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"That's What Will Happen If Canada Stays On This Path" - Jordan Peterson

10m 8s1,631 単語270 segmentsEnglish

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I've been tracking

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economic statistics in relationship to

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Canada and sort of left me open-mouthed

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in amazement at our dismal condition.

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So, from what I've been able to

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understand, the richest people per

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capita in terms of GDP per person,

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um, gross domestic product per person,

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so that's total productivity, is

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Ontario.

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And, uh,

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Ontario inhabitants are now poorer per

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capita than inhabitants of Mississippi,

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and that's the poorest American state.

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So, the inhabitants of Canada's richest

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province are poorer than the inhabitants

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of the United States' poorest state, and

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that's actually occurred

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primarily

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in the last 10 years.

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>> Yes. And

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because we were basically at parity

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before that. Yes.

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>> And had historically been not quite as

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rich as the Americans with some, you

0:58

know, blips above them, but pretty much

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tracking them one-to-one. And now it's

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60% something like that. And that's And

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that's not all the bad news because it's

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60% in terms of

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absolute wealth and a real estate market

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that's twice as expensive approximately

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on average.

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>> Yeah. Right. So, now and

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>> bad. It's really incredible. Like 10

1:24

years ago, the New York Times wrote an

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article,

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"Welcome to Canada, we're home of the

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world's most affluent middle class." And

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in that article, the Times had

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calculated that median American and

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Canadian incomes were tied, and that

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Canadians were slightly better off. And

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now part of that was because of the '09

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'08 '09 financial crisis hit them harder

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than it hit us, but still

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now per capita GDP in the states is

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$22,000

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higher than in Canada

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measured in USD. So, that's about almost

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30,000 measured in

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>> Right. So, that's a whole other income

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essentially. That's a whole other

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part-time income.

2:03

>> Exactly. And, um,

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and then as you correctly point out,

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their real estate is significantly

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cheaper than ours. So, their their

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dollars go a lot further even when you

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match up the exchange rates. Um, and

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what's worse than that is that the

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leading indicators are even more

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horrific. And leading indicators, for

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example, are investment dollars because

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your wealth tomorrow is determined by

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your investment today. So, if your

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employer, for example, is buying lots of

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new tools and technology, you're going

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to be able to crank out more widgets.

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Um, so you crank out those widgets, then

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you can ultimately make more income down

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the road.

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If you take business investment and

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divide it by the number of workers, the

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American worker gets $28,000

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of investment measured in US dollars.

2:57

This is per capita? Per worker.

2:59

>> Per worker. Per member of the labor

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force. So, you take the total business

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investment of the United States divided

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by the total number workers in America

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is 28 grand. In Canada, it's 15 grand.

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So, we got a the Canadian worker gets

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about 55 cents

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for every dollar of his American and

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they're both measured in USD. So,

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how is the Canadian worker

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>> in future productivity?

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>> That's investment in, um,

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in machines and technology, and

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warehouses, factories,

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um,

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>> I see. any any capital investment that

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businesses make divided by the number of

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workers. That's the measurement. So, now

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that means they're getting better

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technology, better, um,

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new machines, uh, better tools than our

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workers, and they will be able to crank

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out even greater wages for their people

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than we will unless we catch up with

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that.

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Um, our productivity is another major

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problem. Like right now,

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and that's productivity sounds

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complicated, it's actually extremely

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simple. You just take the GDP and you

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divide it by the hours worked in the

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country.

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So, American GDP is $80. So, for every

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hour an American worker works on

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average, he he or she produces $80 of

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GDP of GDP. Mhm. In Canada, it's 50.

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So, that's every hour. So, that means we

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have to work 60% more just to make the

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same amount uh, and have the same level

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of, uh, income to buy food and housing.

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So, that that's the Now, that sounds

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like a bunch of wonk speak that should

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only might seem like it it only matters

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to someone staring at a spreadsheet or a

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graph or a chart, but in fact, that's

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reflected in the fact that our 2 million

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people are lined up at food banks cuz

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they can't afford food, and

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80% of youth can't afford homes, and,

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um, our quality of life is and the

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things we can afford to provide our kids

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have fallen back so much. There's real

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real life.

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>> and easily comprehensible statistic. I

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mean, if you work and you produce $80

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worth of goods and services in an hour

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compared to working and producing 50,

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obviously that's a substantial

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shortfall.

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>> Yeah. So, and is that Is there a starker

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indicator of the economic disparity

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between the US and Canada than that? Or

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do you think that's the primary

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statistic?

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I mean, I think housing costs are

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another one. I mean, there was a study

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out just, uh,

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10 days ago that has Toronto and

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Vancouver now by far the most

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unaffordable housing markets in North

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America.

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And so, you know, housing costs are

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50% higher in Toronto than they are in

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Chicago, even though Chicago workers

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make 50% more money.

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Uh, the same is true between Vancouver

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and Seattle. Seattle workers make way

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more than Vancouver workers,

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but housing is 60 or 70% more expensive

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in Vancouver. So, uh, on on all of the

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measures

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>> by a lot. Yeah. By a lot. By a lot.

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>> Yeah.

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>> And we're And we're paying more.

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>> more by a lot. Right. And most of that's

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transpired in the last 10 years.

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>> Yes. And we're paying the difference by

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accumulating enormous quantities of

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debt. Our our households are by far the

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most indebted in the G7. Uh, when you

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take you divide total household debt by

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GDP, we now have a bigger stock of of

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household debt than our entire economy.

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Um, we are more indebted as households

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than the Americans were right before the

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'08 financial crisis.

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Yes. And, um,

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so what we have as a model in Canada is

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we have artificial scarcity imposed by

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very heavy and restrictive state,

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confiscatory state. So, that suppresses

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production. Mhm.

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But in order to allow for consumption,

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we print money and borrow money, and

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then flood the economy with that money.

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>> Okay. So, that's another problem. So,

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that's the inflationary problem. Now,

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the problem with inflation Just many

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problems with inflation, but one of them

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is that it particularly punishes people

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who are thrifty and who save.

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>> Yes. Right. Right. So, inflation

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punishes the people who forego

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gratification to invest in the future.

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That's right.

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>> Right. So, that's a very bad idea.

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>> It's a horrible I Inflation is the

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single most in immoral tax for so many

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reasons. One, it takes from savers and

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people who are trying to be be

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responsible, thus making it impossible

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to be responsible because you will If

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you If you refuse to to play the

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