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Imperial College London Bans Parents From Graduation Ceremonies ‘Just in Case’

by Will Jones
31 March 2022 1:25 PM

Imperial College London, home of some of the U.K.’s most infamous lockdown cheerleaders such as Professor Neil Ferguson, has enraged parents and students by banning parents from attending their children’s graduation ceremonies due to ‘Covid safety’. The Mail has more.

Parents have voiced their frustration at being unable to attend their children’s graduation ceremonies as a London University stuck rigidly to former Covid regulations.

Imperial College London refused to allow parents and other guests to attend graduation ceremonies in person at the Royal Albert Hall on March 10th and 30th, insisting on the safety policy as “cases of Covid are still prevalent in the U.K.”.

This is in spite of Government regulations coming to an end on February 24th.

As a result, many parents were forced to watch their children’s graduation ceremonies online before joining them for celebrations afterwards, the Telegraph reports.

24-year-old civil engineering graduate Alexander Grace accepted his diploma while his mother Lesley Grace and stepfather Stephen Radcliffe watched from a laptop in their Wembley hotel room.

The couple had travelled from Nottingham hoping to see the ceremony, which Mr. Grace had deferred last year in the hope that they could attend in person.

Imperial College London stated:

Unfortunately, guests are unable to attend our March ceremonies. Safety for graduates and staff is of utmost importance. Cases of Covid are still prevalent in the U.K., and although the pandemic appears to be largely under control at present, we are also mindful that the circumstances could rapidly change. The measures in place have been designed to give the best possible chance of graduation going ahead.

Planning for the ceremonies has also been done to best mitigate against any further disruption to graduation in the event of a rise in cases. In the interest of safety, the Graduation Advisory Committee, which includes representation from students and academic staff, made the difficult decision to reduce the number of attendees by restricting Graduation 2022 to graduands only.

I was confused by the reference to the pandemic being “largely under control”. The Government has lifted all restrictions and according to the ONS prevalence is as high as ever. It’s not in any sense “under control”, it’s just we’ve sensibly decided as a country to move on and stop indulging in the self-destructive and paralysing fear that Imperial academics did so much to encourage. Imperial, on the other hand, seems determined still to live in that fear – or rather, is happy to imply it is when it makes life easier for staff by, say, not having to accommodate parents at graduation ceremonies.

Worth reading in full.

Tags: Covid RestrictionsImperial CollegeLockdownsSafetyismUniversity

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74 Comments
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prick
prick
3 years ago

Couldnt give a rats arse old boy

23
-17
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  prick

I guess the downvoters are protesting the absence of correctly placed apostrophe?

I couldn’t give a rat’s arse either. Trying to buy success, they should have known better.

They bought the contacts. Or rather, not any more.

“It’s politics, man. If you’re hanging on to rising balloon, you’re presented with a difficult decision: let go before it’s too late, or hang on and keep getting higher… posing the question, how long can you keep a grip on the rope?”

Last edited 3 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
18
-2
prick
prick
3 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Have an upvote Marcus

2
-1
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  prick

Thank you, prick. Was it the Withnail & I quote?

1
0
Vir Cotto
Vir Cotto
3 years ago
Reply to  prick

…

hah.gif
0
0
Tenchy
Tenchy
3 years ago

ICL are in the University Challenge final on BBC2 next Monday. I earnestly hope that they’re trounced by their opponents, Reading University.

35
0
Deborah T
Deborah T
3 years ago
Reply to  Tenchy

And I hope so too, for two reasons, as I’m a maths tutor, and the captain of Reading (Hutchinson) lives near me and teaches four of my Year 9s.

18
0
oblong
oblong
3 years ago
Reply to  Tenchy

I did an engineering PhD at Imperial.
Great technical uni let down by medical knobs and snowflake admin.

19
0
Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago
Reply to  oblong

I’m surprised they’re happy to be called ‘Imperial’ what with the association with the British Empire and slavery and all that.

37
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

I thought the same with Imperial Leather soap.

7
0
Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago
Reply to  rtaylor

OMG both empire and animal skin in a single product – enough to make a woke he/she/them cease washing.

15
-1
Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

Ha! It’s only a matter of time and an article in the Guardian. Or … maybe they have protection?

4
0
Gefion
Gefion
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

It’s early days… Plenty of time for someone, somewhere to want to remove the “Imperial’ bit.

0
-1
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago
Reply to  oblong

I covered a Q&A talk in their hall at the Sherfield Building once. Was promised certain lighting and seating arrangements. I learned a lot that day…

Please stay in touch with us in the forums oblong when the system crashes and we need kids, nieces and nephews to be taught practicals.

0
0
Susan
Susan
3 years ago

Academia. A bastion of covid nonsense. A consequence of funding, conformity of thought, effeminacy, all of the above?

36
-2
stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  Susan

The education system as a whole is essentially a process for selecting the high functioning conformists in society.

33
-1
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Well it damn well failed with me and many of the rest on here.

16
-1
stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Yep. It’s not a perfect process. But it does a pretty good job, I would say.

3
0
Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Wasn’t always that way.

2
0
Star
Star
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

So you don’t think it has a function for the rest of the population who don’t get to boss anybody about and who mostly do the same thing at work every day?

Conformism, to use your terminology, is bashed into littl’uns when they’re five and nowadays younger too.

0
0
Jane G
Jane G
3 years ago

Once they’ve cashed your fees payment then you can just go and get lost.

22
-1
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
3 years ago

Less whinge, more sue. “Loss of enjoyment” is an actionable thing.

18
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago

Because Ed U Kay Shun

11
-2
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago

Seems the rot started a long time ago…

My uncle, a graduate of Chemistry from ICL over fifty years ago, is completely spell-bound by the COVID BS. He simply won’t engage in any discussion about it. Tells me I am “behaving terribly”.

41
0
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

As a graduate of chemistry he probably knows little about viruses.

What happens then is the scientist says ‘I’ll trust those that do know’ — in the case of covid this is a mistake, because he’s being denied access to the full spectrum of opinion.

What he should do is employ is ‘generic scientist skills’ to investigate the facts that he does have access to and can interpret, and compare the results with what he’s told.

But for some reason many scientists are unwilling to do this, and will instead just rely on the science-priests’ preachings.

33
0
stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

Maybe because they’re not really scientists, but just people with degrees in science subjects.

People with bachelor, even master degrees, don’t really do much scientific enquiry. They just learn a bunch of stuff and show they’ve learned it.

In fact, I would say that intellectual curiosity is by no means a requirement to do well. It may even be a bit of a handicap.

46
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

^^^

9
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Absolutely so. My last attempt at studying anything in earnest (at a German university) came to an aprupt end once I noticed that not even the lecturer was familiar with the content of the secondary literature we were supposed to read. Barring COVID, typical students life is (as far as I could determine) drunken partying for two months, memorizing stuff for one month, write it all down from memory in a few days, be off for three months[*] to forget it all again. Repeat.

[*] German academic year which is composed to two so-called semesters of three months with two three month long breaks in between.

10
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

I went to “Uni” along with all my peers after Sixth Form. Indebted to the eyeballs, my peers laughed at me when I refused to get a single credit card. The campus had its own branch of NatWest, FFS. They were handing them out like hot cakes.

They all borrowed thousands, handed it all to the “Student” Bar and then urinated or vomited their purchases down the toilet.

I lasted less than a year, it all felt a complete waste of time. Went and got a job. Never felt better.

Last edited 3 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
18
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Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Sounds like me except the get a job part. I decided to be a rock star instead. You could call that a failed career move. Seems you need talent and perseverance.

5
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  Think Harder

I decided to be a famous actor after two years of the job. That didn’t work out either, but I did learn a lot about life!

3
0
Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

I think the push for all to have further education has made it a career choice rather than a calling of curiosity and excitement.

2
0
Moist Von Lipwig
Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

No, it’s a philosophy thing, not a scientific knowledge.

Though not a graduate in chemistry, I learned a lot of it as part of my degree but others on the same course as me, who got better qualifications from it, subscribed to the Branch Covidian cultism.

1
0
8bit
8bit
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

As a graduate of chemistry he probably knows little about viruses.

So what? I expect someone with a science degree to not only be expert in their own field but have a pretty impenetrable armour of scientific common sense which should immediately alert them to the slightest whiff of horse shit. There’s always a jolt when you encounter someone with an impressive degree who outside of their field, turns out to be a normie moron.

5
0
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago
Reply to  8bit

I expect the opposite — in general, the higher the qualification the less knowledge there is outside of the speciality.

It wasn’t always this way. In my youthful days the intellect at universities was ferocious. Not so much these days — the age of the polymath has pretty much gone.

6
0
Vxi7
Vxi7
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

This is the authoritarian cooperation: “I don’t question your expertise you will not question my expertise”

3
0
Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

There seems to be a lot of bad scientists lacking curiosity and having too much trust.

2
0
Star
Star
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

Suggested reading: Carlo Cipolla on stupidity and Gustav Le Bon on crowd psychology.

Herds are always f***ing stupid – whether it’s a herd of lorry drivers, priests, scientists, highly skilled philosophical logicians, people who left formal education without qualifications, people who got PhDs, etc. etc.

Last edited 3 years ago by Star
4
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  Star

Daily Sceptic’s Below The Line is the only crowd I have ever been part of. And it’s hard to be f***ing stupid along with them when your fingers are too big for the bloody touchscreen keyboard.

1
0
Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

It’s odd how some seemingly intelligent people have just accepted the narrative (even when illogical) and won’t consider other points of view let alone check the data for themselves.

I guess it is that mass formation psychosis. But why did I do the exact opposite? I’ve never questioned the mainstream until now but covid set off alarm bells. No one was dropping dead around me, it seemed obviously wrong and I simply went and looked at data. Conclusion – no worse than a bad flu season. Then when they kept going I fell down the rabbit hole, well more jumped in looking at everything. Came to some horrible conclusions that simply fit the data and observations better. I still hope I’m wrong.

5
0
Star
Star
3 years ago
Reply to  Think Harder

It’s quite similar to in the USSR, about which it was often observed both inside the country and by those looking at it from the outside that there was extremely strong discouragement of public criticism of ANY aspect of the reigning society, because that would be like pulling on a string and ALL of the lies would start to unravel.

That’s why “glasnost” (“openness”) was such a big thing, why there was even such a concept.

A typical Soviet joke was “They pretend to pay us, and we pretend to work.”

The word “opposition” was extremely strong in that country, not just before Gorbachev but under his leadership too, right up until near the end of the regime.

There’s no glasnost in Britain. There’s no glasnost in any country in the world right now, on the specific issue of Covid or on anything else that’s important, such as children’s education, or the disgusting and utterly inhuman advance of technology that no decent person who is able to form an opinion about it for themselves would ever want, either for themselves or for future generations.

Nor is the huge social problem which is smartphone addiction – especially among young people – being seriously publicly addressed by any “respectable” group anywhere, as far as I am aware.

Nor is the sky-high level of personal indebtedness in countries where it exists, such as Britain. Even looked at through narrow “economist’s” spectacles, the (related) insane market value of houses isn’t being looked at either. That definitely won’t avoid ending in tears, just as every huge financial bubble does.

Tug on one string and… ?

Orwell was so astute when he wrote that freedom is the freedom to say two plus to makes four.

Last edited 3 years ago by Star
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  Star

Two plus to?

Orwell is shaking and rolling, Star 😆😆😆

Sorry to distract from your excellent comment about Glasnost. Have a tick from me.

Last edited 3 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
2
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WasSteph
WasSteph
3 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

I’m a graduate of IC (BSc Hons ARCS for what it’s worth). We used to do science and were expected to have questioning minds. Soothsaying was not on the curriculum. I’m honestly ashamed to admit to most people now that I was ever near the place.
In other news we’ve just received the following from the Royal Opera House about a performance this weekend. There’s plenty that just won’t let this go, either just plain evil or stupid. Luckily we won’t need to have the debate as we can’t afford those from row stalls seats anyway.
 
“Some seats in our auditorium are very close to our staff members and artists. Our staff welcome thousands of visitors every day, and we continue committed to the safety of everyone while in our building.
The front row of the Orchestra Stalls, as well as some seats near where our ushers and camera operators sit during the performance are clearly marked with a mask sign, and we ask those sitting in those seats to wear a face covering if you are able to. On behalf of our staff and artists, thank you.”

1
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  WasSteph

This obviously works both ways: Staff and artists are very close to members of the auditorium sitting there. Considering that they necessarily talk loudly and might even sing loudly, they should wear face coverings to protect the paying audience, many of which are probably even going to be members of vulnerable groups. Should this render the performance inaudible, staff and artists will – unfortunately – in the long run, need to find a job which doesn’t involve performing on a stage in front of a room full of people.

1
0
NeilParkin
NeilParkin
3 years ago

Judging the quality of output from their departments, I hope the degrees have been printed on something soft, strong, and thoroughly absorbant…

17
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

And non-reflective. Makes it easier to show the birthing parents over Zoom.

7
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  rtaylor

And featuring a QR code. Everything of any importance simply must have a QR code.

6
0
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago

It is about time that people recognised that there’ll be cases of covid in the UK forever — it is not going to be eradicated.

Anyone that uses the excuse ‘there are still cases of covid around’ for whatever activity are being naive.

You’d think that Imperial College would recognise this — but I’m afraid that like establishments everywhere, the upper echelons are a bit thick and don’t get science. IC has it worse because they employ Ferguson who is now in too deep and can’t easily get out of the hole he’s dug by admitting that it was all a terrible over-reaction.

52
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huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

Ferguson is up to his neck in the reset – let’s at least be honest after all this time. The cock-up theory is well past its use by date.

32
0
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

I think it’s about time we realised that certain institutions are quite happy for covid to be around forever, available as a tool to further whatever they want furthered.

Even if the govt said covid was nothing to worry about now, millions would not believe them.

We’re going to be living with corona madness for the rest of our lives, millions in the UK will go to their graves being worried about covid.

20
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

A nice current example of that would be

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/mar/31/charging-covid-tests-england-infections

That’s a rundown of everything from start to finish again, with no evidence of having learnt anything about COVID since March 2020. A few key points:

  • positive test results, mislabelled as coronavirus infections rates, would be soaring despite they were, compared to the winter wave, only raising moderately and that this raise seems to have peaked (as of two days ago)
  • people going into public places to spread viruses to other’s they’d previously have protected by being forced into house arrest
  • big exit wave, pressure on the NHS, deadly new variant could be just round the corner
  • it’s outrageous that only sick people will be treated!
  • mass testing required to protect others, ie COVID is still the mystery illness that somehow a great danger to everyone except those who have it
  • testing, mask mandates and social restrictions are low-restriction, preventive measures, recklessly letting Sars-CoV2 spread uncontrolledly is a mortal danger to all of us

Looking at the picture accomanying this load of venomous and socially (in its intent) extremely harmful tripe suggests that lady may want to get her stomach ulcer (or whatever else she’s suffering from) treated instead of lashing out at others in order to cause them some pain as well. I’d really like to have a personal talk with this female non-human being in order to tell her a little about how it feels to start to doubt if people like her will ever again allow me to meet my parents before they (or I) die because that’s just too unsafe for them.

13
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

He’s never had to before, why would he start now? The more wrong he gets it, the more gigs he’s guaranteed by the Profits of Doom.

7
0
rtj1211
rtj1211
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

They get it all right, but their primary motivation is funding streams and BMGF is one huge funding stream. They are official gauleiters of the UK Branch of BMGF propaganda.

7
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
3 years ago

Words, apart from FFS, fail me.

11
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago

How much did Imperial make from this student, Mr Grace, over 3 years?

The headline photo looks like an indoctrination ceremony. A bit worrying Mr. Grace, a Civil Engineering graduate (we need more engineers), hasn’t worked out his age demographic hardly die from Covid-19, but group life insurance companies are paying out from deaths in this young working age group after vaccinations…

Controlled demolition folks.

Last edited 3 years ago by rtaylor
12
0
Boomer Bloke
Boomer Bloke
3 years ago

I wonder how much they paid in tuition for the privilege of having their course delivered over a zoom conference call and then being dictated to about graduation attendance. It seems that authoritarianism as well as Covid is transmissible and virulent.

16
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
3 years ago
Reply to  Boomer Bloke

I have to note the front row, and point out that for many student visitors to these shores, it’s a pure financial transaction: pay money for a degree that gets more money.

The quality of education that they may or may not receive is simply irrelevant, because once you’re in the corporate door, you can fake it until you make it. Purchasing essays is simply costed in to the price.

14
0
Hopeless - "TN,BN"
Hopeless - "TN,BN"
3 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

Mail order degrees should really be the order of the day. Very profitable for those dishing them out, and much cheaper for “students”.

1
0
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5
-2
Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
3 years ago

If this is an example of one of the top universities in the UK,then I’m relieved that I left school aged 15 with no qualifications to my name.

14
-1
steve_z
steve_z
3 years ago

ZOE R value has gone below one for the first time this ‘wave’

1
0
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Has it? I thought it was 1.1 today.

0
0
rtj1211
rtj1211
3 years ago

Cut all Central UK Government funding immediately until they reverse this nonsense.

6
0
Emmelda Johnson
Emmelda Johnson
3 years ago

If Ferguson is the best of Imperial who would want to graduate from there anyway?

9
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Emmelda Johnson

Lest we forget!

trousersdown.jpg
9
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  Emmelda Johnson

Make £££ by creating bullshit for the government with a computer program you wrote for this purpose and with no responsibility for the real-world effects of that whatsoever[*] is probably many a graduate’s wet dream. People don’t go to university to learn about stuff they’re interested in or to do stuff they care for, they go to uni because they’re from the social stratum where this expected (and can be financed) and ultimatively want to get a work little earn much job by doing that.

[*] for the typical prospective math/ physics/ computer-science graduate, it gets better: And get illegally laid while doing so. What’s not to like?

5
0
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago
Reply to  Emmelda Johnson

He studied at Oxford.

2
0
Emmelda Johnson
Emmelda Johnson
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

but teaches at Imperial

Last edited 3 years ago by Banana Bananas
2
0
Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago

It was a truly great college once.
I can’t help but wonder if Imperial’s fall from sense and truth has been a result of its Chinese connections. I’m out on a limb as I don’t know the current situation but back in the day it had a lot of Chinese students and rumoured funding.
Anyone know its funding breakdown?

Last edited 3 years ago by Think Harder
6
0
Star
Star
3 years ago

Does anyone else remember when there was talk of merging Imperial with UCL, with the LSE probably joining soon after? That was when all three were colleges of London University, before Imperial left.

The merged entity would have been the top research university in the world by some measures.

So you can imagine there’d be opposition from Oxford and Cambridge and probably from across the Atlantic too.

The reason I mention this is because there’s a theory that Glaxo was behind the merger plan.

There are various rumours too about less important aspects, such as that certain parties with strong connections with UCL tried to fool the bods at Imperial about the value of UCL properties in Bloomsbury but the Imperial people found out and got furious.

1
0
prick
prick
3 years ago

The 15 perfumed ponce’s

0
0
mrspock
mrspock
3 years ago

My son attended his graduation from Imperial in October.

The authoritarian communist regime led by the woke American woman in charge dictated that it was unsafe for parents to attend the Royal Albert Hall.
The very same venue that held capacity crowds to music events the day before and the day after.

My son’s experience, as a non-leftie, was one where he had to keep his opinions to himself – and so avoided the university where possible. Luckily his Computing degree is of very good standing and so he can out-earn all the woke left leaning morons!

We need to realise that the UK university system is there to educate foreign kids (many of whom do not have the qualifications they say they have) who pay the exorbitant fees that fuels the production of more left-wing thinking.

It’s time to very heavily regulate these establishments to ensure that British kids get a fair proportion of places.

3
0
imp66
imp66
3 years ago

The college should rebrand themselves as “LIMPerial” now they have completely sold out to the wokerati. Winkers!

1
0
Lowe
Lowe
3 years ago

It’s odd that Imperial College restrict numbers in the Albert Hall now when you could have crowded in during the Proms or pack yourself now into the Royal Opera House.

I also was baffled by their expression “largely under control”. Does it mean it’s “under control” or not? And what does “under control” mean? As many recover on any day as succumb to the virus? Numbers going down? Numbers going up but not quickly? Zero Covid? Under ten cases? Everyone masked? Everyone jabbed? Everyone masked, jabbed and boostered?

1
0

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Hugely Influential Covid Vaccine Study Claiming the Jabs Saved Millions of Lives Torn to Shreds in Medical Journal

10 May 2025

Teenage Girl Banned by the Football Association For Asking Transgender Opponent “Are You a Man?” Wins Appeal With Help of Free Speech Union

10 May 2025

Reflections on Empire, Papacy and States

10 May 2025

Ed Miliband’s Housing Energy Plan Will Decimate the Rental Market and Send Rents Spiralling

10 May 2025

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