I look at these kinds of approaches to the campaign, and they trouble me. And the party has moved even further to the right, and Gov. Palin has indicated a further rightward shift."

Powell said he has "heard senior members of my own party drop the suggestion [that Obama's] a Muslim and might be associated with terrorists.

"This is not the way we should be doing it in America. I feel strongly about this particular point," Powell said. "We have got to stop polarizing ourselves in this way. And John McCain is as nondiscriminatory as anyone I know. But I'm troubled about the fact that within the party, we have these kinds of expressions."

Powell, a four-star Army general, was national security adviser to President Ronald Reagan; chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, when George H.W. Bush was president; and was President George W. Bush’s first secretary of state.

Powell has consulted with both Obama and McCain, and the general’s camp had indicated in the past that he would not make an endorsement.

Powell said that as he watched McCain, the Republican “was a little unsure as to how to deal with the economic problems that we were having, and almost every day, there was a different approach to the problem, and that concerned me, sensing that he didn't have a complete grasp of the economic problems that we had."

Powell said a big job of the new president will be “conveying a new image of American leadership, a new image of America’s role in the world.”

“I think what the president has to do is to start using the power of the Oval Office and the power of his personality to convince the American people and to convince the world that America is solid, America is going to move forward … restoring a sense of purpose,” he said.

"This Powell endorsement is the nail in the coffin," said one Republican official, speaking anonymously to offer candid thoughts about the party's nominee. "Not just because of him, but the indictment he laid out of the McCain campaign."



http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14714.html
 
McCain got Liberman, Obama gets Powell.

Fair trade?
Hadn't thought of it this way, but since you ask the question, hell yes!
I don't really care which way Liberman rolls as thats more of an I like or
hate the democrats/republicans. On the other hand, Colin Powell's
endorsement of Obama is, in my opinion, miles larger than Liberman's
endorsement of McCain (unless, however, Liberman brings along the
Jewish vote to McCain :hmm:)


QueEx
 
Hadn't thought of it this way, but since you ask the question, hell yes!
I don't really care which way Liberman rolls as thats more of an I like or
hate the democrats/republicans. On the other hand, Colin Powell's
endorsement of Obama is, in my opinion, miles larger than Liberman's
endorsement of McCain (unless, however, Liberman brings along the
Jewish vote to McCain :hmm:)


QueEx

First, check the picture that Powell mentioned. It's breathtaking:

080929_slideshowplaton16_p465.jpg

Second, Liberman's sway in FL will hurt Obama and will eventually cost him that state, but FL is not needed to win this election. As long as MI, PA, and a combination of other states (maybe NC) are in for Obama.
 
<font size="4">McCain allies prefer plumber to Powell</font size>

P O L I T C O
By KENNETH P. VOGEL
October 19, 2008


John McCain’s surrogates took to the Sunday shows to minimize the damage from Colin Powell’s endorsement of Democrat Barack Obama and challenge the hardening conventional wisdom that the presidential race is slipping away from their candidate.

House Republican Whip Roy Blunt of Missouri admitted he wished Powell would have endorsed McCain, but said that neither the endorsement nor Obama’s association with 1960s radical Bill Ayers will matter as much as Joe the plumber.

“I think Joe the plumber does matter here, not because he's Joe or not because he's a plumber but because of all that particular discussion represents,” Blunt said on CNN’s "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer."

“Endorsements are typically overrated, I think,” former Bush budget director Rob Portman said on CBS’ "Face the Nation." “I don't think it makes a big difference,” Portman told host Bob Schieffer, though he added that Powell “is well respected” and has said Powell “respects both men but he's always had a special admiration for Sen. Obama.”

Missouri’s Republican Gov. Matt Blunt told Schieffer, “I don't know that it will make a difference in Missouri,” and he downplayed the record 100,000-person crowd Obama drew Saturday in St. Louis.

“He obviously has a great celebrity status,” Blunt said of the Illinois senator. “That doesn't always translate into votes.”

Powell got it wrong when he called Obama “transformational,” Rudy Giuliani said on “Late Edition.”

“I don't see the same things in Barack Obama that Colin Powell sees,” said the former New York mayor, who acknowledged he has “the highest regard” for Powell and wanted him to seek the GOP presidential nomination in 1996.

“What I see [in Obama] is a very traditional liberal Democrat, really a throwback — even a throwback before the Clintons, Giuliani said, charging that Obama would engineer a government takeover of health care and strip workers’ rights to secret ballots in union elections.


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14725.html
 
Powell and Palin

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Colin Powell endorses Obama; Sarah Palin tries comedy
 
Colin (R) Endorses Obama (D)

<FONT SIZE="4">Limbaugh: Endorsement About Race</font size>

...
Rush Limbaugh suggested Powell's move was very much related to Obama's status as the first African-American with a chance to become president.

"Secretary Powell says his endorsement is not about race," Limbaugh wrote in an e-mail. "OK, fine. I am now researching his past endorsements to see if I can find all the inexperienced, very liberal, white candidates he has endorsed. I'll let you know what I come up with.

"I was also unaware of his dislike for John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia. I guess he also regrets Reagan and Bush making him a four-star and secretary of state and appointing his son to head the FCC. Yes, let's hear it for transformational figures."

I devoted an entire thread to this on the main board, but I wanted to get some perspective from here as well. (Haven't been on this side in a good while.)

...

I'm twenty-two, so I'm not too aware of the general sense of the nation toward Colin Powell in the 90s. I've never understood why so many are positively convinced he could've been President, but that's not the point here, just the intro. (Though I'd love to see it addressed.)

It's funny to see people like Rush Limbaugh and Pat Buchanan questioning how Powell could now abandon the Republican party... My question is how the hell he was a Republican in the first place. I understand he served under Republican administrations, but I'm listening to him talk on Meet the Press and before the point where he endorses Obama, his explanation of his worldview leaves no doubt:

* We need to "reach out to the world." Obviously a slam of Bush and the conservative faction that just wants to bulldoze the world and scoffs at global opinion.

* The first thing the incoming President need to do is present a "new image of American leadership in the world." Gee, I'm stumped as to who is better equipped to do that! Though not discused often enough, this is Obama's greatest potential and my main reason for supporting him. Doesn't matter if you don't give two shits about the rest of the world, though.

* "When you help the poorest," you help yourself. Sounds like something Jesus would say, but not a Republican. Powell said this with regard to the need for further efforts to end global poverty; contrast this with a Michael Savage, who lists the $700 billion dollar bailout package right along with $850 billion in foreign outreach as a way of blaming other landmasses on the map for America's hard times.

* Asked by Brokaw for the biggest issue "not on the screen right now" awaiting the next President, Powell answers "education." The wing of the Republican party that could be identified with Ron Paul doesn't even support the idea of a Department of Education. They barely believe in the idea of common rights to education, homeschooling attitudes being a microcosm of the mindset that doesn't give a fuck about the rest of the globe unless it somehow impacts the specific coordinates of their own backyard.

He sounds like a Democrat! Can anybody possibly make a case for this man as a Republican, ideologically?
 
Re: Colin (R) Endorses Obama (D)

I'm twenty-two, so I'm not too aware of the general sense of the nation toward Colin Powell in the 90s. I've never understood why so many are positively convinced he could've been President...

Study your American History! George Washington, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Zachary Taylor, Ulysses S. Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower were all successful wartime Commanders.

Others, including John F. Kennedy, George H. W. Bush, and John McCain, have had notable war records. Of course military leaders are included among the ranks of the losers, too. Fact is, a successful war record gives a potential candidate that all important name recognition.

Colin Powell's achievement in the Kuwait war restored glamor to the military lost during the Vietnam era in a way that Grenada and Panama did not. The current Afghanistan and Iraq wars have done nothing but make his Kuwait war record look even better.

That's why the Powell endorsement is so valuable to Obama. Gen. Powell repeatedly told this country not to enter a war without a clear exit strategy. One of the biggest differences between McCain and Obama is their views on the Iraq war and how to end it. That Powell would endorse Obama over his "friend" John McCain is an implied condemnation of McCain's war strategy.
 
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Re: Colin (R) Endorses Obama (D)

Study your American History! George Washington, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Zachary Taylor, Ulysses S. Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower were all successful wartime Commanders.

Others, including John F. Kennedy, George H. W. Bush, and John McCain, have had notable war records. Of course military leaders are included among the ranks of the losers, too. Fact is, a successful war record gives a potential candidate that all important name recognition.

Colin Powell's achievement in the Kuwait war restored glamor to the military lost during the Vietnam era in a way that Grenada and Panama did not. The current Afghanistan and Iraq wars have done nothing but make his Kuwait war record look even better.

That's why the Powell endorsement is so valuable to Obama. Gen. Powell repeatedly told this country not to enter a war without a clear exit strategy. One of the biggest differences between McCain and Obama is their views on the Iraq war and how to end it. That Powell would endorse Obama over his "friend" John McCain is an implied condemnation of McCain's war strategy.
I understand the role of General Washington and our war happy country's General fetish. I didn't say I was totally unaware of who Powell was or who some of our former Presidents were.

Still, we're presuming Powell would've run as a Republican? As I noted, he sounds like a Democrat (though he obviously didn't have to present himself that way) and I think it's okay to question whether a black man could've attained that nomination in the era of the Reagan Revolution led by Newt Gingrich.

Look at what Obama, the only anti-Iraq candidate excepting maybe Kucinich, strugled against in the Democratic primary, let alone the general. I'm to assume that the faction that was ready to embrace Sarah Palin even as she made it harder and harder, the Joe the Plumbers who don't care about logic or reality, the Pat Buchanan culture warriors... Why wouldn't race be just as much an issue for Powell, with the racism front-loaded due to the side he'd be running from?
 
Moved by a Crescent

By MAUREEN DOWD
Colin Powell had been bugged by many things in his party’s campaign this fall: the insidious merging of rumors that Barack Obama was Muslim with intimations that he was a terrorist sympathizer; the assertion that Sarah Palin was ready to be president; the uniformed sheriff who introduced Governor Palin by sneering about Barack Hussein Obama; the scorn with which Republicans spit out the words “community organizer”; the Republicans’ argument that using taxes to “spread the wealth” was socialist when the purpose of taxes is to spread the wealth; Palin’s insidious notion that small towns in states that went for W. were “the real America.”

But what sent him over the edge and made him realize he had to speak out was when he opened his New Yorker three weeks ago and saw a picture of a mother pressing her head against the gravestone of her son, a 20-year-old soldier who had been killed in Iraq. On the headstone were engraved his name, Kareem Rashad Sultan Khan, his awards — the Purple Heart, the Bronze Star — and a crescent and a star to denote his Islamic faith.

“I stared at it for an hour,” he told me. “Who could debate that this kid lying in Arlington with Christian and Jewish and nondenominational buddies was not a fine American?”

Khan was an all-American kid. A 2005 graduate of Southern Regional High School in Manahawkin, N.J., he loved the Dallas Cowboys and playing video games with his 12-year-old stepsister, Aliya.

His obituary in The Star-Ledger of Newark said that he had sent his family back pictures of himself playing soccer with Iraqi children and hugging a smiling young Iraqi boy.

His father said Kareem had been eager to enlist since he was 14 and was outraged by the 9/11 attacks. “His Muslim faith did not make him not want to go,” Feroze Khan, told The Gannett News Service after his son died. “He looked at it that he’s American and he has a job to do.”

In a gratifying “have you no sense of decency, Sir and Madam?” moment, Colin Powell went on “Meet the Press” on Sunday and talked about Khan, and the unseemly ways John McCain and Palin have been polarizing the country to try to get elected. It was a tonic to hear someone push back so clearly on ugly innuendo.

Even the Obama campaign has shied away from Muslims. The candidate has gone to synagogues but no mosques, and the campaign was embarrassed when it turned out that two young women in headscarves had not been allowed to stand behind Obama during a speech in Detroit because aides did not want them in the TV shot.

The former secretary of state has dealt with prejudice in his life, in and out of the Army, and he is keenly aware of how many millions of Muslims around the world are being offended by the slimy tenor of the race against Obama.

He told Tom Brokaw that he was troubled by what other Republicans, not McCain, had said: “ ‘Well, you know that Mr. Obama is a Muslim.’ Well, the correct answer is, he is not a Muslim. He’s a Christian. He’s always been a Christian. But the really right answer is, what if he is? Is there something wrong with being a Muslim in this country? The answer’s no. That’s not America. Is something wrong with some 7-year-old Muslim-American kid believing that he or she could be president?”

Powell got a note from Feroze Khan this week thanking him for telling the world that Muslim-Americans are as good as any others. But he also received more e-mails insisting that Obama is a Muslim and one calling him “unconstitutional and unbiblical” for daring to support a socialist. He got a mass e-mail from a man wanting to spread the word that Obama was reading a book about the end of America written by a fellow Muslim.

“Holy cow!” Powell thought. Upon checking Amazon.com, he saw that it was a reference to Fareed Zakaria, a Muslim who writes a Newsweek column and hosts a CNN foreign affairs show. His latest book is “The Post-American World.”

Powell is dismissive of those, like Rush Limbaugh, who say he made his endorsement based on race. And he’s offended by those who suggest that his appearance Sunday was an expiation for Iraq, speaking up strongly now about what he thinks the world needs because he failed to do so then.

Even though he watched W. in 2000 make the argument that his lack of foreign policy experience would be offset by the fact that he was surrounded by pros — Powell himself was one of the regents brought in to guide the bumptious Texas dauphin — Powell makes that same argument now for Obama.

“Experience is helpful,” he says, “but it is judgment that matters.”
 
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