The squadrons and dets ended up getting assigned, you know, overseas.
Scott:But Clark Gable actually trained there.
Scott:I think he was an officer, maybe
Jenn:I think he was an officer, maybe a major.
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:When the public found out that he was training there, the phone lines would
Scott:get jammed up for hours every now and then with his fans trying to get a
Scott:hold of him, trying to kind of wish him
Scott:luck, or girls trying to call him, or whatever it was, because
Scott:he was still a famous movie
Scott:star.
Scott:Welcome to talk with history.
Scott:I am your host, Scott here with my wife and
Jenn:Hello.
Scott:this podcast, inspired world travels, YouTube channel journey,
Scott:deeper conversations with the curious,
Scott:Now I don't have any like fancy wordy intro tonight, but I do want
Scott:to continue to ask folks for reviews.
Scott:We've been kind of getting an uptick in downloads for the past couple
Scott:listening, I'm always looking for feedback for And also, and now
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Scott:So if you are a coffee fan, much like myself,
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Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:I appreciate
Scott:Yeah, it's, it's, it's two bucks a month.
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Scott:say thank you to them by So that, that is what, if you want to contribute
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Scott:We will call each of those out, each of those groups out at least once a
Scott:month on the podcast So, Jen, we are talking, people kind of saw the show
Scott:title about Medal of Honor, so tell us a little bit about, kind of, why
Scott:we're talking about Medal of Honor
Jenn:Tell us a little bit about Medal of Honor recipients tonight.
Jenn:highest recognition bestows
Jenn:the United States military bestows on a service member and
Jenn:Teddy Roosevelt really lobbied for one and never received it and General
Jenn:George Patton when said I would sell my immortal soul for that metal Yes
Jenn:The Medal of Honor was first authorized in 1861 for the sailors and Marines, and
Jenn:the following year for soldiers as well.
Jenn:So it was first authorized during the Civil War and
Scott:Okay.
Scott:So that's, that's when it started.
Scott:So the medal of honor began coming out of the civil war, 1861.
Scott:It looks like from what I can see here, the efforts of Senator James
Scott:Grimes and the secretary of Navy Gideon Wells, we actually,
Jenn:or
Jenn:twice we have mm-hmm.
Scott:and.
Scott:inspire sailors to valorous service, and each of the, what I, one of the
Scott:things I found interesting, and I've found this over the course we've talked
Scott:about but each service, each service's actually is a little bit different.
Scott:you see each one, they're not all the exact kind of actual metal, right?
Scott:The Army's is that's one thing that until I started making videos,
Scott:I actually didn't realize that.
Scott:They still have that classic kind of ribbon collar with the stars square and
Scott:then the metal that hangs down from it.
Scott:But each service
Jenn:Yes.
Jenn:And you were thinking of the first formal system for rewarding acts of
Jenn:individual gallantry by the nation's fighting men was established by General
Jenn:George Washington, August 7, 1782.
Jenn:And that was designed to recognize any singularity meritorious
Jenn:recognize any singularly , meritorious
Jenn:action.
Jenn:And the award consisted of a purple cloth heart.
Jenn:So it's kind of how the purple heart started.
Jenn:It's not what the purple heart Is, is now
Scott:started.
Scott:it's for
Jenn:wounded in action.
Jenn:So, But the, but it was started by George Washington recognized, but
Jenn:the actual title medal of honor did not come around until Civil War.
Jenn:And you remember us talking about Secretary of Navy Gideon
Jenn:Wells because of the ironclad.
Jenn:So and because we talk about Mary Lovestry.
Jenn:She presented the plans for the ironclad to him.
Jenn:So if you wanna listen to any of those episodes, the Battle of the Ironclads and
Jenn:Mary Vetri, she was the spy down here.
Jenn:African American spy who got the plans when they were building
Jenn:when the south was building their
Scott:and pretty pivotal to but to bring it back to the Medal of Honor while
Scott:we're talking about it today, again, this is another thing that we got to
Scott:see on our jam packed Western road trip when we were again in Pueblo, Colorado
Scott:at the Pueblo Weisbrod Air And one of the displays that they had there was
Scott:kind of this whole section to service men and women mostly historical stuff.
Scott:They had a Medal of Honor
Scott:section, and we, we weren't expecting
Jenn:We weren't expecting that.
Jenn:And what's very interesting is Dwight D.
Jenn:Eisenhower, Upon presenting one of these Medal of Honors to one of these recipients
Jenn:from Pueblo, Colorado, said to him in
Jenn:1953, What is it?
Jenn:Something in the water out there in Pueblo?
Jenn:All you guys turn out to be heroes.
Jenn:And so, Then in 1993, there was a congressman who read
Jenn:into the congressional record information about Pueblo and its
Jenn:recipients of the Medal of Honor.
Jenn:And he cited at the time, it was the only city in a record to have
Jenn:four living recipients of the Medal of Honor from the same hometown.
Scott:And so we actually open our video with John Hill,
Scott:who's one of the docents there.
Scott:And he taught, he showed us the picture of all four recipients,
Scott:you know, living at the time.
Scott:I think today, which in June, you know, for us a I think there was
Scott:only one that was, that was still
Jenn:There's only one still
Jenn:living
Scott:still living so who were, who were the four?
Scott:That we're from
Jenn:So Pueblo, Colorado has since been called the home of heroes because of this.
Jenn:So you have four Congressional Medal of Honor recipients.
Jenn:You have William J.
Jenn:Crawford, Army, World War II.
Jenn:He's the one we Ok we're just going to go through what happened in Vietnam, and I
Jenn:want to share These four gentlemen are all from Pueblo, Colorado, and what they did.
Jenn:So when you read about what they did.
Jenn:it's why
Jenn:the Medal of Honor is such a prestigious, you know, award.
Jenn:It's that next level, right?
Jenn:And we we focus on Crawford.
Jenn:because his story is just so interesting.
Jenn:Crawford is a World War II fighter.
Jenn:He basically disarms three machine gun nests of the Nazis during
Jenn:World War II single handedly.
Jenn:Just kind of runs out there, throws grenades.
Jenn:His grenades happen to be spot on.
Jenn:Blows up these nests.
Jenn:He's able to, basically, his men are taking so much
Jenn:fire that they can't get by.
Jenn:He takes a ton of fire.
Jenn:And it's almost like he says, like, the bullets were going between his legs
Scott:he, and he says it himself, in some of the video that we cut in, because for
Scott:a lot of these Medal of Honor that are more modern there's a site, and it's, if
Scott:you Google it, you can find it pretty but it's a lot of them telling their story.
Scott:And so we found that video, and I, I kind of cut it in to, to
Scott:John talking about it as well.
Scott:And, and he literally says, like, I, I ran, he's like, and I.
Scott:He basically sounds surprised he didn't get shot.
Scott:He's like, bullets must have been going between my
Jenn:And it's just like.
Jenn:Totally badass, but so he does this.
Jenn:He's in Italy at the time and subsequently he gets captured and he
Jenn:spends 19 months as a prisoner of war.
Jenn:But during those 19 months he is awarded the Medal of Honor.
Jenn:And so because he's a prisoner of war and they actually think he has
Scott:thought he was
Jenn:they posthumously present the medal to his father and
Jenn:Truman presents it to his father.
Jenn:And so again, and then he's He's, you know, he's at least as a
Jenn:prisoner, he comes back home, gets the Medal of Honor from his father.
Jenn:So he's never given his Medal of Honor from a president, which is how you
Jenn:should receive the Medal of Honor.
Jenn:You should get it from the sitting president.
Scott:and he actually, I did a little bit further research.
Scott:He comes back and he finishes a full career in the army.
Scott:retires as a Master Sergeant Which is in, which is incredible to me.
Scott:So here he, here he is, he comes back, you receives his medal of honor from his dad.
Scott:Right.
Scott:You know,
Jenn:Oh yeah, while you're a prisoner, I got this from the
Scott:right.
Scott:And then finishes a full career, retires as a master sergeant.
Scott:And then how, so how did we, how
Scott:did, how did
Jenn:after retirement, he takes a job as a custodian at the Air Force Academy,
Jenn:because it's not far from Pueblo,
Scott:45 minutes
Jenn:And so he's, you know, he wants to mentor young cadets and he's a,
Jenn:you know, he's the custodian there.
Jenn:And then one of the cadets writes a paper.
Jenn:And I.
Jenn:And he writes his paper on the janitor's lessons and leadership.
Jenn:And then they start to look up his background and realize that he
Jenn:has achieved the Medal of Honor.
Jenn:But
Scott:he was doing
Scott:research for
Jenn:he was to be for, for the
Scott:he recognized the name.
Scott:Mm-hmm.
Scott:, and went and asked him.
Scott:He's like, Hey, are you the William J.
Scott:Crawford?
Scott:Who's the William J.
Scott:Crawford in this Medal of Honor book over
Scott:here?
Scott:And
Scott:he was like, yeah, that's me.
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:. And
Jenn:that's when they came to realize he never received his Medal
Jenn:of Honor from a sitting president.
Jenn:So at the Air Force Academy graduation, President 1985 at that ceremony.
Jenn:Presents him with the Medal of Honor.
Jenn:Cool.
Jenn:It was pretty cool.
Jenn:Mm-hmm.
Jenn:. Scott: Reagan presents him with the clip of Reagan speaking,
Jenn:calling him up on stage.
Jenn:Now, he, he knew.
Jenn:He was in, he was in, William Crawford was wearing his but he calls him up on
Jenn:stage, you know, gives him the medal.
Jenn:And then, of course, Reagan has to be Reagan.
Jenn:Like, he like, He, he finishes that whole little mini presentation, then he looks
Jenn:around because everybody's standing up for presentation, and he kind of looks
Jenn:and speaks to someone off to the side, and he's like, I think everybody can
Jenn:see, sit down, right, and you hear from the, from the side, he's like, oh, yes,
Jenn:sir, yes, sir, he's like, okay, and he just tells everybody, yeah, sit down, sit
Jenn:down.
Jenn:and everybody just kind of laughs because Reagan has that aura, right, he has that,
Jenn:that presence and that timing, and then he just says, , sometimes I don't know my
Jenn:own power, right, just because he asked everybody to sit down, and he's always
Jenn:cracking jokes, right, it's, it's Reagan just kind of, Making moments light.
Jenn:And he, Reagan also humbles himself in that moment, as most presidents do
Jenn:when they present the Medal of Honor, that that person is actually like the highest.
Jenn:Achiever of America's respect at that moment even more than
Jenn:the president in that moment.
Jenn:We talked about Drew Dix He's the one who's currently still living.
Jenn:He was army during Vietnam What he did is totally badass too during
Jenn:the Tet Offensive of 1968 Although outnumbered at least 30 to 1
Jenn:He led a small contingent of troops on a harrowing 56 hour battle
Jenn:against two Viet Cong battalions.
Jenn:And he rescued a ton of civilians.
Jenn:He rescues a young nurse, eight volunteers, two Filipino workers,
Jenn:a young Vietnamese girl, a wife and children of the chief in the area.
Jenn:And acting alone, he assaulted enemy strongholds, secured key buildings, and
Jenn:captured over 20 prisoners, including one of the highest ranking officers
Jenn:ever seized during the Vietnam I know.
Jenn:That's why the Medal of Honor is like next level.
Scott:That's why the in the, in military former military that
Scott:and throughout my career and
Scott:throughout your you get to every now and then we kind of say, Hey,
Scott:this is one of those kind of Navy heritage they'll talk about some and
Scott:they'll read the official citation.
Scott:and I did that when I was in command, right, every now and then, once the
Scott:Medal of Honor And it's just so hearing these stories thinking about, like,
Scott:it's true self sacrifice because that person is not, almost at a point of
Scott:not thinking of themselves whatsoever.
Scott:The only thing they're is saving those around defeating the enemy.
Scott:it's,
Scott:It's,
Scott:I, it's, it's difficult to even understand and
Jenn:to even understand it.
Jenn:People from Pueblo, Colorado.
Jenn:He was a Korea Marine, and during the winter of 1950, General Douglas
Jenn:MacArthur declared troops will be home by Christmas, but unknown to the
Jenn:commander, the 1st Marine Division was being surrounded by over 120, 000 troops.
Jenn:thousand Chinese troops.
Jenn:And so on November 29th at the Chosin Reservoir, Carl Sitter received
Jenn:his faithful orders to take East Hill and in frigid 60 below zero
Jenn:conditions, and that's no joke,
Scott:I've heard of this.
Scott:The Battle of Chosin is very
Jenn:Sitter and his men ended up on East Hill outnumbered at least 20 to 1.
Jenn:They engaged the Chinese troops for three nights, many times in hand to hand combat.
Jenn:And during that battle, Sitter remembers feeling as though he was
Jenn:protected by an invisible shield.
Jenn:He was able to strategically maneuver his men to take and hold East Hill.
Jenn:He yelled words of inspiration to his fellow soldiers, and several
Jenn:times Sitter refused evacuation and determinedly led his men out of the
Jenn:Chosen Reservoir, leaving no one behind.
Jenn:One of his boys, they were, they're called Carl's boys now retired.
Jenn:Remember, it is the highlight of their life.
Jenn:And he was a highly respected Marine colonel.
Scott:of their Someone, you know, I'm not the history buff, but I remember
Scott:learning about the Battle of You know, even, so at the Naval Academy again,
Scott:hearing about it a couple times.
Scott:I, I didn't, I don't think I even realized when we were talking about it because it
Scott:was a relatively short segment when we recorded of it because we just weren't
Scott:expecting And he kind of, and it's cool because in the video, again, the video
Scott:will be linked in the, in the show notes, they actually have his backup.
Scott:His like, I guess, replacement or whatever they call it, Medal
Scott:of Honor there in the museum.
Scott:And it's on kind of his, that's his uniform.
Scott:Which, that's pretty incredible that a museum like this in Pueblo, Colorado,
Scott:you know, home of heroes, gets to have this, something that's so significant.
Scott:Because the Battle of Chosin, I mean, everybody
Jenn:Yes.
Jenn:And what I really appreciate about these gentlemen is most of them are officers.
Jenn:And you know, you hear, we, we always laugh about how officers are kind of
Jenn:depicted in movies, how they're kind of, Oh, we don't know what's happening
Jenn:and other people doing the job.
Jenn:These are guys leading from the front.
Scott:time.
Scott:He was a major at the
Jenn:He was a major at the time.
Jenn:Like they're out in front.
Jenn:They're doing it.
Jenn:And like you said, he felt like he had an invisible shield to what
Jenn:you had said before these, a lot of these recipients of Medal of Honors.
Jenn:They
Jenn:have really just completely put their lives out there on the line, right?
Jenn:I think it's part of the saying when you read it, you know, to, to completely put
Jenn:your own life at risk for the betterment of your troops and your people that
Jenn:you, you really thought you didn't really think of your own personal life.
Jenn:You were thinking of everyone else's life.
Jenn:Like that's part of the verbiage, I think, of the Medal of
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:I wish I would have had a little more time to kind of read that and to soak that in.
Scott:anybody listening, if you ever get a chance to, to visit, you know, the
Scott:Denver area, Pueblo is not too far away.
Scott:I highly recommend heading over to the museum there to kind of take that all in.
Scott:It's an amazing You can spend, easily spend an entire there if you
Jenn:And the, the last one, the Lieutenant Raymond Jerry
Jenn:Murphy, he's Korean, 1953 he was a Marine, and there was a raid on
Jenn:I think it's Ungok Hill in Korea.
Jenn:And it was a cold day in February, 1953, again, these ungodly.
Jenn:Cold temperatures it turned very grimly very quickly for the first and
Jenn:second Marine platoons of able company.
Jenn:Second Lieutenant Raymond Murphy was the third platoon leader with
Jenn:the assignment of evacuation.
Jenn:As the raid progressed, he became uneasy and he felt something might be wrong.
Jenn:So defying direct orders, he kind of climbed up.
Jenn:on the hill to assess the situation.
Jenn:And it was just as he suspected.
Jenn:The assault had been stalled because all the officers and NCOs of the
Jenn:first two platoons had been killed.
Jenn:So what he did knowing the raid had failed is he led his a very heroic rescue
Jenn:mission to get everyone out of there.
Jenn:And so under his command, he took enemy fire.
Jenn:He made countless runs up.
Jenn:the Hill.
Jenn:Think of like Forrest Gump going back.
Jenn:This is what he did.
Jenn:He pulled other men back, provided cover.
Jenn:He would provide a kind of air cover.
Jenn:And this is the person who Eisenhower is presenting the Medal of Honor to
Jenn:when he makes the statement, what's in the water with you guys in Pueblo?
Scott:Pueblo?
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:And so, He just, he received numerous wounds, refused treatment until everyone
Jenn:else had been evacuated and treated.
Jenn:So again, like you had, you said, there is a moment with soldiers where
Jenn:they're just so a part of the mission that it really isn't about them.
Jenn:their life anymore.
Jenn:It's about everyone else's life and the, and seeing the mission through.
Jenn:And what I appreciate about him as a young officer, because he's a
Jenn:young lieutenant, is he is defying orders to figure out what's going on.
Jenn:And when he sees that the mission has changed, he completely takes
Jenn:the leadership upon himself to take control and evacuate everyone
Jenn:from that from that offensive.
Jenn:So, those are the four.
Jenn:medal of honor recipients from Pueblo, Colorado.
Jenn:It's their hometown.
Jenn:And then we also showcase one in the video who is a civil war medal of honor
Jenn:recipient, but he's buried in Pueblo.
Jenn:He's not from Pueblo.
Jenn:So there's basically five in the area and So again, at the time they were,
Jenn:the four were living, and I think that's what made it the hometown of heroes,
Jenn:because there might be other towns that have more Medal of Honor recipients
Jenn:from that hometown, but because those four were living at the same time,
Jenn:it's because they got that name.
Jenn:And so it's just amazing.
Jenn:Those stories, they just, I mean, you can see why that is the highest award.
Jenn:It's not even an award.
Jenn:The highest recognition you can get from our country for your military service.
Jenn:And then we also showcased in that video the World War II
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:so they had a phenomenal section of just wouldn't call it memorabilia, right?
Scott:But it's, it's items from World War II Korea and Vietnam and, you know,
Scott:communi And they set it all up to, you know, it's even interactive for the
Scott:kids.
Jenn:Kind of have the aircraft that coincide with the kind of theaters
Jenn:they were a part of in the military.
Scott:Kind of those World War Two propaganda posters that some of
Scott:them, like you said, I had never
Jenn:And they were all original.
Jenn:So of course they had the G, I wish I was a man, I joined the Navy, which I love.
Jenn:I have the magnet of it on the refrigerator.
Jenn:But they had one of Dory, Dory Miller, who is the, he was the cook on the
Jenn:ship during Pearl Harbor attack.
Jenn:When the gunman was killed, he took control of the surface to
Jenn:air guns and shot down a plane.
Scott:they just named an aircraft carrier
Jenn:Mm hmm.
Jenn:Yeah,
Jenn:he was...
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:And so, there was a poster of him.
Jenn:There was some really cool ones there.
Jenn:I always loved those
Jenn:posters.
Scott:then they had the kind of whole display of all the female That was neat.
Jenn:So they really do.
Jenn:I say it in the video.
Jenn:They really do a good job of honoring women in service.
Jenn:And there was about...
Jenn:eight mannequins with full dress military uniforms.
Jenn:They had Marines, they had Coast Guard, they had Navy, they had
Jenn:Air Force, they had WASP uniforms.
Jenn:So it was very neat to see a full female uniform from the, from that era
Jenn:and and for the different services.
Jenn:And then the last thing was the flight jackets.
Scott:Yes, the flight jackets were really cool and, and I got some really fun shots
Scott:of those and I have a feeling that if we'd have been able to spend more time on each
Scott:one of them and the significance of why they were on display, we called out one.
Scott:It was from the, the aircraft called Witchcraft and I guess it was called
Scott:Witchcraft because it had done, you know, kind of an ungodly amount
Scott:of successful missions without getting hit or ever pulling back.
Scott:It's like 135
Jenn:Yeah, and they thought there must be some kind of something
Jenn:special, some kind of witchcraft about
Scott:So this flight jacket had kind of witchcraft written
Scott:on it and some of them had more decorations, kind of drawings on 'em.
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:Some of 'em were a little bit more plain.
Scott:But it was cool seeing those old leather flight jackets.
Jenn:Yes.
Jenn:So, and most people know that I was a Navy pilot, so I was a naval aviator.
Jenn:And when you get your wings, you get a brown leather.
Jenn:Maybe issue flight jacket.
Jenn:They're hard to get.
Jenn:They're very expensive if you want to buy them off market.
Jenn:And so to to receive it when you get your wings is a great
Jenn:honor because you only get one.
Jenn:And it's a throwback to this old era where you would fly in open cockpits or freezing
Jenn:cold cockpits and you'd have to You have to be issued a brown leather jacket
Jenn:because you'd be freezing in the cockpit.
Jenn:And so now it's really just very ceremonial.
Jenn:I flew with it one time over the Rockies.
Jenn:I was freezing.
Jenn:I put it on and I actually flew with it in the T 34.
Jenn:But most time you don't really fly, you get it, you get another military
Jenn:jacket issued to you to fly with, but you, now we put patches on it and you
Jenn:wear, you pass it down and you have it in your family, but it's a throwback to
Jenn:when they really were used as part of your gear, as part of what you flew with
Jenn:because of the cockpits being so cold.
Jenn:And and it's just very cool to see the ones that were in action.
Jenn:And actually people have put stuff on them from the, you know, the flights they flew.
Jenn:And so they have a nice collection there at the Pueblo Museum.
Jenn:, but one more thing I wanted to talk about real quick before is and
Jenn:you just mentioned it real quick in the video, is that Clark Gable
Scott:Yes.
Scott:So the old Hollywood actor Clark
Scott:Gable.
Scott:Yes, the famous, you know,
Jenn:Gone with the
Scott:Gone with the Wind, Frankly Scarlet, I Don't Give a Damn.
Scott:Right?
Scott:That guy.
Scott:He, right, because a lot of these You know, during World War Two,
Jenn:joined the
Scott:they joined the military, And so he trained, and you actually
Scott:didn't know this until after we left.
Scott:So I was talking with, I think, the museum president.
Scott:She was hanging out with me and the kids while you were sitting doing, filming
Scott:with some of the other gentlemen.
Scott:And she told me And it's it's actually, it's on their website.
Scott:So if you go to, to their website, PWAM, P W A M dot O R
Scott:G they, they show this on there.
Scott:So that's where I pulled it off of.
Scott:But Clark Gable actually trained there because that in Pueblo, there was a,
Scott:there was a big training site there.
Scott:And a lot of these air kind of, you know, the, the squadrons and dets ended
Scott:up getting assigned, you know, overseas.
Scott:But Clark Gable actually trained there.
Scott:I think he was an officer, maybe
Jenn:I think he was an officer, maybe a major.
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:And her story to me, and it says it on the website as well, is that when
Scott:the public found out that he was training there, the phone lines would
Scott:get jammed up for hours every now and then with his fans trying to get a
Scott:hold of him, trying to kind of wish him
Scott:luck, or girls trying to call him, or whatever it was, because
Scott:he was still a famous movie
Scott:star.
Jenn:luck, or girls trying to call him, or whatever it was,
Jenn:because he was still a famous
Scott:that's only, it's only a few years later.
Scott:So here he is in Pueblo, Colorado, training, you know,
Scott:in flying and stuff like that.
Scott:And people are trying to get ahold of him, jamming up the entire town's
Scott:phone lines for multiple hours at a
Scott:time.
Jenn:can totally see that happening.
Jenn:What would be neat too is like, he probably is, you know,
Jenn:he's flying, so he's probably making radio calls and stuff.
Jenn:So if you're on a tower, if you're in control in Pueblo, it would be his
Jenn:voice on the radio making radio calls.
Jenn:So that's really
Scott:That, that was neat.
Scott:That was just kind of a quick call out that I put in the beginning of
Scott:the video when I'm kind of, I'm doing kinda like a pop-up video thing,
Scott:kind of talking about the, the little bit of the backstory of the military
Scott:training sites in Pueblo, Colorado.
Scott:If you're ever in that area, I highly encourage you guys to, to visit, let
Scott:them know that, that we sent you that, that you came from walk with history.
Scott:If you guys want to support the show we love it when you share
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