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Texas ”No Kings” protests oppose Trump’s immigration tactics

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Berenice Garcia, Carlos Nogueras Ramos, Ayden Runnels and Jessica Shuran Yu – 2025-06-14 15:40:00


On a Saturday, thousands across Texas protested President Donald Trump’s immigration policies and perceived authoritarianism, with major demonstrations in McAllen and Odessa. Protesters, including families, veterans, and educators, criticized aggressive deportations and the administration’s impact on immigrants and women’s rights. The “No Kings” protests, organized by progressive groups like Women’s March and Indivisible, emphasized opposition to executive overreach. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott deployed over 5,000 National Guard members for security amid credible threats and recent shootings targeting lawmakers. Demonstrations, mostly peaceful, coincided with Trump’s planned military parade in D.C. and were marked by both support and counterprotests, reflecting deep political divides in the state.

As Trump celebrates military, Texans protest president’s aggressive immigration enforcement” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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McALLEN — Hundreds of people lined up near this border city’s federal courthouse Saturday, waving American flags and holding signs criticizing President Donald Trump and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

It was a loud scene as anti-Trump chants were often drowned out by drivers honking to show support for the protesters’ cause. Protests, marches and rallies are happening across Texas and the country Saturday in condemnation of the Trump administration’s policies, including its aggressive immigration enforcement, and what many participants consider to be authoritarian actions.

Angeline Garza, a 36-year-old elementary school teacher from Mission, said the protest was a way for her to advocate for the undocumented children and the kids of undocumented parents.

“Now more than ever, [deportations] are affecting a lot of people and they are seeing what the Trump administration wanted to do from the beginning, that it was not just about deporting criminals,” she said.

No Kings Protest against the policies of US President Donald Trump in Mcallen, Texas, on June 14, 2025.
“No Kings” participants in McAllen protest against President Donald Trump’s policies. Credit: Ben Lowy for The Texas Tribune
First: A Pro-Trump counter-protester makes his way through the crowd. Second: Demonstrators line the street during the “No Kings” protest, in McAllen, Texas, on June 14, 2025.
First: A pro-Trump counterprotester makes his way through the McAllen crowd. Second: Demonstrators line the street during the “No Kings” protest in McAllen. Credit: Ben Lowy for The Texas Tribune

The protests, expected to last throughout the night Saturday, coincide with the Trump administration’s planned military parade in Washington, D.C., which falls on the president’s birthday and the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary.

But the demonstrations also began hours after two Democratic Minnesota legislators and their spouses were shot at their respective homes Saturday. The Texas Department of Public Safety later Saturday warned Texas lawmakers and legislative staffers of “credible threats” to legislators planning to attend the anti-Trump rally at the state Capitol in Austin.

[Texas makes arrest after warning state lawmakers of “credible threats” tied to Capitol protest]

The Capitol was evacuated shortly after. DPS’ notice did not specify the nature of the threats to lawmakers. Texas organizers of some of Saturday’s “No Kings” and “Kick Out The Clowns” demonstrations have stressed their protests will be nonviolent. By 3 p.m. Saturday afternoon, protests across the state were underway.

In McAllen, very few people in support of the president appeared, though one man waving two large black Trump flags paraded through the crowd. As he walked, about half a dozen people began following him and protesters chanted anti-Trump expletives at him. The man, who declined to give his name, eventually left the protest area without incident.

In Odessa, more than 150 people gathered on the northeast side of the booming oil field city. Families, veterans and oil field workers lined up in front of a main roadway on Saturday, facing a heavily trafficked part of town.

The protesters waved flags from the U.S., Mexico and El Salvador and recited the pledge of allegiance. They decried what they said was Trump’s authoritarian and monarchical approach to the presidency. Protesters told The Texas Tribune that Trump and his Cabinet had abused legal proceedings and due process for immigrants and women.

A protest organizer leads a chant during the No Kings Day demonstration on Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Odessa.
A protest organizer leads a chant during the “No Kings” demonstration in Odessa. Credit: Eli Hartman for The Texas Tribune
Santianna Chavez, a demonstrator representing the Navajo Nation, poses for a photo during a No Kings Day protest on Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Odessa.
Santianna Chavez, a demonstrator representing the Navajo Nation, poses for a photo during the “No Kings” protest in Odessa. Credit: Eli Hartman for The Texas Tribune

Suzanne Pack, a 62-year-old retired dietitian, said the Saturday protest was the first time she had ever been part of such a demonstration. She said she decided to attend after seeing the event advertised on social media.

“I believe that the government is not taking seriously the importance of due process, and I also believe that women’s rights are being tread upon, especially in Texas,” Pack said. “I have a daughter of childbearing age. She’s seven months pregnant today, and she’s scared to death because of the challenges against fetal maternal health.”

Texas’ “No Kings” protests were planned primarily by progressive groups 50501, Women’s March and Indivisible. The national groups are supported by dozens of smaller grassroots organizations and volunteers.

This blitz of demonstrations throughout Texas and country are intentional, said 50501 San Antonio representative Alex Svehla, and highlight the movement’s core message of “executive overreach.”

“It’s a whole wraparound regarding what Trump is doing,” Svehla said.

As planned demonstrations across the U.S. grew in number this week, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were told to “largely pause” enforcement in the agriculture and hospitality industries, The New York Times reported Saturday.

Earlier this month, Trump deployed 2,000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles in response to protests against immigration enforcement sweeps there. That deployment came without permission from California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat and frequent political foe of the Republican president.

Guadalupe Lemon holds an upside down American flag as protestors march up Walker Street during a No Kings protest at City Hall, Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Houston.
Protesters march in downtown Houston during a “No Kings” protest. Credit: Antranik Tavitian for The Texas Tribune
First: Olivia Mendoza, left, and her mother Rachel listen to speakers during the “No Kings” protest at Houston City Hall. Last: People on a double-decker watch as protestors march down McKinney Street. June 14, 2025.
First: Olivia Mendoza, left, and her mother, Rachel, listen to speakers during the “No Kings” protest near Houston City Hall. Last: People on a double-decker bus watch as protesters march down McKinney Street. Credit: Antranik Tavitian for The Texas Tribune

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced on Thursday he would be deploying over 5,000 Texas National Guard members across the state in anticipation of Saturday’s protests. Roughly 2,500 of those are being diverted from Operation Lone Star border assignments, according to the Austin American-Statesman.

“It does not do any good to have the National Guard not deployed and have a city catch on fire, have crime and chaos break out, and take a day or two to get them there,” Abbott said in a Fox News interview on Thursday.

Abbott has acknowledged in several statements that peaceful protesting is a constitutional right, but that officials “will not tolerate the lawlessness we have seen in Los Angeles.” Abbott’s comments have drawn criticism from protest organizers, who have said a crucial element of their events is their nonviolent nature.

“I think that we have seen some very irresponsible comments from Greg Abbott, unfortunately, that are in line with his authoritarian tendencies and certainly Trump’s, which is of course the very thing that people are protesting about,” said Rachel O’Leary Carmona, executive director for Women’s March.

Thousands gather in front of Dallas City Hall for the No Kings Protest on Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Dallas, Texas.
Thousands gather in front of Dallas City Hall for a “No Kings” protest. Credit: Maria Crane for The Texas Tribune
People watch the No Kings protest from a Starbucks on Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Dallas, Texas. The No Kings Day of Defiance was projected to be the largest single-day mobilization since Trump returned to office.
“No Kings” protesters march past a Dallas Starbucks on Saturday. Credit: Maria Crane for The Texas Tribune

In Odessa on Saturday, the demonstrations were largely amicable, with many of the event’s organizers communicating with law enforcement officials as the day progressed. The protest’s organizers told the Tribune they had been in touch with local law enforcement officials for weeks before the event. Drivers honked their horns in support, but some of the marchers faced hecklers who shouted vulgarities at them.

Leon Fowler, an 82-year-old Navy reserve and Air Force veteran and retired teacher of history and government, said Trump undermined democracy with his actions in the oval office.

“I believe in following the law,” Fowler said. “And what I’ve seen shows no respect for law and no respect for the Constitution.”

Disclosure: New York Times has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/06/14/texas-protests-anti-trump-immigration-no-kings/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

The post Texas ”No Kings” protests oppose Trump’s immigration tactics appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning

The article presents the perspectives of protestors critical of President Trump’s immigration policies and perceived authoritarianism. While it largely reports facts and includes quotes from demonstrators, the framing and language lean sympathetic to the protestors’ cause. The repeated emphasis on the terms like “authoritarian,” “abuse,” and “executive overreach,” as well as quotes that cast Trump and Gov. Abbott in a negative light without significant counterbalance, reflect a left-leaning editorial stance. Though there are mentions of pro-Trump counter-protesters and statements from officials, these are brief and do not provide an equal ideological counterweight. The overall tone supports progressive concerns.

News from the South - Texas News Feed

Glass panels keep falling from downtown Austin building

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www.kxan.com – Nabil Remadna – 2025-07-30 20:37:00

SUMMARY: Glass panels have fallen multiple times from the under-construction 55-story ATX Tower in downtown Austin, raising safety concerns. On July 28, Ryan Companies found a broken glass panel—the fourth such incident this year—and alerted authorities, ensuring no injuries occurred. A covered walkway was installed as a safety measure. The City of Austin’s Development Services Department is working closely with the contractor, conducting site visits and investigations. While causes, including high winds, are being studied, no penalties have been imposed yet. Council member Zo Qadri demands accountability and potential city council action to ensure public safety amid ongoing risks.

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The post Glass panels keep falling from downtown Austin building appeared first on www.kxan.com

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Released messages show Kerrville officials’ flood response

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Emily Foxhall – 2025-07-30 18:12:00


The Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas, surged 34 feet on July 4, causing devastating flash floods that killed over 100 people in Kerr County. City emails and texts reveal officials struggled to fully grasp the flood’s severity as they prepared for Fourth of July events. Early National Weather Service warnings were issued, but local response showed gaps in communication and emergency management expertise. Kerrville city leaders activated emergency teams as floodwaters rose rapidly, closing roads and evacuating residents. The disaster exposed a lack of local preparedness despite a well-funded state emergency system. Officials pledged transparency and review amid criticism of the response.

As the floods hit, Kerrville officials’ messages show lack of information about what was coming” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.


The day before the Guadalupe River rose 34 feet in the small Hill Country city of Kerrville and swamped areas along the river banks, Mayor Joe Herring Jr. messaged the city manager with anticipation.

“Big day tomorrow at LHP,” Herring wrote, likely referring to Louise Hays Park, where a Fourth of July festival was planned with bands and fireworks.

“Yes it is!” City Manager Dalton Rice replied. “And it seems we got some rain too!”

A whole lot more rain was coming.

A review of emails and text messages sent to and between Kerrville city officials offers new details of what happened over the next 24 hours, showing how a city manager notified colleagues and council members that the river was rising. Some seemed to struggle to grasp the magnitude of the flash flooding that killed young girls sleeping in summer camp cabins upriver and sent a wall of water pushing along the Guadalupe River toward them.

As state lawmakers prepare to hold a hearing in Kerrville on Thursday morning about the floods, important questions remain about the local and state response to the horrific storm that ravaged small communities along the Guadalupe and left more than 100 people dead across Kerr County.

National Weather Service forecasters were pushing out warnings overnight as flooding intensified, leaving time for people to get out of harm’s way. But it has been unclear who, especially in leadership positions, saw those early messages and how they reacted. The scenario showed what experts say is a need for people to have multiple ways to get warnings and agencies to have multiple ways to put them out.

In the first state-level hearing on the floods last week, legislators heard that there is no mechanism for the state to be sure local leaders are awake and aware of how they need to be responding to a disaster, and there are no standard qualifications for emergency management coordinators who are working for cities and counties.

The emails and texts offer a window into the response in the city of Kerrville, but Kerr County has not yet released any communications among its top officials, who are responsible for emergency management across the county, including the hard-hit communities upriver from Kerrville where many of the county’s flood victims were swept away.

The city released its internal messages to ProPublica and the Texas Tribune in response to a request filed by the news organizations under the Texas Public Information Act.

Some comments from officials in text messages and a press release indicate that, at first, they were more focused on the flooding ruining the city’s Fourth of July celebration — a disconnect that emergency management expert Samantha Montano said highlights a common struggle for people to understand a disaster as it unfolds and underscores the need for strong local emergency managers.

The state’s relatively well-funded and well-regarded emergency management team in the past has obscured the lack of money and insufficient capability at the local level to respond effectively to a disaster, Montano said. But in this case, that chronic problem shone through.

“There was so much focus on the local government in this event, more so than a lot of other disasters because of the warning failures,” Montano said. “That has kind of stuck now.”

Rice, the city manager, noted in a text message: “Most of our team have not been through a disaster of this scale.”

A text from Kerrville’s mayor early July 4 shows that he was waiting to hear from the city manager about what specific actions he might need to take as the flood came up in the city, and an email to the city fire marshal indicates that all off-duty fire crew were called in well after the river rose.

Despite the initial confusion, Kerrville police were keeping an eye on flood-prone areas and low water crossings before the worst of the flooding struck. They closed those roads to traffic, then began evacuating structures first in harm’s way, Chief Chris McCall wrote in an email to The Texas Tribune.

And McCall did receive a warning that Kerr County pushed out at 5:02 a.m. about flooding in Hunt — a town some 13 miles upriver from Kerrville — on a system called Code Red, according to the city records. It’s not clear how many people received that message, which typically requires people to sign up for the alerts, or who authorized sending it.

That alert came nearly four hours after the National Weather Service issued its first flash flood warning in Kerr County.

Around that same time, 5 a.m., the gauge on the Guadalupe River in Kerrville shows the water started to rise quickly.

Thirty minutes later, texts among Kerrville officials began to fly.

Thursday July 3

Weather-related emails were landing in Kerrville Emergency Management Coordinator Jerremy Hughes’ inbox. He had just put in for retirement before the storm, Herring said. The daily National Weather Service “threat brief” shared by the state operations center predicted minor river flooding in southwest to southeast Texas, and a slight risk of flash flooding, according to the records. Nothing too scary.

Another state message informed Hughes that a flood watch had gone into place early that afternoon for Kerr and seven other counties, meaning meteorologists had identified conditions conducive for flooding. The email encouraged people to “have a plan of action in case a storm threatens.” Forecasters predicted one to three inches of rain, with as much as five to seven inches in some spots. The threat felt more specific.

Hughes received an updated report from the National Weather Service too, the copies of his emails show, reiterating the information. Again, meteorologists urged people in flood-prone areas to be prepared.

Kerrville Executive Director of Public Works and Engineering Stuart Barron passed a similar email around to other city staff.

Meanwhile, Fire Battalion Chief Jaran Floyd was getting organized, messaging a department group to ask for a head count in case they faced issues that weekend. People responded: A raised-hand emoji. Available. Available. Two hours away but available. And so on.

1:14 a.m. Friday July 4

Rain pounded overnight. In Kerr County, it would come down much heavier than meteorologists had predicted; more than 12 inches would fall over the south fork of the Guadalupe River between 7 a.m. July 3 and 7 a.m. July 4, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data.

The National Weather Service put out its first flood warning at 1:14 a.m. for Kerr County, which the agency said automatically triggered alerts to radios and cell phones if people had reception and didn’t disable them. That warning also got pushed through Code Red, according to the records.

Around 3 a.m., a gauge showed the river rising steeply in Hunt, where the south and north forks meet.

Hunt Volunteer Fire Department Chief Lee Pool woke that morning to voices on the radio he left on in his house, he said in an interview with the Tribune later in July. He heard the word “flood,” realized the river was rising and headed for the station in his Ford F-150. Around 4 a.m. the river in Hunt reached what is considered “major” flooding levels — and kept rising.

Pool reached a point where water ran over the road. He turned back, but was blocked again by floodwaters.

“That’s when I realized the magnitude of this,” he said.

Pool said he put in a request for a Code Red. A recording obtained by KXAN timestamped his call at 4:22 a.m.

The dispatcher responded, “We have to get that approved with our supervisor.”

Pool found a hill where he could wait it out. Hay bales floated by like corks. He watched a car come down the raging river with people inside. It was too dangerous to help.

The flood hadn’t yet hit Kerrville, 10 miles downstream.

At 4:58 a.m., someone texted Kerrville Police Chief Chris McCall, warning him the south fork of the Guadalupe had risen 29 feet.

“Holy smoke,” McCall replied.

Minutes later, at 5:02 a.m., according to the city records, Kerr County issued a Code Red: “IF YOU ARE IN THE HUNT AREA ALONG HIGHWAY 39 OR THE RIVER, EVACUATE THE AREA OR GET TO HIGHER GROUND.”

5:36 a.m. Friday July 4

Assistant City Manager Michael Hornes texted City Manager Rice and Assistant City Manager Kimberly Meismer about the rain pounding Hunt. In Kerrville, the water had risen to the base of the stage at Louise Hayes Park, Hornes said. The river was sweeping away the portable toilets staged for the July 4 festivities.

“It’s rising quickly,” Rice wrote back. “I made some rounds early this morning.” (Rice had been out jogging earlier that morning, he would tell reporters.)

Eight minutes passed.

Rice texted the Kerrville City Council: “Good morning. Major flooding on Hwy 39 at Casa Bonita rd past Hunt. 2 water rescues and 2 people stuck on the roof. Hunt (Volunteer Fire Department) and (Texas Intrastate Fire Mutual Aid System) boat team on scene. We have 3 more TIFMAS teams headed to the area and we are on standby. More information coming in.”

“Water is rising out at Louis (sic) Hayes Park more to follow.”

“Thanks for the news,” Council Member Kent McKinney wrote. “We get too little or, at times, too much rain at once.”

“Ugh!!!” wrote Council Member Brenda Hughes. “Not what we needed today.”

At 6:15 a.m.: Rice texted a group of 15 people, including city department heads, to tell them they were activating a command post, and that the park was under water.

“Please notify your on call and emergency teams and stand by,” he said, adding, “situation is developing rapidly.”

The city posted a statement to Facebook soon after that still reflected a lack of understanding of the flood’s size and scope.“Much needed rain swept through Kerrville overnight, but the downside is the severe weather may impact many of today’s scheduled July 4th events,” read the post, which was also issued as a news release. “Citizens are encouraged to exercise caution when driving and avoid low water crossings. Kerrville Police and Fire Department personnel are currently assessing emergency needs.”

Sometime after 6:37 a.m. Herring, the mayor, wrote to the city manager, “I stand ready to do my duty as needed.”

Seven minutes later, according to federal gauge data, the Guadalupe River at Kerrville reached its peak.

The aftermath

Kerrville was not the hardest-hit place during the July 4 flooding, but it didn’t escape unscathed either. Officials reported multiple rescues and evacuations, according to the records. The Walmart became a reunification point. The First United Methodist Church became a shelter.

Awful things happened: A park employee found a child’s body, according to one email. The city attorney, working to get a disaster declaration filed so the city could get federal funding, learned a friend had died in the flood.

As the extent of the disaster became clear, city leaders got bombarded with interview requests from television stations, messages from volunteers trying to find out how to help and solicitations from businesses trying to sell their disaster response services.

Some people sent messages of support; others eviscerated them. One person wondered why police officers didn’t see the river rising. “What happened here?” Another wrote to the city emergency management coordinator Hughes: “RESIGN.”

Council Member Jeff Harris described at a July 8 council meeting going out to a city where he had lived for 20 years and not recognizing it.

Assistant City Manager Michael Hornes told the council at that meeting about the destruction: The water treatment plant was damaged; eight cabins, 10 RV sites and other tent sites at Kerrville-Schreiner Park had to be evacuated as the parkland went under water; an RV hit an apartment building and pushed it off its foundation.

The city decided to turn soccer fields into a place to collect millions of cubic yards of tree and vegetative debris, Hornes said.

Herring, the mayor, said in an email to The Texas Tribune that the city on Thursday would provide the Legislative committees “a complete timeline of the city’s response.”

“I believe this timeline will dispel notions of a delayed response at the city level,” Herring wrote. “This timeline, in my opinion, shows city staff following our emergency plan well — especially given we had no accurate warning of what was unfolding in real time.”

County officials, meanwhile, have declined interviews and instead leaned on a statement from Rice: “From the start, the city and county have pledged transparency and a full review of the disaster response, and we stand by those commitments.”

No details about that review have been publicly released.

Lexi Churchill contributed reporting.

Disclosure: Facebook has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/07/30/texas-kerrville-hill-country-floods-response-emails/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

The post Released messages show Kerrville officials’ flood response appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article presents a factual, detailed account of the flood events and emergency response in Kerrville, Texas, without promoting a particular political viewpoint. It emphasizes transparency, government accountability, and public safety concerns through objective reporting of communications and official actions. The tone remains neutral, avoiding partisan language or framing, focusing instead on the events and systemic challenges in emergency management. The inclusion of multiple perspectives and official statements supports balanced coverage typical of centrist journalism.

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Yelp names ‘Top 100 Sandwich Shops’ in the US, several Texas locations make the cut

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www.kxan.com – Michael Bartiromo – 2025-07-30 12:45:00

SUMMARY: Yelp released its first-ever list of the “Top 100 Sandwich Shops” in the U.S., based on community ratings and reviews, just ahead of National Sandwich Month in August. The No. 1 spot went to Frankie’s Deli Warehouse in Hialeah, Florida, praised for excellent food and friendly service. The list highlights a variety of highly rated delis and sandwich counters nationwide, including spots in California, Texas, New York, and Florida. This ranking offers sandwich lovers a guide to the best places to enjoy classics like Reubens, heroes, and hoagies across the country.

More information, including a handy map of all 100 shops and links to each restaurant’s Yelp page, can be found at Yelp.com.

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