The Problem Isn’t the Plan, it’s the Planning, Postscript

16 01 2012

I’ve pretty fully wrapped up my discussion of PlanMaryland and the folly of central planning in land use policy. If you haven’t already, I highly recommend reading all three pieces and listening to my appearance on The Broadside, where the hosts, Mark Newgent and Andrew Langer, and I have a great discussion on it and other issues.

However, I did want to add one little aside on the topic. I was listening to some music recently and this song came up.

While the song addresses central planning and the economy more generally, it hits upon every idea I made in my three articles and it does so in both easier to understand and more entertaining fashion.





My Appearance on The Broadside

11 01 2012

Earlier this week I had the pleasure of being a guest on The Broadside, one of the shows featured on the Red Maryland Network.

I discussed my recent series on PlanMaryland with the hosts Andrew Langer and Mark Newgent; besides that Del. Kelly Schulz was on to discuss the upcoming MD legislative session and Mark, Andrew, and I discussed the MDGOP and the race to fill the national committeewoman seat now that the current holder, Joyce Terhes has announced she will not be running for reelection.

Special thanks also to Marie Bernadette for the chatroom interaction during the show!

Be sure to check it out, you can listen to the audio or watch the Ustream video of the episode, both can be found here.





The Problem Isn’t the Plan, it’s the Planning, Part III

9 01 2012

In Part I of this series we explored the shocking amount of arrogance and hubris it takes to think one can centrally plan the production of something as simple as a pencil, much less the land use policy of an entire state.

Part II was devoted to explaining how PlanMaryland is the natural culmination of individuals allowing the state to take the first steps into planning land use policy via zoning laws.

This final piece in the series is intended to be a preemptive response to the Chicken Littles who insist that without planning we would face horrible disasters, that we’d lose all of our open space or that the economy would crash or other equally horrendous visions.

First and foremost, I want to address the claims that government planning of land use policy is a necessary component of an orderly society and a functioning economy. Anybody who claims that is either lying or ignorant.

I know it’s a strong claim, but it’s a true one and we can know that because it’s been tried. Not only was it tried, it worked and has continued to work. Where you ask? Texas.

For all the talk of the “Texas miracle” on employment numbers, the real Texas miracle is in land use policy. In the Lone Star State counties are prohibited, by force of law, from implementing zoning codes and the state has shown no real interest in implementing anything of the sort at the statewide level. In fact, the only areas that have zoning controls in Texas are municipalities, and not even all of them have zoning codes.

And how has that turned out? In two words, quite well. By severely limiting the capacity of the government to plan land use policy Texas has ensured that it has a highly elastic housing supply that responds to shifts in the market faster and more efficiently than it did in other states. This in turn has had several positive impacts.

As former Center for American Progress staffer Matt Yglesias has observed, when government refused to use land policy controls to artificially limit the housing supply it resulted in much more affordable housing opportunities. Those prices helped draw people to Texas and thus ensure a better economy and lower unemployment through increased population growth:

What differentiates Texas from the rest of the United States isn’t an immunity to recessions, it’s a systematically higher population growth rate. That gap predates President Obama, predates the recession, and it predates Rick Perry, so I don’t think it tells us anything about any of those things. It’s driven, I believe, by proximity to Mexico and relatively cheap housing. This is to Texas’ credit. National living standards would be higher if the Los Angeles, San Jose, San Francisco, Seattle, and Portland MSAs along with the whole Acela corridor from Boston to Washington would adopt more robust Texas-style policies to increase the housing stock.

In addition to the key benefit of allowing the economy to grow, a lack of land use policy has also helped to insulate the Texas economy from the volatility that has rocked the rest of the country.

The above chart is the FHA’s Housing Price Index for Texas and Maryland running from 1992-2011. As you can see, Texas fared far better than my own state; by allowing the market to set the housing supply rather than government Texas largely avoided both the real estate bubble and the inevitable crash that followed when it popped. The evidence is clear – it is not returning control of land use policy to land owners that puts our economy in the hands of property speculators, it’s putting the control in government hands that threatens to derail our economy.

And the people of Texas recognize this. If government planning were as much of a no-brainer as its supporters claim it to be, then one would expect the people of Texas to resent their current policies. But that’s not the case. In Houston the voters have had three opportunities over the years to implement zoning and each time have soundly rejected it, most likely because they recognize that keeping government control over land use policy strictly limited is the secret behind Texas’ economic and job growth.

Moving away from claims of economic catastrophe, it’s my understanding that preserving open space is among of the arguments for PlanMaryland made by its proponents.

Unfortunately for them the claim that not having government plan our land use policy will lead to the complete destruction of open space is pure nonsense, nonsense that only makes sense if you suspend the basic laws of economics.

The issue is scarcity. The more that land gets placed into use (or bought up by conservationists intent on seeing it remain the way it is), the less land there will be available to meet demand. And as Econ 101 teaches us, when supply is reduced but demand stays constant, the result is increasing prices. Eventually the prices for raw land will reach an equilibrium where the natural price is too high to justify purchase for development.

The effect of this simple fact is amplified when one considers the degree to which current land use restrictions limit density. Most people like to live where there are other people and more services, opportunities, etc. available. That means building where there already is building. So why don’t people build there if the demand exists? For the simple reason that zoning laws and other restrictive land use policies prevent them from doing so.

From Matt Yglesias again:

If you go up to the Columbia Heights Metro station and then walk east just a block east you’ll be struck by the hard transition from the large-for-DC new apartments on 14th street and the low density structures right around them. What’s going on, you’ll wonder. What’s happened, simply put, is that you’ve moved out of an area zoned C-2-B and into an area zoned R-4. In R-4 areas, (including almost everything north of Euclid between 14th Street and Georgia Ave, pretty much the entire square between P, U, 14th, and 7th and many other parts of the city) you can’t build a house taller than 3 stories (or 40 feet), you can’t occupy more than 60 percent of your lot, and you can’t build apartments smaller than 900 square feet per bedroom.

As a result, even though these places have become much more desirable places to live, they simply aren’t allowed to accommodate very many additional residents. Instead of seeing new, denser construction to allow more and more people to live where they’d like, we see zero sum battles over “gentrification” as working class residents can’t afford new, higher rents. Meanwhile, the central city’s inability to accommodate all the people who’d like to live there puts enormous price pressure on the closer-in suburbs, pushing people who want the suburban lifestyle ever-further from the city center in search of affordable housing.

Once again, the evidence is clear. It’s not a lack of regulation and government control that is driving sprawl and leading to the loss of open space, it’s the policies themselves that are doing it. We need to have a little trust in individuals ability to make decisions for themselves so that, via their free choices, market forces can determine the real dynamic housing stock needed and in doing so both create better places to live that meet actual people’s real desires and still preserve open space.

This brings me to my final and really my most important point. When control of land use policy is taken from the land owners and put into the hands of government what it ultimately amounts to is, whether they be NIMBY neighbors or eminent domain wielding land grabbers, giving the powerful and well-off control over land use.

This inevitably is bad for the weak and least-well-off among us. In either case those who are well-off have more time to push for policies to their benefit, more knowledge of how to work the system, and more direct incentive to manipulate things in their favor. In contrast, the young, the poor, immigrants, and others less well-off are too busy trying to get by to speak out at hearings, they don’t generally have the knowledge necessary to fight if they did have the time, and more often than not, as people seeking the join the community of an area it’s easier to simply try and find somewhere else to live rather than fight against a system stacked against you.

The end result is that existing property owners are able to ensure stasis in the housing supply, stasis that drives up both housing prices and rents and drives out those disadvantaged types – the young, the poor, immigrants, and others who can’t afford to stay.

And that’s not even touching on the more insidious ways people use land use policy controls as ways to promote their own interests against less popular minorities.

Zoning laws are not limited to construction and development. They can control the smallest details and nuances of an owner’s use of his property, and they can be used for nefarious purposes even beyond the immediate violation of property rights, such as “banning” unwanted individuals. For instance, the city council of Manassas, Virginia, passed a zoning ordinance that restricts residence in households to immediate relatives, thus excluding aunts, nephews, cousins, and other members of the extended family—and the council acknowledged that the ordinance targeted Hispanics, who apparently were not wanted in the area.

And that is ultimately why I support returning land use policy control to the people. All of the other arguments are important, but the fact is that it’s wrong for existing home owners to be able to game the system to their own benefit and to do it on the backs of those least able to afford it and least able to fight back.

Taking back control of land use policy will lead to more robust property rights, reduce government intrusion into our lives, create a more efficient economy, and enable housing that better suits people’s needs and desires, but more than anything, the real benefit is that it will put everyone on equal footing to participate in the housing market instead of letting the rich and powerful use government to enshrine themselves as the winners.





The Problem Isn’t the Plan, it’s the Planning, Part II

6 01 2012

In the previous installment, I made clear the unbelievable amount of arrogance it takes to think that the production of a single pencil could be centrally planned, much less the land use policy of an entire state.

However I also made the more controversial claim, that Gov. O’Malley doesn’t deserve all the blame for implementing such a foolish plan, that we all need to take ownership of this folly.

To understand why, look back to our friend the pencil. Remember how complex the process of his manufacture is? And think about how much more complex it is therefore to make something much more complex, like a house or a community.

Nobel Prize winning economist F.A. Hayek had many great insights, but his greatest insight was with regards to the astounding complexity of our economy, the ways in which it spontaneously ordered itself, and the folly of trying to centrally plan that economy.

Simply put, Hayek’s great insight was that the economy, and even small sectors of it, are too complex to be centrally planned. The myriad needs and desires of all the individuals who make up the economy simply present too many variables to be accounted for by any person or board.

As a result, when such central planning is attempted, it will inevitably fail. Planners will allocate too little in one area, too much in another, ignore people’s desires and instead force their own preferences. And when the planning fails, how do the planners respond?

Once in a blue moon, they recognize their mistake and roll back their initial planning, allowing the spontaneous ordering of the market to address the issue. More often though, they insist the failure was not theirs, that all that is needed to fix the problem is yet more planning.

In this way, planning begets yet more planning, and what started as relatively minor and benign escalates into massive assaults on individual liberty.

The situation is no different here in Maryland. PlanMaryland did not emerge out of whole cloth from the ether. It is the product of a natural evolution that began the day Marylanders accepted government planning of land use policy via zoning laws and other ordinances controlling land use policy.

Had we protested earlier, refused to accept the lesser invasion of private property rights, then we would never be facing the much larger assault that is PlanMaryland. But it’s not too late, we can fight off PlanMaryland, but we can’t stop there, we need to continue to push forward and rollback zoning ordinances, comprehensive plans, and all the other intrusions on the free exercise of private property rights in Maryland.

And contrary to what some might say, not only can a place survive without government planned land use policy, it can thrive. I’ll explain that in Part III.





The Problem Isn’t the Plan, it’s the Planning, Part I

4 01 2012

Now that Gov. O’Malley has implemented PlanMaryland via executive order, more than a little ink and plenty of angst has been spilled over it.

It’s been declaimed as part of a War on Rural Maryland, an example of executive overreach, an assault on private property rights, and an effort to undermine local planning boards. All of these are true characterizations of PlanMaryland, but they’re also all wrong.

Alright, they’re not exactly wrong. But they miss the real problem and in doing so the obscure the real issue with PlanMaryland. Simply put, the real complaint against PlanMaryland isn’t what it proposes to do, it’s that it proposes to do.

Take a moment and pick up one of the pencils that is undoubtedly on your desk. Consider it for a moment. Just how did it come to be there?

This is a question explored in the famous essay “I, Pencil.” As Leonard Reed, its author explains, not a person in the world knows how to make a simple pencil. Simply obtaining the raw wood alone is a monumental task, requiring the coordination of hundreds of people and skills – not just to cut the wood, but the mine and smelt the saws and other tools, to grow hemp and make it into rope, to run and maintain the lumber camp, even to make the coffee the lumberjacks drink.

As a simple a task as that would seem, it only continues to grow more complex. To transport the wood, to mill it, to fill with graphite and finish the pencils, to ship it to stores across the world, to produce the energy that powers all of this and to generate the capital that finances it all – all of this involves the unplanned coordination of untold thousands and thousands of people.

With such awe-inspiring complexity, what person in the world could ever make a pencil on their own. And in a vacuum, without the way having been shown first, what person or even group of people could ever centrally plan the process? What minds could ever conceive of, much less manage such an intricate and intertwined system, one that spans not just countless humans across the globe but across time as well.

The answer is simple, none could, and only a fool would think they could.

But if the creation of a pencil is such a complex process, how much more complex is a whole house. And how much more complex a community, or the network of communities we call counties? And for someone to think that one person or even a committee could mastermind the collection of counties we think of as a state?

What hubris. What bald-faced arrogance.

But, in spite of his egotistical belief that government is up to the task of capably managing a system of such infinite complexity, Gov. O’Malley doesn’t deserve all the blame. We all need to accept our share as well. I’ll explain why in Part II.





If You Care About Limited Government, You Don’t Wave Away Abuses of State Power

29 12 2011

As someone who is both a libertarian and a Republican I have a somewhat complicated relationship with conservatism and what some self-identified conservatives claim it means to be conservative.

Chiefly the trouble lies in the fact that most every conservative claims they are supporters of individual liberty and limited government, but then toss away those concerns the moment it involves liberty for someone they don’t approve of, whether they be gays, immigrants, Muslims, or other unpopular minorities.

Mostly I’ve focused on immigration and how many on the right so easily reject the free market in order to subsidize American labor interests. This time though, I want to focus on another aspect of so-called conservatives enabling statism.

In a recent post Ann Corcoran of Potomac Tea Party Report responds to a report highlighting incidences of police brutality by cavalierly dismissing it as so much political agitprop from the Left.

This is unconscionable if you honestly believe in limited government. I care about things like the tax code and land use policy, and I certainly recognize how the state uses them to restrict individual liberty. But the police being free to brutalize innocent people and even to egregiously violate the civil rights of actual criminals is a massively bigger threat to individual liberty.

And contrary to Corcoran’s implication, this isn’t something that was made up by the Obama administration or George Soros or some other bogeyman leftist.

I spent about 5 minutes on investigative journalist and libertarian activist Radley Balko’s site and found the following:

  • Over 380 cases of police breaking into people’s homes and terrorizing the occupants while doing no-knock drug raids. These incidents frequently feature physical harm being inflicted on occupants and put both young children and elderly relatives at risk. In virtually every case they either found only miniscule amounts of marijuana or actually had hit the wrong house.
  • Over 320 cases of police shooting people’s dogs when the dogs posed no threat to the officers. In many cases people pleaded with the officers to allow them to pen the dogs or otherwise restrain them but the officers refused to do so and shot the dogs instead.
  • Something like 700 cases of police getting away with flagrant violations of the law either because other police officers refused to enforce the law against them or courts refused to consider as valid testimony that contradicted the claims of the offending officers.

Spend a bit of time reading through the linked material. It’s horrifying to think that this sort of thing happens in America today. We’re a far sight better than places like North Korea, China, or the various authoritarian tyrannies of Africa and the Middle East, but the state is still egregiously violating individual liberty in the United States and in ways a whole lot worse than excessive marginal tax rates.

Just because those abuses aren’t terribly visible to people like Corcoran or myself it doesn’t mean they aren’t real and it certainly doesn’t mean that they aren’t an issue that limited government advocates ought to be outraged about.





Even a Blind Bigoted Squirrel Occasionally Finds a Nut

16 11 2010

David North of the Center for Immigration Studies laments that open borders activists don’t acknowledge that illegal immigration breeds more crime. Personally, I’m not sure what open borders activists he’s spoken with, since that’s one of the reasons I support open borders.

As North correctly notes:

Illegal immigration falls into the same category as violating today’s drug laws, or the prohibition laws of years ago. These are all crime-generating crimes.

It isn’t that Joe Smith grows a little weed, and sells it to his friends; if that were all there was to it, it would not be very worrisome.

No, the weed and the cocaine and the heroin are usually grown in bulk, often in some distant place; then the drugs are processed; then they are packaged and shipped to wholesalers who sell them to dealers, and finally onto the ultimate customer. All of these acts are both illegal and very profitable.

But what is much, much worse that any of these activities per se are the accompanying crimes, both the public-sector corruption and the bloody private-sector turf battles as rival gangs seek to control, and profit from, the various steps in the process.

This is precisely the problem with making victimless actions into criminal acts. Once economic activity is forced out of the legal marketplace, seldom does it simply disappear, it just moves into the black market. And since black market participants can’t turn to the courts to mediate disputes, they turn to violence instead, thus breeding more crime.

And even if they aren’t committing violent crimes, by virtue of their status illegal immigrants are still pushed into committing further crimes. Think on it, if an illegal immigrant undertook enormous risks and financial costs to leave their home and come to America, are they just going to do nothing once they get here?

Of course not, they’re going to find a way to sustain themselves. Making it illegal for them to be hired just means that human ingenuity will get put to use evading government restrictions instead of in more economically productive ways.

Luckily there’s a simple way to fix all this. Just like legalizing drugs would remove the need for the connected illegal activity, deregulating immigration to allow for an easier legal flow of immigration would reduce the illegal actions stemming from illegal immigration.

While I personally think quite poorly of the Center for Immigration Studies, I have to thank David North. His post, even though he doesn’t seem to realize it, it clearly demonstrates that when government makes victimless acts illegal it just breeds more crime.

Considering he’s also pointed out that a porous border is inevitable he better be careful, CIS might decide to sack him for helping further the cause of open borders.

 





PlanMaryland

20 05 2010

Last week I attended the mid-Shore PlanMaryland forum (my apologies for the delay in writing about it).

I arrived early, so I took my time perusing through the various presentation boards and the materials laid out. There was quite a bit I found objectionable, but I regrettably don’t have access to all the materials I saved right now and probably won’t for a week or so, so any discussion of them will have to wait until then.

When each person checked in they got a name tag with a number on it. That number determined which discussion group you were a part of (I believe there were 6 total). Once it got to 7 pm, we were all told to take our seats so the event could begin.

The event began with several addresses to the whole group. None of these were particularly noteworthy, with the only significant item being the complete and total assumption that “planning” is both good and necessary. As I tweeted, apparently no one in the Maryland Planning Department has read their Hayek or heard of the economic calculation problem.

After this we broke into our discussion groups. Each group consisted of two state government representatives, one a facilitator, who helped guide the flow of discussion, and a recorder, who just took notes. I didn’t catch our recorder’s name, but our facilitator was Shawn Kiernan, from the Maryland Department of Planning. Besides this our group consisted of Lee Schnappinger, who works with McCrone; Les Knupp, from MACO; Jim Voss, a retired farmer; John Draper, with the Farm Bureau; and Debbie Stanley, a private citizen and planning proponent (also a recent arrival from PA).

From the start I found myself amazed by some of the things I was told by Shawn. Apparently I’m the first blogger he’s encountered at any of these events. Considering the degree to which planning impacts people’s lives, I found this pretty stunning. Even more stunning to me though was that I was supposedly the first person he’s heard question the idea of planning or encourage the use of decentralized market mechanisms instead of centralized planning to determine land-use policy. Suffice to say, that doesn’t give me much hope for Maryland.

On the other hand, it was encouraging that I while I wasn’t able to get my group to go so far as embracing the Texas, no zoning laws model, I was able to get an overall agreement that we may in fact plan too much and that we should look to more flexible approaches. One particularly popular idea I floated was doing away with “1 house per X acres” limitations and instead embracing property tax credits for property development in areas of desired density levels.

However, my triumph with my group shouldn’t be read into too much. Compared to the other groups mine was probably the most market friendly; besides me there were two farmers, a MACO rep, and someone involved in construction/development vs a carpet-bagger from PA (incidentally, I think the forum proved well my theory that people who move to the area are far more likely to be supportive of centralized planning of land use policy). The table next to mine also had some good market-friendly things to say, but it also had Andrew Langer, president of the Institute for Liberty; David Dunmyer, who is apparently pretty growth-friendly; Del. Dick Sossi, also fairly friendly to growth; and my father, Barry Waterman.

However the other groups, filled with anti-growth, pro-planning stalwarts like Sheila Tolliver, Richard Altman, and Mary Campbell put forward completely insane tripe. The other groups pushed, pretty much unanimously, the idea that we need to protect even more farmland from development (either they never considered or simply don’t care that we shouldn’t be trapping farmers into a livelihood that isn’t competitive even with about $20 billion in subsidies a year). One table, I believe the one with Mary Campbell and Richard Altman, put forward the idea of creating a special designation for Eastern Shore farms, equivalent to New Jersey’s designation for the Pine Barrens (worth noting, I told my fiancee, who is from NJ, about this idea and she thought it hilariously stupid).

So concluding thoughts? I am strongly convinced that the Maryland Department of Planning is looking to issue a broad and expansive vision of how growth in Maryland should occur in the future. Private property rights, economic logic, and the fundamental inefficiency of central planning are never even going to be considered. However there are several more meetings left, so I encourage everyone who can to get out to them and speak out on the importance letting the market determine land-use policy rather than having it be centrally planned by some bureaucrats in Annapolis with grand visions of Soviet-style economic planning.





There Are No Words For This

5 05 2010

This past weekend I attended the Maryland GOP Spring Convention in Ocean City, primarily to hear one speaker, Gary Johnson, former governor of New Mexico and honorary chairman of the Our America Initiative.

He gave a fantastic speech and cemented my already firm conviction that he will be the candidate I support if he runs for president in 2012. However, during his speech he got a cold reception from the assembled party members on two points:

  1. The case for legalizing or at the very least decriminalizing marijuana and abandoning the War on Drugs in favor of a harm reduction approach.
  2. The argument that our continued military presence in Iraq and Afghanistan does nothing to advance our national security interests.

I want to focus on the first item. Every single person in the room who scoffed at Johnson’s call for a sensible policy on drugs needs to read this post by Radley Balko and then watch the embedded video (I’ve embedded it here, but go and read Radley’s post first) and then explain how they can possibly justify continuing the War on Drugs when this kind of abuse happens hundreds of times every day in America.

In February, I wrote the following about a drug raid in Missouri:

SWAT team breaks into home, fires seven rounds at family’s pit bull and corgi (?!) as a seven-year-old looks on.

They found a “small amount” of marijuana, enough for a misdemeanor charge. The parents were then charged with child endangerment.

So smoking pot = “child endangerment.” Storming a home with guns, then firing bullets into the family pets as a child looks on = necessary police procedures to ensure everyone’s safety.

Just so we’re clear.

Now there’s video, which you can watch below. It’s horrifying, but I’d urge you to watch it, and to send it to the drug warriors in your life. This is the blunt-end result of all the war imagery and militaristic rhetoric politicians have been spewing for the last 30 years—cops dressed like soldiers, barreling through the front door middle of the night, slaughtering the family pets, filling the house with bullets in the presence of children, then having the audacity to charge the parents with endangering their own kid. There are 100-150 of these raids every day in America, the vast, vast majority like this one, to serve a warrant for a consensual crime.

But Jonathan Whitworth won’t be smoking that pot they found in his possession. So I guess this mission was a success.

I happen to be a libertarian whose sympathies are more with the Right than the Left. But when I see things like this I fully agree with Mark Thompson:

When the government has the right to bust into tens of thousands of homes in the middle of the night, unannounced, with guns drawn and in full military armor, to take the life of beloved family members, and to menace 6-year old children, all because the homeowner is believed to possess a few grams of a plant or a non-explosive substance, tyranny cannot be said to be on the way. It’s already here. And President Obama wasn’t the one who created it, either.

I will believe that conservatives and the American Right view the words “liberty” and “tyranny” as something other than politically effective platitudes when they make putting an end to 40,000 raids like this a year a higher priority than whether they are taxed to provide someone else with health care or the unrealized hypothetical consequences of cap and trade.

Maryland GOP members, or rather, those of you who scoffed at Gov. Johnson – this is what you are supporting. Remember that the next time you hear someone speak out against the Drug War. Remember the paramilitary police that barged into a family’s home and shot their dogs right in front of their seven-year-old child.





One Last Thought on Healthcare Reform

22 03 2010

With the bill passing last night, I don’t have that much to say on the issue. I really hope that it works out and that we get improved results and lower costs. But I don’t see how it’s going to happen.

I don’t have a lot of faith that Democrats (or Republicans when they return to power) are going to have the political fortitude to pass and keep the unpopular but necessary price controlling measures.

I don’t see any reason to think that it won’t make decisions about what must be covered and how it must be done become politically determined rather than decided by science and market forces.

And on top of all that, I fail to comprehend any way that this bill won’t necessarily slow the pace of medical innovation, reduce the supply of medical care, and increase costs for everyone.

But I hope I’m wrong. I just wish we hadn’t got to a point where that’s what I have to hope.

—–

On the positive side though, I think we should remember one of the only positives of this whole debate and process. Rep. Paul Ryan is finally getting the attention and respect he has long deserved from the Right. I don’t have any evidence to base it off of, but I think he has got to be a contender for the VP pick in 2012.








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