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Re-thinking the Policy Making Process for today's needs | Betty Tushabe | TEDxRugando

11m 40s1,712 palavras247 segmentsEnglish

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when I was 17 years old at the height of

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my puberty and self-awareness my mother

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came to visit me at school

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this wasn't your routine visit it was a

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special visit because I was just a seed

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for my signal six exams and the school

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had given us forms to fill out

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to show what courses we wanted to do in

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university naturally because I knew what

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I wanted I didn't think the need I

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didn't feel the need to consult with

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anyone I filled in my forms but at this

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particular visit my mom is there and I'm

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explaining to her oh yeah so I filled in

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this form I filled in this form and I

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want to do mass communications and she

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looks at me and said no you're going to

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do no and that's the end of it of course

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I was gutted I would have expected her

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to be you know excited for with what was

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exciting me at the moment but anyway I

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went ahead and did low and I can say now

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that I have three degrees in law so and

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this legal training is what has created

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the foundation for the love of policy

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that I have today and the reason why I'm

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standing here speaking to you about

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policymaking so just like our parents

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our governments they play a very central

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role in our lives they plan for us and

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in that they create they they plan they

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create budgets they allocate resources

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and that is what is part of the whole

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strategy for policy and policymaking

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sometimes we might not agree with some

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of the things that they say oh they plan

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for us that's beside the point

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so

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going back to the story of my mother I

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go I study law but then I go back and

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study one more degree in public policy

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but this time I didn't run it by her I

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didn't want her to you know influence

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that decision so when I came back I had

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the opportunity to to walk in the Office

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of the President

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we worked on policies I understood how

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policies are met I understood who the

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key actors are in policies in

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policymaking and student the role of the

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officials and the appointed officials

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but also the influential stakeholders

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that we never really pay attention to or

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even know that they exist

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but they make these decisions on our

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behalf and just like our parents these

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decisions are meant to provide us with a

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safe environment make sure that we have

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access to affordable electricity water

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and education so why does policymaking

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matter I remember when I got my job as a

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legal and policy analyst I knew exactly

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what the legal part entailed but I

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didn't know what the policy might

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entailed so I walked to my immediate

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supervisor at the time mr. washer minor

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and I entered his office said mushara so

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what is policy and he looked at me and

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he said I'm going to give you the one

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lesson if you're ever going to become

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policy person that you need to put the

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back of your mind with every policy and

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he said with every policy there are

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always winners and losers so take a

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minute and think about that for most of

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us here we don't really care about

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policies unless they affect you you or

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someone you care about and that's when

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you're like oh hold on how did this come

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about and that is not at that point that

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we should care we should care before

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because if you take a minute and think

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about it

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the problems we face

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today are not new they're just evolving

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becoming bigger and bigger and bigger

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and that means governments have to

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devise strategies to respond to this

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policy to these issues that we face in

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2030 for Africa is going to have the

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biggest youth population the highest

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rate of urbanization with lots of people

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moving into the cities these are all

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issues that are going to affect us going

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forward but of course governments don't

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always match sometimes they don't always

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match the pace at which we are also

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trying to face these issues because they

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face I mean truth be told some of them

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are still bureaucratic they don't reward

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innovation or even invest in it they

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don't they still have these rigid rules

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especially around procurement that

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stifle creativity but do you know the

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beauty about it all today is that all

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these rigidities adjustables

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by the fad of right now we are living in

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an era of unprecedented access to

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knowledge this knowledge has made us

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walk as matters are where we are

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increasingly putting excessive demands

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on our governments for accountability

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and to provide us with better services

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so governments cannot leave they cannot

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sit back and not walk with us to provide

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us with the services that we need so to

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do this governments have to innovate so

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for most people when you think about

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innovation you think about tools you

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think about products you think about

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that is what comes to everyone's mind

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but innovation in government is around

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finding new working methods very

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creative methods to provide citizens

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with services that are affordable quick

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and easy to access and then now we're

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now living in an era of technology and

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there's quite a number of tools that are

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available for our governments to use so

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for this particular talk I'd like to

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talk about three issues

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co-creation of policies through Design

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Thinking I mean for many of you who are

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in the startup community and the tech

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world you understand what Design

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Thinking is but it's basically breaking

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it down thinking about a problem

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different in looking at it differently

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employing empathy and listening and

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walking together with the communities

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that you serve to create solutions for

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their problems my first experience with

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co-creation through Design Thinking was

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in 2015 and I was working on a project

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in North Carolina and we had to walk

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with a city that wanted to become

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entrepreneurial and so my team and I

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went to this city that we had we were

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walking with we interacted with the

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people in the city we interacted with

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the city officials and it was so amazing

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that that collaboration that

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coordination with the people and

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listening to what people wanted ended up

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being the basis for the strategy that we

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came up for the city government which is

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instead of thinking about it in the

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sense of how do we give more government

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support to these people instead the

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citizens were telling the city officials

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how about we want to create this city

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into a livable city as a festival as a

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festival city or an artisan in a way I'm

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excited I was excited because I

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understood the power of collaboration

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and co-creation for participative and

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inclusive policies and that is something

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I think we can adopt today but also

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again I we go back to the issue of data

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governments have always been the

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custodians of all the data that we have

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if you look at the statistics I think we

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produce about 2.5 continuing bytes of

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data every day and more this is an

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opportunity for us an opportunity for

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our governments to exploit evaluate data

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and give us decisions that are unbiased

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discs and not discriminatory there's

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actually a platform that I read about

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the UK that uses predicts it's called

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predictive and they provide an online

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platform within which they test out then

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polish the new policies to a small group

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of people online and the results that

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they

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the results that they get are able to

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inform them whether they can now roll it

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out nationwide or start again again this

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is just simple ways of walking changing

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the formula of how we walk in order to

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provide very clear and inclusive

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decisions and lastly and I think my most

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the one method that I think is very

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poignant and interesting how do we

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communicate as policymakers how do we

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communicate to engage and not

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communicate to inform the power of

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storytelling we all love good stories

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right that is why we are here tonight to

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listen to all his amazing stories but

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