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What do you think the Typhon Pact represents?

we already know from prior works such as The Gorn Crisis and Articles of the Federation that the Gorn have been mostly friendly toward the UFP in the past.

Which seems to have been ignored and possible reconted in Seize The Fire were the Gorn and Titan crew are pretty much treating each other like mortal enemies and the story seems to revolve around them trying to get over that.

Of course that book also either reconts the main villain of Star Trek: First Contact into the Gorn or had Hawk magically resurrect just to have the Gorn show up and kill him again for some reason.
 
Yes beautiful if u assume humans are no longer racist in the trek verse at all which given our history with it against each other I seriously doubt.

Oh, yeah, Trek humans would never stand for letting their children marry Vulcans or Betazoids or Klingons or Ktarians or... hey, wait a minute...


Yeah Proxies are all fine and dandy but wars are more entertaining.

Speak for yourself. I find war stories rather boring.


Besides Soviet Union vs America and Friends is a bad analogy. Unless u think its totally great storytelling for the Typhoon Pact to collapse like the Soviet Union leaving the Federation to win without firing a single real shot. I don't find that satisfying in my Science Fiction. And that would in my book make this whole thing pointless.

Why assume anyone has to "win?" Look at the history of Star Trek and its portrayal of antagonistic races such as the Klingons, Romulans, Cardassians, Kazon, Borg, etc. The normal pattern is for the antagonistic powers to maintain an uneasy coexistence indefinitely. The good guys usually "win" the immediate conflict, but the overall relationship between the UFP and the antagonists continues largely unchanged. Again, something like the Dominion War (or Destiny) where there's a clear, decisive ending to things is very much the exception to the rule. After all, this is series fiction, so it only makes sense to keep the bad guys around for future stories.

The Pact is more an analogy to the Warsaw Pact as a whole than just the Soviet Union (which is probably closest to the Romulans in this analogy), but I think it's a closer analogy to the modern, post-Cold-War era where the idea of the superpower is fading and smaller states that were formerly overshadowed and bullied by the superpowers are starting to assert their independence. There's no exact analogy, but the idea of the post-Destiny world is that the Federation is no longer the undisputed superpower it once was.


Well Bajor is set to dominate a major trade route. Most probably want to pay the now crippled Cardassians back but of course not much to worry about unless the Prophets start telling Sisko how to build some of their tech. I think that would be an interesting story direction.

As of the current status quo in the novels, Bajor is a Federation member and Cardassia is a signatory to the expanded Khitomer Accords. They're allies now, not enemies.


we already know from prior works such as The Gorn Crisis and Articles of the Federation that the Gorn have been mostly friendly toward the UFP in the past.

Which seems to have been ignored and possible reconted in Seize The Fire were the Gorn and Titan crew are pretty much treating each other like mortal enemies and the story seems to revolve around them trying to get over that.

Well, consider how far Titan was from the Federation at that point. Maybe the Gorn factions depicted there were from the farthest end of Gorn space and didn't have as much experience with the UFP as the Gorn on the nearer side of their territory.
 
About the Gorn:

The bad feelings in Seize the Fire were more instinctive/racial in basis than political, if I'm not misremembering. It was an "ew, mammals!" response that the Gorn characters had to overcome, and while there was distrust of the Federation it wasn't, if I recall, a hostility to the political body so much as a moderate "here be furry things!" horror. And the fact that the Titan was meddling in what to the Warrior Caste was a life-or-death any-means-necessary issue, means I guess they weren't feeling very friendly.

But these were members of the Warrior and Technologist castes, not the Political Caste. Half of the Warrior Caste characters were insane anyway, so they can't really be taken as representative of what a normal Gorn would think, and on top of that I imagine the Warriors are inclined to view any aliens as potential threats, full stop - it's their job, after all. But the Warriors aren't in power - and Seize the Fire also reinforced the idea that the Political Caste actively fears that changing, and goes out of its way to limit the Warriors' influence. It even restricts them to one hatchery world despite their importance - besides the environmental factors, I read that as an implicit means of control to limit the Warriors' ability to challenge the ruling families. After all, not eight years before the novel one of the Warrior factions did turn on the Political Caste, killed many of them, and took the Hegemony to war without cause. The Politicals want a tight leash for the Warriors, I assume.

I'd propose that members of the Warrior Caste desperate to keep their caste alive by any means, and a few workers from the Technologist caste who are ignorant of the wider galaxy, don't really tell us much about the Gorn government's position regarding the UFP. I didn't see the novel as contradicting other sources.
 
A few exceptions don't make the rule.

All fine and dandy if u actually believe trek authors are going to right the Fed like Rome and show the fall. Somehow I doubt they will let the federation fall. Its Fiction for godsakes, the good guys who are the Federation whether u care to admit it or not will always come out on top in these stories. Sure they might face dark times but they win in the end.

Not really a problem. If the Prophets get Sisko on board with their grand plans he can always tell Bajor to quit which they would do. Besides did the Andoirans not recently quit. There is no rule that negates your ability to leave.
 
All fine and dandy if u actually believe trek authors are going to right the Fed like Rome and show the fall. Somehow I doubt they will let the federation fall.

Well, speaking as a Trek author myself, I don't know what the hell you're talking about at this point. Why this fixation on the idea of a "fall?" How did that concept even get introduced into this conversation? Civilizations' fortunes may wax and wane, but just because you're not currently on top doesn't mean you have to cease to exist. Not every historical event has to be a cataclysm.
 
I'll tell you how that concept got started: Andoria's secession from the Federation. If you have one of the Federation's founding members break away, you will of course have people worried that the Federation is falling apart and heading towards collapse. I'm all for the Typhon Pact as an entity as long as it's done right, just don't drag the Federation through the mud to make the Typhon Pact look good.
 
Me? I think that the Typhon Pact is the BRICS, a combination of rising and established powers that now have the strength to challenge the largest and most advanced power.
 
Yes beautiful if u assume humans are no longer racist in the trek verse at all which given our history with it against each other I seriously doubt. Now of course Earth Humans will look down on Colony Humans but when push comes to shove most in their subconscious at the very least will put Humans above Aliens. Humans also have a clear population advantage if u give every planet a vote by itself that is a clear advantage.
What would give you the idea that 24th Century humans are suddenly racist? I think they made it pretty clear in the 24th Century Trek series that humans in general have no problems whatsoever with other races.
Yeah Proxies are all fine and dandy but wars are more entertaining.
Hell no, they're not, we've already gotten plenty of war in Trek and the other franchises. I'd like to see Trek do something more original at this point.
Well Bajor is set to dominate a major trade route. Most probably want to pay the now crippled Cardassians back but of course not much to worry about unless the Prophets start telling Sisko how to build some of their tech. I think that would be an interesting story direction.
Ok, if they want payback then why did they voluntarily help the Cardassians rebuild in the DS9 Relaunch? Other than the occasional pissed off individual, I don't think we've ever seen any evidence that the Bajorans as a whole, have any wish for "payback". And have we ever seen anything that make would you think the Prophets have technology? I don't see where they would need any, they're non-corporeal aliens who exist in a totally different dimension.
 
I'll tell you how that concept got started: Andoria's secession from the Federation. If you have one of the Federation's founding members break away, you will of course have people worried that the Federation is falling apart and heading towards collapse. I'm all for the Typhon Pact as an entity as long as it's done right, just don't drag the Federation through the mud to make the Typhon Pact look good.

Too late for this; it already came to pass.

As for the ~'Typhon Pact is not aggressive' stance - its supporters are, essentially, apologits - they use apologist argumets to justify what can - whatever superficially - be justified and ignore a lot of other established facts about the Pact that cannot be justified.
Of course, depending on one's taste, one could argue that the 'Thphon Pact done right' IS aggressive, xenophobic, etc.
 
About the Gorn:

The bad feelings in Seize the Fire were more instinctive/racial in basis than political, if I'm not misremembering. It was an "ew, mammals!" response that the Gorn characters had to overcome, and while there was distrust of the Federation it wasn't, if I recall, a hostility to the political body so much as a moderate "here be furry things!" horror. And the fact that the Titan was meddling in what to the Warrior Caste was a life-or-death any-means-necessary issue, means I guess they weren't feeling very friendly.

In 'Seize the fire', the gorn were more than willing to commit GENOCIDE against a world inhabited by BILLIONS of sentient beings!
You treat it as inconsecuential just because it was not a federation world? Really, Deranged Nasat?


As for the gorn's racism against the mammals - but, of course, it's instinctive, genetically encoded!
This argument has been done to death - the klingons are aggressive because aggressivity is genetically encoded in them; the cardassians are submissive to the state because the proper instinct is in their genes - and now the gorn are utterly racist against mammals because they have the 'racism' gene.

Of all these examples, the 'racism' gene is particularly preposterous - scientifically speaking.
And of course this argument of yours is not apologist in the extreme, Deranged Nasat.:rolleyes:

I'd propose that members of the Warrior Caste desperate to keep their caste alive by any means, and a few workers from the Technologist caste who are ignorant of the wider galaxy, don't really tell us much about the Gorn government's position regarding the UFP. I didn't see the novel as contradicting other sources.
And - now you've gone from apologist arguments to ignoring most of what was established abot the gorn in the only 24th century continuity trek book to deal specifically with the gorn.
Do you really think the author's intent was to depict a fringe section of gorn society?

But you don't like what was established - so it doesn't really depict the gorn, just an inconsequential minority. Nothing to see here, folks.
Yeah...see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.

As for the ~'Typhon Pact is not aggressive' stance - its supporters are, essentially, apologits

How so?

http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=6014011&postcount=32

The points I made in this post - and others - are either glossed over or 'resolved' with apologisms requiring high improbabilities (AKA contrived) by many in the Trek Literature subforum (in this very thread).
 
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Me? I think that the Typhon Pact is the BRICS, a combination of rising and established powers that now have the strength to challenge the largest and most advanced power.

Oh nice, that comparison hadn't occurred to me before, bit it fits rather nicely.
 
I think the comparison to the BRICS is quite accurate, because the Typhon Pact really doesn't represent any particular ideology or goal other than helping its members assert their power without becoming subsumed into the Federation. It's a reaction against the Federation's unstated goal of wanting to peacefully persuade every culture it encounters to embrace its democratic values and join in its union of worlds. While I would contend that there is nothing wrong with wanting to peacefully persuade other cultures to embrace democratic values and join the Federation -- I rather wish there were a state in the real world whose goal was to do the same thing to join the world into a sort of United Earth -- I can easily see how it could make other cultures feel threatened.

And I think the big thing that the authors of the Typhon Pact novels have done well, which the people who think the Pact is just evil and that a war is inevitable have overlooked, is that they've depicted the factionalism that marks the Typhon Pact's members and the Pact itself. Most of the Pact cultures have now been depicted as having multiple factions vying for internal influence (the Breen government and commercial interests vs. the dissident movement; the Kinshaya regime vs. the reformists; the Romulan moderates vs. the nationalists vs. the Unificationists vs. the Tal Shiar; the Gorn warrior caste vs. the political caste).

The two which have not been depicted as having relevant internal conflicts, the Tzenkethi and the Tholians, have themselves been depicted as either vying for influence within the Pact with other Pact cultures (the Tzenkethi working to assassinate Romulan nationalists so that Romulus won't seek to dominate the other Pact members) or as literally having to be held back by other Pact members (the Tholians).

So I think it's clear that the Typhon Pact is, in essence, still a very disunified entity that cannot accurately be stated to have its "own" agenda. It is at present a platform which its members are using to vie for power with the outside galaxy and amongst themselves. Its final form is yet uncertain.

Okay, the Tholians are undoubtedly hostile - they and the Breen have been portrayed as the voice of aggression in the Pact, so there's more going on with them than just posturing - but I don't think that making ominous comments about arms and power necessarily mean they intend a full-out attack.

Or that the other Pact members would let them. We've already seen an instance, in A Singular Destiny, of the Pact putting a halt to unilateral military action by one of its members.

And while the Tholians are the clearest villains of the piece at present, the Vanguard series does help us understand their hostility, as warped as their perception is. The Federation did awaken their mortal enemy/ancient oppressors, as a consequence of its eagerness to unlock the secrets of the Taurus Reach. The Federation was after power and knowledge and the Tholians wound up getting psychic seizures from it.

That's true, but I don't think it's rational to hold a grudge for that long. Sometimes people can have a legitimate reason to feel wronged yet still react in an unhealthy and disproportionate way.

Well, I think part of the reason the Tholians still hold such a grudge against the Federation has to do with their alien psychology. It's been a long time since I read it, but I seem to recall that The Lost Era: The Sundered established that the Tholian Lattice allows Tholians to directly transfer their members and knowledge on to younger Tholians, partially in consequence of a typical Tholian lifespan being much shorter than those of most humanoid species. So, if I'm remembering that correctly, for the Tholians, the events of Star Trek: Vanguard are not a 120-year-distant historical event that happened to their great-great-grandfathers; it's something that they still remember vividly, that still seems fresh in their minds, because the memories are telepathically transferred to each new generation -- meaning each new generation experiences these transgressions as though they're new.

Andor was just the continuation of that petty game - the Tholians are showing that they can meddle and the Federation will get sand kicked in its face and there's nothing the Federation can do. "The wheel turns, does it not?!" It's definitely hostile and blatantly aggressive, but it doesn't necessarily mean the Tholians want actual war.
Sure. Why would they need to go to war when they can get such potent results far more economically with political manipulation?

And of course, I think it's important to remember that the Tholians were not responsible for Andor's decision to secede from the Federation. They were responsible for revealing that the 23rd-Century Federation government decided to conceal information about the Shedai meta-genome, which could have helped the Andorians in their reproductive crisis. It was the pre-existing tensions within Andorian society over this reproductive crisis, intersecting with tensions over cultural change occurring as a result of Federation Membership and an unwillingness to accept that subsequent Federation administrations were as much in the dark about what had been held classified by the 23rd Century UFP as the Andorians, which led to Andor's very narrowly-approved secession.

Yes beautiful if u assume humans are no longer racist in the trek verse

This is one of the fundamental creative conceits of the Star Trek franchise: That humanity has abandoned racism and prejudice, and has embraced all of its own species and all of the galaxy's other species as its equals. If you can't accept this premise, then Star Trek is not for you.

Now of course Earth Humans will look down on Colony Humans

You seem to misunderstand something. Worlds like Deneva and Alpha Centauri and Cestus, even if they started as Earth colonies, are not colonies anymore. They are, rather, fully equal Federation Members, in the same way that, say, Ohio is a state in the Union fully equal with Virginia. They're not colonies anymore.

Now of course Earth Humans will look down on Colony Humans but when push comes to shove most in their subconscious at the very least will put Humans above Aliens.

I mean, if you assume that the Humans of the Trek Universe are as beholden to the petty impulse to engage in pointless power competitions and are unable to establish a truly egalitarian democracy. But that's anathema to the entire point of Star Trek; depicting a Federation so divided and undemocratic makes about as much sense as doing a sequel to Atlas Shrugged featuring John Galt becoming a Marxist. It goes against everything the original work stands for.

Humans also have a clear population advantage if u give every planet a vote by itself that is a clear advantage.

You seem to misunderstand something I said above: Every Federation Member gets one Federation Councillor. That means they get one vote. In other words: Every Federation Member has equal representation, irrelevant of their relative population sizes. The Federation Council is not like the U.S. House of Representatives; the Federation Council is like the U.S. Senate.

Yeah Proxies are all fine and dandy but wars are more entertaining.

I really wonder if Star Trek is the right science fiction franchise for you.

Besides Soviet Union vs America and Friends is a bad analogy. Unless u think its totally great storytelling for the Typhoon Pact to collapse like the Soviet Union leaving the Federation to win without firing a single real shot.

I did not compare it to the Soviet Union vs. the United States. I compared it to the Warsaw Pact vs. the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Of course, even that analogy is imperfect, since no one Typhon Pact member dominates the rest the way the Soviet Union dominated the rest of the Warsaw Pact.

But, yes, I certainly would like to see the eventual resolution of the Typhon Pact/Khitomer Alliance conflict without depicting yet another full-scale war. War, after all, is a bad thing, and I'm tired of seeing media that glorifies it.

I don't find that satisfying in my Science Fiction. And that would in my book make this whole thing pointless.

I mean, if the idea of peacefully resolving your conflicts and thereby building a better world is pointless to you? Then I'd say Star Trek isn't for you. Give Star Wars a try -- their novel line is content to retell the same damn war story ("Evil Empire vs. Heroic Rebels") over and over and over again, which seems to be more to your tastes.

Well Bajor is set to dominate a major trade route. Most probably want to pay the now crippled Cardassians back

No.

1. Bajor is at the edge of Federation space, not its core. It wouldn't have the chance to "dominate" most major trade routes, since most of them don't come close to the Bajor Sector.

2. Bajor has been assisting in Cardassia's rebuilding efforts. When the Bajoran First Minister tried to stymie efforts at a permanent peace treaty and regular diplomatic relations with the Cardassians, the Bajoran Church went over the government's head to establish an alliance with the Cardassian religious movement known as the Oralian Way; later, it was revealed that that First Minister was acting under the influence of an alien that was possessing his body, and a new First Minister who favored peace with the Cardassians took office. Then Bajor joined the Federation. So, no, Bajor is not out for payback against the Cardassians.

As for the ~'Typhon Pact is not aggressive' stance - its supporters are, essentially, apologits

How so?

Don't mind Edit_XYZ -- he always favors the jingoistic policy and imperial domination by the UFP over the ideal of mutual coexistence and peaceful resolution of conflict. To him, any solution to problems that doesn't involve the Federation using its military to impose its will on others constitutes "defeatism."

About the Gorn:

The bad feelings in Seize the Fire were more instinctive/racial in basis than political, if I'm not misremembering. It was an "ew, mammals!" response that the Gorn characters had to overcome, and while there was distrust of the Federation it wasn't, if I recall, a hostility to the political body so much as a moderate "here be furry things!" horror. And the fact that the Titan was meddling in what to the Warrior Caste was a life-or-death any-means-necessary issue, means I guess they weren't feeling very friendly.

In 'Seize the fire', the gorn were more than willing to commit GENOCIDE against a world inhabited by BILLIONS of sentient beings!

I've not read Seize the Fire, but other posters have consistently said that that was the work of one Gorn faction, not the work of the Gorn government, and certainly not the work of the whole Gorn society. Were these posters mis-reading the novel, or are you just inclined to deny the existence of factionalism?

As for the gorn's racism against the mammals - but, of course, it's instinctive, genetically encoded!

? Something can be "instinctive" (that is, an involuntary emotional response) without being "genetically encoded."

This argument has been done to death - the klingons are aggressive because aggressivity is genetically encoded in them; the cardassians are submissive to the state because the proper instinct is in their genes

Who made these arguments? Where?

I'd propose that members of the Warrior Caste desperate to keep their caste alive by any means, and a few workers from the Technologist caste who are ignorant of the wider galaxy, don't really tell us much about the Gorn government's position regarding the UFP. I didn't see the novel as contradicting other sources.
And - now you've gone from apologist arguments to ignoring most of what was established abot the gorn in the only 24th century continuity trek book to deal specifically with the gorn.
Do you really think the author's intent was to depict a fringe section of gorn society?

That seems to have been what he and other posters have been saying, yes. Especially in light of Christopher's post about several positive interactions between the Gorn and UFP.
 
Don't mind Edit_XYZ -- he always favors the jingoistic policy and imperial domination by the UFP over the ideal of mutual coexistence and peaceful resolution of conflict. To him, any solution to problems that doesn't involve the Federation using its military to impose its will on others constitutes "defeatism."

Really?
With you, Sci, straw-men never end.
Feel free to point out the posts where I supposedly said it.


Unlike you, I actually consider the books in their entirety, not only the parts I like, ignoring the rest 'just because' or hiding behind a facade made of apologistic rhetoric, logical fallacies and, in your case, name-calling.

Who made these arguments? Where?
Your trekbbs fu is weak.

PS - Do read up on the definition of 'instinctive', Sci

That seems to have been what he and other posters have been saying, yes. Especially in light of Christopher's post about several positive interactions between the Gorn and UFP.
Which ignores 'Seize the fire' and only manages to come up with a few obscure comics. Of course that's not ignoring what you don't like.:rolleyes:
 
Don't mind Edit_XYZ -- he always favors the jingoistic policy and imperial domination by the UFP over the ideal of mutual coexistence and peaceful resolution of conflict. To him, any solution to problems that doesn't involve the Federation using its military to impose its will on others constitutes "defeatism."

Really?
With you, Sci, straw-men never end.
Feel free to point out the posts where I supposedly said it.

I stand by my assessment. Every time you have criticized the Destiny trilogy, and here where you criticize the Typhon Pact series, your words indicate a jingoistic value system in which any foreign agents who engage in any level of hostilities must represent the entirety of their societies, in which the idea of moral ambiguity or complexity on the part of the "enemy" is disregarded, and in which anything other than battle is disrespected.

There's just no other underlying value system in which the idea that people have "submitted to defeat" is credible just because the narrative doesn't depict their attempts to forge new weapons as being successful, or in which the role of factionalism in foreign states is disregarded, or in which the possibility of peacefully overcoming differences is ignored. You constantly portray the "other" in the most belligerent terms possible. I don't see any other conclusion to come to about what's driving your words.

Who made these arguments? Where?
Your trekbbs fu is weak.

PS - Do read up on the definition of 'instinctive', Sci

in·stinct

/ˈinstiNGkt/ Noun:

1. An innate, typically fixed pattern of behavior in animals in response to certain stimuli: "predatory instincts".

2. A natural or intuitive way of acting or thinking: "rely on your instincts".

Neither definition relies upon genetics per se. For instance, homosexuality is generally considered "instinctive" to those who are gay, but the most common theory today is that it's the result of differences in hormone exposure in uteri, not a function of genetics per se. And that's to say nothing of the phenomenon people in the armed forces or law enforcement report of their training -- that is, behavioral conditioning -- "taking over," as if by instinct, during a fight, without their being in conscious control. "Instinct" is a generic and highly unscientific term for a lot of different responses that may or may not be genetic in origin, and behavioral conditioning can lead to the development of new "instincts."

That seems to have been what he and other posters have been saying, yes. Especially in light of Christopher's post about several positive interactions between the Gorn and UFP.
Which ignores 'Seize the fire'

What part of Seize the Fire establishes the Gorn government to have been behind the Gorn's terraforming attempt? Other posters have consistently reported that Seize the Fire establishes this to have been the work of a rogue Warrior caste faction, not of the government itself; what part of the novel establishes them to be wrong? What paragraph are they overlooking?

Further, what part of Seize the Fire establishes the Gorn government to be hostile to, or to have a history of hostility towards, the Federation?
 
I'm all for the Typhon Pact as an entity as long as it's done right, just don't drag the Federation through the mud to make the Typhon Pact look good.

What?????? "Look good?" Haven't you ever heard the saying that heroes are measured by the challenges or adversaries they face? The bigger a challenge the Typhon Pact presents to the UFP, the better a story it is. Was it dragging Picard through the mud or making the Borg look good when they assimilated him? No, of course not, that would be crazy. It was about giving the heroes an adversary powerful enough that it made their ultimate victory more impressive.


Me? I think that the Typhon Pact is the BRICS, a combination of rising and established powers that now have the strength to challenge the largest and most advanced power.

Hmm, that's a very interesting analogy. Maybe the Typhon Pact is kind of a cross between BRICS and the Warsaw Pact.
 
If you're talking about Best of Both Worlds, there was nothing at all impressive about the Federation's victory. It was an almost textbook example of an ass-pull/deus ex machina.
 
And while the Tholians are the clearest villains of the piece at present, the Vanguard series does help us understand their hostility, as warped as their perception is. The Federation did awaken their mortal enemy/ancient oppressors, as a consequence of its eagerness to unlock the secrets of the Taurus Reach. The Federation was after power and knowledge and the Tholians wound up getting psychic seizures from it.

That's true, but I don't think it's rational to hold a grudge for that long. Sometimes people can have a legitimate reason to feel wronged yet still react in an unhealthy and disproportionate way.

tell that to the Irish, the Israelis, Palestinians and Roddenberry-only knows how many other oppressed or formerly oppressed and wronged-against peoples the world over who hold grudges over shit that went down decades or centuries ago and are still rational people.
 
If you're talking about Best of Both Worlds, there was nothing at all impressive about the Federation's victory. It was an almost textbook example of an ass-pull/deus ex machina.

The point is that making an adversary powerful and forcing the heroes to endure setbacks is a classic storytelling technique used countless times in fiction, and it's bizarre to interpret it as dragging the heroes through the mud.
 
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