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Lies our drug warriors told us
Reno News and Review ^ | August 24th, 2006 | Dennis Myers

Posted on 08/25/2006 6:26:19 AM PDT by cryptical

The reporters made their way through the dim lights and small huts of Virginia City's Chinatown. In the huts, one of the reporters later wrote, "A lamp sits on the bed, the length of the long pipe-stem from the smoker's mouth; he puts a pellet of opium on the end of a wire, sets it on fire, and plasters it into the pipe much as a Christian would fill a hole with putty; then he applies the bowl to the lamp and proceeds to smoke--and the stewing and frying of the drug and the gurgling of the juices in the stem would well nigh turn the stomach of a statue. John likes it, though; it soothes him, he takes about two dozen whiffs, and then rolls over to dream."

The reporter, Mark Twain, whose Victorian sensibilities made him uncomfortable when faced with the scenes in Chinatown, nevertheless was one reporter who did not use his coverage of opium use to demonize the Chinese. Others were less principled. They set the pattern of much of the news coverage of drug use that followed in the next century and a half.

The Comstock journalists produced racist and inaccurate news coverage that relied on uninformed sources (law enforcement instead of physicians), inflamed the people of the town, and produced the nation's first anti-drug law, an ordinance banning opium smoking within Virginia City, enacted on Sept. 12, 1876. The local politicians, discovering that fear of drugs and minorities sold, were just as irresponsible, blaming everything from poor sanitation to child molestation on Chinese drug "fiends." When the local prohibition ordinance failed, they pushed for a statewide law which failed (and, of course, would be followed by national laws that failed).

The entire ineffectual template of the drug war with which we live today was established there in Virginia City--journalists who gave short shrift to science and health-care professionals in favor of treating politicians and law enforcers as drug experts in lurid and exploitive news coverage; politicians who exploited legitimate concern to promote race hatred and reelection; law enforcers who confused cause with effect and exploited public anxiety to promote punitive laws; and all three who treated prohibition as a solution: "Let severe measures be adopted and the sale of the drug will soon be suppressed!" observed a Nye County newspaper. The nation has been chasing that siren's song ever since.

A century later, Reno physician Wesley Hall was the president-elect of the American Medical Association. On April 2, 1970, he used the forum provided by his new stature to announce that in June, the AMA would release a study showing that marijuana deadened the sex drive and caused birth defects. The statement caused a flap, but no such study was ever released. A few weeks later, Hall claimed he had been misquoted but also claimed that he had not bothered to correct the record because "it does some good." By then, correcting the record did no good--Hall's comments kept getting cited and quoted until experience and the passing years showed their falsity.

Over the course of the war on drugs that began in Virginia City and accelerated decade by decade, such lying became an indispensable weapon of that war. The lies sometimes took the form of outright falsehoods. At other times, they took the form of letting errors stand uncorrected or leaving out essential information. Drug warriors--whether journalists, politicians, police or public employees--need lies because the drug war can't be sustained without them. Lies are the foundation of the drug war, and the five listed here are the tip of the iceberg. There are many, many more, and they are relevant to a marijuana measure that will appear on this year's Nevada ballot.

1. Gateway drugs In the early 20th century, Dr. Charles Towns was a leading public figure and drug "expert," operator of the Towns Hospital in New York. He propounded a theory that would have a long life--that some drugs "lead" to harder drugs. "The tobacco user is in the wrong," he wrote. "It undermines his nervous strength. It blunts the edge of his mind. It gives him 'off-days,' when he doesn't feel up to his work. It always precedes alcoholism and drug addiction. I've never had a drug case or an alcoholic case (excepting a few women) that didn't have a history of excessive smoking. Inhaling tobacco is just as injurious as moderate opium smoking."

The gateway theory evolved until baby boomers raised in the 1950s on "marijuana leads to harder stuff" learned its falsity from personal experience in the 1960s. If that experience and the findings of science were not enough, there was practical evidence that some drugs actually functioned as barrier drugs, not gateway drugs. Whenever mild drugs were removed as a barrier, harder drugs came into use. In 1910, Congress received data showing that during a period of alcohol prohibition in New England, morphine use jumped by 150 percent. In 1968, a Johnson administration crackdown on marijuana in Vietnam reduced supply and provoked an upsurge in heroin use. In 1969 in California, a six-day Nixon administration crackdown on the Mexican border dried up marijuana supplies and filled heath-care facilities with a flood of heroin cases. California physician David Smith told Newsweek, "The government line is that the use of marijuana leads to more dangerous drugs. The fact is that the lack of marijuana leads to more dangerous drugs."

The gateway theory went into decline after such experiences but always made a comeback because drug war dogma requires it. Today it is back, alive and well.

And as it turned out, "Doctor" Towns was a quack--a failed insurance salesman who was not a physician and peddled a bogus "cure" for drug addiction.

2. Marijuana’s not medicine. Today, we're accustomed to medical experts like Washoe County District Attorney Richard Gammick denying that marijuana is medicine (Gammick: "I didn't support medical marijuana because it doesn't exist."), but in 1937, it was a novel argument, since marijuana was universally acknowledged as a beneficial medicine. It was listed in the American Medical Association's Pharmacopeia (list of approved medications) and remained there even after being made illegal until federal officials brought pressure on the AMA. (It is still in the British Pharmacopeia.)

What may have been the first time this lie was told was a key moment in the drug wars. Congress was considering legislation that year to outlaw non-medicinal marijuana at the behest of the lumber and liquor lobbies and fueled by newspaper hysteria over marijuana. By continuing to protect physicians' use of the drug, Congress recognized its medical value.

Though there was an exception in the bill for physicians, the medical community was still concerned about the restrictions. There was apparently an effort to slip the ban through Congress quietly, but AMA lobbyist William C. Woodward found out about a House Ways and Means Committee hearing on the bill and showed up to demand actual evidence of the danger of the drug instead of the anecdotal newspaper horror stories to which the committee had been listening: "It has surprised me, however, that the facts on which these statements have been based have not been brought before this committee by competent primary evidence. We are referred to newspaper publications concerning the prevalence of marijuana addiction. We are told that the use of marijuana causes crime. But yet no one has been produced from the Bureau of Prisons to show the number of prisoners who have been found addicted to the marijuana habit. An informed inquiry shows that the Bureau of Prisons has no evidence on that point. You have been told that school children are great users of marijuana cigarettes. No one has been summoned from the Children's Bureau to show the nature and extent of the habit among children."

The committee members tore into Woodward spitefully, giving him the kind of grilling they did not give to drug warriors.

One member told Woodward, "We know that it is a habit that is spreading, particularly among youngsters. ... The number of victims is increasing each year." Woodward replied, "There is no evidence of that." He kept insisting on evidence instead of hearsay.

The committee ended Woodward's testimony without thanking him or even formally ending his testimony, brusquely calling the next witness.

One of those present at that hearing was U.S. Rep. Carl Vinson of Georgia. When the marijuana ban reached the House floor on June 10, 1937, he was the floor manager. To give some idea of the care with which the bill was enacted and the depth of knowledge from which lawmakers were working, there was this exchange:

U.S. Rep. Bertrand Snell of New York: "What is the bill?"

U.S. Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas: "It has something to do with something that is called marijuana. I believe it is a narcotic of some kind."

Vinson: "Marijuana is the same as hashish."

Snell: "Mr. Speaker, I am not going to object, but I think it is wrong to consider legislation of this character at this time of night."

U.S. drug czar John Walters came to Nevada to campaign against a medical marijuana measure and told a lurid tale of highly potent marijuana. Photo By D. Brian Burghart

Then came a question that led to the lie whose consequences are still with us. Snell asked, "Mr. Speaker, does the American Medical Association support this bill?"

The response fell to Vinson. A truthful answer might well derail the bill. Future chief justice of the United States Vinson stood and lied: "Their Doctor Wentworth [sic] came down here. They support this bill one hundred percent."

The bill was approved.

3. Crack babies. The report went on the air at 5:34:50 p.m. on Sept. 11, 1985, with an on-screen headline of "Cocaine and pregnant mothers." In 1 minute and 50 seconds, Susan Spencer of CBS ignited an inflammatory national myth--the crack baby. Footage of a screaming and trembling baby going through withdrawal after supposedly being born to a mother who used cocaine was backed by interviews with physicians Ira Chasnoff and Sidney Schnoll. Chasnoff had just published a study in the New England Journal of Medicine that had caught Spencer's eye and prompted the report. Spencer ended the report with the lines, "The message is clear. If you are pregnant and using cocaine, stop."

University of Michigan scholars Richard Campbell and Jimmie Reeves have tracked the events which followed. As other reporters and media chased the story, it evolved. Spencer's report was a health warning. By the time her CBS colleague Terry Drinkwater and others recycled the story, it was an attack on the mothers (Washington Post: "The Worst Threat Is Mom Herself"). As the firestorm built, politicians and others got involved, and the babies themselves were demonized. A judge called them "tomorrow's delinquents," and Democratic U.S. Rep. George Miller of California said, "We are going to have these children, who are the most expensive babies ever born in America, are going to overwhelm every social service delivery system that they come in contact with throughout the rest of their lives." Boston University President John Silber suggested the babies were soulless--"crack babies who won't ever achieve the intellectual development to have consciousness of God."

The drumbeat against the children became so fierce that a commentary in the Journal of the American Medical Association asked, "Why is there today such an urgency to label prenatally cocaine-exposed children as irremediably damaged?" And Emory University's Dr. Claire Coles said of the "crack baby" label, "If a child comes to kindergarten with that label, they're dead. They are very likely to fulfill the worst prophecies."

Hospitals started threatening to turn mothers over to police; prosecutors started charging mothers with child abuse. (The Nevada Legislature rejected a statute permitting such prosecutions, and when the Washoe sheriff tried to charge a mother anyway, the Nevada Supreme Court slapped it down.) One case--Ferguson v. City of Charleston--made its way all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which held that hospitals had to stop testing for drugs without patient consent. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine indicated that the drug habits of white women were more likely to be overlooked by physicians or hospitals, while African Americans were reported to police.

And it was all built on a pile of sand.

Spencer, like most reporters, did not know how to read a scientific study, and the Chasnoff study was flawed. The study involved just 23 women, and its author himself called it inadequate.

Worse, according to former Wall Street Journal reporter Dan Baum, who wrote an influential account of the drug war, physicians noticed something about video reports by Spencer and others that ordinary viewers--and the reporters themselves--missed. The trembling babies were exhibiting behavior that is not produced by cocaine. Being withdrawn from coke produces sleep, not the trembling and screaming shown in the sensational reports. Baum wrote, "It dawned on [Dr. Claire] Coles that the TV crews were either mixed up or lying. They were filming infants suffering heroin withdrawal and calling them 'cocaine babies.' "

Moreover, the physicians also felt that drugs were not the cause of the problems being attributed to the babies. Lack of nutrition and health care during pregnancy were. A Florida report noted, "In the end, it is safer for the baby to be born to a drug-using, anemic, or diabetic mother who visits the doctor throughout her pregnancy than to be born to a normal woman who does not."

The controversy arose at a time when both Democrats and Republicans in Congress and President Reagan had sliced apart the "safety net" that had long existed for poor families. By 1985, prenatal care and nutrition were less accessible. Federal deregulation of the insurance industry had cut low-income families loose from health insurance. Federally funded medical care had been slashed. While journalism had raced off after the mock cause of unhealthy babies, the real causes had received far less press scrutiny.

It was a case study of journalism taking a complex story and simplifying it into inflammatory and irresponsible coverage that made the problem worse. It is now pretty clear to experts and insiders what happened. But the damage is done. Today, there are 103,000 hits on Google for crack baby and 107,000 for crack babies.

4. Instant addiction. The March 17, 1986, issue of Newsweek hit the newsstands on March 10. Newsweek has long served as the unofficial house organ of the drug war. That alliance has often suspended the critical faculties of its staff members. Never was that failing more dangerous than in that 1986 issue with its "Kids and Cocaine" cover story. Inside was an interview with Arnold Washton, operator of a drug hotline who was known for hyperbole--he had once told NBC that crack was a form of Russian roulette. In the Newsweek article he said, "There is no such thing as recreational use of crack. It is almost instantaneous addiction."

Newsweek did not bother checking the accuracy of the incendiary claim before publishing it. Instead, acting as stenographers instead of journalists, the magazine's editors printed it without a competing viewpoint.

The assertion shot through newsrooms around the nation with the speed of sound, and those newsrooms passed it along like carriers of a disease. And it was untrue. Dr. Herbert Kleber, perhaps the leading cocaine expert in the United States has said, "No drug is instantly addictive."

The claim was as potent in its effect as crack. Laws, fueled by the frenzy created by "instantly addicting" crack, were enacted. One of them, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, imposed lower penalties on powder cocaine (used mostly by whites) than on crack cocaine (used mostly by African Americans). In practice, whites tended to be diverted into treatment more than blacks. All four members of Congress from Nevada voted for the bill.

There were those who tried to brake the inflammatory news coverage. The Washington Journalism Review eventually ran a cover story quoting Peter Jennings saying that using crack "even once can make a person crave cocaine as long as they live." Existing research, the Review said, disproves that statement. But the piece didn't appear until 1990. The Columbia Journalism Review did not directly challenge the claim but did urge greater skepticism toward drug war claims.

It did little good. The belief in the instantly addicting qualities of cocaine has entered popular culture. "The crack cocaine of ..." joined "If we can put a man on the moon ..." as an indispensable phrase. There are 47,800 Google hits for it--"the crack cocaine of junk food," "the crack cocaine of gambling addiction," "the crack cocaine of sexaholics," and so on.

5. Marijuana’s rising potency That distinguished medical expert, Washoe County District Attorney Richard Gammick, said on Sam Shad's television program, "This is not the marijuana that people used to roll and do a little doobie back at Haight-Ashbury and some of the other things that went on back 30, 40 years ago. This is 10 times stronger in THC [tetrahydrocannabinol] content."

This has become one of the most common new myths about marijuana. White House drug czar John Walters loves it and used it when he came to Reno and Las Vegas to campaign against a 2002 marijuana ballot measure. "What many people don't understand is that this is not your father's marijuana," he told the Washington Post in a story about the Nevada initiative. "What we're seeing now is much more potent." In fact, no reliable evidence substantiates Gammick's 10-times-stronger claim, much less Walters' 30-times-stronger claim.

What they leave out of their sales pitch are these little nuggets of information:

• The claims of higher potency are based on a 1960s study that used unusually low-potency marijuana for testing purposes.

• The Bush administration itself will not substantiate the Walters/Gammick-style claims about potency. The federal Potency Monitoring Project reports negligible fluctuations in potency over the years. The U.S. Department of Justice's "National Drug Threat Assessment" for 2005 said that higher potency marijuana is not marketable because it makes tokers sick--"more intense--and often unpleasant--effects of the drug leading them to seek medical intervention."

• Potency is a so-what issue--when marijuana is more potent, tokers smoke less.

Walters managed to combine two of the lies we listed here into a single sentence when, on one occasion, he talked about border smuggling of pot that he claimed was highly potent: "Canada is exporting to us the crack of marijuana." It's the kind of false statement that would have fit right into 1870s Virginia City.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: addiction; bongbrigade; crackisaddictive; dealerzanduserz; drugskilledbelushi; endthewosd; govwatch; hangthedealers; hungdealersdontdeal; leroyinrenolying; libertarians; mrleroybait; preachingtochoir; wodlist
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To: mugs99
Democrats want to be your Mommy and Republicans want to be your Daddy.

And I, like the vast majority of Americans, am far beyond needing a mommy and daddy.

Some of these folks out here seem to think that most Americans are just frothing at the mouth to lose their identifies in drugs, but are only restrained because the drugs are illegal, and so, once they're made legal, the people will pounce on the nearest drug and consume it with evil passion, losing the soul of America forever.

Bah. No doubt these folks have purchased numerous lots of Lunar property.

221 posted on 08/26/2006 4:49:17 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: Hemingway's Ghost

You ignored what I said and chose instead to whip the starch out of a red herring. My words:
Overcoming the attraction of trance inducing drugs is best pursued by debunking myths about such drugs as a means to deep spiritual experience, instant serenity, ecstatic pleasure and their ilk. Those are the lies that kill.


222 posted on 08/26/2006 6:33:43 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell (Here come I, gravitas in tow.)
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To: PaxMacian
a generations long civil war

A steaming pile of hyperbole.

223 posted on 08/26/2006 7:41:54 PM PDT by Mojave
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To: William Terrell

You condemn "socialism" while seeking its imposition. That places your hyperbolic posturing in question.


224 posted on 08/26/2006 7:53:06 PM PDT by Mojave
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To: cryptical
I've seen most of these lies repeated by drug warriors here on FR, just thought I'd toss this out for a Friday morning.

You just HAD to rattle the cages of the apoplectic prohibitionists, didn't you?! Expect keyboard sales to increase over the next few days as froth damage sends some of them out for new ones to respond to posts.

225 posted on 08/26/2006 8:09:58 PM PDT by Thumper1960 (Politicians are like diapers. They need changed often, and for the same reasons.)
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To: Zon

Good, so law enforcement has helped keep it where it has been and not let it spread worse.


226 posted on 08/26/2006 9:05:13 PM PDT by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: William Terrell
Bah. No doubt these folks have purchased numerous lots of Lunar property.

ROFL...
I think you're right!
.
227 posted on 08/26/2006 9:18:30 PM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: A CA Guy

Good, so law enforcement has helped keep it where it has been and not let it spread worse.

No. The WOD has had the unintended consequence of maintaining an elevated level of drug addiction. There's much better educational resources and medical resources to address the drug problem with than were available in 1914 and 1970. The WOD, aside from its failure, diverts resources and attention away from addressing the drug problem as a medical and education problem.

The goal of ending the WOD is not to solve the drug problem. It is to greatly reduce the violence problem. Then we have to buckle down and rationally address the drug problem. Addressing tobacco addiction as an education and medical problem has been quite successful. Tobacco, more addicting than heroin.

The introductory video at LEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) addresses that. Introduction video. Real Media (14 mb) - MPEG-4 (23 mb) 

228 posted on 08/26/2006 9:22:28 PM PDT by Zon (Honesty outlives the lie, spin and deception -- It always has -- It always will.)
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To: AmericaUnite
The rest of the MedScape article goes into more about the negative effects of cocaine

The MedScape article refutes itself in the last sentence: "the findings are not conclusive or consistent."
.
229 posted on 08/26/2006 9:26:47 PM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: Zon
Law enforcement doesn't cause increases in addiction, that is absurd.
Enforcement doesn't increase rape, murder or diarrhea for that matter either.
230 posted on 08/26/2006 9:28:04 PM PDT by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: A CA Guy

Law enforcement doesn't cause increases in addiction, that is absurd.

Then why do you imply it does increase addiction? I certainly never implied nor said that. Gee wiz, I can imply things about you that you never said but I will not stoop to your juvenile level of discourse. I did say, "The WOD has had the unintended consequence of maintaining an elevated level of drug addiction."228 Maintain the same level of drug addiction as it was in 1914, 1970 and 2003 without the WOD the level would be less than the constant 1.3% is has been -- thus the WOD maintains the 1.3% elevated level. In other words, had the trillion-dollars in resources that have been wasted on wagging the WOD been instead redirected to addressing the drug problem as an education and medical problem the addiction rate would have decreased from 1.3%.

231 posted on 08/26/2006 9:54:50 PM PDT by Zon (Honesty outlives the lie, spin and deception -- It always has -- It always will.)
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To: Mojave
This isn't the thread to discuss how the NRST funds more socialism.

232 posted on 08/26/2006 9:58:35 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: Zon
To suggest it is not reducing what would have been is ridiculous.
In other country's where they treated it like a sacrament addiction went higher and things got worse by far.

Sure, you got a person dying, don't bust them for pot possession at home unless they are sharing or dealing.

We can't approve of it because you will increase addiction a lot more and in the end if no one were addicted, we would all be better off.
233 posted on 08/26/2006 9:59:09 PM PDT by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: William Terrell

You raised the socialism red herring, not I.


234 posted on 08/26/2006 9:59:37 PM PDT by Mojave
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To: Zon
I did say, "The WOD has had the unintended consequence of maintaining an elevated level of drug addiction."

Maintaining an elevated level?

Dance, baby!

235 posted on 08/26/2006 10:02:46 PM PDT by Mojave
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To: Mojave

Roscoe, what other aliases are you posting under?


236 posted on 08/26/2006 10:18:38 PM PDT by Zon (Honesty outlives the lie, spin and deception -- It always has -- It always will.)
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To: Zon
Ping me if you ever manage to construct an explanation of your term "maintaining an elevated level".

It should prove entertaining.

237 posted on 08/26/2006 10:34:17 PM PDT by Mojave
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To: A CA Guy

In other country's where they treated it like a sacrament addiction went higher and things got worse by far.

You're talking about treating drug addiction as a sacrament, religious right. I'm talking about treating the drug problem as an education and medical problem. Similar to treating the tobacco addiction problem since 1990 as an education and medical problem has reduced the number of tobacco users by almost 50%. And tobacco is more addictive than heroin. 

We can't approve of it because you will increase addiction a lot more and in the end if no one were addicted, we would all be better off.

In your world the Surgeon General's Warning on tobacco equates to approval, not toleration. Hey, A CA Guy, there's no law prohibiting you from shoving a broom stick up your a$$, but according to your logic that signals approval.

If only no one was addicted to drugs, but they are. Treating them as criminals is immoral. It is immoral to initiate harm/force against another person or their property. If you think the act of a person sitting in the privacy of their home doing drugs has harmed you then take the person to court and an impartial jury and try your best to convince the jury that the person's act victimized you--harmed you. After all, if that person's act harmed you then you are due restitution for your pain and suffering. Somehow I think nine out of ten times the jury will side with the defendant. I don't see how the person doing drugs in the privacy of their home harms you.

238 posted on 08/26/2006 10:43:53 PM PDT by Zon (Honesty outlives the lie, spin and deception -- It always has -- It always will.)
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To: Mojave

See post 231 a few posts above yours.


239 posted on 08/26/2006 10:46:35 PM PDT by Zon (Honesty outlives the lie, spin and deception -- It always has -- It always will.)
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Comment #240 Removed by Moderator


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