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The Entire Financial System Is Breaking in Real Time

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Ladies and gentlemen, the current

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monetary system is breaking down as we

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speak. And when monetary systems begin

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to crack and stress builds up underneath

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in the financial system, acts of

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desperation from governments, central

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bankers, policy makers usually follow

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after. So, in this video, I want to walk

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you through a broader perspective, a big

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picture look about what's really going

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on and where we are in the monetary

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cycle. One that really goes beyond the

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short-term narratives and market moves

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movements and price action. And I really

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want to focus on something more

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structural, okay, and something more

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important. And that's basically the life

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cycle of monetary systems and where we

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are within that cycle today.

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This is extremely important because I

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don't think people really realize where

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we are in this cycle. Now if we study

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history and look at the past, one thing

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becomes very clear. Every single

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monetary system eventually reaches a

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point where it breaks down. It happens

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over years. it breaks down and then

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finally it's reset and a new system is

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introduced. Now this is not a rare

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occurrence. It's happened many times

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before throughout history and it's a

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reoccurring pattern that has actually

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played out across civilizations around

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the world for thousands of years. Okay.

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And at the center of that pattern is

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always the same problem. It's the

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gradual erosion of the currency itself

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which leads to the erosion of trust in

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the system and in the governments and

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then eventually the system collapses and

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a new system is introduced. So no

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monetary system in history has lasted

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forever and more importantly none of

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them have failed overnight. It was a

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buildup of stress within the system

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before they failed immediately. Okay.

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And we are currently on the same path.

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Slow erosion, rising debt, currency

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debasement, and eventually a reset. And

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that has historically the sequence of

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events that led to every monetary system

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reset. Now, before I continue, if you're

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looking for a more datadriven breakdown

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of financial markets, digital assets,

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the broader macro shifts behind this

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transition that we're seeing, and really

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my long-term positioning and my

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long-term thesis behind everything we're

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seeing. I go much deeper into that in my

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private group and my weekly report. If

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you're interested, you'll find the link

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in the description below. So when we

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really step back and look at the big

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picture here and really evaluate and

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assess where we are today compared to

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previous eras, well, it's increasingly

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clear that we are certainly not at the

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beginning and we're certainly not in the

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middle of the monetary cycle. As a

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matter of fact, we're much closer to the

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end of it than people think. Now, just

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to be clear, that does not mean the

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system collapses tomorrow. Although it

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could, but it does not mean that. And

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the reason is because these things build

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up over time. They don't happen

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overnight. And more signs will become

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visible over time as well. But what it

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does mean is today we're actually

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operating in the later stages of that

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monetary error. And that has been

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building for decades, for a long time

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since 1971 when we went off the gold

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standard. Now, it's important to know

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that every monetary system has started

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off with disciplined monetary policy and

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it worked in the beginning often tied to

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some form of hard backing or constraint

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to keep governments in check. Whether

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it's gold,

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limited credit expansion, or even

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stricter monetary policy that was in

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place when the system was first created.

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But over time that discipline fades and

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governments become reckless and

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governments expand spending,

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increase debt levels. Debt levels rise

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and central banks begin to really

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accommodate that expansion and print

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more money and inject more liquidity

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into the system and debase the currency

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even further. Now, what starts off as a

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controlled system eventually transitions

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into one that increasingly is dependent

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on credit creation, debt expansion, and

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liquidity injections into the financial

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system just to keep the system

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artificially alive on life support. And

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that all involves more money printing

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and debasing the currency. So, at first,

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that whole thing works. growth

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continues, markets expand, people are

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surviving and getting by, and everything

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appears stable on the surface, and asset

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prices rise. And this is where most

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people fundamentally misunderstand

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what's actually happening. And this is

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so important because prices during this

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period aren't just rising because things

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are becoming more valuable

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or because of true value creation,

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whether it's in stocks, crypto, asset

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prices, but prices are going up because

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the currency used to measure them in is

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being destroyed and diluted because

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they're increasing the money supply over

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time. And as debt levels continue to

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grow and increase, the system becomes

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more dependent on intervention from

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policy makers. So as the debt levels

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accelerate, which they are today, more

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debt requires lower rates to refinance

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the debt and that requires more

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liquidity and eventually

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more aggressive policy responses from

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central banks and more money printing

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just to prevent systemic collapse when

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the system breaks down. And it will

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break down because the more debt, the

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more leverage in the system and

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eventually the bigger the contraction.

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And then the bigger the contraction, the

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bigger the intervention and policy

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response. And I believe that's what's

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coming in 2026. I talk more about that

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in my newsletter and in my private

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financial market intelligence group. But

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all of this eventually weakens the

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currency even more. And that's where we

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are today.

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So if we bring all of this that into

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context today, the current global

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monetary system and everything happening

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particularly around the dollarbased

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system that we have with the US dollar,

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we are basically following the same path

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that every system was following that

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eventually led to a systemic collapse

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and then a reset. And the foundation of

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all this actually began in the 20th

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century 1913 when the Fed was set up.

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And the major turning point for that

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came in 1971 when Nixon removed us off

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the gold standard. That decision

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effectively removed the layer of

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discipline that basically kept

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governments in check because for every

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dollar they created they needed to have

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gold backing it. They don't have that

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anymore. So this allowed them for

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unlimited money creation and debt uh

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expansion. So from there the debt really

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began to accelerate.

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Then in 2008

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we saw the introduction of quantitative

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easing and near zero interest rates

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which is the first time in interest rate

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history of 4,000 years where we got to

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near zero interest rates. And we saw a

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scale that hadn't been seen before with

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money creation. That marked another

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turning point. Coincidentally, they

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launched Bitcoin too at that time and

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were calling for a new world reserve

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currency with Barack Obama and G20

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leaders at the United Nations. That QE

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thing became a permanent feature of the

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system rather than a temporary tool,

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quantitative easing, and they will do it

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again. And then in 2020,

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everything accelerated even further,

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even faster and harder. And the wealth

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gap continued to increase. We had the

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scale of money creation and fiscal

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expansion from reckless policy which

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reached levels that were extraordinary

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and the rich got richer and the poor got

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poorer. And all of that stabilized the

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system in the short term and gave people

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short-term relief and comfort. But it

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