SAVE, plan, student loans, borrowers, president, Biden, Harris,

Kamala Harris Calls Joe Biden’s Reelection Campaign ‘Recklessness’ In New Memoir

Kamala Harris is breaking her silence on the "recklessness" tied to Joe Biden's 2024 reelection campaign.


Former Vice President Kamala Harris is speaking her truth on the “recklessness” of Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection campaign.

In her new memoir, Harris speaks candidly about the Democrats’ failed 2024 campaign, which ended with her losing the presidential race to Donald Trump. An excerpt from her forthcoming book, 107 Days, describes Biden’s decision to run as a “personal decision” made by him and his wife.

“‘It’s Joe and Jill’s decision.’ We all said that, like a mantra, as if we’d all been hypnotized,” Harris writes in her book. “Was it grace, or was it recklessness? In retrospect, I think it was recklessness.”

Harris continued. “The stakes were simply too high. This wasn’t a choice that should have been left to an individual’s ego or ambition. It should have been more than a personal decision.”

The surprising reveal highlights the division between the Biden administration and the debate over Biden’s decision to seek a second term amid concerns about his age. In hindsight, Harris says she believes she should have spoken out.

“During all those months of growing panic, should I have told Joe to consider not running?” she wrote. “Perhaps.”

Before Biden dropped out of the race, Harris wrote that she feared he might see her advice to withdraw as “naked ambition” or even “poisonous disloyalty.” She also criticized his age, saying, “At 81, Joe got tired. That’s when his age showed in physical and verbal stumbles.”

“I don’t believe it was incapacity,” she added. “If I believed that, I would have said so. As loyal as I am to President Biden, I am more loyal to my country.”

The memoir also details Harris’ struggles with Biden’s associates, whom she feels contributed to the “constant attention” on her vice presidency.

“And when the stories were unfair or inaccurate, the president’s inner circle seemed fine with it,” Harris wrote. “Indeed, it seemed as if they decided I should be knocked down a little bit more.”

She also criticized the administration for failing to defend her against right-wing attacks over her handling of migration at the southern border, a responsibility Biden had assigned to her.

“When Republicans mischaracterized my role as ‘border czar,’ no one in the White House comms team helped me to effectively push back and explain what I had really been tasked to do, nor to highlight any of the progress I had achieved,” Harris wrote.

The former Vice President also took issue with how the administration “rarely pushed back with my actual résumé” when conservatives attacked her “on everything from my laugh, to my tone of voice, to whom I’d dated in my 20s, or claimed I was a ‘DEI hire.'”

According to the former California Senator, she “often learned that the president’s staff was adding fuel to negative narratives that sprang up around me.” And despite the White House having a large communications team, Harris said, “getting anything positive said about my work or any defense against untrue attacks was almost impossible.”

Biden has not commented on the revelations from Harris’s memoir, set to be released later this month.

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Target, DEI, essence festival

Back-To-School Shopping Did Not Give Target A Leg Up

According to reporting, Target’s August performance shows a decline despite expectations of a boost from back-to-school shopping.


Back-to-school hopes for Target have not panned out as the corporation is still experiencing a sales slump.

Sales figures for August have been released, showing that foot traffic at its stores has dropped for the seventh month in a row. Target continues to face fallout from recent changes to its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies. Changes that prompted an ongoing nationwide boycott

According to Fortune, Target’s August performance shows a decline despite expectations of a boost from back-to-school shopping. Target’s previous quarterly reports had already shown signs of the decline. In the second quarter of 2025, foot traffic fell 3.1% compared to 2024.

In addition to fewer shoppers in stores, Target has also seen significant financial consequences. Earlier reporting showed that Target lost billions in market value following public criticism of its reversal of its DEI policies. Critics argued that the company did not adequately prepare investors or customers for the risks tied to the change. 

Amid the growing backlash, Target is attempting to shake up leadership to regain customer confidence. Brian Cornell, who has served as CEO since 2014, announced he will step down in February 2026. COO Michael Fiddelke will take over the role. Although the move may be viewed as a step in the right direction, many feel it is performative.

Pastor Jamal Bryant reacted strongly to Target CEO Brian Cornell’s decision to step down, calling it “stylish with no substance.” He argued that although Cornell is leaving the CEO role in February 2026, he remains on Target’s board and is still “making decisions concerning the company,” meaning the change is more cosmetic than real.

As the holiday shopping season approaches, all eyes will be on whether Target can reverse the trend of declining foot traffic and regain its footing.

RELATED CONTENT: Target CEO Out After 11 Years Amid Slumping Sales And DEI Backlash

Teyana Taylor, Essence, Apollo,, Innovator Award

Teyana Taylor Says Culinary School Has Been ‘Very Therapeutic’ For Her

Teyana Taylor is discovering joy and a sense of therapy through culinary school.


Teyana Taylor is sharing her excitement about returning to school to study a passion of hers: cooking delicious meals.

The multifaceted singer, actress, and creative director opened up about her decision to enroll in culinary school and pursue something she’s always been interested in.

“I’m so excited. Like, literally as soon as we get off this interview, I’m going straight to class. I’m putting on my coat, my uniform, and I’m getting to it,” Taylor told Marie Claire. “It’s always been a passion of mine. I’ve always loved to cook. It’s been very therapeutic for me.”

With such a demanding schedule as an entertainer and mother of two young daughters, Junie, 9, and Rue, 5, Taylor views pursuing her passion for cooking as “showing up for myself.”

“I don’t have the time to do it, but I have the time to show up for me,” she shared. “It’s ‘work’ in the best way because it’s something that you’re doing for you. It’s a passion that you’re turning into purpose.”

In July, Taylor announced on Instagram that she was enrolling in culinary school with a playful video showing off her apron and chef’s hat. In the caption, the A Thousand and One actress shared her lifelong love of cooking, noting her neighborhood nickname, the “Hood Betty Crocker,” for baking treats for friends.

“Wow… it’s really happening. A dream I’ve carried in my heart for so long is finally becoming a reality, and I’m feeling every bit of it,” Taylor wrote.

“Cooking and baking have always been more than just hobbies for me; they’ve been my passion, my peace, my therapy. Since I was a little girl, I remember being glued next to whoever was in the kitchen while the other kids played around! Lol, watching all the amazing women in my life cook all our favorite meals with so much love and joy. I must say I def got a cooking ass family lol That’s where it all started. And by the time I was 13/14, I was the “hood Betty Crocker” in Harlem, baking cakes for the neighbors and anyone who asked.”

Despite life’s “twists and turns” and her busy schedule as a working mom, Taylor is finding joy in pursuing a natural passion that continues her family’s legacy in the kitchen.

“Through every twist and turn in my life and career, the kitchen has been a safe space,” she added. “So it was always a goal of mine to get my degree in Culinary Arts & Pastry Arts but I never got around to it due to my crazy work schedule, mommy life and simply life, life’nnnnnn lol but honestly finding my way back and going to school at this time is important because it’s the time where I get to show up for me. No matter how hectic life gets, I find comfort in the rhythm of it all—the chopping, the stirring, the creating.”

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NASA, Science

Schools Ramp Up Efforts To Close STEM Gender Gap

Schools in Irving, Texas are working to close the STEM gender gap that widened after the pandemic.


Teachers in Irving, Texas, are working to close the gender gap in STEM that widened during the COVID-19 pandemic.

New analysis shows that in the years before the pandemic, the gender gap in math was nearly closed, The Associated Press reported. However, within a few years, girls lost much of the progress they had made in math scores over the previous decade. Adjustments made for remote learning during the pandemic likely disrupted this progress, allowing old biases and practices to resurface and renew the decline in young girls’ interest in math.

“Let’s just call it what it is,” said Michelle Stie, a vice president at the National Math and Science Initiative. “When society is disrupted, you fall back into bad patterns.”

A look into the average math test scores for third- through eighth-graders across 33 states found that in the 2008–2009 school year, boys generally outperformed girls. By 2019, girls had not only caught up but were ahead, with slightly more than half of districts reporting higher average math scores for girls.

However, within a few years of the pandemic, this progress reversed. In 2023–2024, boys outscored girls in math in nearly nine out of ten districts. A separate study found that gaps between boys and girls in science and math, which were nearly nonexistent in 2019, shifted by 2022 to favor boys.

Researchers attribute the decline to girls reporting higher levels of anxiety and depression during the pandemic, as well as taking on more caretaking responsibilities than boys. In addition, many programs designed to engage girls in STEM were disrupted when schools shifted to virtual learning. Experts also noted that Zoom-based instruction often relies on rote learning, which may favor boys, rather than teaching problem-solving approaches that can benefit girls.

“It wasn’t something like COVID happened and girls just fell apart,” said Megan Kuhfeld, one of the authors of the NWEA study.

To address the decline, schools like De Zavala Middle School in Irving, Texas, have invested in additional teacher training and launched a new science curriculum from LEGO Education that uses LEGO blocks to teach students about kinetic energy and genetics, among other STEM subjects.

“It is just rebuilding the culture of, we want to build critical thinkers and problem solvers,” said Erin O’Connor, a STEM and innovation specialist at de Zavala.

Teacher Tenisha Willis recently guided second graders at Irving’s Townley Elementary School in building a machine to push blocks into a container. When three girls struggled with the task, Willis knelt down to offer extra patience and support, which worked.

“Sometimes we can’t give up,” Willis said. “Sometimes we already have a solution. We just have to adjust it a little bit.”

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MacKenzie Scott

How Atlanta HBCUs Have Benefitted From The Historic $55M Gift By MacKenzie Scott

The gift also sparked a wave of philanthropic attention toward the HBCUs.


HBCUs within the Atlanta University Center have already gotten to work with the $55 million gifted by MacKenzie Scott.

Scott donated the lofty sum to the schools following her divorce from Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos. She acquired a portion of their Amazon stock, which held a price tag of more than $38 billion.

On her own mission, Scott decided to give away the majority of her new wealth, donating to multiple Black institutions in the wake of the summer 2020 protests for Black Lives Matter. That July, she gave Morehouse and Spelman $20 million apiece. Clark Atlanta received its own check for $15 million, five months later.

The money came with no restrictions, allowing the schools’ leaders to allocate the funding as they saw fit. Given systemic and historic lack of funding for HBCUs, the checks helped with scholarships, endowments, and new building developments for students on campus.

According to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Morehouse specifically used the donation to support its new campus center in development. The center will boast three stories and 58,000 square feet, providing a communal yet educational hub for the all-men’s HBCU. However, the construction costs total $80 million, with Scott’s contribution making a significant dent.

Morehouse administrators remember how Scott’s philanthropy displayed trust in Black institutions to use these resources to uplift their campuses and student bodies.

“It was refreshing to see a donor who really genuinely wants to help organizations without having any restrictions. What that really conveys is trusting those organizations to utilize the resources as they need and as they see fit, said Hodan Hassan, Morehouse’s vice president of the Office of Institutional Advancement and chief advancement officer.

Clark Atlanta put $10 million of the gift towards its endowment. The HBCU’s president called the donation a “true turning point” for the university. It is still recognized as the single largest private, individual gift in the school’s history,

“It has helped us fortify our financial base, enrich our academic offerings, expand opportunities for our scholars, and significantly enhance our visibility and reputation,” explained George T. French Jr., the school’s president, to The AJC.

The rest went to its W.E.B. Du Bois Southern Center for Studies in Public Policy, as well as its Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurial Development, with $500,000 allocated for full-tuition scholarships for graduates of Atlanta Public Schools.

Following suit, Spelman also contributed over half of its donation to its endowment. Given its smaller population of around 2,100 students in 2020, each received a $3,500 award. The leftover funding supported technology upgrades and advancing student experience.

However, the AUC agreed that the gift went beyond its direct monetary impact. It signaled to other philanthropists that HBCUs were “worth the investment,” as stated by Hassan. By amplifying its fundraising efforts, these schools acquired even more funding from other avenues, gaining millions to support their cause for Black scholars.

Scott’s generosity indirectly started a movement that spotlighted the AUC and other HBCUs. She continues to pour financial support to other causes, with billions still left to give.

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DONATA,, CEO

Breaking Barriers: Black Woman CEO To Take Helm Of $120M Airport Concessionaire

Nikki Tinsley Harland is recognized for her ability to drive growth, foster innovation, and lead with integrity.  


After serving as CEO of Concessions International LLC for 12 years and 42 years  with the company, Donata Russell Ross will retire next month.  

Nikki Tinsley Harland, a seasoned leader in the travel retail industry, will take over Oct. 6, the company said in a press release. The Atlanta-based Concessions International (CI) is one of the largest Black-owned airport concessionaires in America.  

Russell Ross helped build CI into a business with an annual revenue of $120 million and 1,100 employees. During her time as CEO, the firm said it boosted airport presence, added national brands, and elevated women and minority business participation.

CI serves over 30 national, regional, and proprietary brands at almost 40 locations in eight airports.

Russell Ross will remain board chair of H.J. Russell & Co. and assist Tinsley Harland during the transition. That process is expected to be done by late Q1 2026.

“We couldn’t have found a more perfect candidate to be my successor,” Russell Ross said of Tinsley Harland. “With her Atlanta roots, knowledge of the industry, leadership skills, innovative spirit, and proven track record, she is the ideal person to lead CI into the future and take CI to the next level.”

Tinsley Harland will become CI’s top executive after she was chosen by a CEO search committee consisting of Russell Ross’ brothers, Michael B. Russell and H. Jerome Russell.

The siblings are the children of the late legendary Atlanta businessman Herman J. Russell, who started H.J. Russell & Co. in 1952. Now led by CEO Michael Russell, it’s one of the nation’s largest Black-owned construction firms. It has been regularly listed on the Top 100 list of BLACK ENTERPRISE‘s annual ranking of America’s top Black-owned businesses.

CI was founded 46 years ago by H.J. Russell and two business partners, Felker W. Ward Jr. and Jesse Hill Jr. Russell bought out the partners in 1999. CI became entirely family-owned.

Tinsley Harland has 12 years of leadership experience in the travel retail industry. She most recently was chief operating office at Paradies Lagardère, an Atlanta-based airport concessionaire that offers travel essentials, specialty retail, and dining.

CI cited Tinsley Harland’s ability to drive growth, foster innovation, and lead with integrity.  

“I am excited to join Concessions International as CEO and build upon the incredible foundation and legacy established by those who came before me, and particularly by Donata, who has served as an industry role model for so many of us,” Tinsley Harland said. 

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Mike Tyson, JAKE PAUL, medical, incident, contain, scare, boxing

Mike Tyson Admits To Using Fentanyl ‘Quite A Few Times’ During His Legendary Boxing Career 

Fentanyl is defined as a highly potent synthetic opioid that is now legal in the U.S. as it has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for pain relief.


Boxing legend Mike Tyson made a striking admission during a recent interview, confessing that he used the drug fentanyl “quite a few times” throughout his 1990s boxing career, Fox News reports. 

During an interview on “The Katie Miller Podcast,” the heavyweight champ touched on his well-known usage of marijuana after host Katie Miller asked him how he balances being a user and a role model. After stating that he isn’t sure, given “this is what I do and that’s part of his life as a human being, Tyson revealed that he used fentanyl as a painkiller several times, admitting that it’s like heroin.

“It was a painkiller, and I used to use it to patch up my toe,” Tyson said. “It was like heroin — once it wears off and you take the Band-Aid off, you start withdrawing, throwing up, just like if you were on heroin.” 

Despite it helping with the pain that came along with the sport, Tyson said he had no choice but to stop since it was illegal back then, especially in the sports industry. “It was illegal if it [was] caught in my bloodstream. It was a narcotic, my friend told me. It was brand new. I told my friend ‘Could I use this?’ No one ever heard of it,” he continued. 

According to the New York Post, fentanyl is defined as a highly potent synthetic opioid that is now legal in the U.S. as it has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for pain relief, but the warning comes as it can be fatal if given unprescribed in small doses. The boxing champ has become an anti-fentanyl advocate in retirement after seeing firsthand the effects of it. In 2009, his close friend Arturo Gatti passed away after a lengthy battle with opioids. 

Back in June 2009, he teamed up with acting US Attorney for New Jersey Alina Habba to educate people on the dangers of fentanyl while taking a tour of a US Drug Enforcement Agency laboratory in New York City. “Let’s keep America safe. Fentanyl is killing us,” he wrote on X with corresponding photos.

While Tyson is a vocal advocate of marijuana usage for athletes, saying they “play better” after smoking, studies have shown that fentanyl is nothing to play around with, particularly for older Black men. Data from a 2024 study highlighted how a majority of men in the U.S. between the ages of 54 and 73 have died from opioid overdoses due to fentanyl. 

Data from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates roughly 48,422 people died in 2024 from consuming fentanyl illicitly.

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education, teachers

Teachers Unions Sue Trump Administration For Harmful Immigration Policies

Teachers believe increased ICE presence near schools is a deterrent to immigrant students and parents.


The two largest teachers’ unions in America are suing the Trump administration for targeting immigrants in schools. 

The National Education Association (NEA) and the American Federation of Teachers, which represent approximately 4 million teachers and school staff nationwide, brought the suit. The suit argues that the recent immigration mandate, which allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement to make arrests near schools, is negatively impacting students, according to the NEA press release. Due to increased fear in immigrant communities, some students have been staying home or dropping out of school.  

The lawsuit states that educators have observed rising anxiety and lower attendance. Additionally, teachers say that immigrant parents are reluctant to seek out school resources. Teachers in several states report that students are declining to enroll in programs like special education or English-learner classes. Educators speculate that the decrease in student participation and attendance is due to concerns that school interactions could expose families to immigration risks. 

In an interview with NBC, preschool teacher Lauren Fong asked, “Why a school? Why not someplace else, any place else? It was in the parking lot, where it could be witnessed by so many young children.” 

In California’s Central Valley region, the case states that in January and February, data showed a 22% increase in student absences compared to the same months over the two previous school years, according to a study conducted by Stanford University’s Institute for Economic Policy Research. The increase followed immigration raids. 

The lawsuit was filed in federal court in Eugene, Oregon. It also involves an Oregon farmworker union and several churches. Prosecutors are claiming that the policy reversal and enforcement actions violate the Administrative Procedure Act and First Amendment rights of affected communities. 

At the beginning of President Donald Trump’s second term, his administration eliminated a long-standing policy that had protected certain locations, such as schools, hospitals, and places of worship, from immigration enforcement, except under very limited circumstances. The lawsuit claims that removing those protections “violated the law.” 

Multiple incidents of ICE activity are cited in the suit. Among them was an Oregon operation where agents wearing masks broke a car window and removed a child’s father from his vehicle. The incident occurred shortly after the child was dropped off at preschool. The school was locked down. Teachers played music so that students would not hear what was happening outside. 

The Associated Press reported on the Department of Homeland Security’s response. Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said arrests at schools or churches would still require supervision. 

She said, “Officers would need secondary supervisor approval before any action can be taken in locations such as a church or a school. We expect these to be extremely rare.” 

Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Association, said the administration is creating “fear and chaos” and added that “our students, schools, and communities are paying the price.” 

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, said, “America’s classrooms must be safe and welcoming places of learning and discovery.”

RELATED CONTENT: How A Haitian Man Is Making Majority Trump-Backing Ohio Town Confront Party’s Immigration Views

LaToya Cantrell, New Orleans Mayor

New Orleans Mayor Pleads Not Guilty To Charges Related To Alleged Affair with Former Bodyguard

LaToya Cantrell is accused of using taxpayer money to fund multiple rendezvous and personal entertainment with her bodyguard.


On Aug. 10, New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell pleaded not guilty to federal charges.

Cantrell is accused of fraud, obstruction and conspiracy. The charges stem from an alleged romantic relationship with her former bodyguard, Jeffrey Vappie.

According to documents, the New Orleans mayor used taxpayer money to fund multiple rendezvous and personal entertainment with Vappie while he was on duty. Cantrell paid for personal travel and entertainment that totaled nearly $70,000, according to the indictment.

Additionally, she is accused of attempting to hide the relationship by destroying evidence. Vappie and Cantrell both allegedly deleted multiple messages and presented false statements to conceal the affair. 

“Cantrell and Vappie used WhatsApp for more than 15,000 messages, where they professed their love and plotted to harass a citizen who helped expose their relationship, delete evidence, make false statements to FBI agents, “and ultimately to commit perjury before a federal grand jury,” acting U.S. Attorney Michael Simpson said.

During the hearing, U.S. Magistrate Judge Karen Wells Roby ordered Cantrell to surrender her passport and restricted her travel to the southeast region of Louisiana. Cantrell must obtain permission from probation officers if she wants to travel outside of the area. She was also barred from contacting Vappie. 

Vappie, who retired from the New Orleans Police Department retiree in 2024, pleaded not guilty to charges of wire fraud and making false statements.

Cantrell, the first female mayor in New Orleans history to face criminal charges while in office, will end her second term in January 2026.

U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Louisiana claims Cantrell’s administration misused more than $70,000 in public funds for Vappie’s travel costs, including meals, overtime pay, and transportation. Prosecutors contend she activated message-deleting features after media reports surfaced and that she used her position to help hide evidence. 

Cantrell has denied that the relationship was romantic and has described some of the criticism as rooted in bias because of her race and gender. Her lawyer also stated the case will not impede her duties as mayor. 

RELATED CONTENT: ‘We Are Not Resilient, We Are Indomitable’: New Orleans Residents Speak Out 20 Years After Hurricane Katrina

knicks, spike lee, pope

Clifton Powell Claims Spike Lee Doesn’t ‘Take Care Of His Own People’

Actor Clifton Powell doubles down on his past criticism of Spike Lee.


Actor Clifton Powell is speaking out about what he calls Spike Lee’s poor business practices and alleged mistreatment of fellow Black actors.

On a recent episode of The Art of Dialogue, Powell, who has over 250 acting credits, stood by his criticism of Lee, calling them “facts” he won’t take back, and urged critics to investigate “the kind of business” Lee conducted behind the scenes.

“I don’t dislike Spike Lee. I dislike some of his business practices,” Powell said in a clip shared online. “And people can think about me with one guy call in and say, ‘you old C-list a** actor talking about Spike.’ The problem is people talk a lot of stuff and don’t do their research.”

https://twitter.com/ArtOfDialogue_/status/1965556947454951704

Powell says he’s done his research on the “Do the Right Thing” filmmaker and points to fellow Black actors, including Charles Dutton, who have backed his criticism of Lee.

“I’m never going to accept a Black man doing to us what the man has been doing for the last 70,000 years,” Powell said. “And so go do your research. Listen to what Charles Dutton said. He said Clifton Powell wasn’t wrong.”

Although Powell has never worked with Spike Lee directly, he says friends who have reported that the Academy Award-winning director had a history of mistreating his cast.

“I never threatened him, but I don’t appreciate how he did business with us back in the day,” Powell said. “Not me, but my friends, because I’ve never worked with him.”

Powell acknowledged his respect for Black media moguls like Tyler Perry and even praised Lee’s latest film with Denzel Washington, Highest 2 Lowest. While he recognizes that Black entertainers “got to be careful condemning each other in public,” he says his previous remarks about Lee were made in jest and never intended to go viral.

The Next Friday star is more critical of Lee’s public attacks on Tyler Perry, whom he knows personally and has never had a negative interaction with. Although Powell admits he shouldn’t have publicly criticized Lee, he continues to stand by his claims regarding the director’s alleged poor business practices.

“I don’t respect his business policies,” Powell said.

It was during a 2011 appearance on the Russ Par Morning Show when Powell first made his dislike for Spike Lee public, calling the “Crooklyn” director a “hater” toward his own people.

“I don’t like Spike. I have never said it publicly, but Spike is a hater,” Powell said at the time. “He was doing all these movies, Sam [Samuel L. Jackson] and all these guys know he’s a hater. He kept all the money; there was lawsuits against him. Spike needs to go sit his punk a** down and stop talking about Tyler Perry.”

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