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Who Is William Arkin?
The Weekly Standard ^ | 10/23/2003 | Hugh Hewitt

Posted on 02/06/2007 7:38:21 PM PST by Leisler

A look at the Greenpeace activist cum L.A. Times military affairs columnist who's taking after Gen. Jerry Boykin.

For starters, he is the scribbler who launched the assault on Lt. Gen. Jerry Boykin a week ago by providing NBC with tapes of Boykin speaking in churches, and then followed with a Los Angeles Times op-ed that accused the general of being "an intolerant extremist" and a man "who believes in Christian 'jihad'" (Arkin later admitted on my radio program that Boykin never used the term "jihad").

Arkin also wrote that "Boykin has made it clear that he takes his orders not from his Army superiors but from God--which is a worrisome line of command." This statement, like the "jihad" quotation appears to be pure fiction.

But we can't know for sure because Arkin hasn't released the full transcripts of the talks Boykin gave. Arkin promised to do so when I interviewed him, but has since told my producer he won't be providing them because I have misquoted him on my website--another lie from Arkin, to go along with his broken promise of full disclosure.

SO WHO IS ARKIN? That has proven to be a difficult thing to determine, for while Arkin is a prolific writer, his biography is hard to assemble, and maybe intentionally so.

Arkin is a veteran of four years in the Army (he served from 1974 to 1978) and many of his bylines from the past two decades described him as a "military intelligence analyst" during his service (his rank and units are not readily apparent). He received his BS from the University of Maryland.

His employment since leaving the service is easier to trace. Arkin cut his teeth with the lefty Institute for Policy Studies, and went from there to positions with Greenpeace, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and Human Rights Watch. He has been a regular columnist for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. In recent years he has taken more mainstream work as a senior fellow at the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University (he appears to do most of his writing not from the SAIS campus, but from his home in Vermont).

He is also the regular military affairs columnist for the Los Angeles Times (what a surprise that the Times employs a Greenpeace alum as its military guru) and a commentator for MSNBC.

ARKIN TOLD ME he got his tip on Boykin's faith talks from a Pentagon source, which suggests that the general has an enemy inside the Pentagon. But if, as most of Boykin's critics have argued, the danger presented by the general's private talks about his faith is their effect on the Islamic world, then why did Arkin rush to publicize these private, little-noticed talks that he believes will hurt the U.S. abroad?

The answer is best found in Arkin's own speech to an audience at the U.S. Naval War College on September 25, 2002. In this lengthy and vitriolic attack on the Bush administration, Arkin admitted to feeling "cynical about the fact that we are going to war to enhance the economic interests of the Enron class," and declared that "the war against terrorism is overstated." Arkin believed, in fact, that the war "is not the core United States national security interest today." He rhetorically asked the audience: "Aren't I just another leftist, self-hating American?" and condemned the administration for taking "enormous liberties with American freedoms."

"The war against terrorism," he said, "if it is a war at all, is not World War II or the Cold War, and it is grasping at empty patriotism to claim that it is." He warned of "our tendency to fall back upon secrecy and government control." And he concluded by warning that our foreign policy "convey[s] the wrong message, which is that we have no values, that we are for sale":

Bush and company call the war on terror open ended. Such a characterization reveals a lack of ability to foresee an outcome and betrays a muddled sense of strategy, strategy that is based on American values and our aesthetic and our way of life. It is for that reason that they need help in seeing what they are doing. They hardly have all the answers. You can read the lengthy speech here. I was tempted to leave out the link in the hopes that Arkin would claim his quotes were taken out of context, but I'm willing to let the audience judge for itself, a courtesy that Arkin is unwilling to do for Boykin. I continue to suspect that there is much in the Boykin transcripts that would undercut Arkin's story line, and thus that he intends to conceal. The Los Angeles Times, so much ridiculed in recent weeks, doesn't appear in a hurry to produce the full transcripts either.

ARKIN SET OUT to damage an administration he unquestionably loathes, and found an exposed target in Boykin. The usualsuspects have gathered round to stone the general on the basis of edited reports compiled by an obvious ideologue, and despite the fact that the his talks were expressions of a deeply-felt faith delivered to audiences of fellow believers. There is no evidence that these talks had caused even a ripple of controversy until Arkin launched his well-orchestrated--and quite manipulative--campaign to bring the general down.

If the assault on General Boykin is successful, it is the beginning of the end for expressions of personal faith by public officials.

Hugh Hewitt is the host of The Hugh Hewitt Show, a nationally syndicated radio talkshow, and a contributing writer to The Daily Standard. His new book, In, But Not Of, has just been published by Thomas Nelson.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: fatboy; leftist; pondscum
You can read Arkin's lengthy speech here.
1 posted on 02/06/2007 7:38:22 PM PST by Leisler
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To: Leisler
Who Is William Arkin?

Not only a major-league a**hole, but having a Hall of Fame caliber career.

2 posted on 02/06/2007 7:41:14 PM PST by RichInOC ("Out! Out!"--St. Dogbert)
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To: Leisler
Arkin enlisted before collage. So why do I get the idea that his being an "intelligence annalist" wasn't so much as giving the General Order of Battle Plans for the Fulda Gap, as much as being a Army E-2 clerk that made sure floor safes were well painted and infantry platoon sergeants knew how to fill out SITREP cards properly.

If he had done anything highspeed he would of been yelping about it. He didn't. He was just one of hundreds in any late 1970's Army division intel ants.

I'd really like to see the blogosphere go over this guy and hang him with his own steaming soft sack-load of his own importance.
3 posted on 02/06/2007 7:45:07 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
B.G. Burkett, co-author of "Stolen Valor" offers a guide for obtaining anyone's military records:

http://www.stolenvalor.com/foia.htm
4 posted on 02/06/2007 7:46:51 PM PST by Brad from Tennessee (Anything a politician gives you he has first stolen from you)
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To: Leisler
Are you saying William Arkin, REMF? Totally, 100% agree.

Bill O'Reilly is on this guy like a bad rash. I've never been so bowled over by a journalist as I have been these past two nights. You can forget "Fair and Balanced" BO'R is totally BS over this Arkin guy's column in the WaPo. He is totally, totally back on the mark. I thought his hair was going to burst into flames!

Arkin called our troops, "mercenaries" and said that they receive "obscene amenities" in Iraq. I hope Bill makes this guy rue the day that he was born.

Most sincerely,
Marine Mom
5 posted on 02/06/2007 7:57:03 PM PST by ishabibble (http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/news/16615967.htmALL-AMERICAN INFIDEL)
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To: Leisler
E-mail william.arkin@wpni.com. Chubby Tiger lives in the People's Republic of Vermont, and no doubt, belongs to the Bernie Sanders Mens Naked Latte Lunch and Sauna League.

He lives amongst the folk of South Pomfret, which I think Pomfret means 'potato ass' in French.

6 posted on 02/06/2007 7:57:07 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
I was there (in Germany that is,) right after this Arking guy, Only four years? Year an enlisted remf... Probably got to the rank of e-4, worked over there at S-3, cleaning the M-113, hell, they probably even let he drive the thing once in a while.... Or maybe he was a jeep driver for the S-3 officer.

Whatever...This Arkin guy is a real putz.

7 posted on 02/06/2007 7:58:10 PM PST by abigkahuna (Step on up folks and see the "Strange Thing"--only a thin dollar, babies free)
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To: Leisler
Who Is William Arkin?

Well it's beginning to look like he is the Republican's poster boy for left wing news media bias. He has a resume a mile long of jobs with left wing organizations and yet he is found in MSM airwaves and print pooping all over the Bush administration, the military and apple pie while calling himself a military intelligence analyst.

8 posted on 02/06/2007 7:58:15 PM PST by groanup (War is not the answer, victory is.)
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To: ishabibble
I was in the green machine 78-84. I was in a headquarters company in a battalion in the 82nd. For enlisted it was just us medics, some cooks and the rest were basically chained to typewriters, unless the clerks got exercise by being released for some upper body file cabinet stuff. Anyways I vaguely remember an occupation, I think, called 'intelligence/annalist'. It wasn't go interrogate the SS Colonel stuff at all. It was the bottom, absolute, starting point for an enlisted guy, and basically was making sure people had their rating up, cards filled, safes locked in the evening. Anything of importance was done by senior NCO's. An E-3 would be sweeping up, making coffee and picking up the section sergeant's laundry. Maybe on a good day they would let you move the display cards during some presentation.
9 posted on 02/06/2007 8:05:30 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
Many enlisted USA Army Intel specialists during that specific time frame had what can only be politely called "issues".

None of his active duty station assignments are classified, and all should be readily available to enquiring minds under the FOI Act.

A quick perusal of his DD-214 should supply everything you thought you wanted to know.
Have fun!
10 posted on 02/06/2007 8:08:53 PM PST by sarasmom ( War is not the most vile of the evils humanity commits . There is always apathy...)
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To: groanup; abigkahuna
"military intelligence analyst."

I get the feeling he's been smoking all his hippy lefty Peace Corps friends that he spent a lot of time in, like, East Germany taking pictures of Soviet tank farms with I-Spy infrared cameras while his blond German assistant kept the Porche idling. Wondering how many languages he speaks? I bet for security reasons, he can't go into what he did. (snicker)
11 posted on 02/06/2007 8:12:59 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: sarasmom

Back then I think something like 25% of enlisted were Cat-4.


12 posted on 02/06/2007 8:15:21 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler

The left will leave no stone unturned in their quest to villify the Christian right.


13 posted on 02/06/2007 8:15:59 PM PST by Bullish ( Reality is the best cure for delusion.)
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To: Leisler

A complete pile of excrement! thats who he is.


14 posted on 02/06/2007 8:17:10 PM PST by imahawk (Defeat liberalism, its the right thing to do for America.)
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To: Leisler
South Pomfret, Vermont is the next town north of .......

WOODSTOCK!

15 posted on 02/06/2007 8:21:09 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
"He was an Army intelligence analyst in West Berlin during the 1970s," ...according to WAPo. Can we narrow that down?
16 posted on 02/06/2007 8:24:39 PM PST by cookcounty (Question about the Democrats' Iraq Plan: "Is that a blank sheet of paper or a white flag?")
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To: Bullish
Villify? You wish. They want to destroy Christians. And, anyone else that has any strong identity. Only when people are completely striped, rootless, broken, can they then build them into the new socialist man, to be lead bt these elect, elite, the vanguard.
17 posted on 02/06/2007 8:25:04 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
According to "the Memory Hole":

<< Mr. Arkin served in the U.S. Army from 1974-1978, and was an assistant to the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence of the US Commander Berlin. He was engaged in a number of covert intelligence collection projects and was the primary intelligence analyst for the West Berlin command. >>

18 posted on 02/06/2007 8:30:01 PM PST by cookcounty (Question about the Democrats' Iraq Plan: "Is that a blank sheet of paper or a white flag?")
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To: cookcounty
You know, Arkin, for a guy who puts himself out as an expert on near neigh everything under the sun, it's hard to find anything first source on this clown. Odd how he seems to imply a lot, yet not give details.

I smell rat.

His comments besides being lefty hissyfit, were just really poor language skills. What's up with that? He consistently says, writes, and prints outright falsehoods.

I think the guy is hiding stuff, big time.

You would think if he was an officer, he'd say his rank, schools, and such...but no it's all vague-at-the-bar-talk generalities.

Right.
19 posted on 02/06/2007 8:49:10 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler

Arkin reminds me of a person I knew a long time ago.He couldn't say anything good about American soldiers either,even though he was one.


20 posted on 02/06/2007 9:13:12 PM PST by screaming eagle2 (No matter what you call it,a pre-owned vehicle is still a USED CAR!)
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To: cookcounty

Huh??????????????


21 posted on 02/06/2007 9:17:36 PM PST by screaming eagle2 (No matter what you call it,a pre-owned vehicle is still a USED CAR!)
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To: RichInOC

i first saw the name on tv and didn't catch the first name and he was being called a left wing anti-American radical-and i thought-Alan Arkin??he's a pretty good actor and i don't think he has much of a political profile that i ever heard of-well,i'm glad it's not him


22 posted on 02/06/2007 9:17:42 PM PST by steamroller
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To: cookcounty
<< Mr. Arkin served in the U.S. Army from 1974-1978, and was an assistant to the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence of the US Commander Berlin. He was engaged in a number of covert intelligence collection projects and was the primary intelligence analyst for the West Berlin command. >>

The guy was just out of high school when he joined the Army and claims to have been the primary intelligence analyst for the West Berlin command?

Sounds like resume inflation to me.

23 posted on 02/06/2007 9:19:04 PM PST by freespirited (What about Dingell-Norwood?)
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To: Leisler

I trust Hewitt will also take on vicious Republican smears of retired generals who have voiced criticism of the war efforts.


24 posted on 02/06/2007 9:26:49 PM PST by Dumb_Ox (http://kevinjjones.blogspot.com)
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To: ishabibble
I saw the O'Reilly Factor tonight and those 2 generals looked like they would break Arkin like a rotten toothpick if they ever got their hands on him!!

Not that I would blame them either - personally I'd get in a contributions as well.

25 posted on 02/06/2007 9:41:18 PM PST by prophetic
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To: Dumb_Ox
So civilian Hewitt is supposed to take on various, unknown civilians that somewhere, someplace in the obscrueata of the Internet may of said/written something about an opinion a retired three start held?

Yeah. Right. Let me hit the snooze button.

What else you got?
26 posted on 02/06/2007 9:45:21 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler

#13
William Ardin tried to obtain Russian nuclear bomb

LONDON, July 25 (Reuters) - Environmental group Greenpeace
said on Friday it had tried to obtain a nuclear warhead from a Soviet army
officer at the end of the Cold War.

But the plan to take possession of the nuclear bomb in East Germany in 1991
fell through when the officer, who had sought payment of $250,000, was posted
away from the area after a security shake-up, a Greenpeace spokesman said.

The decision to try to get hold of a nuclear warhead was taken to highlight
the danger of ``loose nukes'' as the Soviet Union began to break up.

The spokesman defended the action despite its dangers, saying Greenpeace
wanted to highlight major environmental problems.

The United States and Russia still hold 12,800 nuclear warheads, and with
India and Pakistan emerging as nuclear weapons states, ``It is clear the
problem is not being dealt with by the politicians,'' he said.

Greenpeace had been contacted by the Soviet officer, and the former head of
Greenpeace's Disarmament Research Unit, William Arkin, had corresponded with
him with a view to getting hold of the device.

``It would have been the biggest nuclear event since Hiroshima,'' Arkin was
quoted as saying in Saturday's edition of The Independent newspaper.

``We planned to line up a scientific team to verify the bomb's authenticity,
and then we were going to unveil it in front of the world's media to show them
that loose nukes were a problem, that disarmament was necessary and that
controls on existing weapons needed to be tightened up, said Arkin, a former
U.S. army intelligence officer.

``Then we were going to say to the Russians: 'Here's your bomb. Come and get
it,''' he said.

(http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/2282.html)


27 posted on 02/06/2007 9:47:08 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: freespirited
Sounds like resume inflation to me.

Resume inflation. What a great euphemism.

It sounds like weapons-grade BS to me...

28 posted on 02/06/2007 10:26:07 PM PST by Triggerhippie (Always use a silencer in a crowd. Loud noises offend people.)
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To: Leisler
Arkin worked for Kofi Annan.

Justin Raimondo likes Arkin. 'DIRTY TRICKS, REVISITED WILLIAM ARKIN TARGETED BY U.S. GOVT?'

29 posted on 02/06/2007 10:48:51 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
Perhaps so, in the Army... :^) (Old school,irrelevant Cold War branch rivalry)

(To any civilians trying to follow the thread, Cat4 was the designation for those enlisted members who were given the option of prison or military service during the years of the draft, and/or those who failed standard IQ tests, but were otherwise deemed physically fit for military duties in support roles in occupations that did not require intense training such as entry level infantry,food service or janitorial positions )
It was my impression, that the US Army utilized it's enlisted "Intel specialists" very differently than did the USAF and the USN.
They were the Army equivalents of the OSI, and were primarily tasked with internal criminal investigations and sting operations of fellow soldiers, IIRC.
I do not remember having contact with any enlisted US Army Intel NCO "peers", between 1977-1986.
My only Army Intel contacts and "peers" were O3 and above.

But even in the USAF, enlisted level "Intel" was merely an additional duty or special duty, for admin types, not separate rated and trained AFSCs, untill the 1970s.
30 posted on 02/07/2007 6:22:36 PM PST by sarasmom ( War is not the most vile of the evils humanity commits . There is always apathy...)
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To: sarasmom
Army, and Marine combat units are by nature in close contact with the enemy. Captured enemy, equipment and papers and such are usually handed over by regular troops to intel members at headquarters of the unit, usually at the battalion level. There they are initially screened. Even at the company level, the company may have need of direct and quick intel as to who, what, is with in the next few hundred meters. Very basic and not high speed. And again, hopefully more higher rank or important captured are pulled from the many and sent to more sophisticated interrogations.

In peace time the intel guys handle code training, basic radio and other security hygiene, safes, keys, inventory of code machines and such. Very blue collar activities.

CID was usually done at division or higher level, often by civilian ex military. Of course there are distince intel battalions with language equipment skills that are disposed as desired. By and large I am thinking more along tactical intel and not higher, spookier stuff that doesn't exist and never happened.
31 posted on 02/07/2007 7:39:43 PM PST by Leisler (REAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS WALK.)
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To: Leisler
I guess I am just a figment of my own imagination, based on false memories of years of government "spooky stuff".
Perhaps it was recently implanted by all those UFO lights reported by the media...LOL

Were you a designated Cat4?
32 posted on 02/07/2007 8:28:31 PM PST by sarasmom ( War is not the most vile of the evils humanity commits . There is always apathy...)
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To: sarasmom

Hey, watch what you say about the infantry!More than a few of us had fairly good GT scores (yours truly had a 124 score BTW)Now Mr. Arkin presents another problem,entirely.I can't figure out exactly what he did and what kind of soldier he was.Something tells me his 201 file would be a VERY interesting read.


33 posted on 02/07/2007 9:27:44 PM PST by screaming eagle2 (No matter what you call it,a pre-owned vehicle is still a USED CAR!)
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To: sarasmom

A friend of mine reminded me of anm old military saying,"those who are willing to fight and die for our country have a taste of freedom the protected will never know".Guess Mr Arkin forgot that as he wrote his "mistaken" impression of America's finest.


34 posted on 02/08/2007 1:14:47 AM PST by screaming eagle2 (No matter what you call it,a pre-owned vehicle is still a USED CAR!)
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To: screaming eagle2
All of the US Army was Infantry first, specialty second, at the time I payed any real attention to them.
My youngest brother and one of my nieces broke family tradition and enlisted in the US Army.
Since I regularly changed both of their diapers when they were infants, I felt free to comment on their choice of service.
Neither were Cat4s, along with the very vast majority of recent and current US Army soldiers,in an all volunteer officer and enlisted active duty force.
That said, 1974 was a different time, and a different Army.
Arkin could not possibly have attained any experience or credentials to claim competency in US Army Intelligence, relative to terrorism or foreign enemy activities.
35 posted on 02/08/2007 7:10:33 PM PST by sarasmom ( War is not the most vile of the evils humanity commits . There is always apathy...)
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To: sarasmom

Yes all soldiers are infantry,but only a few actually wear the blue cord(I got mine in Jan.'78)And I got an earful from"friends"who thought I was some kind of monster for joining the military.Then again,the older members of my family gave me more respect for joining.


36 posted on 02/09/2007 2:00:29 AM PST by screaming eagle2 (No matter what you call it,a pre-owned vehicle is still a USED CAR!)
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To: Leisler

My final assessment of William Arkin;He is a frustrated writer who,while in the military felt the aftermath of Vietnam backlash against the troops,and is jealous now of the way troops are treated now.If he's a qualified military analyst,I'm a three eyed Kryptonian baboon!Finally the "gentleman" can't handle the easiest question,as demostrated in his various interviews.Other than that,he's probably a nice guy.


37 posted on 02/10/2007 11:05:24 PM PST by screaming eagle2 (No matter what you call it,a pre-owned vehicle is still a USED CAR!)
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