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Canada Crosses UNFORGIVABLE Line... Trumps Retaliation Will Be Merciless!

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Mark Carney and the Liberals have

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crossed a line and I think the blowback

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is going to be pretty severe. One of the

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White House trade advisers said that

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Mark Carney specifically is a problem.

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So this is not looking good, especially

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now that Mark Carney has been caught

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lying about his NATO spending. Seems

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like he might be getting a little

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creative with the numbers. That's not

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the only thing that he is lying about.

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He got caught lying about some of the

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projects that he is taking credit for

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that he did not do. Also, with his

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corruption on full display, he is

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handing out even more projects to his

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insiders while denying projects that

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would build our relationship with the

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United States. And this is against all

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of the industry warnings, some of it

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really dire. In addition, there were

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some other global politicians who trying

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to work with Mark Carney might have

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blown back on them as well. Seems like

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they might be losing their career. Mark

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Carney couldn't stop there. He had to

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try and say Canada's doing better than

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the US yet again. and that's the only

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way Canada can win. Of course, there's

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honestly a lot to talk about in today's

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video. So, let's get into it. All right,

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so there were a ton of developments

1:03

today, and one of the things that the

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government's been trying to take its

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victory lap on is the NATO spending,

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like I mentioned, but we have been

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getting called out by the US, by Trump,

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and even our NATO allies, which they did

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mention in this clip here. But it's

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funny that they're stacking it as such a

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win, and then we find out they're

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cooking the numbers. NATO says Canada

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finally met a key commitment by spending

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roughly 2% of its GDP on defense in the

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last fiscal year. A goal set back in

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2014. Christian Lyra, professor of

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>> 2014 will be a trend in this video

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because this isn't the only thing that

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Canada had committed to back in 2014

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that we're just getting in 2026.

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Hilarious that it took 12 years and not

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only 12 years, pressure from Trump,

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pressure from NATO all over the world

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and we finally are. and they still only

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do it by cooking the numbers

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>> of political science at the Royal

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Military at Queens University joins us

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for this update and it's important.

1:57

Thanks so much for joining us,

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Professor.

2:00

>> My pleasure. Hello.

2:01

>> How significant is it that we now meet

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NATO's benchmark and what does this

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mean?

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>> Well, 2% has always been an arbitrary

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benchmark. Politician pick it because

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it's a nice sort of number and gets

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everybody in a common denominator. But

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of course if Canada spends 2% of GDP or

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say Latvia spends 2% of GDP it's going

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to give you very different effects. And

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of course Latafia is spending 5% of GDP.

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Um but at least sort of it brings

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everybody

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>> look you know if they spend different

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amounts it's going to have different

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effects of course but they are spending

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way more than us up to sort of a common

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standard and as you point out the

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government will tell you they're ahead

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of schedule meeting 2% uh but as your

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intro pointed out we agreed to this in

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2014 um and we dragged our feet for a

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decade. Uh so but you know it now puts

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at least Canada sort of in the same sort

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of position as almost all other NATO

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member countries at at least meeting the

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minimum politically agreed upon

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benchmark. There we go. Huge win for

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Canada. Hitting the minimum. That's what

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we need in Canada. Big win. Keep in mind

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this is getting created around as a huge

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win that we've hit just the bare minimum

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and we're still getting called out for

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it because it's nonsense. Many would

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argue that Canada has actually lined be

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uh lagged behind NATO's 2% target for

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years. Something that they've actually

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faced crit criticism for from allies.

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First off, why did it take the country a

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little bit longer? And what image has it

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kind of given Canada?

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>> Yeah, I mean it's come at serious

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reputational cost, right? that Canada

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was always, you know, I think of NATO as

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like a six-packs at the beer store and

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you don't all like like all flavors

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equally and Canada was always a very

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well-liked flavor and Canada increasing

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got excluded uh from key decisions and

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key sort of meetings uh because we

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didn't have capabilities and if you

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don't have capabilities then you can't

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make commitments.

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>> That's a great global reputation to have

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like just leave Canada out of it. They

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are the gross beer that we don't want to

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deal with. Uh so this is very important

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at a time of course when our sovereignty

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is under duress because being part of

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these key decisions is a way of

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asserting our interests not just our

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defense interests but our political and

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our economic interests and it's

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leveraging our European partners to

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counterbalance the vagaries of US

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unilateralism. So

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>> of course the NATO spending is just

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looped back to being anti-American

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spending once again as a Canadian. Thank

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you, Donald Trump. Because the only

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reason we're hitting the bare minimum is

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because we need to protect our

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sovereignty from the vagaries of Donald

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Trump.

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>> This is not just an investment in

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defense. This is very much an investment

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in Canadian sovereignty and asserting

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Canadian political sovereignty um in a

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way that Canada is within the G7 and

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within NATO a very significant country

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in terms of sort of the top halfozen

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countries with headquarters capabilities

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and Canada always been known for being

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able to do being able to make

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commitments and doing those things on

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its own with the capabilities it had. Um

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and so um you know it's probably

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>> what is this World War I? When is the

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last time we were known for that?

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>> We're going to take us a good 15 years

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to rebuild um where the Canadian Armed

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Forces needs to be. So, we can hope that

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this is not just a one or two year sort

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of flash in the pan, but rather a

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long-standing commitment to rebuilding

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Canada's single most important

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instrument of statecraft.

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>> This is what I wanted to keep in there

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because it's so funny. We are pretending

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like the US is the threat to the

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sovereignty that we need to really stand

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up and protect ourselves. And here the

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military specialists are saying we're 15

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years behind having any sort of

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meaningful military, any sort of

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operational capacity, anything like

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that. So once again, thanks America for

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having an army so Canada can pretend

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that we have one when we don't. And

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that's why this was also very funny

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because they were finding out that hm

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maybe this NATO spending was a little

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bit uh you know creative with the

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accounting what they've actually been

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spending on especially because it

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actually didn't have any impact to the

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actual capacity of uh the operations and

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what we can do in Canada. That's why he

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said I hope this isn't a flash in the

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pan. We need 15 years. Ottawa, they are

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officially responding to the news today

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that NATO's defense spending target for

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this country of 2% has been hit. So,

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let's listen.

6:32

>> Morning. Uh, today we want to respond to

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Mark Carney's announcement that uh

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Canada's hit the NATO 2% spending

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target, but that doesn't mean that

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Canada's any stronger.

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as we know that uh all this increased

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defense spending that he's uh bragging

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about today is actually an illusion. We

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know that through creative accounting

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that uh government spending in national

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defense has increased by over10 billion.

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I love that the best we can get from

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them is just fake announcements. And

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you'll see once we get to his project

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stuff, especially when we get to the

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