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#76 | |
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Join Date: September 25, 2008
Location: CONUS
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A poster child for abuse of red flag laws is the case of the woman on Colorado who, a couple or so years ago, filed an "extreme risk protection order" against the police officer who was forced to shoot and kill her son, who was approaching the officer with a knife and who refused to put it down. The officer's body cam showed him back peddling probably at least 100 feet, all the while begging the perp to drop the knife. Finally, the kid rushed the cop, so the cop (and another officer on the scene) had to open fire. The grieving mother filed an ERPO against the cop, claiming that he was a murderer and a danger to society. The Colorado law (at least at that time) required that a complainant be somehow related to the subject of the order, so on the form she checked a box claiming [falsely] that she and the officer had a child in common. Ultimately, she was arrested and convicted of perjury, but it took a couple of years for that to play out. But I don't think all states have a form such as that as part of their system. In my state, as originally adopted the ERPO law required two police officers to sign off on a petition. A recent revision removed that requirement, and also opened it up to the point where just about anyone who can remember your name (even if they can't spell it correctly) can file for an order against you. https://www.reporterherald.com/2022/...ublic-servant/
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#77 | |||
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
Location: Tennessee
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School Shootings will continue States (even gun friendly ones like Florida) are enacting them. Really Gun friendly states like TN are seriously considering them and even the Governor has asked for one. Voters feel like they are reasonable ways to prevent some of these shootings and that some tool other than full on involuntary commitment needs to be in play. So, bottom-line is that this issue will be brought up again and may be coming to a state near you. Since I like proacting, maybe discussion of what that tool should look like would better be between us gun types or "others" will make it up for us. Sticking our heads in the sand prolly won't help and may get us a law that really sucks. So, what are the components look like? I listened to a few Mental Health types and diagnosis of a particular disease seems to be less helpful than actual behavior at the time and many of these nuts aren't formally diagnosed.
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#78 | |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
Posts: 27,786
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You keep asking "how do we write a better red flag law?" What I'm getting from that is "can we? and "how do we do it if we can?" What I'm not getting is "should we?" I don't think we should. I'm afraid I don't buy the argument that "its going to happen, if we help them, maybe we'll get a better deal". The road to Hell is paved with good intentions. The way I see it, red flag laws are not just paving stones, but are steeply sloped down and covered with oil. I'm not being paid to be part of the work crew installing them, and I'm not at all interested in telling that crew how to do a better job. you can't fix anything until you know what is broken and no fix can last until you understand what caused it to break in the first place, and change that.
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#79 | |
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Join Date: September 27, 2008
Location: Foothills of the Appalachians
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Something most people don't understand is, gun-control advocates can't be dealt with in good faith. Any "deal" we think we're striking with them will be poisoned.
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#80 |
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Join Date: April 10, 2012
Location: San Diego CA
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Straight up word ! Tom . The cake analogy is perfect to make that point.
The Cake Let's say I have this cake. It is a very nice cake, with "GUN RIGHTS" written across the top in lovely floral icing. I received it from the 2nd amendment. Along you come and say, "Give me that cake." I say, "No, it's my cake." You say, "Let's compromise. Give me half." I respond by asking what I get out of this compromise, and you reply that I get to keep half of my cake. Okay, we compromise. Let us call this compromise The National Firearms Act of 1934. There I am with my half of the cake, and you walk back up and say, "Give me that cake." cake I say, "No, it's my cake." You say, "Let's compromise." What do I get out of this compromise? Why, I get to keep half of what's left of the cake I already own? So, we have your compromise -- let us call this one the Gun Control Act of 1968 -- and I'm left holding what is now just a quarter of my cake. And I'm sitting in the corner with my quarter piece of cake, and here you come again. You want my cake. Again. You say, "Let's compromise once more." What do I get out of this compromise? I get to keep one-eighth of what's left of the cake I already own? So, we have your compromise -- let us call this one the Machine gun ban of 1986 -- and I'm left holding what is now just an eighth of my cake. I sit back in the corner with just my eighth of cake that I once owned outright and completely, I glance up and here you come once more. You say nothing and just grab my cake; This time you take several bites -- we'll call this compromise the Clinton Executive Orders -- and I'm left with about a tenth of what has always been MY CAKE and you've got nine-tenths of it. Then we compromised with the Lautenberg Act (nibble, nibble), the HUD/Smith and Wesson agreement (nibble, nibble), the Brady Law (NOM NOM NOM), the School Safety and Law Enforcement Improvement Act (sweet tap-dancing Freyja, my finger!) I'm left holding crumbs of what was once a large and satisfying cake, and you're standing there with most of MY CAKE, making anime eyes and whining about being "reasonable", and wondering "why we won't compromise
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#81 | ||
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Join Date: September 25, 2008
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https://thelawdogfiles.com/2013/01/a-repost.html Quote:
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#82 |
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Join Date: September 25, 2008
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I see Metal god quoted Law Dog while I was typing. I'll leave mine up, because I gave Law Dog proper recognition as being the source of the analogy.
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#83 | |
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Join Date: March 11, 2006
Location: Upper US
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Thank you for giving Law Dog (a member here for many years) his due credit.
Metal God, you got one thing wrong about the cake. Quote:
and this is my primary objection to "helping" write better gun control laws, all it does is like throwing one of our babies (our rights) out of the sleigh in the hope the pursuing wolves will stop chasing us. They won't. They may briefly pause while they devour the baby, but then they come on again, and stronger, because YOU FED THEM! Appeasement does not work, long term and its really humiliating short term (though some won't see it. Once you pay the DaneGeld, you're never free of the Dane, and no matter how sincerely they seem to promise that this is the end of their territorial demands in Europe, we DON'T get "peace in our time", from giving them what they demand. We get it (as much as we do) from fighting the war we hoped we could avoid, and winning.
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#84 | ||||||
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 1,773
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As I posted before, this issue has legs and ain't going away. Some of you already live in states with bad Red Flag laws. I suspect my state will have something in the future so I'm interested in what the folks here think would make good law.
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#85 | |
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Join Date: September 25, 2008
Location: CONUS
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Second, why do you say, "without using laws designed for completely insane and nonfunctioning folk"? Are you suggesting that people who want to shoot up schools and kill large numbers of children AREN'T completely insane? In the case of the Sandy Hook shooter, not only was he pretty much nuts, he was also pretty much dysfunctional -- if not non-functional. Do you object to using existing laws about crazy people to keep crazy people away from guns? I respectfully submit that you have fallen into the trap of blaming the tool for the actions of the operator. You are still focused on the guns, and the guns aren't the problem. The problem is people who want to kill large numbers of other people. And our politicians don't want to address that, so they use GUNZ!!! as their scapegoat.
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#86 |
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Join Date: April 10, 2012
Location: San Diego CA
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AB give up he does not get it . He appears to be in the crowd, something has to be done - this is something so lets do this ! Not caring if this actually will work . He does not understand as long as guns are available, guns will be used in bad ways from time to time . The only way to truly stop people committing crimes using guns is to not only ban guns for sale but to take the ones we all have away . I’ll say it again , that is never going to happen . I say never because we’ve ( law abiding citizens ) fought wars over that before and we we will again if push comes to shove . This county will always have guns therefore there will always be people using them unlawfully.
He’s also not listening to what has been said many times . Its about DUE PROCESS period and every red flag law so far excludes due process . I understand why they do , good reason or not , for going due process is never ok . Why do they want to do everything in secret, simple because if they tell the crazy guy they are looking to take there weapons. If the guy really is crazy and is/was planning on doing harm to others . Tipping them off will likely force there hand and they will either do the bad deed right away before LEO can get to the weapons or they can hide the weapons so they can do it at a later date . I/we understand why the government feels the need to for go due process but the constitution says you can’t. Again it has been said many times in this thread , there is already laws on the books to deal with crazy people . The issue is those remedies require due process . Maliciously or not government does not want to use those tools. Because it will tip off the bad guy about the government is up to. It’s really simple as that in my humble opinion. We all must stand up and say no that is unacceptable. ![]() Captain Picard said it best THE LINE MUST BE DRAWN HERE ! THIS FAR , NO FURTHER !!!
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If Jesus had a gun , he'd probably still be alive ! I almost always write my posts regardless of content in a jovial manor and intent . If that's not how you took it , please try again . ![]() ![]() Last edited by Metal god; April 18, 2023 at 12:44 AM. |
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#87 | ||||
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Join Date: December 13, 2005
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Your drive to violate the rights of people whose characteristics you can't even define is the problem, not the solution.
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#88 | ||
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
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Often times, while crazy as bedbugs, these shooters aren't formally diagnosed (until it's too late) but it is clear to those around them that they are crazy based on statements and behavior. Red Flag laws won't stop all shootings but there needs to be a way to temporarily take guns away from suicidal and dangerous types. I'm not a mental health professional (and neither are you) but crazy is not one size fits all. I've personally known people who wanted to and attempted suicide for instance but were not successful and later regretted it but it was during a crisis. Others have testified that they wanted to shoot up a school but were not able to for some reason and then later were fine and glad they didn't. The laws you speak of were written for people who were diagnosed and nonfunctional. Since shooting up schools has become a crazytown meme and SOP we need a tool to get guns away from nuts. It's not a silver bullet but a tool like this along with armed security at schools would be a great set of tools to help prevent such.
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#89 | |
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Join Date: June 17, 2010
Location: Virginia
Posts: 6,685
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As TG (and for that matter, AB) indicate, without a Dept of Pre-Crime the cost of a free society -- backed up w/ the armed means of
both self-determination and defense -- is going to be high. That the Left has taken the stance that such cost is no longer in any "civilized" society's interest has become the driving issue. Take care, for that is the existential issue at hand for what defines the American Experiment Quote:
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#90 | ||||
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Join Date: December 13, 2005
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Where you describe a need based on your informal diagnosis of craziness clear to unspecified people, and can't define what a "nut" is or how one is shown to be a "nut", you illustrate a problem with RFLs more than you make an argument for them. Quote:
Indulging bad ideas isn't a strategic virtue.
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http://www.npboards.com/index.php Last edited by zukiphile; April 18, 2023 at 09:39 AM. |
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#91 | |
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Join Date: September 25, 2008
Location: CONUS
Posts: 18,130
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I'll just toss out one example: The Sutherland Springs church shooter. He had been convicted by a military courts martial, and had either a bad conduct or dishonorable discharge. The Air Force was required BY LAW to report that to NICS. The Air Force did not do so -- and recently paid a significant amount of money to survivors of the victims as a result. And please don't laugh out loud about it -- it's not funny. According to a 2020 Gallup poll, 32 percent of adult Americans report owning firearms. Since many gun owners won't admit to owning them, the actual percentage is likely considerably higher, but let's go with 32 percent. As of 2021 the adult population of the United States was approximately 249.77 million. 32% of that would be 79.93 MILLION people. I think it's fair to say that "most" of those gun owners are innocent. Do you disagree that this means that infringing on their 2nd Amendment rights affects millions of innocent people?
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#92 |
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
Location: Tennessee
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Federal law currently prohibits individuals from possessing firearms if they have been convicted of a felony or domestic-violence misdemeanor, have an active restraining order against them, or have been committed to a mental health institution.
The problem is that very few mass public shooters have disqualifying criminal convictions or mental health histories that prevent them from legally purchasing firearms, even though they often display many signs of being a serious risk of danger to themselves or others. Further, not all mass public shooters have a diagnosable mental illness, and therefore can’t be disarmed through civil commitment procedures. In other words, there’s a gap in existing laws where objectively dangerous people are still permitted to lawfully purchase and possess guns because they have not yet reached a mental health crisis or committed an atrocity. Part of the problem is that civil commitments are a legally intensive process with serious (and often lifelong) implications for the person being committed. They are, therefore, often reserved as a last resort when all else has failed. Red flag laws can provide an intermediate “gap-filler” option for situations where someone is clearly becoming a serious threat to himself or the public, but has not yet committed a serious crime or falls outside the scope of existing laws. Moreover, red flag laws can allow non-state actors to play a more significant role in alerting law enforcement officials and courts to the dangers posed by individuals who may otherwise “fly under the radar.” Friends, family members, and co-workers are often well-positioned to recognize when an individual is becoming an extreme risk of danger and have been instrumental in preventing mass public attacks. Unlike other commonly proposed gun control measures, red-flag laws could have been used to prevent many high-profile mass public shootings without broadly infringing on the rights of all lawful gun owners. For example, the parents of the man who killed six people and wounded 13 in Tucson, Arizona, in 2011 were so worried about his mental health, they disabled his car and tried to hide his firearms. They tried unsuccessfully to get him mental health treatment. A red flag law would have given these parents a means to petition a court for help without relying on county attorneys, and their son could have been disarmed and steered toward treatment before he reached a breaking point. Similarly, red flag laws could have prevented the Parkland, Florida, shooting by allowing the family with whom the shooter was staying to petition a court for disarmament after local law enforcement and school officials refused to take action, despite repeated indications that the shooter was dangerous. No one seriously suggests that any one piece of legislation could provide an easy fix to all mass public shootings, and red flag laws are certainly not a complete answer. They are, however, a potentially important tool in the broader toolbox for combating gun-related violence in the United States, and can be paired with other important measures, such as those addressing untreated mental health issues or increasing the ability of law-abiding citizens to defend themselves in public places.
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#93 | ||||
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
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#94 | |||||
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Join Date: December 13, 2005
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After WWII particularly, there was a problem with involuntary confinement of people we would never confine today. The horror stories involve people with a case of sadness seeking help and being locked up for months or years without access to counsel, medicated, and not shockingly developing mental problems from being confined, drugged and mistreated. We've arguably had a swing to the other extreme now with the mentally ill composing a big part of urban homelessness. Swinging back the other way to the casual abridgement of the rights of people with nervous friends and family (a plan you don't want to be on) isn't progress.
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#95 | ||
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Join Date: September 25, 2008
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The Las Vegas festival shooter wasn't a "nut" either (legally), but his actions weren't exactly exemplary of sanity. I'm sorry, but your approach strikes me as a typical, hand-wringing "But we have to do SOMETHING!" approach. And I respectfully submit that this is not a solid basis for public policy. I am reminded of a video I saw on YouTube several years ago. It was a meeting of some municipal or county board of governors or board of commissioners. They were discussing the adoption of a new anti-gun law or ordinance. It was a public meeting, and a member of the public stood up and reminded the panel that if they passed the law, it couldn't be enforced -- because that state had a firearms preemption statute. Only the state was allowed to regulate firearms. And one of the commissioners responded, "I don't care if it can be enforced. I'm going to vote for it anyway because we've got to do something!" In your case, the "something" you want won't be unenforceable -- but it would negatively impact a great many innocent people while there is no reason to believe that it would actually prevent a single mass shooting. Here's my challenge: Nobody on this forum wants to see kids shot and killed in their schools (or anywhere else). We have made clear that -- setting aside for the moment that creeping incrementalism aspect of gun control legislation in general -- a primary objection to red flag laws as they have been written in every single state that has adopted them is the lack of due process. How about YOU explain to us how a red flag law would read that does provide real, substantive due process?
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#96 |
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Join Date: April 10, 2012
Location: San Diego CA
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Lol where is the bang your head on the wall emoji . The Sandy Hook killer killed the owner of the guns then stole them . What law prevents that ? That is a perfectly fine example because he was diagnosed . His mother chose firearms as one of his therapies. In hindsight does anyone think that was a good idea ? So why can’t a red flag prevent the parents from owning guns ? TG do you think it was a good idea for mom to supply and help train her son to carry out such an attack ? I mean if you saw anyone letting a “crazy” person use there guns wouldn’t that be concerning enough to turn them in as a danger to society and strip them of there rights ?
As far as I can tell you are trying to be a deep thinker but refuse to leave the shallow end . This is not about guns !
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#97 | |||
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
Location: Tennessee
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That acquaintance could have used a Red Flag law to stop this guy before he went postal. Quote:
To be unobjectionable, red flag laws should, among other considerations: Use narrow definitions of “dangerousness” that are based on objective criteria and that don’t treat factors such as lawful firearm ownership or political affiliation as presumptively suspicious; Be temporary in nature, limited only to the period of time the person remains a danger to himself or others, and provide for the prompt restoration of firearms and corresponding rights when the danger no longer exists; Afford strong due process protections, including burdens of proof (i.e., “clear and convincing evidence”), cross-examination rights, and the right to counsel. Provide meaningful remedies for those who are maliciously and falsely accused, and expunge any records of petitions that are not granted; Be integrated with existing mental health and addiction systems to ensure that people who are deemed to be dangerous because of underlying factors receive the treatment they need. I have read that research is limited, but what we do have shows that red flag laws are not used as sweeping gun-confiscation measures. Rather, they effectively target a small class of individuals who are dangerous but can’t otherwise be reached under existing mental health or criminal laws. Importantly, the available evidence suggests that judges do not merely rubber-stamp petitions, especially when adequate due process protections are implemented. Studies of red flag laws in Connecticut and Maryland show that in a significant percentage of cases, petitions are either not granted in the first place, or petitions that were initially granted are rescinded upon further review, and the person’s firearms are returned.
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#98 | |||||
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Join Date: March 31, 2005
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#99 | ||||||||||
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Join Date: December 13, 2005
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Since ability is part of the primary definition of "dangerous", adding the word "potential" is redundant. https://www.google.com/search?q=dang...client=gws-wiz Quote:
You haven't described a gap in circumstances, but have described a problem with burdens of evidence and procedure where you seek a result to which you are not entitled. Quote:
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Observing due process isn't an extreme. I think your response to AB's question could use another run. Quote:
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#100 |
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Join Date: April 10, 2012
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Me after reading this thread
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