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NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label Garrison Keillor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garrison Keillor. Show all posts

Saturday, August 3, 2019

FOCUS: Garrison Keillor | What You Learn From Losing a Ballgame







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02 August 19
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FOCUS: Garrison Keillor | What You Learn From Losing a Ballgame 
Garrison Keillor. (photo: Minnesota Public Radio)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "I sat up high over third base watching my pitcher get pounded by the New York Yankees a few nights ago, looking out on what used to be the printing and warehouse district of Minneapolis."
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Saturday, February 9, 2019

Garrison Keillor | Winter Is Winter, It's Not the Tribulation






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08 February 19
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Garrison Keillor | Winter Is Winter, It's Not the Tribulation 
Garrison Keillor. (photo: MPR)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "It irks me, the notion that winter is a dreadful tribulation. Weather forecasts delivered in funereal tones as if two or three inches of snow were an outbreak of typhus, a front-page story about a snowstorm 'lashing' New England."
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Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, was upset after the president ordered him to write the memo, according to Andrew McCabe's book. (photo: Leah Millis/Reuters)
Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, was upset after the president ordered him to write the memo, according to Andrew McCabe's book. (photo: Leah Millis/Reuters)

Rosenstein Did Not Want to Write Memo Justifying Comey Firing, According to New Book
Jon Swaine, Guardian UK
Swaine writes: "The deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, privately complained that he was ordered by president Donald Trump to write the notorious memo justifying the firing of the FBI director James Comey, according to Comey's former deputy."
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Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. (photo: Doug Mills/Getty)
Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. (photo: Doug Mills/Getty)

The Supreme Court Just Handed Down a Truly Shocking Attack on Muslims
Ian Millhiser, ThinkProgress
Millhiser writes: "The issue in this case is not whether Mr. Ray may be executed, it is whether a Muslim inmate is entitled to be treated exactly the same way as a Christian while that inmate is being executed."
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Native American protesters marched to the National Butterfly Center in South Texas this morning to oppose border wall construction. (photo: Gus Bova/Facebook)
Native American protesters marched to the National Butterfly Center in South Texas this morning to oppose border wall construction. (photo: Gus Bova/Facebook)

"We've Had Enough": Native Americans and Environmentalists Are in a Last-Ditch Fight Over a Border Wall in Texas
Claudia Koerner, BuzzFeed
Koerner writes: "Environmentalists, landowners, and tribal members say a 30-foot-tall barrier will cause irreversible disruption in the Rio Grande Valley."
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Workers protest against Google's handling of sexual misconduct allegations and gender equality at the company's Mountain View, California, headquarters in November. (photo: Noah Berger/AP)
Workers protest against Google's handling of sexual misconduct allegations and gender equality at the company's Mountain View, California, headquarters in November. (photo: Noah Berger/AP)

New Trump Policy Makes It Easier for Big Tech to Discriminate, Insiders Say
Sam Levin, Guardian UK
Levin writes: "The Trump administration is making it easier for tech companies to discriminate against workers, with a policy that impedes efforts to close the gender pay gap in Silicon Valley, current and former US labor officials said."
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Market in Venezuela. (photo: EPA)
Market in Venezuela. (photo: EPA)

US Media Ignore - and Applaud - Economic War on Venezuela
Gregory Shupak, FAIR
Shupak writes: "The US media chorus supporting a US overthrow of the Venezuelan government has for years pointed to the country's economic crisis as a justification for regime change, while whitewashing the ways in which the US has strangled the Venezuelan economy."
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Excavation equipment is used to search for an oil leak close to where the TransCanada Corp's Keystone oil pipeline runs through northern St. Charles County off of Highway C on Thursday, February 7, 2019. (photo: David Carson/St. Louis Dispatch)
Excavation equipment is used to search for an oil leak close to where the TransCanada Corp's Keystone oil pipeline runs through northern St. Charles County off of Highway C on Thursday, February 7, 2019. (photo: David Carson/St. Louis Dispatch)


Keystone Pipeline Shutdown After Leak Near Mississippi River in Missouri
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Excerpt: "TransCanada said Friday its Keystone pipeline is likely the source of an oil leak in St. Charles County."
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Monday, February 4, 2019

Garrison Keillor | The Old Indoorsman Looks Out at Winter






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Garrison Keillor | The Old Indoorsman Looks Out at Winter 
Garrison Keillor. (photo: WPPB)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Blog
Keillor writes: "Severe cold weather gets a person's attention and encourages intelligent adaptation to real-life conditions by threatening genuine misery if, for example, you venture outdoors in your bloomers to tinkle in the shrubbery."
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Tulsi Gabbard. (photo: Reuters)
Tulsi Gabbard. (photo: Reuters)

Congresswoman Gabbard Officially Declares 2020 Candidacy
James Oliphant, Reuters
Oliphant writes: "U.S. Representative Tulsi Gabbard, an Iraq War veteran who at times has had a spiky relationship with the Democratic Party, on Saturday added another liberal voice to a burgeoning field of candidates seeking the party's 2020 presidential nomination."
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Ralph Northam's medical school yearbook page. (photo: AP)
Ralph Northam's medical school yearbook page. (photo: AP)

Policies That Harm Black Bodies Deserve the Same Outrage as Blackface
Shanita Hubbard, Guardian UK
Hubbard writes: "Racism and bigotry are woven into the fabric of this nation. Dismissing this notion, or pretending that progress made with social inequality negates the point, is intellectually dishonest at best. Without question, racism is fully present in America." 

Governor Ralph Northam faces calls to resign over a yearbook photo. That’s good, but voter suppression and other racist policies deserve equal outrage

acism and bigotry are woven into the fabric of this nation. Dismissing this notion, or pretending that progress made with social inequality negates the point, is intellectually dishonest at best. Without question, racism is fully present in America.
Yet it appears the impetus to publicly demand accountability for racism is largely commenced by blatant examples, rather than practices and policies that directly harm people of color. The recent conversations around Virginia governor Ralph Northam fully illustrate this point.
photo from a 1984 yearbook shows a man in blackface standing next to a person dressed as a member of the Ku Klux Klan. It was made public on Friday. In response, the governor seemingly declared that he was in the photo, though he did not say which man was him. The following day, he said he was not in the photo, but mentioned that he once wore a dark shoe polish on his face as part of a Michael Jackson costume.
Unsurprisingly, the backlash was swift, with Republicans and Democrats calling for his resignation. And with good cause. The blackface picture is not only transparently racist, it is another painful reminder of how normalized this behavior is. In 1984, this picture was included in a yearbook. Northam says he had never seen the yearbook before Friday. If he had, he presumably would never have imagined it would have political ramifications.
This absolutely warrants the public outcry it is receiving, and demanding our leaders be held accountable for their actions is the mark of a healthy democracy. But if the litmus test for accountability is transparent racism, then this same vigor must be applied to policies and practices and the politicians who impose them.
Bipartisan outrage and immediate public acknowledgment of racism must extend beyond images of blackface. The same citizens and politicians who boldly acknowledge that Northam should be held accountable should join the group of people who are ignored when publicly addressing other aspects of our political landscape that are racist and detrimental.
Voter suppression not only meets this same standard, it threatens democracy itself. Yet it has reportedly occurred several times within recent elections, to less outrage from politicians and even some private citizens.
An investigation conducted by the Associated Press indicated that since 2012, in his position as Georgia secretary of state, Brian Kemp cancelled more than 1 million voter registrations. Kemp, the Republican opponent of Democrat Stacey Abrams in the 2018 gubernatorial election, also froze 53,000 registrations. A huge portion of those belonged to African American voters; many were unaware their registration was on hold.
In 2017, the AP said, Kemp cancelled 670,000 registrations. Asked about this, he called it “voter roll maintenance”. Given that many of those impacted by this “maintenance” were African Americans, this act can be viewed more as a form of voter suppression. After a tumultuous and historic election, Kemp became governor by a slim margin.
In Republican states, voter suppression also appears to be done preemptively, when the population of communities of color begins to rise. According to census estimates, Texas has experienced a large growth in the Hispanic population. In 2010, the state had 9.7 million Hispanics. In 2017 it was 11.2 million, while the population of white Texans had only increased by approximately half a million people to 11.9 million. It is projected that by 2022, Texas will be majority Hispanic.
Perhaps this is a factor in the state’s recent announcement that it will cut 95,000 people from the voter rolls because “they don’t seem to be citizens”. The League of United Latin American Citizens has filed suit against Texas secretary of state David Whitley, claiming a violation of the Voting Rights Act and an attempt to deter Latinos from voting.
From Texas to Georgia, claims of voter suppression are not uncommon. Voter suppression impacts the ability of marginalized communities to fully participate in the democratic process upon which this nation prides itself. It silences voices and systemically targets people of color in an attempt to strip them of power. It makes them more susceptible to living with the ramifications of policy decisions that could disproportionately harm them. It is by all accounts racist and harmful.

Yet the public outcry and demand to hold those responsible accountable are not nearly as loud as the outrage about politicians apparently in blackface. Holding Governor Northam accountable and demanding his resignation is more than fair. In fact, a zero tolerance policy around racism should be the standard. I just hope this becomes more of a practice with politicians who were smart enough to avoid evidence of blackface, but still impose policies that harm black and brown bodies.


Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., speaks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2018, following a meeting with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus and White House Chief of Staff John Kelly. (photo: Susan Walsh/AP)
Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., speaks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2018, following a meeting with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus and White House Chief of Staff John Kelly. (photo: Susan Walsh/AP)

Puerto Rico Statehood Supporters Pin Hopes on House Action
Rafael Bernal, The Hill
Bernal writes: "The head of Puerto Rico's Statehood Commission has high hopes for action on statehood legislation in the U.S. House now that Democrats are in the majority."
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Gillette Super Bowl ad. (photo: Gillette)
Gillette Super Bowl ad. (photo: Gillette)

'Be a Man': What Does That Mean in Modern America?
Harry Bruinius, The Christian Science Monitor
Bruinius writes: "Almost a decade ago, when Timothy Malefyt was doing research on the nitty-gritties of masculinity for his client Gillette, he and his small team of corporate anthropologists observed what they considered to be a 'paradoxical' set of masculine values among NASCAR fans."
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A worker cleans a museum display case in Riyadh. The departure of more than 1 million foreign workers since 2017 has added to a sense of uncertainty in Saudi Arabia. (photo: Salwan Georges/AP)
A worker cleans a museum display case in Riyadh. The departure of more than 1 million foreign workers since 2017 has added to a sense of uncertainty in Saudi Arabia. (photo: Salwan Georges/AP)

Saudi Arabia Encouraged Foreign Workers to Leave - and Is Struggling After So Many Did
Kareem Fahim, The Washington Post
Fahim writes: "Rising costs, as part of an overhaul of the economy intended to make Saudi Arabia less dependent on oil, have hit low-wage foreign workers especially hard. The result has been a massive exodus of foreigners from the labor force."
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Marshes at Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge on Maryland's eastern shore. (photo: Ataraxy22/Wikimedia)
Marshes at Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge on Maryland's eastern shore. (photo: Ataraxy22/Wikimedia)

Protecting the World's Wetlands: 5 Essential Reads
Jennifer Weeks, The Conversation
Weeks writes: "World Wetlands Day on Feb. 2 marks the date when 18 nations signed the Convention on Wetlands in 1971, in the Iranian city of Ramsar on the shores of the Caspian Sea."
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Sunday, January 13, 2019

Garrison Keillor | Life Is Good, Unless You Get on the Wrong Train






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12 January 19
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TO MY FELLOW SUPPORTERS - We're kind of a family. We keep RSN going and I love you. Thank you for donating. You get it. Marc and his staff work hard to keep us current on Progressive issues, Politics, Black Lives Matter, Bernie Sanders, Robert Reich, etc. etc, etc. We don't want to lose the best thing going. But some people choose to read RSN every day and not contribute. I now turn directly to YOU who are not contributing. Don't run and hide. I'm talking to you. You're starting to piss me off. In a big way. You like getting something for nothing. Who doesn't? But what you don't realize is that the only way to keep this amazing newsletter ALIVE is to DONATE. Even if it's a little now and then it would help. It doesn't even have to be $27/month the way Bernie raised millions. I'll let Marc set that monthly donation amount for being able to sustain the publication. Please, be part of our family and let us know you think RSN is worth keeping alive. / Your fellow RSN reader, Carrie Honigman

Garrison Keillor | Life Is Good, Unless You Get on the Wrong Train 
Garrison Keillor. (photo: WPPB)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "In response to the government shutdown, I have stayed in bed, gone without bathing, turned off the phone. I am going to continue until Walmart sends me six fresh walleye and a set of white sidewalls autographed by Barbara Walters. I know what is needed and I can hold out for years if I have to."
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Migrants, part of a caravan of thousands from Central America trying to reach the United States, climb down a steep hill near the border wall into the U.S. from Tijuana, Mexico. (photo: Leah Millis/Reuters)
Migrants, part of a caravan of thousands from Central America trying to reach the United States, climb down a steep hill near the border wall into the U.S. from Tijuana, Mexico. (photo: Leah Millis/Reuters)

If the Shutdown Lasts Two More Weeks, the Cost to the Economy Will Exceed Price of Trump's Wall
Yun Li, CNBC
Li writes: "If the government shutdown lasts another two weeks, the total cost to the U.S. economy would exceed the price of building the proposed border wall."
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Alex Jones. (photo: AP)
Alex Jones. (photo: AP)



EXCERPT: 

lex Jones will have to turn over his tax returns, business plans, and marketing data in a lawsuit with families of Sandy Hook victims, who say he pushed conspiracy theories about the school shooting to get rich.


Koerner writes: "Alex Jones will have to turn over his tax returns, business plans, and marketing data in a lawsuit with families of Sandy Hook victims, who say he pushed conspiracy theories about the school shooting to get rich."
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A caravan of migrants moving north after crossing the border from Honduras into Guatemala. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)
A caravan of migrants moving north after crossing the border from Honduras into Guatemala. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)

A New Migrant Caravan Is Forming in Central America, With Plans to Leave Next Week
Sarah Kinosian and Kevin Sieff, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "Another migrant caravan is forming in Honduras, with plans to set out next week on a journey that will once again test the immigration policies of Mexico and the United States."
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Brian Kolfage. (photo: ABC)
Brian Kolfage. (photo: ABC)

Far-Right Grifter's Campaign to Crowdfund Donald Trump's Border Project Hits a Wall
Adam Peck, ThinkProgress
Peck writes: "At the end of last year, shortly before the holidays and as the federal government was careening towards a partial shutdown, one of Donald Trump's more enterprising supporters took it upon himself to fund the president's vanity project along the U.S. -Mexico border."
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French protesters clad in high-visibility yellow vests. (photo: AFP)
French protesters clad in high-visibility yellow vests. (photo: AFP)

Yellow Vests Continue Protests Despite Government Threats
teleSUR
Excerpt: "Yellow Vests protesters congregated at different points in France, for the ninth Saturday of demonstrations, against the austerity policies of President Emmanuel Macron."
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A corn farmer. (photo: Austin Public Library)
A corn farmer. (photo: Austin Public Library)

US Taxpayers on the Hook for Insuring Farmers Against Growing Climate Risks
Georgina Gustin, InsideClimate News
Gustin writes: "Like every Midwestern farmer, Jerry Peckumn relies on a few things going right every season. Rain, but no deluge. Sunshine, but no heat wave. A timely cycling of the seasons."
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Friday, January 4, 2019

FOCUS: Garrison Keillor | Onward, My Friends! Courage! Comedy!






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03 January 19
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FOCUS: Garrison Keillor | Onward, My Friends! Courage! Comedy! 
Garrison Keillor. (photo: NPR)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "My first resolution for 2019 is 'Lighten up. When someone asks you how you are, say "Never better" and say it with conviction, make it be true.' And my second resolution is: 'Don't bother fighting with ignorance. It doesn't bother him, and you wind up with stupidity all over you.'"
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Sunday, December 30, 2018

Garrison Keillor | A Christmas Letter From New York




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30 December 18

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Waiting until the situation is dire is abusive of the process.
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Reader Supported News
29 December 18
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Garrison Keillor | A Christmas Letter From New York 
Garrison Keillor. (photo: WPPB)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "It was, in my opinion, the best Christmas ever. Men are running the country whom you wouldn't trust to heat up frozen dinners, a government shutdown meant that TSA people worked as volunteers (and also the DOJ employees investigating Individual-1's dealings with the Russians), and on Wall Street the blue chips were selling like buffalo chips."
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A TSA worker works at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, December 25, 2018. (photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP)
A TSA worker works at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, December 25, 2018. (photo: Nam Y. 



Trump Issues Executive Order Freezing Federal Workers' Pay in 2019
Veronica Stracqualursi and Kevin Liptak, CNN
Excerpt: "President Donald Trump issued an executive order Friday freezing federal workers' pay for 2019, following through on a proposal he announced earlier in the year."
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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. (photo: Bryan Cox/Getty Images)
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. (photo: Bryan Cox/Getty Images)

He Drew His School Mascot - and ICE Labeled Him a Gang Member
Hannah Dreier, ProPublica
Dreier writes: "When Alex walked into school on June 14, 2017, it felt as if summer had already started. He didn't have regular classes, just a standardized math test in the late morning."
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People gather around the Ben & Jerry's 'Yes on 4' truck as they learn about Amendment 4 at Charles Hadley Park in Miami, October 22, 2018. (photo: Wilfredo Lee/AP)
People gather around the Ben & Jerry's 'Yes on 4' truck as they learn about Amendment 4 at Charles Hadley Park in Miami, October 22, 2018. (photo: Wilfredo Lee/AP)

Florida Republicans Are Working to Block Restoration Voting Rights for Felons, Despite Recent Vote
Mariana Alfaro, Business Insider
Alfaro writes: "Florida lawmakers might not be ready to put Amendment 4 - a measure approved by 64.5% of Florida voters that would give voting rights back to most felons who have completed their sentences - into action."
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CAIR launched a campaign to publicize the family's plight and the State Department granted Shaima Swileh a waiver to visit her dying son. (photo: NBC)
CAIR launched a campaign to publicize the family's plight and the State Department granted Shaima Swileh a waiver to visit her dying son. (photo: NBC)

Two-Year-Old Whose Yemeni Mother Fought Trump's Muslim Ban to Visit Him Dies in Hospital
Saphora Smith, NBC News
Smith writes: "A terminally ill boy whose Yemeni mother fought for more than a year to visit him after being barred from entering the U.S. by the Trump administration's travel ban has died in hospital in California."
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A Honduran family stands next to the border fence after they turned themselves in to Border Patrol agents. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)
A Honduran family stands next to the border fence after they turned themselves in to Border Patrol agents. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)

The Problem With Border Security
Joseph Nevins, NACLA
Nevins writes: "On December 11, President Donald Trump hosted an Oval Office sit-down with incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Senate Minority Leader Charles 'Chuck' Schumer (D-NY)."
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Two elephants play in a river in Thailand. (photo: Wootthisak Nirongboot/Getty Images)
Two elephants play in a river in Thailand. (photo: Wootthisak Nirongboot/Getty Images)

An Elephant's Personhood on Trial
Brandon Keim, The Atlantic
Keim writes: "Forty-seven years ago, the Asian elephant now known as Happy was one of seven calves captured - probably in Thailand, but details are hazy - and sent to the United States."
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